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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A37032 Clavis cantici, or, An exposition of the Song of Solomon by James Durham ... Durham, James, 1622-1658. 1668 (1668) Wing D2802; ESTC R17930 380,359 486

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not do with him as he did with Saul whom he rejected he would not take away his mercy from Solomon as he had done from him And if no more were in these Promises but what is temporal there would be no great consolation in them to David whose consolation is one chief part of the scope of that place Beside these promises Psal. 89. 31 32 33. which are the same with these 2 Sam. 7. are looked upon as special evidences of God's love and peculiar Promises of his Saving-Covenant 2. When he is born the Lord gives him his name yea sends Nathan 2 Sam. 12. with this warrand to name him Iedidiah because the Lord loved him which cannot be a love flowing from any thing in him as if he had been well pleased with his carriage Solomon had not yet done any thing good or evil but it must be a love prior to his works and so not arising from his good deeds and therefore not cut off by his sins which being like the love God had to Iacob before he had done good or evil Rom. 9. 11. must speak out Electing love as it doth in that place 3. He is made use of by the Spirit to be a Penman of Holy Writ and a Prophet of the Lord all which are by our Lord Luke 13. 28. said to sit down with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the Kingdom of Heaven and there is no reason to exclude him seing that universal all the Prophets c. would not be a truth unlesse he were there And though some wicked men have prophesied as Balaam did yet are they never accounted Prophets of the Lord as Solomon was but false Prophets and Inchanters neither were they Penmen of Holy Writ who were as Peter calleth them 2 Pet. 1. 21. Holy men of God speaking as they were inspired by the Holy Ghost 4. Neither are the peculiar Priviledges he was admitted unto to be forgotten by him the Lord built the Temple by him the Covenant was explicitly renewed with God 1 King 8. 9. and his prayers are often particularly mentioned to be heard yea after his death some testimonies are recorded of him which cannot consist with his rejection See 2 Chron. 11. 17. where the wayes of Solomon are put in as commendable with Davids though there were defects in both and this being immediatly after Solomon's death it would seem he left the worship of God pure and so had turned from his Idolatry though all the monuments of it were not abolished And especially in this he was singularly priviledged that in a most lively way he was the Type of our blessed Lord Jesus in his Intercession Reign and peaceable Government Beside that by particular Covenant the Kingdom of Christ and his descent from him was established to him 5. It 's of weight also that it seems more than probable that Solomon wrot Ecclesiastes after his recovery it being neither amongst the Proverbs nor Songs which are mentioned 1 King 4. 32. And in it he speaks out the experience he had both of folly and madness and the vanity he had found in all created things even when he had perfected his Essay of all the possible wayes of attaining either the knowledge of their perfections or satisfaction in the injoyment of them The Scripture therefore hath not left his recovery altogether dark yet as to any Historical narration thereof the Lord hath so ordered that he passeth away under a cloud for these good ends First Thereby Solomon is chastised with the rods of men even after death upon his name for his miscarriages are set down expresly but his recovery as to any direct testimony thereof is past over 2. By this the Lord maketh his displeasure with Solomon's wayes known though he had favour to his person and gave him his soul for a prey 3. Thus the Lord would affright others from declining and hereby teacheth his people to be afraid to rest upon Gifts yea or upon Graces seing he hath left this matter so far in the dark as might yeeld an occasion as it were to question the eternal condition of Solomon 4. It may be also that Solomon after his recovery did never recover his former lustre nor attain to such a profitable way of appearing in God's publike matters for which formerly he had been so observable For so it is taken notice even of David after his fall that his following life is stained as different from what went before therefore it is the commendation of Iehoshaphat 1 Chron. 17. 3. that he walked in the first wayes of his father David which certainly is not done to condemn David's state after that time but to leave that mark as a chastisement on his failings And seing Solomon's were greater therefore may this silence of his recovery be more universal as to him Before we draw any thing from this by way of use I shall answer a doubt and it is this How can all these thousand and five Songs mentioned 1 King 4. 32. be lost without ●ronging the per●ection of Canonick Scripture Or what is come of them Or what is to be accounted of the losse of them Ans. We say 1. The Scriptures may be full in the articles of faith even though some portions thereof which once were extant were now a-missing except it could be made out that some points of faith were in these Books which are not to be found in other Scriptures 2. Yet seing it is not safe and it wants not many inconveniences to assert that any Book once designed of God to his Church as a canon or rule of faith and manners should be lost And seing it is not consistent with that wise Providence of his whereby he hath still carefully preserved the treasure of his Oracles in his Church We rather incline to say that though these Songs were possibly useful and might be written by the Spirit 's direction yet that they were not intended for the universal edification of the Church nor inrolled as a part of his Word appointed for that end Neither can it be thought strange that it should so be for that a thing be Scripture it 's not only needful that it be inspired but also that it be appointed of God for publike use It 's not improbable but Isaiah Moses David Paul and others might have written many moe writtings upon particular occasions or to particular persons which were useful in themselves for edification and yet were never appointed of God to be looked upon or received as Scriptures for publike use in his Church So do we account of these Songs mentioned in the objection and other writings of Solomon now not extant And it may be the Spirit hath pitched on this Song to be recorded as the sum and chief of all the rest as he did pitch upon some particular Prayers of David and Moses c. passing by others And Lastly We are rather to be thankful for the great advantage we have by this than anxiously to inquire what hath
love as to bestow it on any creature whorishly but who reserve it for Christ only So the Church is called 2 Cor. 11. 2. A chast Virgin And so these who were kept unspotted and sealed for the Lord Rev. 14. 4 5. are called Virgins They are here called Virgins in the plural number because this denomination belongs to all Believers distributively and in particular They are said to love Christ that is whatever others do who have no spiritual senses and whose example is not to be regarded yet these saith she desire thee only and delight in thee only and this differenceth true Virgins from others If it be asked whether that be single love which loves Christ for his Ointments We answer Christ's Ointments may be two ways considered 1. As they make himself lovely and desirable so we may and should love him because he is a most lovely object as being so well qualified and furnished 2. As by these many benefits are communicat to us thus we ought to love him for his goodnesse to us although not principally because no effect of that love is fully adequat and comparable to that love in him which is the fountain from which these benefits flow yet this love is both gratitude and duty taught by Nature and no mercenary thing when it is superadded to the former Hence observe 1. All have not a true esteem of Christ though he be most excellently lovely for it 's the Virgins only that love him 2. There be some that have an high esteem of him and are much taken with the savoury Ointments and excellent qualifications wherewith he is furnished 3. None can love him and other things excessively also they who truly love him their love is reserved for him therefore they are called Virgins It is but common love and scarce worth the naming that doth not single out it's object from all other things 4. They who truly love him are the choise and waill of all the world beside their example is to be followed and weight laid on their practice in the essentials of spiritual communion more than on the examples of Kings Schollars or Wise-men So doth she reason here from the Virgins and passeth what others do 5. True chast love to Christ is a character of a Virgin-believer and agrees to them all and to none other 6. The love that every Believer hath to Christ is a proof of his worth and will be either a motive to make us love him or an aggravation of our neglect Vers. 4. Draw me we will run after thee the King hath brought me into his chambers we will be glad and rejoice in thee we will remember thy love more then Wine the upright love thee Being now more confirmed in her desire from the reasons she hath laid down she comes in the 4. vers more directly to propound and presse her suit for rational insisting upon the grounds of grace in pressing a petition both sharpens desire and strengthens the soul with more vigour and boldnesse to pursue it's desires by Prayer In the words we may consider 1. the petition 2. The motive made use of to presse it 3. The answer or grant of what was sought 4. The effects of the answer following on her part suitable some-way to her ingagement The petition is Draw me a word used in the Gospel to set forth the efficacious work of the Spirit of God upon the heart ingaging the soul in a most sweet powerful and effectual way to Jesus Christ None can come to me saith Christ except the Father draw him Joh. 6. 44. It is used here to set forth the Brides desire to be brought into fellowship with Christ by the power of this same Spirit that as she desires a visit from Christ so she desires his Spirit that he may by his powerful operations draw her near to him And although a Believer be not at a total distance with Christ and so needs not renovation as one in nature doth yet considering what a Believer may fall into a deadnesse of frame as to the lively exercise of grace and a great distance as to any sensible sweet communion with Jesus Christ and that it must be by the power of that same Spirit without which even these that are in Christ can do nothing that they must be recovered and again brought to taste of the joy of his salvation as is clear from David's prayer Psal. 51. 10. to have a clean heart created in him c. See vers 12. of that Psalm And that there are degrees of communion with him and nearnesse to him none of which can be win at without the Spirit 's drawing more then being made near at the first in respect of state I say all these things being considered it 's clear that this petition is very pertinent even to the Bride and doth import these particulars 1. A distance or ceasing of correspondence for a time and in part betwixt Ch●ist and her 2. Her sense and resentment of it so that she cannot quietly rest in it being much unsatisfied with her present case 3. An esteem of Christ and union with him and a desire to be near even very near him which is the scope of her petition to be drawn unto him that she may have as it were her head in his bosome 4. A sense of self-insufficiency and that she had nothing of her own to help her to this nearnesse and so a denying of all ability for that in her self 5. A general faith that Christ can do what she cannot do and that there is help to be gotten from him upon whom the help of his people is laid for acting spiritual life and recovering her to a condition of nearness with himself 6. An actual putting at him so to speak and making use of him by faith for obtaining from him and by him quickening efficacious and soul-recovering influences which she could not otherwise win at 7. Diligence in Prayer she prays much and cryes for help when she can do no more The motive whereby she presseth this petition is We will run after thee wherein we are to consider these three things 1. What this is to run which is in short to make progresse Christ-ward and advance in the way of holinesse with chearfulnesse and alacrity having her heart lifted up in the wayes of the Lord for the Believers life is a race Heaven is the prize 1 Cor. 9. 24. and Philip. 3. 13 14 c. and the graces and influences of the Spirit give legs strength and vigour to the inner-man to run as wind doth to a ship to cause her make way as it 's Psal. 119. 32. Then I shall run the way of thy commandments when thou shalt inlarge my heart which is on the matter the same with drawing here And this running is opposed to deadnesse or slowness in her progresse before Now saith she I make no way but draw me and we shall go swiftly speedily willingly and chearfully Hence we may