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A35537 An exposition with practical observations continued upon the thirty-fifth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-seventh chapters of the book of Job being the substance of thirty-five lectures / by Joseph Caryl ... Caryl, Joseph, 1602-1673. 1664 (1664) Wing C776; ESTC R15201 593,041 687

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The excellency of God in Judgment as well as in Power But what are we to understand by judgment in which Elihu saith God excells In answer to this Querie I shall first shew that Judgment is taken four ways in Scripture and then prove that God is excellent in Judgment with respect to every one of them First Judgment is an ability of judging A man of judgment and a wise man are the same When we say such a man is a man of Judgment or a judicious man we mean he is a prudent man he is able to discern things that differ he knows how to order state and determine doubtful things aright In this sence we are to understand it here the Lord is excellent in judgment that is in wisdome and prudence to set things right and to give every one his right he sees clearly how to mannage all his affayres and purposes by righteous meanes to right ends The prophet gives God the glory of this title expressely Isa 30.18 The Lord is a God of judgment Blessed are they that wait for him That is the Lo●d is infinitely furnished with wisdom he knows exactly not only what ought to be done but how and when to do it therefore waite for him And 't is encouragement to waite when we have a person of judgment and understanding a discreet and prudent person to waite upon God is a God of judgment in this sence theref re blessed are they that waite for him Secondly Judgement in Scripture is taken for that moderation or due measure which is observed in any thing that is done This follows the former for unless a man have a Judgment or true understanding in the thing it self he can never hit a right measure of it Thus I conceive that Scripture is to be understood Math 23.23 where Christ denouncing or thundering out woes thick and threefold against the proud hypocritical Pharisees he tells them Ye pay tythe of Anise and Cummin and have omitted the weightier matters of the Law Judgment Mercy that i● either they did not give a right judgment according to Law or their legal Judgments were given with rigour not at all attemper'd mixt and moderated with mercy Of such the Apostle James speaketh Chap. 2.13 He shall have judgment without mercy that hath shewed no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against Judgment In this sence the Lord is excellent in Judgment For as he hath wisdome and understanding to see what is just ●ight so in Judgment he remembers Mercy His patience is grea● before he gives Judgment and his moderation is great when he gives it He dealeth not with us according to our sins nor rewardeth us according to our iniquities Psal 103.10 that is his Judgments are not proportion'd to the greatness of our sins and iniquities For as it followeth at the 11th verse of that Psalme as high as the Heave● is above the Earth so great is his mercy towards them that feare him Therefore the Prophet brings in the Chu●ch praying thus Jer. 10.24 O Lord Correct me I conceive it is not a direct prayer for Correction but a submission to it As if he had said I will not murmur nor rebell against thy Correction O Lord Correct me but with Judgment that is with due moderation It cannot be meant of Judgment as it notes the effect of divine displeasure but Correct me moderately or as another text hath i● in measure as thou usest to correct thy people This meaning is plain f●om the opposition in the next words Not in thine anger least thou bring me to nothing Anger transports men to do things undecently wi●hout mode●ation we quickly exceed our limits if carried out in passion and though that anger which the Scripture attributes often to God never transports him beyond the due bounds of his wisdome and justice yet when God is said to do a thing in anger it notes his going as it were to the utmost bounds of justice this caused the Church to pray O Lord if the cup may not pass from me if it cannot be but I must be corrected then I humbly and earnestly beg thou wouldst be pleased to correct me in Judgment not in anger least thou bring me to nothing What the Church prayed for here the Lord promised elsewhere Jer. 30.11 I will not make a full end of thee but I will correct thee in measure and will not leave thee altogether unpunished Thus God is excellent in Judgment He abates the severity of his proceedings and allayes the bitterness of the cup by some ingredients of mercy Thirdly Judgment in Scripture is put for the reformation of things when they are out of order In this sence it is used John 12.31 Now is the Judgment of this world Our late Annotators tell us that by Judgment is meant reformation As if Christ had said I am come to set all things in order that have been out of order and disjoynted in the Jewish Church and every where else Now is the Judgment of this world In this sence God is excellent in Judgment or he excells in this Judgment that is he is for reformation he will set all things right he will make crooked things strait he will make the rough places plain John the Baptist came before Christ in this work yet in this work Christ is before or exceeds John the Baptist The Lord Isa 4.4 will purge away the iniquity of the daughter of Zion with a spirit of Judgment and with a spirit of burning that is with a reforming and a refining Spirit And the Lord will send forth this Judgment unto victory Matth. 12.20 that is he will do it thorowly he will ove●come all the difficulties and put by all the obstacles which hinder the perfect reforma ion of things as well as ●f persons That 's the importance also of that great promise Isa 1.25 26. I saith the Lord will turn my hand upon thee or take thee in hand a●d purely purge away thy dross and take away all thy tinn th●t is all those corruptions which have crept in upon thee I will rest●re thy Judges as at the first and thy Councellors as at the beginning Things and persons are usually best at first The new broom ●ay we sweept clean As time consumes all things here belo● so it co●rupts most things and therefore when the Lo●d promiseth to restore them to a primitive purity he promiseth the purest restauration all which is summ'd up in the 27th verse Sion shall be redeemed with Judgment which is not only if at all intended of a redemption by Judgment on her enemies but by that reformation which ●od would work upon themselves in taking away their dross and tinn Restoring their Judges as at the first and their Councellers as at the beginning Such a Judgment is spoken of Isa 30 22. Ye shall defile also that is utterly disgrace and deface the Covering of thy graven Images of Silver and the Ornament of thy molten Images of Gold
may be said not to understand when he doth not behave himself understandingly or according to the Lawes and Rules of reason Men of the best understanding and greatest honour are like the beasts that perish as to ●heir frailty that is they dye which may be the meaning of the Psalmist at the 12t h verse where he saith Man being in honour abideth not he is like the beasts that perish But all men that are in honour and understand not their du●y or do not what they understand are like the beasts that perish as to their inability that is they live as if they had nothing but what beasts have sense and appetite to govern their lives by He that doth not practise according to knowledge what he knows is like and worse than a beast that hath no knowledge For when a beast doth any thing absurdly he doth like a beast but when man doth any thing absurdly he degenerates or falleth from his own forme he doth not like a man and therefore is worse than a beast And that 's it I conceive which the Apostle Jude aimes at in the 10th verse of his Epistle where rebuking a very vile generation of men Revilers who speak evil of those things which they know not he presently adds But what they know naturally as brute-beasts in th●se things they corrupt themselves When he saith What they know naturally as brute-beasts his meaning is what they know in common with beasts that is by sense and appetite which are common to man and beast as reason and understanding are common to Man and Angel● Now saith the Apostle what they know naturally as brute beasts in those things they corrupt themselves which brute beasts do not For these words as brute beasts are to be taken in construction and interpretation with the former part of the sentence What they know naturally not with the latter they corrupt themselves Their knowledge indeed is no better than the knowledge of brute beasts natural but in corrupting themselves they are unlike to and do worse than brute beasts who run not to such excesses yet there is nothing more common in Scripture than to say that men act the beast when they sin and put off those manners which become and are worthy of an ingenuous and rational man For as man is partaker both of a spiritual and sensitive nature so he takes his denomination from that part to which in his disposition and conversation he most inclines Hence he is sometimes called God or an Angel of God and sometimes he is compared to the most hurtful of beasts a Lyon sometimes to the worst of beasts to a Fox to a Wolfe to a Dog to a Swine to a generation of Vipers to what not which may put a mark of dishonour and reproach upon him Fifthly Note It 's a great shame reproof and reproach to man when he acts unanswerably to the teachings of God It is better to be a beast in or by nature than to be a beast and continue so in qualities and conditions O what a reproach is it that they who have a far better nature than beasts should lead no better lives than a beast yea possibly much worse The Psalmist crys shame upon such Psal 32.9 Be ye not as the Horse or as the Mule which have no understanding whose mouth must be held in with bit and bridle lest they come near unto thee The Horse and Mule are unruly creatures if left to their own rule they have no understanding how to mannage and order themselves they must be mannaged and order'd by bit and bridle in the hand of a skilful rider else they do more hurt than good service to those that come near them Now saith the Lord to man Be not you like the untaught or unmannag'd Horse and Mule as ye are better taught so ye should have better manners We say of some men they are better fed than taught and we may say of many men they are better taught than manner'd they mend not their manners though daily taught yea urged to mend them For this neglect the Lord reproves the sluggard Pro. 6.6 Go to the Ant thou sluggard consider her wayes and be wise thou doest not answer natural much less Scriptural light thou doest not learn by any teachings one of the least of my creatures may teach thee more than thou hast yet learned of all the teachers which I have sent thee The little Ant that dwels upon a Mole-hil that creeps upon the ground may teach thee better manners and make thee wiser Art thou not ashamed to need such a teacher having had so many teachers That 's also the sense of those rebukes which the Prophet powres out with a strong contestation upon the people of Israel calling Heaven and Earth to witness against them Isa 1.2 Hear O Heavens and give ear O Earth I have nourished and brought up children and they have rebelled against me But how doth the Lord convict them of rebellion and by whom even by the teachableness and trac●ableness of the dullest brutes The Ox knoweth his owner and the Ass his Masters crib but Israel doth not know my people doth not consider As if he had said The Ox and the Ass out-do you the Ox knoweth his owner that feeds him and the very Ass knows the crib where he is fed These beasts take notice of regard and submit to their Master and Benefactor but Israel doth neither observe nor submit to me who have tenderly nursed and plentifully nourished them who have as the Lord spake by his Prophet Hos 11.4 been to them as one that taketh the yoke off their jawes and layeth them meat the fat and the sweet the finest of the wheat and honey out of the Rock to feed upon and which is more than this who have not only fed them better but taught them better than the Ox or Ass O ye Heavens be astonished at this Further as in this Scripture the Lo●d contested with and reproved his people by the beasts of the earth so he doth it in another by the fowls of the air Jer. 8.6 7. I saith the Lord hearkned and heard but they spake not aright c. every one turned to his course his sinful course or his course in sin as the Horse rusheth into the battle that is fiercely fearlesly presumptuously at once slighting at least forgetting both their own danger and my command As the Lord thus rebukes the head-strong obstinacy and wilfulness of that people by their likeness to the Horse so in the next verse he reproves their blindness and blockishness by their unlikeness to the Sto k c. Yea the Stork in the Heaven knoweth her appoynted time and the Turtle and the Crane and the Swallow observe the time of their coming but my people know not the Judgements of the Lord. Then followeth v. 8. How do ye say we are wise and the Law of the Lord is with us Lo certainly in vaine made he it the
not regard vaine prayer so when thou sayest to him thou wilt not mark it that is attend to providences as thou oughtest he wil not regard thee There is a truth in this and the Original word may fairly bear this translation yet I shall not stay upon it but rather take this Context as the beginning of a new argument than as the inforcement of the former understanding it so the words have yet a reading different from ours Another modern translater disliking the former reading only in the first part of the verse gives his own thus In this also thou hast sinned Those words are supplyed to make up the sense Etiam in hoc pexasti quòd dixisti te non contemplaturum eum Judica te coram eo expecta eum Pisc as being the bringing in of a further charge against Job In this also thou hast sinned that thou hast said thou shalt not see him judge therefore thy self before him and look for him This is the matter of his new charge Thou hast said thou shalt not see him this is thy sin And having given him this charge Elihu gives him counsel according to this translation in the close of the verse Judge therefore thy self before him and look for him We say in our translation Judgement is before him that is before God this translation saith Judge thy self before him and the reason of it is because some take the word here as a Noune Aliqui 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nomine exponunt Judicium alii pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verbo imperativi modi Judica Merc others as a Verb of the Imparative mood Judge thy self before him and then look to him or trust in him that is thou hast failed greatly and sinned in taking up such a Conclusion as this that thou shalt not see God the sense of which I shall open when I come to our own translation therefore I advise thee to judge thy self thoroughly and humbly to acknowledge thy fault This translation is much insisted upon and because it hath a profitable sense I shall note two or three poynts from the latter part of the verse where it differs from ours and then proceed to our own Translation Job being charged with sin for saying that he should not see God is here advised to judge himself Judge thy self and look to or trust in him Hence Note It is our duty to judge our selves And 't is a great Gospel duty The Apostle gives it in plain words 1 Cor. 11.31 If we would judge our selves we should not be judged of the Lord. We are very apt to judge one another but very backward to judge our selves It is a great work to erect a Tribunal as I may say in our own Souls and Consciences to sit in Judgement upon our selves which that we may do we must do these three things First we must send Summons to our selves we must cite our selves to our own Tribunal for alwayes before Judgement Summons must go out and be sent to the party offending Here we are to send Summons to our selves that is to call together all the powers of our souls to appear in this Judgement and answer what is or may be alledged against us And when we have Summoned our selves then secondly we are to examine search and try our selve● Lam. 3.41 Let us search and try our wayes and turn again unto the Lord. Thirdly having tryed and examined our selves before we can come to Judgement that Judgement which is here intended we must humble our selves under a Conviction of our own vileness and sinfulness whether of our nature or of our actions whether of our state or of our way for whereas there are two parts of Judgement Absolution and Condemnation we can never come to that part of Judgement the judging of our selves as persons worthy to be condemned by the Lord for our sins unless we are first convinced of our sins Now when we have summoned examined and convicted our selves then we are ready to judge our selves to judge our selves even with the judgement of condemnation respecting what we have done yet we should do it with hopes of absolution acting our faith upon the free grace and mercy of God through the satisfaction which Jesus Christ hath made for us Again The scope of this counsel or the reason why Elihu adviseth Job to judge himself was to shew that he had rashly judged of the wayes of God because he had not duly judged himself Hence Note Self-judging or judging our own doings will preserve us from rash judging the doings and dealings of God with us We shall never think God deals harshly or rigorously with us if we do but enter into and pass a right judgement upon our own souls As they that judge themselves shall not be judged of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.31 so they that judge themselves will never judge the Lord no they will acquit and justifie the Lord under all his proceedings even in his sorest and severest ones Thus did Ezra in reference to those great and unparalel'd sufferings of the Jewes in the Babylonian warr and captivity Chap. 9.13 Thou our God hast punished us less than our iniquities deserve And so did Daniel Chap. 9.7 O Lord righteousness belongeth unto thee but unto us confusion of faces as at this day Further Elihu concluded Job very much affected with or highly conceited of himself because he pleaded his own innocency or integrity so much and was so desirous to come to a hearing and have his matter tryed before God and therefore saith he Judge thy self Hence Note Self-judging will keep us from proud or high thoughts of our selves of our own wayes or works how good soever they are Suppose our wayes and our works pure and good as Jobs indeed were for the maine he was a man of the highest elevation in holiness and of greatest integrity yet if we would thoroughly examine and judge our selves consider our short comings in duty our sinnings against duty and the sins that cleave to our best duties we should find our very innocency to be guilty and our righteousness to be unrighteous and surely such a discovery would lay us very low in our own thoughts and go very far towards the subduing of that pride of our hearts which often ariseth from the contemplation of our own wel-doing Lastly Consider this counsel was given Job according to this translation with respect to that which follows Judge thy self and trust in or wait for him Hence Note We are never fit to trust nor to wait upon God in any of his providences till we judge our selves or Judging of our selves will dispose and prepare our hearts for trusting and resting upon the power goodness and mercy of God The more we judge and humble our selves the readier ha●h God declared himself to help us in our extremities 1 Pet. 5 6. we also are then the readier to trust and wait on him both because we then see more clearly what need we
shall see God no more they shall not see him as long as they live they are afraid they shall never have comfort more nor peace more while they are in this world while they are on this side heaven yet whether ever they shall come to see him in heaven is their greatest their saddest their most heart-disquieting and heart-breaking doubt and feare And indeed as we cannot see God untill he gives us eyes so we cannot believe we shall see him untill he gives us hearts Many times his dealings both as to outward terrible providences and inward terrors are so dark that we can see nothing but darkness nor say any thing but as Job is here charged to say that we shall not see him Yea God doth often hide himself from his people on purpose to try whether they will trust him and wait upon him under such withdrawings for salvation whether temporal or eternal Isal 45.15 Thou art a God that hidest thy self O God of Israel the Saviour Let us therefore take heed of saying he will be for ever hidden or that we shall never see nor behold him as a Saviour say not it is so dark with us that as now we see no light so our night shall never have a morning Fourthly From these words Although thou sayest thou shalt not see him Note A good man is apt to give his heart and tongue too much liberty We should watch our hearts to keep out or cast out vaine thoughts we should strangle distrustful and unbelieving thoughts in the very birth that so our tongues may never bring them forth nor publish them to the offence of others Thou hast said thou shalt not see him But when our unbridled tongues have run at randome and spoken what is not right yet God will do what is right as the next words assure us Yet Judgment is before him These words plainly intimate that Jobs scope when he said he should not see God was that he should not see him as a Judge clearing up his cause or appearing to vindicate the wrong done him and to do him right As if Elihu had said Whatever thy opinion is concerning God that he will never appear in thy cause to do thee right yet know this O Job Judgement is before him and therefore I advise thee be thou better perswaded both of his presence with thee and of his providence over thee The word rendred Judgement is that from which one of the Patriarks had his name and it is a great elegancy Gen. 49.16 Dan shall Judge his people The proper name Dan is the same with the Verb which follows shall Judge When Judgement is said to be before the Lord it may be taken three wayes so we find it in the Sc ipture First we read there of Judgement as it is opposed to mercy These terrible and dreadful Judgements of God are every where spoken of Secondly Judgement is opposed to imprudence and want of understanding or discretion Judgement is a wise and clear sight or apprehension of things as we say such a one is a Judicious man or a man of a great Judgement Thirdly Judgement is opposed to injustice or to un●ighteousness thus we do judgement and justice Many have a great stock of judgement or understanding who yet will do little judgment that is little justice they have a right understanding of things yet will do little or nothing right Here when it is said Judgment is before him we are to understand it in the two latter senses for though it be a great truth that judgment as opposed to mercy is before the Lord And he shall have judgement without mercy that hath shewed no mercy though as the Apostle adds in the same place James 2.13 Mercy rejoyceth or glorieth against Judgement The Lord hath judgements all manner of judgements about him yet that notion of judgement doth not belong to this place but the two latter Judgement is before him that is he is a God of infinite understanding and wisdome he seeth every thing to the utmost he goes to the bottome of every mans case yea to the very bottome of every mans heart he sees every action quite through and every person And as he knows the truth of every mans cause and case so he will do every man right according to the merit of his cause and case Justice and Judgement are the habitation of his throne while clouds and darkness are round about him Psal 97.2 that is though present dispensations are obscure as in Jobs case yet both the procedure and dealings of God as also the issue or determination which he gives in every matter is just and righteous to all men as well as gracious and comfortable to good and upright-hearted men Thus Judgement or this judgement is alwayes before him that is he hath a clear sight of it and he is ready to do it Hence Note First God hath a right and clear apprehension of all persons and actions His understanding is infinite The Lord is as Hannah spake in her Thanksgiving-Song 1 Sam. 2.3 a God of knowledge and by him actions are weighed That is he knoweth them exactly to a grain as we do the weight of those things which we have laid in an even Balance It is required of Judges in that advice which Jethro gave to Moses Exod. 18.21 That they should be able men that is not so much men of able purses as of able parts men of able judgement and of more than common understanding even such as were able to look through every mans Cause that came before them Such is the ability of the Lords understanding to the full he is Omniscient He is light and in him is no darknesse at all And as in him there is no darknesse so nothing is dark to him the most intricate and knotty Case the most ravel'd and vext Cause that ever was is plain and evident before his eyes with whom we have to do and who hath to do with us Judgement is before him neither is there any Judgement before any other in comparison of him God hath so much light that Men and Angels are to him but darknesse God seeth so much that all others may be said not to see or to be stark blind even those Judges may be called blind who are not blinded we may say they have no eyes whose eyes are not put out with gifts compared with God How blind then are those Judges who are blinded and whose eyes are put out either by prejudice or passion by hopes or fears it cannot be but Judgement must be before God because as he cleerly sees and fully understands whatsoever comes before him so nothing can divert or biass him f●om doing every man right according to his sight and understanding Judgement is before him Hence Note Secondly God will do right to every man as sure as he knows the right of every man There are many who know what is right who know whose Cause is right yet will not
do right But as sure as God knows every mans righ● so certainly he will do him right Abraham pleaded thus with God Shall not the Judge of all the Earth do right Gen. 18.25 Certainly he will do right he cannot but do right Judgement is before him The Scripture is express He will reward every man and award to every man according to his works Every man shall have as he is for as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 4.6 He shall bring to light the hidden things of darknesse and make manifest the counsels of the heart and then shall every man have praise of God that is every man shall have it who is fit for it every man shall have praise who is as we say praise-worthy how much soever he hath been dispraised slurr'd in his credit unworthily dealt with and accused in this world God will not hold or detain the truth of men in unrighteousnesse though men hold both the truth of God and the truth of men the truth of their Causes in unrighteousnesse Judgement is before the Lord. Fu●ther That Particle which we render yet gives us this Note God is never a whit the lesse Righteous because it doth not appear to us that he is so Although thou sayest thou shalt not see him yet Judgement is before him The wayes of God are often secret but none of them are unjust Judgement is before him even then when we think i● is farthest off from him Therefore if we will give God the glory of govern●ng the world and of ordering all our personal conditions we must not measure him by the things we see or which appear for we cannot see the measure of his Judgement by what appears that which appears to us is not his Judgement something else is his judgement and he in the close will make his judgement clear to all men he will make it appear that judgment is his though what his judgement is doth not appear The mis-apprehensions or mis-constructions of men do not at all retard or stop the righteousnesse of God as the Apostle speaks in another case Rom. 3.3 Shall the unbelief of man make the Faith of God that is the Faithfulnesse of God of none effect God forbid God will be Faithful and True though all the world be Unbelievers and Lyars Now as the unbelief of man cannot make the Faithfulnesse of God of none effect so our not believing that Judgement proceeds or our saying it is delayed does not at all take off God from righteousnesse in doing Judgement he is doing Judgement righteously whatever apprehensions men have of his doings Judgement is before him Therefore trust thou in him Elihu according to the first reading of the former words exhorts Job to Repentance Judge thy self and here he exhorts him to Faith Trust thou in him Judgement is before him therefore trust thou in him or wait and hope in him for seeing God is a Just and Righteous Judge he will not neglect or slight the Cause of any of his People therefore they have all the reason in the world to trust in him and wait upon him It is unbelief which makes haste Faith is content to wait and tarry The Original word hath several significations First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Notat 1. Dolere 2. Parturire 3. Manere Perseverare 4. Sperare Forte per metaphoram quia animus sperans futur●m gaudium cum dolore parturit Coc. More general to grieve or be in pain and trouble Secondly In special to bring forth or the pain of a woman in travel to bring forth there is much pain in that travel Thus some translate here Wait for him as a woman in travel waits for deliverance Thirdly As it signifies to have pain and to have that pain in bringing forth children so to attend to wait to stay quietly and expect Rest in the Lord saith David Psal 37.7 and wait patiently for him We may give the reason of this signification from that allusion The woman though she be in pain yet she patiently bears it because she hath hope a man shall be born into the world John 16.21 A woman in that pain hath not only patience but comfort under it because she hopes a child shall shortly be born who will recompence all her sorrows in bearing and bringing him forth into the world That 's the force of this word Trust in him Thou art in pain in trouble in travel for the present yet thou shalt have a blessed deliverance thou shalt certainly find that it is not in vain to trust upon God Thus Elihu a●viseth Job to such a patience as a woman in travel with child hath who bears her pains comfortably being refreshed and supported with an assurance and fore-sense of that joy which she shall have being once delivered Trust thou in him I have in some other places of this Book met with this Point of trusting in God Job said in the 13th Chapter of this Book vers 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And therefore I shall not stay to open that general duty or the exercise of that Grace which here Elihu exhorts Job to Trusting in or waiting upon God Only from the Connexion Note First It is our duty to wait and trust upon God And 't is such a duty as will keep us close to all other duties a mind staid on God is a mind fit to move about any good work whatsoever which God calleth us unto Secondly Put all together Thou sayest thou shalt not see him thou art doubtful whether ever things will mend yet Judgement is before him therefore trust Hence Note When things are not clear to us when we have no light about what God is doing or what he will do yet it is our duty to trust and wait upon God We must wait upon God and trust in him though we do not see him yea though we cannot see him for Judgement is before him That of the Prophet Isa 50.10 is a clear proof of this duty and some expound this Scripture specially respecting outward dark providences as others of inward darkness or darkness of spirit Who is among you that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voyce of his servants that walketh in darkness and hath no light as Job saith here I shall not see him What shall a poor benighted soul do in that case The answer or advice followeth Let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God How dark soever our condition is yet it is our duty to trust upon God and if once we are enabled to give God the glory due to his name in confessing that Judgement is before him we shall readily trust upon him to order all things for us though all things seem out of order even to amazement though we see heaven and earth as it were confounded yet we shall readily trust upon him because we believe that even then Judgement is before him How soon can he turn our
quandoquidem igitur illa non extat invasit ira ejus qua odit et amolitur peccat m etiam in iis ques diligit et salv●s vult maxime Coc. He hath visited in his anger or strictly his anger hath visited That is God hath heavily afflicted thee God is far from all passion and perturbation of mind only he is said to be angry or to visit in his anger when he doth that which anger produceth among men when he casts down and punisheth when he lays his hand sorely upon the Creature then he is said to be angry then His anger hath visited The word notes quick breathing in the Nostrils anger appears or vents it self there as it is said of Paul when Saul Acts 9.1 And Saul yet breathing out threatnings and slaughter against the Disciples of the Lord went unto the High Priest You might see anger as it were foam yea flame out of his mouth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ira ejus visitavit and evaporate at his nostrils Thus saith Elihu Because it is not so his anger Hath visited To visit is properly to go to and see any person whom we respect and love thus we visit friends in civility and courtesie Secondly To visit is an act of pity and mercy and thus we visit the sick the widdow and the fatherlesse James 1.27 Pure Religion and undefiled before God and the Father is to visit the fatherlesse and widows in their affliction that is to go to them in pity either for the supply of their wants by our purse or for the comforting of their hearts by our counsel Thirdly We visit in care as well as in kindnesse that is when we go to our Families or Flocks or places of charge wheresoever they are and see that or whether all things are well and right with them or well and rightly done towards them according to the rules that such persons under our charge ought to act and live by Thus in Colledges and Hospitals there is a visitation of care to make enquiry of persons in trust about persons and things under their trust To the Point in hand there is a twofold visitation of God First He visits in love and mercy Ruth 1.6 Then she that is Naomi arose with her Daughter in Law that she might return from the Countrey of Moab for she had heard in the Countrey of Moab how that the Lord had visited his people in giving them bread That is God had shewed them kindnesse and mercy in relieving them from that devouring famine Again Gen. 21.6 And the Lord visited Sarah as he had said that is he gave her the promised mercy of a Son Once more Luke 1.68 Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for he hath visited and redeemed his People and that 's a blessed visitation indeed which brings redemption Thus the Scripture often speaks of Gods visitation in mercy Secondly There is a visitation of God in anger wrath and judgement The Law saith Exod. 20.4 5. Thou shalt not make to thy self any graven Image c. Thou shalt not bow down thy self to them nor serve them for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children unto the third and fourth Generation of them that hate me That is punishing the iniquity of the Fathers upon the Children these Children continuing in their Fathers ways to do sinfully such Children as take up the evil examples or tread in the bad steps of their fore-Fathers shall suffer for it The Prophet at once upbraided the impudent Jews and threatned them in this Language Jer. 6.15 Were they ashamed when they had committed abominations nay they were not ashamed neither could they blush therefore they shall fall among them that fall at the time that I visit them they shall be cast down saith the Lord. Again Isa 26.14 Therefore hast thou visi●ed and destroyed them There is a visitation for destruction that 's a sad visitation In this sense we read of a time of visitation Jer. 8.12 Jer. 10.15 We read of days of visitation Hosea 9.7 The dayes of visitation are come the dayes of recompence are come We read also of a year of visitation Jer. 23.12 For I will bring evil upon them even the year of their visitation saith the Lord. As also Chap. 11.23 I will bring evil upon the men of Anathoth even the year of their visitation This is the visitation here spoken of it is a time a day a year of sore visitation with thee O Job Because it is not so he hath visited in his anger Hence Note First God expects the work of Faith and Patience when his afflicting hand is upon us Faith hath much work to do at all times but most in times of affliction There is also a use of two sorts of patience in our best dayes the patience of labouring in Gods work and the patience of waiting for the reward of our work after all our labours But in sad dayes the Lord expects we should exercise both patience in suffering and in waiting for deliverance out of all our sufferings then 't is that both Faith and Patience trusting and waiting must have their perfect work Secondly Note When the Lord doth not find or see as he expects the work of Faith and Patience in a time of affliction he will afflict more and more until he finds or works it This is it which Elihu saith in the Text Because it is not so he hath visited in his anger Job was sorely afflicted before but now he is visited in anger because he did not manifest such trust in God as he expected in that condition As when the wicked repent not of their sins under the punishing hand of God he will punish them more and more even seven times more for their sins Levit. 26.41 So when good men act not their Graces believe not trust not under the afflicting hand of God he usually afflicts them more and more gives them soarer stripes and layeth yet heavier burdens on them When God misseth what he lock'd for we may quickly feel what we looked not for Mr. Braughtons Translation speaks the Point fully But now for missing his anger doth visit Man seldome misseth t●ouble from God when God misseth duty from man and 't is a me cy that he doth not 't is mans mercy when God minds him of his deficiencies in duty though by a smart visiting rod. Thus the Lord spake of Davids Seed and 't is to be understood of all the Seed of Christ whom David typed Psal 89. If his children forsake my Law v. 30 31. Then vers 32. will I visit their transgressions with the Rod c. How true this charge of Elihu was as to Jobs omission of duty I shall not stay to enquire only this we know Job had professed trust in God yet because it was mingled with so much complaint with so many unbelieving expostulations Elihu might say the Lord missed the patience trust and confidence
skilful to discern a fair day a foul day there are natural prognosticks of these things but ye hypocrites cannot discern the signs of the times Do ye not think God hath given you warning hath he not fore-shewed what he will do with you and with this City if ye were wise ye might unde●stand that shortly it will be overthrown and so it was by Titus Vespatian not long after God gives as clear signs of the changes that shall be in times as he doth concerning the change of the weather And that 's one thing which doth very much fore-shew it when God puts it into the hearts of his Ministers unanimously to fore-warn approaching troubles Such warnings were given to Hierusalem not only by Ch●ist Josephus lib. 7. c. 12. de Belio Judaico but afterward by others Josephus in his History reports of one th●t could not by any punishment be stopt from crying up and down the City for several years after this manner A voyce from the east a voyce from the west a voyce from the four windes a voyce against Jerusalem and a voyce against the Temple There was also as the same Author reports a voyce heard in the Temple Let us depart hence The Jewes generally would not believe these voyces but went on and were angry when any told them of a Cloud coming over their day yet they found them all verified in the subversion of their city by the Romans Such fore-warnings were given the Palatinate and other parts of Germany before those great evils came upon them Some way or other God hath alwayes shewed when these showres were coming and when a people grow weary of their warnings when they grow more prophane and wicked under them this is a sure sign a fatal prognostick that God is coming with a showre of wrath and is ready to pour down a storm of vengeance upon them And surely these warnings both with respect to natural changes in the Air and civil changes in the affairs of this World argue the wonderful goodness of God that he would have us prepare for all dispensations He will not send a showre of rain but would have us prepared for it and when he is about to send those great showrs of Judgment upon the world he would have his people ready and prepared and therefore by some means or other he tells them before hand what is at hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pecus Thus the noyse thereof sheweth concerning it or telleth us the storm is coming But is there nothing else that fore-tels this Yes it followeth The cattel also concerning the vapour The very beast of the field give notice of the vapour The Hebrew is that which goeth up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so we read in the margin The rain comes down and the vapours go up and the going up of the vapour is an argument of the coming down of the rain As the noise or thunder in the Clouds sore-sheweth a storm so the cattel concerning the vapour they tell us the rain is coming down by their apprehenson of the vapour which goeth up Some render not vapour but plants or herbs trees or grass these go up or ascend out of the earth as well as vapours Our translation is plain The cattel also the very sheep and oxen yea the fowles of the air will tell when we shall have foul weaher before such stormes come usually they run to shelter hiding and shifting for themselves as well as they can against the storm Cattel presage rain Plinius lib. 18. c. 35. Natural History Virgilius in Georg. l. 1. Pliny in his Natural History speaks much of the natural sagacity that is in beasts swine sheep and oxen whereby they perceive change of weather The Poet Virgil also verifies largely and acurately of these things reporting how husbandmen that keep cattel will gather by what they see in the cattel what the weather will be The cattel also concerning the vapour Hence Note Bruit Creatures by a natural instinct perceive the approaching changes of the weather And why hath God given them that natural instinct Why are they quick-sented and quick-sighted yea many times mo●e quick-sighted than men are Surely it is first that those poor Creatures may provide themselves of shelter and not be abroad in the storm rain or wind in a time of danger or inconvenient to them This may be of use to us God would teach us by the very dumb Creatures the Bruits what our duty is the Cattel the Swine the Sheep will witness against us if we do not take notice of nor observe the signs of the various dispensations of God or when he is about to vary his dispensations Can the Cattel tell when it will be fowl weather and are men so stupid are they especially that profess the Gospel so stupid that they understand none of these things The Prophet Jeremiah Chap. 8.7 reproves the people of Israel upon this account by the fowles of heaven as was shewed upon another occasion at the 11th Verse of the 35th Chapter The Stork in the heavens knoweth his appointed time and the Turtle and the Crane and the Swallow know the times of their coming that is they will not stay in any place where it is not fit nor safe for them to stay and they will not come to any place till they know all things are suitable and ready for them But my people knoweth not the judgment of their God they are more senseless than the very fowls of heaven in this And therefore the prophet checks them v. 8. How do ye say we are wise and the Law of the Lord is with us You count your selves very wise yet ye are not so wise in this matter as the Stork and the Crane and the Swallow for they observe their times but you do not It is a great part of our wisdom to see what God is doing or what he is about to do before he doth it It is said Prov. 22.3 A prudent man foreseeth an evil When evil is come every one can see it though some will scarce see it then as the Prophet complained Isa 26.11 When thy hand is lifted up they will not see it but usually that which is done or doing we can see when we feel an evil we can see it but the prudent that is the godly man fore-seeth the evil How comes he to fore-see it not by any hellish divination not by star-gazing not by asking the Devil what shall be hereafter as Saul did he would fore-see the evil but he went to the Devil to a Witch for it 1 Sam. 28. Now a godly man doth not fore-see the evil by any such wayes or means but by a diligent collection of things compa●ing one with the other or by the connection of causes with their effects and of antecedents with their cons●quents by these he plainly fore-seeth that such or such an evil is coming even as the beast fore-sees the storm is coming by the
and what profit shall I have if I be cleansed from my sin So then in the second verse you have the charge and in the third the proof of the charge Thinkest thou this to be right The word which we render to think 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An hoc cogitasti in jus Heb notes more than a bare thinking even the devising or curious contriving of a matter in the brain hast thou formed this in thy Imagination and concluded it in thy Understanding for right for sound and wholsome Doctrine for a very truth There may be a threefold exposition of these words First As an appeal to Jobs own breast Thinkest thou this to be right let me ask thee the question Hast thou said well in this dost thou believe thou hast let thy Conscience judge and make answer I doubt not but thou wilt be self-condemned And indeed no guilty person can be absolved himself if himself being judge Secondly We may look upon the words not only as an appeal but as a reproof or objurgation Thinkest thou this to be right What man in his right mind would think so thou toldest thy wife in the second Chapter Thou speakest like one of the foolish women and may it not now be told thee Thou speakest like one of the foolish men Would any man in his wits utter a word of this import a word of so gross a savour of so dangerous a reflection upon the Justice of God or so much as intimate himself by any the remotest consequences more just more righteous than God why hath such a word dropt from thy mouth Thus he chides checks and reproves him Thirdly These words may have the sense of a denying question Thinkest thou this to be right Surely Job thou dost not think this to be right I cannot believe that thou thinkest this to be right thou are not surely so far left of Reason and of Grace as to think this to be right This sense gives some allay to or abatement of the former surely thou dost not think so though thou hast spoken so though thy words may have this meaning yet I hope this is not thy meaning I am unwilling to take up thy opinion from thy expression Thinkest thou this to be right From the first Exposition Note It is a strong way of conviction to put or refer a matter to his Judgement and Conscience against whom we make opposition Thinkest thou this to be right I refer it to thy own Conscience whether this be right yea or no and thus the Scripture speaks often When God would stop the mouth from all contradiction and not leave opposers a word to say he leaves it upon them to say all Moses intending to prove that none could prevaile against Israel unless God provoked by sin delivered Israel up into their hands gives this demonstration of it Deut. 32.31 Their Rock is not as our Rock even our enemies themselves being Judges I refer this to our enemies opinion whether the Dunghil gods the Idols whom they serve and trust to be like Jehovah the living God whom we have and ought to serve and trust to You that are our enemies do you think your Rock is like our Rock I know you do not The Apostles Peter and John referred it back to the judgment of their Judges whether it were fit for them to obey their commands yea or no when they called them and charged them to preach no more in that name the name of the Lord Jesus Christ Acts 4.19 Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you more than unto God judge ye We have received a command from God to preach Go teach all Nations Math. 28.19 and we have received a command from you not to preach now we leave it with you whether it be fit for us to obey God or you So the Apostle having admonished the Corinthians to flee from Idolatry presently adds 1 Cor. 10.14 15. I speak as to wise men judge ye what I say I have given you the rule and I leave it to your consideration what 's best and safest for you to do I speak as to wise men that 's a holy insinuation As if he had said I know you are wise men men of understanding and therefore I do not so much command you to obey what I say as to judge what I say I am much perswaded you cannot judge otherwise in this thing than I do There is so much truth and reason in what I say that you cannot but say so too The same Apostle speaks again in a like forme about womens praying uncovered Judge in your selves is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered 1 Cor. 11.13 As if he had said I do not stand wholly to my own judgement in this case of conscience I dare refer it to you and stand to yours Thus in many things we may appeal unto the Consciences of those we deal with no doubt the Conscience is often satisfied while the Will stands out Men of much understanding will dispute when Conscience hath nothing to say Yea some will for their own ends argue that to be right which in their Consciences they do not think to be so Thinkest thou this to be right Thou hast said it but dost thou think it I trow not Observe Secondly There is a Light within us that will shew us what 's am●ss or 〈◊〉 not right Elihu doth not direct Job immediately to the Word though that 's the authoritative and authentick Rule but to his heart thou hast a Light in thy self whereby thou mayest see that this is not right Thus the Apostle 1 Cor. 11.14 15. Doth not even Nature it self teach you that if a man have long haire it is a shame unto him but if a woman have long haire it is a glory to her for her haire is given her for a covering The Light which every man hath in him will shew this Again the Apostle Rom. 2.14 15. proveth that the old Gentiles had a light of Nature in them which shewed them many things amiss Thus he argueth For when the Gentiles that have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law they do them by Nature that is by the Light of Nature which shews them to do these things that is it sheweth them that they ought to be done and they do them as to the outward action by that Light these having not the Law that is the written Word published to them in that formality which the people of God have these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their Conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another This Light shewed those Gentiles so far what to do according to the Law as left them without excuse for not doing what it shewed Gospel Mysteries and matters of Faith are purely of Divine Revelation but what
this reading Elihu in these words prevents an objection which Job might take occasion to make from what he had said or wished rather at the 36th verse of the former Chapter My desire is that Job may be tryed unto the end That is further afflicted or afflicted to the utmost Against this desire of Elihu Job is by him supposed making his exception or objection in this verse As if he had said Why doest thou or what reason hast thou to desire that I should be yet again tryed by affliction What I pray would that profit me if I were afflicted yet more and more Can the suffering of evil do me good or make me better To this objection Elihu gives answer in the next verse and those which follow to the ninth and he doth it as the Asserter of this Interpretation judgeth by this Dilemma Thy afflictions would profit either God or thy self seeing God doth nothing in vaine but neither thy sufferings how grievous soever nor thy doings how righteous soever can profit God no more than thy sins or evil doings can damage God therefore it remains that if God afflict thee further it will be if thou hast a heart to improve it for thy profit This reading and the sense arising from it is much insisted on but as the former is very harsh so I conceive this latter is very dark and intricate and grounded upon the supposition of an objection very remote or not easily to be suggested in this discourse And therefore to avoyd both my own and the readers unnecessary trouble I shall take the Text as it stands in our Translation and offer somewhat for instruction from it How great sinfulness there is in saying There is no profit in the wayes of God I have shewed at the 21st Chap. vers 11 th and Chap. 34th vers 9. So that referring the Reader thither I shall here give only this Note It is very sinful to say we shall get no advantage by leaving sin We may well put the Apostles question Rom. 6.21 to our selves What fru●t have we in those things whereof we are now ashamed What benefit have we got by polluting our selves with sin But how vaine a question is it to say What profit shall I have if I be cleansed from my sin Elihu chargeth Job with this yet still remember he referrs not to his eternal but temporal condition And this was Asaphs or Davids temptation also as to his temporal condition even he the one or the other David or Asaph spake as much in express terms as Job is here charged with Psal 73.13 where complaining of the great tryals and troubles he had been under and of the prosperity of the wicked Behold saith he these are the ungodly who prosper in the world they increase in riches But how is it with me Verily I have cleansed my heart in vaine and washed my hands in innocency for all the day long have I been plagued and chastned every moment As if he had said What have I got by my holiness and forsaking of sin what have I gained by my strictest walkings and abstainings from the very appearance of evil Have I not reason to conclude in good earnest that I have cleansed my heart and hands in vaine seeing my sufferings are not lessned though my sins are seeing my punishments are renewed every morning though I am every morning upon the renewal of my repentance Thus spake the Psalmist in the day of his temptation and doubtless this day of his Temption had been a day of temptation and provocation to the Lord like that of Israels in the Wilderness Psal 95.7 had not the Lord come in by his grace and helped him to bite in his words at the very next verse If I say I will speak thus if I use such not only uncomely but wicked language as this I have cleansed my heart and hands in vaine Behold I should offend against the generation of thy children And when I thought to know this it was too wonderful for me that is it was beyond my skill to reconcile these works these providences of God towards me with his word and promises nor was I any whit less at a loss how to reconcile the prosperity and flourishing condition of wicked men with those terrible threatnings which the Lord in his Word every where thunders out against them These cross and intricate dispensations puzzel'd me greatly put my soul into a maze nor could I spel their meaning nor make out the sense of them Vntill I went into the Sanctuary of God then understood I their end the woful Catastrophe the miserable end of wicked-men their slippery standing and their sudden falling as both are described v. 18 19 20. Then also I understood the blessedness of a godly mans estate both now and for ever in having God his guide and his portion v. 24 25 26. then I understood what profit and advantage comes by cleansing our selves from sin though to the eye it appeare not yea though all appearances speak the contrary To be cleansed from or to remove sin is profitable and advantagious First As to the removal of Judgement When we begin cleansing work the Lord usually makes an end of afflicting work For as one great end of sending affliction is to cleanse us from sin Isa 27.9 By this shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged and this is all the fruit to take away his sin so our being clean●ed from sin is usually the end of our afflictions When we are cleansed from sin we are troubled no more we smart no more speak then Is it no profit to be cleansed from sin when so many not only persons but Nations have been ruin'd because not cleansed from sin God gave his own people cleanness of teeth Amos 4.6 that is famine or want of bread because of the uncleanness of their hearts and lives and is it no profit to be cleansed from sin when for our sinfull uncleannesses God will cleanse us of all our comforts even to a morsel of bread 'T is therefore a speech both false in it self and highly di●honourable unto God to say I shall have no profit for still I shall suffer though I be cleansed from my sin whereas first there is more profit in being cleansed from sin than in being delivered from sufferings and secondly when once we are cleansed from sin we are in the fairest way to be cleared from and see an end of all our sufferings Secondly The more we are cleansed from sin the more communion we have with God and the more peace from God Is not this a great profit a profit besides the eternal reward a profit far better than any temporal reward Will not communion with God satisfie us for the loss of friends of estate or health Will not peace with God answer all the tribulations we can meet with in this world If therefore being cleansed from sin we have closer communion and sweeter peace with God let no man say
darkness into light who in the first Creation when all lay together in a confused heap and darkness over all b●ought forth light and set all in order The Lord can command light out of darkness good out of evil order out of confusion and he can do all this easily and at an instant therefore whatever the appearances of things are let not us judge according to appearance but hope and wait and stick to what God hath promised Though providences appear cross to promises and prophesies yet they never frustrate either Let us also be sure to stick to the commandements of God for we may rest assured God will stick to his promises To keep Commandements is our work to keep promises is Gods work though we fayle much in our work God will not fayle at all in his work To believe this is the highest and truest work of faith But if we are faithful in our work the keeping of Commandements we have a further evidence that God will be faithful in his work the keeping or fulfilling of promises a great part the most spiritual part of Gods fulfilling promises being his enabling of us to keep Commandements and then we shall be able to say not only in faith but from experience that Judgement is before him And untill we come to this conclusion of faith in dark times when we cannot see him the soul never sits down in rest Nothing fixes the soul but trust in God we are unquiet yea we boyle with unquietness and toss as the angry Sea with the windes till we trust fully upon God upon his wisdome and power upon his goodness and faithfulness and can say let him do as seems good in his eyes we know he is and will be good to Israel even to such as are of a clean heart When we can once stay our minds on God we are quiet but when we must bring God to our mind and must have God go our pace or come at our time and work in our way none of which he will do what a do soever we make to have it so O how restless and troubled are we even like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest And O how much of this restless trouble discovers it self in the minds of many that I say not the most of men and all because they cannot trust God when they do not see him or because when they do not see him which was Jobs fayling they say they shall not see him If matters come not to pass according to their platforme and model or hit not the dates and dayes the times and seasons which they have fixt in their unscriptural Kalender or by a mistake of the Scripture Kalendar they are ready to say they shall not see him their hopes are as the giving up of the ghost that is they give all for lost and past recovery Many trust God as they do some men no farther than they see him they are the worst and coursest sort of men whom we trust no otherwise How dishonourable then how infinitely below God is such a trust Elihu would have Job and so should we trust God though he could not see him and said he should not Thou hast said thou shalt not see him yet trust in him Lastly From the illative particle therefore that is because Judgement is before him trust thou in him Note hence The consideration of the Righteousness and Justice of God is a mighty argument to provoke us to trust him and wait upon him Trust is not every bodyes due some as we speak proverbially are to be trusted no farther than a man can throw a Milstone that is they are not to be trusted at all Trust I say is not every bodyes due but to trust God is every bodyes duty yea and interest too for he is cloathed as much with righteousness and justice as he is with strength and power Will you not trust an honest man will you not trust a wise man We can come to a height of confidence in man sometimes if we think him a man of judgement and wisdome of honesty and faithfulness we can trust all we have in such a mans hand how much more should we say to God seeing Judgement is before him therefore will we trust in him We have an eminent Scripture urging this duty upon this ground Isa 30.18 The Lord is a God of Judgement Judgement is there taken in the same notion as here in the Text he is a wise and a just God the Lord is a God of judgement what followeth Blessed are they that wait for him There can be nothing said more urging more encouraging to wait and trust on God to do us right then this He is a God of Judgement a righteous God Judgement is before him Thus far of the good counsel which Elihu gave Job in this his dark and deserted state and counsel it was worthy to be embraced with both armes and with an open breast and that Job had need of it he shews in the next words while he tells Job and us it was not so with him yet as appeared by the sad hand of God upon him and his own distemper under it JOB Chap. 35. Vers 15 16. 15. But now because it is not so he hath visited in his anger yet he knoweth it not in great extremity 16. Therefore doth Job open his mouth in vain he multiplieth words without knowledge IN the close of the former verse Elihu called upon and exhorted Job to a patient reliance and trust on God Judgement is before him therefore trust thou in him here in the 15th verse he shews that the reason why God visited him so sorely and yet continued his visitation upon him was because he did not as he ought patiently trust in and rely upon him There are several readings of this verse but I shall only mention one besides our own and having stayed a little about that go on to the explication of the Text as it lyes in order before us Some render thus But know now his anger hath visited thee but a little Hebr Nunc autem cito quod paululum te visitavit ira ipsius neque inquisivit multum admodum Merc Scito perexiguum esse quo te deus iratus plectit nisi levitèr in te inqui ere m●luisset Bez nothing neither hath he made any great inquisition The sense of the verse according to this rendring riseth thus As if Elihu had said God hath dealt with thee O Job far better than thou hast dealt with him or then thou hast cause to expect he hath not laid his hand so heavy upon thee as thy iniquity hath deserved and yet thou complainest much of his severity whereas indeed he hath not strictly inquired into the multitude of thy sins which if he had done he would certainly have brought upon thee a greater multitude of afflictions he would have afflicted thee much more Thou art too well used to complain thus That 's the summe of this rendring which
forgets God as his Maker will never remember much less answer and accomplish the ends for which he was made Thirdly I will ascribe righteousness to My Maker Note A godly man takes God as his own and appropriates him by Faith in all his Relations Faith takes not only a share in God but all of God My God my Father my Maker my Redeemer are strains of Faith A Believer doth as it were ingross God to himself yet desires and endeavours that all as well as himself may have their part and portion in God yea God for their Portion Job said Chap. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth He spake as if he had got a Redeemer not only to but by himself Thus also holy Paul of Christ Gal. 2.22 Who loved me gave himself for me as if he had been given for him alone and loved none but him This is the highest work of Faith and 't is the signification of our hottest love to God it shews endearedness of affection to him as well as neerness and clearness of interest in him when we thus take him as our own Saviour Father Maker I will ascribe righteousness to my Maker Observe Fourthly He who is the Maker of all men can be unrighteous to n● man nor is lyable to the censure of any man whatever he doth 'T is impossible that he who made us should wrong or injure us and that upon a twofold Principle First Of the respect he hath for Justice towards all those whom he hath made God is so tender that he doth not willingly or with his heart affl●ct nor grieve the children of men to crush under his feet all the Prisoners of the earth Lam. 3.33 34. much less will he as it followeth vers 35 ●6 turn away the right of a man before the face of the most High that is before his own face who is the Most High As if it had been said The Lord will not pervert Judgment in any mans Case that comes before him Or if we take those words before the face of the Most High as denoting the highest Judicatory on Earth as our Margin intimates putting there for Most High A Superiour then the meaning is The Lord doth not approve that any earthly Judge though Supream or most Superiour should turn aside the right of a man how inferiour soever for as the 36th verse hath it To subvert a man in his Cause the Lord approveth not or as the Hebrew is rendred seeth not that is he seeth it not with approbation but indeed with detestation and will severely punish such subverters of Justice Secondly It is impossible that he who hath made us should wrong or injure us upon the principle of his Soveraignty over all those whom he hath made He that gives all men their being he that gives all to all men that are in being can be unrighteous to no man whatsoever he taketh from him or doth with him We have Job in the beginning of this Book Chap. 1.21 ascribing righteousness to God his Maker upon this reason or principle The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away blessed be the Name of the Lord. It is he that made me a man 't is he who once made me a rich man a great man the greatest man of all the men of the East Chap. 1.3 What if now he hath lessened me and left me little or nothing what if he hath now made me a mean man a poor man in account a no man what if God hath now stript me naked and taken all from me He hath taken nothing but what he gave why then should I take it ill at his hands or have so much as an ill thought of him the Lord gives and the Lord takes there 's no unrighteousness in all this If God should utterly undoe us he doth us no wrong if he should as it were unmake us let us consider he is our Maker then we must say there is no unrighteousness in him yea we shall be ready with Elihu in the Text to ascribe righteousness unto him And therefore as a Corollary from the whole Note Fifthly Whatsoever God doth with us or others we ought to maintain the honour of God and retain good thoughts of him both as righteous and good Though Heaven and Earth be moved though the World be full of confusion and un●ighteousness yet we must ascribe righteou●nesse to God Whatsoever or whosoever falls to the dust the Honour and Justice of God must not Thus far of Elihu's third Argument for attention the Fourth is at hand in the next verse Vers 4. For truly my words shall not be false he that is perfect in knowledge is with thee As if he had said I am purposed to speak the truth and nothing but the truth therefore hear me Truly my words shall not be false He gives assurance for or warrants the truth of his words while he saith they shall not be false Negatives in Scripture often carry a strong affirmation The Father of a Fool hath no joy Non est ●●num pro passimum est sic non remitt●tur ei i. e. famietur Drus saith Solomon Prov. 17.21 that is he shall have a great deal of sorrow When the Scripture denyeth forgiveness to any sort of impenitent sinners or saith their sin shall not be forgiven the sense is they shall be punished When we say proverbially Goods ill gotten shall not prosper the meaning is they shall perish and do him mischief that hath gotten them not only shall he not thrive with them but they shall ruine and undoe him his goods ill gotten shall do him no good when the evill day is come much less shall they be able or he by them to prevent the coming of an evil day Once more When we say Such a thing is not ill done our intendment is 't is very well done excellently done So here when Elihu saith Truly my words shall not be false his meaning is I will speak truth and truth to the highest I will speak nothing but what shall endure the Touchstone and the Test I will not offer thee a Syllable of falshood what I alledge and urge either for God or against thee shall not be fetcht o● hammer'd out of my own brain and so subject to errour and mistake but such as God who cannot erre by whose Spirit and in whose stead I speak unto thee hath inspired me with or taught me for thy conviction and instruction Fourthly When he saith Truly my words shall not be false we may take it two wayes First As to the matter spoken Secondly As to the mind of the Speaker when truth is thus spoken t is truly spoken thus much Elihu engag'd for As if he had said The matter that I speak shall be true and I will speak it in truth or with a true mind and heart I will not speak any thing to flatter thee nor for my own ends to trouble thee my words shall be candid and sincere
their life nor their death is precious in the Lords sight as both of the meanest Saints are Psal 116.15 The special Promises of preservation are made to the godly the common Providences of preservation extend to the wicked God preserves many wicked men but not one of them can plead a Promise for his preservation or say Lord thou hast undertaken to preserve me I have thy Word or Warrant for my preservation So then the Lord doth not preserve the life of any wicked man upon a word of Promise Secondly I answer When the lives of the wicked are preserved they are not preserved for any love which God bears to their persons as such but either First to bring them into a better state that is to turn them from their wickedness that being converted they may be saved at last according to his purpose Or Secondly they are preserved to serve some ends and purposes of his in this World For though God hath no pleasure in them yet he makes some use of them and doth his pleasure by them Or I may say they are preserved to be Executioners of his displeasure in chastening and correcting his own people The King of Assyria was preserved in great Power and to what end I will send him against an hypocritical Nation Isa 10.6 He must go on my Errand though he meaneth not so nor doth his heart think so as the Lord spake vers 7. He hath other matters and designs in his head but I have this use of him and of his power even to punish the people of my wrath The Lord made use also of Nebuchadnezar and his Army to serve him in the destroying of Tyrus and of him and his Army he saith They wrought for me Ezek. 29.20 Thus the Lord doth some of his work his strange work especially his work of Judgment by the hands of wicked men and therefore he preserves their lives Yea he preserves them many a time to be a help and a defence to his people A Thorn Hedge keeps the Pasture that strange Cattle break not in and eat it up Wicked men are as Bryars and Thorns and they are suffered to live because the Lord can make use of them as a Fence to his people When the Serpent cast out of his mouth water as a Flood after the woman the Church that he might cause her to be carryed away of the Flood then the Earth that is earthly carnal men helped the Woman Rev. 12.15 16 The Lord used bad men to do that good work the preservation of his distressed and persecuted Church Thirdly As the Lord suffers many wicked men to live that they may be brought out of their sins so he suffers others to live that they may fill up the measure of their sins Why did the Lord preserve the Amorites was it because he loved or liked them no but because they were not then ripe for Judgment Gen. 15.16 The Iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full Some wicked men are to fill up their dayes that they may fill up the measure of their Fathers sins by their own as Christ threatned the Scribes and Pharisees Math. 23.32 Such a grant of life though for a thousand years is worse than a thousand Deaths Fourthly we may answer The wicked are not so much preserved from as reserved unto further wrath 2 Pet. 2.9 The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptations and to reserve the unjust unto the day of Judgment to be punished God doth not presently punish all the wicked nor take away their lives there is a day of Judgment coming and till that day come their lives are preserved as persons reserved unto Judgment Fifthly VVhen wicked men are said to be out of the Lords Protection consider There is a twofold Protection First ordinary Secondly extraordinary The Lord doth preserve and protect wicked men in an ordinary not in an extraordinary way he doth not work wonders much less miracles to preserve them as he often doth for the preservation of his own people God will not be at such cost in preserving of wicked men as he is at in the preserving the lives and liberties of his eminent Servants rather than they shall perish or not be preserved he will somtimes work a miracle and put Nature out of its course to save their lives VVhen those three VVorthies were cast into the midst of the burning fiery Furnace God stopt the rage of that furious Element that the Fire had no power upon their bodyes nor was an hair of their head singed neither were their Coats changed nor the smel of fire had passed on them Dan. 3.27 Did we ever hear that the Lord restrained the power of the fire to preserve wicked men When Daniel a man precious in the sight of God was cast into the Lions Den the Lord preserved his life also by stopping the Mouths of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Did we ever hear that God preserved the lives of wicked men in such a way No sooner were Daniels accusers cast into the Lyons Den but the Lyons had the Mastery of them and brake all their bones in pieces e're ever they came to the bottome of the Den v. 24. The Lord doth not preserve the lives of the wicked by miraculous manifestations of his Power and Glory Sixthly I answer Though some wicked men are commonly preserved as other men yet many by their wickedness hasten their ruine and shorten the number of their dayes We may distinguish of wicked men First wicked men may be taken in a General notion for all that are unconverted and unregenerate Many persons pass for honest and good men in the world who yet are wicked being carnal and abiding in a state of nature wicked men of this sort are ordinarily preserved Secondly Take wicked men and such I conceive the Text especially intends for notorious wicked men such as are murderers blasphemers c. the Lord doth not preserve the lives of such but lets mans Justice seize upon them or divine vengeance overtake them Psal 55.23 The blood-thirsty and deceitful man shall not live out half his dayes that is he shall not live half so long as he might according to the course of Nature because of his nefarious sinful courses Histories are full of dreadful Tragedies sealing to this Truth with the blood and untimely death of gross offenders How often have we seen or heard of the Ve●geance of God following and falling upon those that were signanter notoriously wicked and of ●●ese we are especially to understand the Poynt and Text He preserveth not the life of the wicked Take this Inference from all that hath been said about this awakening Observation How sad is the life of a wicked man indeed of any man on this side the Line of grace but especially of any very wicked man He can scarce be said to live whose life is not preferved by God a wicked man is alwayes in death seeing God doth not preserve his life The Apostle
Paul said he was in Deaths often but God had as often preserved his life but they are in Deaths alwayes whose life God never preserveth VVhat preservation of life can he have who hath not God for his preserver God in Creation or Propagation giveth us our life as to being but Preservation gives us our life as to well-being Can it be well with them that are not under the preservation of God To be redeemed by Christ would be but a small comfort unless we were also preserved by him Jude 1. To them that are sanctified by God the Father and preserved in Jesus Christ and called If we were only redeemed from death and not preserved in life what were our spiritual life to us So I may say in respect of the life of the body to be meerly created or propagated what is it if we are not preserved 'T is a high Priviledge when a man can not only say he hath received life from God but his life is preserved by God That 's the first poynt He preserveth not the Life of the wicked Again From that other Interpretation of the words as not to preserve is as much as to destroy and ruine Note As God utterly disowneth so he will at last utterly ruine all wicked men He not only doth not favour them but pours out fury upon them Jer. 10.25 Pour out thy fury upon the Heathen that know thee not and upon the Families that call not on thy Name The Prophesie of Isaiah speaks no better concerning them than that prayer of Jeremy Isa 3.11 Wo unto the wicked it shall be ill with him for the reward of his hand shall be given him And what can the hand of a wicked man earn the wages of sin is death he can get nothing but wrath and death nothing but tribulation and anguish here and eternal misery hereafter by the work of his hands VVoe to the wicked for the reward of his hands shall be given him that is eternal destruction and sorrow shall be given him according to the iniquity of his hand A godly man is rewarded according to the cleanness of his hands Psal 18.20 24. He labours to keep his hands much more his heart clean whatever the VVorld judge of him But woe to the wicked when God giveth them the reward of their hands of their unclean soul and filthy hands for what can such hands get or procure by all their labour but their own mischief and sorrow There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Isa 57.21 No peace is to them because no good is done by them their portion lyes in promises who keep Commandements so theirs must needs lye in threatnings who do nothing but break them or break them in all they do My meditation of him shall be sweet I will be glad in the Lord said David P●al 104.34 As if he had said I know that I and eve●y Godly man shall receive so much good from the Lord that it doth me good at the heart to think of it But as for the wicked I can fore-see as we say with half an eye how ill it will be with them and so let it be I must subscribe to and vote with the righteous judgement of the Lord again●t them ver 35. Let the sinners be consumed out of the Earth and let the wicked be no more Lastly Consider these words He preserveth not the life of the wicked with respect to the wicked specially intended and treated of in this Context The Lord is mighty and despiseth not the mighty because they are mighty he preserveth not the wicked Hence Note Wicked men how mighty soever cannot preserve themselves nor doth the Lord undertake for their preservation The strongest of wicked men cannot stand by their own strength they cannot protect nor preserve themselves and the Lord will not put forth his strength to preserve them from falling As no mightiness no power can bear man up or maintain him against the Lord so not without the Lord if he preserveth not the life of the wicked they cannot escape death and destruction though high as Cedars and strong as Oakes They cannot but perish whom God preserveth not He preserveth not the life of the wicked But giveth right to the poor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pauperes afflicti Or to the afflicted Poverty it self is a great affliction and usually the poor are afflicted by others Here is a second instance of Gods goodnesse in the exercise of his power and might As He preserveth not the life of the wicked So he giveth right to the poor as he destroyeth wrong-doers so he will do right to those that suffer wrong Every word is considerable First He giveth that 's an act of bounty Secondly He giveth right that 's an act of equity And that Thirdly To the poor that 's an act of pity and charity Further When 't is said He giveth that implyes First a present or speedy act Secondly a constant and setled course of acting As the word giveth imports that the Lord doth it now and doth not put it off to hereafter only so it likewise importeth that the Lord will do it hereafter as well as now He giveth Right to the poor The poor suffer wrong but the Lord comes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and gives them right or rights them and that in a twofold notion First He gives them that right which is due to them according to his own righteous Laws or the righteous Laws of men That 's right done which is done according to a righteous Law Secondly He giveth them that right which is due to them according to the integrity of their own hearts and wayes We may say Thirdly The Lord giveth them right not according to the strictnesse of the Law but according to the integrity of their hearts Thus David prayed Psal 7.3 Judge me O Lord according to my righteousnesse and according to mine integrity that is in me that is according to my honest meaning and the simplicity of my Soul As if he had said O Lord do me right men have done me wrong they have false and wrong apprehensions of me they raise false reports concerning me but thou O Lord who knowest my integrity wilt judge me accordingly and 't is my humble and earnest Prayer that thou wouldest He giveth right To the poor The poor in Scripture are taken two wayes First as they stand in opposition to the rich Secondly as they are opposed to the proud thus here he giveth right to the poor as well as to the rich and he will especially give right to the humble poor to the righteous poor to the poor in spirit Such the Prophet speaks of Isa 66.2 To this man will I look even to him that is poor He means not the poor in purse as such he means not those as such who wear poor cloaths the Lord doth not always look to or respect such poor for many such are both proud and wicked but he
looks to him that is poor in spirit or of a contrite spirit let such be in Rags and lye upon the Dunghil the Lord will look to them and he hath a threefold look for them First A look of honour as respecting their Persons Secondly A look of care to supply their wants Thirdly A look of justice to deliver them from wrong And if they that are poor in spirit be rich also in the world they shall not fail to receive right from the hand of the Lord. The Lord giveth right to all sorts of men against their wicked oppressors but his poor the Godly poor believing poor those that are poor not only in purse but in spirit are more peculiarly under this priviledge of being righted by the Lord. And usually in Scripture the word poor is taken in a good sence Nomen pauperis in bonum sumitur pauperes sunt populus Dei for good men as the word rich in an ill sence for evil men Jam. 5.1 Go to now ye rich men weep and howl for the miseries that shall come upon you The Apostle speaks as if that were the case of all rich or as if he called all rich men to weeping and howling c. Yet some poor men are wicked and some rich men are righteous and therefore I conceive the word poor may be taken here for any wronged or oppressed poor yet especially for the Godly poor For though God giveth right to all men even the worst of men yet here the scope of Elihu is to shew that God takes most care of those whom the wicked do most not only neglect but injure and oppresse He giveth right to the poor Hence Note The poor especially the Godly poor are often wronged and go by the worst in the world Or thus The poor as poor usually suffer from and by the world As the world is apt to oppresse any poor so mostly the Godly poor Psal 12.5 For the oppression of the poor I will arise 'T is possible a rich man may be oppressed a mighty man may be oppressed by one mightier than he but usually the poor are oppressed and they trampled on who are already underfoot And therefore the Lord saith For the oppression of the poor for the sighing of the needy now will I arise and set him at safety from him that puffeth at him This is not exclusive the Lord will arise for the help of the rich and great when any such are wronged but he is said to arise for the help of the poor as intimating that the poor seldome come by their right or find help in the world unlesse God arise to help them or help them to it and because he hath said he will help them to their right we may be sure he will Davids Faith was strong upon this promise Psal 18.27 Thou wilt save the afflicted people Psal 72.4 He shall judge the poor of the People P●al 140.12 I know that the Lord will maintain the cause of the afflicted And his Experience was as clear as his Faith was strong Psal 37.25 I have been young and now am old yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken that is I have often yea alwayes seen him helped one way or other and sometimes set on high from affliction Psal 107.41 The Lord careth so for the poor as if he cared for none else and the best of the poor are little cared for by any but the Lord. Zeph. 3.12 I will also leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poor people and they shall trust in the Name of the Lord. The rich of this world trust to creature helps but as the Lords poor know they ought not to trust in creature help so they have it not to trust to and therefore they trust in the Name of the Lord not only out of choice which is their grace and duty but out of necessity And what will the Lord do for them that trust in him not only out of necessity but choice he will surely take care of them and do them right Secondly Note God rights the poor freely He giveth them right he doth not sell it What freer than gift They need not bribe for it As he freely giveth them the Righteousnesse of his Son to justifie them so they have common right of free gift to relieve them Note Thirdly The Lord relieves or rights the poor speedily He giveth implyeth a present act and that doubles the mercy Note Fourthly God will always right the wronged poor He giveth imports even a continued act as he did it in former times in the dayes of old so he doth it at this day and will do it always As the Lord giveth right speedily so constantly with him is no variablenesse or shadow of turning Most men do right only by fits but the Lord is ever giving right Lastly He giveth right to the poor not to this or that poor man but to the poor Hence Note The Lord distributes right to all that are wronged As his Mercy so his Justice is not confined to a few but floweth out to all But it may be objected Why then are so many poor without their right If the Lord giveth right and giveth it continually and impartially why do the poor cry and sigh and groan and mourn why see we so many tears of the poor If they have right why do they complain I answer First The Lord giveth right to the poor sometimes when the poor perceive it not Psal 97.2 Clouds and darknesse are round about him Righteousnesse and Judgement are the habitation of his Throne When a man cannot see the Lord doing right yet the Lord doth right The Sun shineth when eclipsed or covered with a Cloud The Lord never ceaseth to right the poor though neither poor nor rich perceive how or which way he doth it Secondly I answer He giveth right to the poor even when they want right or when they are under the sorest oppressions by supporting their hearts in this perswasion that he will give them right The poor have right when their minds are satisfied that they shall have right There is no true Godly poor man in the world how much soever afflicted but his heart is or may be satisfied that he shall have right That 's a sure word Psal 9.18 The needy shall not always be forgotten the expectation of the poor shall not perish for ever And therefore we may pray with confidence Forget not O Lord the Congregation of thy poor for ever Psal 74.19 The poor may rest in this assurance while their troubles rest upon them that God will bring forth their Righteousnesse as the Light and their Judgement as the Noon day Psal 37.6 He hath right who believes he shall have it as he that believeth hath everlasting life in hope long before he attains the possession of it John 3.36 Thirdly Though we say The Lord giveth right to the poor both speedily and constantly yet he reserveth to himself a liberty as to
men in great trouble in fetters and cords of affliction Well saith Elihu suppose it be so suppose you find many righteous men in such a low condition yet God withdraweth not his eyes from them no not then yea he is doing them good by all the evils that they suffer So then if this relative they referre to righteous men in either capacity either to such as were before exalted and are now affl cted or to such righteous men as were never so exalted yea as are depressed and cast into an afflicted condition yet God withd●awe h not his eyes from them but still continues his care of them and tenderness towards them If they be bound in fetters and holden by the cords of affliction Here are two hard words bound and holden bound as captives bound as prisoners bound in fetters yea and holden in cords holden or caught as a poor bird in a net or snare or as a wild beast in a toyle bound in fetters and holden in cords These fetters and cords may be understood two wayes First Literally and properly it is possible for a righteous man to be bound in fetters and holden in cords plainly so called Joseph was cast into prison and the Iron entred into his soul and his feet were hurt in the Stocks in material Stocks Secondly We may expound these fetters and cords figuratively or metaphorically and so any trouble or streight is as a fetter and as a cord Thus to be bound in fetters and holden in cords is but an expression signifying any afflicted condition Fetters and cords are Emblems of slavery captivity The P ophet foreshewing the willing contribution of divers strange Nations towards the help of the Jewes in their return from the Babylonish captivity as also beyond that their subjection to Christ and the power of the Gospel gives it under this shadow Isa 45.14 Thus saith the Lord the labour of Egypt and merchand se of Ethiopia and of the Sabeans men of stature shall come over unto thee and they shall be thine that is they shall yeild themselves to thee as thy subjects and more they shall come after thee in chaines they shall come over that is they shall follow thee as captives do a conquering enemy in chaines In what chaines the meaning is not that they fhall come with chain●● of Iron upon their bodies but even the stoutest greatest richest of them shall humbly submit they shall come even as prisoners with their chaines about them supplicating and intreating thy favour We read in the holy History of the Kings that the servants of Benhadad came with ropes about their necks to Ahab Vin●ula sunt servitutis Symbola they came with material ropes about their necks in t●ken of their abasement and readiness to submit unto what sentence soever the King of Israel should lay upon them To come with ●opes and chains is in Scripture Language to come in deepest humiliation and to be bound in chaines and fetters is to be in greatest affliction That 's the sense of the Prophet Isa 28.22 Now therefore be ye not mockers there were some that derided him threatning judgement in the name of the Lord take heed of that lest your bands be made strong that is lest God bring you into such great afflictions that you shall find and feel your selves as it were in bands or as Elihu expresseth it in the Text bound in fetters and holden in the cords of affliction So then this notes in general any state of trouble or sorrow of misery or calamity that befalls us here below Psal 107.10 They that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death being bound in affliction and iron that is as fast bound in affliction as if they were bound in iron Thus here Holden in cords of affliction Some translate cords of poverty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eunibus p●upertatu Vulg 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dicitur qui quid premit constringit quare appellalatione Funis comprehenditur pignus quo obligatur homo ●● dolor praefertim parturie● l●m the same word signifying both affliction poverty because poverty is so great an affliction Here 's the case this is the condition into which Elihu supposeth righteous men may fall They may be bound in fetters and holden in cords of affliction Taking the words as they refer to righteous men in general observe The best of men may fall into the worst outward condition They may be in a condition of captivity they may be in reall fetters and cords or they may be in a state of affliction as bad to them as fetters and cords I have heretofore more than once spoken of the afflictions of the righteous in the opening of this Book therefo●e I shall not stay upon it here Only take notice that the righteous may come into fetters c. not only for tryall of their graces but for the punishment of their iniquities they possibly have not kept close to the bands of duty and therefore God brings them into the bands of calamity As wicked men say in the pride and stoutness of their hearts Psal 2.3 Come let us break their bands and cast their cords from us that is those bands of duty and cords of obedience which the Gospel layeth upon them So in a degree good men righteous men may throw off the cords of obedience and the bands of duty through the violence of corruption and temptation walking loosely vainly for a season they may break the bands of the Gospel Covenant and the cords of the Commandement and when they do so God will not spare them but will throw them even into the bands of trouble and into the cords of affliction they shall know the fetters and bands of affliction threatned in the Law when they have not carefully kept to the rule of the Law Secondly Taking the righteous in that special capacity for such as were once exalted and in high place or as 't is said in the former verse With Kings on the Throne and finding them here in fetters and bands Note The worldly state of good of righteous men as well as others is subject to change For though that text saith He establisheth them yet it is not to be understood that God doth so establish righteous men in their places that they can never be put out of them or so exalt them that they shall never be pulled down that text sheweth what God can do he can exalt them so that they shall not be removed for ever and he often exalts them so but he doth not so alwayes for the outward estates of good men may have as great changes as the outward estate of wicked men have they may come from thrones to prisons and from chaines of gold to fetters of Iron There have been many such changes as to the things of the world even to those that are not of the world And as Heathen Princes and Kings have often found such changes so also did
is it that sin doth exceed or wherein consists the exceedingness of it I answer First There is an exceedingness of sin in the streng●h that it hath over us when it doth easily command and prevaile then we sin exceedingly o● then sin is exceeding sinfull it hath got a mighty hand over us O how sadly do the sins of many exceed thus they are held down by their corruptions as slaves and captives they cannot get themselves out from under the power of a base lust As the devil leads some so lusts and corruptions lead others captive at their will they are at the beck and command of sin Thus sin exceeds in the wicked who either know not God or who walk daily contrary to their knowledge Secondly That man doth exceed in his transgression or his transgression doth exceed who sins with or hath a very ill frame of heart in sinning Many a good man falls into sin and yet he hath not as I may say a base or wicked frame of heart in sinning but his very sinning is upon the matter against his own heart and the bent of his spirit his heart goeth not with it The more of the heart or will is mingled with any sin the more exceeding sinfull it is I may say of some men I would not be mistaken That they do evill with a better frame of heart than others do good there are some that do good with very bad yea with base hearts The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination how much more when he brings it with a wicked mind or as we put in the Margin with wickedness Pro. 21.27 that is either for applause to be seen of men or for profit to gain by men or in malice the better to compass revenge upon any man or sort of men under all which covers wicked men have brought their sacrifices that is have appeared in the outward worship of God or have taken up the form of godliness And whosoever doth thus hath a far worse frame of heart in doing good than a good man hath in doing evil who though he doth evil yet he delights not in it and closes not with it By how much any mans heart is more taken with sin by so much the more sinfull it is Thirdly The exceedingness of a sin may be measured by the circumstances of sinning then a man may be said to transgress and exceed in transgression when he sinneth First against light against the checks of his own conscience within as also Secondly when he sins against reproofs warnings and admonitions from without that man exceeds in sin who hath been told of it and yet goeth on Thirdly that man exceeds in sin who sins in the midst of much mercy and daily received or renewed favours as also he Fourthly who sins in the midst of many afflictions and judgements whether upon his person and family or upon the Nation where he liveth such as these not only sin or transgress but exceed in transgression Now the Lord in times of affliction sheweth men these and the like exceedings of their transgression and causeth them to confess not only that they are sinners and have transgressed but they are brought upon their knees to confess that they have exceeded in transgression And when this is done the Lord goeth on yet further to perfect the work of humiliation and repentance while they are bound in fetters and holden in the cords of affliction for then as it followeth Vers 10. He openeth also their ear to discipline and commandeth that they return from iniquity Still 't is Gods work he sheweth before and here he openeth as in the former verse he openeth their eyes to see so in this he openeth their ear to hear He openeth their ear 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Revelavit occulta abscondita revelatio auris notat intimam insinuationem This latter is more than the former this opening the ear to discipline is more than a shewing of sin and the exceeding sinfulness of it Opening the ear imports a close and home-discovery of a mans condition to him Psal 51.6 David after his great sin perceived the Lord shewing him or making him to understand wisdome secretly He openeth also their ear The word which we translate to open properly signifieth to reveale and in Scripture phrase the ear is said to be revealed or uncovered when a secret is brought to us 1 Sam. 20.2 Jonathan said to David God forbid thou shalt not die behold my father will do nothing either great or small but that he will shew it me or uncover my ear and why should my father hide this thing from me Saul also used the same Hebraisme or forme of speech when he upbrayded his servants with their unfaithfulness to him What saith he hath the son of Jesse such preferments for you and are you all so corrupted in your loyalty to me that all of you have conspired against me and there is none that sheweth me or uncovereth my ear that my son hath made a League with the son of Jesse Loquit●r de auro cord● mentis Scitum illud Mens audit mens vidit caetera surda et caeca sunt Drus Sam. 22.8 Will none of you uncover my ear that is discover the plot that is contrived for my ruine Then the ear is said to be opened or uncovered when any secret is made known to the mind as was further shewed at the 16th verse of the 33d Chapter where Elihu used this expression and therefore I shall not return to that matter but referre the Reader thither Only consider to what or for what the Lord is said to open the ear In the 33d Chapter Elihu told us that when the eyes of men are shut deep sleep being fallen upon them he openeth the ears of men and sealeth their instruction Here Elihu saith God having men und●r the rod he openeth also their ear To discipline The Hebrew word is of the same extraction in both places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ad castigationem i. e. Ne castigatio sit eis absque fructu vel ut ista disciplino seu correctione emendentur Pisc Instruction is for discipline and discipline tends unto instruction It is often rendred chastisement and generally signifies any severer course of instruction or education whereby we are drawn off from evil and unto good When Elihu saith He openeth their ear to discipline we may understand it two wayes First To fit them for instruction and counsel they heard possibly before but not with an open that is a ready and obedient ear The ear is shut though we hear much unless we submit and conforme to what we hear The ear seldome opens fully till the Lord smites as well as speaks and gives us both a word and a blow Secondly He openeth their ear to discipline that is to hearken what Gods chastening or correction speakes or what he speaks by his chastning The Lord would not have his chastnings unprofitable nor his rods
fetters and held in cords De carcere educentur ad occisionem gladij Aquin. Per gladium iransire dicitur q●i gladio occiditur Drus but now the sword sh●ll overtake them and they shall perish or be taken away by the sword The Hebrew is they shall pass away by the sword that is they shall die Man is said to pass away by the swo●d when the sword doth not pass by him but smites and kills him which is a temporal perishing It is said Isa 57.1 The righteous perish c. As the righteous perish by a natural death so they may perish by a violent death and possibly that may fall upon them when they attend not the providential dispensations of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●●●prie ●●è mi●sile aut ja●●lum They shall perish by the sword or by the drawn weapon The word notes any weapon that is drawn or cast forth hence some translate it a Dart or Javeling which is shot out of the hand but it may also be applied to the Sword which being drawn forth out of the sheath is often sent upon deadly messages and may be numbered among missive weapons Now when Elihu saith they shall perish by the sword we may take the word sword properly or tropically Properly two wayes First for the sword of the Warrier Secondly for the sword of the Magistrate either justly punishing or grievously afflicting Some good men have acknowledged in great trials and sufferings under the hand of man that God hath met with them for their neglect or non-attendance to more immediate afflictions under his own hand Again take the sword tropically or improperly and so any sore affliction that greatly annoyeth especially if to death is called a sword in Scripture They shall perish by the sword under one notion or other if they do not obey Hence learn God will not spare no not his own People if they do not obey him God is full of sparing-mercy but the righteous may provoke him so that he will not spare no not them Judgement begins often at the house of God 1 Pet. 4.17 And if Judgement begin at the house of God what shall the end be of those that obey not the Gospel This is a terrible word The righteous may perish by the sword how dreadfully then shall the unrighteous the wicked the scorners of godliness perish If God will make his own people smart in his anger when they provoke him how will he speak to his enemies in his wrath and vex them in his fore displeasure Psal 2.5 Secondly From the gradation of their troubles First they were bound in fetters and holden in cords but now here 's a sword a devouring sword a killing deadly weapon Hence learn They who give not glory to God in lesser or in lighter afflictions draw greater upon themselves They may come from a cord to a sword from being bound to be slain God hath several sorts of Instruments to chasten his people with and as the best of outward good things may be the portion of evil wicked men so the worst of outward evils may be the portion of good men they may at any time and sometimes shall perish by the sword and as it followes They shall die without knowledge The sword is death a deadly sword 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall die Without knowledge or as the text may be read because they were without knowledge But is any righteous man without knowledge That the soul be without knowledge is not good saith Solomon Prov. 19.2 How then can he be good whose soul is without knowledge And seeing we interpret this text of the righteous how can it be said they die without knowledge I answer Knowledge may be taken in a more general sense and so no righteous man either lives or dies without knowledge he neither lives nor dies without the knowledge of God in Jesus Christ whom to know is eternal life John 17.3 and without the knowledge of whom all who are actually capable of such knowledge must die eternally he neither lives nor dies without the knowledge of himself as a sinner and of Christ who saveth him from his sins Such ignorances are inconsistent with the state of a godly man he may do foolishly but he is not a fool he may be wanting in some kind of knowledge but he doth not want knowledge he cannot be without saving knowledge though he may perish temporally without knowledge The first thing that God makes in the new creation is light the light of knowledge there he begins his work therefore we cannot take knowledge generally simply and absolutely in this text Dei monita per castigationes ●cire intelligere noluerunt Drus but as knowledge may be taken restrictively for knowledge in or about this or that particular so a good man may want knowledge there may be somewhat which the Lord would acquaint the righteous with and teach them by their fetters and afflictions which they do not learn and therefore they die without k●owledge or because they are without knowledge yet that want of knowledge together with all their other wants and ignorances are pardoned to them Further we may expound the words thus They shall die without knowledge that is without the knowledge or consideration of of that special affliction or judgement which is coming upon them Non est oratio affirmativa stultitiae vel negativa scientiae sed simplicitèr negat advertentiam Bold they shall die unawares not thinking nor so much as dreaming of such a judgement or that such a hand of God was so near them According to this interpretation Elihu intends either their inadvertency of that approaching scourge or calamity with which they are overtaken or their not understanding the reason of it Christ saith in the Gospel Luke 12.46 The master of that servant the evil servant shall come in a day which he knowes not of and in a time when he looked not for him Now as the last Judgement the great Judgement shall come upon the wicked in a time when they look not for it so the Lord may bring a special particular judgement upon some one or more of his own people when they do not think of it or never suspected that they should fall under it Good men are sometimes surprized and so they shall die without knowledge is no more than this they shall be taken unawares by a suddain unexpected judgement Though every godly man hath a preparation for the general judgement yet as to a particular one he may be much unprepared Lastly Some expound the words of more than inadvertency or bare nescience even of folly and some degree of affected ignorance which possibly may prevaile upon a righteous man in some cases and for a time but I rather adhere to the former interpretation because as was shewed before the whole context seems to intend a more ordinary case of a righteous man So then this Scripture holds out the sad issues
and Sacrifices as in obeying the voyce of the Lord ● Saul had been very carefull to bring home sacrifices He had not obeyed the command of God yet hoped to put him off with a sacrifice But what were heards and flocks of cattel to be sacrificed when Saul rebelled against God Nothing provokes God more than outward services of worship when they are not accompanied with inward and universal submission to his will for that 's no better a sacrifice no purer worship than a Heathen payes to his Idol-god Hypocrites offer God only the blind and the lame Mal. 1.14 that is maymed and imperfect services there is imperfection in the services of the best but theirs are imperfect services so imperfect blind and lame that they are fit only for the blind and the lame so Idol-gods are called 2 Sam. 5.8 And do not they heap the wrath of the true God who serve him no better than false gods are served by their Idolatrous Devo●ionists Secondly There must needs be a continual heaping up of wrath by Hypocrites for if not to set the heart right provokes God to wrath Psal 78.8 The Lord was exceedingly displeased with the Israelites because they set not their heart aright Now if the Lord be so angry when the heart is not set aright much more must it provoke the Lord when then do purposely set their hearts wrong when they do evil knowingly advisedly when as it were they study to do evil To do good only in shew doth more displease the Lord than the doing of that which in shew is evil or which is evil above-board known to be so by all beholders As Hypocrites often deceive men so they attempt to deceive God himself This cannot but heap up wrath being it self so great a heap of sin They who think God will be pleas'd with outward Services alone or have no care to give him inward are alike displeasing to him Therefore among all sorts of sinners the Lord declares his wrath and thunders woe upon woe in the Gospel against Hypocrites They have heaped up wrath and it shall be heaped upon them They shall have their Portion in the Lake that burneth with fire and brimstone That 's the first thing what they do They heap up wrath When the hand of God is upon them they are so far from coming forth humbly and penitentially to turn away his wrath or to seek his face that they provoke him more and more and dreadfully enflame the reckoning against themselves They heap up wrath Secondly Elihu tells us what the Hypocrites in heart do not They cry not when h● bindeth them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vincire pro castigare species pro genere Licet hanc doctrinam in communi Elihu prop●nat verisimile tamen est Jobum dicendo pungere But is it a fault or so great a fault not to cry when God bindeth us Are we commanded or bound to cry when we are bound in fetters and holden in cords of affliction wherein lyeth this sin That will appear while I shew what crying is here intended To cry is First to complain and make a noyse this is the cry of impatience Secondly to mourn and be sorrowful this is the cry of Repentance Thirdly to pray to supplicate yea to pray mightily to pray strongly and this is the cry of Faith Luke 18.7 Shall not God avenge his own Elect which cry day and night unto him That is which pray mightily to him night and day The hypocrite in heart often makes the first cry when God bindeth him the cry of impatience but never the two latter he makes not either the cry of Repentance or the cry of Faith in Prayer when God bindeth him This lets us see the second Part of the wickedness of these hypocrites 't is the omission of a most necessary duty yea of two They act very sinfully for they heap up wrath they act not holily for they do not cry when God binds them that is they neither repent nor pray or they repent not heartily they pray not earnestly in the day of their affliction Hence note First Hypocrites humble not themselves when God humbleth them When he binds them as it were hand and foot they are tongue-tyed and heart-tyed The Lord said of such Hos 7.14 They cryed not unto me with their heart when they howled upon their beds they assemble themselves for Corn and Wine and rebel against me They howled and made a noyse but saith the Lo●d all the while they cryed not to me There was no Repentance no Prayer in their cry they cryed not with their heart Hypocrites will first complain much when God binds them secondly they murmure much when God binds them thirdly they will vex themselves like a Bull in a Nett when God binds them Fourthly they will rail and curse when God binds them but repent or pray they do not Isa 8.21 They shall pass through it hardly bested and hungry and it shall come to pass that when they shall be hungry they shall fret themselves and curse their King and their God and look upward Here was blaspheming but no crying no repenting no praying no deprecating the hand of God or the Judgment felt in an humble and spiritual way Hypocrites cry not to the Lord though he makes them cry they are readier to find fault with God than with themselves in the day of adversity they neither cry the cry of godly sorrow for their sin nor the cry of godly Prayers for help out of their affliction They who are false with God in times of Peace seldom if at all repent or duty apply themselves to God for help in times of trouble the reason is The Conscience of the hypocrite in heart tells him Anteactae turpis ●itae ●em●ria anintum enervat he hath dealt basely with God and therefore when he is in streights or bound what face what faith what liberty of spirit can he have to cry to God Such hypocrites often cry out despai●ingly but oh how rately are they brought to cry either believingly or repentingly when God bindeth them Secondly Consider this cry a little further as a Prayer-cry Hypocrites in heart may be much for prayer in time of prosperity they were not hypocrites else if they did not pray they were openly prophane not hypocrites Christ speaking of hypocrites Math. 6. tells us they pray much and Math. 7. they cry Lord Lord. Hypocrites are much in praying especially in times of prosperity yet here he saith They cry not when he bindeth them that is in the day of adversity Hence Observe That which is not done uprightly will not be done constantly Hypocrites cry to God only in shew at best and when 't is best with them but when they fall into a troubled condition they cry not they even lay down their shew they throw up their duties when they miss their desires They who have prayed often in a time of prosperity not throwing away their sins coming into
way of admonition and counsel forasmuch as he had done amiss before and carried himself unduly under the hand of God even so far as to fulfil the counsel of the wicked that therefore he would now for the time to come take heed and be more wary And lest Job should slight this admonition or counsel Elihu adds a powerful motive to urge that duty upon him even the wrath of God Beware Why Because there is wrath Beware and beware lest this wrath breaking forth he take thee away with a stroke And how dreadful the wrath of God is Elihu shews in these three verses by a threefold Consideration First because if we fall into the Lords hand when he is in wrath there is no meanes under heaven that can deliver or bring us off This he asserteth at the latter end of the 18th verse Then a great ransome cannot deliver thee It is dangerous coming un-der that wrath from which a ransome especially a great ransome cannot deliver What that ransome is which cannot deliver us is expressed in the 19th verse Will he esteem thy riches no not gold A Second motive to beware o● this dreadful wrath is this because if once the wrath of God be up as there is no ransom so no power in the creature that can deliver That we have in the latter part of the 19th verse nor all the forces of strength though thou hast armies millions of men in armes yea though thou hast legions of Angels in pay yet they cannot prevail all the forces of strength cannot deliver thee There is also a third consideration to shew the unavoidableness of the wrath of God namely because there is no sleeing no making an escape from it Some indeed are so angry that you cannot satisfy them with a ransom and so powerful that no strength can deliver you from their power yet possibly you may make an escape and hide from them you may get out of the way and lye out of sight but saith Elihu that will not do neither in this case v. 20. desire not the night when people are cut off in their place the night or darkness will be no cover to thee from the wrath of an angry God Thus you have the sum and substance of this admonition to Job Beware because there is wrath and that wrath of God so terrible that nothing can deliver from it no ransom no power nor can we deliver our selves by flight or by darkness I shall now open the words more distinctly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 calor ira a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 caluit incaluit quod iracundi incalescunt Verse 18. Because there is wrath beware c. The word which we translate wrath comes from a root that signifies heat or to be hot and we know they that are angry and in wrath are very hot their mind and spirit are enflamed we use to say to an angry man why are you so hot the wrath of man is hot the wrath of God is certainly much hotter Because there is wrath but where is it I answer First there is wrath in the breast or heart of God there his anger is kindled against sinners Secondly There is wrath in the decree of God against sinners Zeph. 2.2 Thirdly there is wrath in the threatnings of God there it first appeares and breaketh forth Deut. 29.20 So the Apostle Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from heaven How is it revealed As his love is revealed in promises so his wrath in threatnings Fourthly there is wrath in the works of God in his Judgments acted upon the children of men As there is wrath hidden in his breast and decreed so wrath is heard from his mouth in terrible threatnings and seen in his hand by terrible Judgments executed upon his enemies We may see wrath in the dealings of God his works tell us he is angry Therefore fear to persist lest in his anger he take thee quite away We should beware of sinful works lest we provoke and stir up the Lords anger to make bloody work There is wrath particularly as to the dealings of God with thee O Job saith Elihu therefore Beware The word beware is not expresly in the Hebrew tex● but it is plainly intended and supplied by Interpreter● in gene●al to make up and clear the sence of this verse We have a like reading in the 36th of Isaiah v. 18. Beware lest Hezekiah perswade you c. The word beware is a supplement added there in a different character to shew that it is not expressed in the Hebrew As if Raoshakeh had said If Hezekiah perswade you to stand out against my Master Sennacherib you will provoke his wrath to your utter ruine and destruction therefore beware There as here beware bespeakes our caution because there is wrath take heed what you do or say Hence note First There is a wrath of God against sin or God will appear in wrath against sinners The Apostle John in his first Epistle Chap. 4.8 tells us in a direct predication God is love and 't is as true God is wrath The wrath of God is a divine perfection it is the perfection of God as his love is God is one and the same he is not divided into several passions perturbations or affections but thus the Scripture speaks of him to denote what we may expect from him and what he is and will be in his actings towards them who obey him not Secondly note The wrath of God appears and is put forth in his works of judgment As the goodness of God is his love acted or as the good things which God doth for us are love-actions so the evils that are upon us are wrath-actions I do not say that every evil which we endure in this world is the acting of wrath upon us but I say there is wrath in the actings of evil upon us Moses said to Aaron Numb 16.46 Go quickly take a Censer hast hast and make an atonement there is wrath gone out How did he know wrath was gone out He tells us in the next words the plague is begun He saw wrath in that dispensation of God the plague begun argued that God was angry Because there is wrath beware Hence note Thirdly We should by all meanes take heed and beware of the wrath of God The wrath of man is a small matter to the wrath of God yet we are very careful to beware of the wrath of man especially of great men The wrath of the Kings and Princes of the world is like the ●oaring of the Lion saith Solomon and we are ready to tremble at that but O how should we tremble at and beware of the wrath of God! Who knoweth the power of thine anger Psal 90.11 We may take some scantling some measure of the wrath of man and know how far it can go and what it can do but we can take no measure of the wrath of God for it is immesurable and therefore we should avoid every
thing that procures his wrath That 's the meaning of this caveat do nothing that blowes up or incenses the wrath of God But what is it that blowes up wrath It is sin every sin hath that in it which may blow up wrath The Apostle saith The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men not only against this or that ungodliness no● only against this or that degree of ungodliness 't is neither against ungodliness of some special kind nor of some special degree but against all ungodliness therefore all ungodliness and all unrighteousness is to be avoided And as we should do nothing to provoke wrath so we should do every thing which may prevent wrath Psal 2.12 Kiss the Son why lest he be angry and his wrath kindle Who is the Son and what 's this kissing of the Son which p●events wrath The Son is Christ he is the Son of God this kissing is a kiss of homage an humble submission to Jesus Christ by fai●h and obedience it is a Gospel receiving of Ch●ist to kiss the son is to receive Christ as ou● King as our P●iest as our P●ophe● to receive Christ in the whole manifestation of his Mediatorship Do this to prevent wrath kiss the Son And consider how terrible he repo●ts that wrath to be If his wrath be kindled but a little blessed are they that put their trust in him On then take heed that you do not provoke the wrath of God and do your utmost to prevent it which nothing can do but kissing the Son that will and that only can do it submit to Jesus Christ receive Jesus Christ without him it is impossible to prevent wrath H● that believes not the wrath of God abideth on him Johs 3.36 Jesus Christ alone is he which delivereth us from the wra h to come 1 Thes 1.10 And if we further consider this wrath from the expression both of the Psalm and of the Text it should make us who are so fearful of and who so shift from the wrath of men exceedingly afraid of the wrath of God The word as was shewed before comes from a root which signifieth the heat of fire implying that the wrath of God is fire and Heb. 10.27 it is called fiery indignation yea God himself Heb. 12.29 is called a consuming fire Why doth the Scripture express him and his wrath by fire Surely because fire is well known to us and we are well able to conceive how dreadful a thing fire is when it is in its rage and fury when it hath got the mastery Fire is a comfortable servant but a dreadful master Now as fire is the most dreadful element so wrath is the most dreadful attribute of God yet I may say that elementary fire which as to our sence is so dreadful is but a sun-shine compared to the wrath of God as will appear if we consider it in two things First it burns internally The visible fire burns but visible things outward things but this fire burns within scorches the conscience burns the soul burns that which all the fires in the world cannot reach cannot touch God is a Spirit and the wrath of God is a fire that burnes the spirits and will for ever afflict and torment the consciences of wicked men The hottest fires which the most enraged malitious Persecuters kindle cannot touch the spirit the conscience is quiet the soul triumphs while the flesh fries in the fire 'T is the fire of divine wrath alone which hath power upon the soul and a burning there is ten thousand times more painful than the burning of our flesh Secondly the wrath of God burns eternally Your fires here though they are dreadful yet they go out they consume themselves by consuming the matter or fuel cast into them they cannot continue alwayes because they eat up and devour that which maintaines them But the wrath of God burns continually God is called a consuming fire not because the fire of his wra●h consumes but because he consumeth sinners in the fire of wrath and when we say he consumeth sinners in his wrath or his wrath consumeth sinners we are not to understand it of a consumption as to being but only as to a well or comfortabe being for not only the soul● but the very bodies of sinners shall remain in this fire of the wrath of God for ever unconsumed The bodies of the damned shall be raised again at the great day and being re-united to their souls both shal abide unconsumed in the fire of this consuming wrath eternally The great dread of ordinary fire is that it consumes what it burns but the greatest dread of this fire is that it consumes not that which it burns O therefore take heed of the wrath of God the wrath of God is terrible as to corporal and temporal judgements much more as to spirituall and eternal judgments that is as the fire of his wrath burns both internally and eternally Because there is wrath beware Lest he take thee away with his stroke Here the danger is exprest If the Lord be angry he can soon take thee away with a stroke he can remove yea hurry thee away out of all thy present joys and enjoyments to everlasting sorrows The word imports a violent remove The stroke here spoken of is like that Chap. 24.26 He striketh them as wicked men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cum com●losione in the open sight of others that is he shames them as well as punisheth them as he strikes them with his hand to their confusion so he strikes or claps his own hands together in dirision as 't is said Chap. 27.23 Men shall clap their hands at him and shall hiss him out of his place we may take it in both these significations Lest he take thee away with a stroke that is lest he strike thee so as to make an utter end of thee or lest he take thee away with derision clapping his hands at thee and pouring contempt upon thee Have we not reason to beware of that wrath which in either sense can take us away with his stroke Yet I conceive a third sense may be given of these words Lest he take thee away with his stroke that is lest he take thee away suddenly even as suddenly as a st●oke can be given Hence Note First God can presently strike to destruction He can take the strongest away with a stroke he can do it wi h one stroke The Lord needs not stand cutting and slashing hacking and hewing as we say all day long one stroke of his will do it He took away Herod at one stroke Acts 12.23 He took away Ananias and Saphira at one stroke Acts 5.5 Nadab and Abihu were taken away with one stroke Lev. 10.1 All these perished and so have thousands more as with a stroke so suddenly at one stroke The Lord can strike home as Abishai said to David in the case of Saul when he found him in the
Jeremy did not desire the evil day to come on others yet when the evil day was come upon himself we find him venting strange and strong desires of that kind Chap. 9.2 O that my head were a fountain and mine eyes rivers of tears that I might weep night and day for the slain of the daughter of my People He had visions of slaughter and he did even beg a head melted into water for abundant mourning over that day But what were his other what were his further wishes with respect to himself at that time we have them in the next verse O that I had in the wilderness a lodging place of a wayfaring man that I might leave my people and go from them for they be all adulterers a company of treacherous men What uncomfortable desires had Jeremiah as to that day of distress O how did he covet to have a retiring place any hole in the wilderness like a wayfaring man that he might leave his people and see them no more because they were so wicked and their wickedness he foresaw would bring down such dreadful evils upon them And as he wisht this sad retirement upon the foresight of evils to come so we find him in another place Chap. 20.14 15 16 c. wishing that he had never been born to see such presnet evils We have the like plain wish of David in the day of his trouble Psal 55.2 Attend unto me O God and hear me I mourn in my complaint and make a noise because of the voice of the enemy because of the ●ppression of the wicked for they cast iniquity upon me and in wrath they hate me they charged him with evils that he had not done my heart is sore pained within me the terrors of death are fallen upon me fearfulness and trouble are come upon me and horror hath overwhelmed or covered me David was at that time in a very sad day you see and what was his wish that day we have it at the 6th verse And I said O that I had wings like a dove for then would I flee away and be at rest lo then would I wander far off and remain in the wilderness Holy David could not keep his heart in those distresses from extravagant wishes David had the integrity of a dove as he often pleaded before the Lord and being distrest he wished also for the wings of a dove that he might flee away and get out of the reach of all those impendent calamities How usual is it for good men in bad dayes to breath out such wishes one wishes that he had never been born rather than to see such a day another wishes he may die presently rather than live in such a day When the Apostle John had given the prophesie of dreadful judgments to come upon the wicked world or the world of wicked men he presently tells us what their wishes or desires will be Rev. 9.6 And in those dayes shall men seek death and shall not find it and shall desire to die and death shall flee from them Most men flee death that 's a misery but death sleeth from some men and that 's a greater misery They are in the worst of conditions who would have death when death will not be had Their lives are worse than death who only wish to die What non-sense wishes and desires had they also in the day of the Lords anger mentioned in the same book Chap. 6.16 Who said to the mountaines and to the rocks fall on us and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb. It is possible for good men sometimes to have strange wishes but O how lamentable are the wishes of wicked men and unbelievers who have no part nor interest in Jesus Christ in those times when Conscience is wounded and awakened or when a day of the Lords wrath or judgment from the Lord appeareth When Christ the Lamb shall sit upon the throne and call them to give an account O then they will wish for rocks and mountaines to fall upon them that they might not appear how glad will they then be to be hidden with an everlasting night They cannot but desire the night who have sinned against light Holy Job could not forbear to desire the night of death in the day of his distress what desires then must the wicked have who have no hope beyond this life Again as to the vanity of that design of some in desiring the night for shelter Note There is nothing can cover us from the eye or secure us from the hand of God What is darkness to God who is light and in whom there is no darkness at all 1 John 1.5 Desire not the night As gold and silver cannot ransom sinners as great forces all the Armies on earth forces of strength cannot help sinners so the night cannot hide them they that are in the grossest darkness are never the more out of Gods sight The darkness is not darkness to him the darkness and the light to him are both alike Psal 139.11 12. and therefore he said before vers 7. Whither shall I go from thy spirit or whither shall I flee from thy presence If I ascend up to heaven thou art there c. Wheresoever we are God is who is every where nothing can keep us off from or keep us out of the eye of God Lastly as the night is taken for death Desire not the night Hence note It is a vain wish to desire death for our rescue or escape from the evils of this life Death is it self an evil the worst of natural evils How can that help us out of our evils of trouble which is it self the most troublesom evil The Lord promiseth some of his people that they should die before the evil day Josiah and Hezekiah had such promi●es 'T is a favour to die as they did in the assurance of eternal life before we feel the evils of this life But death considered in it self is no relief against evil and as it is the worst of natural evils in it self so it carrieth those who are unprepared and unprovided for it to worser evils than any they can meet with in this life Some desire death to escape the evils of this life when as soon as they die they go to the evils of another life which are the second death such a death as hath no second and descend not only to the grave but to hell And what hath any one got by leaving the troubles of this life to fall into the dolors of that second secondless death They only dream of security by death who are unprepared go die Death is good for none but those who are fitted for and have by faith laid hold upon eternal life JOB Chap. 36. Vers 21. Verse 21. Take heed regard not iniquity for this thou hast chosen rather than affliction IN this verse Elihu gives Job another serious admonition or re-enforceth the former warning
prosecuteth the admonition which he had given Job in the 21 verse to take heed of uttering any thing rashly concerning Gods dealings with him or of choosing iniquity rather than affliction And he presseth the admonition by two great arguments First From the power and wisdome of God in the 22t h verse Behold God exalteth by his power who teacheth like him Secondly He urgeth it by an argument taken from the soveraignty of God as also from his most exact Justice v. 23. Who hath enjoyned him his way or who can say thou hast wrought iniquity As if he had said Take heed how thou accusest the Justice of God in any of his dealings with thee If God be of such power of such wisdome of such soveraignty of such integrity then consider well what thou speakest yea what thou thinkest of God beware thou speakest not a word nor conceivest a thought amiss of him Consider I say God himself his wayes and works thoroughly and thou wilt conclude with me That though many in the world have great power and have left the markes of it in many places and upon many persons yet none like God either first in doing his own work or secondly in directing or teaching us how to do ours So that Elihu by this report and commendation of the power and wisdome of God seems to comfort Job in the assurance or hope of better things Ecce deus excelsus in fortitudine sua Vulg 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 excelsus est intransitive sumi potest attollit robur suum i. e. rob●re suo excelsus est if he would hearken to and accept his counsel for as God had mightily afflicted and broken him so he was as mighty to heal those breaches and deliver him he only waited to see him in a better frame that he might be gracious Isa 30.18 That 's the general sum of the words Vers 22. Behold God exalteth by his power Some read God is high in his own power that carrieth Elihu's reason strongly in it God is exalted in his power above all others and therefore it is no way sutable or consentaneous unto reason that the greater power should be questioned much less condemned of injustice by the lesser power There must be a parity a co-ordination or a co-equality at least if not a superiority where judgement is given That 's a great truth God is exalted in his own power David Psal 21.13 turns it into a prayer or wish Be thou exalted O Lord in thine own strength He makes a like prayer Psal 108.5 The Lord in other places declareth himself p●remptorily in it Psal 46.10 Be still and know that I am God I will be exalted among the Heathen I will be exalted in the Earth It shall be so whether men will or will not whether men will or no God will be exalted because he is exalted in his own power not in any derived power or power given him from the creature Men or Angels The power which God puts forth in his works exalt him or shew him to be a great a mighty God Behold God is exalted by his own power But we translate the Text and so I conceive it more fitly sutes the scope of Elihu as expressing an act of God towards others Behold God exalteth by his power So Mr Broughton Mark the Omnipotent sets up by his strength Behold As hath been shewed is a note both of attention and admiration God The strong God the potent the omnipotent God who is able to overcome all difficulties Exalteth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Elevare exaltare corroborare stabilem inconcussum reddere The word which we render to exalt signifieth to set in an inaccessible height or to exalt ve●y high and not only so but to establish in that exaltation yea so to confirme and corroborate him that is set up in such a height that no power is able to molest trouble or afflict him and therefore a word coming from this root signifieth a fortified Castle or Tower such places if any are exalted and lifted up on high Behold God exalteth As if Elihu had said God is not only exalted in himself he is not only lifted up beyond the reach of all creature-annoyances but he is able to lift up others and he doth actually exalt his when he pleaseth beyond the reach of all danger beyond the hurtfull power of those who hate them and therefore have a mind to hurt them God is so exalted above others that he can exalt others also He exalteth by His Power He hath the power in himself The word which we render power signifieth First That might and strength which is corporal the might and strength of the body Secondly Inward might and strength whether acquired or infused the might of the mind wisdome and pollicy Thirdly Civil might and power honour and riches Whatever maketh a man strong comes under the notion of this word and every way in all the Notions of power God is exalted He exalteth by his power But seeing 't is barely asserted He exalteth by his power nothing being expressed it may be questioned whom doth he exalt or what doth he exalt I answer Forasmuch as the Scripture leaveth it at large and undetermined we may apply this assertion to any either thing or person God exalteth whom he pleaseth and what he pleaseth VVe may take it distinctly these five wayes First He exalteth Himself by his power that is he exalteth his own Name and Glory which is nearest to him yea as himself Secondly He exalteth every work which he will undertake and engage upon He doth not only lay the Foundation of his work and rear up the VValls a little way but he exalteth by his power till he hath set up the Head-stone of his work as the Prophet Zechariah speaketh Chap. 4.7 all that love and fear him shouting and crying Grace Grace to it He exalteth his works of Providence as once he did his work of Creation to full perfection Thirdly The Lord exalteth those that fear him for they are most properly his Favourites and whom should he exalt but those whom he favoureth All the worldly exaltations of evill men are but depressions and abasements compared with those exaltations and advancements which God intendeth for all that fear him and some he exalteth much in this VVorld Fourthly and more specially He exalteth by his power such Job then was those that are cast down by the oppressing power of men even the poor and those that have no help Thou art he saith David Psal 9.13 that liftest me up or exaltest me from the gates of death When I am perishing when I am ready to be swallowed up with death when I am at the greatest loss even as to life it self then thou liftest me up thou liftest me up from the very gates of death Again Psal 18.48 He delivereth me from mine enemies yea thou liftest me up above those that rise up against me When they are casting me down God is
few are there in power who do not much iniquity who do not either for want of better information or of a better conscience oppress grieve and afflict those that have to do with them or are subject to them God may do what he will yet will do nothing but what is right How infinitely then is God to be exalted in his truth and righteousness And thus the word of truth exalts him Deut. 32.4 2 Chr. 19.7 Rom 9.14 There is no unevenness much less aberration in any of the ways of God he never trod awry nor took a false step Who can say unto him without great iniquity thou hast wrought iniquity Hence we may infer If God works no iniquity in any of his wayes whether in his general or special providences Then All ought to sit down quietly under the workes of God Though he bring never so great judgments upon nations he doth them no wrong though he break his people in the place of dragons and cover them with the shadow of death he doth them no wrong Though he sell his own people for nought yet he doth them no wrong All which and several other grievances the Church sadly bemoans Psal 44. yet without raising the least dust concerning the justice of God or giving the least intimation of iniquity in those several sad and severe wayes Secondly We should not only sit down quietly under all the dispensations of God as having no iniquity in them but exalt the righteousness of God in all his dispensations as mingled also sprinkled with mercy Though we cannot see the righteousness of God in some of them yet we must believe he is not only so but merciful in all of them though the day be dark we cannot discern how this or that su es with the righteousnes much less with the goodness and mercy of ●od yet sit down we ought in this faith that both this and that is righteous yea that God is good to Israel in the one and in the other When the prophet was about to touch upon that string he first laid down this principle as unquestionable Jer. 12.1 Righteous art thou O Lord yet give me leave to plead with thee about thy Judgments Why doth the way of the wicked prosper Why is it thus in the world I take the boldness to put these questions O Lord yet I make no question but thou art righteous O Lord. It becomes all the sons of men to rest patiently under the darkest providences of God And let us all not only not charg God foolishly but exalt him highly and cry up both his righteousness and kindness towards all his people For who can say to God thou hast wrought iniquity Having in several other passages of this book met with this matter also I here briefly pass it over JOB Chap. 36. Vers 24 25. 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold 25. Every man may see it man may behold it afar off THese two verses contain the third advice counsel or exhortation given by Elihu to Job stirring him up to give glory to God in his providential proceedings with him There are three things considerable in these two verses First The general duty commanded which is to magnifie the work of God Secondly We have here a special reason or ground of that duty the visibility and plainness yea more than so the illustriousness of his work The work of God is not only such as some men may see but such as every 〈◊〉 ●ay see yea behold afar off Thirdly We have here an incentive to provoke to this duty in the first words of the Text Remember Vers 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold To Remember imports chiefly these two things First to call to mind what is past Mat. 26.75 Then Peter remembred the words of Christ. Secondly To remember is to keep somewhat in mind against the time to come in which sence the Law runs Exod. 20.8 Remember the rest-day that is keep it in mind that when-ever it cometh or upon every return of that day 〈◊〉 may be in a fit posture and preparation for it Remember the rest or sabbath day to keep it holy To remember in this place is set I conceive in a double opposition First To forgetfulness of the duty here called for remember and do not forget it Secondly To the slight performance of the duty here called for the magnifying of the work of God Remember that thou magnifie As if he had said Be thou daily and duely affected with it do not put it off with a little or a bare remembrance the matter is weighty consider it fully As if Elihu had said to Job Thou hast much forgotten thy self and gone off from that which is thy proper work I have heard thee much complaining of the workes of God but thy work should have been to magnifie the work of God Though God hath cast thee down and laid thee low yet thy business should have been to exalt the work of God Remember it would much better become thee to act another part than this thou shouldest have acted the part of a magnifier of the work of God not the part of a complainer gainst it Remember that thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Augeas extollas ejus opus non accuses ut nunc facis Merc. Magnifie The root signifieth to encrease and extol We may consider a twofold magnifying of the work of God There is an inward magnifying of the work of God and there is an outward magnifying of the work of Go● First There is 〈◊〉 ●●d magnifying of the work of God when we think highly 〈◊〉 it thus did the Virgin in her song Luke 1.46 My soul doth magnifie the Lord. Her heart was raised up and stretched out in high thoughts of God Secondly There is an outward magnifying of the work of God To speak highly of his work is to magnify his work to live holily and fruitfully is to magnifie his work We cannot make any addition to the work of God there is no such magnifying of it but we must strive to give the works of God their full dimension and not lessen them at all As we must not diminish the number of his works so we must not diminish the just weight and worth of them There is such a charge of God to the Prophet about his word Jer. 26.2 Go tell the people all the words that I command thee to speak unto them diminish not a word Deliver thy message in words at length or in the full length of those words in which it was delivered unto thee We then magnifie the wo●k of God when we diminish not a tittle As we cannot add any thing to it so we must neither abate nor conceal any thing of it To magnifie is not to make the works of God great but to declare and set forth the greatness of them that 's the magnifying here especially intended Remember
vastness that all must confess the hand of God hath done it Thirdly We then magnifie the works of God when we freely submit to God in them as just and righteous when we accept and take them kindly at his hand not only when they are outward kindnesses but crosses All the great words and rhetorick we can bestow upon the works of God will not magnifie them unless we freely submit to them as just and righteous They that would magnifie the works of God must say Judgment and righteousness are the habitation of his throne while they can see nothing but Clouds and darkness round about him Psal 97.2 I saith the Psalmist am in the dark about all that God is doing at this day yet of this I am as confident as confidence it self Judgment and Righteousness are the habitation of his throne I know God doth nothing amiss no not in the least Thus John in the Revelation Chap. 15.3 saw them that had gotten the victory over the beast and over his image and over his mark and over the number of his name and they saith he sing the Song of Moses c. saying great and marvelous are thy works just and true are thy wayes The works of God in Judgment upon Babylon are full of justice and we magnifie them by proclai●ing and crying them up as just yea the work of God in judgment upon Zion is exceedingly magnified when Zion submits to it and embraceth it as just and righteous It was the great sin of the house of Israel when they said Ezek. 18 25. The wayes of God are not equal As if they had said are these the Lords equal dealings that we his People should be given up to the hand of the enemy and suffer such things as these yea the house of Israel must say all the works of God not only his exalting works but his humbling works are equal just and righteous for we have sinned This is to magnifie the work of God Fourthly To magnifie the work of God is to look upon his work what-ever it is not only as having justice in it towards all men but as good and being full of goodness to his People Possibly it may be very hard work yet we must bring our hearts to say it is good work good to and for the Israel of God Thus the holy man of old magnified the work of God Psal 73.1 Truly God is good to Israel This he spake while he was bemoaning himself under very afflicting providences We magnifie the afflicting works of God when we submit to them as just much more when we embrace them as good And it was very much the design of Elihu to bring Job off from disputing about the evils with which God had so long exercised him to a ready yeeldance that they were good for him and that in all the Lord intended nothing but his good Fifthly To magnifie the work of God is to answer the end of it Every work is magnified when it receiveth its end if a work be done yet if it have not its effect if it bring not that about to which it was designed the worker receives no honour from it nor is the work honoured To work in vain is a debasing a lessening of any work not a magnifying of it The Apostle was afraid to bestow his labour in preaching the Gospel in vain When people still continue in their blindness and unbelief c. this layeth the preaChing of the Gospel low but when souls are convinced and converted and come flocking in then the Gospel is magnified and the word of the Lord glorified as the Apostle prayed it might 2 Thes 3.1 Now as the word of God is magnified when it attains its end so the work of God is magnified when we give him or come up to those ends for which he wrought it But if we let God lose the end of his work we do what we can to debase his work as if he had done it in vain We say he works like a fool that hath not proposed an end to every wo●k he dot● and he appears not very wise at least not very powerful who a●taineth not the end or ends for which he began his work The most wise God hath his end and aim in all his works in this world and this is the honour we do his work when we labour first to know and secondly to give him his end in every work But if any ask What are the ends of God in his work I answer They are very various First The chief end of all that God doth is the advancement of his own Name and Glory As he made all things for himself in Creation so he doth all things for himself in Providence That which is the sin of man is the holiness of God to seek himself It is most proper for God who is the chief good and whose glory is the ultimate end of all things to set up himself in all things Prov. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself saith Solomon And the Apostle faith as much Rom. 11.36 Of him and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for ever Amen All things are of him therefore all things should return unto him If we would magnifie any work of God we must be sure to give him this end the glory of it Let it not satisfie us that we are advanced or get up by the works of God unless we our selves advance his glory by them Many advance themselves and are lifted up with pride when God works for them or by them not at all minding that which they should chiefly mind the glorifying of God in by what he hath w ought either for themselves or others Secondly God hath this in design by all his works to make us better If it be a work of Judgment it is to make us better and then we exalt his works of Judgement when we are bettered by them when we are more humbled and weaned from the world by them And as 't is the design of God to make us better by his works of Judgment so by all his works of mercy The Apostle beseecheth us by the mercies of God to present our bodies that is our whole selves a living sacrifice in all holy service to himself Rom. 12.1 What will it advantage us to be bettered in our outward enjoyments by what God works or doth for us unless we learn to be better and do his work better that is unless our hearts be more holy and we more fruitful in every good word and work Some will magnifie the work of God by keeping a day of thanksgiving because they are richer or greater by what God hath wrought for them who yet are not a whit more holy or spiritual by it Wo to those who magnifie the work of God because they think it shall go better with them when themselves are not better Enquire therefore what lust hath the work of God moved you to
in Prophesies of mercy and instruction so of judgment and desolation Thus the Lord charged his Prophet Ezek. 20.46 Son of man set thy face towards the south and drop thy words towards the south and prophe●●e against the forest of the south field Again Ezek. 21.2 Son of man set thy face towards Jerusalem and d●op thy words towards the hol● place and prophesie aga●nst the land of Israel Once more Amos 7.16 Drop no● thy word against the house of Isaac So tha● I say this dropping is us●d frequently as in a natural so in a spiritual sence He maketh small the drops Of water 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Forma duali significantur aquae duplices The word is of the Dual Number in the Hebrew and so it signifies both sorts of water the waters of heaven and the waters of the earth the upper and the nether waters the ●pper waters in the Clouds and the nether waters in the Springs We find them spoken of together in the first of Genesis at the 7th verse God divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament We find the upper waters spoken of singly Psal 104.3 Who layest the beams of the chambers in the waters Chambers are above And in the first of Genesis at the 9th verse we find the lower waters alone Let the waters be gathered together under the heavens Rabbi Selo exponit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multiplicat quia dum ita guttatim aquae decidunt multiplicantur Merc. Under-heaven waters are the lower waters One of the Rabbies renders the words thus He multiplieth the drops of rain and the reason of it is which falls in with our translation because the less any one thing is made the more is the general mass out of which it is made multiplied From the words thus far opened we may note somewhat for our instruction Taking the former signification of the words He draweth up the drops of water Observe The ordinary rain which watereth the earth is first fetched from the earth Plavia est vapor calidus humidus ex aquis locis humidis virtute Solis Stellarum usque ad m●diam aeris regionem elevatus ibi propte● loci frigiditatem in nubem condensatus c. Garc. de Meteorol part 2. cap. 25. God raiseth vapours from the earth and then watereth the earth with them All the rain which falls upon the earth was raised from the earth If I were to answer that question in nature What is Rain I might resolve it thus Rain is the moisture of the earth drawn up by the heat of the Sun into the middle Region of the Air which being there condensed into clouds is afterwards at the will of God dissolved and dropt down again in showers The Clouds at the command of God hold fast and at his command they break and let out their waters upon the earth This is as was toucht before a very ordinary yet a very admirable work of God As in spirituals all those acts of grace in faith and love and joy c. by which our hearts and souls are carried up to heaven come first from heaven so that rain which comes down upon us from heaven was first fetched from among us by the mighty power of God Rain according to natural Philosophy is thus generated The water and moisture of the earth being attenuated by the heat of the Sun-beams become vapours which being so rarified and resolved into an airy substance are by the same heat of the Sun drawn up to the middle region of the air where being again condensed or thickened into water they melt down into rain at the appointment of God We may consider rain briefly in all the causes of it Thus First The efficient cause of rain is God Secondly The instrumental cause is the heat of the Sun Thirdly The material cause is the moisture of the Sea and watery Land Fourthly The final cause of it is 1. Supream the glory of God 2. Subordinate and that threefold First the benefit Secondly the punishment Thirdly the instruction of man Secondly From that other signification of the word as it notes withdrawing or keeping back upon which some insist much Observe God when he pleaseth can with-hold the water or the rain He can give a stop to the rain and then the clouds yeeld us no more water than a stone He with-holds the drops of water The Lord threateneth the Vineyard with this stop Isa 5.6 I will command the clouds that they rain no rain upon it which is true of a natural and proper Vineyard and of proper natural rain though it be meant there of the people of God whom he metaphorically or improperly calleth his Vineyard and the rain there intended is the rain of instruction usually falling upon them Now as God doth often forbid the showers of the word that they fall no more upon a people as he sends forth a prohibition to stop the spiritual rain so he also stops and prohibits the natural rain Amos 4.7 8. I have with-holden the rain from you when there was yet three moneths to the harvest and I caused it to rain upon one city and caused it not to rain upon another city one piece was rained upon and the piece whereupon it rained not withered so two or three cities wandered unto one city to drink water but were not satisfied Thus in case of disobedience to his divine Law the Lord threatened to stop the common Law of nature and to make the heavens brass and the earth iron Deut. 28.23 And when the heavens are brass that is when they yeeld no more moisture than brass then the earth is as iron that is it yeelds no more food for the sustentation of man or beast than a bar of iron doth Such stops the Lord hath often put upon the courses of nature and can do again when he pleaseth though I believe he never did nor ever will do so but when highly displeased and provoked by the sin of man Take two or three inferences from it First If the rain or drops of water come not in their season let us acknowledge the hand of God It is God that hath lockt up the clouds when-ever they are lockt up God hath forbidden the clouds to let down their rain when-ever they with-hold it Men and Devils can no more stop the rain than make it Secondly When we want rain let us go to God for it 'T is the prerogative of God alone to help us in that streight and therefore the holy prophet sends a chalenge to all other powers or declares them disabled for this help Jer. 14.22 Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause rain or can the heavens give showers neither the one nor the other can The heavens cannot dispose of a drop though they possesse a sea of water God must hear the heaven before the heavens can
them in remembrance that God made their fore-fathers dwell in tents when he brought them out of Egypt as also to mind them that here they had no abiding place but were to seek one to come And as this place of publick worship so any place for private dwelling was called a tabernacle Surely I will not come into the tabernacle of my house until c. Said David Ps 132.3 that is into my house which though it be a royal Pallace yet I look upon it but as a movable tabernacle But doth God dwell in a movable house God is immovable he makes no removes yet wheresoever God is pleased to shew himself in his power and marvelous works there we may say his tabernacle is The tabernacle of God where this noise this mighty noise is made is nothing else but the Clouds before spoken of The Clouds are Gods tabernacle they are called so expresly by a word of very near cognation unto this Psal 18.11 He maketh the Clouds his pavilion A pavilion is an extraordinary tabernacle a pavilion is that tabernacle which is proper to a King or to the General of an Army Now saith the Psalmist He maketh the Clouds his pavilion In them he shews his power and glory They are also called the chariots of God Psal 104.3 Deut. 32.6 and he is said to come in the Clouds as a Prince in his chariot He came in a thick Cloud Exod. 19.9 and he descended in a Cloud Exod. 34.5 which here is called his tabernacle So then the Clouds together with all that middle region of the air where the rain now and fiery meteors are generated are in Scripture allegorically called the tabernacle of God because there he seems often to dwell or reside for the producing of many wonderful works upon this inferiour world We may take the word here in a double allusion unto a tabernacle or unto two sorts of tabernacles First There were ordinary tabernacles wherein men dwelt The ancient Hebrews dwelt in tents or tabernacles these were tabernacles for civil use or for habitation in allusion unto which the Apostle speakes of the body wherein the soul dwels 2 Cor. 5. When the earthly house of this tabernacle shall be dissolved we know that we have a building of God an hsuse not made with hands eternal in the heavens Secondly There were tabernacles for military use souldiers tents or tabernacles As the whole heavens so the clouds especially may be called the tabernacle of God in both respects they a●e his house wherein he sits unseen and doth wonders all the wo●ld over in them he sh●weth his power and appears glo●iously and as a great P●ince or mighty General he sends out his edicts and orders from the clouds he commands winds stormes tempests snow haile for several dispensations to go from thence according as his own infinite wisdom seeth fit and the cases of men require whether in wayes of Judgment or of mercy as Elihu tells us yet more distinctly at the 31th verse For by them saith he judgeth he the people he giveth meat in abundance The clouds are very fit and commodious for Gods use in any of these respects either for the terrifying and punishing of the wicked or for the helping and feeding of them that fear him Now forasmuch as the clouds are called the tabernacle of God upon these accounts Learn first There God is said to be especially where he especially workes God is no more in one place of the wo●ld than in another as to his being and existence for he is every w●ere he filleth heaven and earth We must not think that God is shu● up in the clouds as a man in his tabernacle but because God workes much in the clouds and doth great things by the rain thunder and lightening therefore the cloudes whence these Meteors issue are called his tabernacle Where-ever God works much he is said to dwell Why is God said to dwell with them that are of an humble and contrite heart even because he workes much in them and much by them So because many great works of God are done in the Clouds as we shall see more particularly hereafter therefore the Lord is said to dwell there as in his tabernacle Secondly When 't is said Who can understand the noise of his tabernacle Observe The most dreadful storms and tempests the roaring winds which we hear at any time are sent out by God they are the noise of his tabernacle They go when he saith go Psal 148.8 Stormy winds and tempests fulfilling his will We may think stormes of all thing● least under command and order yet they are under an exact order The most stormy winds go not an haires breadth besides or beyond the commission which God gives them As often as we hear the roaring noise of the wind much more of thunder let us remember 't is the noise of his tabernacle Vers 30. Behold he spreadeth his light upon it and covereth the bottom of the sea Elihu insists still upon the workes of God He spreadeth his light Some understand by this light the lightening and it is a great truth God wonderfully spreads the lightening upon the da●k clouds as if they were all in a flame That 's clear to the eye when it lighteneth and God is s●yd Psal 144.6 To cast forth his lightening which comes neer this word in the text he spreadeth it But because in the next ch●pter Elihu speakes purposely of the lightening therefore I shall not stay upon that sence here but decline it Rather take light in the common notion He spreadeth his light that is the light of the Sun which is eminen●ly called Gods Light upon it that is upon the cloud spoken of in the forme verse and so the two parts of this verse yeild us a de●crip●ion as I conceive of the weather-changes made by God When we have had much rain and stormes God can presently spread his light up●n the cloud that is cause the light and heat of the Sun to conquer the clouds and scatter them And he also covereth the bottom of the Sea That is by and by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he makes it very dark by the gathering of thick clouds even as dark as the bottom of the Sea whither the light cannot come or dark to the bottom of the Sea R●dices maris sunt profundissimae infimaeque illius partes The original is the roots of the Sea that is the lowest parts of the Sea which we significa●tly translate the bottom of the Sea Some explicate the whole ve●se He spreads his light upon the face of the whole heavens and spreads the waters over the Ocean so that no bottom can be seen scarcely found Mr. Broughton by the roots of the Sea understands the earth Another saith he makes mention of the roots of the Sea because the waters of the Sea are as it were the roots of the Clouds they chiefly supplying the matter of which they are made Vapours drawn from
Christ makes this an argument of faith in God for food and cloathing Mat. 6.26 Behold the fowls of the air for they sow not neither do they reap nor gather into barns yet your heavenly Father feedeth them are not ye much better than they How little faith have you who knowing that God feeds the fowls of the air yet cannot trust him for your food He giveth food in abundance Thirdly note Plenty and scarcity are at the dispose of God He can give meat in scarcity as well as meat in abundance he can give cleanness of teeth as well as fulness of bread And as he can strengthen the staff of bread so break it and cause us to eat bread by weight and with care and to drink water by measure and with astonishment Ezek. 4.16 To eat by weight and drink by measure is to eat and drink in the want of bread and water as is expressed vers 17. And as these changes of our natural so of our spiritual food are from the Lord Amos 8.11 I will send a famine What famine not of bread but of hearing the word of the Lord. 'T is the Lord who sends plenty and scarcity of bread whether for the soul or for the body Fourthly In that he saith by them he giveth meat in abundance Note God useth natural meanes as the cause either of plenty or scarcity The Lord could give us abundance if he pleased without rain but he rarely gives abundance but by rain he sends rain out of the Clouds to water the earth and make it fruitful The Lord could make our souls fruitful in every good work without the preaching of the word but he seldom doth it I believe never when the word may be had without the preaching of the word And therefore the Lord by his Prophet makes a comparison between or a paralel of these two Isa 55.10 11. As the rain cometh down and the snow from heaven and returneth not thither but watereth the earth and maketh it bring forth and bud that it may give seed to the sower and bread to the eater so shall my word be that goeth out of my mouth c. The Lord useth rain and snow yea wind and thunder to fit the earth as he useth his Word and holy Ordinances to fit the soul to bring forth fruit to himself He could do both alone but he improveth that order of nature and grace which himself at first set up and instituted to b●ing about these excellent ends 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praebebit esc●m per multam Sept. By them he giveth meat in abundance The Greek translation renders all manner of muchness From the whole learn what cause we have to acknowledge the goodness of God in every shower of rain and fleet of snow for by them he giveth us our meat We should hence also be minded to fear the Lord and to take heed of his displeasure It is said Asts 12.20 when Herod was highly displeased with them of Tire and Sidon they came with one accord to him and having made Blastus the Kings Chamberlain their friend desired peace because their Country was nourished by the Kings Country O how much more should we labour to avoid the displeasure of God and hasten to make our peace with him seeing our Country is nourished by his Country The heavens nourish the earth else the earth could not afford any thing for our nourishment We are fed rather from the heavens than from the earth The clouds drop down and make the earth fat to give grass for cattel and co n for man Elihu speaks nothing of the Earth but of the Clouds f●om them we are fed Lately consider Elihu joynes both effects expresly By them he judgeth the people he giveth meat c. Hence note The Lord can make the same creature either beneficial or hurtful to us That which is an instrument in his hand for good to his servants is often a plague and a scourge to his enemies The rain which at one time moistens the earth at another time drowns it the rain which at one time cherisheth the creatures at another time choaks them The winds which at one time fan the air and cool it at another time enrage and vex it the winds which at one time sweeten and cleanse the air at another time corrupt and infect it The Lord can with the same creatures furnish himself for any dispensation By them he judgeth the people and by them he giveth meat in abundance JOB Chap. 36. Vers 32 33. 32. With clouds he covereth the light and commandeth it not to shine by the cloud that cometh between 33. The noise whereof sheweth concerning it the cattel also concerning the vapour THese two verses have a Character of difficulty and obscurity put upon them by several interpreters Hujus et sequentis versus difficultas et obscuritas tanta semper ab omnibus enarratoribus habita est ut vix alius in toto hoc libro ne dicum in toto sacro codice locus isto impenetrabilior esse videatur Bold and some have concluded them the most difficult and darkest portion of the whole Book of Job yea of the whole Book of God And should I reckon up all the various Grammatical constructions of these words together with the distinct interpretations given upon them I should weary my self and rather perplex than advantage the Reader And therefore I shall speak to these two verses First as they are laid down plainly in our translation according to which with submission to the judgement of those learned Authors I see neither any great difficulty nor obscurity in them and shall afterwards give a brief account at least of some of those different readings and translations which I find upon them The words as I conceive according to the mind of our translators and as the Text clearly beareth hold out two things concerning the raine of which Elihu had spoken before First What is naturally preparatory to raine or foule weather that we have in the 32d verse With clouds he covereth the light and commandeth it not to shine by the Cloud that cometh between Secondly We have that which is declaratory of raine or as some call them the Prognosticks and signs of raine these are laid down in the 33d verse The noise thereof sheweth concerning it the Cattel also concerning the vapour Vers 32. With clouds he covereth the light He that is God covereth the light with Clouds We heard of the Clouds at the 29th verse but the word there used is not that which is used in this 32d verse Vox 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 am●igua est ad manus nubes proprie volas denotat ad nubes refero quia de iis hactenus actum et quia propriè curvaturas significat quales in unaquaque mibo duae sunt convexa concava De Dieu in loc The word here made use of by El●hu signifies generally any thing that is hollow or concave as
at hand and afar off It is said of the Empire of the Sun Psal 19 6. his going forth is from the end of the heaven and his circuit unto tke ends of it and there is nothing hid from the heat thereof much more may I say of the Empire of God his going forth is from one end of the earth to the other and there is nothing hid from his wisdom and government One of the Ancients gives his sentence clearly with this truth Qui summa regit extrema non deserit qui utique praesens equalis est etiam in dissimilibus sil i ipsi dissimilis non est Gregor He saith he that ruleth in the highest heavens doth not forsake the ends of the earth he is every where present and every where alike present though the places are unlike yet the presence of the Lord is a like when need requires it That 's further matter of comfort that under the whole heaven and unto the ends of the earth we may find the Lord ready for us and disposing all things not only for good but for the best He directeth it c. Vers 4. After it a voice roareth or after it he roareth with a voice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Elli● sis praepositionis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Post eum Vulg. Pro volunte ac jubente illo ut post deum sit post ille praeceperit Drus Anteambulones praenuncii supremi regis adventantis There is another reading of these words some give it thus after him a voice roareth That is after his command God willing and giving forth an order for it a voice roareth that is at his command or word the voice roareth or followeth As if the scope of Elihu in this Text were to shew that neither Thunder nor Lightning stir a foot or haires breadth till they have a word from God as indeed they do not For though Thunder and Lightning may be called Gods Vshers or Heralds that go before him proclame his approach Psal 18.12 13 14. yet they follow and come after him They go before him as to action yet they come after him as to commis●●on they go not till he saith go or hath given them commission to go That 's a profitable reading of the words Our translation saith after it a voice roareth that is after the Lightning or as soon as it hath Lightned a voice roareth Our experience teacheth us that Thunder followeth the Lightning which we are not to understand according to the nature of the thing for so Thunder and Lightning are as it were born and brought forth together there is no difference between them at all in time but there is a difference as to order at least as to order in our apprehension and so the one may be said to come after the other the Thunder after the Lightning as when a gun lesser or greater is discharged if you are at a distance you may see the fire a considerable time before you hear the report Segnius irritant animos demissa per aurem quam quae sunt oculis subjecta fidelibus Horat. and possibly the bullet hits the mark before the sound hits to the ear though the discharge be made in a moment which some say is because the eye is a quicker sence than the ear but rather because light doth in a moment strike through the air but the sound comes by certain circuits fetcheth a longer compass before it comes at the ear as hath been toucht lately before as also at the 26 verse of the 28 chapter And besides this or any other reason of the thing in nature constant experience teacheth us that we see the light first and then hear the voice and therefore Elihu speakes here very congruously to both After it a voice roareth And as the reason of this in nature as was shewed is that more speedy passage of the light through the air than of the sound so a moral reason may be given of it which take in this observation God mindes or warnes us of his Judgments before he sends them Fulguratio ostendit ignem fulminatio ●mitit illa ut-ita dicam cominatio est conatio sine ictu ista jaculatio cum ictu Sen. lib. 2. Nat. Quest cap. 12. When you see Lightning you say there will be Thunder by and by as natural Lightning gives warning of Thunder so God gives warning from his word and providences when a Thunder-clap of judgment in any kind is coming God never sends a judgment but we hear of it before we feel it God speaks before he strikes Matth. 24. Behold I have told you before Lightning tells us Thunder is at hand God doth not use to strike his people with a Thunder-bolt before he hath given them notice by a flash of Lightning indeed judgments alwayes surprize the wicked how much Lightning soever hath been dashed in their eyes yet the Thunder comes unawares The day of the Lord will at least come as a snare upon all carnal men though they have had frequent calls to prepare for it God in the course of nature teacheth us the course of his providence Lightning gives warning that Thunder is coming and happy are they who take warning by his Lightning and so escape the stroke of his Thunder after it a voice Roareth It hath been already shewed that Thunder is the voice of God here Elihu tells us what kind of voice it is it roareth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rugivit propri●●m leonis The word signifieth the roaring of a lion 't is also applyed to the roaring of the Sea that 's a dreadful roaring Naturalists tell us there are several sorts of Thunder every Thunder is not a roaring Thunder they give five or six gradual denominations of Thunder First There is a shreeking or crashing Thunder 1. Stridens Secondly There is a hissing Thunder 2. Sibilans as when red hot iron is put into water Thirdly There is a cracking Thunder 3. Crepans as when a bladder is broken or a chesnut in the fire 4 Tumultuans Fourthly There is a rumbling Thunder We sometimes hear only a rushing in the clouds no crack of Thunder breaking our 5. Rugiens c. Garcae●s Meteorolog Fifthly There is a roaring Thunder as this text speakes a voice roareth Sixthly There is a whispering Thunder I may call it a kind of silent o● still-voyced Thunder possibly that was such spoken of 1 Kings 19.12 After the fire a still small voice As also that when Jesus Christ was baptized by John in Jordan Matth. 3.17 And lo a voice from heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased 'T is conceived that voice came in a still whispering Thunder Such doubtless was that Thunder John 12.28 29. when Christ prayed Father glorifie thy Name then came there a voice from heaven saying I have both glorified it and will glorifie it
his word This goodly Fabrick of the World was made by his word and all the creatures in the world will presently act upon a word from God Psal 33.9 He spake and it was done he commanded and it stood fast Gods saying is doing This is a point of high consolation to all the people of God what-ever their affliction is God can command them out of it what-ever their wants are God can command a supply for them He that saith to the natural Snow and to the Rain to Stormes and Tempests be ye upon the earth can also say to the Snow and Rain to the Stormes and Tempests of trouble be ye not upon the earth He can do or undo by his word as himself pleaseth 'T is also matter of great terror to all that rise up against and disobey the word of the great God for though they 〈…〉 they see nothing at hand to interrupt them nothing to check them in the way of their lusts though they look upon themselves beyond the ●each of d●nger yet 't is but a word speaking from God and they are wrapt up in Snow and hurrican'd with a Storm and Temp●st He saith to the Snow c. This irresisible force of a word f●om God was n●●ed also upon those words in the 9th Chapter vers 7. He c●●mandeth the Sun and it riseth not The Sun will not appear or 〈◊〉 will hide it self in an Eclipse or Cloud and da●ken the whole ea ●● if G●d do but give a command Thi dly t●ke the point yet more strictly and restrainedly as here in the text He saith to the Snow and to the Rain Snow and Rain are at the command of God Non ti●i videantur casibus moveriqui verbo Dei in omni motu suo deserviunt Quo vult Deus illuc fertur nubes s●ve pluviam sive nivem sive grandinem portat August in Psal 148. Psal 147.15 16. He sende h forth his commandment upon earth his word runneth very swiftly that word referrs to the particular matter in hand as appeareth in the very next Verse and the two which follow He giveth Snow like wool he scattereth the h●ar Frost like ashes he casteth forth his Ice like mo●sels c. David applies the swift running of Gods word to these things and how swiftly these run on his errands we may see 1 Kings 18.44 For whereas there had been no rain for three years a half according to the word o● El●jah the P●ophet God did but say to the Rain come and it came and though E●ijahs Servant at first saw a very small appearance of it only a Cloud like a mans hand yet presently the whole heavens were masked over with Clouds and there was a mighty rain The great rain of his strength Rain and Snow and Vapours quick●y fulfil his word Psal 148.8 God is the Lord of hosts and these creatures are his host these as well as men and ang ls are his hosts Psal ●4 10 Who is this king of glory the Lord of hosts is the king 〈◊〉 glory and 't is the great glory o● God ●hat he hath such ho●●s at his command None of the P●inces o● Powers of this wo l● have any such How long may they send their commands to the Snow before it will come or to the Rain before they can get a drop of it neither the one nor the other will stir at the command of man but at the command of God they haste away And if when the Lord saith to the Snow and to the Rain come and they come abide upon the earth and they abide there how will this reprove and condemn thousands of the children of men to whom the Lord speaks and speaks again and again he sends out his commandment and his word runs very swiftly to them yet they stir not they move not Surely Snow and Rain will rise up in judgement against those to whom the Lord hath said do this and they did it not to whom the Lord hath said do not this yet they did it The word represents all sorts of Creatures below man as well as the Angels above man readily obeying the command of God to teach man how readily he should obey his commands and how greatly he shall be condemned if he do not and that not only by the Angels in heaven but by the Snow and Rain that fall upon the earth Fourthly From the destinction which is here made of the rain the small rain and the great rain of his strength Note In what degree or quantity soever the rain falls it is by the special appointment of God If it be a small gentle soaking rain it is because God hath spoken to the small rain to go if it be a great a violent a smoaking rain a rain of his strength it is because God hath said to the great rain go We are not to stick in second causes but to have our hearts raised higher both as to the rain it self and to the proportions of it He maketh small the drops of rain as 't is said at the 27th Verse of the former Chapter and he can make great the drops of rain of the drops of rain g eat he can cast the rain into what mold he pleaseth great or small it shall be a sweetly-distilling rain or it shall be as Solomon speakes a fiercely sweeping rain Prov. 28.3 where he compares the poor man that oppresseth to a sweeping rain God hath sweeping rains and as 't is said Ezek. 13.13 overflowing showres in his hand and he sometimes sends not a watering showre not a refreshing or comforting showre in mercy not a showre to enrich and fatten the earth but an overflowing showre to drown the earth and destroy the fruits of it in his anger and this is true whether you take the showre properly or metaphorically If you take the showre properly for that which falls from heaven he sends the refreshing he sends the overflowing showre or if you take it metaphorically a showre may signifie any kind or degree of judgement he can send one judgement which shall be as small rain and he can send another which shall be as great rain as the rain of his strength an overflowing showre He can send forth as that allusion is used Jer. 12.5 his footmen and he can send forth his horsemen greater or lesser Judgments as himself pleaseth he proporti●ns and cuts them out according to his own infinite wisdome and righteous will Lastly From these words He saith to the snow abide on the earth or be thou on the earth stay there and so to the rain Observe Snow or Rain continue or stay upon the face of the earth till God calls them off When he saith be ye upon the earth upon the earth they will be until the same power that sent them fetch them back again These hosts are like a well ordered and well disciplined army wherein Souldiers sent out by the order of their General or superiour Officers must
Throne and from the wrath of the Lamb. Although we should have prosperity or fair weather as long as we live in this world yet there is a day of wrath coming be not then to seek of a hiding place which is only to be had in and by Jesus Christ He is the man chiefly intended by the Prophet Isa 32.2 That shall be a hiding place from the wind and a covert from the tempest If you are without him in that day you stand naked to the wrath of God and that will quickly soak into you or sink you for ever Secondly As the beasts going to their dens for shelter may instruct us so it may reprove and upbraid us and it will be at last a dreadful reproof upon all that are backward in this thing to provide themselves of a Covert against the Storm The Jewes as hath been formerly toucht were upbraided with the Crane the ●urtle and the Swallow because they knew the time of their coming Jer. 8.7 They knew when such a Countrey would be unfit or unsafe for their stay and therefore they removed to places more comfortable to and commodious for them But saith he my people know not the judgement of the Lord. As if he had said my people have not so much wit or fore-cast as the Crane and the Swallow they know not what is good and safe much less what is best and safest for themselves let it snow and rain never so fast either they stand it out and out-dare it or they seek such coverts from it as cannot be a covering to them 'T is said the very Vermine Mice and Rats will by a natural presage come out of a house that is ready to fall They are more senseless than Mice or Rats who hasten not to a place of safety when they perceive the foundation of that sinful State wherein they stand sinking and the walls cracking on every hand How faithless then are they how presumptuous and senseless who hasten not out of Babylon when they hear the Scriptures of truth saying not only that Babylon shall fall or is falling but as of a thing already done and past Babylon is fallen is fallen Is it not dangerous to stay in a falling house in a house which shall so certainly fall that 't is said and said again 't is fallen 't is fallen O take heed of a hard heart when you hear of a falling house or of a storm ready to fall upon your heads When God threatned Pharaoh to bring a storm of hail upon the land of Egypt that was indeed a rain of his strength a mighty rain of hail the text saith Exod. 9.20 He that feared the word of the Lord amongst the servants of Pharaoh made his servants and his cattel flee into the houses but they whose hearts were hardned let them stay abroad and so they perished Sinners you hear of a worse storm of hail threatned than that which fell upon Egypt even the great rain of the strength of the Lords wrath revealed from heaven against you shall the beasts in such a day of distress go into dens and remain in their places and do you think to abide the day of the Lords terrible coming Do you think to stand it out when he appeareth The Prophet foreshewing the day of Christs first coming in frail flesh said Mal. 3.2 Who may abide the day of his coming and who shall stand when he appeareth for he is like a refiners fire and like fullers sope Now if the day of Christs first coming was such as sinners could not abide when he came only with refining fire to fetch out the dross of their sins and purge away their corruptions shall sinners impenitent and unbelieving sinners I mean presume that they shall be able to abide or endure that day of his second coming when he shall come with consuming fire to punish and take vengeance on them for their sins Away with these vain confidences which as the Prophet told the Jewes Jer. 2.37 the Lord will certainly reject and in which you can never prosper and go into those holes of the rock the wounds of a crucified Saviour in which and in which only you may be safe and saved for ever from the Snow and great Rain of Gods strength the power of his anger which none know at present Psal 90.11 but all must feel who are not sheltred from it by Jesus Christ who delivereth us from the wrath to come 1 Thes 1.10 JOB Chap. 37. Vers 9 10 11. 9. Out of the South cometh the Whirlwind and cold out of the North. 10. By the breath of God Frost is given and the breadth of the Waters is straitned 11. Also by watering he wearieth the thick Cloud he scattereth his bright Cloud ELihu having spoken of Thunder and Lightning as also of Snow and Rain with their effects upon man and beast at the 6th 7th and 8th verses last opened he in the 9th and 10th verses speaks of the Winds with their effects first Cold Secondly Frost or first of the VVind secondly of the Cold and thirdly of the Frost and then at the 11th verse of the wonderful works of God in disposing and dispersing the water in the Clouds for the refreshing of the earth by Rain in its season In the 9th and 10th verses I say he discourseth of the Winds and though there be four Cardinal or principal VVinds the East VVest North and South which are subdivided into thirty-two VVinds according to the Mariners Compass yet here Elihu treats by name of two VVinds only the South-VVind and the North-VVind which two are often and eminently spoken of in Scripture which two as they come from directly contrary Points in the Heavens so they produce contrary effects famously known among men on earth And therefore I conceive Elihu gives instance only about them as being more generally taken notice of Vers 9. Out of the South cometh the Whirlwind c. The word which we render the South properly signifieth a Chamber an inner Room or secret place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cubiculum interius penetrale omne quod in intimis partibus est a Chamber within a Chamber which is the most private retiring Room or Chamber Gen. 43.30 Judg. 16.9 2 Sam. 13.10 1 Kings 20.30 Cant. 3.4 VVe say Out of the South c. And the Reason why the South is expressed by that word which signifieth a secret Chamber is because the South Pole is scituate or placed in the most secret part of the VVorld Polus Antarcticus occultatur a nobis u●pote depressus ●ub nostro Horiz●nte secundum qu●ntitatem qua Polus Arcti●●s super Horizo●tem elevatur Aquin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●proriptuariis superveniunt d●lores Sept. as to them who inhabit Northern Climates they who live nearest the North Pole are farthest removed from the South And as the same word in the Hebrew Tongue signifieth the South and an inner Chamber so at the 9th Chapter of this Book vers 9.
we read of the Chambers of the South The Septuagint ●ender He bringeth the Wind or Whirlwind out of his Cellar Cellars or Store-hou●es being secret places and removed out of sight for the keeping of Goods and VVares that are laid up there and it is elegantly expressed that VVinds come out of Store-houses as if God did lay them up till he hath ●ccasion to draw them forth and use them Some render it by a general word Out of a secret place cometh the Whirl wind VVe say best Out of the South First because it is expresly opposed to the North in the Text Secondly because Southern VVinds are the strong●st and most vehement VVinds as the No●thern are the coldest For though we find by experience that strong VVinds blow from all Quarters of Heaven yet usually the South brings forth the strongest VVinds and therefore in Scripture a sudden and violent VVind is called a VVhirl-wind out of the South VVhen the Prophet would describe an unavoydable coming of Judgment he saith Isa 21.1 As Whirlwinds in the South pass through so it cometh c. And again Zech. 9.14 The Lord God shall blow the Trumpet and shall go with Whirlwinds of the South Both places expressing it according to what was most usually and commonly known great VVinds coming out of the South Redeamus tua benignitate ab ex●lio et c●ptiv●tate ea celeritate qua turbo et proces●a erumpunt ab australi plaga Bold That place Psal 126.4 is rendred by ●ome not as we Turn again our Captivity O Lord as the Streams in the South but Turn again our Captivity as Storms or Whirlwinds in the South The Church prayed that God would make some sudden change of things like that made by Southern Storms and VVhirlwinds Yet we are not to understand it as if all Southern VVinds were VVhirlwinds or tempestuous favourable refreshing VVinds come from thence sometimes as may be collected from the 17th verse of this Chapter and from Canticles ●he 4th verse the 16th and as is expressed Acts 27.13 The South-Wind blew softly So that Elihu speaks of what is often and usually done not of what is alwayes done when he saith Out of the South cometh The Whirlwind That 's wind with an addition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Whirlwind is more than an ordinary wind Wind is one of those Meteors which God the Author of Nature hath provided for the use of man It is called by one of the Ancients the agitation or flux of the Air. Much might be spoken about the natu●al causes and matter of winds but I shall not insist upon that A VVhirlwind is a tempestuous wind Turbo a Graecis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Plinio vortex vocatur Ventus est Aeris fluxus seu agitatio Damasc l. 2. de Orthod fide c. 8. the G eeks have a special word for it and so have the Latines both importing violence or that which troubles and turns all upside down and throweth every thing out of its place Such a boysterous ●hing is the VVhirlwind 't is a tossing tumbling breaking disturbing wind this VVhirlwind Cometh out of the South It cometh A like or the same expressi●n is applyed to the Sun Psal 19.3 He hath set a Tabernacle for the Sun which is as a Bridegroom coming out of his Chamber and rejoyceth as a strong man to run a Race As the Sun cometh every morning out of his Chamber by Gods appoyntment so doth the VVhirlwind at special times appointed by God 'T is fitly said such fierce and un●uly winds come forth for they are as it were kept fast in prison till God takes off their Bonds and opens their Prison-dore and then out they come furiously and boysterously to do the work God hath commanded and designed them to Out of the South cometh the Whirlwind VVhen Elihu saith The VVhi●lwind the great VVind cometh out of the So●●h he doth not express yet in●imates who it is that brings the VV●i●lwind out of the South The VVhi lwind cometh but it doth no● come before it is sent The sco e o● Elihu all along is to shew the mighty power of God in ordering and disposing the Meteors and among them these mighty winds Hence No●e Winds come at Gods appoyntment He is the Au●ho● of them he is the disposer o● them he rules their most unruly motions The H●athen Poets ●eign d a god of the winds whom they called Aeolus wh● was Pictur'd or Sta●ued puffing the winds out of hi mouth But 't is Jehovah who hath the winds in his power the winds and the Whirlwind Neither the Heathen god Aeolus nor the god of this World the Devil nor the Devils of this World VVitches and Conjurers have any power of their own over the least breath of wind either to raise or lay it Agur describing the Excellency of God both in himself and in his working saith among other things Prov. ●0 4 He gathereth the Wind in his Fist implying tha● God h●th the ●inds in his hand even as a man carryeth a thing in his hand or holdeth it in his Fist keeping it there or letting i● out at pleasure o● as he listeth Psal 135.7 He bringeth t●e Wind out of his Treasure We read the same in the P ophet Jer. 10.13 Je● 5.1 16. These Treasures out of which God b●ings the win● ●ome call the Secrets of Nature or secre● natural Cau●es but I conceive 't is an allusion to the Customes of men who lay up things useful in private places that they may have them at hand when occasion calls Christ teacheth us in imitation o● them to get and keep by us such Treasuries of saving Truth Math. 13.52 To be sure God hath the winds ready he hath a s●o e and stock of them which upon any occasion he can b ing forth God makes a twofold use of the winds or there are two general purposes for which he b ings them out of his Treasures First for good Secondly for hurt to the VVo●ld First in Mercy Secondly in Judgment Fi●st God b●ings them fo●th out of his T●e●●ures in a way of Mercy and for good to M●nkind And there is a sixfold good or good use for which God b●ing● the winds out of his Treasure Venti Aquilonares dicuntur sco●ae coeli quòd reddunt aerem mundum Vatabl First to cleanse and ●u●ge ●he Ai● the●efore by some the winds are called The Brooms of Heaven VVhen the Ai● is corrupt and foul God sweepeth it by these Brooms And we find when Judgment is threatned a negative is put upon the wind as to this use Jer 4.11 A dry wind of the High Places of the Wilderness toward the Daughter of my people not to fan or to cleanse c. Implying that one merciful use of the wind● is to fan and to cleanse the Air as Co n is fanned and cleansed Secondly God brings the winds out of his treasure to temper the Air. VVh n the Ai i● cooled by a gentle B i●ze
we count i● a mercy in ho● seasons And such is the goodness o● God that in t●ose places where the heat is most troublesome there are many cool B●iezes We read Gen. 3.8 of the cool of the day or as the Margin hath it the wind of the day implying that the extream heat of the day is usually asswaged and cooled by the wind The Prophet Jer. 14.6 describing a time of drought saith The wild Asses did stand in the high places they snuffed up the wind like Dragons To snuffe the wind in time of drought is a great refreshing wind refresheth the body as well as food and 't is some refreshing in famine or want of food Thirdly The wind is a Rain-bringer We say when the wind riseth there will be rain Thus 1 Kings 18.45 before the mighty rain which Elijah foretold we read of a wind The Heaven was black with clouds and wind and there was a great rain When Elisha told those three Kings distressed for want of water Ye shall not see wind neither shall ye see rain yet that valley shall be filled with water 2 Kings 3.17 he thereby implyed that wind is the ordinary fore-runner of rain We indeed translate Prov. 25.23 The North wind driveth away the rain yet we put in the Margine The North wind bringeth forth the rain It is true of both the wind scattereth and driveth away the rain the wind also bringeth rain Fourthly The wind causeth vegetables to flourish A sweet gale of wind is not only good for man and beast but for the grass and for the herbs for plants and trees the blowing of the winds maketh them flourish in allusion unto which the Church speaks Cant. 4.16 Awake O North wind and come thou South blow upon my garden that the spices thereof may flow out that is that my Graces my faith in thee 〈◊〉 love to thee c. may put forth and appear The spiritual wind the breathings of the Spirit draw forth spiritual fruit from the heart and in the life of believers as the natural draws forth the natural fruits of the Earth Fifthly The winds are beneficial and helpful for the drying up of the waters they make the earth clean as well as the air It is said Gen. 8.1 ●fter the whole world was drowned God made a wind to pass over the earth and the waters asswaged The wind is a dryer as well as the Sun Sixthly There is a great use of the winds as to artificials What mighty things are done by the wind By it Mills are turned to grin'd Corn a Land and Ships are moved to carry bo●h Men and Merchandiz● at Sea there were hardly any passing from Nation to Nation 〈◊〉 dis-joyned by water but by the advantage or help of winds by the help of winds Merchants bring treasure and precious things from one end of the earth to the other These and many more are the common benefits of the winds for which the Lord brings them out of his treasures Secondly The winds have their evil effects God sends them somtimes for a pl●●●e o● in a way of Judgment Fi●st Winds 〈◊〉 ●●●ect the air the Lord can send as a cleansing so a co ru●ting ●ind Secondly As wind b●ings rain so it hinders or blows away the rain Thi dly The Lord sends the wind to break and overthrow all that st●nds before it What doth not the whi●lwind overthrow Houses and Trees at Land are blown down Goodly Ships at Sea richly laden have been sunk and over-set by tempestuous winds God sent a whirlwind out of his treasure which caused the Mariners in Jonah to cast their Merchandize into the Sea and Jonah himself too What cross and tempestuous winds did the Apostle Paul meet with in his voyage to Rome Acts 27. Further That the Lord bringeth the winds out of his treasure is matter of great comfort to all that have an interest in the Lord He can command the winds for them and against their enemies the wind cometh out of his Chamber and it shall do as he commandeth It is said Nahum 1.3 The Lord hath his way in the whirlwind and in the storm and the clouds are the dust of his feet That is he ruleth whirlwinds he walks in and works by the whirlwind and by storms And as we may take it properly so metaphorically that i●●●in the most tempestuous dispensations and providences when the world is as it were in an Haricane as boysterous winds in some places are called In the greatest concussi●n● and confusions whether of things or persons the Lord carrieth on his work in a regular course As the great tossings of the air by natural winds so the greatest tossings of affairs by the st●ong and various passions of mens spirits in the wo●ld which we may call civill winds yea whirlwinds are unde● the ordering of divine power and wisdome The Prophet Isa 17.13 admonisheth the wicked to take heed and give glory to God For saith he the Nations shall rush like the rushing of many waters But God shall rebuke them and they shall flee far off and shall be chased as the chaffe of the mountaines before the wind and like a rolling thing before the whirlwind A rolling thing is unsteadfast at all times and a whirlwind will make that roul and tumble which is very steadfast it maketh Trees to shake it maketh strong Towers tremble Now if the whirlwind causeth things that are fixed and strong to shake and move what will it do to those that are light and unfixed rolling things That which is as men judge fixt and steady as a Rock shall be as a rolling thing before the whirlwind of the Lords displeasure The Margin of our Bibles calls this rolling thing Thistle-down We know what the down of a Thistle is which at ●ome seasons of the year falls off and is the lightest thing imaginable When there is not a breath of wind stirring the Thistle-down will stir roll and move from place to place what then think you will become of Thistle-down before a mighty wind a whirlwind The wicked shall be as Thistle-down before the whirlwind but the people of God need not fear for as 't is said of the Sea so of the wind his way is in it he rules the proper and he rules the metaphorical whirlwinds which toss and tumble the state and affaires of this world To close this matter We may take notice of several wonderfull things in and about the wind and because Elihu ranks this among the great works of God who doth marveilous things which we comprehend not Nulla propemodum regio est quae aliquem ventum ex se Nascentem circa se cadentem non habeat Sen l. 5. Natur quest c. 17. Plin l. 1. cap. 47. In iusula Lesbo Oppidum Mytilene magnificè aedifi●atum est sed imprudentèr positum quod in ea civitate cum Aaster flat homines aegrotant Vitru l. 1. c. 5. not only in Thunder and Lightning in Snow and
For his Land Thirdly For Mercy He causeth it to come saith Elihu whether for Correction for his Land or for Mercy all these purposes and designs God hath in moving and ordering these vast and mighty bodies of the Clouds which hang like Mountains in the air Thus you have the parts of these words with their scope and tendency More distinctly Vers 12. And it is turned about by his counsel First Vapours are raised and condensed into Clouds by the counsel of God he causeth the vapours to ascend from the ends of the earth Psal 135.7 Which vapours as was shewed before are the material cause or matter of the Clouds Secondly As by the counsel of God the vapours are raised of which Clouds are made so this Text tells us that by his counsel the Clouds are moved and order'd in their motion which motion of the Clouds is very various somtimes one way somtimes another somtimes forward somtimes backward or retrograde somtimes their motion is circular as the word here used by Elihu seemeth to imply It is turned or whirled about 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to that of Solomon Eccl 1.6 The wind goeth toward the South and turneth about unto the North it whirleth about continually and the wind returneth again according to his Circuit We have here three words expressing the motion of the wind First it goeth Secondly whirleth about Thirdly returneth again and all this according to its circuits It is said of Samuel 1 Sam. 7.16 He went from year to year in circuit to Bethel and Gilgal and Mizpet and judged Israel in all these places Thus the winds according to the Commission they receive from God ride every year in circuit now they are in one quarter and anon in another and wheresoever they come they may be said to do judgment in a way of favour to some and in a way of displeasure unto others The wind hath his Circuits and as the Circuit of the wind is such is the Circuit of the Clouds the motion of the Clouds is from the wind some say from the Starrs but most generally as to the natural cause it is from the wind which way the wind moves that way the Clouds move And though the motion of the Clouds and Winds seems exceeding unsteady and changeable up and down without any certain rule in Nature yet they observe their Circuits and run their compasse as God appoynts them Mr Broughton renders And for varieties he turneth himself in his wise Counsels for their operation for whatsoever he Commandeth them It is tur●ed about say we By his Cou●sel It should seem that God even calls a Councel which way the Clouds shall be directed they go by his Councel The word in the Hebrew is a very significant one that I mean which we render his Counsel others his skill his art or cunning and there are not a few who render it they are turned about by his Engines as if God did use as it were artificial Engines to turn about those mighty bodies of the Clouds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Propriè rei nauticae peritia q●ae intractandis funibus potissimum c nsistit unde nominis appellatio Drus Convertuntur artifi●io ipsus T●● Ipsa quoque incircuitibus volvitur maclinis ejus Merc Vertitur solertiis ejus Drus Properly the word signifieth the Ropes and Tackling of a Ship in ordering which Ropes and Tackling the whole management of the Ship doth consist The Mariner shews his skill and art in steering his Ship a right course which he doth not only by guiding the Rudder but by ordering the Ropes and Tackling this way and that way to compasse or avoyd the wind And the Hebrew word Tachbuloth here used hath a very great nea●ness in sound to the Tackling of a Ship This is a most elegant Metaphor shewing how the Lord doth as it were steer the course of the Clouds or guide the Clouds as the Sea-man doth his Ship his Counsels may be compared to the Tackling and the Ropes or rather to the Helme by which the Ship is guided God is as the great Pilot sitting at the Stern and he turns these Clouds as his Ship he turns them about as a Ship tacks this way and that way to reach her Port and there unlade The Rain Snow Haile are the Lading which these swift Ships the Clouds carry from place to place to serve the providences of God towards man This divine conduct of the Clouds is very admirable the Lord knowing what parts of the Earth need those Commodities Rain Snow c. which those aerial Vessels are laden with for the enriching of the world We render it by his Counsel that is by those means which he in his Wisdome and Counsel useth to turn the Clouds about they are turned we translate the word Pro. 1.5 Wise Counsels and Pro. 20.18 Good advice there Solomon saith With good advice make warre And indeed good advice is the best tackling for Ships in a warre at Sea and the best ammunition for a warre at Land Councel is a noble a notable Engine The greatest things on Earth are turned about by it and so are those great things in the air the Clouds They are turned about by his Counsel That they may do whatsoever he Commandeth them Here 's the general design and purpose of God in turning about the Clouds whithersoever he please it is that they may do whatsoever he Commandeth them where we have the Clouds set forth First In their obedience They do the Commands of God Secondly In the universality of their obedience They do whatsoever he Commandeth Elihu compares the Clouds and Meteors to good servants who are ready to do what God their Master requireth of them and not only so but they do his Commands every where or wheresoever he requires them they do all his Commands and that in all places as the Text speaks in the next words Vpon the face of the world in the Earth That is wheresoever there is Earth or a World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 orbis pars terra habitabilu Graecè 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habitable or unhabitable thither or so far doth God send the Clouds in his service or for the executing of his will Further when he saith Vpon the face of the World his meaning is upon the outside or uppermost part of the World and because the Heavens even the uppermost Heavens are a part of the world with which the Clouds have nothing to do their business lying here below therefore I conceive Elihu determines it expresly in the Earth The Clouds are not raised or made for the use and service of the world above but of the world below They do whatsoever he Commandeth them upon the face of the World in the Earth Hence observe First The motion of the Clouds is not of themselves nor meerly from any natural cause or power but of God He as it were by certain Engines and weights turnes them about they move not
to come to that place or person to that Nation or People to which himself hath appointed it He causeth it to come Whether for Correction or for his Land or for Mercy Here are three ends or purposes of God in communicating and commanding forth the Clouds and we may take those three ends two wayes The first of these and the last concern Man more specially the second concerns all other creatures both Plants and Beasts of the earth it concerns all from the Cedar in Lebanon to the Hysop on the wall among the Plants and from the Lion to the Mouse or to the least of living or sensible creatures among the Beasts all w●ich God according to his Soveraign Power and Justice doth either comfo●t or afflict as he pleaseth Again The ends which God aimeth at respecting Man are either for Correction or for Mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sive ad virga● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sive in disciplinam First He causeth the Cloud with whatsoever is its burden Hail or Rain or Snow to unlade and disburden it self for correction The Hebrew is for a Rod so we put in the Margin A Rod is for correction therefore we translate for correction for disci●lin● God sends t●● Clouds to whip or discipline a people Fu●ther the w●●d signifies a Rod under a twofold Notion Fi●●t A R●● or a S●●ff to smite or strike with in which sence it is called Prov. 22.15 The Rod of correction and at the 8th verse of the same Chap er The Rod of anger as also Isa 10.5 O Ass●rian the Rod of mine anger saith God Here 's a R●d to smite with Secondly It signifies a Rod to govern with or to rule with and hence this word denotes the Scepter of a Prince The two great Emblems of Magistracy are a Sword and a Scepter The Scepter is in the fashion of a Rod or VVand which imports chastening and correction and from hence it was that the chief of the Tribes of the Children of Israel Numb 17.2 were commanded to take every one of them a Rod according to the house of their Fathers twelve Rods and to write every mans Name upon his Rod and lay them up in the Tabernacle of the Congregation c. Now those Rods given in by the Princes of the Tribes were as so many Emblems of their Power and Authority because to the chief Magistrate the punishment of the faults and miscarriages of all under his government did belong And hence the same word signifies a Magistratical Rod or Scepter of Government and a Tribe or whole Family under the Rod o● Scepter of a Governour because as Rods or B●anches g●ow from one Root so many Tribes or Families from one Father thus the Twelve Tribes of Israel sp●ung from Jacob. And that 's the Reason why the Latine Translator renders this place not as we whether for correction but Whether for a Tribe the meaning of which reading Whether for a Tribe or for his Land is thus given VVhether it be for one particular place or for the whole Country or earth in general as will further appear in opening those words For his Land This Translation of the Vulgar Latine and the Inte●pretation given upon it sutes well with that of the Prophet 〈◊〉 4.7 where the Lord saith I caused it to 〈◊〉 upon one City and not upon another Here was Rain for a Tribe and not for his Land not an universal Rain all the Land over he causeth it to rain upon one City not upon ano her upon one Tribe not upon another that 's a good sence and the word will bear it Yet I rather take it here for a Rod which imports chastening or correcting as we translate Whether it be for Correction They that carryed the Rod or the Scepter had also the power of correction in their hand as was toucht before and that may be one Reason why when God sent Moses to Pharaoh Exod. 4.17 upon that great Message the deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt he commanded him to take his Rod in his hand which Rod held out these two things First that M●ses came not as a private man to him but like a Prince like an Embassador from the great King or like one whom he had appointed to take upon him the government of that people with a Scepter in his hand Secondly to let Pharaoh know that as God sent him with a power or cloathed him with a Commission to treat with him so with a power to scourge or plague him even with ten Plagues As if the Lord had said O Pharaoh Seest thou this Rod in the hand of my servant Moses assure thy self thou shalt have stroke upon stroke plague upon plague if thou wilt not let my people go But of that by the way He causeth it to come for correction or for a Rod. Hence note God can correct us by any of his Creatures He can make any thing a Rod he can make nearest Relations a Rod. A Son is somtimes a Rod to his Father how often have miscarrying and undutiful children been made a Rod of correction to their Parents and they are usually so when Parents have not duly corrected their children for their undutifulness and miscarriges What are cruel men but Rods to other men Some men have been the scourges of Mankind Attila once a great Commander in War and King of the Hunnes was called The Rod or the Scourge of God Flagellum Dei And so God himself called the Assyrian the Rod of his anger Isa 10.5 David called all wicked men in g●●● the Sword of God in his prayer for deliverance from them Psal 17 1● ●● Deliver my soul from the wicked thy sword from men which are thy hand O Lord thy correcting hand men ordain'd for Judgment and establisht for Cor●●●tion as the Prophet spake of the Chaldeans Hab. 1.12 Who have their portion in this life And as the Lord makes men so the Beasts of the earth a Rod for the correction of Man Thus the Lord threatned by his Prophet I will send among them Sword and Pestilence and noysome Beasts Here in the Text we have a Rod made of a Cloud a strange kind of Rod I 'le send it for a Rod it shall come for correction Parents correct their children wi●h Rods God corrects the world with Floods first with unseasonable secondly with superfluous Rains O what severe corrections hath God laid upon the world by the Clouds The Clouds have been terrifying destroying Rods Exod. 9.18 23. Clouds have destroyed the Fruits of the earth for the sin of Man and taken away the hopes of the Harvest Rain from the Clouds hath ruined the dwellings of men and spoyled bo●h Co●n and Cattel Rain from the Clouds was that overflowing scourge which destroyed the whole earth in the dayes of Noah then God caused the Cloud to come I cannot say for correction but for ruine for an universal ruine and devastation And as God then made the
Lord hath not called thy name Pashur but Magor Missabib that is fear round about I will make thee a terror to thy self thy own Conscience shall be terrible to thee A man had better fall into the hands of the most cruel Tyrants in the World than into the hands of his own Conscience But when a man is a terrour to himself then to have the Lord a terrour to him likewise to have God appearing in terrible Majesty how dreadful is it The awakened Conscience of a sinner carrieth in it as a thousand witnesses so a thousand terrours and God in his anger is more terrible than a thousand consciences Secondly God is terrible to sinners in the day of outward trouble when as David speaks Psal 65.5 By terrible things in righteousness he answereth the prayers of his People When God is doing terrible things in the World how miserable is their case to whom God also is a terrour in that day A godly man when God is doing the most terrible things shaking Heaven and earth and as it were pulling the world about our ears yet because he finds God at peace with him he is well enough But as for impenitent sinners when God is doing terrible things what will become of them I may bespeak them in the words of the Prophet Isa 10.3 What will ye do in the day of your visitation and in the desolation which shal come from far to whom will ye flee for help and where wil ye leave your glory As if he had said wh● or what can be a comfort to you when God is a ●errour to you And therefore another Prophet fore-seing such a terrible day coming makes this earnest deprecating prayer Jer. 17.13 O Lord be not thou a terr●ur to me in the evil day I know an evil a terrible day is at hand but Lord I beg this of thee that thou wilt not be a terrour to me in that day if men should be a terrour to me and God a terrour too it would be in●upportable Yet thus it will be with the unrighteous when God doth terrible things in righteousness and such things he will do in the latter dayes Take heed lest God appear with terrible Majesty to you in such a day Thirdly How terrible is God to impenitent sinners when awakened in the day of death What is Death In this Book Death is called The King of Terrours Now if when Dea●h is making its approaches to a person who lives in a contempt of the wayes and word of God if when his breath sits upon his lips ready to depart and the King of Terrours is ready to tear his caul and to rend his heart-strings asunder if then I say God appears in terrible Majesty what condition will such a one be in To have Death the King of Terrours and the Living the ever-living God in terrible Majesty falling upon a poor creature at once is a thousand deaths at once Fou●thly What will sinners do in the day of judgment that will be a terrible day indeed The Apostle 2 Cor. 5.10 having said We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ to receive according to what we have done in the body whether good or bad presently adds knowi●g therefore the terrour of the Lord we perswade men that is knowing how terrible the Lord will be to impenitent sinners to all whom he finds in their sins knowing this terrour of the Lord and how terrible the Majesty of the Lord will be to such in that day we perswade men we do all we can to pluck them out of their sins and turn them to God in Ch●ist Jesus who saves his people from their sins for to be sure that will be a most dreadful day to sinners Thus the M●j●sty of God will be terrible to the wicked and ungodly especially in these four dayes Only they who fear the Lo●d and take hold of his name by faith shall be able to stand befo●e his terrible majesty God will not be a terrour but a comfo●t to them ●hat fear him in every evill day Fu ●her the word as w●s shewed before signifies not only Majesty but Pra●se With God is ●errible praise dreadful praise Hence note First The Lord is most praise worthy With the Lord is praise The Psalmist every where s●ts fo th the praise-worthiness of God and presseth this duty upon us I shall not stay upon it only remember with the Lord is praise that is he is to be praised And from the attribute of his prai●e or that with the Lord is terrible praise Note Secondly Even in those things which the Lord doth most graciously for us and is to be highly praised by us even in th●se he is to be feared dreaded and reverenced God is to be praised not only with joy and thankfullness but with fear and reverence for with him is terrible praise It is the express word of Moses in his song after the destruction of the Egyptians in the Red Sea Exod. 15.11 Who is a God like unto thee glorious in holines fearful in praises We should not be affraid to praise God no we should be most forward to praise him but we should have a holy fear upon our hearts when we praise him Praise is the work of heaven from whence fear shall for ever be banished there will be perfect love and perfect love Casts out fear 1 Joh. 4.18 What-ever fear hath torment in it as all fear out of Ch●ist hath we shall have nothing to do with in that blessed life And even in this life praise which is the work of heaven on earth should be performed with such a spirit of love joy as is without all base tormenting fear we should have so much love to God in and for all the good things he doth for our soules especially ye and for our bodyes too in dealing out daily mercies that it should cast out all that fear which hath torment in it Yet there is a fear which should p●ssess our spirits while we are praising God a fear of reverence I mean which fear I doubt not will remaine in heaven for ever Glorified Saints shall praise God with that fear that is having an everlasting awe of the Majesty of God upon their hearts He is fearful in praises and therefore let us so praise him as remembering our distance so praise him as to be affraid of miscarrying in the duty and so instead of praising displease him in stead of honouring grieve him This duty of praise is very dreadful The Psalmist saith there is mercy or forgiveness with thee O Lord that thou mayst be feared Psal 130.4 Not only is the Lord to be feared in his wrath and in the executions of his justice but he is to be feared in his mercy in that greatest expression of his favour towards us the forgivness of our sins When we are in the highest exaltations of the mercy of God and of the God of our mercies yet then should our hearts be
God what he is he ever was and ever will be there is neither encrease nor diminution of his strength But because things which are alwayes encreasing grow to a huge bigness and strength therefore he is said to encrease in strength or as our translation imports to excel in power He that excels in power is excellent in power The word rendred power implieth the power of doing the Greeks call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or of activity a power put forth in working he is excellent in power that is in ability to do whatsoever he pleaseth and when 't is said he is excellent in power in this kind of power i● notes that the power of God in doing doth wonderfully excel all tha● ever he hath done Ejus virtus in infinitum excedit omnes effectus suos Aquin. The effects or acts of the power of God are nothing as I may say to the faculty of his Power he can do more than he hath done He is so far from having over-acted himself I mean from having done more than he can do again which hath been the case of many mighty men and may be the case of any man how mighty a doer soever he is that he can do infinitely more than he hath done if he himself pleaseth he is excellent in power or of excelling power I have as was lately said opened this point of the power of God in other places of this Book whither I refer the Reader yet taking the power of God as the word is properly here intended for his working power Note The working power of God is excellent so excellent that it exceeds the apprehension of man There is a two-fold power of God and in both he is excellent First His commanding power his power of Soveraignty or Authority that 's a most excellent power 't is a power over all whether things or persons Secondly His power of working or effecting that which he commands Some have a power of commanding yet want a power of working they want a power to effect that which they command but whatsoever God hath a mind to command he hath an hand to effect and bring it about he can carry on his work through all the difficulties and deficiencies which it meets with in or by the creature He can do his wo●k though there be none to help him in it though all forsake him and with-draw from his work yea he often worketh though there be not so much as an Intercessor to move him to work Isa 59.16 He saw that there was no man to do any thing and wondered that there was no Intercessor to entreat him to do somewhat for them Things were in a great exigency and there was not only no man that would put forth a hand but there was no man that would bestow a word for redress no man would bespeak either God or men for help What then must the work stand still or miscarry no saith the text His own arm brought salvation unto him that is set it ready at hand for him to bestow upon his people or his own arm brought that salvation to his people which they greatly needed and he graciously intended though he had not the contribution of a word towards it from any creature here below one or other God alone is self-sufficient and to man All-sufficient Such is the working power of God that he can work not only when he hath but a little help but when he hath no help at all Secondly The excellency of the wo●king power of God appears in this that he can and will p●oduce the desired effect and bring his work to pass though many though all men oppose it and rise up against it though they set both heart and hand wit and will power and pollicy to cross yea to crush it The Lord is so excellent in power that he both can and will do his work through all opposition though mountains stand in his way though rocks stand in his way he will remove them or work through them Isa 43.13 I will work and who shall lett it Neither strength nor craft neither multitude nor magnitude neither the many nor the mighty can lett it if the Lord undertake it Take a double Inference from this First 'T is matter of great comfort to all that fear God in their weakest condition and lowest reducements when they are fatherless and have none to help them As the Lord is excellent in his wo●king power so he usually takes that time yea stayes that time till his servants are under the greatest disadvantages till they are at worst before he will put forth his power and work The Apostle saith of himself 2 Cor. 12.10 When I am weak then am I strong that is then have I the strength of the Lord coming into my help And as it is with respect to particular persons so to the whole generation of his children when they are weak then are they strong that is then they have the strong God the God excellent in power appearing and working for them Secondly This al●o is a sad word to all that stand in the way of Gods working power His working power quickly works through all power and can work it down Babylon is a mighty powerful enemy but Rev. 18.8 we read of the downfal of Babylon and that her ruine shall come as in one day But how shall this be effected The answer is given in the close of the verse For strong is the Lord God which Judgeth her Suppose there should be no power in the world strong enough to pull down Babylon yea suppose all the powers in the wo●ld should stand up fo● Babylon 't is otherwise prophesied for the Kings of the earth shall hate the whore and shall make her desolate and naked and eate her flesh and burn her with fire but suppose I say all earthly power should appear for rather than against Babylon yet this is enough for us to rest in strong is the Lord which Judgeth her He is excellent in power and as it followeth In Judgment This comes in lest any should think because God is so excelent in power so mighty in strength that therefore he would carry things by violence or by meer force as the sons of men the mighty Nimrods of the world somtimes do If they have strength and power to do such or such things they regard not Judgment nor Justice they look not whether right or wrong therefore Elihu when he had said God is excellent in power presently adds and in Judgment As if he had said Though the Lord excel all in power and is able to crush the mightyest as a moth yet he will not oppress any by his power the worst of men shall find the Lord as much in judgment and righteousness as he is in strength and power And therefore O Job be assured God hath not done thee any wrong nor ever will This I conceive to be the scope of Elihu in the connexion of these two
thou shalt cast them away as a menstruous cloth thou shalt say unto it get thee hence This is the Judgment of reformation which God hath and will further work among his people till Sion be built up in perfect beauty and Jerusalem become the praise of the whole earth Thus also God is excellent both in power and in Judgment Fourthly Judgment signifies those evills which God brings upon impenitent sinners that 's a very frequent notion of Judgment in Scripture and the Lord is excellent in this Judgment and that First Upon his own people when they provoke him and sin against him 1 Pet. 4.17 If Judgment begin at the house of God what shall the end be of them that obey not the Gospel There 's Judgment beginning at the house of God that is God will bring evill upon his own house the Church even sore troubles and persecutions The Lord will not spare them who have been slight with him forgetfull of him formal in profession or wanton and vaine in conversation This is a great part of the Lords excellency in Judgment he brings Judgment upon his own house The Lord saith the Prophet Isa 5.16 shall be exalted in Judgment and God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousness that is in bringing his righteous Judgments upon Israel his peculiar people We find that Gospel Prophet Isaiah often interweaving the wyre and whipcord of corporal bondage with the silk and scarlet thread of Sions d●liverances Secondly In Judgment towards his enemies Psal 149.9 He will execute on them the Judgment that is written and that is no inconsiderable nor easie Judgment The servants of God may smart sorely under these Judgments but the wicked and rebellious shall perish and sink under them How dreadfull is that profession or protestation which the Lord made by Moses Deut. 32.41 If I whet my glittering sword and my hand take hold of Judgment I will render vengeance to mine enemies and will reward them that hate me Some possibly may object Surely there is no such appearance of Gods excellency in Judgment upon the wicked of the wo●ld the enemies of his name and wayes It grew to a Proverb Mal. 2.17 Ye say every one that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord and he delighteth in them or where is the God of Judgment Evill men seem to be good in the eyes of the Lo●d when they enjoy good and if it be so said some Where is the God of Judgment I answer First the Lord hath left testimony enough upon Record and written it in the blood of many thou●ands to justifie himself that he is excellent in Judgment by taking vengeance on the wicked Did he not excell in Judgment upon the sinning Angels 2 Pet. 2.8 Jude 6. was he not excellent in Judgment when he destroyed the whole world for sin when he burnt Sodom and Gomorrah with fire for sin How many instances might I give of this from Scripture God hath sufficiently declared himself excellent in this punitive Judgment I answer Secondly God indeed do●h not presently execute J●dgment upon all the wicked we sho●ld rather be lead by sence than by faith if he should do so if he should smite sinners as soon as they provoke him yea if God should take that course he must even break the world to peices and destroy whole generations at once Thirdly God suffers sinners a while that his councels may be fulfilled for though the wicked obey not the command of God yet they fulfill the councel of God Acts 4.28 and they do it chiefly when he with-holdeth Judgment from them Fourthly Unless the Lord did a little give stop to the execution of Judgment in this kind it would neither appear how good nor how bad some men are Let some have but a little power in their hands and the world at will then you shall see whither they will go and what they will do And w●en bad men are suffered to go on unpunished and to be a punishment to others then it appears more fully how good some are and that in a twofold respect First because they refraine from evill though they see that they also possibly might do it impune and not suffer in this world Secondly because ●hey hold fast both thei● profession and practise of Godliness how much soever they suffer for it in this world from evill men Fifthly God is executing Judgments upon wicked men while he seems to spare them from judgment Pro. 1.32 The prosperity of fools slayeth them S●me think a wicked m●n is migh●ily favoured when he is in prosperity no that prosperity is his destruction and destruction is Judgment in perfection The table of a wicked man is made his snare his full table fa●tens his heart which is the sorest of all judgments To be un●ensible is worse than any punishment of sense to be hardned or heartned in doing evill is more penall than the suffering of any evill Now while wicked men escape the suffering of evill they grow resolved that is hardned and heartned in doing i● or to do it Take Solomons observation or experience in the ca●e Eccles 8.11 Because sentence against an evil work is not speedily executed upon themselves or others therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully s●t in them to do mischief So then there are many invisible judgmen s upon wicked men when we see no hand touch them nor judgment neer them God give● them up to vile affections and to a repr●ba●e mind Rom. 1.26 28. to their own counsels Psal 81.12 and to strong d●lus●o●● by ●●hers 2 Thes 2.11 The●e heavy loads o● judgment may be on their hearts upon whose backs we see not s● much as a gaine weight of judgment Thus the Lord is excell●nt in judgment in all the notions of it I have in●●anced fou●e Now l●st any should think that God at any time breaks the rule of justice in his zeale for this latter sort of judgment or while he is powring out vengeance upon the wicked therefore it foll●ws in the next place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And in plenty of Justice God executes great wrath upon sinners but there is g●eat Justice Justiti● est const●ns perpetua voluntas suum cuique tribuendi Justin plenty of Justice in it There is store ●nd abundance of justice and righteousness in his most rigorous ju●gments A little justice is a most precious thing how precious then is plenty of j●stice Justice in it self is the giving of every one his due and where justice is in any man it constan●ly bends and enclines his heart to do so his especially with whom there is as in God plenty of justice And indeed what-ever God hath he ha●h plenty of it He hath mercy and plenty of it he i● plenteous in mercy Psal 103.8 A●d with him i● ple●teous redemption P●al 130.7 There is also plenty of justice in him Some men have no Justice at all in them though their
had Fathers of our flesh who for a few dayes chastened us after the●r own pleasure they to ease themselve● have put us to pain but the Lord doth it for our profit that we might be partakers of his holiness There is just cause we should be afflicted when we provoke God by sin or when he would purge us from our sin or make us more holy And as it may be said God will not afflict because he doth not afflict us but when there is cause for it so Thirdly Because he doth not afflict us but when there is need 1 Pet. 1.6 nor more than there is need we shall not be afflicted an hour longer nor have a grain more of weight in the burden of our cross nor a drop more of gall and wormwood in the cup of our sorrows than we have need of Isa 27.7 8 9. Hath he smitten him as he smote those that smote him in measure when it shooteth forth thou wilt debate with him As if it had been said he shall have no greater a measure than is both useful and needful First to humble him for his sin secondly to subdue and mortifie his sin thirdly he shall have no more than is needful to exercise his graces his faith and patience no more fourthly than is needful to make him thankful for deliverance and sensible of mercy when it comes Thus as God who hath plenty of Justice will not afflict us but when there is need so not more than is need Fourthly It may be said He will not afflict because he doth not afflict us more than we can bear he tenderly considers our strength what we are able to stand under how long we are able to stand under it he will not break our backs nor our hearts unless by godly sorrow for or from sin by affliction God saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 10.13 is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that ye may be able to bear it Hence wh●n it is said Lam. 3.33 He doth not afflict willingly c. it foll●weth vers 34. to crush under his feet all the prisoners of the earth The Lord makes many his prisoners yet then his bowels are opened towards them he will not crush nor tread them down as mire in the streets I saith the Lord Isa 57.16 will not contend for ever c. For if I should the Spirit should fail before me and the souls which I have made I know what your spirits can bear and I will contend no longer than I know you are able to bear it Hence that Promise Psal 125.3 The rod of the wicked shall not rest upon the lot of the righteous least he put forth his hands to evil The Lord knows the rod may prevail over us so as to put us upon the doing of evil and therefore he will take order that it shall not Thus we may safely understand this assertion He will not afflict that is he afflicts not willingly he afflicts not till there is need nor will he afflict more than needs nor more than we are able or himself will enable us to bear he will either support us under or give us deliverance out of all our afflictions in due time I might hence or from the whole infer a double duty First Be Patient under affliction Secondly Be Comforted in affliction For God doth so afflict that he may be truly said not to afflict But having met with occasions for the ministring of such like counsels to the afflicted from other passages in this book it may suffice only to mind the Reader of them here This spake Elihu in the close or peroration of his discourse to stir up Job to consider all the dealings of God with him he would have him sit down with these four Doctrinal Conclusions upon his heart that God is Excellent in Power and in Judgement and in plenty of Justice he will not afflict Surely he will not afflict more in measure nor longer in time than is need as Job seemed in his passion to intimate and charge God for which he had several reproofs before Thus far I have opened these words as they stand in our translation There are two or three different readings especially of the latter part of the verse which would not be altogether omitted and therefore I shall touch at them and then proceed to the next and last verse of this Chapter which is also Elihu's parting word or the conclusion of his large and close discourse with Job The first different reading is much insisted upon by some Interpreters Take it thus Omnipotens quem non assequimur amplus est virtute sed judicio m●gnitudine justitiae non affliget Merc. The Almighty whom we cannot find out is great in power but he will not afflict in judgment and plenty of justice This translation transposeth those words which we place in the end of the verse he will not afflict to the middle of it and it renders the copulative particle And by the adversative But This makes the sence of the whole verse more plain and easie than the former as also to rise up more fully to the purpose of Elihu As if he had thus summed up all that he spoke before or had contracted it into this sum Which things seeing they are so as I have declared we may certainly conclude Quamvis sit potentissimus tamen homines ante creatos tanti facit ut non utator omnipotentia sua ad eos summo jure pro meritis eorum affligendos Jun. that the Almighty is so full of majesty and power that we are no way able to reach compass and find him out Yet notwithstanding he is so full of goodnesse and mercy that he is very sparing towards men and will not afflict them according to their demerits nor up to the extremity of justice This exposition holds out clearly that temperament of the power and justice with the goodness and mercy of God which Elihu undertook to demonstrate at the fifth verse of the thirty sixth Chapter and so forwards He is great in power but he will not afflict in judgement Take this note from it How great soever the power of God is yet he doth not afflict sinful man according to the greatness of his power nor the utmost line of his justice The Lord is full of mercy full of sparing mercy he spareth his people as a man spareth his own son that serveth him Mal. 3.17 And indeed if God should afflict in plenty that is in extremity of justice what would become of the best of the holiest of men Who can withstand the power of the great God who can stand in judgment before him if he should mark iniquities Psal 130.3 Woe to the most innocent man alive if God should mark iniquities and not forgive iniquities And therefore it follows in the next or 4th verse of that Psalm
But with thee is forgiveness As God is most bountiful in giving so is he most merciful in forgiving This holds the head of believing and repenting sinners above water and keeps them from sinking into the bottomless gulfe of despaire that they have a forgiving God to go unto and that there is none like him in forgiving Mich. 7.18 None forgiving so freely Isa 42.25 ●o abundantly Isa 55.7 none so constantly and con●inually as he There is forgiveness with thee 't is a continued a perpetual act Now because God pardons so freely he doth not he will not he cannot because he will not punish extreamly God dealeth with sinners in measure because he dealeth with them in a Mediator Though he be great in power yet he will not afflict according to the greatness of his power or the plenty of his justice Secondly Some of the Jewish Doctors render the latter part of the verse thus whereas we say He is excellent in judgement and in plenty of justice he will not affl●ct they say Judi●ium copiam justitiae non affliget i. e. jus non pervertet Merc. ex Rabbinis He will not afflict judgement and plenty of justice that is as they give the gloss Though he be great in power yet he will not pervert justice We may well say justice is afflicted when it is perverted and then justice is perverted when any man is wronged or when at any time the wronged or wrongfully afflicted are not righted and relieved Thus God will not afflict justice These translators do not joyn the word afflict as we to the person of man but to the justice of God or the actings of his justice He is great in power but he will not afflict he will not oppress judgement and justice This is doubtless a great truth in it self yet I doubt whether it be the truth intended by Elihu in this place Certainly God will not do any man wrong though he hath power enough all power in his hand yea God will do all men right though he be great in power yet what affliction soever he layeth upon the creature shall be no affliction to justice or judgement to that justice or judgement with which God is cloathed and will declare by executing it among the children of men But I pass this as over-nice Thirdly Others render thus He is excellent in power Non respondebit Tygur Probarem si esset 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in fonte nunc cum sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non potest aliter legi quam affliget vexa● Drus Merc. and in judgement and plenty in justice he will not answer The wo●d which we translate to afflict with some alteration in the Hebrew pointing signifieth also to answer and so the words carry a sence of the absolute soveraignty of God who is so great in power and in judgement and plenty of justice that he will not answer that is though men complain of his justice or think he hath done them wrong or at least is over-severe towards them yet he will not come to an answer he will give no man a reason of his wayes Of this Elihu spake expresly Chap. 33. v. 13. He giveth not an account of any of his matters God is so powerful that no man can call him to an account and so just in the use or exercise of his power that there is no reason why any should But though this also be a great truth yet because Elihu had asserted it fully before as also because this translation is grounded upon a change in the ordinary pointing of the Hebrew word from which I conceive with others we ought not easily to recede therefore I shall not stay upon it Nor shall I more than mention that apprehension of some Raboins who thus give out a 4th sence or interpretation of the words whereas we say As touching the Almighty we cannot find him out Omnipotentem non invenimus multum robore judicio Et tali● sit tamen talem eum non experimur in m●ndatis sui● ut immodice nos oneret aut immodicam a no●is exiget justitiam c. Rabbi Selc moth Rambam he is excellent in power and in judgement c. They say thus although the Almighty be great in power and in judgment and plenty of justice yet we find him not so That is we do not find him putting out the g●eatness of his power or the exactness of his justice in the commands which he hath laid upon us or in the duties which he hath required of u● he doth not over-burthen us nor exact hard things of us And they instance in the rules which God gave about offerings and sacrifices he required say they of some only a turtle dove or a pair of young pigeons of others but a lamb or a bullock such things he required for sacrifice as were of easie price and might easily be obtained he did not put us upon the getting of strange and rare beasts as Buffes or Unicorns or any sort of creature which may put us to much paines in getting them or to much expense in buying them And as in these so in other things God hath graciously condescended to our weakness as appears every where in the Law Thus the Jewish Writers make out their translation and though it be a truth that in one sense the Ceremonial Law was as St Peter in that council at Jerusalem declared Acts 15.10 A Yoak which neither they nor their fathers were able to bear yet there was much favour mixed with it which caused the Lord to appeale in that point to their own consciences or to make themselves the Judges M●ch 6.3 O my people what have I done unto thee or wherein have I wearied thee testifie against me And as God though great in power did not over-lay the Jews so much less hath he over-laid us Christians with duty 1 Joh. 5.3 His Commandements are not grievous And Christ said of his yoke and burden Mat. 11.10 My yoke is easie and my burden is light Christ may lay what burdens he pleaseth upon us but he is not pleased to lay any grievous burdens upon us This therefore is a truth both as to them and us yet I conceive it beside the design of Elihu in this place and I only mind the Reader of these different interpretations of all which some good improvement may be made So much of this verse The whole discourse of Elihu concludes in the next Vers 24. Men do therefore fear him He respecteth not any that are wise in heart This verse containeth two things First a practical inference by way of use from that fourfold doctrine held forth in the former verse concerning God As if Elihu had said For as much as the Almighty is incomprehensible so that we cannot find him out for as much as he is mighty in power and judgement and plenty of justice so that we can neither avoid him nor delude him therefore men do fear him
signifies every believer a Servant 238 Service and Worship often the same in Scripture 237. God expects our se●vice and then especially when we suffer under his hand 237. To serve God what or the service of God described 238 239. To se●ve God our Freed●m 240. Service of God pleasant and easie in a twofold respect 240. Service of God not lean but pr●fitable 240 241 Sight of God two-fold immediate mediate and that by a threefold means 102. The sight of God or his discovery of himself to us very sweet to the the soul 104 Signes of changes in the weather and other natural things 424. Inferences from it as to other th●ngs 424 Signes why given by God 549 Sin how sinful it is to say there is no profit in leaving sin 17. The benefit or profit of leaving sin 19. God receives no hurt or damage by the sin of man how many or how great soever his sins are 31. Yet sinners shall be dealt with as if they had hurt him and why 31. How the sins both of good and evil men turn to the glory of God 32. Sin considered in a threefold opposition 33. Sin d●th six things to God yet cleared how no damage to him 34 35 36. The least sin hurtful 47 48. Sin hurts the whole Creation but chiefly man 48 49. The sad effects of sin as well as the filthy nature of it should move us to avoid it 48. Sin hurts others but th●se most who commit it 49. Sin is v●cal 92. God doth not severely mark the sins of his people 116. Sin mans work 224. God doth not suffer sin to grow potent in his people 226. There is an excessiveness in some sins 227. In what sence sin may reign in a righteous man 228. Sin may be seen and not the exceedingness of it 228. The exceed●ngness of sin shewed in three things 228 2●9 Sin a vain thing how 234. God will not indulge sin in any 293. Sin should have no respect 321. Sin not to be chosen in any case 324. Sin strictly taken cannot be chosen 325. Vpon what accounts sin is chosen by many 325 326. They make a very bad choice who choose sin rather than affliction 372. Sin worse than any the worst affliction 330 331 Singing an act of Praise 352 Skie two things considerable in it clearness and strength 568. How the skie may be said to be strong 569 Snow what it is 469. When it usually falleth 469. Six things wonderful concerning the Snow 472. Snow how like w●ol shewed in three things 472 473. Sno● and Rain at the command of God 474 Sodomites how expressed in the Hebrew 271 Song in the night what 70 71 73 Soveraignty of God over all creatures three Inferences from it 14 20 Soul how taken in Scripture 268 South why expressed by a word that signifies a secret place 487. Whirlwinds come from it 488 Sparing mercy God will not spare his own if they obey not 252 Speaking two things of great use in it 139. Speaking of two sorts 232 233 Spirits of men weighed ●y God 552 Standing-still two-fold that of the mind to what opposed 527 Star-gazers their vanity 27 Stormes in the hearts of men allayed by God 562 Streight who may be said to be in it 282. No streight so great but God can deliver out of it 283 Strength of heart wherein it consists 175. 183. Strength of wisdom in God two-fold 175. There is no strength against the Lord. 311 Suddenness of divine Judgments 300 Sufferings did not hurt the Martyrs and why 51 Sun in its brightness cannot be looked upon 602 Swearing the Lords saying as much as his swearing 549 Sword how taken in Scripture 252 T Tabernacle what 407 408 Teacher God is pleased to be a Teacher of his people 338. The teachings of God above all teachings 339. How God exceeds all Teachers shewed in seven things 339 340. Three Inferences from it 342. Several Evidences of our having been taught of God 342 343 344. Teaching 'T is mans shame when he acts not according to the teachings of God 82. Teaching is to make us knowing 576. There are two sorts of persons who call for teaching 577 Terribleness of God to sinners in four dayes 609 Thundering Legion 460. Thunder a terrible thing 436. Thunder the Voyce of God 440 442. Thunder called the Voyce of God in a twofold respect 442. Six Inferences from it 443. Word of God like Thunder shewed in five things 444. Thunder Gods Hera d. 454. Thunder how it followeth L●ghtning 454. Why we see the Lightning before we hear the Thunder 454. Six degrees or s●rts of Thunder 455. Thunder described 457. Marvels in Thunder 460. The effects of the Word like those of Thunder 461 462. Two Inferences from it 464 Tiberius the Romane Emperour his Character 630 Time at the dispose of God 379 Trembling what 436. Great appearances of God should make us tremble 437. A fourfold trembling 437 438 Troubles are streights 281 282 Trusting in God a Duty in darkest times 112. T●ust in God fixes the heart 113. Some not to be trusted 114. We should trust God more upon experience of what he hath wrought 365. The Eternity of God a gro●nd of trusting him 380 Truth will prevail though many be against it 23. No matter if we are alone so Truth be on our side 23. Some speak Truth with false hearts others speak falsly with a true heart 153. To speak truth a high commendation of the Speaker 154. Truth taught us by God four effects of it 342 343 344. Some Truths are specially to be attended to 524 U Valentinian his zeal and advancement 213 Vanity what a●d who 92 Visiting of three sorts 119 Unde●standing how an unde●●●an●ing man may be said not to unders●a●d 81 Uprightness That which is not done uprightly will not be done constantly 266 W Waiting on God in hardest times 112 113. Warnings G●d gives them before he sends great Judgme●ts 425 426. Warning God gives wa●ning before he strikes 455 Water of two s●rts 388. Wa●er held up in the Air by the Power ●f God 392 Way of God what it is 345 Whirlwind what 489 Wickedness what 47 Wicked men out of Gods Protection he takes not care of them 189. How God doth and doth not preserve the lives of the wicked 189 190. Wicked not so much preserved as reserved 191. Wicked men of two sorts 192. Their life sad 192. God will at last utterly destroy them 193. God will not be taken off by any outward respect from destroying them 301 Winds four Cardinal 487. What the Wind is 489. Winds come at Gods appoyntment 489. God makes a twofold use of the Wind. 490. Six uses of it for mercy or for the good of man 490 491. Winds the Broomes of Heaven 490. Afflicting effects of the Wind. 492. Seven Wonders observable in the Winds 493 494. What the Wind is 598. Causes of the Wind. 599. Life preserved by the Wind. 599. Spirit of God compared to the Wind. 601 Wise
which he expected from Job Doubtlesse more of all these should have appeared in him and they should have appeared more in that time of affliction There are two things which God looketh for and aims at in the time of our affliction first the mortifying of corruptions that they wo●k no more at least no more so strongly as they have done secondly The stirring up and acting of our Graces that they may be more wo●king and work more strongly than ever they have done Where the Lord sees not these effects of affliction that our sins grow lesse and our graces more that we complain lesse and trust or believe more we are like to be afflicted more and he will discover his anger more Because it is not so he hath visited in his anger And thence Note Thirdly Distrust or impatience under the affl●cting hand of God or our not trusting God in our worst condition patiently is a very provoking sin We provoke the Lord to visit us in his anger when we do not trust in his mercy Our not trusting God must needs provoke him to anger for when we do not trust him we question him distrust or unbelief questions all that God is and all that God hath promised it questions his Truth and his Faithfulnesse his Power his Mercy and his Goodnesse all these which are the glory of God and in all which the sons of men ought to glorifie him these are all questioned and darkned when we put not forth acts of trust and reliance upon God in times of greatest affliction and extremity Is it not then a provoking sin I say not to with-draw trust from God and give it to an arm of flesh but not to put out fresh and full acts of trust upon God let our affliction or extremity be what it will The Children of Israel were in great extremity at the Red Sea a mighty Army pursuing them at the heels to destroy them and mighty waters being before them ready to swallow them up in these straits whilest they should have done their utmost to get and assure God to be their Friend the Psalmist tells us They provoked him Psal 106 7. But wherein lay their provocation that Scripture saith They remembred not the multitude of his mercies The former mercies of the Lord did not strengthen their trust in present troubles that was one provocation And as former mercies did not strengthen their trust so the present trouble drew out their distrust as another Scripture assures reporting their behaviour in it Exod. 14.11 And they said to Moses Because there were no Graves in Egypt hast thou taken us away to dye in the Wildernesse Wherefore hast thou dealt thus with us to carry us forth out of Egypt What were these fearful fore-casts these amazing bodements of an unavoidable as they apprehended ruine but the overflowings of unbelief or distrust in God and this was another provocation Former mercies are forgotten yea eaten up by unbelief as the seaven lean Kine in Pharaohs dream eat up the fat ones and present difficulties are aggravated by unbelief as if all the power of God could not remove and overcome them And will not the Lord think you visit in anger for such a sin as this Again As Elihu doth not say barely he hath visited but he hath visited in his anger or his anger hath visited so consider who was it that was thus visited in anger It was Job a Godly man a man perfect and upright Hence note Fourthly God visits or afflicts even his own people his elect and choicest servants with fatherly anger when they displease and provoke him We find the Scripture speaking expresly of the anger of God towards the best of his servants even towards a Moses as himself made confession Deuter. 1.37 when they displease him Also the Lord was angry with me for your sakes saying thou also shalt not go in thither Moses was a most meek man the meekest man upon the face of the earth nor was he an inferior in any other grace yet the Lord was angry wi h him and angry with him upon that special occasion his unbeliefe Numb 20.12 And the Lord spake unto Moses and Aaron because ye believe me not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the children of Israel therefore c. We read of the Lords anger breaking out against Aaron for another sin Numb 12.9 The anger of the Lord was kindled against them that is against Aaron and Miriam because they had spoken against Moses vers 1.8 Aaron was the High Priest and as he was high in office so eminent in grace and doubtless Miriam was a very gracious woman yet the Lord was not only angry with them but exceeding angry his anger waxed hot against them and kindled when they forgot their duty to Moses and remembred not their distance with reverence Solomon in his prayer at the Dedication of the Temple speaks of the people of God collectively If they sin against thee and thou be angry with them The Lord is not only angry with the world but angry with his Church not only angry with Babylon but with Jerusalem And as Solomon spake that of the whole Nation of the Jewes supposing they might fall under the Lords anger all together as a body so he did experience it sadly in his own person 1 Kings 9.11 And the Lord was angry with Solomon because his heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel which had appeared unto him tw●ce Wise Solomon departed from God through an evil heart of unbelief and vanity after the Lord had come and appeared to him more than once in grace and savour and the bitter effects or fruits of that departure appeared to him shortly after the Lord saith that Scripture was angry with Solomon and the sequel of his History tells us there went out very hot displeasure against him As these Scriptures are a proof of the Lords anger kindling against his people when they sin so we find the Church represented praising the Lord for quenching the fire of his ange● Isa 12.1 And in that day thou shalt say O Lord I will praise thee though thou wast angry with me thine anger is turned away and thou comfortest me When we turn from God his anger is turned against us and when we turn to God his anger is turned away from us When the Lord is angry what can comfort us but the turning away of his anger And by the very act of turning away his anger he comforts us though all the world be angry with us But some may say How doth the Lord who is said to love his people with an everlasting love visit them in anger To clear that we may distinguish of anger First There is correcting anger Secondly there is consuming or destroying anger Destroying anger is inconsistent with eve●lasting love but not correcting anger correcting anger may be very grievous therefore the Prophet deprecates it Jer. 10.24 Correct me O Lord in Judgement not in thy anger The
Lord doth often exercise that is as often as there is cause and we give him cause too often to exercise a smart and severe anger towards his own people but his consuming and destroying anger is the lot and portion of the wicked If his anger be kindled but a little namely against his enemies blessed are they that trust in him blessed are they that believe when that anger of the Lord breaks forth against unbelievers Or we may state it thus First God is angry with sinful persons thus he is angry with the world or with wicked men Secondly God is angry with persons for sinning there is a great difference between these two anger with sinful persons and anger with persons for their sin or for sinning and thus he is angry with his own people even with the godly when they sin though not for every sin Further We may distinguish of anger thus There is anger mixed with a desire of taking revenge upon those that we are ang●y with a revengeful anger thus the Lord is angry only with the wicked Of this anger Moses speaks having described a presumptuous sinner who believes not only without a word but against the word who when he heareth the word of the curse blesseth himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of mine heart to add drunkenness unto thirst then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man c. Deut. 29.19 20. Read more of this revengeful anger of the Lord Deut. 32.22 41 42. Secondly there is anger with a desire to reforme and reclaime those that we are angry with Thus a loving and indulgent father is angry with his child when he hath committed a fault he is angry not with an anger of desire to revenge but with an anger of desire to reforme And thus the Lord is angry with his own people with his choicest servants and dearest children when they forget their duty and play the wantons Lastly We may distinguish of anger thus There is First a temporary anger As there is a temporary faith in hypocrites so we may say there is a temporary anger in God against the faithful when offending that is he is angry with them for a while for a season Sing unto the Lord O ye Saints of his and give thanks at the remembrance of his Holiness saith David Psal 30.4 But why doth he call them to singing we have the reason of it given at the 5th verse For his anger endureth but a moment he speaks there of the Lords anger against his Saints and peculiar people while they indeed have cause to mourn for provoking the Lord to anger they may also sing both because his anger endureth but for a moment that is because if that be all it endureth not at all a moment is of no endurance as also because in his favour is life weeping may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morning Once more hear the Prophets report of the Lords anger Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth iniquity and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage he retaineth not his anger for ever because he delighteth in mercy God do●h not retain his anger for ever that is not long yea that not for ever is but a little while a moment and that but a small moment as the Prophet Isaiah spake Chap. 54.7 As if he had said The Lords anger is not retained so long as if it should be alwayes retained his anger towards you is soon blown over and gone upon the matter like a moment as soon as come Such is the anger which God discovers towards his own people Secondly There is an anger for ever an abiding wrath a fire of anger which never goeth out nor can be put out which is kindled in the breast of God against ungodly men and against them only as living and dying without repentance in their ungodliness Job a godly man was visited in the former not in this latter anger Yet for the fuller answer to this query as it concerns Jobs case I conceive Elihu speaks with the highest and hardest towards him For though it be a truth th●t the Lord discovers as was shewed before a fatherly anger towards his children when he chasteneth them for their sin yet he chasteneth them more or rather in love than in anger As whom he loves he rebukes and chastens Rev. 3.19 so he chastens and rebukes them in love And as for Job whom God dearly loved it is cleare from the first and second Chapters of this Book that God afflicted him not for any special sin or way of sinning but for his tryal and to set him up as a great pattern of patience to all succeeding generations Or we may say that God afflicted Job not because of any provocation which he had given him but at Satans instance and provocation Chap. 2.3 All that can be said for Elihu's help in saying that God visited him in anger is only this That though Job had not provoked the Lord to visit him in anger when he began to visit him yet some impatient and over-bold speeches of his or that liberty of speech which he took in expostulating and almost contesting with God about his afflictions might cause him to visit him in such anger as hath been set forth in answer to the query And now because it is not so because the Lord misseth those acts of grace trust and patience which thy case calleth thee to the exercise of He hath visited in his anger and what followeth Yet he knoweth it not in great extremity Et non advertit ad auctum valde i. e Nihil discrevit sc deus qued non visitaret etiamsi ea re visitatus magis dolerer Nam necesse erat visitatum ita tangi ut sentiret quod fieri non poterat si non pleraque charissima quóque bona adimerentur Coc Elihu seems to have spoken this turning himself to the company and complaining to them of Jobs insensibleness Yet he knoweth not c. Some refer this clause of the verse to God also He hath visited in his anger and taketh no notice of the great increase or of that which is greatly increased that is God hath spared nothing from his visitation although the party visited were never so much grieved or damnified in the loss and spoyle of his all There was a necessity saith this Author that he who was visited should be so toucht as to be sensible of the stroake which could not be unless the greatest of his encrease and those things which were most dear to him were taken away from him or he were stript naked and bereaved of them Our translation refers these words to the person visited as if he though reduced to the greatest extremities yet was not sensible of it or took no notice of what he suffered or was done to him Yet he knoweth it not in