Selected quad for the lemma: heaven_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heaven_n earth_n power_n see_v 8,567 5 3.5162 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A85666 An exposition of the five first chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. / Delivered in severall lectures in London, by William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1645 (1645) Wing G1851; Thomason E272_1; ESTC R212187 422,046 514

There are 50 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

precedent parts of this Vision there is yet more and higher glory to be spoken of and that is the glory of God in the person of Christ This Vision of the firmamen is preparatory to the Vision of Christ upon the Throne it 's described 1. From the place of it it was upon the heads of the living creatures 2. From the colour it was like Crystal and terrible Crystal 3. From the n●yse came thence vers 25. In the 23. and 24. Verses wee have a renewed and intermixt description of the living creatures from their wings the situation the number the office and noyse of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 d stendere expandere To begin with the Firmament the Hebrew word is Rachiah from a word signifies to draw out and make thin as metals are and wooll to stretch out as Curtains and Tents are Isa 40.22 whence heaven is called expansum because it is stretched out over the whole earth the Greeks call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of the firmnesse and permanency hereupon wee call it the firmament not from the hardnesse or solidity as if it were like Iron or Stone but from the firmnesse of it that it hath endured many thousand yeers and is not melted by its motion nor at all changed it 's taken sometimes for the ayre sometimes for the clouds and sometimes for heaven it self and so wee may take it here even the starry firmament This firmament was over the heads of the living creatures the wheels Angels were under it and it was between the Lord Christ and these creatures and did the office of that pair of wings which did cover the faces of the Seraphims in Isa 6.2 great was the glory of Christ and through this vail of the firmament presented to them The colour and likenesse of it was as the terrible crystal We must a little explain these words it was the likeness of the firmament not the firmament it self The Hebr. words run thus the ice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the terrible or the terrible ice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ice water hardened by cold whence Crystal hath its birth for though ice be not Crystal yet Crystal is from ice when ice is hardened into the nature of a stone it becomes Crystal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nat. hist l. 37. c. 2. more degrees of coldnesse hardnesse and cleernesse give ice the denomination of Crystal and the name Crystal imports so much that is water by cold contracted into ice and Pliny saith the birth of it is from ice vehemently frozen and so you see the originall of Crystal The Epithet here added terrible hath some difficulty in it that heaven a visionall firmament should be terrible seems strange terriblenesse ariseth from newnesse greatnesse or the glory of a thing Things new and strange do cause fear as when the earth opened and swallowed up Corah Dathan and Abiram there was great feare it was a terrible thing and this is called a new thing Numb 16.30 If the Lord make a new thing so when new sights are seen in the heavens they cause astonishment to the beholders as comets the standing of the Sun and the like 2. Things great are dreadfull great waters great mountains great armies Deut. 1.19 he calls the Wildernesse a great and terrible wildernesse Joel 2.11 the day of the Lord is great and terrible and so the Lord great and terrible Nehem. 4.14 from the greatnesse of it therefore might this Crystal be terrible 3. The glory of it that might make it terrible for glorious things are so lightning is glorious and dreadfull when Gods glory appeared in the mount it was terrible unto Moses and made him to quake Heb. 12.21 At Pauls conversion there was a glorious light which stroke feare into all were with him Act. 9. And this Crystalline firmament was full of glory Crystal is a cleer thing receives the light so as to affect the eyes much in like manner this firmament had a great cleernesse and transparency being the foot-stool of Christ sitting upon the Throne Suppedaneum Christi sedentis in throno 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Septuag sometimes translate the Hebrew word for terrible glorious Deut. 10.21 Who hath done for thee these great and terrible things great and glorious things say they so Isa 64. ver 3. Thou diddest terrible things they render it glorious things Tam vehementer nitebat ut form dinem aspicienti afferret Pol. Divinitatem quandam praese fer●bat Mald. for they are terrible and here from the gloriousnesse of this Crystal or Crystalline visionall firmament it may be called terrible and this I conceive to be the true cause of its terriblenesse it was so glorious that none could behold it without being dazled astonished and put into a trembling Observ 1. That all creatures are under Christ even Angels themselves they and the wheels are under the firmament where Christ is he walks above his feet are where creatures heads are all are subject to the power of Christ and hee sits above and hee rules them and over-rules their actions Angels and all wheels stoop to him the Prophet saw the wheel on the earth the Angels under the firmament but Christ was above 1 Cor. 15.27 All things are put under him all Angels all men all devils God hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name Phil. 2.9 2. That heavenly things are pure and glorious and hold forth the glory of God Rev. 22.1 they have the cleernesse splendor and lively colour of the Crystal The higher wee ascend the more purity beauty and glory there is more in the ayre then in the earth and waters more in the Sun more in the stars and firmament then in the inferiour things Gods glory is every where the earth is full of it If wee look downwards we may see it but if we look upwards we shall see more excellency and glory How much glory is in the Sun who can tell how many wonderfull things it hath in it and so the firmament Psal 19.1 The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work The out-spread firmament that is so vast so transparent so beset with stars that darts down such sweet influences it holds forth Gods glory exceedingly the glory of his wisdome power goodnesse There is much of Gods glory seen in it Job 37.18 The sky or firmament is compared to a looking-glasse not because you may see severall species of things as we see severall faces in the water and birds in the ayre but chiefly because in it wee see so much of the glory of God even most of his attributes we should be oft looking in this glasse and observe the glory of God 3. That the things above are dreadfully glorious so glorious that our weak eyes cannot behold Incu●iunt sacrum quendam honorem the glory of the firmament was as the
according to his humane nature hee should sit upon the Throne of God and judge the sonnes of men hee was administrator Patris the great Agent of his Father Whether Christ in this Vision sate or stood is doubted because it 's said above upon it neither standing nor sitting being expressed but my inclinations are to conceive that the Lord Christ sate and stood not 1. Because Thrones are not for standing but sitting and we never find in Scripture that any stood in Thrones but sate they have sitting in Thrones is the usuall phrase of Scripture 1 King 2.12 Solomon sate upon the Throne of David his father and in the 22th Chap. 10. The King of Israel and the King of Judah as they sate each upon his Throne and Isa 6.1 Isaiah s●● the Lord sitting upon a Throne Rev. 4.10 The twenty four Elders fell down before him that sate on the Throne 2. Kings and Judges here on earth do not use to stand but sit which doth more fully set out their State and Majesty and if Kings on earth do so how much more this King in heaven Besides standing is a servants posture Deut. 17.12 and Ch. 10. v. 8. but sitting is not Luke 17.7 8. that is the Masters the Lords posture Obser 1. The wisdome of Gods Spirit in laying down things to prevent the corruptions and mistakes of man wee are apt to think grosly of the divine nature that God is visible corporeall contained in place sitting as man but see how the Spirit of God carries it here and takes off from all such conceits here is mention of likenesse appearance of things not that they were materially so it 's the likenesse of a Throne the appearance of a Saphire and upon the likenesse of the Throne was the appearance of a man no true body The Anthropomorphites thought God to be like unto us to have his Throne in heaven and sit in it and so far did these men proceed in this opinion of Gods corporeity and circumscription that they assembled into troops and threatned to stone all opposed it So tenacious of and violent for errors are men even the deluded sons of men 2. That man is not capable of immediate accesse to and converse with God Here be many steps and degrees before the Prophet comes to see Christ and then it 's not in his Divine nature but in the appearance of a man Here be the living creatures in the way by the firmament over their heads and then a Throne and that of Saphirine colour and afterward a sight of Christ in the form of a man and then converse If the Lord should not condescend to our weaknesse and mantle up his Majesty there could be no communion between him and us 3. That the Lord Christ who appeared like man hath Kingly Majesty Here is a Throne and a Throne set before him Thrones present royall Majesty unto us and this Throne presenteth Christs when on earth he was in the forme of a servant but in heaven he appeared to the Prophet in the form of a King Neither hath he a Throne only but what ever appertains to Kings Vnction he had and such as other Kings had not hee was anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power Act. 10.38 Promulgation Zach. 9.9 O daughter of Jerusalem behold thy King cometh unto thee A Crowne Hebr. 2.9 Wee see Jesus crowned with glory and honour the Jews crowned him with thornes the Lord with glory A Scepter hee hath also and better then of Gold Hebr. 1.8 A Scepter of righteousnesse is the Scepter of thy Kingdom A royall guard of Angels they are under the firmament stand ready at his foot-stool he hath his Agents and Ambassadors in the kingdome of the world to declare his pleasure to transact his appointments Ephes 4.11 Apostles Prophets Euangelists Pastors Teachers these negotiate the great affaires of this King they dispense the mysteries of his Kingdome he is not a titular King but hath large Dominions Dan. 7.14 There was given him dominion and glory and a Kingdome that all people nations languages should serve him and Psal 2.8 The heathens are his inheritance and the ends of the earth his possession He hath a Legislative power he makes and abrogates Lawes at his pleasure Gen. 49.10 He came of the Princely Tribe that made the Lawes Judah bare the Scepter and gave the Lawes and therefore by David is called The Law-giver Psal 60.7 and Christ descending thence and being typified by the King of Judah he is the true Law-giver Jam. 4.12 there is one Lawgiver and therefore Matth. 28. last Teach them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you hee hath a pardoning and punishing power he pardoned Mary Magdalene and punished him had not on his wedding garment 4. That Christ is not only King but the chiefest of Kings his Throne is not on earth but in heaven it 's above the firmament that was over Angels heads and Christs Throne is above them both so that all power in heaven and earth are under Christ his Throne is exalted above them all Heb. 1.6 Let all the Angels of God worship him the greatest Archangel must do it those Thrones for so they are termed Col. 1.16 must stoop to this Throne Ephes 1.20.21 God hath set Christ in heavenly places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among the heavenly thrones yea in supercelestiall places for it followes hee hath set him far above all Principalitie and Power and Might and Dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come and hath put all things under his feet even Angels are under the firmament where his feet stand and all the Princes of the earth are under him Rev. 1.5 Hee is the Prince of the Kings of the earth The inscription of his vesture and thigh is King of Kings and Lord of Lords this title is not Xerxes Nebuchadnezzars nor Alexanders but Christs alone the kings of the world when they sit upon their thrones they have their expansum over their heads some cloth of state made of the richest stuffe that the brains of men can reach unto bedeckt with Diamonds and Pearles that are most costly but this over their throne intimates their subjection to some higher power but it 's not so with Christ hee is above the Expansum nothing is over his head Angels Kings Devils are under his feet and unto him must every knee bow 5. That the Lord Christ who hath such a glorious Throne is exceeding glorious himself his Throne is like Saphires of a Saphirine colour which is very beautifull it 's like the glory of the heavens if an earthly throne be a Throne of glory as Hanna styles it 1 Sam. 2.8 what is this throne a resemblance of the Throne of his glory which hee speaks of in Matth. 19.28 and Chap. 25. vers 31. The cloathing of the Kings daughter Psalm 45.13 was wrought Gold a glorious outside but there was more glory
son of Buzi This Buzi was a Prophet if the rule of Jerome and the Rabbins be true Filium Prophetae se assere re Jerome saith when a Prophet nameth his Parentage in the beginning of his Prophecy it is to affirm that he was the son of a Prophet and so say the Rabbins likewise That man was a Prophet whom the Scriptures set down to be the father of a Prophet Then Buzi here who was the father of Ezekiel a Prophet by these rules was a Prophet himself But this is the voyce of men not of heaven His name signifieth contempt disgrace a man contemned scorned despised in the times and places where he liveth You may hence note 1. That the Prophets and Ministers of God have alwayes been subject to derision and scorn Isay 8.18 I and my children are for signes and wonders in Israel If the Vine do beare such ill fruit what then doth the Thorne bear If there be mocking and scorning of the Prophets in Israel what reproaches what taunts and bitter sarcasmes will there be then in Babylon 2 Chro. 36.16 They mocked the Messengers of God and despised his words and misused his Prophets They counted them teachers of lies false Prophets seditious factious such as delivered strange doctrines plotted treasons c. nothing was too vile too bad to lay upon the Prophets and the sons of the Prophets Zedekiah smit good Micaiah on the cheek 1 King 22.24 and saith he Which way went the Spirit of the Lord from me to speak unto thee Thou fool thou silly man thou mad man thou false fellow thou deceiver of the King and people which way went the Spirit of God from mee to thee and so smites him on the cheek Signum maximae ignominae Now to smite on the cheek was a proverbiall speech among the Hebrewes and it was a signe of the greatest disgrace that could be done to any This was the condition of the Prophets while they were here in the world And also of the Apostles We are made as the filth of the world and off-scouring of all things to this day 1 Cor. 4.13 Paul a great scholar full of the Holy Ghost called by an extraordinary way yet he saith of himself and the rest of the Apostles that they were counted as the off-scouring of all things men get up all every where on every side so the word carries it the men of the world were like unto a man that raked every where to get a basket of filth dirt and dung to throw in some ones face 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so they scrape in the doctrines lives and passages of the servants of God do catch at all advantages do seek every where to pick up something that they may have wherewithall to upbraid reproach and revile them and we are made as the very filth and dung upon the face of the earth Was not Hus that Worthy of God so counted when the Prelate who had the power of ordering things had put a paper crown on his head with three ugly shaped devils upon it and this Title over their heads Haeresiarcha Here is the Diabolicall Heretique that great Heretique that hath three devils in him and when they sent him away to the stake with this farewell Go thy wayes we commit thy soul to the Devill Was not here a man made the filth of the world Even such mockings such dealings such doings must the servants of God look for while they are here They are the sons of Buzi they are Buzies indeed men of contempt and scorn among wicked and vile men 2. That whom the world contemneth God will honour Here is a Buzi a man of contempt in the world but God giveth him a son and a son who is a Prophet and a son whose name is recorded in Scripture together with his own all honourable things Hannah was scorned reproached by Peninnah but God giveth her a Samuel and honoureth her with the motherhood of such a son Joseph was thrown out by his brethren cast into the pit sold to Potiphar put into prison but God did lift him up in Egypt and set him almost in the Throne made him the next man to the King himself Christ was the stone disallowed and rejected by the builders even the Master-builders the great ones the Rabbies the Pharisees but God makes him the chief corner stone God sets him up on high This is for the comfort of those that are godly and thrown out by the world God will take them up and put honour upon them in a way they know not of From the Subject we come to the things fell out with the author of them and they are these 1. Heaven is opened 2. Visions are presented 3. They are seen of Ezekiel 4. The author of them is specified Visions of God The heavens were opened and I saw visions of God The word opening among the Jewes notes sometime not the reality but the effect of a thing Gen. 3.7 Their eyes were opened they were not shut before but now they saw that which they saw not before and so their eyes are said to be opened In the Gospel Christ is said to open the eyes of the blind the ears and mouth of the deaf and dumb not that their mouths were absolutely shut or their ears absolutely stopped or their eyes so closed that they could not stir their eye-lids but Christ opened them so as hee made them to see heare and speak to do that which they could not do before so that in regard of the effect they are said to be opened Sometimes again it noteth the truth of a thing and so Stephen saw heaven opened and Christ standing at the right hand of God and Peter saw heaven opened and a sheet coming down to him The question is whether of these wayes it is to be taken here Origen saith That the heavens were open to the eyes of his body there was a division of the heavens and so in a literall sense he saw the visions and the things presented to him But Jerome saith Non divisione firmamenti sed fide credentis The heavens were opened not by the rending of the firmament but by the faith of the believer You may take it in the literall sense and according to the truth of a thing The inconvenience objected against it is not considerable for it is said If the heavens were literally opened how could Ezekiel see so far as to see things in heaven the strength of his eyes could not reach it for if the Sun and fixed Stars which are far above the Sun are greater bodies then the earth and seem so little unto us how little would any thing in heaven seem to the eye when it is exceedingly beyond both these Answ The heavens being opened it doth not follow that Ezekiel must see the visions in heaven the things he saw might be neerer then the Stars or Sun The Dove came down and lighted upon Christ and the sheet
was let down from heaven unto Peter and so the visions might be neerer unto Ezekiel then the highest heavens The heavens were opened and he saw visions of God it is not said that he saw visions in heaven and grant it to be in heaven Stephen saw Christ there and so might Ezekiel see the object of his vision there yet neither did Stephen by his naturall strength see Christ nor Ezekiel these visions but he that opened heaven did open their eyes strengthened them to see at such a distance Or Secondly you may take it effectively that was done to the eye of faith as if heaven had been opened A thing is said to be opened when that is removed which hinders coming at the thing shut up the seven seals were loosed Rev. 5. then was the book opened when the shuts of the window are turned aside that the eye can come at the light then the window is open the impediments are taken away Vbi discussis omnibus obstaculis Deus facit ut fidelium oculi usque ad gloriam ipsius coelestem penetrent and heaven is open when all lets being set aside God causeth the eyes of his to see divine visions or reveals divine mysteries unto them as if heaven were open and this is the way most peculiar to the servants of God Hereafter saith Christ You shall see Heaven opened and the Angels ascending and descending upon the Son of man The Angels are not corporeall they cleave not the heavens asunder in their descent or ascent that is not the meaning but the spirit of the Text is this the impediments should be taken away from their minds they should be so enlightened with the glory of the Gospel they should see as it were even Angels come down and minister unto Christ they should as the expression is Nova acie apertis oculis 2 Cor. 3.18 with open face behold as in a glasse the glory of God see heaven opened in Christ and the Angels descending upon the Son of man And so did Ezekiel see heaven opened Observ The Key of Heaven is in the hand of God he openeth heaven at his pleasure and letteth out and in what parties and things he pleaseth Angels visions and other things he lets out he openeth heaven and letteth in your prayers your tears your souls at his seasons the key of the grave the key of the womb the key of the clouds the key of hell is in the hand of God and he turns them at his pleasure but above all the key of heaven is in the hand of God he is Lord Chamberlain there is none goeth out nor comes in till God himself turn the key If you would have mercies you must look up to God for them and desire him to turn the key Rev. 3.7 he is said to have the key of David he opens and none can shut he shuts and none can open a key notes power and the key of David chief power in the house in the Kingdome where that key is there is the greatest power God hath that key in his hand the key of David all power to open and shut heaven when he will he can open your hearts at his pleasure he can open Texts at his pleasure he can open dark things unto you therefore seeing all power is in the hand of God look up to him for mercies and desire him to turn the key for your good and his glory 2. That God doth great things for those that are truly godly that are true beleevers Heaven is opened for them and onely for them Wee doe not reade in the booke of God that heaven was ever opened for any wicked man wickednesse shutteth up heaven godlinesse hath the priviledge to the godly heaven is opened To Christ it was opened Mat. 3.16 To Steven Act. 7.56 To Peter it was opened Act. 10.11 To John it was opened Rev. 4.1.19.11 And it is opened to Ezekiel here in the Text I saw heaven opened It is shut against others wicked men shall never see it open in mercie the Judgement at last shall not be in heaven but in the aire or on the earth It is the priviledge of beleevers to have choice mercies Great things God will doe for them that the world shall have no share in It was the godly that saw Christ after the resurrection and not any wicked man It was for beleevers that Christ prayed and not for the world Joh. 17. It is for the heirs of salvation that the Angels are sent forth to be ministring Spirits unto Heb. 1. And it is for the faithfull the heavens are opened that they may see what the glory of their Fathers house is into what a familie they shall ere long be received This sets out the excellency of faith unto us for as it is a hand to receive Christ and his benefits a mouth to eate his flesh and drinke his bloud so it is an eye to see into heaven and the eye for which heaven is opened EZEK 1. The heavens were opened and I saw visions of God c. The Word of the Lord came expresly to Ezekiel the Priest c. And the hand of the Lord was there upon him And I looked and behold a whirlwinde came out of the North a great Cloud and a fire infolding it selfe c. I saw visions of God GOD hath manifested himselfe unto his Prophets severall wayes 1. By speaking immediately unto them without interposition of any medium even mouth to mouth and face to face So he spake to Adam in Paradise to Moses Exod. 33.11 The Lord spake to Moses face to face as a man speaks to his friend This manner of Gods manifesting himselfe was peculiar to Moses above any or all the Prophets besides as you may reade Deut. 34.10 2. God manifested himselfe to his people by Dreames which was in the night season there was some representation of something unto them when they were asleepe Thus God manifested himselfe to Jacob Gen. 28.12 And Jacob saith Gen. 31.11 that the Angel of God spake unto him in a dreame 3. God hath manifested himselfe to his people by Visions Psal 89.19 Thou spakest in visions to thy holy One. And Gen. 15.1 The Word of the Lord came unto Abraham in a vision These three you have together in two verses Numb 6. and part of the 8th If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my selfe knowne to him in a vision and speake to him in a dreame and to Moses will I speake mouth to mouth Here in the Text it is by way of vision that God speaks or appeares unto Ezekiel I saw visions of God In a Vision there are these things 1. There is some species or similitude represented to the sight whether it be to the eye of the body externally or to the eye of the minde internally alwayes something is represented to the eye 2. A Vision is of something that is future whether at some little distance or very remote Hence
Ark so that there and here the Cherubims these Angels looke upward Obser 1. That all creatures depend upon Christ these Angels have the faces of Men Lions Oxen Eagles and look up to him if there were nothing in it but this that Angels in their own nature looking up it might convince us that all inferiour creatures do depend upon him as well as those noble ones but when they come in with the faces of other creatures looking up it 's cleere evidence that all depend upon Christ Col. 1.16 17. By him were all things created that are in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether Thrones or Dominions Principalities or Powers all things were created by him and for him and by him all things do consist he holds all in his hand heaven and earth men and Angels they all consist and subsist in him Heb. 1.3 He upholds all things by the word of his power 2. That in all our ministrations we are to have our instructions and directions from Christ Angels look up to him if hee speak they hear they move and act if not they stir not Moses and Aaron did nothing in the State or Church without direction from God Princes must look into the Law of God continually Deut. 1.7 that they may do things warrantably the Centurions souldiers and servants did come go and do at his appointment not their own and Angels run not of their own heads they will heare a word of command have a commission from Christ before they go It 's not enough that wee be knowing full of courage quick to dispatch much a Commission a Warrant from God we must have else all our doing is nothing nay let us do the will of God without knowing wee are warranted by God to do it it 's rather sin then service Pro. 3.5 6. Lean not to thine own understanding let it be never so great acute cleere it 's not beyond Angels they look up to God and so must thou In all thy wayes acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths Christ is the great Counsellour and wee must not in one or two or some great exigence of businesse consult with him but in all our wayes what ever we attempt for our selves families State Church we must consult with him sits upon the Throne and he will direct our paths Most miscarry in their wayes or make little progresse because they consult not at all or very little with Christ whereas if men did consult with Christ and do all upon his warrant upon a divine ground they should never miscarry in their ways but proceed farther in the paths of godlinesse in a few weeks then they did before in may yeeres when David had consulted with God he could say God was at his right hand so that he should not be moved Psa 16. 3. That the pleasure of Christ is worthy our waiting for Angels look up and attend what he will say and make known unto them these holy glorious and mighty creatures think not much to wait upon Christ and exercise their patience till he please to reveal his minde Christ is a great King the only Counsellour and his counsell of infinite worth and it 's not State but equity that all creatures wait upon him Angels do it shall we grudge at it Psal 123.1 2. Vnto thee lift I up mine eyes O thou that dwellest in the heavens Behold as the eyes of servants looke to the hand of their Master and as the eyes of a maiden to the hands of her Mistresse so our eyes wait upon the Lord our God He interprets the meaning of looking up which is waiting upon God for manifestation of himself Psal 5.3 David would direct his Prayer to God and look up not down to the world downe to corruption but up to God what he would speak Psal 85.8 I will heare what God the Lord will speak Mic. 7.7 Let the resolution of the Prophet be thine I will look unto the Lord I will wait for the God of my salvation my God will hear mee 4. That Christ is an object of admiration and adoration The looking upwards is Signum admirationis typus reverentiae the Cherubims looked towards the Mercy-seate admiring and adoring him was figured by it and wee lift up our faces towards heaven when we admire and adore God you have the phrase in Job 22.26 Thou shalt have thy delight in the Almightie and lift up thy face unto God That is admire and adore that God thou delightest in Where is most delight there is most admiration and adoration Christ is the delight of Angels when he was incarnate they bowed downe to pry into that mystery and now he is glorified they look up to admire him there is matter of admiration in Christ all in him is not yet drawne out and discovered 2 Thes 1.10 Christ shall come to be admired in all them that beleeve As it 's in a Country when it 's discovered still new and new things are met with so in Christ Rev. 22.1 2. There the vision of Christ is compared to River-water and that is alwayes new fresh and to a tree of life with twelve manner of fruits every moneth The vision and fruition of God is new savoury and pleasant unto them every moneth day and houre and this is to Angels as well as to any other 2. To adore him Heb. 1.2 Let all the Angels of God adore him They doe look up acknowledge him God and tender to him that glory the Father hath even adoration Christ that was despised rejected of men the stone disallowed of the Master builders that we hid our faces from and esteemed not he is the object of Angels adoration 5. That the service of Jesus Christ is honorable service Angels doe stretch up their faces and waite for it and it 's the glory of the Angels that they are ministring Spirits sent out by Christ Heb. 1.14 is a comparison between the glory of Christ and Angels and their glory is that they are his servants we think the service of great persons an honour to us Who is greater then Christ all power in heaven and earth is given unto him Mat. 28. And he is more honorable then all Princes he is King of Kings and must be honoured as the Father Joh. 5. Servire Deo est regnare Philo. The Apostles counted it their great honour to be servants of Christ Paul James Jude Peter begin their Epistles with it they set it in the front as the most honourable title this service is liberty not bondage Servitus Christianorum regia est l bertas August in Psal 99. his Spirit is a Spirit of libertie his Law is a law of libertie and Rom. 8.2 The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ hath made me free from the law of sinne and death he is not the servant of Christ is the slave of Satan this service is spirituall profitable honourable David had rather be a doore-keeper in Christs
the vexation of it Shall wee let out our hearts to that runs from us like a rolling thing and if wee overtake it runs into us like a thorn they that will be rich catch the world pierce themselves thorow with many sorrowes 1 Tim. 6.9 10. and breake upon this wheele Because it runs smoothly sometimes men are taken with the motions of the world but at length you shall find its motion rough swift ready to overthrow and break you all in pieces they are broken in Ireland and wee are breaking here now let the Apostles counsell be acceptable 1 Cor. 7.29 30 31. Brethren the time is short let them that have wives be as if they had none let them that weep be as if they wept not and them that rejocye as if they rejoyced not and they that buy as if they possessed it not and they that use this world as not abusing it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 praeterit decipit and why all this for the fashion or shew of this world passeth away it acts otherwise then you expect if you affect the world wives children or any part of it it will deceive you you think to hold it and it 's but a shadow no substance and a shadow a shew going away let us therefore not look at this wheel but at him that moves the wheel who is unchangeable unmovable of infinite being in comparison of whom the world is a drop a little dust let us with David say Whom have we in heaven but thee and there is none in earth we desire in comparison of thee let us let go our hold of the world draw in our affections from it hopes after it and look only after that City Heb. 11.10 Having given you the signification of the Wheels the next thing premised is the description of them and now I come to the particular handling of the Wheeles where we shall meet with difficulties and excellencies VER 15 16. Now as I beleld the living creatures behold one wheele upon the earth by the living creatures with his four faces The appearance of the wheels and their work was like unto the colour of a Berill and they four had one likenesse and their appearance and their work was as it were a wheel in the middle of of a wheel IN these Verses they are described 1. From their number implyed in the 15th expressed in the 16th verse foure 2. The place where they were and that is the earth 3. Their colour they were like a Berill 4. Their likenesse between themselves they foure had one likenesse 5. Their form was as it were a wheele in a wheel Touching the first viz. the number of the wheels they were four mention is made of one in the 15th verse but it 's one with four faces not the faces of the four Cherubims but of four wheels which wheels were so like that they are said to be one wheel hee that saw one saw all As in some picture of a Prince when wee have seen the same in divers places or oft in the same wee say this is one and the same picture so here our Prophet saith hee saw all the wheels but they were so like that they might well be called one and the same for the Prophet mentions in the 16th verse wheels and four wheels and one likenesse of them Here by a figure called Hypallage we may make the sense more easie thus there appeared one face in the four wheels for one wheel having four faces In the 10th Chapt. it 's out of all dispute that there were four wheels Verse 9. When I looked behold the four wheels by the Cherubims one wheel by one Cherub and another wheel by another Cherub These wheels being four represent to us the four parts of the world Eastern Western Northern Southern that in them are great stirs and changes The next thing in this verse is the place I saw one wheel upon the earth how could that be when Ezekiel saw the vision in heaven Answ This is a vision and it appeared to him to be on the earth not the true earth but the earth in a vision as in pictures if a wheel a Chariot a City be drawn and presented to the eye they are presented as being upon the earth Observ 1. That all inferiour causes wheels instruments agents whatsoever are but as one wheel before the Lord. All things in the four quarters of the world were presented by God to the Prophet as one wheel to us they are many mighty divers contrary infinite but unto God they are otherwise all the Armies Parliaments Kingdoms Crowns Agents in this world are but one cause one wheel before the great God they are a small thing to him Isa 40.15 16 17. Behold the nations are as the drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the ballance behold hee taketh up the Isles as a very little thing Lebanon is not sufficient to burn nor the beast thereof sufficient for a burnt offering all nations before him are as nothing and they are counted to him lesse then nothing and vanity 2. That changes stirs and tumults are here on the earth not in heaven the Prophet saw the wheels on earth not in heaven there be no wheelings no turnings no troubles no wars no deaths no diseases no sins no feares no teares no wicked men no wicked thing and so no changes it 's only the prerogative of heaven to say I am the Lord I change not Mal. 3.6 the world cannot say it Jam. 1.17 With him is no variablenesse or shadow of turning in God and heaven there is nothing of the wheel all is constant immutable but on earth it 's contrary the things under the Sun are vanity inconstancy and change it self 3. That all the inferiour agents and causes are at the dispose of the superiour of Angels they have a great interest in the government of the world the wheel is by the living creatures at their feet to move and turn it which way they please if they will bespeak wars in the North or South if they will have the world in an uproare it 's done Angels are Gods hands and deputies in the administration of all things here below in the world God supports and subverts kingdomes by them Dan. 10. Gabriel tels Daniel that hee withstood the Prince of Persia 21. dayes and his counsellers that sought to oppresse the people of God and that hee would go again and fight with him Kingdomes and the affaires of them yea the quarters of the world under God are ordered by Angels and while Angelicall and divine protection are over kingdomes they prosper but when God is provoked by the sins of a people hee leaves the wheels of that Kingdome to men and devils it runs to ruine Then the Princes and Potentates are deluded with strong delusions grow tyrannicall Idolatrous false hostile c. then the kingdome growes weak without spirit counsell strength successe and is infinitely intangled with
direct them to their journeyes end so that they misse not the marke they aime at What if many second causes be ignorant blind know not their own motions yet if they have guides infallible to lead them it 's sufficient to conduct them to the intended end If a seeing dog can lead a blind begger from place to place direct his motion to the desired end shall not the eye of providence lead any all second causes to their end Providence is an unerring thing and disappoints not God of his expectation The Pilot carries a great ship from harbour to harbour over the Seas through the stormes and fulfils the mind of the Master and so Providence carries the great wheels up and down to the very place appointed 4. The least motions of the wheels are not without providence some think that the great things in kingdomes and the world are transacted by providence but for they lesser they passe in a casuall manner providence reaches them not but the eyes were every where the wheels were full of eyes not a few eyes here and there one but in every part that so mans minde might be freed from such sinister thoughts as that there should be any motion of any wheel without the direction and influence of providence God hath made the least and greatest creatures and hee causeth the least and greatest motions Providentia ita cura● omnia ut unum aliquid ita singula ut si illud curaret unicum August in Confess And the Schoolmen say that providence is infinita in omnibus infinita in singulis Let us pitch our thoughts upon some lesser motion the dispensation of a lot the fall of a haire from the head the preparations of the heart the answer of the tongue these are all of the Lord and directed by providence the earth loseth not a pile of grasse the trees not a leafe the water not a fish the aire not a bird without an ordinance of providence 5. Providence orders the motion of the rings and wheels in all parts all the world over not one two or three wheels had eyes but all foure had eyes round about them God by his divine providence ordered things as well in Babylon as in Sion Providence wrought in Aegypt and in the red Sea As there are wheels in all parts of the world in all Kingdomes of the earth so there are eyes in all those wheels 6. The works of God in disposing and governing second causes are admirable glorious and beautifull workes The wheels were full of eyes fitly disposed wisely carried on certainly attaining their ends Could we see the eyes in the wheels we should never fault the workes of God in the world but stand and admire their glory and beauty when the heavens are vailed with clouds we have sowre and discontented thoughts of the heavens themselves but when the clouds are gone that we can see the Starres those eyes of heaven then we admire their beauty and glory and certainly it 's a most glorious sight to see the heavens full of starres in a cleare night and it 's no lesse glorious to see the eyes in the wheels and the choice acts of providence in all their turnings and windings Caussin saith the world in all its parts is ruled like a paper with musick lines and if wee could see those lines they would be as glorious as lines of gold 7. The motions of the wheels are such as that they hold out a providence to all there is something in the wheels that none can reach and something that any may see they are full of eyes and the weakest may see one providence or other if not all the eyes yet some of them there be mysteries in the wheels to exercise the greatest and eyes to satisfie the weakest As no man but sees the stars in the heaven at one time or other so no man but may see the eyes in the wheels That evill doth not over-run all and the wicked devour the good argues a providence In one of the Conanie Islands Johannes Metellus saith there is a tree which drops water at every leafe and sufficeth the Inhabitants and their flocks being a drie Island without water Mithridates when in his cradle had his clothes consumed with lightning and his body not toucht A father and a son shipwrackt at sea the son sail'd to shoar upon the back of his dead father In these particulars and such like providence doth eminently appeare VERS 19. And when the living creatures went the wheels went by them and when the living creatures were lift up from the earth the wheels were lift up 21. When those went these went when those stood these stood and when those were lifted up from the earth the wheels were lifted up over against them Here we have 1. The motion of the wheels farther commended unto us 2. Their station 3. The time of both THe motion was forwards upwards and downwards and for the time of their motion and station it was when the creatures moved or stood as the Cherubims moved so moved the wheels forward upward downward and when they stood still the wheels stood The kind and manner of their motions with their rest depended on the living creatures they moved equally at their motion What 's meant by the lifting up of the wheels must be inquired for Angels to be lifted up is not strange they are heavenly creatures and heaven is their habitation But for the wheels to be lifted up that is very strange wee must search out the sense for into heaven they were not lifted Expositers leave us in the dark all except one that I have met with passe over this difficulty and what I find in that one is this the lifting up of the Angels and the wheels referre to the supreme cause and seems to tell us that inferiour and superiour causes wheels and Angels are under the regiment of the first cause and if wee take the words actively as Montanus doth render them viz. the living creatures in lifting up themselves from the earth the wheels lift up themselves also and that is they looked up to heaven for direction and assistance which may well be called a lifting up themselves Psal 25.1 Vnto the Lord do I lift up my soul that is to thee do I look for counsel comfort strength If wee take the words passively when the living creatures are lift up from the earth the wheels were lift up then I will give you my thoughts what the sense may be and it 's this the lifting up is not meant of lifting up to heaven but to service when God should more then in an ordinary way let out himself to the Angels give them new light new strength and so lift them up to great service then the wheels also were lifted up proportionably to do their parts and the words in the Text invite me to conceive it to be the sense because it 's said The spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels
terrible Crystal such as caused dread in a Prophet what eye can look upon the Sun in its glory and strength could we see an Angel in his glory Jud. 6. Jud. 13. Sensibile excellens destruit sensorium it would terribly affright us when Angels vayl'd up their glory in humane shapes it made great Worthies of God to quake as Gideon Manoah and others glorious objects work strongly upon our spirits and quickly scatter them And if the glory of creatures be such what is the glory of God himself 1 Tim. 6.16 God dwels in the light which no man can approach unto it 's such exceeding glorious light that no created eye can endure that light or glory is Gods habitation and so glorious a one it is that wee cannot look upon it Act. 22.11 Paul could not behold that glorious light shined about him The earth heavens and world which are Gods out-house we may behold but his glory which is himself his inmost roome we may not wee cannot eye this light is darknesse unto us there is so much brightnesse in it that it will put out our eyes and whether this glory be accessible by the Saints or Angels may 〈◊〉 disputable because God is invisible and his glory inaccessible and besides the Angels they had wings to cover their faces Isa 6. And here they are presented to Ezekiel under the firmament with that upon their heads which shewes that they and all creatures are distanced from God and capable of seeing his glory only in that way he thinks good to propound it That in Mat. 18.10 seems to speak the contrary where it 's frid that in heaven their Angels do alwayes behold the face of my father it 's true they are in the speciall presence of God have sweet and satisfactory communion with God stand ready to do his will but God hath no face in heaven and whether they see his essentiall glory I leave to farther inquiry 4. That all things here below are expressed to the eye and view of Christ the firmament is so cleere that Christ sees through it It 's the window of heaven and through it hee looks into the world it 's a molten looking-glasse Job 37.18 and as wee may see Gods attributes and glory in it so Christ sees our shapes thoughts distempers and motions he saw Saul when he got the Letters to Damascus to persecute the Saints the Lord Christ saw him and knew the bloodinesse of his mind and said unto him Saul Saul Acts 9. many are Atheisticall and say in their hearts as hee in Job 22.13 How doth God know can he judge through the dark clouds Esa 29.15 they do evill in the dark and say who seeth us and who knoweth us there is one in the heavens that seeth through the clouds and darknesse it self they are as the Sun and Firmament to him darknesse is no darknesse the firmament is as light it self all things done in Armies Councels Markets Shops Families Closets Beds Hearts are naked and open to the eyes of him with whom wee have to do Heb. 4.13 I come now to the 23. Verse where the glory of Christ is set out from his Ministers or Officers and they are the living creatures VER 23. And under the firmament were their wings streight the one toward the other every one had two which covered on this side and every one had two which covered on that side their bodies I Have spoken before of the wings yet somewhat I shall adde four wings they had and more wee may not give them though it may seem in this Verse they had more for it 's said their wings were streight that is stretcht out and then that they had two on this side and two on that side but the meaning is when they did flie those wings that did cover upward were stretcht out and the other did still cover their bodies or feet The scope of the verse is to shew that the Ministery of the Angels doth refer to and set out the glory of Christ and that may be seen in the observations to be given Obser 1. That where Christ is there the Angels are neer unto him he was above the firmament and they just under it the firmament was upon their heads there was only a glorious transparent firmament betweene Christ and them distanced from Christ they are but not far 2. The Angels wise strong serviceable swift and glorious creatures attend Christs Throne and are subject unto him they were under the firmament about his Throne Is it not for the honour and great glory of a King to have Nobles Potentates and Princes under him attending in his Court It was much for Ahashuerus his glory and honour when he had the Nobles and Princes of the Provinces before him and under him Est 1.3 And so it 's much for the honour of Christ that hee hath Angels which are greater then the Kings of the earth attending him 3. They are ready to exercise the will and pleasure of Christ this farther advances the honour of Christ their wings were stretched out and they willing to move in any service if their Lord gave out the word when the Centurions servants were so willing to go and come at his bidding it made much for his honour Matth. 8.9 ready cheerly active servants are an ease and honour to their Masters unreadinesse and unwillingnesse in inferiours do disparage authority and stain the glory of it Angels that serve at Christs Throne are never unready or unwilling for any service 4. They are unanimous in their Ministrations they fall not out by the way their wings are streight the one towards the other they cary on the work put into their hands with love sweet agreement peace and constant At the birth of Christ they sung all one song and sung without division Glory to God on high on earth peace good will towards men as they sung so they act there is no disagreement amongst them Can two walke together except they be agreed Angels do flie together and act together they are so agreed that no devill no creature can divide them they have all but one minde and serve the Lord Christ with one consent and what honour is this to Christ that hath so great so many servants and all minding the same thing 5. They reverence the greatnesse and Majesty of Christ though they be high and glorious yet they see so vast a distance between Christ and themselves that they cover their faces Isa 6. and their bodies here they come not into his presence rudely but with great respect and reverence As God is to be had in reverence of all that are about him Psal 89.7 so Christ is reverenced by all the Angels that are about him Women are to be vail'd in the assemblies because of the Angels 1 Cor. 11.10 to shew their reverence and subjection to them being present and Angels are covered to shew their reverence and subjection unto Christ it 's an honour to
overlaid it with the best Gold there were six steps and twelve Lions and there was not the like in any Kingdome In this last sense wee are here to take it a seat for Christ to sit in and so the Temple or Sanctuary is called the Throne of God Jer. 17.12 a glorious high Throne from the beginning is the place of our Sanctuary A Throne here holds out unto us sundry things 1. Divine Majesty and highnesse of Christ 2. Kingly Dignity 3. Triumphant Glory 4 Judiciary Power Psal 9.4 Thou satest in the Throne judging right Kingly and judiciary power are chiefly meant 2 Cor. 18.18 I saw the Lord sitting upon his Throne and all Host of heaven standing on his right hand and on his left and Rev. 20.11 12. I saw a great white Throne and him that sate on it and the dead small and great stood before God and the Books were opened here Christ sate in judgement over the Jewes and exercised his power pronouncing sentence against them The next thing is the likenesse as the appearance of a Saphire stone The glory of this Throne was great Solomons was of Ivory and Gold but Christs is of Saphire The Scripture mentions Palaces Psal 45.8 Towers Cant. 7.4 Beds Amos 6.4 Houses Amos 3.5 Vessels Rev. 18.12 And Thrones of Ivorie 2 Cron. 9.17 but none of Saphires Gemma gêmarum Abulens Hieroglyph 41. the Saphire is a stone of admirable worth and splendor the chiefest of Pearles and Pererius saith it was among the Ancient alwayes of great esteeme The Empire and high Priesthood were signified by it Among the Egyptians Aelianus the chief Priest being Judges also wore a Saphire about their necks and at this time when Cardinals are newly created Deorum munera opima beneficia invitare conciliareque fertur ut vel hinc Ecclesiasticis praesulibus omniū maxime dignā rude vulgus profiteatur Ruen de gemmis Coelesti colore conspicui sunt Ruen ibid. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aureis punctis lucere the Pope sends to each of them a Saphire which sets out dignity and greatnesse For the colour of the stone Pliny saith in his lib. 37. c. 9. that it is of an ayrie colour hee should have said of a skie or blew colour for when the heavens are most cleere and have a transparent pleasant blew then the Saphire doth most resemble them very fair and beautifull Jerome will have Sapphire to be from Saphar Pulcher because these stones are very faire and delightfull Pliny in the place before cited saith they do flame and sparkle with purple veins much like the colour of Brimstone when it's first fired there is a pleasant blew with a little purple in it and so oft it 's in the heavens when they are cleer The Saphire and heavens cleernesse are brought in together by Moses Exod. 24.10 they saw the God of Israel and there was under his feet as it were a paved work of a Saphire stone and as it were the body of heaven in its cleernesse the pavement was Saphire and the colour of it as the cleernesse of heaven Wee must inquire what the Saphire represents unto us for surely there is something yea much in it Should wee tell you what vertue is given to this stone by men of great note it would take up much time Avicen Albertus and Mathiolus affirm this stone to be good against Melancholy and the quarterne ague Galen and Dioscorides that it helps against poysoning ruptures and exulcerations but I will passe by such things and come to that is neerer our purpose The Saphire is an Embleme Symbolum libertatis 1. Of liberty so you shall finde it to speak in that Exod. 24.10 the Israelites were come from their pavement of bricks to one of Saphire now the God of Israel was exalting them to precious liberty from their vile bondage Puritatis soliditatis 2. Of purity and solidity it hath the colour and cleernesse of heaven it hath no impunity in it things impure are the ruine of themselves and so are unsolid but that 's pure is firm as the firmament Sublimitatis coelestium mysteriorum Sapphirum coelestiali quid portendere significat ipsius color Sanct. it 's pure and solid Hence the Saphire is a foundation stone of the new and heavenly Jerusalem Rev. 21.19 3. Of the incomprehensiblenesse of divine mysteries it hath a skie colour the colour of the firmament it self and that blewnesse wee see in the heavens is intense light and sets out the incomprehensibility of Gods wayes 4. * Caestitatis venereos compescit affectus Rivet Of chastity it 's an enemy to wanton lusts hence Cant. 5.14 Christs belly is said to be overlaid with Saphires and his Throne being saphirine it tells us that Christ expects chastity in the spirituall marriage between him and his Church 5. Of vigour and cheerfulnesse Lam. 4.7 Their polishing was of Saphire Vigoris letitiae vultus eorum Sapphirus their faces were saphirine so the Chaldee reades it their countenance before were full of vigour cheerfull like those are well polished but now through famine black they were withered and like a stick without all cheerfulnesse Gloriae 6. Of glory and here in this Vision Christs glory is likened to Saphire the glory of his Throne was saphirine From the likenesse of the Throne wee come to the party whose the Throne is and that is one had the appearance of a man who this is must be cleered it was not God the Father or God the Holy Ghost for the learned observe that neither Father nor the Holy Ghost have ever appeared in mans shape but that will not hold for the Antient of dayes God the Father appeared to Daniel Chap. 7. Vers 9. in the form of a man Expositers do most agree it was the Lord Christ and of that judgement shall wee be not because they say so this were a blinde ground for a rationall man to be led by but because wee finde in Scripture that Christ hath oft appeared in Vision like unto man Dan. 9.13 I saw in the night Visions and behold one like the Sonne of man the Jews acknowledging this to be meant of Messiah so in Rev. 1.13 one like the Sonne of man appeared in the midst of the seven Candlesticks and Rev. 14.14 I looked had behold a white cloud and upon the cloud one sate like unto the Sonne of man By these places we have good warrant to conceive that it was Christ that did appear unto Ezekiel in this Vision Quest But seeing Christ was not yet incarnate why is he here presented in the likenesse of man Answ 1. Because in his divine nature hee is invisible and being to manifest himself he appeared in the form of man as being most suitable to the nature of man 2. It was a prefiguration of his incarnation that in the fulnasse of time his Divine nature should assume our flesh into the unity of his person 3. That
flesh then went out glory John 1.14 and grace Vers 16. Then was Sol in nube the most glorious Rain-bow that ever was or shall be in the world he was not a signe of peace but our Peace Ephes 2.14 By his blood we are brought nigh for he is our peace 2. God hath his dayes of Rain When the flood was then there was rain to purpose forty dayes together If God hath rained bread Exod. 16. he hath rain'd wrath Job 20.23 snares storms fire brimstone Psal 11. God rains blood upon kingdomes Ezek. 38.22 I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood and I will rain upon him and his bands and the many people with him over-flowing rain great hailstones fire and brimstone 3. That the Lord Christ in wrath remembers mercy he mingles mercy with judgement hee sits as Judge upon the Throne hee pronounces s●●tence against a sinfull kingdome executing the vengeance written against sinners and yet here hee is compassed with the Rain-bow shewing that hee will not utterly destroy the Jewes a remnant should be spared When the great deluge of water was drowning the world yet Noah and his were saved there was mercy in the midst of judgement and here is a Judge with a Rain-bow over his head to assure the godly they should not perish in this flood of wrath now powring out upon the Jews Jerome saith of the Bowe it is a sign of mercy and the covenant which God made with man that when it appeared in the cloud we might know we should not perish by a flood and much more when Christ sits in judgement with the Rain-bow about him may the godly know that they shall not perish by the wrath of God if the glory of his Majesty statelinesse of his Throne terror of his Justice and the greatnesse of his Power do at any time discourage us wee must looke at the Rain-bow round about him and remember his Throne is compassed with mercy It 's said of the Jews when they see the Rain-bow they go forth confesse their sins but will not look upon it Confession of sins or any duty whatsoever will do us no good unlesse wee look upon the Bowe the mercy of Christ now was a storm and in it a Rain-bowe for the Prophet and godly to looke at it 's said in the Text the Bowe in the cloud in the day of rain then it 's a rainy day when God rains snares fire and brimstone and horrible tempest upon the wicked even then the bow is in the cloud and the righteous should look for it and look to it they should remember the covenant and mercy of it Is it not a rainy and stormy time now is not this great Prince angry with the kings and kingdomes of the earth doth he not frown chide and smite and that with deadly strokes in many places Let us look at the Rainbow now and know if there should come an overflowing scourge a deluge of wrath upon the world yet the Noahs shall be arked and safe the righteous shall be hid Christ will manifest mercy to them Saith John Rev. 4.2 I was in the Spirit and behold a Throne was set in heaven and there was a Rain-bow round about the Throne no sooner was John in the Spirit but he saw the Throne and the Rain-bow let us now be in the Spirit look with eyes of faith and wee shall see the Throne him sits on it and the bow round about him and then though kingdomes lie under the floods of errors superstition and ungodlinesse though drown'd in troubles and blood yet wee shall see God and Christ in a way of love and mercy towards us 4. That Justice and Mercy do compasse the Throne of Christ there was brightnesse round about and the bow was round about go to Christs Throne any way there is nothing but justice for the sinner unlesse penitent and believing and if such nothing but mercy This was the appearance of the likenesse of the Glory of the Lord and when I saw it I fell upon my face and I heard a voyce of one that spake Here is the conclusion of the Vision and in it wee have the scope of all was presented to the Prophets view and it is to manifest the infinite glory of God and then followes a double effect First upon sight of it he fell upon his face And Secondly He heares a voyce and so a fit pass … is made to that which followes The first thing is the manifestation of Gods glory a●● 〈◊〉 glory of God is considerable 1. In God himself in the Divine 〈◊〉 and there it is infinite glorious exceeding glory 2. In the creation as it is expressed and opened in the volume of the creatures there Gods glory is greatly seen Isa 6.3 The earth is full of his glory the Hebrew is the fulnesse of the earth is his glory the world is glorious and filled with Gods glory it 's nothing else but Gods glory interpreted and opened unto us in the creatures Quid est mundus nisi Deus explicatus and divine providence about them 3. In divine dispensations towards his Church and people Gods glory is in the firmament in all the creatures but more specially and fully in the Church Psal 29.9 In his Temple doth every one speake of his glory there it is most visible affecting and provoking of every one to speak In the world few take notice of it but in the Temple every one sees it and speaks of it the world is God opened and so glorious the Church is Christ opened and so very glorious this made David long to be in the Sanctuary when hee was in the Wildernesse and why so to see thy power and thy glory Psal 63.2 Could not David see them in the heavens in the mountains in the goodly Cedars and other works of God Yes but not as in the Sanctuary and therefore hee saith to see thy power and glory so as I have seen thee in thy Sanctuary there I have seen thee otherwise then ever elsewhere there he saw the King upon his Throne and in his glory The glory of God in each of these is held forth in this Vision in some measure there was the Spirit in the wheels a fire within by which the glory of the divine nature appeared there was a whirlewind a cloud fire brightnesse living creatures wheels moving severall ways which represent the glory of God in the world and government of it there was a firmament and a throne one sitting upon it surrounded with a Rain-bow which sets out the glory of God in his severall dispensations towards his Church both in his judgements mercies and government thereof A Question is moved Whether our Prophet saw the glory of God The Answer is It was the appearance of the likenesse of the glory of the Lord he doth not say hee saw God in his essence it 's acknowledged by most that we cannot see Gods essence while wee are Pilgrims on earth In
vid. ●●b de viden Deum Hom. 2. 2. q. 174. 175. and absent in the flesh Augustine and Aquinas are of opinion that Moses and Paul saw God in his essence but they were men and not without their errors for had they seen Gods essence their faith had ceased being swallowed up in vision The School-man would help it thus the light of glory in them had not a permanent being but was given them transitively Esse perman●ns per modum transeuntis But this answer will not bear up the opinion for faith and vision of glory cannot consist in a larger tract or in the least instant of times as in one man there cannot be a perfect and obscure light together the full light of the Sun and least degree of darknesse cannot at once be in the eye And farther if they saw the essence of God they had not the act of faith but evidence for if a man had seen Rome and after remembers it Non habet fidem sed evidentiam de eo quod vidit he saith not he believes there is such a City but hee hath seen it and so of Gods essence It must not be granted that ever any saw Gods essence you have incontrollable authority for it Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time Durand saith these words are to be understood exclusively 1. Of corporeall vision for with a bodily eye none ever did or shall see God 2. Of intellectuall naturall Vision because a naturall understanding cannot attain unto the cleer vision of God 3. Of the vision of comprehension from all created understandings though Angels and Saints in heaven see God yet not comprehensively and 1 Tim. 6.16 whom no man hath seen nor can see there 's a deniall both of the fact and the possibility Aust himself confesseth in l. 2. de Trin. C. 16 17 18. That the substance of God is not ullo modo corporaliter visibilem not to be seen at all with the eyes of flesh and the rule of School-men touching visions and apparitions is infallible that the nature of God is not seen with the eyes of the body but only some corporeall thing is exhibited which being visibly seen or sensibly perceived God is invisibly represented to the understanding Al. Halcus But Moses saw God face to face Exod. 33.11 So Jacob saw God face to face Gen. 32. Answ Those Patriarchs and Prophets that are said to see God saw him in divers resemblances and this is an unanswerable argument that they never saw Gods essence for that is pure immixt alwayes alike neither standing nor sitting having no parts no shape or likenesse to any thing therefore saith Athenasius those Fathers saw God in some creature Deum non fuiss ab antiquis p●r●bus v●sum nost 〈◊〉 assumptio●e creatu ae secundum Deitatem vero esse 〈◊〉 v sio●●em not in his own nature for it is invisible Again this phrase of seeing God face to face in the Hebrew dialect imports two things First Familiarity Secondly Perspicuity 1. Familiarity they had familiar converse with God Deut. 5.4 the Lord talketh with you face to face you asked him questions and he gave you answers and it 's evident that this is intended in the phrase Exo. 33.11 The Lord spake to Moses face to face as a man speaks with his friend Moses questioned it with God and God most friendly answered him So in Numb 12.8 Mouth to mouth will I speak with him it notes the presentiality and familiarity of God with Moses 2. Perspicuity cleernesse they saw God face to face that is comparatively others saw God in dreames and visions which were more obscure but these saw God more cleerly had more illustrious visions of God they saw Gods back-parts these saw Gods face and the phrase is used in the New Testament 1 Cor. 13.12 Then shall wee see face to face that is more fully and perfectly then here but whether wee shall see the divine essence in patria in heaven is questionable Chrysost Hom. 14. on John saith That before the incarnation the Son of God was Angelis invisibilis and if they in their glory saw not the divine nature of Christ it 's like wee shall not Whether Christ saw the Father or Holy Ghost with the eyes of his body is questionable if some doubt it others deny it Halens grants that the soul of Christ saw God perfectly from his conception but hee saith not the eye of his body saw him Aquinas saith that glorified eyes shall see God in that manner as now our eyes do see the life of man life not seen with a bodily eye as a thing visible by it self but by the intervention of something else and so accidentally becomes sensible it 's our understanding not the eye reacheth life and so in God But in 1 John 3. we shall see him as hee is Answ He speaks of a new and unutterable way of seeing God Wee shall see him as hee is to be seen mediante lumine gloriae the beams of the Sun so fill the eye that wee cannot behold the nature of it and whether it be so in heaven wee shall not know till wee come there let us get holinesse and then wee shall see him will resolve this doubt Observ 1. That all the glory is seen of God in this life any wayes is but the appearance and likenesse of the glory of God There was much and great glory in this vision there is more in the world in the creatures more in the Church and yet all this is only a shadow and a small appearance of the glory of God If we should see ten thousand Torches lighted up in a dark night they make a glorious light yet are they nothing to the light of the Sun when that comes torch-light star-light seem appearances of light rather then light it self So when the glory of God shall be revealed it will darken all other glory and there was not so great a difference between the light in Goshen and darknesse in Egypt as there will be between the glory of God and that glory now appeares in the world The glory of God is neither expressible or comprehensible by any or all the creatures The glory that Isaiah saw on the earth and that Ezekiel saw in the heavens did not expresse the thousand part of this glory and neither heaven not earth are able to comprehend the same 2. See the infinite goodnesse of the Lord that will expose that to the eyes of his servants which is so deare unto him his own glory Precious things of Princes and great ones are not common for the view of all but choyce friends favorites shall see them God hath nothing more precious then his glory yet this shall his choyce friends and favourites see and because they cannot see it in the perfection of it God will draw a picture of it with his own hand and hold forth to the eyes of his here Ezekiel had an appearance of
the acquaintance of wicked men the Prophet Micah will give you reason for it Chap. 7.4 The best of them is a brier the most upright is sharper then a thorne hedge You think some of them are faire men have good natures good parts great places and you may bee intimate with them lean upon them and get good by them if not doe good to them but you are deceived saith he the best of them for wit parts birth breeding place is a brier yea the most upright those that are civill What shall you what can you have frō a Scorpion but aculeum vulnus venenum clam palam insidiabuntur Somper lanam saepe vitam perdunt When one commended Julian the Cardinall to Sigismund the Emperour he answered Tamen Romanus est And so when any wicked man is commended to you answer Tamen sentis est that have a form of godlinesse and walk according to their light even they are sharper then a thorn hedge And because it is incident to the nature of man to minde great ones and seeke their acquaintance he speakes in the verse before of Princes Judges and great men and beats men off from looking after leaning upon them the sheep run to the hedge for shade in the heat and shelter in the storm but what 's the issue If they eseape with their lives yet they goe off with rent garments and if the best of them bee briers what are the worst of them When David was become a Courtier he met with a spear and found Saul sharper then a thorn hedge his spirit was vext with him and no marvell wicked men vex the spirit of God who hath more patience and wisdome then man who is without all corruption and altogether holy yet his spirit is vexed with them Isa 63.10 Therefore the Spirit of God counsels us what acquaintance to seek Job 22.21 Acquaint thy selfe with God and be at peace and thereby good shall come unto thee he will not be a brier or thorne to run into thy hand he will not vex thy spirit trust him he will not deceive or disappoint thee 5. See what fruit to look for from them fruits sutable to their nature 1 Sam. 24.13 Wickednesse proceedeth from the wicked it is a proverb and they have much truth and strength in them and it was ancient then and in all ages hath been made good observ'd that wickednesse comes from the wicked by it David cleares himselfe taxes his malicious enemies and confutes Saul himselfe As for me I am accused to be a seditious and traiterous fellow a man that seekes thy life O Saul thou hast followers and flatterers about thee to exasperate thee against me that put thee on to hunt me as a Partridge on the mountain and to spill my blood but I am no such man as they pretend and thou conceivest I had thee at advantage was counselled to take away thy life and could have done it but wickednesse was not in me I cut off the lap of thy Coat when I could have cut off thy Head I will make thee judge who is the wicked man those that accuse mee thou that pursutest the soule of an innocent man or my selfe that have spared thee having such advantage Wickednesse proceeds from the wicked if I had been a wicked subject as thou and others thought thy life had gone but thy Courtiers thy Counsellers are wicked yea and thou art wicked and nothing but wickednesse comes from you and that proceeds as light from the Sunne water from the fountaine breath from the nostrils Christ tells us wee must not look for good from them Matth. 7.16 Doe men gather grapes of thorns or figges of thistles If you looke for such fruit you will be deceived they may grow green as the vine and figge-tree but their fruit is different what fruit have Papists and Prelaticall ones brought forth in Church or State these many yeares corrupt trees cannot beare good fruit briers thornes brambles may bring fruit for Gadarens and swine not for Christ and his Disciples Judg. 9. The Olive tree had its fatnesse the Figge tree its sweetnesse and good fruit the Vine its pleasant wine they would not leave their places for promotion For usually when men are promoted they lose of their excellencie the Olive trees Figge trees Vines they lose of their fatnesse if not all their fatnesse of their sweetnesse if not all their sweetnesse but what had the bramble fire and fire to consume the Cedars of Lebanon brambles are of aspiring nature and when they are got up they fire States and Kingdomes 6. Then it 's no great losse when wicked men are taken away when briers and thorns are cut down and Scorpions killed who is damnified by it Spina sunt pestes terrae frugum morbi Plin. wicked men are the very plagues of the earth they suck away the sweet from the Vine the fat from the Olive It was said of Nero that he was venenum terrae and when that pitcher was broken it was gain not losse matter for praise not mourning the Husband-man is not grieved when the grieving thorn and pricking thistle are cut out of his corn Prov. 11.10 When the wicked perish there is shouting shouting on earth that justice is done his wickednesse at an end the Church and State eas'd of such a burthen rid of such a thorn and shouting in hell Isa 14.9 When Jehoiakim died there was no lamentation made for him hee was a wicked and worthlesse King his carkasse was no better then the body of an Asse and hee had the buriall of an Asse drawn and cast out in the high-way or ditches Jer. 22.18 19. hee had an infamous buriall and such saith Olimpiodorus is the end of every Magistrate or Minister that teaches and governs well but lives ill his end is infamous hee is buried in infamy but godly men are of great worth Heb. 11.38 the world was not worthy of them those precious ones mentioned there and those are living now God valued and values above the world godly men are the Pillars of the earth they are the marrow blood and soul of the world the world languishes and lies adying when they are pull'd away Moses Exod. 32.10 held Gods hands Moses is a man that hath power in earth and in heaven hee is a man that when there is a danger can go up to the heavens and so put the Lord to it that he saith Let mee alone that I may destroy this wicked people and I will make thee a great nation he would have hired him to have come to an accommodation men are now upon accommodating but a Moses will not accommodate no not with God himself when his people are in danger but he will have a blessing upon good terms hee will have Gods wrath removed and a reconciliation between heaven and earth or else Moses will never be quiet with God what a losse is such a man after his death if God had not
the wicked and that for speciall ends I have set thee in the midst of the nations and God had peculiar ends in it The nations and countrey about was full of ignorance Idolatry and prophaneness God recorded his name at Jerusalem set his worship there and them in the midst of the nations that they might make known the true God the true Religion the true way of Worship that they might by their holy lives win those that were without bring them in to serve the God of Israel and had the Jewes been consciencious of their wayes faithfull and spirituall in their worship they might have prevail'd much with the nations to have turned from their Idols and other sins to the living God at least have convinc'd them of the evill of their own wayes and the excellencie of Gods wayes Therefore Moses used this Argument to perswade the Jewes to keep Gods Statutes Deut. 4.6 Keep and do them saith he for this is your wisdome and understanding in the sight of the nations which shall bear all those statutes and say Surely this great nation is a wise and understanding people Examples of ci●●es and nations are convincing and perswasive Orators if they be ●●lly ●eakons on a hill whose light extends far great cities have influence into all the counties and countreys round about they came from all places to Jerusalem from Sheba 1 King 10.1 from Ethiopiae Acts 8.27 from Parthia Mosopotamia Lybia Rome and many other parts Acts 2.9 10. and what they saw and heard at Jerusalem that fastned upon them What is done in great cities is much observed and goes forth to the ends of the earth Rev. 17.5 Babylon the Mother of Harlots and abominations of the earth 4. Ingratitude is a sin that provokes heaven it self it caused God the giver to upbraid Jerusalem the receiver I set thee in the midst of the nations I made thee the head put honour upon thee call'd thee my city was thy defence glory strength I gave thee my Judgements and Statutes and what hast thou done corrupted thy self corrupted the nation changed my judgements into wickednesse and rejected them this troubled the Lord greatly in all ages Deut. 32.6 Do you thus requite the Lord Oh foolish people and unwise is not he thy father that hath bought thee hath hee not made thee c. and notwithstanding all that God had done for them and was to them yet they corrupted bespotted themselves dealt perversly and crookedly with God so Isai 1.2 Heare O heavens and give eare O earth I have brought up children and they have rebelled against mee Oxen and Asses were more respective of their owners then they were of their God and therefore God upbraids them with it God had done much for that people his Law Prophets Temple Worship Miracles choycest blessings of heaven and earth were for them and yet they were ingratefull therefore God calls heaven and earth to witnesse against them how unreasonable they were in their carriage towards the Lord so in Jer. 2.12 he puts it higher Be astonished O yee heavens at this be horribly afraide very desolate and why should there be such a change in the heavens because Gods people had made a dreadfull change on earth God had been a fountain of living waters unto them fill'd them with comforts of all sorts made them green and flourishing and now they had forsaken him for puddle and broken cisterns of their own ingratitude troubles heaven and earth Bernard saith mans ingratitude troubled Christ more then his crosse nails whippings reproaches yea his death for Christ to become man to suffer all for man and he to be unthankfull this pierced him to the heart most and when God doth much for kingdomes and cities and they prove ingratefull it puts God into an upbraiding way Isa 5.4 I did so and so for my Vineyard Oh what could have been done more I will take away the hedge thereof and it shall be eaten up trod downe laid waste it shall have briers and no rain shall fall upon it 5. Those have the name and face of Gods people may become worse then Heathens Jerusalem changed Gods Statutes into wickednesse that was ill but she did it more then the nations which was exceeding ill hence you find Ezek. 16.46 47 48. that the sins of Jerusalem exceeded the Samaritans and Sodomites Thou hast not walked after their wayes nor done after their abominations but as if that were a very little thing thou wast corrupted more then they in all thy wayes their sins were inconsiderable to Jerusalems and because Sodoms sins being so great notorious as that they fetched fire from heaven and God could forbear them no longer it would hardly be received that Jerusalems sins were worse then Sodoms the Lord swears to it As I live saith the Lord God Sodom and her daughters have not done as thou and thy daughters have done the nations and countreys about never sinned so desperately against God as those professed his name and went for his people and you have the sentence of heaven for it Jer. 2.10.11 Passe over the Iles of Shittim and see send unto Kedar and consider diligently and see if there be such a thing hath a nation changed their gods which are yet no gods but my people hath changed their Glory for that which doth not profit the turpitude of their fact is fully set out it was such as could not be parallel'd among Heathens inquiry was made the report given in that the Gentiles changed not their gods they would not alter their lawes and worship they had from men but the Jewes parted with their glory when they would not part with their shame they let go their Religion which was divine Hos 9.10 and without any just cause changed Gods judgements and statutes into wickednesse into that which neither did nor could profit they were changelings chopt away heaven for earth God for Idols and his worship for mens inventions this made the Lord say of them Jer. 3.5 Behold thou hast spoken and done evill things as thou couldest What could they do worse then let the infinite glorious wise most holy and blessed God go for Idols and Idolatrous worship when the heathens would not let their gods goe that were of base and corruptible materialls made by the hands and art of men that could neither see heare or help them What could Manasses doe worse then he did 2 King 21.11 VER 7 8. Therefore thus saith the Lord God Because you multiplyed more then the Nations that are round about you and have not walked in my Statutes neither have kept my Judgements neither have done according to the judgements of the Nations that are round about you 8. Therefore thus saith the Lord Behold I even I am against thee and will execute judgements in the midst of thee in the sight of the Nations c. THe 7th verse is of the nature of the sixt and hath in it motives unto God to proceed in judgement
a chiefe praise in Israel and fit you for an eternal weight of glory Your Highnesse most humble servant VVILLIAM GREENHILL To all Wel-willers of TRUTH Especially to the Authours and Fautors of the Expository Lectures in this Citie IN most Arts and Sciences are difficulties in Divinity are depths Plato Aristotle Euclid have their nodos and the Scriptures have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in them are dark sayings Psal 78.2 Riddles Ezek. 17.2 Parables Matth. 13.35 Wonders Psal 119 18. great things Hos 8.12 things hard to be uttered Heb. 5.12 hard to be understood 2 Pet. 3.16 Mysteries Mat. 13.11 hidden manifold Wisdom 1 Cor. 2.7 Ephes 3.10 the deep things of God 1 Cor. 2.10 Much is in it that God hath intermixt the holy Scriptures with some difficulties Hereby we are led up to conceive there be infinite depths in God which eternity must take us up to study They convince us of our incapacity of high things Joh. 16.12 They prevent our undervaluing of divine Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 flesh and blood is very apt upon reading and apprehension of easiness to lay aside choyce Workes God hath therefore hid some truths under the rocks laid them deepe that so there might be digging and searching Prov. 2.4 as for treasures Difficulties quicken and whet endeavours sloth is a great gulfe which hinders men from coming at the truth and it made the Father fear Ego vereor ne per nimiam negligentiam stoliditatem cordis non solum velata sint nobis divina volumina sed etiam signata Origen In Verbo Dei abundat quod perfectus comedat quod parvulus sugat Falg lest thereby the Lords Book should not only be shut but also sealed up Ingenuous spirits when they heare of hard things stir livelily and what they get by sorest labour is most precious The rocky and knotty things in the Prophets and Apostles suffice to exercise the greatest abilities and graces which are seated in humane nature they keepe mens thoughts from swelling into a conceit of omnisciency they make us long to be where wee shall know as we are known 1 Cor. 13.12 and in the mean time to pray with David Open thou our eyes Sine Deo impossibile est discere Deum Iren. that wee may see the wonders of thy Law hard things drave David to the Lord he knew that without God hee could not understand the things of God whose glory it is both to conceale and reveale a thing Prov. 25.2 Mat. 16.17 Many have sued to God for further discovery of his minde and have attempted to help us in Scripture difficulties but all dark things are not yet cleared nor all depths yet sounded To this day a vaile is upon the heart of the Jewes in reading the old Testament 2 Cor. 3.14 15. and surely the vaile is not fully removed from the hearts of us Christians we have seen very dimly into sundry things not only of Paul Peter and John but of Moses and the Prophets especially of this Prophet Ezekiel who hath therefore been past over both by Writers and Readers as dark difficult and lesse usefull Robert Stephen mentions one Respons ad censu Theol. Paris in praef and that a Sorbonist who had liv'd above fifty yeeres and knew not what the new Testament meant and have not sundry persons among us lived their fifty yeeres and not known what Ezekiel meant Hath he not been a Book clasped and sealed unto them If this Hieroglyphicall Prophet have been a wonder to all for his Visions yet he hath been known to few by reason of the abstrusenesse of his Visions which have kept off great Rabbies from imploying their talents to open them If weaknesse and error be found in these poore labours of mine J intreat you to remember J have beene among propheticall deepes and difficulties which may plead for him who knowing his own insufficiencies came invita Minerva to this taske If any light appeare for the better understanding of these aenigmaticall things I must say with Daniel There is a God in Heaven which revealeth mysteries to him be all the glory My prayers shall be to him inlightneth every man which commeth into the world Dan. 2. that he would anoint your eyes with eye salve whereby you may daily see more into the great and glorious truths of God and those things which may strongly make for your eternall peace and comfort So prayeth Your Friend and Servant in the Lord W. G. The Introduction to the Work ALL Scripture being the breath of Gods Spirit 2 Pet. 1.21 2 Tim. 3.16 none can be Judge or Expounder of it but the same Spirit Men are only Indices veritatis they cannot bring a sense but shew you what is the sense of Scripture Those are called to be Expositors must not fetch senses ab extra but take what is in the bowels of the Text and hold forth unto others A work which requires ability wisdome diligence and faithfulness Ability to inquire into the originalls wisdome to compare Scriptures consider circumstances and to discerne the verity spirituality and propriety of Texts and Phrases diligence to dig and search after truth which lieth deep and hid faithfulness to give out Truths being found with their own lustre not humane tincture Whosoever doth thus shall purchase favour in Heaven if not esteem on earth Expository work is ancient and honourable Ancient as Nehemiahs time Chap. 8.8 the Levites gave the sense of the Law they expounded it In those dayes the Jewes had their Perushim Interpreters which was above five hundred yeers before Christ what wayes they interpreted Scripture Helvicus you may reade in Shindl. Pentagl page 1491. and in Weems his Christian Synagogue 2 book chap. 1. pag. 221. It 's also Honourable for the Lord Christ was an Expositor Mark 4.34 hee expounded all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 24.27 hee interpreted and vers 32. hee opened the Scriptures Paul also was an Expositor Act. 28.23 he expounded This work being so ancient and honourable let it finde the more acceptance with you Some would have Expositors only give the literall sense without observation or application of any thing if all people could prophesie were skilfull in Scriptures as Ezra mighty as Apollo I could like it But because many truths lie so deep and so closely couch'd as all cannot easily discern or extract them it is necessary to give the sense and draw forth points observable yet with a brievous perspicuity and perspicuous brevity The literall sense may be strong meat for some when observations may be milk for others That course shall I take and so I come to the Title The Antiquity Scope and Occasion of Writing Nature Benefit and Parts of this Prophecie handled in the Title The Book of the Prophet Ezekiel FEw of the other sacred Books have this Title in the originall prefixed The word Sephar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a book signifieth any writing
depart from Israel Trausiit prophetia ab Israele Shind which was the saddest blow one of them that ever Israel had All the rest were Prophets of the first Temple and among them was our Prophet Ezekiel and Daniel though they were in the captivity for the first Temple was not yet destoyed and they had lived at Jerusalem among the Prophets and the Prophets of the former Temple it is observed had the largest visions and the fullest discoveries of the minde of God more was discovered in the first Temple then in the second till Christ his comming for the second Temple had Prophets but forty yeers after it was built and the first Temple had Prophets for four hundred and thirty yeeres The Prophets to speak for the honour of this our Prophet were all honourable men men of great esteem and worth they were men of God as it is said 1 King 17.24 I know thou art a man of God Ish Elohim a man of the Gods a man of God the Father a man of God the Son a man of God the Holy Ghost hee had to do with all a man of Gods counsell a man of Gods protection a man of Gods countenancing a man of God that stood for God a man of God that would plead the cause of God in the corruptest times against the desperate enemies A Prophet was a man of God That they were very honourable you shall find by that passage 1 Sam. 10.11 Is Saul also among the Prophets It is a Proverbiall speech and noteth a thing that is very rare and unusuall What is Saul that was a man of mean condition Saul that was erewhile seeking his fathers Asses is Saul now come to so high and honourable a condition as to be a mong the Prophets This was matter of wonder The Prophets they were so honourable and in so high an esteem that it was counted a strange thing for any to come to that dignity and preferment that were not of the Propheticall race the Tribe of Levi or such as were in order to those holy functions They were likewise men priviledged Psal 105.15 Touch not mine Anointed and do my Prophets no harm Anointed is the same with Prophet as Expositors observe though it is carryed otherwise in the generall apprehension of men for Kings but anointed here is the same with Prophet They were anointed when the Holy Ghost was given unto them and they were called unto their Office this was their anointing of God and they must not be touched nor harmed Gen. 20.7 saith God to Abimelech Give the man his wife for he is a Prophet he is an honourable man he is a man of high account in mine eyes Princes must not wrong a Prophet God spake to a Prince Give him his wife for he is a Prophet the greatest person in the world should not dare to touch a Prophet that is a man so honourable a man of God and so gifted and sent of him to such great imployments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Further a Prophet was called in Scripture a Seer 1 Sam. 9.9 Let us go to the Seer for he is now called a Prophet that was before time called a Seer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that i from the Hebrew word to see and not barely to see but to see exactly curiously throughly into things The Prophets saw through the clouds they saw into the heavens they saw into the very counsell of God Isa 30.10 Which say to the Seers See not you see too much the meaning is you see too acurately why do you see so and tell us such things So Abraham he was a Prophet you heard before he was likewise a Seer Joh. 8.56 Abraham rejoyced to see my day he saw it distinctly he saw it so as it affected him he saw it and was glad There is besides this word another name in the Hebrew which the Prophets had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that was Chozeh Isa 30.10 That say to the Prophets Prophecie not the Hebrew is La chozim to those that foresee and foretell things you have a conjuncture of these three in one verse 1 Chron. 29.29 They are written in the book of Samuel Haroah the Seer and in the book of Nathan Hannabi the Prophet and in the book of Gad Hachozeh the Seer The word cometh of Chazah to contemplate to see from which root comes our English word to gaze and so it is interpreted Isa 47.13 Star-gazers this only by the way Our Prophet had the honour to be a Seer as well as a Prophet therefore verse 1. it is said I saw visions I had the honour to see visions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and visions of a God These Titles of Seer and Prophet as they set out the dignity so likewise they point out the duty of the person As they were Seers they were the eyes of the Church Oculi Ecclesiae to see good coming or evill that they might incourage them upon the one and draw them to repentance upon the other As they were Prophets they were os Domini the mouth of the Lord to speak to the people whatsoever the Lord himself did make known to them All this then doth but serve to breed in you an honourable esteem of this our Prophet hee is a man of God hee is a man honourable among the rest of the Prophets hee is a Seer he is the eye of the Church he is the mouth of God Having thus opened unto you the Title I shall now shew to you 1. The scope and occasion of this Prophet 2. The nature and condition of it 3. The seasonableness of this Prophecie for this time 4. What benefit you are like to have by this Prophet and then divide the Prophecie in generall and fall into the Chapter 1. For the scope and occasion of this Prophecy In generall it is to shew the certainty of Jerusalems destruction and the seventy yeers captivity which were now in question and so to confirm the Prophecy of Jeremy being of the same argument Jeremy having prophecied of the captivity of Jerusalem for seventy yeers the utter ruine of the City and Temple many both in Jerusalem and Babylon the captivity being begun for now Ezekiel and divers were in Babylon murmured and complained of Jeremy that he was a false Prophet that hee had not the Spirit of God that hee had misled the people that he had brought them into bondage by his fair words put them upon yeelding unto the King of Babylon and betrayed them You shall finde false Prophets bestirred themselves and opposed his prophecy both in Sion and in Babylon as Jer. 28.1 2 3. Hananiah being at Jerusalem when Jeremiah was in the house of the Lord in the presence of the Priests and of all the people saith he Thus speaketh the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel saying I have broken the yoak of the King of Babylon within two full yeers will I bring again into this place all the vessels
chiefest in malignancy and opposition this you shall see 2 Chron. 36.14 15 16. All the chief of the Priests and the people transgressed very much they polluted the house of the Lord they mocked the messengers of God despised his words and misused his Prophets this was the practice of those times Was there ever any great disorder corruption in the Church or any sedition treason almost in the State but some of the chief of the Priests have had their hands in it When the Calf was set up in Moses his dayes Aaron the Priest had his head and hand in it when David was a dying Adonijah makes the sedition and stir in the Kingdome but Abiathar the Priest had a great hand in it Both in the State and in the Church you may well observe that the chief of the Priests have had their hands in the evill in the trouble And have not we now a malignant party that oppose the reformation intended and begun Do they not set themselves with all their might against the Ieremies Daniels Ezekiels and Rechabites of the Land that will not defile themselves There is such a party you all know that do oppose godliness that despise the Prophets scorne the Saints make sad the hearts of the righteous and strengthen the hands of wickedness therefore this prophecy may be seasonable enough in regard of that malignant party that doth oppose too openly 3. They had lost their countrey their choysest comforts they were in captivity and constant jeopardy of their lives if they provoked the Babylonians they were ready to fall upon them and root them out presently and those at Ierusalam were in danger every day to have their liberties estates consciences Religion and lives taken from them And are not we like unto them and are not we even in a Land of liberty in a state of captivity Do not our estates our liberties our consciences our Religion our lives and all lie at the stake Wee are even in Babylon in the midst of Sion wee are in a sad and heavie condition therefore this Prophecy may be seasonable now considering our estate is so like to theirs 4. The times then were such that they loathed Manna ordinary and plain truths would not down unless truths were new and transcendent they were weary of them and slighted them Ieremy was too plain a Prophet for them too low and God gives them Ezekiel a dark and hard Prophet And is it not so in these dayes we have been fed with Manna so long that we loath Manna as a wormy thing If we have not something new unheard of transcendent we are weary wee think it not worth our going out of doors if so then here is a Prophet that may be sutable to these times and your desires God gave them this Prophet in a time of affliction and there was something in it for afflictions open mens understandings Vexatio dat intellectum and inlarge their capacities when people are under pressures then their understandings are quickest then they are most apprehensive therefore God gave them such a Prophet as might sute with their condition in exercising their parts and graces to the full when at the best Now is a time of affliction if your spirits be awakened and the bent of them be after high and hard things lo here are difficulties and transcendencies for you here are high things to draw up your thoughts to exercise your spirits be they never so choice and apprehensive One thing more for the seasonablenesse of this Prophet it is said heaven was open Ezekiel saw visions of God If ever God hath opened heaven since Christ now he hath done it in these sad times God hath now caused is causing you every day to see visions out of the Prophets and out of the Gospel These expository Lectures are openings of heaven and let out cleare and choice light unto you from heaven therefore seeing heaven is opened let visions of God be counted seasonable and become acceptable unto you But if this Prophet be so dark and difficult what is the benefit and fruit we shall have by him This is the next head wee are to come unto and the benfits of this Prophet are these the darker the Prophet is the more of God may you look for from him God dwelleth in darkness as well as in light Psalm 18.11 He made darknesse his secret place And Exod. 19.9 God came to Moses in a thick cloud Tenebrae sunt latibulum D●i and there Moses had the most of God Here God is coming to you in a dark Prophet and questionless you shall find much of God in him here you shall see much of Gods mercy in upholding and comforting the spirits of his people and providing for them in a strange land here you shall see much of Gods justice in punishing sinners for their sins and iniquities here you shall see much of Gods truth in fulfilling of prophecies here you shall finde much of Gods power in subverting of Kings and Kingdomes here you shall finde much of his manifold Wisdome in these dark visions here you shall finde more of God then you expect 2. This prophecy is an exact History of the time of the Jewes being in captivity in it you have many passages of Nebuchadnezzars reign and government of his acts abroad and at home and of Gods dealing with his people in the time of this their seventy yeers captivity Were not Daniel and Ezekiel extant wee should have such a great losse as the world could not tel how to repair it the acts of Gods dealing with his Church and people in that seventy yeers would be swallowed up in a Chaos of darkness 3. You shall see for what sins God subverteth and overthroweth Kingdomes and States In this Prophet you shall find that the Lord doth ruine glorious Churches great Cities mighty Kingdomes men of great renown families and posterities and the particular sins for which he doth it Namely for false worship Idolatry injustice uncleannesse prophaning of his Sabbaths contempt of his Word abuse of his Prophets and sins of that nature So that as it is Prov. 21.30 There is no wisdome no counsel nor understanding against the Lord. God will overthrow even Kings and their Councels Kingdoms with their Nobility and Gentry with their Magistrates and people God will overthrow them when he once sets upon such a worke such a designe There is no standing out against him 4. You shall see here also the different carriage betweene the godly and the wicked in times of Judgement When judgements are abroad in the world the inhabitants of the earth should learn righteousness but wicked men they grow more active against God more impudent more desperate and hard-hearted they combine and plot together to roote out the righteous this you shall see in this Prophecie And for the godly you shall finde that when judgements are neare and upon them they are mourning in secret they get together
they that feare God speake often one to another they fast they pray they redeeme the time they worke out their salvation with feare and trembling they give God no rest they will be at it at midnight In a word you shall finde the carriage of the godly to be exceeding contrary to the carriage of the wicked 5. Here you shall find Gods new Covenant wherein you shall see the riches of free grace God doing all both making the Covenant and performing it both commanding and giving what he doth command unto your soules 6. You shall finde that this Prophet is an Evangelicall Prophet for he points at Christ he will shew you where he is he will lead you to the Temple where you shall see Christ with his line in his hand and measuring out a Temple for the times of the Gospel measuring of his worship his worshippers and all that doth concerne the new Jerusalem Much of Christ will be found at least in the conclusion of this Prophet 7. You shall have a lively representation of the uncertainty of all things and of all conditions in this world In Lament 4.12 it is said there that the Kings of the earth and all the Inhabitants of the world would not have beleeved that the adversary and the enemy should have entred into the gates of Jerusalem None thought none of the Kings of the earth none of the Kings of Israel beleeved that ever Jerusalem which was so fortified by mountaines round about should be taken by the enemy But you shall see in this Prophet that even Jerusalem the Citie of God the Temple that was the glory of the world and Sion the perfection of beauty they are all laid wast Neither Prince Priest Prophet Nobles nor any are spared but all are destroyed all are carried into captivitie all are brought under the sonnes the precious sonnes of Sion are carried away into Babylon So that there is no place no condition no prerogative that can priviledge any from the hand of God where once sinne is come to a perfection Prov. 14.34 Righteousness exalteth a Nation but sinne is a reproach to any people Let them be Jewes or Gentiles let them be Kings Priests or Prophets when sin is growne to a height then the wrath of God comes to a perfection and God will lay a Sion wast God will raze a Temple God will carry a Iehojakin a Zedekiah Prince and Prophet Priest and People into captivitie Is Sion gone is the Temple razed is Ierusalem laid in the dust What confidence then can any Kingdome can any Citie have Let not England let not London be secure Feare and Tremble Repent of sinne Take heed of provoking God Looke beyond the Kingdomes of the earth Looke up to heaven and make sure of that Kingdome which cannot be shaken which cannot be taken from you Thus you have some of the benefits that are to come by this Prophet We are now to fall upon the generall division of the Prophecy In this Prophet you have 1. The Preface wherein is contained Gods appearing to Ezekiel his calling of him and strengthning of him in his office And these are laid downe in the three first Chapters 2. You have the Prophecy it selfe wherein you have these foure things 1. The destruction of the Iewes by the Babylonish captivitie with the causes thereof viz. their sinnes This is laid downe in the next 21. Chapters 2. Threatning of judgement and destruction to severall Nations that had insulted over the people of God being carried away captive and the hand of God being upon them these were the Ammonites the Moabites the Edomites the Philistines the Assyrians and Babylonians And this he doth from the 25. to the 33. Chapter 3. Sharpe reproving of the Iewes for their iniquitie for their hard-heartednesse for their not improving the hand of God upon them exhorting them to repentance he tels them of freedome some mercy and deliverance and after that againe of affliction and trouble that shall befall them And this he doth from the 33. to the 39. Chapter 4. A typicall Prophecy concerning Christ and spirituall freedome through him laid downe in the vision of the new Temple and of the new Ierusalem from the 39. Chapter to the end wherein there will be many glorious things made knowne in due time Thus you have the generall division of the Prophecy To come to the Chapter Ver. 1 2 3. Now it came to passe c. In this Chapter you have 1. Ezekiels first vision from the fourth verse to the end of the Chapter 2. In the three first verses you have 1. The time what yeare what moneth what day this vision was ver 1 2. 2. The place 1. generall the land of the Chaldeans 2. particular by the river of Chebar ver 3. 3. Together with this you have the occasion his being there among the Captives 3. The subject of this Vision Ezekiel Described 1. From his office a Priest 2. From his parentage the sonne of Buzi 4. The Author of this Vision God I saw visions of God such visions as came from God Now it came to passe c. Now The word in the Originall is And And it came to passe It seemes a strange beginning of a booke especially when it referres to nothing said or writ before There are many of the books of sacred Writ begin on this manner as Exodus Leviticus Numbers Iosuah Ruth Samuel Kings and divers others In historicall books it may note the series connect things antecedent with things consequent but in propheticall books it cannot note or make a connexion with things foregoing Jonas begins his Prophecy so and what was the antecedent to make up the connexion Here is the Quere and difficultie why the Prophet should begin his book on this manner And it came to passe Some satisfie the doubt thus They make it an idiome or proprietie of the Hebrew tongue to begin books with this particle And or Now and so they make nothing of it But surely this is not all there is something wrapped up in this Now or And Van. which may be of instruction and use to us Now or And it came to passe The Prophet doubtless was meditating upon the condition he was in meditating of the condition that he had been in Time was that we were at Jerusalem that we went with joy to the Temple to the solemne Assemblies that we heard the voyce of God that we saw his glory his beauty his power and his strength there Time was that we had communion with the Saints that we sung songs of Sion together with chearfulnes and with joy we had precious Ordinances honourable Sabbaths Sacrifices that did cheare our hearts and seale up pardon of our sinnes to us and intimate the good will of God in Christ to our soules wee sate under our Vines and under our fig-trees and were in safetie But now now we eate the bread of mourners wee drinke our own teares Now wee are deprived
as some call him who was the father of this Nebuchadnezzar the great that carried away Iehoiachin into captivity If it were the thirtieth yeer of that Monarchy it falls in with the thirty yeers since the eighteenth of Iosiah wherein the Law was found and the Passeover kept so that these two may stand together and there need be no jarring between Interpreters for this time In the fourth moneth It was not the Moneth Tebet or Thebeth as some will have it which answers to that we call Ianuary but the moneth Tamuz or Tammuz that which answereth to part of Iune and part of Iuly about the time we are now in for the Iewes were to reckon their moneths from April as Exod. 12.2 This shall be the beginning of moneths it shall be the first moneth of the yeer to you that moneth was Abib Nisan or Nissan and answereth to part of March and part of April now from thence this is the fourth moneth and falleth in with the latter end of Iune and beginning of Iuly In the fifth day of the moneth This I finde some do make to be the Sabbath day and it is very probable that it should be so for Chapt. 3.16 hee saith that at the end of seven dayes the Word of the Lord came unto him again Hence they collect that it is not likely that God would step over the Sabbath day and give Ezekiel visions upon another day and not upon that for if Ezekiel had had his visions upon another day the people should have been destitute of all the benefit they were so imployed in their works of building and planting and other accommodations for a captivity that they had no leasure to resort unto Ezekiel upon a week day therefore they strongly conclude that it was upon a Sabbath day in the latter end of the week From hence observe 1. That that time is not considerable wherein the Law of God is out of date the time was reckoned here from the eighteenth yeere of Josiah wherein the Law was found It was lost in Manassehs and Amons dayes till the eighteenth yeere of Josiah when being found it was brought forth for the comfort and instruction of the people for the worship and honour of God and from that punctum the Spirit of God reckons the time and begins the account When Gods Law is out of the way and his Worship down that is no considerable time at all in the eye of God Parties that are in the dark or dead wee do not reckon of their time One converted in his old age said I have been long in the world I have lived but a little time meaning since hee was converted the time before was incomputable The widow that liveth in pleasure the Apostle saith is dead while shee lives 1 Tim. 5.6 and the world is dead that hath not the Law the place is dead that hath not the Ordinances of God so long they have been but they have not lived they have not measured time and therefore the Spirit of God fixeth the account at the finding of the Law 2. The things here not being specified but left undetermined that God would have us observe the remarkable passages in Church and States when they fall out not one or two but many or all the chief as the eighteenth yeer of Josiah when the Law was found when that great passeover was kept when he and the people of God entred into a solemn covenant with God when the great reformation was made among them such great acts were taken notice of as also the changes in Babylon when the Chaldean Monarchy began when Nebuchadnezzar was put into the Throne and his head lifted up above others God would have us take notice of the chief acts of his mercy and providence at chief times Hosea 14.8 Ephraim shall say What have I to do any more with Idols There will be a great alteration then it will be a remarkable time said God I have heard him and observed him and then followeth Who so is wise and he shall undrstand these things prudent and he shall know them Now is a time of memorable emergents and they should be considered the famous things of 1640. 1641. ought to be had in everlasting remembrance a triennall Parliament resurrection of Religion Law and Gospel were found again Reformation begun Protestation and Covenants taken the Kingdomes united here and forain ones shaken in pieces 3 This makes for the truth and strength of our Prophets visions and prophecy for when exact particular times and places are set down that things were done in such a yeer of such a King such a moneth such a day of the moneth it addes weight to an ordinary History and when the Spirit of God shall so punctually determine the time to a yeer a moneth a day it is a strong seal to the truth of the visions and prophecy 4. See here from the fifth day that God hath a speciall care of his Sabbaths and of the spirituall good of his servants Of his Sabbaths that they shall not lie in the dark when they are in Babylon God will open heaven and appeare to a Prophet and give him visions upon a Sabbath day God will do it too upon a Sabbath day that so the people which were in a sad condition that laboured now in Brick and Clay again that were building planting taken up with secular affaires might have a seasonable opportunity for the good of their souls The Sabbath was made for man for the good of man and they found it so Though they be in Babylon they shall have a Prophet they shall have visions and visions upon a Sabbath day when they have liberty and opportunity to come to the Prophet to be instructed in these visions without prejudice to their Callings Ezekiel 1.1 2 c. As I was among the captives by the river Chebar that the heavens were opened and I saw visions of God In the fifth day of the moneth which was the fifth yeere of Jehoiaxhins captivity The Word of the Lord came expressly unto Ezekiel the Priest the sonne of Buzi in the land of the Chaldeans by the River Chebar and the hand of the Lord wast here upon him As I was among the captives by the river Chebar HEre is the place mentioned where the Prophet was and the occasion of his being in it Among the captives The originall s in the middest of the captivity the abstract being put for the concrete captives for captivity and this is ordinary in the Scripture as circumcision for cirumcised Phil. 3.3 Election for Elected Rom. 11.7 the election hath obtained that is the elected and here in the middest of the captivity is in the midst of the captives In the middest is not to be taken Geometrically and strictly as if he were exactly in the middest of them proportionably every way considered but in the middest is to be understood among the captives they were captives and so was he As Josh 7.13
There is an accursed thing in the middest of you that is amongst you By the river Chebar This is the particular place The notes upon your quarto Bibles do say that this river Chebar was part of Euphrates Rabbins and others say it is Euphrates it self But if it were Euphrates why should the Spirit of God change that name which was known and take a name which was unknown Surely the Spirit of God would have said Euphrates and not Chebar If it be a part or channel of Euphrates why kept it not one of those names that is mentioned Gen. 2. Gihon Pison Hiddekel Gihon it cannot be for that river runneth toward Ethiopia Hiddekel it is most likely to be which lyeth in those parts but that river kept its name and was not changed as appeareth Dan. 10.4 where it is said He was by the ●iver Hiddekel if Pison be it some reason must be given of deserting that name and imposing one new and unheard of Interpreters therefore conceive this Chebar to be a river of it self rising from the mountain Masius running through Mesopotamia and emptying it self into Euphrates at a place where is a Town called Chebar whence the denomination probably may come but rather it is called Chebar because of the plenty of waters that are in it and for the plenty of grasse that is upon the banks thereof Neer this river had the Jewes their habitation and they were placed together Chapt. 3.15 I came to them of the captivity that dwelt by the river Chebar Here they were placed because the Jewes were odious to the Babylonians as of old they were to the Egyptians and dwelt distinct from them In Salmanassars time when the ten Tribes were carried into Assyria they were put in Halah and Habor by the river of Gozan 2 King 18. The Rabbins call this river Sabbation the Sabbaticall river because it flowed not but desisted from its ordinary course upon the Sabbath day and Josephus saith that it was certain this river did constantly forsake its course upon the Sabbath day God thereby miraculously intimated to them that he would have them keep a Sabbath though in a strange land These captives were fixed by Gozan or by Chebar which is the particular place the next is the generall place the land of the Chaldeans Chaldea was the countrey of Abraham hee went from Vr of the Chaldeans Genesis Chapt. 11. verse 31. and Stephen calls it Mesopotamia Acts 7.2 Abraham was in Mesopotamia before hee dwelt in Charran It lay on the north of Chaldea between Euphrates and Tygris in verse 4. it is said Abraham came out of the land of the Chaldeans and dwelt in Charran these two Chaldea and Mesopotamia were promiscuously taken sometimes being neer together and sometimes distinctly The chief city in Chaldea was Babylon now called Bagdat from Baga which in Arabick signifieth a garden because it stood in a pleasant place and had many gardens in it it was built by Nimrod that mighty hunter the first King that ever the world had when the tower in it was built up nine thousand one hundred threescore and four paces from the ground which is above nine of our miles then it pleased God from heaven to confound their language Quia ibi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and of one made threescore and twelve hence was it called Babel Gen. 11.9 because God there confounded the language of all the earth and their work together This countrey was called the land of Nimrod Mic. 5.6 Quae excussit and the land of Shinar Gen. 10.10 which signifies shaking because it shook their language and scattered the people inhabited it out of the land It is branded by Zachary for the dwelling place of wickednesse Zac. 5.11 Out of this land of Chaldea it is conceived by some came the three Wise men who offered the gifts to Christ for the Chaldeans were the chiefest Astrologers and exactest Astronomers that were in the world as you may observe Dan. 2. These Chaldeans were a martiall people very cruell Jer. 6.22 23. A people cometh from the North countrey and a great nation Jer. 50.41.42 they shall lay hold on bow and speare they are cruell and have no mercy their voyce roareth like the Sea c. They were polluted with abominable Idolatries superstitions sorceries inchantments and all manner of prophanenesse into this land and among this people did God bring the Jews who had been so dear to him Babylon was the seat of the chiefest and greatest Monarch of the earth thither came a continuall conflux of people from all parts of the world to whose scornes and wrongs the Jewes were daily exposed they said These are the holy people these are they come out of the holy land come and sing us one of the songs of Zion and so prophane was Belshazzar as that hee took the holy vessells to quaffe and carouse in into this land were they brought and the godly were constrained to heare and see the blasphemies and abominations that were amongst them and to beare the scornes and frownes of all commers Thus have I opened to you the particular place by the river Chebar and the generall place the land of Chaldea Let us see now what observations will arise from hence 1. Observe that God is not tied to places let the place be never so holy let it be the holy Land the holy City the holy Temple God is not tied unto either of them but hath his liberty to work and manifest himself where he pleaseth even in Babylon The Rabbins have a rule goeth for truth amongst them Nunquam Spiritum sanctum extra terram sanctum prophetis loqu● and is firmly believed that the Holy Ghost never spake unto the Prophets out of the holy Land and therfore they say Jonas fled to Tarshish from the face of the Lord to avoid the inspiration of the Almighty But here we see in Chaldea by the river Chebar is Ezekiel inspired here heaven is opened unto him here hee seeth visions of God here the Word of the Lord cometh expresly unto him and here the Spirit of God doth work mightily in him One shift they have for this They say Ezekiel was a Prophet before hee was carried out of the Land of Canaan before he came into Chaldea But we have nothing in Jeremy nor Ezekiel nor in any other part of Scripture that Ezekiel was a Prophet and moved to prophecy before he came into Chaldea and therefore it is said verse 3. That the hand of the Lord was upon me there there first in that polluted land I never had the Spirit of the Lord before I came into Chaldea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When the Inhabitants of Jerusalem had polluted the holy City prophaned the holy Temple and defiled the holy Land with their Idolatries and other wickednesses then God departs pitcheth his Tabernacle elsewhere and powreth out his Spirit in Babylon God is not tied to places he can in a dungeon
in a prison in a Babylon let down his Spirit into the heart of any servant of his and raise him to a propheticall height 2. Observe that no place is so wicked but God can raise up instruments to do him and the Church service there Babylon was a seat or land of wickednesse a sinke of all sin the mother of Harlots and abominations of the earth Rev. 17.5 Yet here even out of Hell it self Quasi ab ipsis inferis doth God raise up a Prophet for his people It was said by Nathaniel Joh. 1.46 Can any good come out of Nazareth Much more may it be said Can any good come out of Babylon Can any good come out of Rome What was answered there Come and see So here come and see a Prophet in Babylon come and see the Spirit of God powred out upon Ezekiel even there And to this may the first word of the prophecy have some respect as if the Prophet had said They have had Prophets in Jerusalem a long time but no Prophets elsewhere behold now also is a Prophet in Babylon God can raise up to himself Saints in Nero's Court he can raise up instruments ordinary and extraordinary to do him service in Babylon in Rome in Egypt in most prophane and vile places that are overspread with all Idolatries and abominations whatsoever 3. See here a door open for the inlargement of the Church a type of Gods goodnesse toward the Gentiles The Church had been shut up for 850. yeers in Judea for so long it was from Joshuahs entring into Canaan to the captivity but now hee openeth a door for the Gentiles here is a Prophet a Church in Babylon here is a way made for the bringing in of the Gentiles and enlarging the borders of Sion God will not only have mercy upon Jewes but upon the Babylonians 4. That the godly are wrapped up in the same calamity with the wicked Ezekiel is among the captives and many others with him they lost their countrey friends estates liberties ordinances they were in great misery brought very low under a heathen King amongst enemies exposed to the scorns and wrongs of all and Ezekiel Daniel the three Children Mordecai and many others were all in the same condition The children of God are subject to the same outward publike or private calamities that the wicked are All things come alike unto all if you look upon the outward face of things there is no exception Good Josiah was slain in the battell as well as wicked Ahab Naboth was stoned as well as Achan If David a man after Gods own heart prosper in the wars so doth Nebuchadnezzar a heathen a tyrant sicknesses diseases deaths of what kinde soever are common to good as well as to bad the sword plague famine hath seised upon the carkasses of the godly as well as the wicked If wicked women die in child-birth so doth good Rachel There is no condition but may befall the children of God 1 Pet. 5.10 the same afflictions are accomplished in your brethren that are in the world and no temptation hath taken hold of you but such as is common to the nature of man Whatsoever affliction then you have whether publike or private this may be some solace it is no other then what befell Ezekiel Daniel and hath befallen the godly in all generations 5. That the godly are mingled in this world with the wicked and prophane men of great worth great grace rare excellencies they are not so priviledged as to be exempted from the society of the wicked and ungodly Here is Ezekiel amongst the Chaldeans Joseph was amongst the Egyptians and Job saith of himself Chap. 30.29 that he was a brother to Dragons and a companion to Owles and David cryes out Psal 120.5 Wo is me that I sojourne in Mesech and that I dwell in the tents of Kedar that is with a barbarous and prophane people that were like to the posterity of Mesech and Kedar The Church of Smyrna Rev. 2.9 was pestred with the Synagogue of Satan and Pergamus vers 13. had her dwelling where Satans seat was In that City if you observe the 14. 15. verses you shall finde there was much Idolatry and persecution for there were those that held the Doctrine of Balaam who taught Balac to cast a stumbling block before the children of Israel to eat things sacrificed to Idols and to commit fornication and there Antipas my faithfull Martyr was slain Where there is Idolatry will be persecution and uncleannesse and where these be is the seat of Satan and the Church of Pergamos was seated even where Satan had his seat and throne therefore it is no strange thing for the people of God to dwell amongst the wicked In Canticles the Church of Christ is said to be a Lilly among thornes a Lilly and none growing neer but thornes that scratch prick and tear the Church Micah 7.4 The best of them is as a brier the most upright is sharper then a thorne hedge the best of the wicked are Briers and Thornes one time or other It is the lot of the godly to be among the Chaldeans while they live here in the world 6. See here that God hath a speciall care of his Church and people when they are in the lowest and worst condition Where now is Jerusalem become Where is the glory of all the world now they are carried into captivity now they are in a strange land under a strange King and government now they are deprived of all their sacrifices and services of that nature now they are imprisoned now they are in danger of their liberties and lives every day yet as the Psalmist saith Thou remembrest us in our low estate in this low estate when they are at the river Chebar in the land of the Chaldeans doth God remember them and sends an Ezekiel to them and unto him even in Chaldea in Babylon were the heavens opened and he saw visions of God Where there are the greatest enemies God will shew himself a friend where the Church is exceedingly straitned God will give enlargement Now his people are in Babylon in captivity he sends a Prophet to them Ezekiel the strength of God such a Prophet as shall be strong to keep them off from Idolatry though they were amongst Idolaters strong to comfort their hearts against all the strong discouragements they had strong to lead them toward God and heaven though they had false Prophets to lead them down to hell strong to oppose the false Prophets to reprove them stoutly to incourage the people faithfully and to make known the mind of God unto them without flattery They shall have a Prophet though they be in Babylon this should stay up the spirits of the godly if they should be driven into Wildernesses God will provide Ezekiels for them 7. Observe from the place that we are to take heed of judgeing the condition of men by their outward afflictions When great calamities come people
it is that Vision is put for prophecy Isa 1.1 3. In a Vision there is alwayes such an irradiation of the mind such divine satisfying over-powering strong light that the partie who hath the Vision is put out of all doubt and dispute concerning the truth of the thing he hath seene or is represented Moller Ps 89.20 4. There is in a vision a strong impulse upon the spirit of the partie to doe that which is the minde of God concerning that vision 5. It is when they are awake God speaks to men by dreames in the darke when they are asleepe but usually visions are when men are awake All these are found here in the Prophet Ezekiels vision 1. There are representations of diverse things to him he was an Hieroglyphicall Prophet he had more things presented unto him of that nature then any Prophet besides All that followeth here in this Chapter are representations of things to Ezekiel in this vision 2. It is of things to come for this Prophecie being either of the ruine of Jerusalem or of the state of the Church still it was of that which was not present but future 3. The Prophet he had strong inlightnings he had such irradiations of his minde that he was satisfied touching the thing therefore he saith The word of the Lord came expresly unto him the hand of the Lord came upon him in a great deale of strength 4. He had a mightie impulse though he was backward unwilling to goe on in the worke of God yet the Spirit came upon him with power and put him on And lastly it was when he was awake walking up and down by the river Chebar there he had these visions Thus much for the nature of a vision now these visions were visions of God I saw visions of God Not that he saw God oft and so every sight of God made a new vision for no man can see God and live but visions revealed to him by God which did in some measure set out the glory and majestie of God and so they are called visions of God Or visions of God by way of opposition and exclusion thus I saw visions of God I had divine visions not Satanicall delusions for Satan hath his Prophets and they have their visions whereby they delude the world not dreames and conceits of mine own no Angel no Devill no dreame no fancy of mine presented them unto me but they were propheticall visions such as God himselfe hath presented Or visions of God lastly in regard of the eminency of them I saw visions of God that is choice rare difficult transcendent visions Things that excell in Scripture-phrase usually are said to be things of God As the Mountains of God the Cedars of God the Citie of God as you may reade Psal 36.6 Psal 80.10 Jonah 3.3 1. Observe here the certaintie of the things contained in this Prophet He doth not say I heard but I saw visions of God The sense of sight is the most certaine most active most discerning most evidentiall of all the senses Therefore 1 Joh. 1.1.3 That which we have seene with our eyes which we have looked upon we declare unto you There was certaintie in that which they saw One eye-witnesse is more then ten heare-says then ten eare-witnesses Thales being asked the Question Quantum ocul● ab auribus How much truth should differ from a lie his answer was As much as the eyes differ from the eares intimating that what you heare may be false but what you see that is certain The Prophet here saw visions of God to shew the certaintie of these visions and so of the whole Scriptures which are visions of God 2. See here the dignitie of these Visions they are visions of God such as are great glorious transcendent things Mens words works things are meane poore and worthlesse but the things the visions of God they are so high so excellent that few can reach them they are beyond the apprehensions of ordinary men yea the Prophets themselves did not see all that was in those visions God did vouchsafe unto them This shews the things of God have transcendency in them are of great authoritie and challenge answerable esteem These are visions of God and must with all Scripture be valued accordingly Hence the Ancients have called the Scriptures An Epistle of God sent from Heaven to the sonnes of men Therefore in them is nothing impertinent empty but all in them is glorious full of sense mysteries and Spirit this strengthens the authoritie of Scripture Ne titubet fides that our faith may not stagger at all but be confident and build upon them as visions and truths of God 3. See here that when God beginneth once to let out mercy to his servants he stints not presently but proceeds I saw not one vision but I saw visions of God hee had many choice ones It was kindnesse that Ezekiel had such a name The strength of God it was kindnesse that the Lord would open heaven to him it had been great kindnesse if he had seen but one vision but for Ezekiel to have heaven opened and to see visions of God many visions one after another this sheweth the great kindnesse of God When Rachel had her first son she called his name Joseph which signifieth adding or increase for she said The Lord shall adde to mee another son Gen. 30.24 Now God hath begun to shew kindnesse he shall not only give me this but he shall give me another son also When the Lord hath bestowed one mercy on you you may name it Joseph increase addition for God will bestow another upon you Abraham had many mercies from God one after another and Moses a multitude of mercies he converseth with God face to face he heareth God speak he hath Gods presence to go along with him yea he seeth all Gods goodnesse and glory to passe before him When mercies come forth God will not presently shut the door of mercy again Heaven is opened visions are presented one after another Psal 36.10 Continue thy loving kindnesse the Hebrew is draw forth or draw out thy loving kindnesse A metaphor either taken from vessels of Wine which being set abroach once yeeld not only one cup but many cups so when God setteth abroach the Wine of his mercy he will not fill your cup once but twice and seven times or taken from a Mother who hath her breasts full of milk drawes them out for her childe not once but often the child shall have the breast many times in the day and many times in the night so when God beginneth to shew mercy to you he will draw out his breasts of consolation and will bestow mercy after mercy upon you or from a line which is extended for so God being in a way of mercy will extend the line of mercy and measure out mercy after mercy for you Is not heaven now opened Do you not see visions of God this day How often is
heaven opened in this City in a week How many visions have you from the Prophets What manifestations of truths are there What discoveries of the minde and will of God to your souls are there in these dayes I saw visions of God saith Ezekiel and so may you The Word of the Lord came expresly The Hebrew is emphaticall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●ssendo fuit om i●o fuit fiendo factū est the Word of the Lord by being hath been or hath altogether been had much being in me Besides the visions I saw there was a reall communication of truths to my understanding evident and expresse commanands from God came unto me and it came so as it had entrance and abiding in me Accurate factum est there was an accurate and reall work of it upon me and in me Prov. 3.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Keep sound wisdome the word for sound wisdome in the originall is that which is essence or being intimating that all other things are nothing and the Word of God that hath only substance and being in it making substantiall where it comes and so here it gave being and was an ingraffed word in the soul and heart of the Prophet so that the meaning is the Word came with that evidence and clearnesse unto mee that I could not withstand it it had such entity and substance in it that it made me of a common man a Prophet And the hand of the Lord was there upon mee The hand of the Lord is taken in two senses especially in Scripture 1. For judgement or punishment so you have it Acts 13.11 speaking of Elymas the Sorcerer saith Paul The hand of the Lord shall be upon thee and thou shalt be blind Gods hand was upon Elymas and he was stricken blind for perverting the Deputy In this sense it is not taken here 2. The hand of the Lord is taken for prophecy When the Lord doth come upon the sons of men and stirs up their spirits to prophecy that is the hand of the Lord. But yet this is not all It noteth the vertue and power of the Spirit of God which came upon the Prophet not shaking disturbing and throwing of him down as some Rabbies conceive but changing comforting elevating and exciting the spirit of the Prophet to see divine mysteries and notes also that efficacy and power which did set on the Word upon the heart and conscience of the Prophet that power which did subdue all opposition carnall reasonings and remove all impediments whatsoever stuck upon the heart of the Prophet and hindred him in that work which God would have him to undertake It is this hand of the Lord that makes the Word mighty spirituall lively according to that in Hebr. 4.12 the Prophet felt the intrinsecall vertue of this hand the Spirit of God in his own heart it was a quick and lively word unto him This intrinsecall vertue of the Spirit if it reached not the Prophets hearers yet it abode in the prophecy and it remains an efficacious prophecy to this day It 's worth inquisition what the vertue of the Spirit is expressed here by the hand of God There are three things in it The hand is 1. Symbolum roboris 2. Index veritatis 3. Instrumentum operationis 1. The hand is Symbolum roboris the Type or Embleme of strength therefore of a strong man we say he is a man of his hands that is the symbol of his strength So the Spirit of God is a Spirit of strength the hand of God notes the strength of God and the Holy Ghost is the power and strength of God Luke 1.35 The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Highest shall over-shadow thee And greater is he that is in you then he that is in the world The Spirit of God that is in the hearts of his children he is of more strength then Beelzebub the prince of Devils and god of this world 2. The hand is Index veritatis the hand or finger doth shew a thing If you would have a man goe this way or that way you shew him or point him with the finger you direct him with your hand Salomon Prov. 6.13 speaking of the wicked man saith He teacheth with his fingers that is he shewes others by his hand to do wickedly the Spirit of God is Index veritatis this hand of God doth shew you the truth 1 John 16.13 14. He shall shew you saith Christ things to come He shall take of mine and shew it unto you It is the Spirit of Christ this hand of God that sheweth you all things you will never know truths till this hand point to them and teach you you may have notions in your head and guessings in your spirits and bosomes but the reality and certainty of things will never be attained to till the spirit of God acquaint you with them 3. The hand is Instrumentum operationis the instrument of action men do all by the hand therefore it is called the Organ of organs by the Philosopher So the Spirit of God that doth all Zach. 4.6 Not by might nor by power but by my Spirit I will do all by that saith God It is the Spirit of God that doth convince it 's the Spirit that doth convert it 's the Spirit that doth dictate and inspire godly men it 's the Spirit that sanctifies it 's the Spirit that leads into truth that comforts the Spirit is the great agent the hand of God by which God doth all his works It was the Spirit that moved upon the face of the waters at first the Spirit of God was the agent in the work of creation and the great agent in the work of redemption and salvation These phrases being thus opened observe hence 1. That the Prophet received what he delivered to them from God The hand of the Lord was there upon me and the Word of the Lord came expressly The Prophets must deliver to the people what they receive from God and not what they bring of themselves They must not bring their own visions their own conceits what seemeth good in their own eyes but they must bring the Word of the Lord to the people They must not speak according to the humours of the people as they move them as they would have them but they must speak as the Spirit of God moves them as God will have them 2 Pet. 1.21 The holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 11.23 and Paul saith What I have received of the Lord that I deliver unto you he would not deliver any thing he had from the world or from himself but what I received from the Lord that I deliver unto you Ministers they are Gods Seeds-men and they must have their seed from God else they will sow tares 2. It is of much concernment for Ministers to see they have a good and clear Call to their Ministery Ezekiel here stands much upon it I saw
heaven opened I saw visions of God and the Word of the Lord came expresly to mee and the hand of the Lord was there upon mee Here were strong evidences of his Call to the work he was to go about Ministers are to be the mouth of God to the people and the mouth of the people to God both are weighty businesses they deal about the eternall truths of the eternall God your immortall souls and the everlasting condition of them The glory of God is concredited in a great measure unto them the great things of the Kingdome of Christ are put into their hands to dispense as God shall move and give them opportunity Had they not need therefore to see to it that their Call be right and to make it out strongly and clearly that God hath sent them If they can clear it up that God hath sent them they may expect his assistance his blessing his protection and successe in their labours How ever things prove this will be their comfort in the midst of opposition reproach persecution hazard of liberty and lives I was called of God I am in his work in his way he brought me into his Vineyard hee will stand by mee I will go on let him do with me what he pleaseth The clearnesse of a mans Call will add much comfort to a mans spirit in a black day it makes conscientious pitifull and painfull a Ministers call being evident the peoples consciences will be satisfied will receive his doctrine then will they look upon him as their Pastor and Teacher reverence him for his works sake and are likely to receive much good by him Whereas otherwise if the Calling of Ministers reach no higher then a Patron or Prelate there is seldome any good comes either to Ministers or people therefore it concernes them to look narrowly to it that their Calling be of God cleare and strong to themselves else they cannot make it out to others neither shall finde that comfort nor do that good which otherwise they might 3. That in corrupt times when Religion the Chu●ch and Gods glory are greatly indangered God then takes care to raise up some extraordinary servants to vindicate his truth in his people his glory all was brought now to a desolate condition false Prophets prevailed Religion suffered Gods honour was low and now God takes Ezekiel that was one of the ordinary Priests before and bestowes a larger measure of his Spirit upon him and raiseth him up to be a Prophet and sets him awork to do great things in Babylon Though now men be not called immediatly by the voyce of God and Christ as of old yet by extraordinary instincts and motions of Gods Spirit they were heretofore and are still put upon great services Philip was a Deacon by his ordinay Calling but by extraordinary instinct and hints of Gods Spirit he was raised up to be an Evangelist and to do greater service unto the Church of God So Luther that was a Frier at first by extraordinary instinct of Gods Spirit was raised up to purge errors out of the Church and to glorifie God especially in clearing the doctrine of Justification by Free grace So Zwinglius Wickliffe and others in our dayes God hath not left himself without witnesse at this day he hath stirred up the spirits of some to do him great and extraordinary services 4. That those Ministers are fittest to speak to the people that finde the Word of God to have being in them The Word of the Lord came expresly to mee the Word of the Lord had being in him was ingraffed in him When the Word is a word of being in our hearts then it will be a word of power in your consciences That which comes from our hearts will reach to yours and will be effectuall in you otherwise the Word is but an empty sound it cometh from the teeth outward and reacheth but to your eares and seldome goeth down into your souls 5. Take this note that there are principles of opposition in the dearest servants of God to the work of his Spirit It is said the hand of the Lord came upon mee invaded mee so some render it I stood out against God I had my carnall reasonings I had stubbornnesse and opposition in my will I said there was a Lion in the way and I pleaded hard against this work and service But the Spirit of God came upon me came mightily upon me came with a strong hand upon me as he saith came so upon me that it subdued all my carnall reasonings subdued the stubbornness of my will it removed all my shifts and pretences and brought me off to go about the Work of God Is it not thus with most Christians When you would pray when you would do good is not evill present with you But when the Spirit of God cometh upon you it will overcome that indisposition that sluggishness that opposition it will work down distempers and frame you sweetly to go about the work of a God as it did Ezekiel 6. That the Word and Ordinances of it that visions and revelations do the heart of man reall good when divine vertue goes along with them otherwise not What if Ezekiel had seen never so many visions what if God had spoken never so expresly unto him unlesse the hand of God had been upon him too unlesse the Spirit of God had improved those visions and ingraffed those words in him all had been as an empty sound all had been as meer shadowes and sights to him But when the Spirit of God goes along then there is efficacy and benefit in any Ordinance take away the Spirit from the Word and Ordinances of God and they will be but dry bones without meat or marrow take the Gospel which is called the ministration of the Spirit if the Spirit be not in it the choisest promises the sweetest truths there what are they they are Literae damnatoriae and Leges mortis they are letters and lawes of death to the soul When the hand of the Lord is upon an Ordinance and upon a man in that Ordinance then is there good gotten and then doth the soul gain 2 Cor. 10.4 Our weapons are mighty through God 7. That all spirituall good received and done by the Saints is from the operation of Gods Spirit which therefore is called Gods hand Luke 11.20 If I by the finger or hand of God cast out devils this finger Mat. 12.28 is called the Spirit of God If I by the Spirit of God cast out Devills That which is called finger in one is called the Spirit in the other Now doe men receive any good have you faith have you love patience meeknesse understanding zeale godlinesse any all graces It is this hand of God that hath wrought them Doe you doe any divine good unto others It is this Spirit of God that workes by you and inableth you to doe that good Act. 6.10 They were not able to resist the wisedome and Spirit by
which he spake Stephen spake by the Spirit of God If you heare if any good be done or received it is from the Spirit which is the hand of God Therefore you should know to whom to give the glory and honour of all your receipts and of all your actions 8. Note here That the Messengers of God should come not onely with the Word of God but also with the hand of God they should ●●ing his truths and his Spirit Ezekiel the Word of the Lord came expresly to him and the hand of the Lord was upon him It is needfull that Ministers come not onely with Law and Gospel with the Word of God but that they come with the very hand even the Spirit and power of God for all the efficacy and good done is by the Spirit If a Minister come and bring the letter onely without the Spirit what evidence will there be to his owne soule of the certaintie of those things whereof he speakes How will he be able to see into the spiritualnesse of them to know that they are of God and that they are to be commended to the people in the name of God when he wants the Spirit of God to discerne them himselfe What prevalency can there be in the hearts of hearers when the Minister comes not with demonstration of the Spirit What bottome is there for the faith of men where there is the wisedome of words without the power of the Spirit The hearers get most good when Gods letters come to them not without his seale evidencing they are his letters Hence saith Paul 1 Cor. 2.4 5. My preaching was not with inticing words of mans wisedome but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power that your faith should not stand in the wisedome of men but in the power of God Then doth the faith of hearers stand in the power of God when the Ministers come with evidence and demonstration of the Spirit of God Last of all From these three verses generally considered observe That when Gods servants are in deepe afflictions then are usually brought in the sweetest consolations Here is Ezekiel taken out of his own Countrey deprived of his estate and friends of the Temple of Gods Ordinances and solemne Assemblies and of all the sweet and good that Jerusalem afforded He is brought into Babylon he is a captive there he is solitary now by the River side he was in a distrest and forlorne condition What man here would be in Babylon now and not think himselfe very miserable When Ezekiel was in this condition heaven is opened visions are seene God speaks expresly unto him the hand of the Lord is there upon him So that you may see when we are in deepe aff●ictions many times God commeth in with his sweetest consolations Gen. 15.1 Abraham in the Chapter before had gotten a victory and rescued L●t his brothers sonne out of the hands of sundry Kings and being come home he falleth into a shaking fit and is filled with feare lest those Kings should reinforce their strength come upon him and his and destroy all While he is in this agony God commeth to him Feare not Abraham I am thy shield and exceeding great reward God came in his deepe distresse and brought in a sweet refreshing to his soule Elijah that great Prophet and worthy servant of God after he had made a sacrifice of Baals Priests and Jezabel sought after him to slay him and had vowed that he should die the death 1 King 19. if there were no more men in the world he was forced to flie for his life and he flieth into the Wildernesse and there was a great famine neither bed nor bread he had there and whither to goe he knew not he had many enemies he hardly knew a godly man left he was even weary of his life now he sitteth downe under a Juniper tree and desireth that God would take away his life It is enough now O Lord saith he take away my life for I am not better then my fathers I am even willing to die the world is so wretched and there so much hatred of thee and thine Ahab and Jezabel are against me all the Countrey and Land cry out of me as the troubler of Israel and to what purpose should I live any longer While he is in this condition God sendeth an Angel unto him and an Angel with bread to feed him and with glad tydings to comfort him John when he was in Patmos banished by Domitian in a place where were the condemned parties belonging to the State of Rome those that were the most desperate and vile wretches that they would faine be rid of they sent them to Patmos John was there and while he was there he had those revelations that were full of glory and excellency The three Children when they were in the fiery furnace the fire did them no hurt but loose their bands and set them at libertie and then one like the Sonne of God commeth and walketh amongst them and comforteth them in those fiery flames In deepe distresses then God doth often let out himselfe he dwelleth in the darknesse and letteth out himselfe and becommeth light to those that are in darknesse You know that passage in the booke of Martyrs of Glover and Austen Mr. Glover was sad and full of feares some dayes before he was to suffer his spirit was downe he quaked and trembled to thinke of the stake and of that bitter cup he was to drinke he was afraid that he should deny his Saviour and undoe his soule But the night before he was to suffer he cryed out unto Austen Ob Austen he is come he is come I knew a woman in travell M rs A. G. and in that travell whereof shee dyed who had been sometime in darknesse and having much sought God and waited for the revelation of his countenance when shee was almost spent in her travell and come neare her end upon a suddaine shee sprang up and fixing her eyes towards heaven said He is come he is come he hath kissed me with the kisses of his mouth his love is better then wine I will not ex●hange my condition with the greatest Prince in the world the Lord is infinitely good he hath not deceived me neither will he ever deceive any Shee had these impressions upon her spirit till the breath went out of her body Thus God in great distresses in deepe afflictions bringeth in seasonable and sweet consolations And I looked and behold a whirlewinde came out of the North c. Wee are now come to the Vision some make five Visions in this Chapter The first is a Vision of a tempest in this fourth verse The second is of the foure living creatures with their description from this verse to the 15th The third is of the wheeles from the 15th verse to the 22. The fourth is of the Firmament from the 22. verse to the 26th The fifth is of a Throne with one in it from
purge the aire that the visions might be clearer and more conspicuous to his eyes and himself better disposed to the reception of them Bacons Naturall History for Southern winds make the humors fiuide and the body heavie they relax the sinews and prejudice the motions of the man But Northern winds shut up the humors consolidate the parts of the body intend the spirits make man more lively fit to receive and do But there is something else in this North-wind great difference there is among Expositors concerning this vision and no man almost knoweth where to fasten what I conceive to be the truth you shall have By this whirlwind from the North is meant Nebuchadnezzar with his army that should come and besiege Jerusalem Jer. 1.13 14. this is set out under the representation of a seething pot I saw saith he there a seething pot from the face of the North so the Hebrew is and what is that Out of the North an evill shall break forth upon all the Inhabitants of the land The evill is The Families of the Kingdomes of the North shall come against Jerusalem vers 15. There is the evill the Babylonians shall come to Jerusalem and be a wind a whirlewind a tempest to it Nebuchadnezzar and his Army are compared to a whirlewind in the sudden rising swift going and terrible execution 1. In the sudden rising winds you know rise suddenly Act. 2.2 Suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind which sheweth that winds do come unexpectedly Jonah 1.4 No sooner was Jonah in the Ship but God sent out a great wind upon the Sea such a wind should Nebuchadnezzar be he should come suddenly upon them Jer. 6.26 The spoiler shall come suddenly upon thee Habak 2.7 Shall they not rise up suddenly that shall bite thee and awake that shall vex thee A metaphor taken from a Dog Serpent or wild Beast when a man passeth by the way before ever he thinks of it the Dog Serpent or wild Beast starteth up bites or stings him so should Nebuchadnezzar be for he speaks of him in that second of Habakkuk he should come suddenly and set upon Jerusalem and overthrow it as a mighty storm and tempest doth a tree or house How could this be sudden when the Prophets had foretold them of it long before To this I answer first That because they did not believe what the Prophets did foretell touching Nebuchadnezzar and his destruction of Jerusalem therefore it was sudden to them though foretold Lam. 4.12 The Kings of the earth and all the Inhabitants of the world would not have believed that the adversary and the enemy should have entred in at the gates of Jerusalem Neither King nor people would believe the Prophets they would not be perswaded that ever an enemy should enter within the gates of Jerusalem and lay it wast 2ly Though they were foretold though they did believe it yet because they were not prepared for it when it did come therefore it was sudden unto them Luke 21.34 Take heed lest by any means your hearts be overcome with surfeiting and drunkennesse and that day come upon you unawares though men believe that evill shall come if they be taken unawares unprepared it is sudden to them So these either not believing or not being prepared though they did believe the coming of Nebuchadnezzar was to them as a whirlewind very sudden 2. In its swift going The wind is said to have wings 2 Sam. 22.11 because of its swiftnesse and speedy motion and Ships that are driven by it are said to be swift Job 9.26 And so it is said of the Chaldean horses that they are swifter then Leopards Hab. 1.8 Leopards are very swift creatures so swift that Claudian fastens this Epithet upon them Pardi fulminei Leopards are as swift as lightening and thunder and therefore Dan. 7.6 Alexander is compared to a Leopard because of his speedy conquering the world Celerity in matters of war is of great moment And it would do well that those that are now interessed in it would make more speed for speed doth great things Alexander being asked the question how he overcame the world in so little time answered By not delaying every opportunity was taken These Chaldeans and their horses were very swift and they came with great speed upon Jerusalem and therein resembled the wind 3. In its terrible execution A whirlewind or any wind which bringeth a tempest what dreadfull work doth it make Houses Mountains Trees Steeples are shaken and torn in pieces what can stand before a tempestuous wind You may see the power thereof in 1 King 19.11 A great strong wind rent the mountains and brake in pieces the rocks The strength of rocks and mountains was weaknesse to the strength of the winds those great vessels at Sea viz. Ships when a storm cometh how are they battered and shaken sunk and split against the rocks There is terrible execution done by the winds at Sea and Land when they are in their strength So Nebuchadnezzar and his forces were very terrible Habak 1.6 and so on we may see the terriblenesse of them I will raise up the Chaldeans a bitter and hasty nation and verse 7. They are terrible and dreadfull and verse 9. They shall come all for violence their faces shall sup up as the East-wind that wind was most vehement and scorching in Judea and devoured all that was green so did the Chaldeans devoure and destroy all their pleasant things they shall gather the captives as the sand The wind drives great heaps of sand together raiseth a mountain presently so should they gather the captives as heaps of sands Then afterward verse 10. They shall scoffe at the Kings and the Princes shall be a scorn unto them they shall deride every strong hold for they shall heap dust and take it No person no hold can stand before them In these respects Nebuchadnezzar and his army are compared to a whirlewind and a whirlewind out of the North. A great cloud Clouds are moist vapours exhaled from the earth and Sea by the Sun and condensated by the cold in the middle region and carried by the winds up and down this way and that way they are the bottels of heaven which God doth fill with Wine or Vinegar with Mercy or Wrath. This cloud here likewise doth represent the same thing again unto us Nebuchadnezzar and his army Jer. 4.13 chiefly his army In the Prophets Ezekiel and Jeremiah oftentimes his army and and himself are compared to a cloud and that in three respects 1. Clouds cover the face of heaven many vapours gathered together rise up and darken the Sun and keep from us the comfortable aspect thereof Ezek. 32.7 I will cover the Sun with a cloud The same word that is used for a cloud doth signifie likewise a multitude a great company Ped●tum equ●tumque nubes Heb. 12.1 Livie speaks of a cloud of horse-men and foot-men and Epiphanius speaks
if justice be not done one act of justice executed upon delinquents makes them more honourable then all the scarlet robes in the world How glorious and dreadfull was the Parliament Strafford when that great man fell in Israel And if justice were executed upon delinquents and they had their due we should be glorious in power dreadfull to nations terrible to our enemies they would say Who is able to stand before the God of this Parliament before the God of this kingdome Out of the middest thereof as of the colour of amber That is out of the middest of the fire not out of the middest of the wind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or out of the middest of the cloud The Hebrew word for Amber is a word that is found no where else in all the Scripture but in this Prophet and but twice more viz. at the 27th verse of this Chapter and at the second verse of the 8th Chapter Rabbi Iarchi confesseth hee knoweth not what the meaning of this word is another Rabbi saith it was the name of an Angel who instructed Ezekiel The Septuagint Jerome and divers others translate it Electrum amber and because here is mention of the colour of Amber we must inquire what Amber this was There be divers kindes of Amber one sort of Amber is called Succinum Succinum quarundas arborum s● cus which is the juice of certain trees the gum of Pine trees which being hardened by the aire is yellow and bright that is white and duskish is bastard Amber A second sort of Amber is a liquid substance which flowes from the Sea rock and about the Sea shoares and being hardened by the aire winds and water floats up and down upon the Sea especially about Florida and other Indian shoars and it is of a honyish and waxie colour The third kinde of Amber is metallicall made of metalls and those more precious then gold as Jerome inferiour to it as Zanchius saith This Amber is compounded of gold and shining silver is very precious and of great use But besides this there is yet another metallicall Amber called Aurick●lcum the choisest and purest Brasse and this is thought to be t●● Chasmal or Amber here mentioned according to that Rev. 1.15 His feet were like to fine brasse as if it had burned in a fiery furnace Brasse doth most needy resemble fire The colour of Amber here is a fiery colour and surely this is neer the truth but yet it cometh not up fully to the nature of the word here for I do not finde amongst those that search into the nature of words that this word Chasmal is interpreted Amber as the learned observe Prunam ardentissimam or summe ignitam it signifies a coal that is fired most intensively a coal that hath the utmost heat it 's capable of so hot that presently it burneth any thing it toucheth such coals are more red and lively then others and it comes neerest to the nature of the word to render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fest●nant●r excidens consumens Color insignis Calv. as the colour of a burning coal Hence Junius and Tremelius render the word Color vividissimus the most lively colour for nothing hath a more lively colour then hot coals or fine Brasse burning in the fire either of which you may take but I rather cleave to that of burning coals which being in the midst of the fire might so sparkle and shine as to dazle the eyes and whether Chasmal in this place were not more fitly rendred as the colour of burning brass or of a burning coal then as the colour of Amber I leave to consideration Now what is meant by this Amber or coal there is great dispute some understand by it Christ because he is more precious then Amber more lively then any burning coal whatsoever But we must lay this sense aside because there is a Vision of Christ in the latter end of the Chapter The soundest Expositors by Chasmal leade us to some inferiour to Christ viz. the Angels who are called Seraphims Animalia ignea as Kimchi hath it of Saraph to burne and Seraphims are fiery burning creatures Isa 6.2 About it stood the Seraphims that is the fiery burning Angels answerable to the Chasmal or burning coales here So in Iudges 13.20 an Angel went up to heaven in a flame of fire that element was most sutable to Seraphicall and Angelicall nature 2 King 6.17 There were horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha and Angels were in those chariots They are likened to fire because of their ardent and burning zeale to doe the will of God Psal 103.20 For the word Colour the colour of amber in the Hebrew it is the eye of amber the organ is put for the object so you have it used Numb 11.7 The colour of it was as the colour of Bdelium the Hebrew is the eye of it was as the eye of Bdelium Now having given you the meaning of Chasmal viz. that he saw Angels of fiery colour like to hot burning coales so intense and zealous that they were ready to doe and execute whatsoever God would have done Note hence 1. That heavenly things are so transcendent and we so weake that we can comprehend or receive very little of them They must be presented in things beneath their excellency to make us capable of a little of them Per corporales ostensiones incorporearum percipimus notitiam Prad God must manifest his minde here by winds clouds by brightnesse of a cloud by a fire infolding by burning coales that so we may take up a little of the minde of God Joh. 3.12 saith Christ to Nicodemus If I have spoken to thee of earthly things and thou doest not understand them how wilt thou understand if I speake unto thee of heavenly things Nicodemus a Doctor in Israel did not apprehend the doctrine of regeneration when expressed in his owne Dialect had Christ spoken of the great things of the kingdome of heaven in their own nature how could he or any of us have understood Here wee see darkly and as in a glasse God is pleased to goe in the way of man with us to condescend to our capacities and to present heavenly things in Hieroglyphicks winds clouds fire and coales that so we may have a little apprehension of the nature of those things 2. That heavenly Spirits are most pure and lively So much the word Chasmal leads us unto it noteth coales that have no darknesse no smoake in them that are altogether fiery and so lively as that they cannot be more lively Such is God he is light and no darknesse he is more lively then all the world beside He is Actus purissimus all his actions exceed our apprehensions Such are Angels they are pure and lively creatures Heb. 1.7 Angels are Spirits for their puritie and flames of fire for their activitie and zeale Rev. 15.6 Sunt luminaria
give us in Satan here and make him the god of the world Exemplo imperio suggestione and that by example command and suggestion and Christ doth thrice call Satan the prince of the world Joh. 12.31.14.30.16.11 and Eph. 2.2 according to the Prince of the power of the aire the spirit that now worketh Vnaquaeque res v sibil●s habet Angelicam potestatem sibi praepositam Aug in l. 83. qu. 79. q. In hoc mundo visibil nih●l n si per creaturam nv●sibilem d sponi potest Thom. 1. part qu. 110. The devill hath great power in the aire to raise winds to cause storms thunder lightning which is the power of the aire and the same power hath he in the spirits of the children of disobedience and by that spirit whereof he is Lord he can move them any way as the winds and clouds and carry them against Christ and his truths Now hence I infer that if Satan and ill Angels be as gods princes in this world have power in the aire and hearts of wicked men then must it needs follow that good Angels are as Gods and princes and have as much power in the world and hearts of good men as they otherwise devils should gain by their fall more then ever they had by their standing and it 's not credible that wicked damned spirits should have more honourable titles and larger power then the holy and glorious Angels What be those services the good Angels are imployed in Answ 1. To inform us of Gods will and God of our wayes They acquaint us with Gods mind Gen. 18.19 Angels told Abraham and Lot what God would do to Sodome an Angell tells Elijah 2 King 1.3 what to say to the Messengers of the King of Samariu● an Angel tels the Apostles Act. 1.11 that Christ shall return in that manner they had seen him go up to heaven Christ tels John Rev. 22.16 that he had sent his Angels to testifie those things in the Churches the Angel tels Daniel that he came forth to give him skill and understanding Chap. 9.22 Mat. 1.20.2.13 An Angel informs Joseph of the minde of God touching Mary and Christ So to inform God what is done here among men the Angels went up the ladder as well as came down Zach. 1.11 The Angel sent out by the Lord certified the Angel Christ that stood among the Myrtle trees Per M●nistros more potentisst●m regis omnia faci● Bonav that they had travelled up and down the world and behold say they all the earth sitteth still and is at rest This God doth for honour and not necessity he knoweth all things but he will have them witnesses of his will 2. In opposing the great enemies of Christ and his Church whereupon they intermedle with Kings and Kingdomes and the great affaires thereof Dan. 10.20 Knowest thou wherefore I come unto thee now will I return to fight with the King of Persia and when I am gone forth lo the Prince of Grecia shall come This Angel Gabriel oppos'd the cruell Edicts of Cambyses King of Persia who laboured to keep the Jewes in captivity longer and to oppresse them sorer then others had done but Gabriel kept them from execution and brought his kingdome to ruine by degrees and therefore he saith the Prince of Grecia shall come I will leave Persia and go into Greece and stir up Alexander to come into Persia and spoile the King of his kingdome when Princes are stirred up by flatterers and prophane wretches to oppresse the godly to hinder the work of the Temple then Angels do fight against them Elesbaan King of the Ethiopians being in armes against Dunaam a Tyrant his army was much oppressed with famine and the power of the Tyrant whereupon he dyed to God for help and presently heard Gabriel Gabriel Gabriel thrice he heard that voyce from heaven intimating that Gabriel would help him whereupon he joyned battell with the Tyrant overcame kill'd most and took the Tyrant King of the Homerites Baron anno 523. Ammonius de gestis Francorum l. 3. c. 87.88 Vbi non est contrarietas voluntatis non est pugna and bound him in chaines At a great battell between Clotharius and Theodoricus was seen an Angel with a drawn sword and many were slain on both sides Some understand these Princes to be Spirits if good there is no discord between them good Angels are without sin and so no opposition in their wills to Gods or one another if of evill Angels it 's that wee aim at the good Angels oppose and contend against the evill with all their strength Rev. 12.7 Michael and his Angels fought against the Dragon and his There was a great battell in heaven the Devill and his angels were cast out which is for the great comfort of Sion certainly devils and devillish men would over-run all if there were not Angels imployed in the four quarters of the world to keep the Church and people of God when Balaam and Balak would have curst Gods people an Angel cometh forth and fights against them Numb 22.22 This is one great office of the Angels to fight against Princes Potentates and men of the earth that seek to oppresse the people of God and labour to hinder Temple work and the welfare of Sion 3. To execute the judgements of God upon wicked men the death of their first-born in Egypt which was the chiefest of the plagues and touched them neerest was done by a destroying Angell who therefore is called Hammaschchit Exod. 12.23 the destroyer shall not come into their houses but into the Egyptians he did come the singular number is put for the plurall a thing usuall in Scripture and so the sense is that Angels were the destroyers of Egyptians and the Psalmist in the 78. Psalm 49. saith God did this work by sending evill Angels among them not that these Angels were wicked spirits as some have thought but Angels or messengers of evill of death unto them The Egyptian Sorcerers used the help of wicked Angels to oppose Moses and harden the Egyptians and God used the help of good Angels to punish evill doers they have been and are imployed in such service the Angels that came to Lots house smote the Sodomites with blindnesse great and small which were at Lots door Gen. 19.11 They fetched fire from heaven and destroyed the place ver 13. When seventy thousand died of the plague 2 Sam. 24.17 in Davids dayes it is made the work of an Angel ver 17. he saw the Angel that smote the people it was an Angel that slew 185000. Assyrians Isa 37.36 Psal 35.5 6. It 's their work to chase and persecute wicked men often Angels of God do suddenly destroy them Act. 12.23 And immediately the Angel of the Lord smote him Lorinus thinks it was the Devill did it but it was some good Angel that being zealous for God did vindicate his glory which was given to a mortall
house then dwell in the Tents and Courts of wickednesse Psal 84. Luther said He had rather fall with Christ then stand with Caesar Joh. 12.26 If any man will serve me him will my Father honour if wee serve Christ Angels are our fellow-servants Rev. 22.9 6. That holy creatures have heavenly minds Angels look up and that in their imployments their eyes are fixed above upon the Lord Christ and it 's certain where there is holinesse it carries upward water will rise as high as the spring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from looking upwards or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the same Os homini sublime dedit and so doth the water of the Spirit Pauls conversation was in heaven Phil. 3.20 Rev. 10.2 An Angel hath sea and earth under his feet and Rev. 12.1 The Church hath the Moone under her feete all ceremoniall worship all mutables in the world and saith Cant. 7.10 I am my beloveds and his desire is towards me The Church finding Christs affection towards her cannot but look out and look up Most men look downwards and are neither like Angels nor men more like swine wormes moules Many are loath to come neere God lest he should say Put off thy shooes from thy feete put off thy earthlinesse if we would have God look down from heaven we must look up to heaven David said When I awake I am still with thee Psal 139.18 He was with God when he lay downe and with him when he awaked and rose The next thing is their wings mentioned in the sixt verse every one had foure wings and verse 8. under their wings on their foure sides and in the 8th they foure had their faces and their wings and in the 9th their wings were joyned one to another 11th their wings were stretched upward two of every one was joyned one to another and two covered their bodies Angels are set forth to us in Scripture with wings here with foure In Isa 6. and Rev. 4. with six wings each of them and they are said to be winged for the agilitie of their natures and swift motion in executing their office Omnis spiritus ales est Tertullian saith Every Spirit is winged they fly in a moment into any part of the world to execute the commands of God Gabriel came flying to Daniel Chap. 9.21 and that swiftly Astronomers observe that from the center of the earth which is 3000. to the surface up to the Sunne is above foure millions of miles to the Firmament where the fixed starres are Clavius in Sphaeram Lessius de omnipot Dei above fourscore millions of miles and from thence to the place of the blessed where Saints and Angels are more millions then from the earth to the Firmament So that according to their account it must be above 160. millions from heaven to earth and this space the Angel came flying in a little time we thinke a Bullet out of a Musket flies swiftly and it doth for it hits the bird or mark ere the report is heard and will fly 180. miles in an houre according to its motion The Sunne moves swifter 1160000 miles in one houre the fixed starres about the aequinoctiall Moone 42. millions of miles each houre and yet the motion of an Angel is swifter being a Spirit and passing through the ayre without opposition no creature in heaven or earth moves faster then an Angel Their wings are foure but the Seraphims in Isa 6. and the foure Beasts in Rev. 4. are set out by six wings each of them A question hereupon arises Why the Visions being correspondent the Angels here are described onely with foure wings Ans That paire of wings is wanting here did cover the face of Isaiah his Seraphims and Johns foure beasts for they standing before the throne and face of God were not able to behold such Majestie brightnesse and glory with open face although they were most pure creatures We cannot look upon the Sunne in its strength and glory but we cover our eyes with our hand so they their faces with their wings now here was something in stead of these wings and did the office of those wings and that was the Firmament Ver. 22. The likenesse of the firmament upon the heads of the living creatures and ver 26. Above the firmament was the throne This firmament interposed between the lustre of divine glory and their eyes as the wings did in the Prophets and Apostles vision and therefore here was no need of that paire of wings they were not before the throne but sub expanso and to doe works beneath in the world Observ That the glory and Majesty of God is such as no eye can fully behold there wings here the firmament is interposed between God and Angels When God came downe upon Mount Sinai and manifested his majestie and glory what said the people Speake thou to us and not the Lord lest we die They could not endure the shine of Moses face much lesse the lustre and majestie of the Lords something must interveene else man dyes for it Touching the wings of these our Angels three things are laid downe 1. The conjunction of their wings 2. The Extention of them 3. The use The Conjunction is in the 9th verse Their wings were joyned one to another and ver 11. Two wings of every one were joyned one to another The extremitie of their wings when stretched out and ready to flie did touch one another so as they seem'd to have but one wing Observ 1. That there is mutuall love and much agreement between the Angels the Connexion of their wings notes the Connexion of their hearts and the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As Sisters that love one another intirely and work together most sweetly so are the Angels they love and labour together most sweetly Foemina ad sororem suam there be no divisions or distractions among them what businesse soever is appointed they all agree in wee men can hardly agree in any one businesse Aliud stans aliud sed●ns de republica sentis Declam in Ciceron so many men so many minds Salust told Tullie that his minde was very changeable concerning the Common-wealth and it 's true of most of us what we allow now in matters of the State or Church wee condemne anon and so are at agreement neither with others nor with our selves but Angelicall concord parallels yea exceeds our discord Angels are all love peace and unitie Alae aequaliter extentae elevatae conjunctae 2. That there is a blessed harmony in the works of God done by Angels their wings goe evenly joyntly not one before another above another divided any way but there is unitie and uniformitie in all their actions and operations Could wee behold the actions and works of Angels wee should see such glory and beauty as never was seene in the works of men If we look upon a building that is uniforme and every part proportionable wee
are much taken with it A garden that is drawne out exactly and every thing in it set in order An Army that keepeth ranke and posture and proceeds in all things according to rule how beautifull and comely are they All the actions of Angels are such one runneth not before another one is not divided from another one disallowes not what another doth but their harmony and correspondency is such that if a man could see the same he would be ravished with the works of Angels Jam. 3.16 Where envying and strife is there is confusion but among Angels there is no envie no strife so no confusion Mutuas sibi invicem tradunt operas ad exequenda Dei decreta 3. That wee should joyne our helps for furtherance of the works of God Angels joyne their wings and afford help to each other to doe the will of God Devils and wicked men joyne together against God and his wayes Psal 2.2 The Kings of the earth set themselves and the Rulers take counsell together against the Lord and against his Anointed c. And good men should joyne together their heads their purses and abilities whatsoever to further Gods worke If Angels appeare and put forth their wings to doe the will of their God let us appeare and put forth our hands to doe the worke of our God The second thing about their wings is they were stretched upwards not let downe drawne up resting upon their bodies but extended as ready for service as might be ver 11. This notes unto us the readinesse of Angels to doe the will of Christ their faces look up attend his commands and their wings are stretched out to fly about them as soone as they are made knowne as a Hawke that is upon the wing watches till the fowle rise and then falls upon her and flyes after her immediately Angels are upon the wing before the command goes out and when it 's out God shall not need to use motives or arguments to put them on The manifestation of his will is the strongest motive unto them and it should be so with us We pray that Gods will may be done on earth as it 's done in heaven the meere manifestation of Gods will therefore should prevaile with us as with Angels but let God manifest his will bring forth his strong arguments to move us yet we have no wings or if wings not stretched forth or if stretched forth wee rather flag then fly with them The third thing is the covering of the wings ver 11. Femora two covered their bodies their thighes feet that is in Isa 6.1 their uncomely parts which are in Scripture-phrase call'd the feete One wing did cover the fore-part of their body another their hinder parts Obs 1. In this covering of their bodies God propounds them a patterne of chastitie and modestie unto us Those parts are hid which might uncovered argue disreverence of God or concupiscence in them or be offensive unto men God loves chaste spirits and chaste behaviours the Angels are very chaste and would not have any undecent thing objected to divine view whose authoritie and majestie they adore Nihil impurum in conspectum Dei veniat No impure thing must come into the sight of God therefore God ordered Exod. 20.26 That there must be no steps to his Altar lest the nakednesse of the Priests were discovered in their going up and so offence given to God and man and further he appointed linnen breeches to cover the Priests nakednesse Exod. 28.42 2. It notes out to us that Angelicall nature is a thing hidden and too high for us while we are in our houses of clay their natures are beyond the reach of mans braine and that wee are so farre from the knowledge of Gods face nature and abilitie to behold them that we cannot know and behold the lowest parts the very feet of Angels they are vail'd up from us As too transcendent for our capacities we know not the natures of any creatures here below not of a flower a fly we describe things but doe not cannot define them I would see the proudest of you all define the nature of a straw as one preached in Cambridge to all the Scholars Vitreum vas lam●imus pultem non attingimus if we know not the nature of these visibles of bodies then much lesse of Angels and if not of Angels least of all of God 3. That men are apt to Idolize choice Instruments imployed in Gods service and therefore the Angels are covered with wings to prevent it Such is the beauty wisdome strength use and celeritie of Angels in Gods service that man is apt to deifie them John falls down to worship before the feete of an Angel Rev. 22.8 And when Paul and Barnabas had heal'd a creeple the Lycaonians said The Gods are come downe to us in the likenesse of men and they would have sacrificed to them Act. 14. And should the Angels appeare to us in their natures without being covered up wee should take them to be Gods but they will not have that honour they will hide their beauty and excellency and desire the glory onely be given to God The next thing wee are to come unto is their feete in the seventh verse VER 7. And their feete were straight feete and the sole of their feete was like the sole of a calves foot and they sparkled like the colour of burnished brass STraight feete They were feete of men and by a Synecdoche feete are put for the leggs and thighs the Septuagint read it Their thighs were right or straight and therefore could not be the thighs or feete of beast which in the hammes are with compasse and not straight they were neither bending inward nor outward but straight as pillars Columnarum instar This types out to us 1. That the wayes of Angels are all straight and right feete in Scripture are put for wayes inward of the soule outward of the whole man Pro. 4.26 Ponder the path of thy feete Psal 119.105 Thy word is a lamp unto my feet that is all my actions and Eccles 5.1 Keepe thy foote when thou goest to the house of God that is thy thoughts affections will reason and all within Take the feete of Angels for their thoughts desires wils reason actions they are all right there is no act of theirs voyde of reason as the acts of brutes are none done by rash motion or suddain passion as too many of mens are they goe not without warrant and when they goe they goe in the way appointed of God never turne out but are exact keeping to his will 2. They are firme constant in their resolutions and service for God that is noted by feete in Scripture for feete are the basis and foundation of things Exod. 30.28 The Laver and his foote that is his basis whereon he rested mens feet or legs are the foundation whereon the body rests In Eccles 12.13 Firmitas homini debebatur
may heare and not heare c. What 's the reason Christ knocks at the dore so oft and is not let in the heart is dead asleep or abroad 4. Ad transitum facici suae aut tractum faciei suae objectum So Piscat That Angels have the scope and marke in their eye which they aime at They went every one streight forward the Hebrew is to the way or passage of his face that path was before his face that is they went thither where their eyes or faces were fixed as they looke not back nor aside so they alwayes looke upon the marke each goeth forward to that is before him this keeps them on to the work and in the work they have the marke in their eye Pro. 4.25 Let thine eyes look right on and let thine eye-lids looke streight before thee looke to the charge appointed to that is right to that is set before thee of God and this will quicken thy industry Phil. 3.13 14. Forgetting those things which are behinde and reaching forth unto those things which are before I presse towards the marke Paul had not his eye upon what was done bygone or on what was upon either side of him but upon that was before him the marke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heaven eternall life was the marke in his eye and he pressed after them he was as intent upon them and as pursuant of them as he was in the work of persecuting the Saints he reached after them as the one thing necessary Assequitur nulla qui sequitur multa Is Angelicus qui nec multus nec varius est we set not the mark before us in stead of heaven Christ eternall life we have the world our pleasures and a multitude of things in our eyes and so we are divided and doe nothing 5. That Angels minde and pursue every one his own work not others They went forward to the worke object mark set before their faces he that had his work designed him in the East minded not his work lay in the West each acted his own part and fell not upon any thing concern'd another although their imployments lay the same way what was before their faces that they did and nothing else Devills compasse the earth and medle with all men and with all matters it 's not so with the good Angels they kept their station and doe keep order they intermedle not with ought concerns them not The Apostle would have Christians to be Angelicall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thes 4.11 Study to doe your own businesse those things concerne our generall and particular calling if men will with their wit and curiositie run out of their bounds they are extravagant and busi-bodies Some think because they are Neighbours they may medle in all contentions because Subjects they may interpose in all State-affaires because Christians deale with others sinnes but this is to break the hedge to break out of our own callings into others and such though they seeme great doers doe nothing 2 Thes 3.11 There are some among you that walke disorderly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 working not at all they are busie-bodies What busie and doe nothing Yes because they doe things impertinent unto them unfruitfull unprofitable out of place When Peter medl'd too far in Johns matters What shall this man doe Christ takes him up sharply What is that to thee Joh. 21.22 And some thinke this made Peter so sharpe against that sinne afterwards and to looke upon it as bad as theft and murther 1 Pet. 4.15 Let none of you suffer as a murtherer or as a thiefe or as an evill doer or as a busie-body in other mens matters They ran and returned Here is the qualitie of their motion it was swift they had wings to fly and feete to run much hath been spoken of the Angels swiftnesse I shall here therefore touch upon their returne when their work is done they make no stay they linger not at all but returne with all speed when God sends them out or calls them in their motion is very speedy it 's set out here by a flash of lightning that is the soonest into the world and out againe of any sensible creature in a moment it is in your houses and out againe in a moment it shines from East to West and is gone it 's very glorious and marvellous active Angels are Cherubims of glory Heb. 9.5 and the most active of all Gods works and when their work is finished they retire immediately as lightening when it 's come to its period doth reciprocate and fall back into its selfe without delay so doe the Angels returne to him sent them out to know his farther pleasure and to doe him more service Obs 1. That Angels in their services are glorious and terrible They are like the lightning which shines dazles and doth dreadfull things Judg. 13.20 When Manoah and his wife saw the Angel goe up to heaven in a flame of fire they fell downe on their faces to the ground and thought they should dye ver 22. It was a received opinion among the Jews that if they saw God or an Angel they should dye upon it Judg 6.22 23. Gideon a mightie man of valour cryes out Alas O Lord God because I have seen an Angel of the Lord face to face and the Lord said Feare not thou shalt notidye If they had a vision being awake they apprehended death but they never had experience of any that dyed upon any such occasion this rose rather from the apprehension of glory majesty in God and Angels and consciousness of their own weaknes guilt as not able to abide the presence of those glorious creatures that came immediatly from the presence of the glorious God and we finde that some have been much affrighted and almost struck dead at the presence of the holy Angels Mat. 28.2 3 4. An Angel comes from heaven whose countenance was like lightning and his rayment as the Sunne and for feare of him the Keepers of the Sepulchre did shake and became like dead men there was no spirit left in them the glory of the Angel did exanimate them they are glorious and terrible in their ministrations and so should the Ministers of the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Angels of the Church be Nazianz. saith of Basil his speech was thunder and his life lightning Such were James and John Boanerges sonnes of thunder Mark 3.17 They were terrible to sinners in their preaching like thunder and lightning 2. That account is to be rendered to God of all our services whom God sets awork he will reckon with Angels returne and become responsable to God their Lord and Master those mightie and glorious creatures when their work is finished doe willingly and chearfully returne and give in their answer God looks for it and they delight to doe it and account we must all give of our work in the world Rom. 14.12 Every one of us
and seen far They are light to the godly when Angels execute Gods judgements upon sinners the Saints see much in it they see matter of feare and praise of feare in that Gods power wrath and hatred are manifested in them against sin and sinners of praise in that themselves are delivered and justice is performed Psal 58.10 11. The righteous shall rejoyce when hee seeth the vengeance hee shall wash his feet in the blood of the wicked when the wicked are taken away by a divine stroke by the hand of justice and God hath the glory of his justice the righteous rejoyce at it but is that all no Hee washeth his feet in the blood of the wicked that is by this judgement he fears and reformes it 's a metaphor taken from the practice of those parts where they went barefoot or with Sandalls and so contracted much filth and used to wash and cleanse their feet when they came in so here the godly seeing the hand of God upon the wicked feares and judges himself for his sins purges his conscience and affections and stands now in awe of that God who hath stricken the wicked for those sins which hee himself in part is guilty of Waldus a man of note in Lions seeing one struck dead in his presence he washed his hands in his blood for presently he gave almes to the poor instructed his family in the true knowledge of God and exhorted all came unto him to repentance and holinesse of life They are lightning to the wicked that is dreadfull and confounding In this worke of executing judgement as they are lamps to light the godly so they are burning coales and lightning to destroy the wicked How terrible was the destroying Angel when the plague was in Davids dayes Rev. 16. when the Angels powred out their vials of wrath how dreadfull were they men blasphemed and repented not to give glory to God VERS 15. Now as I beheld the living creatures behold one wheel upon the earth by the living creatures with his four faces VVEe have done through divine vertue two parts of the Vision and now are coming to the third That of the wheeles which hath its darknesse and difficulties and here the glory of God in his providence is considerable from earthly things and second causes In the Vision of the wheels two things I shall present unto you First the signification Secondly the description of these wheels What these wheels may signifie there is great variety of opinions with all which I will not trouble you Wheels by a Synecdoche some think is put for a Chariot in which God is presented to the Prophet guarded with Angels on every side who stand with great reverence and readinesse to do his will and by this Chariot they understand the Majesty Glory Providence and Kingdome of God in which he rules all things at his pleasure as a Waggoner or Pilot Quasi auriga and by the wheels the Immensity Eternity celerity perspicacity and efficacy of God in his operations Some thinke by Chariot is meant the Church and by the wheels the Apostles These are thoughts of men we will therefore labour to give you the thoughts and intention of Gods Spirit so neer as we can By the Wheels wee are to understand this visible world with all things in it the kingdomes of the earth and the Church of God and condition of all humane things which are all in motion and uncertain and that this is the sense of the Wheels may be gathered from the Prophet in the 10th Chapter and 13th verse where it 's said Ipsis nomen vocatum est hic orbis or ipsae vocatae sunt orbis Iun. as for the wheeles it was cryed unto them in my hearing O wheel O world Their name is the or this world the word in the Hebrew is Haggalgal and not the same with the usuall word for wheel and it 's both Substantively and distinctively used and notes out this world in which we live in which Ezekiel was it 's not Galgal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but haggalgal which is demonstrative and distinguishing Psal 77.18 there is the same word and it 's not rendred in the wheel Illuxerunt coruscationes orbiterae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the Greeks do absolutely take 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the world Heins in Iacob 3.6 but in the heaven or in the round that is the ayre and the Vulgar translates it The lightnings have shined in the world and so the Septuagint Seeing it's evident that by the wheels is meant the world and things therein it 's needfull to examine the fitnesse of this comparison and so to see the wisdome of Gods Spirit in it Orbe rotundato sydera quaeque micant 1. The wheel or wheels are round such is the form of the world it 's called orbis globus from the roundnesse 2. A wheel is movable and mutable that part is on high is presently at the bottome and that which is at the bottome is quickly again at the top and this informs us in the mobility and mutability of all humane and mundane things and is principally intended by this vision of the wheels Kingdoms Churches Families volvuntur revolvuntur are daily wheel'd about mov'd changed and never long permanent in any condition The four great Monarchies the Babylonian Persian Grecian Roman how were they kickt like Foot-balls and tossed like Tennisballs from one to another and at last devoured by each other After that great rent made in the house of David by Jeroboam what changes what wars and famines were in the kingdomes of Judah and Israel you find in the Books of the Kings and Chronicles You may see the relation of these wheels in one Chapter 1 King 16. you shall finde that in twelve or thirteen yeers of Asa's reign King of Judah there was the death of Baasha Elah Zimri Tibni Omri that were wretched Kings and made fearfull stirs and murthers in Israel and beside wicked Ahab in that time began his reign and troubled all Israel The Church what a low ebb was it at in Elijah's dayes when he complains Gods Covenant is forsaken his Altars thrown down his Prophets slain himself left alone and his life also sought for 1 King 19.14 The Church now when Ezekiel had this vision was in captivity without a Temple Altar Sacrifice and the Church is never long in any settled condition Rev. 8.1 There was silence in heaven about the space of half an hour under the ten fiery Persecutions the Church had no rest but in Constantines times it had a little but presently the Arrian heresie brake out and did more mischieve the Church then all the persecutions before The Church is wheeled about from condition to condition sometimes it 's in Egypt sometime in the Wildernesse sometimes in Canaan and sometimes in Babylon it 's Noahs Arke that rides upon rough waters and is not like to take harbour before
Christ comes So for families and persons they are in a movable condition Aetas parentum pejor avis mox datura progeniem vitiosiorem Horat. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eccles 1.4 One generation passeth away and another cometh that goes and a third hastens after them to the grave 1 Cor. 4.9 Wee are made a spectacle to the world a Theatre that is we come into the world and act here a little while upon the Stage of it and presently we are gone Kings Princes and all conditions of men do so Noah and his Generations are gone David and his If wee come neerer our selves the Merovignian family was driven out by Pippin son of Martel and that family by Hugh Capet so that there have been three races of the royall line in France the Plantagenets race here is wholly gone or lies in obscurity great is the incertainty motion and mutation of the things in this world the wheels are up and down and not consistent Job is very rich and poor in one day Haman in great favour and under great displeasure in a wheel of time There is a story very suitable to this vision of the wheels and brought in by Expositers to give light unto it which I may not omit and it 's of Sesostris a King of Egypt who had a golden Chariot bedecked with many precious stones and when hee rode in it no meaner persons must draw it then foure Kings that hee had conquered one of the four cast his eye altogether upon the wheel and being demanded the reason of it by Sesostris said I see in this wheel the mutability of all conditions that part of the wheel is neerest heaven is by and by upon the earth and contrary that is upon the earth is presently again neerest heaven This wrought so upon Sesostris that hee thought his condition might change and therefore freed those Kings from that servitude and would not have his Chariot drawn any more by them Belisarius Generall of Justinian forces overcame the Persians in the East the Vandals in Africa the Goths in Italy and did extraordinary service at last had his eyes put out his whole estate taken away and forced to begge of passengers without the gates of Rome Baron Da obolum Belisario quem extulit virtus caecavit invidia O give one farthing to Belisarius whom his own vertue advanced and others envie hath blinded Adonibezek who sate upon the top of this wheel was soon brought under hee had seventy Kings with their thumbs and toes cut off and put like dogs under his table to eat scraps 1 Cor. 7.31 and himself was made acquainted with that condition In the present affaires of Ireland wee may see the mysterie of Ezekiels wheels all things are running moving and working to a change 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 3.6 he calls it the wheel of nature or rather of this Generation shewing that the present Generation is hastening out of the world 3. Wheeles make in their motion a great noise and ratling Joel 2.5 Like the noise of Chariots on the tops of mountains so the things in the world move not silently but make a great stir and mighty noise Rev. 6.1 when the first seal was opened and Christ rode abroad upon his white horse of the Gospel conquering the Nations there was as the noise of thunder and stirs and tumults were raised in Kingdomes and mighty oppositions were made in the world Chap. 19. when Christ shall judge the great Whore and avenge the blood of the Saints it will not be without noise vers 6. I heard as it were the voyce of a great multitude and as the voyce of many waters and as the voyce of mighty thunderings saying Allelujah for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth there is the voyce of the people like waters a low and lesse noise and there is the voyce of Parliament and Armies a greater a thundring voyce the things now in motion in this kingdome and others make a great thundring in the world as in former dayes between the Houses of York and Lancaster were fought seventeen pitched fields in which eight Kings and Princes perished forty Dukes Marquesses and Earls 200000. of the people besides Barons and Gentlemen which things were not done without a great noise 4. Wheeles are moved by some hand and set on running else they stir not so this world is moved acted and governed by divine vertue Things are carryed in this world like wheels Psal 113.9 up and down backwards and forwards as if all were left at six and seven and hurried up and down by some blind chance or fortune which we exclude and only acknowledge all to be moved ordered and effected by divine providence it 's God that by his providence and the ministery of his Angels that sets all the wheels in the world in motion a Sparrow falls not to the ground nor a haire off our heads without his will 5. By the motion of the wheel many works are done the Potters of old made their vessels by the motion of the wheele Ier. 18.3 by it the corn was ground and justice was done Prov. 20.26 He bringeth the wheele over them that notes the punishment of evill-doers it 's a metaphor from husbandmen that in hot countreys did by the help of a wheele break the ears of corn and so get it out Isa 28.28 and justice is the wheele that breaks men and gets out the truth and separates the chaffe from the Wheat in some place a wheele hath been used to break the bones of sinners Hence Tully saith 5. Tuscul beatam vitam iu rotam non ascendere That an innocent life had nothing to do with the wheel So that by the motion of the wheele much hath been done and God by the rotations and strange motions in the world brings about great works Dan. 9.25 the walls of Jerusalem should be built in a troublous time In the 9. verse and Chap. 1● of the Revelation mention is made of trumpets and vials which note great stirs and changes in the world and notable effects follow thereupon We hope that the stirs of our time are the preparation to the most glorious work of Antichrists ruining our reforming Christ reigning and the Jewes raising old things are passing away and all things are becoming new old Religion viz. Popery old Prelacy old Service and Ceremonies are going downwards and they that led into captivity are themselves a leading into captivity Rev. 13.10 Observ The world and things in it are not fit for us to fix our hearts upon The world it self and all in it are of a wheeling nature uncertain movable and running away and the word Galgal a wheele and the world signifies also a mote chaffe straw any thing driven before the wind and so it is used Isa 17.13 Chegalgal as a wheeling thing before the whirle-wind the margent renders it as a thistle or thorne the one shewes the vanity of the world the other
when God by his Spirit lifted up the Angels to great imploiments then that Spirit lifted up the wheels the second causes to more then ordinary service and the word lifting up notes service a higher degree of it then before 2 King 19.4 Lift up thy prayer for the remnant that are left Hezekiah sends to Isaiah when Rabshakeh blasphemed and Jerusalem was besieged and saith Isaiah thou art a Prophet and hast more then an ordinary measure of the Spirit lift up thy prayer let it be extraordinary such as may lift up the spirits of all to joyn with thee higher then ever such as may lift up Jerusalem out of misery So Jehoiaehin when he was set up upon the throne to governe and to do great service it 's said his head was lifted up Jer. 52. and so in Psal 12.10 the lifting up of Gods hand notes doing of some great matter The next thing inquirable into is the standing of the living creatures and the wheels when the one stood the other stood do the Angels stand still at any time they are active spirits and alwayes in motion Two things this standing implies 1. A cessation from any service in hand at the will and pleasure of God if he would call off the Angels from their imployments before they were finished In this sense the Angels are said to stand and so the second causes they used although they were both imployed in some other service or 2. When they had perfected any work in hand then they were said to stand not idle but in expectation of a new Commission like faithfull servants when their work is done present themselves before their Master and demand their pleasure so the Angels and second causes hearken what God will say more and what is the next word and work to be done they wait upon God for new instructions Observ 1. The motions of this inferiour world and the second causes in it do depend upon higher causes even heavenly motions the ministery of Angels The observation is plain from the words When the living creatures went the wheels went by them If the Angels move the wheels move also they are great things the Angels have in their hands the wheels of Nature of States and Kingdomes yea of the Church it self 2. Nothing in the world is casuall many things seem so to us but in veritate rei are not so all things here below move at the motions of others and that which is ordered by the motion of Angels or God himself cannot be casuall The wheels are moved by Angels Angels by God himself God directs all nothing happens falls out amongst us wherein the hand of God or Angels is not things are not accidentall if a thing could drop from the heavens or be done on earth without God and his Angels that were casuall and accidentall indeed And because men see not the immediate or remote causes of things who they be move the wheels on earth therefore they attribute effects events and accidentall things to fortune chance luck to good to bad dayes and hours which proclaims mens ignorance and forgetfulnesse of God Qui paratis mensam fortunae Hier. Qui ponitis mensam fortunae Vulg. Isai 65.11 Those that forget God prepared a table for that troop for Fortune some read it but those who know God acknowledge his eye and hand seeing and ordering all Austin misses his way and so escapes the danger of death was intended another being in a despairing humour seeks a knife a halter to undo himself and findes a great treasure a third hath his ring drops off his finger into the Sea and after finds it in the bowels of a fish God so directs all these accidentall things that there is nothing done but by a secret instinct and hint from himself Absconditum quid and in all such passages we should mind something of God 3. That nothing can let the motion of the wheels when Angels and Providence would have them stir When the living creatures moved the wheels went presently it 's not in the power of second causes of men or devils to hinder the work of God in the hand of Angels The King of Persia may withstand Gabriel 21. dayes together Dan. 10.13 but the wheels moved all the time Gabriel prevailed and Gods work prospered in his hand wicked men make head against God Providence Angels and think to stop the wheels when they move not on their side but all is in vain if a man should catch hold of a Chariot running to stop or turn the course of it were it not folly or madnesse in him and because he would be the Chariots remora that may prove his ruin so here men and devils do ruine themselves in opposing the wheels which notwithstanding all oppositions proceed and keep their course And let me tel you a riddle Gods works go on through the hearts heads and hands of his greatest enemies Providence fetches them in and makes them subservient to the worke they oil the wheels although they know it not and forward the work though against their wils God in this kind makes use of kine and cart men and devils yea any creature to carry his Ark to its place 4. That God doth sometimes raise the spirit of the creature to more then an ordinary heighth and inables it to unwonted service The living creatures and wheels were lifted up So Moses when called up to the mount his spirit was raised much else the service had been too hot and hard for him Joshuah was advanced when it was told him that there should not any man stand before him all the dayes of his life Josh 1.5 Jeremy tells the Jews that the Chaldeans whom they thought would depart and not meddle with their City hee tels them that though they had smitten the whole army of the Chaldeans and that there remained but wounded men yet they should rise up every man in his Tent and burn the City with fire Jer. 37.10 When men are wounded thrust thorow as the Hebrew is they can have but little strength 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how should they be able to do it God would lift them up to that service as David when he grappled with the Bear and Lion incountred with Goliah had his spirit lifted up to a great heighth Hence that in Zachary 12.8 H● that is feeble among you at that day shall be as David that is such a warrier as David who though a young stripling slew a Bear a Lion and Goliah and the house of David shall be as God and as the Angel of the Lord. The godly though weak yet shall be lifted up to divine and Angelicall strength this was made good in the time of the Maccabees when the people of God were weak Antiochus fierce and vile then God raised up the spirit of Judas Jonathan and Simeon to do extraordinary things this was also made good in the time of the Apostles what great things did they do and
of the whole earth this is the day that we looked for These expressions you have in the Book of Lamentations David a King a Prophet a man of a warlike spirit that feared not the Bear the Lion Goliah saith my flesh trembleth for feare of thee I am afraid of thy judgements Psal 119.120 When other things did not daunt him at all Gods judgements did there was daunting terror in them and no marvell there is wrath in them such rage wrath fury as is in wild beasts Hos 5.14 I will be unto Ephraim as a Lion and as a young Lion to the House of Judah I even I will teare and go away I will take away and none shall rescue such terror as is in an earthquake that shakes the foundations of all Isa 29.6 such as in a strong winde and an overflowing showre Ezek. 13.13 such as in a flail that beats out the corn and breaks the straw in pices Hab. 3.12 such as in the Sea or Earth swallowing up Psal 21.9 What a dreadfull cry when Corah and his company sunk alive into the earth when Pharaoh and his host were overwhelmed in the Sea such terror is in Gods judgements yea more dreadfull yet such as in thunder lightning and devouring fire Isa 29.6 yea such as is in fire and brimstone Psal 11.6 God is Baal-chemah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nahum 1.2 A Lord of wrath so the originall is a Possessour of wrath and in his judgements doth distribute terrors and sorrows him therefore should the sonnes of men reverence 2. Gods Judgements have the voyce of speech in them they speak unto sinners Mic. 6.9 The Lords voyce cryeth unto the City and the man of wisdome shall see thy Name heare yee the rod and who hath appointed it If the first voyce be the cry of the Prophets and Ministers the second is the cry of the Judgements of God the rod speaks aloud it proclaims Gods anger wrath fury jealousie revenge his Omniscience holinesse justice the terror of the Almighty it proclaimes our folly shame and ingratitude treachery and great guiltinesse before God it cries to us for repentance when destruction lay at the gates of Ninivie they understood the language thereof and repented in dust and ashes Jon. 3. It cries to us for righteousnesse when Gods judgements are in the earth the Inhabitants of the world will learne righteousnesse Isa 26.9 They cannot learne unlesse they be taught and do they not teach and teach many lessons to feare God whom men have forgotten in their prosperity to make restitution to men whom they have wronged in the day of their wills to be charitable in censuring others and rigide in censuring themselves 3. Angels are not only swift but efficacious in their motions and administrations The great waters mighty thunders and numerous armies make way before them and nothing can withstand their force and so it is with Angels when they are upon service none can stand before them they destroy armies shake kingdoms move all the wheels in the quarters of the world and their motions are not faint but forcible 4. It 's not every eare that heares the noyse of Angels wings though their noyse be great efficacious like waters thunder the voyce of speech as an host yet all heare them not it 's the Prophet heares them and such as have divine spirits the operations of Angels are unperceiveable to most of the world all eyes see not visions neither do all eares heare the things that visions do speak few are capable of divine mysteries To you it is given to know the mysteries of the Kingdome Mat. 13.11 There be mysteries in the government of the world as well as in the Kingdome of heaven and it 's a speciall gift to be acquainted with them Gods secrets are made known to them that feare him Psal 25.14 some choyce precious excellent spirits they heare they see what others do not such as turn from iniquity Dan. 9.13 such as are wise Hos 14.9 they understand such as are deeply interested in the truth and Churches cause as have suffered much and have their drosse purged out by the fire of afflictions they heare they see more and greater things then the men of the world Nehemiah Isaiah Daniel Ezekiel John that were men of great sufferings they heard voyces others heard not In the Revelation it 's said oft Hee that hath an eare to heare let him heare every man hath an outward eare but not the inward the eare of the heart whereby to perceive the meaning of the Spirit men heare not the voyce of the Spirit in the Churches they heare men but not the Spirit what that speaks in the Ordinances and as they heare it not in them so they heare not the Spirit in the wheels nor the voyce of it in the great judgements of God VERS 25. And there was a voyce from the firmament that was over their heads when they stood and had let down their wings HEre we have a description of the firmament from the noyse that came from it and that is the cause of the Angels making their appearance before the Lord and the manner of their appearance is they stood with their wings let down Whose voyce this was comes now into question it was not a voyce of the firmament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De super firmenta but from above which is in the originall besides from the firmament so that it was not the noyse or voyce of the firmament neither of any Angel for they are here present under the firmament but it was the voyce of Christ of him that was above upon the throne and it hath much in it 1. It sets out the Majesty and State of Christ who like a mighty Emperor sits upon his Throne and speaks unto his Nobles and people at distance 2. His authority calling in the Angels his great agents in the world from their services to appeare before him they upon this voyce come from the quarters of the world and stand about his Throne to give account of their administrations to receive new instructions and are sent out by him to great services 3. To awaken quicken and prepare the Prophet who had hard things to meet with harsh people to deal withall but when hee saw Angels come and go at the voyce of Christ it hushed all objections and set his spirit to attend to the voyce of Christ to receive instructions from him and to do his will thought hee Shall those glorious Angels those great Agents in the world hearken to Christ be informed by him execute his Will and shall I a poore captive stick at it dispute the case with him no no I will be like to these Angels heare receive and obey Of the standing of the Angels formerly hath been spoken in the 21th Verse to which I refer you The letting down their wings notes their cessation from imployment as Birds or Fowls when they fall upon their feet on trees or ground
may come unseasonably to them but it 's not so here Christ sits upon the Throne and that constantly to assure us that he is alwayes willing and ready to heare the motions his shall make and to execute judgements upon their enemies which is matter of great comfort to poor afflicted soules that they may at any time finde this Judge sitting and open their grievances unto him and have audience other Judges are absent from their seats or not at leasure or stately and will not give way to poore oppressed ones to ease themselves and acquaint them with their suits none of these are to be feared here 11. Christ sitting on the Throne prompts unto us that Christ should accomplish the whole work of mans redemption which the Father had appointed him and so sit downe in glory upon the Throne He appeared as man in that nature hee did and suffered the will of God on earth and in that nature he sate down at the right hand of God had not Christ been to fulfill all righteousnesse he had not appeared as man sitting on the throne and had he not done it hee should never have returned to heaven and sate down in glory hee hath satisfied the Law is freed from the guilt of our sins and hath presently finished the work undertaken and therefore told his Father he had glorified him on earth he had finished the work he had given him to do and thereupon desired him to glorifie him and set him upon the Throne Joh. 17.4 5. which is done and this may be of singular comfort against all our imperfections corruptions temptations and death it self VERS 27. I saw as the colour of Amber as the appearance of fire round about within it c. HEre the man that sate upon the Throne is described unto us 1. In generall 2. More particularly 1. In generall I saw as the colour of Amber 2. Particularly upwards and downwards upwards as the appearance of fire round about within it from the appearance of his loynes upward so that this fire was more latent and then downwards the fire was more visible and had brightnesse about it Touching the word Hashmal or Chasmal I have spoken largely in the 4th verse Quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 festinanter consumens and it signifies a coale intensly hot and as it were presently consuming what ever it touches such coals are most fierie and lively and they that render the word color vividissimus a most lively colour or as the colour of a burning coal give the truest sense of the word Before it referred to the Angels here to Christ the word Chasmal read backward is Lammashach or Lammashiach which is interpreted the Messiah it 's the Cabalists observation and the summe in generall is this I saw as the colour of Amber I saw Christ that sate upon the Throne all of an intense fierie colour like the most hot burning coals and so the Lord Christ is set forth Rev. 1.14 15. His eyes were as a flame of fire his feet like unto fine brasse as if they burned in a furnace so here from head to feet Christ is presented in a fiery colour and it 's frequent in Scripture when acts of power and judgement are to be executed against kingdomes or churches to have Christ presented in a fierie way so Rev. 10.1 the mighty Angel Christ is brought in there with his face shining as the Sun and his feet at pillars of fire and presently there were great thunders and dreadfull things so Rev. 2.18 hee is brought in with eyes like fire and feet like brasse and then tels Thyatira hee hath a few things against her so Rev. 19.11 12 13. In righteousnesse he doth judge and make war and then his eyes were as a flame of fire and his vesture dipt in blood thus is he described when some great designes are afoot as sentencing a church warring against his enemies c. The particular description is next which falls into farther inquiry from his loynes upward was as the appearance of fire within it there is a difference between the fire in the upward parts of Christ and that in his lower the one is externall the other internall Within it within what within the colour of the Amber or according to the word as we have interpreted it within that fire of burning hot coals there was as the appearance of fire in the concave of it round about Ignis latens igniens intrinsecus Sanct. so that there was a fire in a fire a secret hidden fire burning inwardly this fire did not put forth its vertue so apparently as the other did but burnt inwardly and reflected upon it selfe What this fire was is our work to open unto you By fire within Gregory in his seventh Homily understands Christ before his incarnation he was ignis in Judaea tantum there only hee shined the Gentiles knew him not but after his incarnation hee shined from his loynes downward and was made known unto all but by it wee understand the divine nature of Christ which being full of perfection too bright for humane eyes was more inward and remote from sense and it 's likened unto fire in regard of the lustre and efficacy of it which none can indurc By the burning hot coales wee may understand the burning zeale of Christ to the glory of God in executing judgement upon the wicked and at this time hee sate in judgement upon Jerusalem From his loynes downward there was as the appearance of fire and it had brightnesse round about it this fire and brightnesse was more apparent visible and enlightning then the other and it represents to us the great glory and Majesty of the Lord Christ as it is exhibitive to and comprehensive by creatures it 's the glory of humane nature which was the lower part of Christ lesse glorious the strength of the divine natures glory shining through it and giving out it self in that way and degree as man is capable of the Sun in a cloud may be beheld by the weakest eye in it self not by the strongest the glory of both Christs natures are shadowed out unto us in this verse And it had brightnesse round about Splendor ei circum that fire produced a brightnesse and a brightnesse on every side it sets out the glory of Christ in execution of justice upon those are delinquents or the glory of his presence and actions hee dwels in light and all his actions are lightsome Observ 1. That the Lord Christ as man is very glorious hee was here in the appearance of man and the Prophet saw him having the colour of Chasmal that is like unto the most burning and hottest coale or coales not those in common fires but those that are in a furnace which glow and shine most Dan. 10.6 Rev. 1.16 in his transfiguration which was a Praeludium to his glorious condition in heaven Christs face shined as the Sun Mat. 17.2 What a glorious creature is the
Sun and Christs face as glorious as that is in Dan. 12.3 it 's said The wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnesse as the stars for ever but Christ as the Sun which is the great glory of the heavens the godly may have firmament and star brightnesse but Christ Sun brightnesse Neither doth that reach the glory of Christs humane nature it goes beyond it Acts 26.13 when Christ appeared to Paul at his conversion what saith hee I saw a light from heaven above the brightnesse of the Sun shining round about mee this was the light of the glory of Christ glorified and it was beyond the brightnesse of the Sun The Star that led the Wise men to Christ Epist ad Eph. Ignatius thinks did exceed all the rest in light and brightnesse that none ever was like it be it so yet the glory of Christs humane nature is far above it no creature is so glorious as fully to represent the glory of it therefore saith the Apostle Phil. 3. last Hee shall change our vile bodies and make them like not the Stars or Sun that were too low but like his glorious body the originall is his body of glory that is his body which is exceeding glorious above the glory of all creatures 2. That the Lord Christ sitting upon the Throne in judgement is very dreadfull hee is ignis vividissimus as hot burning coals the Propht Malachi tels you of his coming and when hee comes who may abide the day of his coming and who shall stand when he appeareth for he is like refiners fire and he shall sit as a refiner and purifier of silver Chap. 3.2 3. A refiners fire is the hottest it melts purges consumes and is terrible such a fire is Christ in his judgements Jerusalem could not stand before him but hee destroyes them by the strength of Babylon and afterward is terrible to Babylon it self Jerem. 51.25 I am against thee O destroying mountain speaking of Babylon which destroyest all the earth I will stretch out my hand upon thee and rowle thee down from the rocks and will make thee a burnt mountain this burning coal Christ will fire and burn down that great mountain and what then they shall not take of thee a stone for a corner nor a stone for foundations but thou shalt be desolate for ever severe was the Spirit of Christ against Babylon in the letter and as severe is he now against Babylon in the mystery hee shall destroy them that destroy the earth Rev. 11.18 Hee makes Jerusalem a burthensome stone to all that meddle with it Zach. 12.3 There is mention made in the 28. of our Prophet 14. of stones of fire Christ is the stone of fire that breaks and burnes the kingdomes of the earth many kingdomes in Europe are on fire at this day and almost broken in pieces and burnt to ashes we may see that Christ is terrible in his judgements hee is riding now upon his red horse taking peace from the earth dipping his garments in blood and causing his great sword to eat flesh and drink blood he is upon his black horse bringing in famine and pestilence the pale horse is sadled and death is on the back of him and intends to ride through our Cities Countryes Townes Families and make a great slaughter Rev. 2.6 and will yet be more terrible vers 17. the great day of his wrath is at hand and who shall be able to stand neither Kings great men Captains mighty ones nor any other sort can do it they will call on rocks and mountains to fall upon them and hide them from the face of him that sits on the Throne and from the wrath of the Lamb his eyes sparkled with fire his feet are like burning brasse and out of his mouth issue flames of fire and to set out the dreadfulnesse of this Judge Paul tels us he shall come in flames of fire 2 Thes 1.8 And as his appearance so his name will be dreadfull for he hath an unknown name belongs to him in his way of ruling and judgement Rev. 19.12 and this will be known when he sets up his Kingdome among the Jewes saith Brightman 3. That he is zealous in sentencing and punishing Malefactors he is pruna summe ignita and not only so but here is a fire within zeal in his breast a spirit of burning within you may see the zeal of Christ in Joh. 2.14 15 16 17. The Temple being a type of Christ and by divine appointment set apart for worship should not have been made a place of merchandize but Christ coming and finding in the Temple those that sold Oxen Sheep Doves and changers of money sitting made a scourge of small cords and whipt them out of the Temple like a company of Rogues drove out the Sheep and Oxen powred out the changers money overthrew the tables bid them take away their Doves and not make his Fathers House an house of merchandize they might have said All these are brought for sacrificing for publique service and the worship of God and what dost thou pretend Gods glory and take away his sacrifice we will whip thee out of the Temple and use thee as an enemy to God and his worship and it was a wonder they did not Christ being a poore man having no countenance from the Rulers and medling with rude fellowes and dealing with them so sharply and shamefully as to whip them out it was wonder they tore him not in pieces or stoned him to death for it Christs zeal was hot and carried him on to punish and disgrace those delinquents not fearing their rage or malice so Gods glory might be repaired This zeal in Christ was so intense that it warmed the hearts of his Disciples who upon it remembred what was writ of him The zeal of thine house hath eaten mee up How zealous was Christ in his carriage towards the Asian churches he tels Ephesus that except shee repent recover her first love and do her fitst works hee will come quickly remove her Candlestick out of its place and unchurch her Rev. 2.5 To Pergamus also he saith Repent for I come quickly and will fight against thee with the sword of my mouth verse 16. So for Thyatira wherein Jesabel lived and did much hurt Behold saith Christ I will cast her into a bed and them that commit adultery with her into great tribulation except they repent of their deeds and I will kill her children with death c. vers 22.23 So for Laodicea how zealous is Christ against that zeallesse church I know thou art neither hot nor cold I would thou wert cold or hot so then because thou art lukewarm I will spew thee out of my mouth Chap. 3.15 16. His proceeding with the churches answers his apparition to John in the vision which was with eyes as a flame of fire and feet like burning brasse Chap. 1.14 15. 4. That the divine nature of Christ
betokens rain Exercitat 80. if in the evening fair weather but we may finde by observation that evening Rain-bows in our Horizons have been messengers of rain as oft as morning ones the Grecians call it Iris which Eustathius saith is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nuntio because it doth foretell rain some derive it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contention because it presageth stormy and wet weathee Homer constantly calleth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a divine messenger to tell the world there should be rain and storm This is the observation of some learned that if the colours of the Bowe appeare thick and end in blacknesse of a cloud rain followes certainly but if they grow cleerer and so vanish a serene followes Besides this signification Lib. 12. c. 22. Pliny attributes a speciall operation to it where the hornes of the Bowe do light Plants and Herbs are made more fragrant and pleasant Iridis incubatu Plantae fiunt odoratiores Exercit. 80. Ad generationem mannae mellis ●eri● and Scal. is of the same opinion who saith the incubation of the Rainbowe upon Plants makes them more odoriferous and Aristotle tels us lib. 5. Hist Animal cap. 22. that it doth much conduce to the generation of hony-deaw 2. For the Theolocall consideration of this Bow it is to put us in minde of the great flood that drowned the world and to assure us that God will never more do so Gen. 9.14 15. When I bring a cloud over the earth and the Bowe shall be seen in the cloud I will remember my Covenant between me you and every living creature and the water shall no more become a flood to destroy all flesh When we see the Bowe therefore in the heavens wee should 1. Be led to consideration of divine Justice against the iniquities of the world which hee punished most severely as to destroy all flesh And 2. To mind the rich mercy of God to our forefathers and our selves to whom hee hath bound himself by covenant and the Bow being the signe of it that hee will never destroy the world again in that kinde and whereas some make the red colour in the Bowe a sign of the worlds destruction by fire at last it hath foundation in mans brain not in any institution of God But I come to the words of our Prophet here is a Bow in a cloud in the day of rain Qui infra lumbos imaginis apparebat Maldon A lapid c. some make the brightnesse here to be that which is downwards from his loynes and to be like unto the Bow in the cloud and so they exclude all the parts from his loynes upward from having reference to this Bow understanding by his upper parts the divine nature by his lower the humane and something there is in it because the Text saith in 27th verse I saw from the appearance of his loynes downwards as the appearance of fire and it had brightnesse round about it That fire had not the other but it seems to mee more suitable to the Text and truth that this brightnesse being in circuit round about it did compasse not the lower parts only but the whole Throne and Person of Christ and so wee finde in Rev. 4.3 where Christ is upon the Throne that there is a Rain-bow round about it and therefore conceive that here also the Rain-bow was round about the Throne We will not stand upon that longer but come to see what the Bow points at And 1. It is an Embleme of glory Gods glory is much seen in the heavens alwayes but when the Bow is set in the cloud Habet accessionem aliquam non spernendam ac si Deus adderet aliquid ad nudum Coeli aspectum Cal. It 's a glorious creature and hath glorious colours in it various and yet beautifull affecting the eye for the present more then all the glory of the heavens besides and I finde among Interpreters that it signifies First the glory and beauty of divine Providence in its various proceedings with the wicked and the godly it punisheth the one it rewards the other and when these are done there is so much glory in it that Angels and men are affected with it Secondly the glory which is conveyed and communicated to the creatures for in the heavens the glory of God doth shine You know the Rain-bowes originall and being is from the beams of the Sun communicated received and reflected and though it be glorious yet it 's a borrowed glory and so informs us that the glory in all creatures is from another from Christ By him Kings raigne He gives gifts to the sonnes of men He enlightens every man that comes into the world 2. It is a token of mercy and favour Symbolum clementiae gratiae misericordiae it 's a Bow without arrows the back saith Ramban of it being towards the heavens and ends downward it 's a signe of mercy for when one shooteth arrowes hee holds the back from him And that it is a signe of grace and mercy we will make out by Scripture unto you that covenant made by Noah about the waters in Isa 54.8 9 10. is applyed to the Covenant of Grace striken with man in Christ In a little wrath saith God I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee for this is ●s the waters of Noah unto mee for as I have sworne that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth so have I sworne I would not be wroth with thee for the mountains shall depart and the hils be removed but my kindnesse shall not depart from thee neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee Here you see the Covenant of waters applyed to the Covenant of grace and in the Revelation you shall see the same signe even the Rain-bow applied for a signe of grace Rev. 4.3 There is Christ sitting upon the Throne and a Rain-bow round about it which shewes that the Throne of Christ is compassed about with mercy and Rev. 10.1 A Rain-bow was upon his head Christ is presented in Visions crowned with the Rain-bow as a messenger of grace and peace Isa 9.6 for hee is the Prince of peace and his Crown is the Rain-bow a certain Embleme of peace Gen. 9.13 14. The Rain-bow hath variety of colours and all glorious and so doth the more fitly resemble the mercies of Christ which are various and glorious This brightnesse then in the figure of a Rain-bow signifies grace and mercy held out to those that were godly or should repent of their wickednesse the brightnesse before noted the glory of his judicary proceeding and here being form'd into a Bowe it betokens mercy Observ 1. That mercy and grace come to us through the humane nature of Christ from thence goeth out the brightnesse and the beams that make the Bow when the Word was made
Ahab is sicke and cannot sleep unlesse he have Naboths vineyard Amnon must have Tamar to satisfie his lust else he must lie awake all night Wicked men cannot bee in quiet unlesse they sleep in wickednesse When Christ came to his Disciples they were asleep but the wicked rout were awake and comming to take him they are restlesse like the Sea Isai 57.20 The wicked are like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest not when it is calme but in its working boyling restlesse condition when it threatens stormes to swallow up ships to break over the banks c. Such are wicked ones they storm they swell and watch where to break out to empty themselves of their estates to drown a countrey in the blood of a civill warre Mich. 7.2.3 they all lie in wait for blood they hunt every man his brother with a net that they may doe evill with both hands earnestly c. They have their net set they hunt they watch and will not lose an opportunity if one hand will not serve both shall and the intention of their spirits also they are earnest in the work And as they are wife to watch their season so their feet are swift in running to the accomplishment of them Prov. 6.18 Were not our enemies watchfull and active to break Parliaments to make Canons to search pockets to fetch men into their Courts 3. They are exceeding troublesome to the countries where they are they will get up their walls into their chambers and beds as some Expositers observe Eglinus in Apocal and therefore to prevent such evills they set their beds remote from the wall and the feet of their beds in pots full of water and for feare of them they lie in the highest roomes they molest them much and multiply their feares in this they are not unlike them Ahab was a troubler of Israel wicked men are the incendiaries in Church and State I must not name any you know more then enough that are not nick-nam'd when they are so term'd they have troubled this State this City 4. They confederate and joyne together to do mischief one will stick fast to the roof or wall a second unto him a third unto the second and so make a chain till they reach to the party asleep and the last stings him and returns and so every one back in order this I find of the Scorpion in Eglinus upon the Revelation here is both their craft and malice unto man that they are subservient one to another and so linked together for such a purpose herein are wicked men truly Scorpions Prov. 1.14 Come let us all have one purse Nahum 1.10 the wicked are as thorns folden together stick together as the scale of Leviathan Acts 4.5 6. Rulers Elders Scribes High-priest Caiphas John Alexander and as many as were of the kindred of the High-priest were gathered together against Christ and his Apostles 5. The Scorpion feeds upon the dust of the earth it feeds upon base and low things upon vile and venemous things so do wicked and ungodly men as the Serpent licks the dust of the earth so do they lick the dust of the earth they feed upon malice they feed upon blood they feed upon that which is not their own Amos 2.7 They pant after the very dust of the earth they pant after the estates and means that poor men have in any place where they come and they feed upon it and satisfie their malice and revenge to the full in sucking the estates and crushing the bones of the Saints of God Lambunt pungunt venenum infundunt 6. They kill lenta morte but gravi supplicio when they set upon a man they lick him they prick him they poyson him which quickly torments and within a few dayes kils Rev. 9.5 their terment was as the torment of a Scorpion when he strikes a man some Scorpions have double stings and that they may be sure to kill they strike with both wicked men lick us with their treaties and kill us with their treacheries Psal 55.21 Their words are fofter then oyle but they are drawn swords in the treaties and flatteries of wicked men if we were not blind wee might see drawn swords death at the throat of our estate of our Religion lawes and liberties Haman flattered with Esther that sought the destruction of the Jews the decree is sealed for the death of young and old Est 3. here was a Scorpion and Jer. 38.4 the Princes beseech the King to put Jeremiah to death such a Scorpion was Jezabel and Ahab which stung Naboth to death and got his Vineyard Hence that law in Ezek. 46.18 The Prince shall not take of the peoples inheritance by oppression to thrust them out of their possessions 7. Scorpions are driven away if any of them be burnt in the house where they haunt Si aliqui eorum in med●o domus exurantur say Palladius and Virga when Joab and Shimei were put to death by the sword of Solomon then the other Scorpions in Israel were afraid and hid themselves and the Kingdome was established in the hand of Solomon 1 King 2.46 If we shake not our Vipers into the fire they will do us harm Thus you see wherein the resemblance lies between the wicked in regard that they are call'd Briers Thorns and Scorpions in the Text. The Observations that do arise from the Text are 1. That he is the fittest man for publique imployment is sensible of his own naturalnesse weaknesse and insufficiencie for place or service Son of man be not afraid I see Ezekiel that thou art sensible of thy own naturalnesse earthlinesse and insufficiencie be not thou afraid thou art the fitter man for my service Moses pretended that hee was a man slow of speech and unfit for the great work of delivering Gods people and leading them out of Egypt into Canaan but hee was the fitter man for God So those Ministers or Magistrates that are sensible of their own weaknesses they are fittest for Christ and Church service and the Lord Christ will shew his power most in their weaknesse 2. Those that are in Gods work and do intend heaven they must look for afflictions they must look for trouble Ezekiel saith Christ I 'll put thee into my service but know thou must not go a smooth way thou must meet with thorns and briers thou shalt meet with Scorpions and Serpents there is a Scorpion in heaven and Scorpions on earth too let a man be in a heavenly calling a Prophet let a man be in a worldly calling a Magistrate hee shall meet with Scorpions and Serpents through many afflictions wee must enter into heaven and it is well wee enter through many afflictions 3. The way and method of the Lord Christ is to propound unto us the hardest things at first he deals so with Ezekiel here he heares of Thorns Scorpions a rebellious House and heares of that which might have discouraged him but Christs way is
dismay confound us if wee feare men Jer. 1.17 Be not dismayed at their faces lest I confound thee before them or break thee in pieces Jeremiah saith God If thou dost feare them and betray the truth I have committed to thee I will forsake thee leave thee to the hands malice cruelty and breake thee to pieces before their faces fearefulnesse doth much provoke God hee that sees not sufficiency in God to support him shall find enough to daunt and crnfound him but if wee go on with courage discharge the place and trust committed to us Stellae in nocte lucent in die latent Bern. in Cant. Videbis me plus posse dum torqueor quam ipse dum torques if wee should fall into the hands of wicked men and suffer God will own us let out himself unto us support us sympathize with us deliver us or make us and our sufferings glorious Stars shine in the night they are obscur'd in the day when Vincentius was tormented by the Tyrant hee said Thou shalt see mee more couragious in suffering then thy self in tormenting Some helps against feare 1. Let your feare be exercised about God he is an object fit to be feared all flesh is grasse all nations are a drop of the bucket and the small dust of the ballance Inhabitants of the earth are as a swarm of Flies a troop of Grass-hoppers and shall wee feare these little things the world is nothing unto God there is no greatnesse beside God himself hee hath made the world Nihil magnum nisi magnus Deus Psal 119.120 he hath dried up the Seas hee sends out the mighty winds hee changes times and seasons hee brings Princes to nothing makes Judges vanity hee tumbles nations into hell and can destroy the soul and body eternally him feare saith Christ Luke 12.4 5. not men that can but kill the body but feare him who after the body is dead can kill the soul and cast into hell I say unto you feare him and Isa 8.13 Sanctifie the Lord of Hosts himself and let him be your feare let him be your dread let there be such a frame of spirit in you as becomes the Lord of Hosts sutable to his greatnesse his soveraignty and authority over you and all creatures then you will not feare when the feare of God is strong in your heart then the feare of man ceaseth when the Dictator rul'd at Rome then all other Officers ceased and when this feare of God rules all other feares will be husht and that 's not all if God be sanctified by us hee will be a Sanctuary unto us 2. Set faith a work men in publique place should have their hands at work on earth and their faith in heaven the just live by faith and will not die by feare Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32.7 8. when Senacherib was coming against Jerusalem and troubled the whole land hee set his hands awork to fortifie the City and his faith to fortifie himself Be strong and couragious be not afraid nor dismayed for the King of Assyria and his multitude for there be more with us then be with him with him is an arm of flesh but with us is the Lord our God to help us and to fight our battell here was an army of 185000. to affright him but here was faith in the Lord of Hosts to establish him Heb. 11.27 Moses feared not the wrath of the King for he endured as seeing him who is invisible by faith hee saw the invisible God and that made him hold out against the King though his wrath was hot his looks fierce his words terrible his face cruell Moses knew that what ever hee lost for God he should finde in God Prov. 29.25 The feare of man bringeth a snare but who so putteth his trust in the Lord shall be safe mans feare brings a snare and so death had Moses feared Pharaoh hee had compounded with him and so ruin'd himself and others but hee that puts his trust in the Lord shall be safe The Hebrew is set on high like a bird upon the wing that is out of the reach of every snare and fowler though never so cunning Cardinall Borromaeus being told of great danger from some who lay in wait for him Si Deus mei curam non habet quid vivo said An Deus est in mundo pro nihilo Is God idle in the world and Jahannes Silentiarius being in the like case said If God take not care of mee why do I live 3. Labour for purity and holinesse the most holy men are the least fearing men Paul was of great courage hee had much holinesse 1 Thes 2.10 and when the Viper leapt upon his hand he feared not it could not kill him but he could kill it he shook it into the fire Adam at first no creature could harm him because holy in the lives of the Fathers mention is made of one Abbas Paulus who handled Serpents and Scorpions and cut them in pieces without any hurt and being asked how he came to this condition said If a man be holy all things are subject to him as to Adam before his sin in Paradise if our hearts and consciences be polluted we shall feare if not flie 1 Sam. 18.12 Saul was afraid of David hee had great riches many forces yet feares David a poor man a banished reproach't man and Herod feared John he was a holy man Magnas vires habet pietas Job 17.9 The righous shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall be stronger and stronger Prov. 28.1 The righteous is bold as a Lion a man that is truly and thorowly godly that knowes nothing by himselfe that hath purged out every spot and gotten off all guilt and needs not blush at any thing past or present hee is a Lion hee is a brasse wall nothing shall daunt him but the wicked flie when none pursue Nehemiah was a holy man and hee would not flie but Manasseh a wicked King hides himself among the thornes and Adam runs to the thickets they had prickings without and worse prickles within 4. Value not life too much let us be willing to lay out our lives in Gods service to spend and be spent for God Acts 21.13 Paul said I am ready not to be bound only but to die at Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus he prized the name of Christ above his life and if wee would prize something above our lives wee should not so over-rate them as through feare of man to lose better things to keep them the Devill tels us skin for skin Job 2.4 and all that a man hath will he give for his life true all to save life but there are some things of more worth than mans life as the glory of God the favour of God the peace of God truth of God the name of Christ c. and wee should so account of them and be ready to sacrifice our lives for them Nehem. 6.11
make the Rain-bow a sign of the Covenant between God and man who could make the Temple a type of Christ but hee that fill'd the Temple with glory and who can institute Sacraments ordinary or extraordinary but God and Christ in them alwayes is a Command and a Promise of grace which falls not within the compasse of mans power 6. That the Lord Christ provides meat for his servants Eat what I give thee Christ had propheticall meat for him a roul to give him It 's from Christ that truths come As a Nurse prepares meat for the child and puts it into the mouth of the child so doth Christ here he ever gives seed to his sowers he furnisheth his with abilities if they want books he will provide them VER 9. And when I looked behold a hand was sent unto mee and lo a roul of a book was therein HEre wee have the efficient instrumentall and materiall cause to treat of A hand was sent unto mee sent from Christ there could not be a hand without some Author hee that sate upon the Throne and made all he made he sent this hand no mention is made of any arm or body a hand might write it and reach it forth Dan. 5.5 there was in Belshazzars sad vision the fingers of a hand came forth and wrote upon the plaister of the wall nothing but a hand appeared had there been no hand the Prophet might have doubted whence it came taken it for some casuall thing but being reached out by a hand it was evident to him it came from heaven even him that he saw so glorious fell down before and was comforted by The materiall cause is A roul of a book Megillath Sepher the Ancients at first writ in barks of trees afterwards in skins of beasts which they call Pergamena vellum or parchment supposing them to be invented at Pergamus by King Attalus where was a famous Library of parchments and manuscripts but rouls of vellume or parchment were before that time Ezekiels vision was long before the Roman Monarchie Attalus lived when that flourished and having no issue made the Roman State heir to his crown but rouls were in Isaiah's dayes Chapt. 8.1 Take thee a great roul yea in Davids dayes Psal 40.8 In the volume of thy book Bimgillath Sepher in the roul of thy book They are very ancient and call'd rouls from the rouling them up about Cedar or some precious wood that they might be the better preserved The Law and Prophets were written in such rouls and when they unrouled them the Jewish Doctors used to expound them Nihil est vetustum in principum Archivis quod non sit scriptum in voluminibus Calv. as is gathered from that place Luke 4.17 These rouls are in practise to this day in the Jewish Synagogue and they have their Thorah or Law written in one volume and rouled up as Paraeus observes on the 5th of the Revel Kings have their Courts of Rouls And there is nothing antient in the Courts and Libraries of Princes in their Treasury of Monuments but is written in rouls or volumes For the signification of this Roul some make it to signifie the secret counsells of God it 's true they were written in it but not signified by it The Roul here is symbolum Prophetiae a typicall sign of the gift of prophecie to be given to the Prophet and in that sense wee are to take it Observ 1. That the Lord Christ doth at his pleasure put forth creative and infinite vertue to effect what hee speaks Eat what I give thee and presently a Hand is created a Roul is presented unto the Prophet which none could have done being destitute of divine power Christ hath a Hand in readinesse alwayes to do what he will have done he hath sometimes a visible hand to do it as here sometime an invisible when hee call'd Lazarus forth of the grave he had an hand invisible to effect it when he bid the dead to heare the dumb to speak the lame to walk Devils to depart their habitation hee had an invisible hand that effected those things so in Acts 11.20 21. when some of the Brethren had preached the Lord Christ and faith in him it 's said presently the hand of the Lord was with him and a great number believed there was a secret hand of divine power effecting that in their hearts which the Disciples preached in their ears And Acts 4.30 Christ hath a hand to stretch forth and to heal to heal soul diseases and bodily too to heal State and Church diseases Mat. 8.2 3. The Leper said to Christ Lord if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and Jesus put forth his hand and touched him saying I will be thou clean and immediatly his Leprosie was cleansed if wee would look to Christ as this Leper did wee might find and feel the hand of Christ 2. That the Lord doth often times extraordinary things for the incouragement and confirmation of his servants in their Function Here is a Hand and a Roul reached out to Ezekiel Jeremiah is fearefull and backward to the work of God and God to incourage and establish him puts forth his hand Exod. 4. and toucheth his mouth Jer. 1.9 Moses hee is doubting and pleading with God to dismisse him but by the miracles of the serpentined and unserpentined rod of the leprozed and unleprozed hand he confirms in his call to that great and hard service Isaiahs lips are touched with a coal from the Altar in the hand of a Seraphim his iniquity is purged and so hee is heartened to his work Isa 6. Christ breathed upon his Apostles and said Receive the Holy Ghost Joh. 20.22 By these extraordinary things they were consecrated to and confirmed in their offices 3. That there is a neere conjunction and sweet Analogie between the symbols the Lord Christ useth and the things intended Christ intends here the gift of Prophecie to confirm that upon Ezekiel Now what is the externall sign or symbol it's a book written full of propheticall things and so did fitly resemble the thing intended in all the symbols that God had used in the old and new Testament in a sacramentall way there have been fit Analogies between them and the thing signified and intended by them Circumcision the Paschall Lamb water in Baptisme Bread and Wine in the Supper of the Lord do set out the manifold wisdome of God and Christ in accommodating symbols so neer to the truth and holding it forth so livelily and the wisdome of Christ appeared in conveying the gift of prophecie by a Roul of a book From this example of Christ giving a Roul to Ezekiel some conceive springs that custome in the Universities at the creation of Doctors it 's done by reaching them out a Book but how warrantable I leave to judgement they do it may give them volumen but not rem voluminis if they had given them the gift of prophecie wee should never had so many
Angels sees the course and motion of things in the world had the Spirit enter into him comforting him assuming and assisting him and now he is a desolate an astonished man he sits as one forsaken of all here was a great change and it was not Ezekiels case alone others even all the Worthies of God have found the like David was strong through divine favour and quickly troubled for the want of Gods face hee had his singings and his sorrowings Psal 30. hee was oft in the valleys Psal 25.16 17. I am desolate and afflicted the troubles of my heart are inlarged and Psal 143. My spirit is overwhelmed my heart within me is desolate Paul is one day rapt up into the third heavens and another day hee hath a thorne in the flesh if hee have the revelation of the Spirit to exalt him hee hath the buffettings of Satan to humble him Paul himself knew changes 4. Distempers of spirit fasten and continue oft with the servants of God Ezekiel was in his distemper of bitternesse and heat of spirit seven dayes it 's not easie to shake off distempers when they have taken hold of us Jonas was in an ill humour and frame of spirit many dayes together hee must be drencht buried and boyl'd in the Whales belly ere hee will be pliable to the Will of God when Vzzah was smitten for his error David was displeased and in a pet with God himself and would not bring the Ark in three moneths to Sion 2 Sam. 6. 5. Distemperednesse of spirit unfits for the service of God Jam. 1.19 20. Per iram sapientia perditur ut quid qu●ve ordine agendu● sit omnino nesc●atur Greg 5. Moral c. 30. he fits seven dayes and nothing is done The Apostle James knew this and therefore said Be slow to wrath for the wrath of man worketh not the righteousnesse of God wrath darkens the mind and puts all out of frame wise men in their wrath see not their wayes nor work when the light of Reason truth and the Spirit is gone what can a man do befitting God wrath makes men bungle in their own businesses Per iramlux veritatis amittitur Spiritus sanct● splendor excluditur ibid. much more in the Lords it works not the righteousnesse of God but it s own righteousnesse that seems right in its own eyes that shall be done Ezekiel thought it right not to prophesie not to submit to the will of Christ and work of the Spirit but his passion was prejudice to him and to the work of God it 's evill when wrath prevents reason forceth it to action Aquin. 3. p. q. 15. art 9. then what ever is done is the work of anger not of reason not of righteousnesse when wrath hath the kingdome when that is in the head and heart there is no place for the righteousnesse of God Vbi est ira ibi non est Dominus sed amica Satanae l. 2. Const this made Clem. say where wrath dwels God dwells not Wrath is a speciall friend of Satans many of his counsels and designes are effected by it the more of this humour the more service hath hell the lesse of it the more serviceable for heaven Moses was the meekest man upon the earth and he did most work for heaven Christ was meeker then all other and he did work the righteousnesse of God effectually hee did work for heaven and earth 6. That the Prophets could not prophesie at their pleasure Ezekiel sits seven dayes and there 's no prophesying Aquinas hath a question whether prophecy be a habite if it were so it is in the power of man to use it any time but so could not the Prophet when the Shunamites son was dead and shee came to Elisha what said hee Her soul is in bitternesse and the Lord hath hid it from me 2 Kings 4.27 and hath not told me unlesse the Lord reveal himself unto them de novo the Prophet could not tell things the School-men therefore conclude that prophecy is not in the Prophet per modum habitus sed per modum impressionis transeuntis habites are permanent things but prophecy is a transient thing as light in the ayr for as the ayr doth alwayes need a new illumination so the mind of a Prophet doth alwayes need a new revelation else the Prophet sits in darknesse and knowes not more then other men Lam. 2.9 Her Prophets find no vision from the Lord and so in Psal 74.9 There is no more any Prophet neither is there among us any that knoweth how long It was night oft with the Prophets Nathan spake not from heaven when hee bid David go and do all was in his heart touching the building of God an house for it is said that night came the Word of the Lord unto Nathan 2 Sam. 7.3 4. before he had not a word and when it came it was not for David but Solomon to build the house Aliquando Prophetiae spiritus deest Prophetis nec semper corum mentibus praesto est Hom. 1. in Ezek. so that it 's true which Gregory saith Sometimes the spirit of prophecy is wanting to the Prophets and their mindes are dark Samuel mistook when hee said Surely the Lords anointed is before him 1 Sam. 16.6 7. VER 16. And it came to passe at the end of seven dayes that the Word of the Lord came unto mee saying 17. Son of man I have made thee a watchman unto the house of Israel therefore heare the word at my mouth and give them warning from me 18. When I say unto the wicked Thou shalt surely die and thou givest him not warning nor speakest to warn the wicked from his wicked way to save his life the same wicked man shall die in his iniquity but his blood will I require at thy hand 19. Yet if thou warn the wicked and hee turn not from his wickednesse nor from his wicked way hee shall die in his iniquity but thou hast delivered thy soul IN these words and the rest to the end of the Chapter is a new Revelation made to the Prophet together with the events following thereupon or thus 1. You have the Call of the Prophet to his Office renewed and that is in the words read and on to the end of the 21th Verse 2. Speciall directions and events laid down from the 21th verse to the end of the Chapter In the words read you have First the circumstance of time when this repetition of his Call or new Revelation was made and that was after seven dayes v. 16. Secondly his Office specified which is to be a watchman v. 17. Thi●dly the parties he is to watch over and admonish 1. In generall laid down and that is the house of Israel ver 17. 2. More particularly 1. The wicked vers 18 19. 2. The righteous vers 20 21. Fourthly the reasons of it why he must admonish both sorts The first is ab incommodo the danger and mischief of it
from Aristotle Justinian Machiavil from Traditions Fathers or Councels but from Christ Ministers are watchmen and therefore they must heare the Word at Christs mouth they must inform the Church and people of God in nothing he speake not and warrants not you have an excellent place in Habbak 2.1 I will stand upon my watch and set mee upon the Tower and will watch to see what he will say unto me The Prophets eye and eare were towards God hee cared not what the people and false Prophets said desired determined expected but he only looked at God he would see what he did heare what hee said which way hee mov'd and take all his light from him and then he knew he should not erre hee should not wrong any and it followes The Lord answered me and said Qui patrum p●●c●●a c●ncil●orum decreta visiones hominum pro verbo Dei Ecclesiae obtrudunt the Prophet durst not give out any thing to the Church til the Lord first gave out to him and when ought was revealed to him he durst not keep it back If prophets might not bring what they had not from the mouth of God how shall we dare to do it they sin greatly who obtrude upon the Church the wills and decrees of men as authenticall 3. That it 's the office of Prophets and Ministers to premonish their people to foresee danger and foretell them The word Zahar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies to shine inlighten to make cleere as the Son and metaphorically to admonish because he is admonished Qui admonetur illustratur de rebus futuris edocetur is inlightned Ministers must deal plainly and cleerly with sinners convince them of their sins and the punishments are threatned against them Ministers must not daub and sow pillows under mens elbows but as it 's in Isaiah 58.1 They must cry aloud and not spare they must lift up their voyce like trumpets and shew the people their transgressions and the house of Jacob their sins The word shew them notes a setting of them before their faces so that they must see and take notice of them and the danger they subject unto the Ministers must not spare any not great ones not the greatest the house of Jacob must be told of them and Ezekiel is a watchman to the house of Israel to the Kings Princes Nobles great small to all therefore all must be warn'd Chrysostome told Eudoxia the Empresse of her sins and spared not for her greatnesse shee had set up a silver Statue about which the people exercised vain and needlesse sports which tended to the disgrace of the Church and for this he dealt roundly with her it 's the Prophets fault that Princes and great ones are so bad they seldome heare of their own sins or Gods truths 4. The Prophets and Ministers of Christ are to do their office in the name of Christ Thou shalt give them warning from mee not from thy self not in thine own name Christ when hee was upon the great work of redeeming man and revealing the Gospel said he came in his Fathers name Joh. 5.43 And did his work in his Fathers name Joh. 10.25 God sent the Son and he did all in his name Christ sends Prophets Apostles Ministers and they must preach and work in his name because what they ask in his name they receive it 's done for them and what they do in his name abides is blessed Joh. 15.16 This should prevail with people to receive the Messengers of Christ as his Messengers as those come in his name what ever their message be conviction of sin denouncing of judgement saith Paul 2 Cor. 5.20 Wee pray you in Christs stead and here Ezekiel must warn them from Christ be it matter of comfort or terror all must be done in Christs name and stead and they entertained as those that are sent of Christ and come from him it 's good for us so to do for in receiving them we receive Christ and that 's not all wee receive the Father also that sent Christ Matth. 10.42 A Minister is good company when hee brings God and Christ with him and there is nothing lost by receiving any Messenger of Christ the right way vers 41. Hee that receives a Prophet in the name of a Prophet shall receive a Prophets reward you must not receive a man because hee is learned witty of note Non quia dives potens amicus akin unto you because he is ingaged to you or you to him because you have some design upon him but you must receive him in the name of a Prophet because he belongs to Christ is sent out by him and comes in his name and then you shall have a Prophets reward you shall profit by his Doctrine hee shall blesse you in the name of Christ 1 King 17. 2 King 4. his prayer shall be availeable for you the widow of Sarepta lost nothing entertaining Elijah nor the Shunamite by receiving Elisha their presence and prayers did much advantage them But you may take the words thus a Prophets reward that is the Prophets have a great hard and glorious work in hand and the shall have an eminent reward in heaven and seing you receive them as Prophets in my name notwithstanding all the reproach discouragements they meet with and danger their Doctrine brings seeing you incourage them and help on their work you shall have such reward as they have be received into the same Mansion I receive them VERS 18 19. When I say unto the wicked Thou shalt surely die and thou givest him not warning nor speakest to warn the wicked from his wicked way to save his life c. IN these Verses is a more particular object of his Office viz. The wicked whom he must tell of his sin or die for it here was the operation of the Roul sad and bitter work in the thoughts and apprehensions of the Prophet When I say unto the wicked God speaks not immediatly unto the wicked how then is it here said When I say c. God sometime speaks to them by their conscience which tels them from God that they are guilty and shall die But this reaches not the sense of the words it may be thus taken When I say to the wicked that is in my Word Gods speaks to all wicked men in his Word and there it 's evidenc'd what is the portion of every sinner but yet there is somewhat more in this phrase When I say to the wicked that is of the wicked thou shalt die and thou givest him not warning c. That in Heb. 1.7 Of the Angels hee saith in the originall is to the Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the sense is of the Angels he saith and so here to the wicked is of the wicked or if this be not full enough you may take it thus When I suggest to thee by my Spirit that the wicked shall die and thou dost not
or as it 's more fully in Chap. 2. ver 5. Regnum Dei non in eloquentia sed in fide constat that their faith should not stand in the wisdome of men it will go off from one to another as men are more witty and hold out the truth in siner and more inticing expressions which will prove evill therefore hee declined the wisdome of men and preached in demonstration of the Spirit that their faith might stand in the power of God in such conviction and operation of the Spirit as might breed invincible stedfastnesse in them Secondly not to please men Gal. 1.10 Do I seek to please men if that were my end I should not be the servant of Christ but he must serve Christ in saving of souls not in pleasing of men when that is propounded unto men they will subject truth to mens humor and become flatterers but Ministers must not doe so not frame their Sermons according to mens humors and minds Jer. 15.19 Let them return unto thee but return not thou unto them do not thou comply debase the truth to please them but speak as the Oracles of God and let them please or provoke it matters not the provoking of them may be the neerest way to their salvation and that is thy end Thirdly not to get a living that is not the end of a Prophets office it 's to make men living men to save their lives and souls Paul preached the Gospel without charge to any and told the Corinthians he sought them not theirs their souls not their substance yet he denies not but that they that preach the Gospel should live of it 1 Cor. 9.14 It 's fit Preachers should have maintenance and sufficient but the end of preaching is not a living but life Cadit Asina est qui sublevet eam perit anima nemo est qui reparet Bern. the life of sinners to save to deliver them seeing this is the end of their calling how should it quicken them to their work If a Sheep were in a pit a child in a fire what haste would wee make to pull them forth and shall wee see souls rushing into the eternall pit the eternall fire and not move our feet our tongues to help them 8. The office of a Prophet and Minister is honourable it 's to save life to save souls their Calling is conversant about the lives and souls of men the soul is the immediate work of God the Image of God of more worth then all the world it was for the souls sake Magna res anima quae Christi sanguine redempta est Bern. Ep. that Christ came down from heaven prayed preached wrought Miracles suffered death and gave his heart-blood this made the Father say Precious is the soul being redeemed with Christs blood and being a thing of such worth and consequence the Ministers work is to save it that very work which is the Lords and Christs therefore in 1 Cor. 3.9 the Apostle saith of himself and all Ministers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wee are labourers together with God co-workers concurrent with God in the salvation of sinners this is great honour In Obad. and made Jerome say Ipse Salvator Apostolos suos mundi esse voluit salvatores Christ hath made Apostles saviours of the world he calls them the light and salt of the world they inlighten the blind and season the unsavoury souls of men and so save them from corruption and perdition it 's an hard but an honourable work therfore saith James Let him know that hath converted a sin●● that hee hath saved a soul from death Jam. 5.20 let him know it it 's a great and glorious work is done that he may be incouraged and God be praised 9. Ignorance will be no plea for wicked men if they be not warn'd not told of their sins they shall die men are apt to excuse themselves they are ignorant they knew not this or that to be sins their Teachers were insufficient or negligent and this may be truth but neither their fault nor thy ignorance will be a sufficient plea before God warn'd or unwarn'd the wicked shall die Isa 27.11 It is a people of no understanding therefore hee that made them will not have mercy on them and hee that formed them will shew them no favour Nescience may excuse in part but ignorance hardly at all that which men produce in favour of themselves God produces against them you are an ignorant people saith God of no understanding you know not prima principia neither God nor your selves and think because you are ignorant therefore to find mercy and favour at my hands but you are deceived your ignorance aggravates your woe ever therefore will I shew you no mercy no favour those are ignorant of God and his wayes God will be ignorant of them in their greatest straits Depart frm mee I never knew you Matth. 7.23 Ignorance is a great evill it makes men brutish like Nebuchadnezzar who had an Oxes heart in a mans shape ignorance is part of the Devils image as knowledge is of Gods wee should labour therefore to get knowledge savory and saving for it 's not good that the heart be without knowledge Prov. 19.2 10. See here who are the most cruell bloody and damning Ministers even those that are silent that warn not the people of their sins that preach flattering things or to no purpose let men be dumb and not speak at all or preach so as not to warn them of their sins and dangers they are who ever they be whether the greater or lesser Clergie as they use to distinguish themselves they are the bloody damning soul-murthering Ministers you cry out of those Ministers that tell you most of your sins that set judgement hell and damnation before you they be bitter harsh men cryed out of on all sides whereas they are the faithfullest friends that sinners have they would fain save your souls pull you out of the pit keep you out of hell and help you into heaven and are they censurable for this should one see a company of travellers going in a way they should fall into the hands of Cavaliers or Thieves and tell them the danger of it with great affection and compassion should another see them and say nothing or bid them go on and they do so are taken stript imprison'd starv'd to death you can easily tell which of these dealt most faithfully and friendly which treacherously and cruelly too many of the Ministers in England have been faulty this way and guilty of murthering multitudes if not millions of souls it 's one of the crying sins of the Land that wee have had such a dumb insufficient and consequently such a bloody soul-damning Ministery And many amongst them having slain souls now by putting on these wars seek to slay bodies also 11. There is a great necessity lyeth upon the Prophets and Ministers of Christ to preach and to preach home to
pleasure upon sinners Take thee a sharp knife a razor and cause it passe upon thy head and beard the Prophet might not take what instrument hee pleaseth but what Christ appointeth it was he set apart Nebuchadnezzar Nebuzaradan and the Chaldeans to shave Ierusalem and therefore the whole work is given to God Isa 7.20 The Lord shall shave with a razor that is hired by them beyond the river by the King of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet and it shall also consume the beard this is spoken of Senacherib and verified also in Nebuchadnezzar both these were razors in the hand of God by which he shaved the head the Princes and Nobles Counsellors were out off by him The beard the Priests and strong men The feet the common people It 's the Lord appoints and sets instruments on work to afflict Churches and States Amos 3.6 Shall there be evill in a city and the Lord hath not done it there is no razor shaving in a city but the Lord hath set it on work there Micah 1. ●2 evill came down from the Lord to the gate of Ierusalem it came from above and it came to Ierusalem hereupon the Prophet in Chap. 6.9 said to them the Lords voyce cryeth to the city and the men of wisdome shall see thy Name hear yee the rod and who hath appointed it 3. When God hath been long provoked by a people the comes with sharp and sweeping judgements amongst them and that is set out by the razor he had waited much upon them they went on in their sins but now God calls for a razor and that should go to the quick Muscul in Isa Radere non est simpliciter auferre sed sic auferre ut praecedentis status vix ulla supersint vestigia God would not reap them or lop them in those cases the stub and trunk are left but hee would shave them not leave a politique body or Church state that place in Isa 7.20 holds out the truth fully he would spare neither head beard or feet every condition of people the honourable the mean the lowest should be shaven he would not only strip them of their clothes but shave them and take away their native beauty he would fill them with mourning make them a scorne cut off their limbs and destroy their lives there should be no city no Temple no King no Priest no Sabbath no God left them but hath not God shaven them in Germany in Ireland and is he not shaving us now 4. That there is no standing out against God what ever our number or strength is his judgements are irresistible men here are compared to hairs his judgement to a razor can the softest or harshest hair withstand the razor can any one or all the hairs of the head or beard do it no the razor will easily passe through all as a fithe through grasse or corn hairs are weak things razors sharp and strong Pharaoh was the strength of Egypt but God by the red Sea did shave him and many thousands more from off the face of the earth the great men of the world are no more to God then hairs before the razor he cuts off the spirit of Princes Psal 76.12 he challengeth the briers and thorns of the earth Who would set them against me in battell I would go through them I would burn them together Isa 27.4 5. The judgements and proceedings of God with sinners are not rash sine consilio but su●●●● judicio he weighs out the hair and proportions suitable judgements unto those that were represented by it the infinite wise God is exact in his proceedings hence you have it in Scripture that God doth weigh actions Psal 1.2 3. the paths of men Isa 26.7 their spirits Prov. 16.2 he examines how they are clog'd with sin and guilt God measured the covetousnesse of Babylon which was exceeding great and he brought answerable judgements upon her Ierem. 51.13 14. God would send Caterpillars to eat up all her wealth Let God deal with Babylon or Sion hee observes a proportion in his judgements Ier. 46.28 speaking of Iacobs seed hee tells them hee will correct them in measure the afflictions of the Church seem great and oft are great yet never are they without measure Psal 80.5 Thou feedest them with the bread of tears and givest them tears to drink in a great measure 6. There is no escaping of Gods judgements for hard-hearted sinners here are diversity of judgements fire sword dispersion if one did not take then another would overtake them if the fire did not scorch them the sword should cut them off if not that they should be scattered 1 King 19.15 16 17. God bids Elijah anoint Hazael King of Syria Iehu King of Israel and Elisha Prophet in his room and tels him there should be no escaping for sinners if they escaped Hazaels sword they should die by Iehu's if not by his they should by Elisha's not that he used the sword but by his prayers and by his prophecies in Ier. 1.10 he was set over kingdomes to root out pull down and to destroy many escape the swords of Princes and are smitten by the swords of Prophets Let not sinners think to delude God he will meet with them one way one time or other Amos 9.1 2 3. God comes there in judgement he stands upon the altar and bids them smite the lintell of the dore that the posts may shake this was spoken of Ierusalem not of Dan and Bethel God would not at all appear there and what followes God would destroy them there would be fleeing presently and what saith hee Hee that fleeth shall not flee away and hee that escapeth of them shall not be delivered let them dig to hell climb up to heaven hide themselves in Carmel in the botome of the Sea God will follow them find them out and make them smart if enemies should carry them away and shew favour to them God will send a sword and it shall slay them vers 4. See Amo. 2.13 14 15 16. nothing will priviledge not speed strength courage bow horse these are good but in time of judgement they will not secure not a great house though of stone Amos 3.15 not gods of gold and silver Isai 2.20 21. not heaps of such treasure Ezek. 7.19 They shall cast their silver in the streets and their gold shall be removed their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the wrath of the Lord not horns of the Altar 1 King 2.28 30.31 not prayer Jer. 11.14 not fasting and sacrifice Ier. 14.12 7. That in great judgements and generall destructions God of his infinite mercy spares some few Ezekiel must take a few and bind up in his skirts all must not be destroyed the fire and sword devoureth many but the dispersion preserved some and some few are left in Iudah God is just and yet when hee is in the way of his judgements he forgets
with Jerusalem First They observed not the laws of God 2. Not the lawes of the Nations but multiplyed more then they and thirdly before them unto whom they should have been patterns of pietie Because thou hast multiplyed more then the Nations Some Expositors referre these words to their mercies not their sinnes and make the sense thus Because thou hast multiplyed in number in riches in honour and strength in victory in profits in ordinances in all blessings for which yee ought to have been thankfull fruitfull and obedient unto that God who blessed you thus above the Nations but in stead of this hast dishonoured God growne loose Idolatrous c. therefore will I deale accordingly with thee Take it thus and you have this note That prosperitie rather worsens then betters a people they had more mercies then the Nations and more sinnes then they as they abounded in Gods blessings so they abounded in ingratitude Deut. 32.15 Jesurun waxed fat and kicked c. Hos 13.6 But others referre this multiplying to their sinnes and the sense is this Because thou hast not satisfied thy selfe with a little wickednesse but multiplyed sinnes iniquities transgressions and that more then the Heathens that had not thy mercies nor thy light therefore will I judge thee and that they multiplyed sinne is evident Ezek. 16.25 Thou hast built thy high places at every head of the way thou hast opened thy feete to every one that passeth by and hast multiplyed thy whoredomes shee sinn'd with the Aegyptians Assyrians Chaldeans vers 26.28 29. The judgements of the Nations The Gentiles have their judgements their laws rules and wayes of living and worshipping Some understand here the lawes of nature what men have written in their hearts naturally according to what you finde Rom. 2.14 15. and the Jewes that had the laws of God superadded to the law of nature did not abstaine from those sinnes the Nations did They observ'd the Law the Jewes brake Others referre it to their laws decrees and practise touching their gods and the worship of them they were tenacious of both and would not alter their worship nor exchange their gods It was a Maxime among heathens Ne quid novarent in religionis forma and it was an Oracle of Apollo Eos deos rite coli qui traditi essent à majoribus and they thought it impious to depart from what they had received When Paul came to Athens they did and would worship their unknowne God Paul could not prevaile with them to exchange a lye for truth not all the miracles Moses did in Egypt prevail'd with Pharaoh the Egyptians to forsake their false gods so that these words are a reproach to the Jewes who were not so constant as the Nations to their god Observ 1. That God walkes not into the way of judgements till men doe walke out of the way of his statutes Because yee have not walked in my statutes nor kept my judgements therefore I will doe so and so by you God's delights are in wayes and works of mercy Judgements are his strange works and strange acts Isa 28.21 he is provoked unto them as a Bee unto stinging it 's the child's wantonnesse causes the father to use the rod. David's sin brought the sword to his owne house the plague to the people when the wickednesse of the earth was great then the windows of heaven were open and the flood came Gen. 6. 2. When God intends judgements he usually convinces sinners judgements and convictions are not far asunder God sets their sinnes before them they walked not in his statutes they sinn'd more then the Nations therefore he would proceed in judgement with them he convinces them of their sinne to make way for a farther conviction namely of the equitie of his judgements when the Lord shall convince a sinfull people to be guiltie and that of great sinnes it stops their mouths and proclaimes the equitie of his judgements which are ever short of the merit of mens iniquities Ezr. 9.13 Our God hath punish'd us lesse then our iniquities 3. That Heathens are oft more true to their principles then the people of God The Nations kept their judgements their gods their worship they would not suffer ought to be spoken against their gods Demetrius and others were in a rage against Paul and his companions for it Act. 19. They were free from many of those sinnes were practised and countenanced among the Jewes who kept neither to the true God nor to his statutes and judgements Ahaz is better pleased with an Altar from Damascus then that the Lord had appointed 2 King 16. Solomon that excell'd in wisdome shewed his folly in this that he built high places for Chemish and Molech and not onely a particular man but the body of the people turn'd aside from the true God Judg. 2.12 They forsooke God that brought them out of Egypt and followed the gods of the people that more round about them they bowed to them they served Baal and Ashtaroth and Chap. 10.6 it was an ordinary thing with them The Children of Israel did evill againe in the sight of the Lord and served Baalim Ash●aroth the gods of Syria the gods of Zidon and the gods of Moab and the gods of the Philistims They were not satisfied with one or two false gods but fetched in the gods of the Nations round about them Hos 4.12 Hence this people are said to goe a whoring from under their god his lawes statutes worship government would not suffice them but they would out and have strange gods and strange lawes 2 Chron. 12.1 Rehoboam forsook the Law of the Lord and all Israel with him Gods Law was exchanged for the lawes of men They kept the statutes of Omri and brake the statutes of Jehovah Mic. 6.16 The Jewes were as unconstant to their God and in his worship as any Nation under heaven God upbraids them for it Jer. 2.36 Why goddest thou about so much to change thy way God had given them a good way a way of life and they would not abide in it but hasten into wayes of sinne and death they loved to wander Jer. 14. Hath not England been weary of Gods wayes wandered to Rome and other parts to fetch in somewhat of theirs Have we not been upon conjunctures of Protestants and Papists in Doctrine Discipline and Ceremony Vers 8. In the 8. ver is laid down a dreadfull threatning Behold I even I am against thee and the denunciation of judgement runs on to the end of the Chapter with many aggravations Here the Lord is brought in a just and severe Judge and the chiefe Author of all the judgements were to come upon them I even I am c. It 's doubled and notes 1. Evidentiam That so they might be perswaded of it the Jewes thought that God would never be against Jerusalem but to convince them he tells them I even I am against thee 2. Certitudinem That whether they beleeved it or no
Angel tels her The Holy Ghost c. And farther see the wisdome of the Angel he tels her ver 36. that her Cousin Elizabeth had conceived a son in her old age and that was the sixth moneth with her and how ever thou thinkest it impossible for thee that art young without man to conceive and for her is old with man to conceive ver 37. yet nothing is impossible with God 3. That knowledge must issue into actions Angels are full of eyes and full of hands too their actions are answerable to their knowledge Rev. 4.8 They are full of eyes within and they rest not day and night if they have no service in the world beneath they will be praising God above they know much and therefore act much Knowledge without practice is little worth Scire tuum nihil est n si te scire hoc sciat alter Pers if hid from others it is as nothing as not being saith the Poet Unlesse Learning Knowledge be improv'd it 's of no account the Egyptians painted a tongue and a hand under it to shew that Knowledge and Speech is efficacious and good Quid prodest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazian when that which is known and said is done What good doth the unpracticall speech of Golden-tongued men Let men be Chrysostomes golden-headed and golden-mouthed if they be not golden-handed too it 's nothing God would not have us all eye and rest in knowledge Joh. 13.17 If yee know these things happy are yee if yee do them and Rev. 22.14 Blessed are they that do his commands that they may have right to the tree of life happinesse is intailed to doing not knowing and the Angels seem to finde greater happinesse in doing Gods commands abroad in the world then standing alwayes in his presence Psal 103.20 They hearken unto the voyce of his word if he bid them go they are gone and account it their greatest honour to be doing they have hands and would not be idle knowledge without action is a man without arms it 's wine shut up in the vessell that doth good to none and will corrupt at last and ma● the vessell such knowledge will be like the poyson that lies long in the body and at last kills without remedy 4. That Angels are great agents and do much service they have hands on their foure sides at least they had four hands and they were able to do much and great service some make more and no hands of theirs is idle one Angel can do more then thousands of men witnesse that great slaughter in a night and other things formerly spoken of Briareus a great doer is said to have an hundred hands 5. That God doth carry on his works here in the world by invisible vertue by hands under wings by wayes and means not seen There is vis plastica in the womb which forms and perfects the birth yet is not seen and in the womb of the world God hath vires plasticae which form and perfect his works yet not seen much is done by the power of Angels yet their power not seen Mighty things are done by Gods Spirit in the Ordinances in the Assembly in our hearts and yet Gods Spirit is an invisible agent the Minister the Word would not do it unlesse some invisible vertue went along therewith Zaeh 4.2 3. though none were found to powre oile into the Lamps yet God had Olive trees were not thought of nor seen Zachary saw not the Candlestick Bowle Lamps or two Olive trees till the Angel awakened him and made him see that God had wayes to communicate vertue unto the Church he knew not of and that though the Church were poor low not able to make a considerable Army to carry them to Jerusalem and plant them there yet he had his Spirit to work it out for them and therefore saith Not by might not by power but by my Spirit 2 Thes 2.8 The Lord shall consume Antichrist by the Spirit of his mouth and so the two witnesses Fire goes out of their mouths and devours their adversaries Rev. 11.5 in an invisible way by a secret work It was a hand under the wing that made peace betwixt Scotland and us that gathered this Parliament that hath and doth keep it it 's invisible vertue that hath made them unanimous and magnanimous invisible vertue that upholds this Kingdome that restrains the remainder of wrath that daunts the adversary that hath shaken the Prelacy and brought forth the great things in our dayes it 's the hand under the wing that hath opened the hearts and purses of many to further the great service in hand 6. That wee are to do Gods works without noise or notice of our selves Angels that are agents for God have their hands under their wings their actions are seen but not their hands In Jud. 13. when Manoah Catechized the Angel and asked him What is thy name v. 17. the Angel would not tell him but said Why askest thou thus after my name seeing it is secret ver 18. And you shall not finde the names of above two Angels in Scripture Gabriel and Michael Angels are jealous of Gods glory and had rather conceale their hands and names then God should lose the least degree of his glory for Manoah would therefore have known his name that he might have honoured the Angel afterward and we are very apt to look at the instrument and neglect the principall it 's wisdome to muffle up our selves and to hold forth God as much as may be Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works c. he doth not say that they may see you but see your good works and glorifie their father not you As Fishers they would have the bait seen not themselves they would catch the fish with their bait not scare them with their sight Mat. 6.1 Take heed you do not your almes before men to be seen of them almes must be given but wee and our hands must be hid Paul exhorts the Philippians to hold forth the word of life Phil. 2.16 not themselves but the Word of God which is the word of life 7. That their operations and presence are together they are not in heaven and so work on earth or in one part of the world and work in another but their hands are under their wings whither their wings do carry them there they act and not elsewhere The Angel came down to stir the water in the pool Joh. 5.4 and cure the Party that stept in first they have not that power to work at any distance 8. That Angelicall vertue and nature is hid from us it 's too high for our capacity their hands their operative vertue we cannot discover or see into a little of the Angels is presented to us by these faces wings feet hands c. but the distinct knowledge of Angels as Angels is reserv'd til wee are like the Angels in heaven therefore wee must
not intrude into those things which we have not seen vainly puft up with our fleshly minds but be content to be ignorant of their natures and many of their actions and excellencies till we come to glory Now from their parts we come to their motions and it 's said Vers 9 They turned not when they went they went every one streight forward Vers 12. And they went every one streight forward whither the spirit was to go they went and they turned not when they went Vers 14. And the living creatures ran and returned as the appearance of a flash of lightning They turned not when they went Which way soever they moved they turned neither face wings nor bodies but went streight forward there was no digression regression wandring no circulation but their motion was streight they moved in linea recta they move and move not impertinently but directly By this motion of Angels is set out Gods government in the world they are his agents our Prophet seemes to crosse himself in ver 14. it 's said they ran and returned and ver 17. they returned not when they went here in this 9th they turned not when they went this knot must be loosed or else our Prophet will suffer The Solution of this doubt is that the Angels being in their work appointed of God went on without turning or looking back til they came to the issue and end of it til they came to the place appointed and then they returned unto God to give account of their service and to receive new instructions They went not back after the work was begun but after it was ended what ever difficulties interposed in the way none of them could drive back or divert the Angels till their work was done and then they presently returned Obser 1. That the works of God in ordering the things of the world are streight Angels are as Gods hands and in them is the agency of his work and they go streight on and there be no windings no turnings in their operations the works of God seem crooked to us but there is nothing crooked in them A Carpenter that builds a house hath some pieces of timber long some short some bowing some streight of all which hee builds a goodly house but some rude ignorant fellow understands not the reason of that diversity and when the work is done there is nothing seen defective but all is streight and perfect so in the works of providence and divine dispensations in the world they seem crooked and therefore some have called providence crooked and winding but no such thing is in them Psal 18.30 His wayes are perfect Deut. 32.4 His work is perfect take the work of creation providence redemption they be without obliquity deformity or defect but men are not so and the reason is given for all his wayes are judgement that is all his administrations all his doings are judicious right and equall 2. That Angels persist in and carry on their work they are constant and persevere Constantia est in proposito perseverantia in opere Charles the 5th his Motto was Plus ultra Faelicitatis index ultimus dies Solon they turn not back they give not over but proceed to the end they are not slothfull weary unfaithfull but active lively holding on to the end This may be usefull to our thoughts Angels go on and lively in their work shall we be lazy they persevere shall wee draw back or turn aside Lots wife looked back and she was turned into a pillar of Salt Gen. 19.26 she looked to the things behind which was unwarrantable and God did severely punish her shee had part of Sodomes judgements which were brimstone salt and burning Deut. 29.23 And she was made a pillar of salt to season after-ages with the feare not only of backsliding but also of back-looking Josephus saith hee saw this pillar in his dayes Antiq. l. 1. c. 12 which was neer two thousand yeers after but Borchardus that liv'd some 300. yeeres since saith it was in his dayes Adrichomius saith it 's yet extant and the Targum hath it that it will indure to the day of judgement Whether this materiall pillar be extant or not is doubtfull Christ hath set up a spirituall pillar that will endure to the end to make us faithfull to the end Remember Lots wife Luke 17.32 Look back and die go on in the wayes and commands of God and live It was the reproach of the Israelites that they would have gone back to Egypt and they died for it in the wildernesse Matth. 10. Hee that endures to the end shall be saved and Luke 9.62 No man having put his hand to the Plough and looking back is fit for the kingdome of heaven A man plowing if he look back endangers the Oxen which plow and must needs make crooked furrowes and mar all so one that hath begun to plow in Gods field if he look back he is unfit for heaven Exod. 17.12 Moses hands were steady till the going down of the Sun and so must ours till the Sun set till our lives end Gal. 4.9 How turne yee againe to weake and beggerly Elements Gal. 5.7 Yee did run well It 's dangerous when either of these come in against a people but the godly have a promise Jer. 32.40 I will put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from mee 3. That they keepe close to the work in hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They fetched no compasse to what is injoyn'd they divert neither one way nor other as they give not over so they turne not aside upon any pretence whatsoever but hasten to the execution of what is commanded how un-Angelicall are wee that have such roving spirits in all our imployments tho●gh we look not back yet we look aside God complains This people draw nigh with their lips but their heart is farre from mee they are in my house and in my work but their hearts are in neither they look towards me as if they were my people but their hearts look another way as if they were worldlings hypocrites like Watermen they rowe one way and look another Ezek. 33.31 With their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousnesse wee are too guiltie of this evill our hearts are seldome at home What 's said of the Harlots feete Pro. 7.11 They abide not in her house the same may be said of our hearts they abide not in the house When you walke abroad and keepe the path the Spaniel that is with you ranges over much ground and seldome is in the path so is it with our hearts we may be in the path of duties but our hearts ranging over the world heaven and hell Jam. 5.17 Elias prayed earnestly in the Originall it 's he prayed in prayer intimating a man may be at prayer in prayer and yet be a prayerlesse man not pray and that because the heart is not in it So in hearing you
smitten dumb Dan. 10.15 breathlesse verse 17. 5. To testifie two things first thankfulnesse for some mercy received or promised upon this ground Abraham fell on his face Gen. 17.23 when God appeared to him and told him that hee would make a covenant with him and multiply him exceedingly hee fell on his face to manifest as his humility so especially the gratefull frame of his spirit towards God for such a mercy 2. Reverence worship and respect unto divine Majesty falling upon the face notes so much in the language of Canaan 2 Chro. 20.18 Jehosaphat bowed his head with his face to the ground and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell before the Lord and worshiped him so bowing in Psal 72.9 is to note reverence and worship They that dwell in the wildernesse shall bow before him and his enemies shall lick the dust they shall come in to Christ and by bowing their faces to the ground and licking the dust of his feet shall testifie their reverence and subjection unto him so Isa 49.23 That which made our Prophet fall down on his face here was feare and amazement at the apprehension of the Majesty of Christ the great glory that appeared newnesse and dreadfulnesse of things in the Vision Observ 1. See what mischiefe sin hath done unto us it hath disabled us from partaking of our greatest good the sight of glory is the happinesse of the creature when Peter saw Christs transfiguration but dimly hee said O Master it 's good being here but sin hath made us incapable of the sight of glory Peter and the rest fell upon their faces and could not behold it as otherwise they might Cum magno moerore pensare considerare cum lachrymis debemus in quantam miscriam infirmitatem cecidimus qui ipsum bonum ferre non possumus ad quod videndum creati sumus Gregory in his 8th Hom. saith it 's matter of great mourning to consider wee are fallen into such an estate as that wee cannot behold what would make us happy wee cannot indure that good that glory which God created us to behold yea such weaknesse hath sin brought us to that wee cannot bear the sight of the appearance of the likenesse of glory They are weake eyes that cannot indure the Sun-beams they more weake that cannot indure the light which is more remote from the brightnesse and glory of the Sun and so here man cannot indure the glory of the Lord nor the likenesse of it nor the appearance of the likenesse 2. That the sight of glory is an humbling thing when the Prophet saw the appearance of the glory of the Lord hee falls upon his face then hee is conscious of his own weaknesse and worthlesnesse then hee trembles and sees the great disproportion between Majesty and nothingnesse Isa 40.5 The glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it and then followes all flesh is grasse glory will convince us that wee are but grasse it 's not hearing will do it at least not so effectually seeing and seeing of glory doth humble mightily seeing of miserie causeth grief mine eye affecteth mine heart but seeing of glory causeth godly sorrow Job 42.5 6. Now mine eyes seeth thee Nisi aliquid de aeternitate in mente videremus nunquam in facie nostra poenitendo caderemus Gre. I abhorre my self and repent in dust and ashes when hee saw the Lord and his glory then hee abhorred himself his own righteousnesse all his confidences duties and what ever the heart and wit of man catcheth hold of and repented and said What am I unto God the great the glorious God he is so infinitely glorious and distanced from mee that I am no better then dust and ashes Isaiah and worthy to be buried under them out of his sight and so Isaiah when he saw the glory of the Lord then was hee sensible of his own vilenesse and cryes out Wo is mee I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips though a Prophet yet a man of unclean lips for mine eyes have seen the King the Lord of Hosts he had heard the Seraphims cry Holy holy holy the Lord of Hosts the whole earth is full of his glory but this wrought not so powerfully as the sight of his glory now hee saw his sin what a great and soul sinner he was and therefore saith he Wo is me c. 3. That those be throughly humbled with the sense of their own vilenesse and weakness are fittest to hear divine truths and to receive divine mysteries Ezekiel falls on his face and then heares a voyce so was it with Daniel flesh and blood is apt to be lifted up to trust in something of its own men look at and like their own parts their graces some confidence or other we are apt to catch hold of but we must let all go below in our own eyes if we will be fit auditors of Christ we must fall down at the feet of his Throne if wee will heare him speak from his Throne Jam. 4.6 he giveth grace to the humble they finde the choycest favours at his hands Moses a meek man yea the meekest of all living and God shewed himself the most to him and so to him as not to others Numb 12.8 He spake to him mouth to mouth Deut. 34.10 There arose not a Prophet in Israel like to Moses whom the Lord knew face to face Isa 66.2 And I heard a voyce of one that spake This is the second effect following his sight of the glory of God hee first falls upon his face and then hears a voyce this was the voyce of him that sate upon the Throne and was so glorious that the Prophet could not behold him it was not the voyce of the heavens Psal 19.3 nor of the thunder Psal 29.3 but of Christ and the voyce of Christ is taken in the Scripture First for an extraordinary voyce having extraordinary power with it Joh. 5.28 those that are in the grave shall heare his voyce that is the power of his voyce shall fetch them out of their graves Secondly for the doctrine of Christ Joh. 10.27 My sheep heare my voyce that is my Doctrine they do not hear Christ immediately speaking but they heare his Gospel his Ministers opening it unto them Thirdly for the speech of Christ speaking unto others Act. 9.4 I heard a voyce saying Saul Saul c. such is the voyce here Christ speaking himself unto Ezekiel This Vision and Voyce was First to affect the Prophet that hee might be humbled awakened quickned up and prepared to the work the Lord Christ intended him Secondly to confirm him 1. In his call to his Ministery hee was to be a Prophet to this people in a strange Land and therefore hath an extraordinary call to it Christ from heaven appeares 2. In the truth of his Prophecie hee should utter nothing but what he had from Christ the author of all truth hee would put words
into his mouth 3. In the whole race and work of his Ministery that hee might not be discouraged seeing that hee had seen such a vision heard such a voyce Thirdly to confirm the Jewes Gentiles all to whom this Prophecy should come of the Majesty reality and truth of it Note 1 God sets one sense awork after another his eye was taken up before with the sight of great and glorious things now his eares come to be exercised and fill'd with as choyce truths as the eye had objects and after there is a roll for his taste and touching God lets in mercy and goodnesse to us through every window and door Note 2 That grat feare doth astonish and hinder judgement hee heard a voyce but knew not whose it was feare doth disturb and surprize Ezekiel Chap. 2. vers 1. And hee said unto mee Son of man stand upon thy feet and I will speak unto thee IN the former Chapter wee met with great deeps and difficulties mysteries of a high nature and if any light have appeared in the opening of them let him that sits upon the Throne have the glory of it by his assistance we have gone over sundry rocks and through some deeps In quibus liberis gressibus locut onis nostrae in●repidum pedem ponamus Greg. Hom 9. in Ezek. and we desire by the same assistance to proceed and now wee are come from the Mountains to the Plains where wee may walk with more safety The glory of the Lord being set out in this government of the world in his dispensations towards his Church in the antecedent Chapter The scope of this Chapter is to corroborate Ezekiel smitten down with the sight of glory and to shew his Call unto his Propheticall Office the parts are the confirming sending and instructing of the Prophet 1. His confirmation and comforting is laid down in the two first verses 2. His sending in the three next to the sixth verse 3. His instructing from the sixth to the ninth after that mention is made of a roll in the two last verses and in the beginning of the next Chapter which is of much concernment as in its place may appeare The confirming of the Prophet is 1. By the Word of God in the first verse 2. By his Spirit in the second verse In the first verse are two things considerable 1. The party speaking 2. The matter spoken where you have 1. The Appellation Son of man 2. The Command Stand upon thy feet 3. The ground of it which is a gracious promise And I will speak unto thee It 's Christ who speakes and unto Ezekiel whom hee calls the Son of man the originall is the sonne of Adam that is of earthly man for as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15.47 The first Adam was of the earth earthly and Adam signifies earth or red earth whereof his body was made and when we read in Scripture this phrase it notes out to us 1. Our base beginning that we are of the earth there is no man be he never so excellent high wise honourable but hee is the son of Adam terrae filius a brat of the earth Psal 49.2 Both low and high Adam and Ish the base man and the noble man as the Chaldee renders it both the sons of Adam and the sons of Jacob are so they have all one father and all one mother and that is the earth 2. Our frailty that wee are earthen vessels and soon broken in pieces Psal 9.20 Put them in feare O Lord that the nations may know themselves to be but men they think themselves gods but shew them thy power thine iron Rod and Scepter bring a War a plague a Famine amongst them and then they will know that they are frail weak men 3. Our worthlesnesse and fitnesse to be rejected who amongst us regards a clod of the earth an earthen vessell silver or golden ones some prize and prize too much but earthly ones are contemptible Nations are as the drops of the bucket and small dust of the ballance Isa 40. and are not they contemptible things this made David to wonder and say Psal 144.3 Lord what is man that thou takest knowledge of him or the son of man the son of earth that thou makest account of him that thou visitest him Psal 8.4 and Job 7.17 What is man that thou shouldest magnifie him and that thou shouldest set thine heart upon him these be high and great expressions to be bestowed upon so poor a thing as man is to take knowledge of him and such knowledge as to make account of him as to minde him visit him magnifie him to set the heart upon him this is exceeding much from an infinite great and glorious God towards worthlesse men and not credible if the Spirit of God had not revealed it 4. Our end that wee are earth thence wee came and thither we must Gen. 3.19 Dust thou art and unto dust thou must return This title of Son of man I do not find given to any but three in the Book of God once to Daniel Chap. 8. 17. Vnderstand O sonne of man forty times and upwards to Christ and above eighty times to this our Prophet but with this difference Ezekiel is called the Son of man by another Christ alwayes calls himself so Ezekiel is four times in this Chapter so called and it 's given him 1. To prevent pride say some Expositers hee had a glorious Vision was among Angels saw the Lord Christ and was to enter upon the Propheticall Function the least of which might stir corruption and make pride blossome when Paul had his rapture into the third heavens and heard things unutterable what saith he 2 Cor. 12.7 Lest I should be exalted above measure through the abunance of revelation there was given to mee a thorne in the flesh the messenger of Satan to buffet me c. Paul was in danger of being lifted up but God prevented it and so here Ezekiel is minded of his mean originall his frailty worthlesnesse and end that he might not be exalted with his Vision or Office we are exceeding apt upon the receit of great mercies to grow proud and confident which are evill in any but worst in a Prophet and therfore to prevent these hee calls him Son of man 2. To frame his spirit to a right estimate of himself through out the whole course of his Office that what ever good was done Nihil supra naturae humanae vires sibi assumeret he should still remember he was the Son of man and it was God not he that did it It 's a hard thing to keep the heart in an humble frame and fitnesse to give unto God the glory of what he doth by us God helps our Prophet by this title which runs through the whole Prophecy and took such interest in his heart that whatsoever was seen heard said or done by him the Son of man the glory of all was given to Christ the Son of
raised up a Joshua what had become of Israel When Elijah was taken away the horsemen and Chariots of Israel went 7. See here a ground why wee are so wary in having peace with our adversaries there 's much ado about peace wee all say peace but give us leave to be wary when wee make a peace when wee dwell among Thorns and Scorpions Thorns have their prickles and grievances Scorpions have their stings and wee are unwilling to be stung wee would not have our consciences our liberties stung wee would not have our priviledges plucked from us and all be in danger wee are unwilling to come to this When Scotland had made peace with England Flanders and the Easterlings it was said they had peace with the world but their Prelates made war with God so wee may have peace with men but there are those amongst us who if we look not to it will make war with God with the Lamb and those that follow him It 's reported of the Spanyards that they had peace with all the world but were out with God if we make such a peace as to have peace with men and to be out with God this would be a cursed peace if wicked men will lay aside their thorninesse their stings and subtilties be Nathaniels and not Achitephels Doves and not Serpents we would willingly imbrace a peace we have on the shoes of the Gospel of the preparation of peace 8. Seeing wicked men are Thorns and Scorpions let those in Authority look to it and do their duty that the Briers and Thorns grow not too high too great that Scorpions do not abound It 's said there were nine kinds of Scorpions about Jerusalem and Syria and very great ones and twenty kinds of Thorns also I fear we have all those kinds of Thorns and Scorpions amongst us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Greeks have a Proverb There is a Scorpion under every stone and where almost can a man go among us but there are Scorpions Thorns and Briers scratching catching and doing a mischief Let Magistrates tread upon those Scorpions and Ministers hew those Thorns Psal 91.13 Hos 6.5 Let Ministers do as Chrysostome did who would have his hand cut off before he would suffer Scorpions and Thorns to come to the Table of the Lord to poyson that Wine and Bread and to prick the sheep that came to feed there Magistrates likewise should do what lies in them that neither the Scorpions nor Briers do mischieve the sheep you may finde Scorpions in more places then one in your Courts Markets Shops Fields Ale-houses if you drive them not out of their holes Numb 33.55 they will be pricks in your eyes and thorns in your sides and vex you in the land wherein you dwell you may make oile of these Scorpions and meat of these Leviathans Pliny and others observe that if you burn one Scorpion in the midst of the house all the rest will flie away if Authority would execute Justice upon some of our Scorpions cut down some of our Thorns the rest would flie away wee are so fearefull and backward herein that wee let Scorpions multiply thorns and brambles increase not only til our fleeces be scratched from us but our flesh stung about us our liberties and lives indangered wee will not see where our sore is nor search to the bottome of it and because wee will not doe it God may justly send fiery Serpents to sting us and afford no brazen Serpent to cure us For your encouragement to deale with these consider Psal 118.12 2 Sam. 23.6 Ezek. 28.24 where it is said There shall be no more a pricking brier or grieving thorn unto the house of Israel for they shall know that I am the Lord God Another principall observation is That we must not bee afraid of men what ever they be especially those are called to publike place as Ministers and Magistrates Christ calls Ezekiel to publick service and foure times he is forbidden to feare in this verse Be not afraid of them that is their frownes bee they great ones Kings Princes Nobles or whomsoever bee not afraid of their words though stormy grievous stout contradictory c. because words doe stick and strike deep oft-times it is repeated again Bee not afraid of their words let them not affect thee nor be dismaid at their lookes The Hebrew word Techoth signifies to be amazed dejected discouraged and letted in ones way but the Prophet must not be amazed dejected or discouraged with what ever he hears sees or meets withall To give some few Reasons concerning this and some helps whereby to fortifie our spirits that we may not be fearfull having to do with Scorpions and Thorns 1. Feares are prejudiciall they take away our liberty Tuus timor tibi est Nero tua tentatio tibi est Iulianus they put halters about our necks and strangle our comforts they multiply and prolong our miseries they wound and disable us the work is to be done bene libere intrepide if we feare that will fetter infeeble and make us bungle Isa 22.2 They were slain not with the sword but with feares Feare slayes a man while hee is alive feare buries a man before hee is dead feares are prejudiciall to those that are in publique place 2. They are to be men of courage who are in publique place Exod. 18.21 Moses was to provide able men to be Magistrates and Rulers the originall is men of strength and courage the word signifies vertue strength a bulwark riches an army all which do increase courage so that a Magistrate should have the courage of all these of the vertuous of the strong of one in a bulwark of the rich of an army hee is to be a man of might Dan. 3.20 He commanded the most mighty men it 's the same word the men of most courage that were of mighty courage to binde Shadrach Meshach and Abednego those God puts into publique places are to be such Josh 1.9 Be strong and of a good courage be not afraid neither be thou dismayed where courage is required feare is prohibited and where feare is prohibited as in our Text there courage is imploy'd Should such a man as I flie feare said Nehem. 6.11 no I will not feare nor flie but be couragious and stand it out against Sanballat and the rest their power their scoffs their threats their plots Magistrates Ministers and all Gods people should be men of courage when Reformation and Temple-work are in hand Hag. 2.4 Be strong O Zerubbabel and be strong O Joshua and be strong O all yee people of the land saith the Lord and work The work of Reformation and of the Temple will not go on if you faint and flag Samuel was a man of courage when hee told Saul intreating him to return with him that hee might worship but hee would not return with him for thou hast rejected God and God hath rejected thee from being King and thinkest thou that I