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A86934 A brief exposition of the prophecies of Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk and Zephaniah. By George Hutcheson minister at Edenburgh. Imprimatur, Edm. Calamy Hutcheson, George, 1615-1674. 1654 (1654) Wing H3822; Thomason E1454_1; ESTC R209588 282,367 353

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birth-right for red pottage Gen. 25.29 30. c. 4. The counsel and providence of the Lord extends it self and is exercised not only about his Church but even among enemies he who reignes in the midst of enemies hath to say concerning Edom. 5. Albeit the enemies of God and his people be little sensible of their own condition and what God intends against them yet the Church is not left ignorant of what God will do with these enemies but in his Sanctuary and from his Word it may be seen We saith he that is I and my fellow Prophets Ezchiel and Jeremiab and by our Ministery the Church of God have heard a rumour from the Lord concerning Edom that is some taste of his dark counsel before it break forth in effect 6. It is a comfortable and useful doctrine to the Church to be instructed concerning Gods judgments to come upon her enemies partly that she may be comforted in her troubles in expectation that God will clear his affection toward her in plaguing those that wronged her And partly that she may hereby see what sins especially God is angry at to avoid them for these ends is a Prophet raised up to preach not in Seir but in Judah concerning Edom. 7. War is one of the sharp scourges whereby God punisheth wicked Nations and it cometh upon a people not accidentally but by the especial providence of God who hath Peace and War in his own hand and who when he hath any work to do can make instruments however led by their own principles and ends active and willing For it is from the Lord an ambassador is sent among the Heathen who not only stirs them up but makes them mutually to excite one another Arise ye and let us rise up in battel against her Ver. 2. Behold I have made thee small among the heathen thou art greatly despised The greatness of Edom's calamity by this war is held forth from its effects that hereby the Lord would diminish their number power wealth and reputation and put them beneath all other Nations and load them with contempt and ignominy Doct. 1. What ever instruments be imployed in inflicting any judgement yet God is to be eyed as having chief hand in them all I have made thee small saith the Lord. 2. The Lord pursuing for sin can bring down the greatest person and people in the world and lay them in the dust and poure contempt upon the most honourable I have made thee small and greatly despised 3. As the Lords judgements upon enemies are not readily foreseen or expected by them so when they come they are remarkable and to be remarked so much doth this Behold import 4. Things undertaken by God and foretold by him in his Word ought to be reckoned as certain as if they were already come to passe I made thee small thou art despised saith he Whereas yet it was but in his purpose and not accomplished 5. To be singular in afflictions or judgements or in the measure of them addeth to the weight and renders them more grievous for to be smal among the Heathen or Nations implies not only that Edom was reckoned among the Heathen Nations not of the Church but that God by his judgements should make him one of the smallest of them and that none should be so far brought under as he and this is told him as an aggravation of his stroke 6. As the Lords shewing mercy upon any makes way for mans mercy towards them also in so far as may be for their good Jer. 42.12 So when the Lord becomes a party in anger mens affections and respects will dry up for however Edom was esteemed of before yet when God dealeth with him he is greatly despised Ver. 3. The pride of thine heart hath deceived thee thou that dwellest in the clefts of the rock whose habitation is high that saith in his heart Who shall bring me down to the ground Ver. 4. Though thou exalt thy selfe as the Eagle and though thou set thy nest among the stars thence will I bring thee down saith the LORD For further confirmation of the judgement the Lord enlargeth and amplifies the former sentence from several considerations overturning all their vain confidences wherewith they were puffed up as supposing to be exempted from the stroak by them Whereby also the Lord partly discovers their pride and conceit because of these to be one of the causes of his controversie against them and partly also he explaines further the judgement to come upon them by threatning to pull down every one of these confidences and so make them completely miserable and contemptible The first vain confidence is the situation of their hilly Country and their Cities built upon inaccessible rocks of which as of the rest they were intolerably proud as conceiving their Country to be inaccessible and their Cities to be invincible Against which the Lord threatens that though they dwelt as high as the Eagle builds her nest yea as the Stars toward which Eagles mount yet he should reach them and debase them and so their Country should be invaded and their cities taken Doct. 1. Outward advantages and accommodations concurring with a natural heart usually do produce pride self-confidence insolency for Edom whose habitation is high is proud and saith in his heart Who shal bring me down to the ground whereas a renewed heart in all these is poor and dependeth on God 2. The Lord judgeth of mens pride no so much by their outward carriage which may be masked over with a shew of humility as by looking to their heart and diseerning the conceit and losty imaginations that reign there He eyeth the pride of Edoms heart 3. Of all the deceits that men are essayed with self-deceiving is one of the greatest when they are given up to delude themselves with vain imaginations and confidences thine heart hath deceived thee 4. As pride and conceit however it muster up mens excellencies before them is but a deluder and makes a shew of what will prove nothing as being either an evidence of being nothing in reality or that what they conceit of is blasted and withered so in particular however presumtion promise great things to make sinners secure and contemne Gods threatnings yet it doth but deceive and feed with vain hopes and will prove a deceiver in the end when there is most need of what they promised The pride of thine heart hath deceived c. 5. Pride in the creature is looked upon by God as a party against him as striking eminently at his glory in not depending on him and as affecting his throne and therefore provokes God though there were no other quarrel or enemy and ingages him to prove his power in abasing it Therefore that general defiance Who shall bring me down to the ground is answered by God as especially concerned I will bring thee down saith the Lord. 6. The Lord is able to reach man and bring him down in his most
crying verse 2. and setteth out more of their sinne is that their wickednesse in vexing and grieving one another and the godly amongst them and their violent spoiling of one another together with their starting and keeping up law-suits and contentions or of strife against the messengers of God who reproved them as was usual Jer. 15.10 Hos 4.4 that I say all these were not only publick and open in the Prophets and godlies view whereever they went but a great grief and vexation unto them their hearts were over-charged when they saw such wickednesse and God taking no order with it Doct. 1. When once men shake off the fear of God it is righteous with him to give them up to break all bonds of love humanity and civil society amongst men for these godlesse men are given up to iniquitie grievance spoiling and violence c. Thus the Lord sheweth how unfixed they are in all things who hold not fast the root of his feare 2. It may be the lot of the Lords most faithful servants to see sad sights of wickednesse among the people committed to their charge instead of comfortable fruits of their Ministery This Prophet after his pains taken seeth only iniquitie and grievance and every where spoiling and violence are before him these sinnes being so impudently committed that the actors cared not who saw them See Isai 49.4 3. Albeit it be the duty of the Lords people and faithful servants not to carve out what shall be their own lot and successe in the world yet they ought not only to keep themselves unspotted but to be seriously affected and vexed with the iniquities of the times for saith the Prophet Why doest thou shew me iniquity and cause me to behold grievance Not so much quarrelling with Gods Providence towards him as testifying his own and the godlies ve●ation by seeing these things See Ezek. 9.4 2 Pet. 2.7 8. To be vexed with the evils of the time is a way to keep our selves from falling into them and a ground of hope that God will appear as the Prophets reasoning imports 4. However the godly may be called to contend and strive both for God and for their owne rights yet it is a mark of an unsanctified spirit to delight in the fire of contention and either to beget or entertain them needlessely or unjustly This was one of the vexing evils of the time There are that raise up strife and contention Vers 4. Therefore the law is slacked and judgement doth never go forth for the wicked doth compasse about the righteous therefore wrong judgement proceedeth A third aggravation of his complaint holding out yet more of the iniquity of the times is taken from the consequents of Gods indulgence toward that people that they were emboldened to sinne by it and grew the worse for that they were spared for when the Prophets preached and men rebelled and yet God spared them they did hereby take occasion to contemn the Law and Word of God as a dead thing having no vigour nor authority and so ran on all mad courses insomuch that no justice was to be found for if there were any who respected equity or right they were so overpowered with the multitude of wicked men that they durst not appear not could effect any thing and so justice could not choose but be wrested Doct. 1. It should be the godlies endeavor to have their zeal against sin cleanly and arising upon justifiable grounds for here the Prophet cleares that his zeal against the iniquity of the times flowed not from any prejudice he sustained thereby but from the over-turning of all Religion and justice that appeared therein 2. The Lords forbearing and long-suffering oft-times prove a snare to wicked men hardening them in their evil course for because of Gods indulgence Therefore the Law is slacked c. 3. It is not the enjoyment of the Word of God or Ordinances but their having authority and vigour in our hearts and practices that will prove blessed in enjoying them for this people had the Law but it was the quarrel that it was slacked or dead in its authority The Law is slacked the similitude is taken from the faint or lifelesse pulse of a dying man 4. Contempt of the authority of the Word openeth the door to all wickednesse and justice will go to ruine among men where Religion hath no place for these two are conjoyned The Law is slacked and judgement doth never go forth 5. It is a great height of a lands guiltinesse when Judicatories and Courts of Justice become corrupt for that is the height of their impiety and the evidence of a despised Law that Judgement doth never go forth c. 6. Times of general defection prove ordinarily times of great trial to the godly and righteous not only are their souls vexed and they supplanted in their righteous cause but they dare hardly appear against the stream of injustice or if they do appear they cannot be able to effect any thing that is right but all goeth wrong do what they can for Then the wicked compasseth about the righteous therefore wrong judgement proceedeth Ver. 5. Behold ye among the heathen and regard and wonder miraculously for I will work a work in your dayes which ye will not beleeve though it be told you Followeth to verse 12. the Lords answer to this expostulation containing a prophecie of the destruction of the Jewes by the Caldeans which is here described generally from severall properties 1. That it should be a singular and wonderful destruction insomuch that if any of the Heathen should consider it it would breed admiration in them Deut. 28.37 and 29.24 25. 1 Kings 9.8 or if the Jewes should consider any stroak inflicted on the Heathen they should admire that their owne stroak was sadder as Dan. 9.12 2. That it should be incredible to themselves who dreamed of ease and yet be true And 3. That it should be speedy and come to passe even in their time to whom this was preached Doct. 1. When men harden themselves in their evil wayes because of Gods for bearance and the Word hath no authority among them then the Lord will speak in another language by his rod for because of that contempt of the Word ver 4. the Lord will work a work that is will send judgments which he will owne and wherein he will be seen 2. The Lords long suffering patience toward impenitent sinners will not alwayes last but when their iniquity is come to an height it will also end in sad judgements therefore albeit the Lords patience had out-wearied the Prophets patience yet now I will work a work in your dayes saith the Lord. 3. As abuse of mercie offered to the Church deserves sadder judgements then the sin of Heathens who have not such an offer Matth. 11.22 24. So it is an addition to the Churches calamity when the Heathen and enemies who have been witnesses to Gods working for her shall become Spectators and
scoffe at the Kings and the Princes shall be a scorne to them 4. Forts and strong holds wherein men do oft-times place their confidence will prove but matter of derision to the instruments of Gods vengeance for they shall deride every strong hold and however men boast of these yet they are easily reached for an enemie can heap up dust which lieth under his feet and by that means take it Ver. 11. Then shall his minde change and he shall passe over and offend imputing this his power unto his God The Lord subjoynes to all this as a ground of encouragement and hope to the godly that the Caldeans and especially their King would make a sinful use of all their victories and of this among the rest that he shall be so drunk with successe as his swelling thoughts of himself shall increase and in his arrogancie shall passe all bounds of modesty and humanity which formerly he might seem to have and shall grievously transgresse in ascribing all his victories and increase of his power to his idols and take the glory from God who employed him as his scourge all which might assure the godly that such a power should not stand long Some instances of this carriage we may read Dan. 4.30 and 5.4 Doct. 1. Prosperity is no lesse a trial to bring out what is in mens hearts and no lesse difficult to bear then adversitie is for here adversitie tried the Jewes and prosperity brought out more of the Caldeans naughtinesse Thus also was Hezekiah tried 2 Chron. 32.31 2. Albeit that many be employed in wars and making Conquests yet there are but few who reap any great benefits by all their toile the most part of the Conquerours as well as the conquered being but slaves to promote the ambitious designes of a few and furnish fuell to their lusts for notwithstanding there were great armies of the Caldeans yet all this swelling which they accounted the fruit of their victories is enjoyed chiefly by their King His minde changeth he shall passe over c. 3. It is the plague attending prosperity in an evill course that it is cursed to the enjoyers of it and wicked men are plagued with pride by reason of prosperitie and are encouraged not only to over-run men but to transgresse all bounds of modestie in themselves and to be more insolent and bold upon sinne for when Nebuchadnezzar prevaileth against the Jewes then shall his minde change and he shall passe over c. 4. As it is a judgement for men following a false Religion to prosper in their opposition to the truth and it is a further judgement when men are not led to repentance by Gods liberal dealing toward them but are given up to advance a false religion the more they prosper for this was a plague on the Caldeans that being idolaters and yet prospering against the people of the true God they go on and he offends imputing this his power unto his god 5. It is one of the difficult steps of mans life and which will never be cleared without the sure Word to read the language of divine providence without mistaking and so father favourable dispensations rightly to see aright who bestows them and upon what ground to see what good things in men providence doth encourage what evil it doth reprove to observe whether the good successe men have be because of any good in their way or for any evil that is in their opposites Herein the Caldeans fail for whereas the Lord imployed them and punished Judah by them not because they were right but because of Judahs sin yet they applaud themselves as if they had prospered because of their idolatry and do impu●e all this power to their idols 6. Albeit it be not the duty nor disposition of the truly godly to take pleasure in the sinne of any yet it furnisheth ground of confidence to them that God will own their quarrell in due time when they see their enemies abusing their prosperity they will gather that insolencie and arrogancie shall not escape unpunished that it shall not be a stable conquest which is either holden of or consecrated to idols and a false religion to the dishonour of the true God for to this end and to clear this truth doth the Lord subjoyn their sinful carriage here to their great successe in the former verses Verse 12. Art thou not from everlasting O LORD my God mine holy one we shall not die O LORD thou hast ordained them for judgement and O mighty God thou hast estabilshed them for correction Followeth to the end of the Chapter the Prophets exercise about this answer and his reply unto it In this verse in a speech directed to God he confirmes his own and the godlies faith in their being preserved from destruction in this calamity which is not to be understood only of the preservation of the godly from ●ternall destruction what ever become of them outwardly nor yet of the particular preservation of any particular person wicked or godly further then they may have a particular promise for it as Baruch and Ebedmelech had nor is it strictly to be applied by every particular visible Church as if it might not be destroyed by judgements for however the Lord may bring many judgements on a Church before he give her a bill of divorce and cause her to cea●e to be a Church yet the sad experience of the Churches in Asia and many other do refute that but the meaning is that the Lord having resolved to keep a Church continually in the world and there being a particular promise of the Church of the Jewes their enjoying that priviledge to be the only people of God till the Messiah should come of them the Prophet upon that generall ground and particular promise gathers that the Church of the Jewes should not be totally extinguished or cut off by her captivity in Babylon and yet further confirmes this his confidence from Gods Covenant with them from his eternall immutability who had also from of old been in Covenant with them as the words will also bear and his holinesse and from his purpose power and providence in appointing the Caldeans to punish and correct but not to destroy the Church Doct. 1. Judgements threatened or inflicted may speak sadder things to the apprehension of the godly then God really intends by them for so is insinuated that to die or irreparable desolation was presented to their minde in this stroak 2. As the Lord was pleased to continue a Church of the Jewes under the Law in the midst of all their calamities so he will never want a Church and people in the world however he may correct and he may inflict many judgements on a visible Church and yet not cast her off and he will be good everlastingly to the souls of his people albeit he toffe their bodies and their minds both in the world all which should be accounted of as great mercy in a time of captivity and
sad dispensations for al this is held forth by way of gloriation in the Prophets speech we shall not die 3. Believers having Gods promise may humbly carve their own answer according to it and when they come to God in Prayer may by faith tell him what they look for and will get therefore the Prophet saith to God O Lord we shall not die 4. It is a character of the truly godly man that in times of common calamity he is publick-minded and his care Prayer and confidence taken up about the Church and the godly and not his own case only therefore saith the Prophet We shall not die that is the Church and a seed of God in it shall not perish 5. Interest in God by vertue of the Covenant made in a Redeemer speaks comfortable things in saddest times for the Prophet gathers his confidence from this O Lord my God 6. Such as are in Covenant with God and have promises made unto them will be notably confirmed in the faith of them by taking up the nature properties and way of God the covenanting party and promise-maker for thus doth the Prophet confirme his faith that his God is Jehovah able to give a being to things promised that he is from everlasting and eternall and so is immutable in his purposes and will eternally have a people to be his Spouse and Subjects as is gathered from the same attribute Psal 102.27 28. that he is as the words will also read from of old the Lord my God or the Churches God by a Covenant of Grace even before the Law Gal. 3.17 and had proved so to that day and therefore the Law would not disannul that Coventant to such as renouncing their own righteousnesse flee to God through Christ in that Covenant and the Lord in his future dispensations would prove himself to be like himself of old and lastly he confirmes his faith from Gods holinesse that he is mine holy One without all spot of impurity and therefore as he disapproveth sin and punisheth it in his people so he will not spare it in enemies far lesse will he rub any imputation on his holinesse by falsifying his Covenant and promise made to the Church and elect in it as is imported Psal 60.6 and 85.35 In summe they that know his Name will trust in him Psal 9.10 7. As faith must not expect to go on without much opposition from within so it is the duty of a Believer not to succumbe or give it over at every apprehension or tentation but to set himself against it and shame himself from it by venting it to God This is imported in the way of the Prophets expressing his confidence Art thou not from everlasting not importing his totall hesitation or questioning of this but rather that as Gods dispensations ministred occasion to his weaknes to apprehend death so also when he would fasten faith on God sense did question his attributes which his heart rising against he shames his own unbelief by venting this question to God wherein he holds forth the absurdity of senses apprehensions that as it would take away the believers comfort in questioning promises so also it would turn atheist deny unto God the glory of his attributes withal shews that the way of curing ●uch distempers is to lay them out to God although faith could do no more but question the truth of what sense faith 8. God is sovereign Lord in all calamities and doth set bounds and limits to them which whatever either the power of enemies or greatnesse of trouble inflicted by them seem to threaten shall not be transgressed therefore doth the Prophet reckon that the Caldeans being sent out for judgment to punish the Church yet such as might keep within bounds of fatherly correction and reproof or to plague and punish the rebellious and correct and not destroy the godly and Church and that being ordained or established or solidly founded and supported for that work only and that by the Lord who is mighty in power or a rock as the word is unalterable in his purposes therefore they should not be permitted to go beyond his commission and purpose but they should do his work and pleasure not their own we shall not die O ●ord thou hast ordained them for judgement and O mighty God thou hast established them or fcorrection Vers 13. Thou art of purer eyes then to behold evil and canst not look on iniquity wherefore lookest thou upon them that deal treacherously and holdest thy tongue when the wicked devoureth the man that is more righteous then be The Prophet having confirmed his faith of the preservation of the Church subjoynes an expostulation that the Lord being so pure and holy as that he cannot so much as look upon any sin wherein men approve themselves and for pardon and purging whereof a Mediatour is not sought unto far lesse on grosse iniquity and unjust grievance of others without indignation and anger yet he should seem to take no notice but did tolerate the Caldeans in their treachery and violence against the Church who though sinful were more righteous then their persecutors and that he should rather punish the Church then them In which complaint there is not only an expression of the godlies weaknesse and wrastlings under such dispensations but their faith also is insinuated that as God in his holy indignation at sin had not spared the Church so he would not long wink at the Caldeans iniquities but punish them in due time and deliver his Church This way of the Caldeans upon which he grounds the expostulation is gathered from the former prediction v. 6 7 c. Doct. 1. Such is the weakness and instability of the spirits of the Lords people and so various the occasions of exercising their graces that they meet with few dispensations within time wherat their hearts are not ready to quarrel for the Prophet formerly complaining out of zeal that God took no course with the sins of his people and yet getting an answer he is not satisfied but his compassion findes new matter of exercise and complaint 2. The clearest sighted Saints may be so bemisted as not to be able to reconcile Gods dispensations with his nature and attributes but be ready to apprehend a repugnancy betwixt them for here the Prophet cannot wel reconcile Godsholinesse with his tolerating of the Caldeans 3. We are so weak and selfish that when providence works not according to our minde and apprehensions we are ready to succumb under temptations of Atheism and to question Providence for the Prophet looks on God as looking on and holding his tongue as a Spectator onely when he tolerated the Caldeans 4. It is the duty and will be the care of all the godly to justifie God and clear him from any imputation however their weaknesse cannot see through all the deep mysteries of his Providence about his Church and her enemies and for that end they should prevent misbelife and temptations language
the judgement for both Prophets and Priests are here found guilty See Lam. 2.14 2. Want of gravity in carriage and rashnesse and inconstancy in doctrine making the Word Yea and Nay and fitting doctrine to all humours parties and times is a character of a false Minister accessory to a lands sin and liable to sad judgements whatever extraordinary or singular thing he pretend to Her Prophets are light or rash unstable and heady persons 3. An unfaithful time-serving Minister though he may please himselfe and others may like well of his way yet in Gods account he is but a perfidious man betraying his trust and the soules of men and men will finde it so in due time for being light they are also treacherous persons 4. Every Minister that would approve himselfe to God ought to give himself both to deal with God in behalfe of the people and with the people on Gods behalfe for such was the Priests charge to minister un●o the Lord in the Sanctuary in name of the people and to be ordinary teachers of the law to the people in both which they failed here 5. It is a token of sins full ripenesse and of speedy approaching judgement when Ministers dare pollute the holy things of God by going prophanely and in a carnal way about his worship and service their own familiarity and frequent employment about it without sensible hearts having bred a contempt of it and so embolden others to do the like or tempt them to abhor Gods service thus was it with Jerusalem when wo came upon her Her Priests have polluted the Sanctuary 6. The holy Scripture being the revealed will of the supreame Lord and the unalterable rule of mens duty according to which they may expect blessings or curses it must be an high presumption in men to wrest and force it to applaud their fancies and to take their light to the Word and father it upon it and not come with submission of heart to receive light from it and so make of Scripture what they please this is also a quarrel They have done violence to the Law Ver. 5. The just Lord is in the midst thereof he will not do iniquity every morning doth he bring his judgement to light he faileth not but the unjust knoweth no shame The equity of this threatned wo is cleared from the justice of God who not only dwelling amongst them could not without impuration to his holinesse passe over such grosse abominations but also was a just God in giving her faire play in this processe and not pronouncing this sentence till she was found incorrigible which he proveth from two evidences whereof the first is that however he had daily and early by his Messengers held forth this law as a lamp whereby they might see the evil of their wayes and so failed not to give them warning that they might be reclaimed yet they proved obstinate and impudently blushed not to sin against cleare light Doct. 1. However a visible Church persevering in sin may blesse her selfe and expect great things from Gods visible presence with her yet all these priviledges speak the impenitent sinners disadvantage their lying neer a stroak for if the just Lord be in the midst thereof he will doe no iniquity to wit in sparing her being so sinful See Amos 3.2 3. 2. God doth so much delight in mercy and is so tender of his people that he never proceeds to severity so long as there is another way unessayed to reclaim them or to stint the course of their sin which doth abundantly justify him when he judgeth for in this also he is the just Lord in the midst thereof he will not do iniquity in that he will not cast off till other means be essayed as the following purpose cleareth 3. It is a great favour from the Lord and a testimony of his long suffering when he doth not take every finner at his first word but followeth him with frequent warnings of his danger if he go on and offers of advantage if he returne for it is marked here as an evidence of Gods kindnesse in this processe that every morning which was the usual time of Prophets preaching Jer. 7.25 doth he bring his judgements to light he faileth not 4. Albeit men may pretend to acknowledge the authority of God and his Word yet it is usual that when they are mad on sin and going to ruine this should be a presage of it that the Word will do nothing at them for it is marked as their sin and a token that judgement must come on when notwithstanding warnings the unjust knoweth no shame 5. None who are within the visible Church and doe acknowledge a Deity and yet dare with a high hand sin against the cleer light of the Word but they proclaim themselves to be destitute of all ingenuity and given up to the plague of effronted impudence for such know no shame Ver. 6. I have cut off the Nations their towers are desolate I made their streets waste that none passeth by their cities are destroy'd so that there is no man that there is none inhabitant 7. I said Surely thou wilt feare me thou wilt receive instruction so their dwelling should not be cut off howsoever I punished them but they rose early and corrupted all their doings A second evidence of their incorrigiblenesse is that the Lord had often-times visited the Nations round about not one but many of them and not with an ordinary but with remarkable stroakes destroying their strong holds or Princes which as corner stones as the word imports uphold the fabrick of the Common wealth and making such havocke of the Nations as there were neither traveller nor Inhabitant to be found all which considering out ward meanes and their duty might have warned them to flee those sinnes for which those Nations had been punished and instructed them to fear God and reforme their wayes that so their afflictions might have kept within bounds of fatherly correction and they might have prevented the last stroake of being put out of their land and yet for all this they were so farre from turning to God that they were even worse all their wayes being not only sinful but corrupt and bent active and headlong in going wrong as if it had been their study and they were as earnest to goe wrong as he had been to reclaim them v. 5. Doct. 1. The Church is so dear unto God and he so tender of her well-being that before he ruine her he will preach her duty and danger to her upon the dear expence of others for all these sad judgements on others v. 6. was to inform her that she might prevent the like 2. Judgements inflicted on any of the world is a document and call to others to fear God especially being guilty of the like sinnes yea even the Church ought to take warning from judgements on enemies for He cut off thir Nations laid their Towers desolate c. that his Church
eminent strength and greatnesse imaginable and cannot only make strong holds a vain refuge in a day of vengeance but is able to overturn more confidences then man can build up for his own security To dwell in the clefts of the rock is but a smal thing for Gods power to reach and yet it was the height of that which Edom had to boast of for Though thou exalt thy self as the eagle and though thou set thy nest among the stars thence will I bring thee down Ver. 5. If theeves came to thee if robbers by night how art thou cut off would they not have stollen till they had enough if the grape gatherers came to thee would they not leave some grapes 6. How are the things of Esau searched out how are his hid things sought up A second vain confidence is their wealth and treasures wherewith men use to help themselves in their extremities The Lord threatens to make these a prey to their enemies who after their victory being without fear of ambushes should at leasure seek out and carry away even their hidden Treasures and so their spoiling should not be ordinary but complete even to admiration VVhence learn 1. Riches treasured by those whom God hath a quarrel at are so far from helping or delivering them in a day of wrath or from doing the owners good that they are justly given as a prey to their enemies Edoms things an searched out and sought up 2. As the children of the Lord art to read the mercy of their trials by considering how moderate they are in respect of judgements upon enemies so the wicked may see the severity of God in what their stroaks are beyond ordinary for this end is Edoms spoiling set before him as being beyond what theeves and robbers by night use to do who use not to take all away but what may suffice as not being able to carry all or not daring for fear to stay and search out all and beyond what grape-gatherers do in vineyards who according to the Law Lev. 19.10 or because they cannot reach all with their eye do still leave some grapes whereas the things of Esau are searched out and his hidden things sought up 3. The stroaks that God hath appointed for such as not only live wickedly but also turn enemies and persecutors of his Church are complete and far beyond the ordinary visitations that come upon the children of men This comparison betwixt Esau's stroak and robbers their picking imports that the one had been in some sort a mercy and delivery in respect of the other 4. However the wicked be senselesse and fearlesse when God threatens them yet his stroak will make them feel and awake them for this Exclamation How art thou cut off how are the things of Esau searched out c. doth imply not any pity in the Lord or his Prophet towards them but that the judgments should astonish and affect themselves when it came upon them Ver. 7. All the men of thy confederacy have brought thee even to the border the men that were at peace with thee have deceived thee and prevailed against thee they that eat thy bread have laid a wound under thee there is none understanding in him 8. Shall I not in that day saith the LORD even destroy the wise men out of Edom and understanding out of the mount of Esau The third vain confidence is the help of their confederates the Narions round about them and especially Egypt whose interest it was to engage the Edomines who lay in their frontiers against the Chaldeans The Lord threatens to make these the occasion and instruments to promote their ruine for all their confederates should engage them to oppose the Chaldeans at the border of their Countrey which was in effect to cast them out of it as the phrase also in the Original signifies their friends and intimate familiars by subtilty and fair pretences should ensnare them to run on their own hurt and ruine as if they had given them a bed to lye on and yet hid a dagger in it with the point upward to slay them And this is more fully cleared by reading the words thus as the Original h●th it without addition of any words which are put in the Translation They have laid thy bread a wound ander thee signifying that their bread which they had from Egypt was the snare that drew them on their ruin Doct. 1. According to the sin of a Person or Nation so ordinarily is their judgement for Edom broke off that brotherly amity that ought to have been betwixt his brother Jacob and him therefore he is peid in his own coine his heathen confederates are his ruine He sinned in breaking bonds and he is plagued in that other bonds break him and are broken to him All the men of thy confedracie have brought thee even to the border c. 2. God can make those to be instruments of sinners ruine who in appearance are very near friends and can make confederacies wherein men conside the short cut to their destruction Edom was ruined by his confederates and the men that were at peace with him 3. The confederacies and alliances of politick men are not to be trusted in they being led only by their own State-interests and not minding their benefit with whom they carry fairest but only their own advantage for so did Edoms confederates The men that were at peace with him deceived him they gave him bread for a wound under him to put them betwixt themselves and the dint of the enemy The fourth vaine confidence is their wisdome and prudence whereby they might think to manage their affairs dexterously and to the best advantage as it seems they have been famous for this Jer. 49.7 Concerning this the Lord foretels that for all their wisdom they should not be able so much as to discern and prevent the treachery of their confederates And that because the Lord would when they were ready for the stroak deprive them of wisdom either by taking away such as were wise or turning their wisdome into folly Hence learn 1. When the Lord hath ruine to bring upon a people their wisdome and policy will not avert it He can deprive men of wisdom to manage their affairs he can make the wisest to be over-reached and out-witted and can make what they think their wisest course prove greatest folly in the issue for Edom is wise and many confederacies seemed a wise course to strengthen themselves and yet in all this there is no understanding in him to discern the snares in it 2. That wherein men are most eminent and are ready to conside most in will prove vain when they have most need that the pride of all glory will be stained for The wise men are destroyed out of Edom and understanding out of the mount of Esau who were a wise people Excellencies confided in are a disadvantage 3. Whatever wisdome or excellencies be in men they are all Gods gift and
dependent on him who gives or takes them away at his pleasure and according as he hath a people to raise or to ruine for He destroyeth the wise men when he will 4. Mens wisdom and prudence is ordinarily looked upon by God as an enemy to him and ground of a controversie in regard that mens conceit of their wisdom is the cause why they give God little to do acknowledg not his providence but take all upon themselves for this question Shal I not saith the Lord even destroy the wise men out of Edom imports that there is some necessity for his doing of it and that their wisdome may not escape without a stain 5. It is a singular demonstration of Gods Soveraignty and providence in the world when he overturns the wisdome of the wise brings all their well-contrived projects to nought snares them in their own works and counsels makes eminent fooles of them and causes them to reel like drunken men who were in reputation for wisdome for When there is no wisdom in him the Lord declareth himself the Author of it that we may see his hand in it and give him the glory of it and may believe his power to do the like when the wisdom of Adversaries is the Churches fear Shal I not saith the Lord destroy the wise men c 6. However the threatnings of Gods Word may oftentimes seeme improbable when they are pronounced yet in the Lords time the accomplishment will be remarkable for albeit Edom notwithstanding the Lords threatning retain his former wisdom the Lord in his holy providence ensnaring wicked men so who do contemn threatnings when they are not speedily executed Jer. 17.15 yet In that day to wit of his calamity shal I not destroy the wise men saith the Lord Ver. 9. And thy mighty men O Teman shall be dismayed to the end that every one of the Mount of Esau may be cut off by slaughter The fifth vain confidence is their valour and strength for which also that Nation was eminent as living by the sword according as was foretold Gen. 27.40 concerning this the Lord threatens to confound with terror the mighty men of their Country or some part of it most renowned for valiant men and called Teman from Esan's Grandchild Gen. 36.15 or from its situation Southward as the word signifies from Judea And so these being laid by there should be an universal slaughter of the inhabitants of the Country at least of every one of note as the word in the Original signifies and is translated so Psal 49.2 and 62.9 and elsewhere as was usual for the Chaldeans to do where they prevailed 2 Kings 24.15 Doct. 1. Natural men are in a sort endless in their carnal confidences and hard to be put wholly from them but when one fails they will have another to flye to Therefore is all this paines taken to shew the vanity of Edoms refuges who if the situation of his Countrey faile him hath treasures to gather forces with and failing that confederates or if they be wanting prudence which hath delivered people in great extremities and if he be yet put to it he hath mighty men to run on all hazards And every one of these needs to be particularly threatned to make them sure of vengeance 2. The terror of God is sufficient to crush and overthrow the mightiest of men mans valour is not terror-proof when the terrour is from God Thy mighty men O Teman shall be dismayed and broken with terror as the word also signifieth 3. As terror upon a people is an ordinary forerunner of great desolation Thy mighty man are dismayed and every one of the mount of Esau cut off by slaughter So where the Lord hath a judgement to go through a Land no probable or promising furniture will turn it away but what would hinder it shall be made uselesse The mighty men shall be dismayed to the end that he may reach his purpose and cut off every one c. Ver. 10. For thy violence against thy brother Jacob shame shall cover thee and thou shalt be cut off for ever The Lord having pronounced sentence against Edom proceeds to shew the equity thereof from the cause procuring it upon which the sentence is again repeated In general Gods quarrel against them is for their violent carriage towards Judab for which they are again threatned Doct. 1. As the Lord doth not strike a people but where he hath a just quarrel so the stupidity of men in not laying sin to heart and their blindnesse and self-love is such as Gods quarrel will not be taken up till himselfe discover it Therefore doth the Lord himself here reveal it 2. Of all the injuries and evil deeds committed by wicked men none are so remarked or so suddenly and severely punished as the injuries they do to the Church and people of God The Lord threatens Edom for violence against Jacob as if he had committed no other fault and as filling his cup speedily 3. The Lord will not forget enemies their interest in and obligations to the people of God whom they oppresse that thereby he may aggravate their guilt and double their punishment Therefore the Lord reckons Edoms kindred to Jacob that his unnaturalnesse might appear and to be a ground of the sentence Thy Brother Jacob. 4. Much ignominy and shame is abiding those especially who ought to be friends and are foes to the Church of God partly in that they shall be disappointed of their expectation to see the Churches ruine and partly in that judgements from God shall make them base and contemptible if not also confound them with horror that they should have taken part against the Church with those who ruine themselves for shame shall cover Edom when he is destroyed by the Chaldeans with whom he joyned against Judah 5. Judgements upon the troublers and enemies of the Church are without moderation and hope of recovery as coming from the hand of Justice and of a jealous God Thou shalt be cut off for ever for however there may be some relenting under this or that particular stroake yet unlesse that repentance prevent justice makes what they get but an earnest of more and pursues them to all eternity as this stroake of Edom is expounded Mal. 1.4 Ver. 11. In the day that thou stoodest on the other side in the day that the strangers carried away captive his forces and forreigners entred into his gates and cast lots upon Jerusalem even thou wast as one of them Edom's violence is more particularly described by shewing positively what he had done to wit that in the day of the Churches trouble he not only was an idle spectator as to assisting of his brother but concurred with the enemy as one of themselves to help forward the affliction VVhence learn 1. Many sad afflictions may come upon the priviledged people of God when God is provoked and those not onely cleanly trials and sufferings for Truth which have their large
were burnt it self or that God should make the Church active to effect it as was in part accomplished when the Jewes after their captivity destroyed the Edomites as History recordeth 4. The Word of God and his Omnipotency and fidelity who speaks it is sufficient to confirm the Churches faith in the certainty of most improbable things For whatever unlikelihood be in this promise it is removed by this For the Lord hath spoken it Ver. 19. And they of the South shall possess the mount of Esan and they of the plain the Philistines and they shall possess the fields of Ephraim and the fields of Samaria and Benjamin shal possess Gilead 20. And the captivity of this hoast of the children of Israel shal possesse that of the Canaanites even unto Zarephath and the captivity of Jerusalem which is in Sepharad shal possess the Cities of the South It is further promised That the Church shall not only have restitution but enlargement of their possessions enjoying all their own and possessing what had been their enemies The Jewes in the South taking in Edom with their own portion they who dwell in the plain enjoying the Philistines land as lying neerest them and all their own borders recovered not only Ephraim Samaria and Benjamin but Gilead also beyond Jordan and for further confirmation the Lord foretels that the numerous captivity of Israel should possesse their Northern border to Zareph●●h or Zareptah toward Zidon 1 Kings 17.9 And that the Captives of Jerusalem and Judah in Sepharad conceived to be a place in a Chaidea should possesse their South-border Now concerning the accomplishment of this promise it cannot be said that any thing done by the Maccabees and their successors or obtained by Herod and his successors from the Romanes was the full performance these things coming far short of what is here foretold besides that the children of Israel or ten Tribes are expresly mentioned in this Prophecie Nor doth the taking the place in a spiritual sense fully exhaust the meaning there being such expresse designation of places to be possessed and of several troups of captives to possesse the several places And therefore it seems to point further at the restitution of Israel to their own land and the inlargement of their border when they shall turn to Christ in the latter dayes Rom. 11.25 26. However the Promise may teach us 1. The afflictions of the Church through Gods blessing tend to their advantage and gain For the Captivity are to get not only their own land but the mount of Esau and the Philistines and what they had not before their Captivity 2. Christ in his Church will gain ground on his enemies and possesse and reign over them either by their voluntary conversion or violent subjection and destruction For so much doth the scope of this promise being spiritually taken import 3. The priviledges of the people of God are irrevocable and immurable and will break forth in comfortable fruits after long and sad interruptions This is again signified and taught by Israels possessing the fields of Ephraim and Semaria and Benjamin with Gilead as the Original hath it of which they have been so long deprived 4. The Lord marketh every distresse and captivity of his people and what becomes of them and may manifest much of his goodness to such as he hath sore afflicted and brought down with corrections For though the Captivity was sent away with much ignominie and carried far off yet the Lord marks that they are the captivity and where they are and will restore them to their possessions and cause them to possess the gates of their enemies Ver. 21. And Saviours shall come up on Mount Zion to judg the Mount of Esau and the kingdom shal be the LORDS A further Promise of fit instruments to be raised up in the Church to deliver her and manage the cause of God against enemies as of old when the Lord raised up Judges to deliver Israel Whereby we are to understand not only spiritually that Christ will send to the Church his Apostles and Messengers who instrumentally save the Elect 1 Tim. 4.16 by holding forth Christ in the Word of Salvation and by their Doctrine do condemn the world but that in all Ages and especially in the Church of converted Israel God will raise up instruments of deliverance to the Church as he did also in the times betwixt the captivity and coming of Christ Doct. 1. The Church of Christ will not want fit instruments to promote her happinesse For Saviours shall come up on Mount Zion 2. The allowance of the Church of God is Salvation eternal and temporal also in so far as is fit for her to receive Therefore are the instruments sent to her called Saviours to wit in an instrumental way 3. The Doctrine of the Gospel in the mouth of Christs Servants doth reprove judge and condemne the world and all the enemies of Christ and this judgement is seconded with spiritual plagues and sometimes temporal till the day come when the World shall judge them and they receive a complete recompence according to it Thus do some of Christs instruments judge the mount of Esau 4. As the Lord is Soveraign in all the world even over his enemies So when he raiseth up instruments for the Churches good he will blesse them and by them bring his enemies to an account and execute his sentence against them For these instruments of the Churches temporal deliverance do judge the Mount of Esau when God delivers enemies into their hand as his delegates to pour his vengeance upon them The last and great promise is that God in his Christ shall have a Kingdom in his Church and among their enemies for their behoof Doct. 1. Where Christ sets up his Church there he sets up his Kingdom also and will be acknowledged as such For the Kingdom shall be his 2. No dominion or sovereignty is to be acknowledged in the true Church but Christs only he alone hath power to make Lawes binding the conscience to institute Ordinances enjoyn censures appoint Officers by his own Courts to judge his own House c. For the Kingdom shall be the Lords All other Saviours or instruments of deliverance must serve him and his Officers must content themselves with his Ministry 3. The Kingdome of Christ is matter of comfort to the true Church and godly it being sweet to live under his yo●k and protection for it is a promise The Kingdome shall be the Lords 4. Christ holds his kingdom by a certain and firm tenure as being made sure to him by the infallible promise of God as here is recorded in holy Scripture and upon this ground may the Church notwithstanding all opposition expect the day when the kingdomes of this world shall become the kingdomes of our Lord and of his Christ and he shall reign for ever and ever Rev. 11.15 JONAH The ARGUMENT JONAH having prophesied in Israel in or a little before the days of Jeroboam
his delayes in executing vengeance for sin with the severity of it when it comes therefore in opposition to their devising iniquity verse 1. that they might execute it well as they thought the Lord deviseth an evil saith he that is it shall be as sore and sharp an evil as if it had been most seriously devised and all the time of delay had been imployed for that effect 4. Sin publickly acted without controlment will bring on judgments against a whole people Therefore because oppression was committed publickly against this family do I devise an evil that is against this whole Nation Amos 3.1 2. even the notorious sins of private persons much more of publick Ministers of Justice not being punished or such sins becoming universal cannot but bring judgments upon a whole Land 5. However Oppressors may think to shift the Lords visitations yet when they come they shall seize upon them and their violence shall be met with afflictions which they cannot shake off for it is an evil from which ye shall not remove your necks 6. Albeit men also dream that if they cannot exempt themselves from judgments yet they will courageously and undauntedly bear out under them yet the Lord by his rods will make the most haughty to stoop for Neither shall ye go haughtily 7. God hath our time and the revolutions thereof so in his own power as he can thereby when he will cause the stoutest to fall before him therefore it is subjoined as a reason why they shall not walk haughtily for this time is evil God shall make the times to crush them 8. Men by their transgressions do provoke the Lord to make their time bitter and evil unto them wherein otherwise they might comfortably serve their generations for because they had oppressed c. therefore this time is evil Ver. 4. In that day shall one take up a Parable against you and lament with a doleful lamentation and say We be utterly spoiled he hath changed the portion of my people how hath he removed it from me turning away he hath divided our fields Their calamity is further set forth that it should not be ordinary but the matter of a Proverb in all mens mouths and of a bitter lamentation composed by themselves to bewaile their calamities or by their enemies counterfeiting their sorrow wherein they should bewaile their utter desolation in that the Lord had transferred the possession of the holy land which he had given as a portion to his people to their enemies and had not onely cast his people out of it but turning away in anger had given it to the enemies to divide it among them and so had put them out of hope to return to it again all which relates especially to the case of the ten Tribes whose lands were thus possessed by the Assyrians 2 Kings 17.24 Doct. 1. Sinning against God with an high hand will at last make the sinner a remarkeable spectacle of justice and will end in bitternesse and lamentation for In that day shal one take up a Parable or Proverb against you and lament with a doleful lamentation 2. The sinners desert is to be utterly ruined without hope of restitution and to be left in that condition to bewaile their want and misery for this is the sum of their lamentation that they are utterly ruined put away from their land their enemies dividing it as their owne inheritance 3. The seeing of God as a party and affliction as flowing from his anger they make the afflicted's lamentation yet more bitter for so doe they lament He hath changed and removed turning away be hath divided 4. The Lords judgements upon a sinfull people will surprize them with astonishment and be more sad then any thing they did expect or dreame of when they were wallowing in their iniquities for so much doth their admiration import How hath he removed it from me Ver. 5. Therefore thou shalt have none that shall cast a cord by lot in the Congregation of the LORD Their utter desolation is here positively denounced by God in confirmation of their lamentation that being cast out of their land they should want the benefit of dividing their inheritances by lot before the LORD in his Congregation as of old Joshua had done Josh 18.4 6 10. and they used to doe on several occasions especially every Jubilee when they returned to their possession but should remaine exiled and their enemies in possession of their Country Doct. 1. It is a bitter case when an hard condition is not onely feared or apprehended by us but proves in reality as sad as we imagine For here the Lord confirms their lamentation in apprehending desolation by a positive sentence Thou shalt have none to cast a cord by lot 2. Iniquity will make a Land spue out even a confederate people and detaine them in exile destitute of their wonted priviledges This is imported in that threatning Thou shalt have none to cast a cord c. 3. The causes procuring judgements are still to be taken along in our thoughts with the judgement Therefore saith he because of these sins mentioned ver 1 2. Thou shalt have none c. This will make us justifie God in his afflicting and will set the afflicted on work by repentance to make up their outward losses in God 4. Afflictions will be so much the more bitter as the mercies of which wee are deprived by them have been given unto us by a special providence and as a signe of Gods favour for so the land from which they are to be banished is a land which they had by lot in the Congregation of the Lord that is a land divided to them by especial providence of God and wherein the Congregation of the Lord was See Ps 47.4 and 137.1 Ver. 6. Prophesie ye not say they to them that prophesie they shall not prophesie to them that they shall not take shame The second accusation is for their contempt of and opposition unto Gods Word and Messengers the sense of the words which in the original are concise and short is when the wicked heard the Prophets of God threaten sin so sharply they could not endure this sound doctrine but either would have them silent as Amos 7.10 11 12 13. or would limit them to preach onely what they pleased as their false Prophets did and so some read the words Prophesie ye not let these to wit the time-serving Prophets and such as would follow their way prophesie upon this the Lord threatens to adde this to their judgements that he will take away his Prophets and hereby give them up as dogs to whom holy things are not to be cast and prevent the shame and ignominy which his Prophets suffered at their hands as Matth. 7.6 or as the words may be read by way of interrogation If they shal not prophesie unto these shall they take no shame although they were rid of faithfull messengers to warne them yet that would not hold off jugements
nor exempt them from shame and confusion Doct 1. The Lords Word in the mouth of his messengers ought to be refreshing and a meanes of fructifying unto the Church and will prove so except it be to such as are neer unto cursing therefore is prophesying in the Original called dropping by a name taken from raine which refresheth and fructifieth the earth 2. A declining time and a faithfull Ministry will be still at odds and contending decliners would either be rid of the Word and Ministry altogether or if they think that too grosse yet they will allow of none but such as are made to their minde not of such as may bee instrumentall to frame them according to Gods minde Prophesie yee not say they to them that prophesie or Prophesie yee not let these prophesie 3. Howsoever the Lord will have his truth published so song as hee seeth fitting or hath use for it oppose who will and so the words may be read that when the wicked said Prophesie not the Lord answered They shall prophesie yet when men become so desperately wicked as not only not to care for the Word but studie to affront and injure the Carriers of it it is righteous with God to deprive them of it for a judgment to them and the good of his wronged servants They shall not prophesie to them that they shall not take shame See Ezek. 3.26 4 Albeit wicked men think all sure enough if they were freed from that eye-sore of a reproving and threatning Word and Ministry yet that would put them never a whit the further from judgments for sin for so much doth that other reading hold forth If they shall not prophesie shall they take no shame as if he said will that exempt them from judgments that upon their contempt the Word is removed No verily but as it is a judgment in it self so it is a presage of more following Ver. 7. O thou that art named the house of Jacob is the Spirit of the LORD straitned are these his doings Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly Unto this accusation and th●eatning the Lord subjoyns a sad expostulation with this people now so far degenerated as thus to contemn and oppose his Messengers as if they might limit his Spirit to speak only what pleased them or as if his Spirit were straitned to do them good and preach comforts if they were fit for them that he must only threaten and poseth them if their wayes and doings were approved of God and such as called for comfortable doctrine and whether they could alledge that threatnings and judgments were his usual way of dealing with his people in which he delighted if he were not provoked thereunto by their sin and appeales to themselves if his words did not both speak and perform good things and would prove so to them if they were holy and consequently it was not he nor his Prophets but themselves that were to blame that the Word spake hard things unto them and that accordingly they were punished Doct. 1. It is a deplorable case and sadly to be lamented when men stand in opposition to the Word of God and the Carriers thereof so much doth this expostulation and these pressing interrogatories imply 2. Men may both think and do many things with great boldnesse which yet if they should seriously think upon they would be forced to condemn and finde a witness against in their own bosomes for these questions put to their consciences imply that God had a witness for him there and they durst not say nor do as they did if their consciences were put to it as in his sight 3. Many have and study to keep up a name which they are ill worthy of and no way answerable to it O thou that are named the house of Jacob saith he but no way like that which Jacob was and should be See John 8.40 Hos 12.3 4. God can discover betwixt shewes and substance and will see a fault in such as glory in faire titles for he calls them as they are Thou art named the house of Jacob and hast but a name 5. It is an evidence that a visible Church is degenerated whatever shew they have when they turn opposers of the Word of the Lord in the mouth of his servants and of his servants for their message cause it being the true glory of the Church to have messengers carrying Gods mind unto them and to entertain the message and messengers as becometh for it is upon this account they get this title Thou art named c. 6. Such as oppose and fight against the Word of God and his Messengers do in effect fight against the Spirit of the Lord whose Word it is for these opposers are challenged as straitning the Spirit of the Lord. 7. It is an high presumption and injury done to the Spirit to think to imprison and deny him liberty in the mouth of his servants to speak any thing but what men please for Is the spirit of the Lird straitned imports that it was not seemly they should limit him in giving Commission to his servants 8. The Lord hath a store-house of spirit to bring forth comforts and of power to produce mercies if his people were fit for them for Is the spirit of the Lord straitned imports also that it was not for want of fulnesse in his Spirit to publish or performe good things that the Prophets got only commission to threaten see Isa 50.2 9. When the Lord sends forth sad threatnings in the mouths of his servants it becomes a people seriously to examine their wayes to see them disapproved of God and deserving such entertainment therefore he leads them from quarrelling with the Spirit of God or his servants seriously to consider Are these his doings that is whether their own wayes are agreeable to the law or such as the Spirit of God works in his people 10. The Lords ordinary way of dealing with his people in which hee delights is mercie for Are these his doings imports also that however hee did now threaten and deal harshly with them yet they might be abundantly convinced that it was not his usuall way so to doe nor a course in which he took pleasure if their case did not call for it See Mic. 7.18 Lam. 3.33 11. That which God looks to and requires in his people is not so much their profession speaking as their walking and carriage and that they study a constant course of uprightnesse and sincerity although they cannot attain to perfection for it is required that they walk uprightly 12. As the upright walker will need the Word much for direction and encouragement so to such the Word speaks onely good however they may reade and apply it wrong sometimes by reason of their distempers and fears and may mistake when the Word speaks against their corruptions which is without prejudice to their sincerity and when the Word speaks hard things whereby their further good is
See John 8.56 Luke 10.23 24. 4. As no vicissitude of dispensations hath buried in oblivion that Covenant made with Jacob and his seed so the Catholick Church of Believers of all Nations have right to the spiritual promises made to Jacob and his seed for these to whom the promises are made are called Jacob and Israel to shew unto the seed of Israel that he would assemble them being mindful of his Covenant and to confirm all his Elect that by believing in Christ they are made his Israel and heirs to Israels promises 5. Christ the great shepherd will want none of his chosen ones howsoever scattered dispersed and far from him but will have them all gathered and brought in to the fold of his Church I wil surely assemble Jacob all of thee I will surely gather the remnant of Israel saith the Lord to scattered Israel and to his scattered Elect through the world See John 10.16 6. Christ having gathered his people as in one flock will do the duty of a faithful shepherd in feeding and securing of them from dangers I will put them together as the sheep of Bozrah a place in Edom or Moab where there were many flocks and good pasture 1 Chron. 1.43 44. Jer. 48.24 and 2 Kings 3.4 as the flock in the midst of their fold 7. The Lord who of remnants can make multitudes will in his own time blesse his Church with increase and multiplication of Converts and hereby will make up the loss of their scatterings and sufferings The remnant shal make a noise by reason of the multitude of men See Isai 49.20 21. 8. Howsoever there may be many difficulties in the wayes of God which his people are to follow yet a people waiting upon him shall find impediments removed to their hand and that they have nothing to do but go on till they dip their feet in Jordans brink and he will make it dry for the breaker is come up before them they have broken up and have passed through the gate and are gone out by it The speech alludes to the custome of armies who usually send some before to prepare the way and break through stait passages that the army may march without trouble Passes being opened in all places See Isai 57.14 and 62.10 9. Christs Church doth not want a King to go out and in before her to protect defend and guide her in her way and as a General to fight her battels for Their King shal pass before them and the Lord in the head of them 10. There is none to be acknowledged as having kingly power in or over the Church as she is a Church but he who it the Lord JEHOVAH for their King passing before them is JEHOVAH in the head of them that is their General in the forefront of them as the word is translated 2 Chr. 20.27 See Hos 1.11 Is 52.12 CHAP. III. THe Prophet having hitherto faithfully discovered the sins of the body of this people and denounced Gods judgments because of sin he comes more particularly to tax the Rulers both in Church and State especially in Judah and to threaten them for their sins and this he doth 1. Severally in relation to their own particular punishments The Princes for that they ought to know right and wrong and walk accordingly and yet were most perverse and inhumane in oppression v. 1 2 3. are threatned that in their strait they shall not be owned of God ver 4. The false Prophets who deluded the people and preached so as might be most subservient to their base ends ver 5. are threatned with such confusion as should make them ashamed of their trade ver 6 7. whereas he a faithful man should bear out in his duty ver 8. 2 He deals with them conjunctly in relation to the judgement which they by their sin procured to come on the Church of God whereas the Rulers perverted Justice ver 9. and built the holy City with goods taken by oppression ver 10. and generally both Rulers and Teachers were corrupted with bribes and love to gain and yet would presumptuously rely on God ver 11. therefore he threatens that for their sake Sion should be laid desolate v. 12. Ver. 1. ANd I said Hear I pray you O heads of Jacob and ye princes of the house of Israel is it not for you to know judgement HEre he challengeth the Rulers in peace and War for affected ignorance of the Law of God and layeth a ground for aggreaging their wickedness in that it concerned them to be better acquainted with the Will of God in the matter of Justice and equity then others and so ought to be exemplary in their knowledg and obedience knowledge including consequent affection and practice whereas they in their practise proved themselves ignorant or despisers of the Law Wee need not curiously enqure whether by Jacob the Kingdome of Judah be understood as by Israel the ten tribes seeing the latter part at least of the threatnings in this Chapter is especially directed against Judah Ier. 26.18 but by these names we are generally to understand that people which were come of Iudah otherwise called Israel Doct. 1. When a land in general is culpable of defection rulers in Church and State have their owne eminent guilt in it This is imported in the Prophets scope while as having reproved the whole body of the people he now comes to challenge the rulers in an especial manner Hear O heads of Iacob 2. Faithful Ministers ought not only to inveigh against sinne in general or of the commonalty only but in particular ought to reprehend the sins of every ranke even of Rulers for so doth Micah's practice teach 3. Men in greatest eminency are bound to heare God speaking by his messengers and to receive what messages are sent unto them as being under the law as well as others Heare O beads of Iacob and ye Princes of the house of Israel 4. As Rulers especially are unwilling to be brought to an account for their wayes by the Ministry of the Word so Ministers are bound to omit no point of discretion and tender insinuation which may consist with their fidelity and zeale against sin and which may be instrumental to make the word take and not to be stumbled at for so doth Micab's way of intreaty teach Hear I pray you which imports both the Rulers aversenesse to heare and his tender condescendence that they may heare 5. Whatever may be the success of a faithful Minister in the discharge of his duty yet his faithfulnesse and diligence will be matter of peace to him when the conscience reflecteth upon it as here Micah gives a comfortable account of his pains I said Hear c. 6. Beside the general obligation lying upon all men especially within the visible Church to know and obey the will of God it is especially incumbent to rulers and great ones among the Lords people so to do as being by reason of their education means encouragements
instrument of true good to others who yet is not regenerate himself 3. As Ministers need not only furniture of matter but such life and zeale in publishing the Word as becomes the Oracles of God so where the Spirit of the Lord is the furnisher there will be efficacie life and zeale accompanying the doctrine for I am full of power by the Spirit of the Lord saith he 4. A faithfull Minister ought also to be endowed not onely with sufficient knowledge to speake according to the Word and not falsifie the minde of God through ignorance and with prudence to speak it seasonably but with fidelity and streigtnesse in telling the minde of God according to equity and truth without partiality or regard to one or other for so much doth the word judgement import 5. Ministers also stand in need of fortitude and courage to speake out boldly what is the minde of God and constantly adhere to it without feare of any or being blown over with the winde of flattery and this a faithfull Minister must and ought to expect from God onely I am ful of might by the Spirit of the LORD 6. A faithfull Minister lookes on all his endowments as not given to be layd up and contract rest beside him or for himselfe onely but that hee ought to improve them for God and his people in his place and station I am full saith he to declare unto Iacob c. and empty out that goodnesse for their good and behoofe 7. It is an evidence of a faithfull and able Minister to be much in opposition to sin and freely to charge it home and declare transgression and sin to the sinner and not be deceived or blinded with fair titles or shews but to discern and reprove sin even in Iudah and Israel Ver. 9. Hear this I pray you ye heads of the house of Jacob and Princes of the house of Israel that abhor judgement and pervert all equity 10. They build up Zion with blood and Jerusalem with iniquity 11. The heads thereof judge for reward and the Priests thereof teach for hire and the Prophets thereof divine for money yet will they leane upon the LORD and say Is not the LORD among us none evill can come upon us In the second part of the Chapter Micah gives a proofe of what he hath said of his owne fidelity in speaking to all sorts of rulers Civil and Ecclesiastick Ordinary and Extraordinary conjunctly seetting before them their sinne and how they procured Zions ruine he accuseth the Rulers in State that they who ought to have beene patrons of Justice did abhorre and pervert it ver 9. that in stead of adorning the holy city with justice and judgement their care was set upon stately buildings and they gathered means for that end by cruel oppression ver 10. And generally he accuseth all of them that justice was perverted through briberie and covetuousnesse and that their Church-men were mercenary and made their calling of ordinary teaching and extraordinary divining subservient to their gain and yet all of them were carnally confident and presumptuous of Gods favour and presence among them and of exemptions from judgments ver 11. Doct. 1. Persons in eminency especially being accustomed to sinne are usually deafe to what the Lord saith and therefore must be often called to heare as here they are after that former call vers 1. 2. The messengers of the Lord must not give over when their message is not received but must cry till either they get audience or have delivered their soules for Micah repeats Heare I pray you 3. It is the duty of faithful Ministers in reproving the faults of Rulers to give evidence they doe not condemne their Authority when they reprove their faults and not to be wanting in any respective carriage which is due unto them therefore doth Micah give them their titles and againe intreat Heare I pray you yee heads of the house of Jacob and Princes of the house of Israel Where the Princes of Judah to whom this was spoken Jer. 26.18 are called Rulers in Jacob and Israel not only because the house of David had still a right to governe all Israel and therefore such a title seemeth to be given to Jehoshaphat 2 Chro● 2.2 or because their carriage was more like Israel then Judah and therefore it is given to Ahaz 2 Chron. 28.12 Gr. because there was no more left of all Jacobs race after the Captivity of the ten tribes which was in Hezekiah's dayes but only Judah to governe but because they were Rulers of a people that came of the stock of Jacob otherwise called Israel 4. The Lords quarrel against men is not so much for sinnes of ignorance and infirmity as for such as flowe from a perverse disposition going wrong because they love to doe so and do hate what is right therefore are they againe challenged that they abhorre judgment and so pervert all equity 5. The Lord will admit of no faire precences to palliate any sinful deed for it is no excuse that they build Zion if it be done by blood and iniquity or with goods taken by bloody oppression from the poor but on the contrary as it is incident to all pretences that they prove snow-water and defile that the more which they endeavour to cleanse so it is the matter of a sadder quarrel that they should build the holy City by such meanes They build up Zion with blood and Jerusalem with iniquity 6. Those are unsurely built houses and estates at the way of raising whereof and gathering means for that end God is angry for it is a quarrel against them and the house which they build with blood and iniquity See Hab. 2.12 7. Howsoever the Lord allow lawful maintenance to such as are publickly employed in Church and State yet to receive hire or gifts so as to judge partially because of the gifts received is grosse iniquity for it is a quarrel here The heads thereof judg for reward c. See Exod. 18.21 8. When bribes are received by men in office either in Church or State it is an evidence they will not do their duty faithfully and in singlenesse for judging for reward teaching for hire and divining for money is all one with false judgment and erroneous teaching and divination for true is he who said A gift blindeth the wise c. Exod. 23.8 9. Presumption will feed up men with delusion under very grosse sins and when a stroak is near for Yet will they lean on the Lord c. 10. External priviledges of the Church and external reformation of Worship are ordinarily turned by secure sinners into a snare or plague to themselves making them dream of Gods favour and of peace when wrath is upon them and trouble at hand Such a snare was Gods presence in his Temple and Hezekiah's reformation to these profane rulers Is not the Lord among us c. 11. External priviledges will not exempt prophane sinners from deserved judgement nor
plead Gods quarrel most thoroughly Therefore he leaves this challenge at the dore of their own conscience as that which in due time would speak out an answer to that question shall I count them pure 8. It is a great signe of wickednesse in any person to imploy the power God hath given them above others to wicked ends for the rich men thereof that is of the City ver 9. or of the land are full of violence Because they are rich therefore they are violent and beare it out 9. Violent oppression and deceitfull circumvention are equivalent sins in Gods estimation as tending both to one end to gather riches with wronging of others and flowing from the same fountain being onely fitted for diverse times and according to the diverse conditions of the wicked for if they be powerfull they are violent and if not they supply that defect by deceit Therefore is it joyned with the other the inhabitants thereof or all ranks almost of the land have spaken lies and their tongue is deceitfull in their mouths that is as oft as they speak they bring out fraud and deceit Ver. 13. Therefore also will I make thee sick in smiting thee in making thee desolate because of thy sins Lest by sparing these hypocrites they might think he was such a one as themselves therefore he gives out sentence and threatens them explaining what the rod was whereof he gave them warning He threatens that by striking and making them desolate he will make them sick that is not so much send bodily sicknesse which is a particular judgement of it selfe Lev. 26.16 with their desolation as generally that as they by oppression made others faint so he would crush them by judgements and make them as weak as a sick man Doct. 1. Sin will lay a land desolate and leave a people helplesse and friendlesse and without comfort against crosses so much do the words hold forth 2. Sin is most of all to be looked unto in our desolations and afflictions as having a greater hand therein then the power of enemies Therefore doth he mention onely sin as the cause of desolation because of thy sins 3. Judgements for sinne will not onely affect the afflicted man but be ready to make him faint and succumb for saith he I will make thee sick in smiting thee They whose hearts are effeminate with love to sin Ezek. 16.30 will prove feeble in bearing the punishment of sin Ezek. 22.14 Ver. 14. Thou shalt eat but not be satisfied and thy casting down shall be in the midst of thee and thou shale take hold but shalt not deliver and that which thou deliverest will I give up to the sword 15. Thou shalt sowe but thou shalt not reap thou shalt trend the olives but thou shalt not anoint thee with oile and sweet wine but shalt not drink wine Followeth a particular enumeration of these judgements whereby he would make them sick and desolate The first stroak is famine flowing not from scarcity of provision but from the Lords withdrawing of a Blessing Lev 26.26 Hos 4.10 Whence learn 1. Threatenings giving out of old against sin stand in force against the same sins in all generations for the threatenings of the Law of Moses are declared to be in force in Michas dayes 2. God hath so immediate an hand in feeding men by the creatures that when he withdraweth his blessing the creatures though given in never so great abundance will not feed for thou shalt eat and not be satisfied 3. It is just with God to let such as provoke him in gathering together outward things know how far they wrong themselves while they do it on the creature forgetting the Creator Therefore against such as provoked him by gathering of wealth he threatens that all of it should not so much as keep them from starving The second stroak is their casting down to be in the midst of them that is they shall be exhausted in their own land and with intestine evils although they were secure of forreign enemies or of captivity by them Teaching that as instine troubles are a fore judgement and sharp punishment for sin so the Lord can reach a person or people in the midst of all their contentments and can abase them as low by his secret curse as by any outward enemy thy casting down shall be in the midst of thee The third stroak is that there shall be no possibility of exemption from his plagues when they shall essay all meanes to preserve what is precious to them as wives children treasures c it shall be to no purpose for what escapes at one time shall be cut off at another Whence learn 1. Humane endeavours will not exempt men from divine judgements pursuing them for sin thou shalt take hold to wit that thou mayest hold fast or pull out of danger but shalt not deliver 2. When wicked and impenitent sinners are preserved from one stroak it is onely that they may be reserved for a greater for what thou deliverest will I give up to the sword The fourth stroak threatened is their being deprived of laboured-for comforts the land being given as a prey to their enemies who should devour their provision as they had bereft others of the fruit of their labours so should the enemy or other instruments of Gods wrath deal with them they should not reap much lesse eat of what they had sowed they should not as in times of joy anoint themselves with the oile they had trodden out nor drink of their own wine See the like threatenings Deut. 28.38 39 40. Amos. 5.11 Zeph. 11 13. and the contrary promises Isay 62.8 9. Amos 9.13 14. Doct. 1. Sin provoketh the Lord however he be long-suffering and slow to execute to make mans endeavours for his own subsistence to be vaine whereof he will give proof when the cup of iniquity is full Thou shalt sowe but thou shalt not reap c. 2. The Lord doth so in deep wisdome contrive the way of his judgements as they may give the sorest dash to the wicked and may repay their sin Therefore as they by oppression and deceit reaped where they sowed not so now he will make them sowe and not reap yea he lets them sowe and tread the olives and sweet wine that having employed their paines and being filled with expectation their disappointment may be the greater Vers 16. For the statutes of Omri are kept and all the works of the house of Ahab and ye walk in their counsels that I should make thee a desolation and the inhabitants thereof an hissing therefore ye shall beare the reproach of my people Here we have another cause of Gods rod and a further accusation for their idolatry which being set up by Omri and Ahab his son who beside the golden calves worshipped Baal 1 Kings 16.25 30 31 32. was followed by the people of Israel and by Judah also by reason of the affinity that was betwixt the two Kings at that time 2
the rich man conspire to perfect what they have agreed upon Doct. 1. Great men are ordinarily first and most eminent in publick and general defections therefore they are here first spoken to 2. The Lord especially marketh and abhorreth mens eager disposition to do evil whereas he is tender toward such as through tentation and infirmity do slip for saith he that they may do evil with both hands earnestly the Prince asketh c. 3. Albeit it be a sin in Judges to receive bribes never so privately yet it doth much aggravate the sin if it be publickly avowed the Prince asketh and the Judge asketh for a reward 4. Sins are most dangerous when they appear vailed under the name of vertue or committed under the specious pretence of equity for so was it in this time of defection Bribery went under the name of reward or retribution for their service and favour shewed 5. It is a great iniquity when men in authority do not bear down wicked great men but they have encouragement to do wrong and may get their will accomplished with Judges by reason of their greatnesse and wealth for so is complained of in this time of defection the great man he uttereth his mischievous device he dares utter it to the Judge for concurrence and gets it put in execution on the poor 6. It is an usual sin also in declining times for great men so to play to others hands as to strengthen themselves and one another in evil courses for so was it in this time so they wrap or twist it up a similitude taken from cords twisted together to make them strong signifying the conspiracy of the Judge and great man that the one may get his bribe and the other may make his prey of the poor Vers 4. The best of them is as a briar the most upright is sharper then a thorn-bedge the day of thy watchmen and thy visitation cometh now shall be their perplexity A second instance of this defection is in the persons of such especially great ones as seemed to be better then others the best and most streight of which were both hurtful and catching as thornes are unto this he subjoynes a threatening shewing that it portended the near approaching of the judgements foretold by the Prophets wherein as they had formerly intangled others with their thorny griping covetousnesse and strengthened themselves as twisted cords in their wicked wayes so now themselves should be so perplexed as they should not know whither to turn them Doct. 1. In times of defection there may be some ready to shelter themselves under this pretext that they are not so evil nor so unjust as others therefore a word must be directed in particular to the best and most upright to let them see the vanity of that pretext 2. No goodnesse or uprightnesse in men is sufficient to cover their declining after the sins of the time therefore doth the Prophet speak even against the best and most upright 3. Even men who seem to be well-affected and better then others are in hazard to be drawn away with the evils of the time for so were they in Micahs dayes with covetousnesse and oppression which were the sins of that time The best of them is as a briar c. 4. It is an evident symptome of a declining time when men become covetous oppressors catching and dangerous to meddle withal therefore are the decliners here observed to be briars and sharper then a thorne-hedge Covetousnesse is the ordinary evil into which backsliders fall and the ordinary forerunner of judgments for then the world becomes an idol and so is fitted for Gods stroak 5. However the Lord may bear long with the filthy their being filthy still providing the righteous be righteous still yet when those who have a shew of goodnesse are ●ither wicked under that mask or cast it off and run to the same excesse with others and when men who are none of the worst follow the sins of the time and so the disease becomes universal it is a signe of speedily approaching ruine for then the day of the watchmen cometh now 6. It addes much to the weight of a rod that the Lord hath forewarned sinners of their danger and yet they have not taken warning therefore is their affliction called the day of thy watchmen that is not so much a day of vengeance on their false Prophers and wicked Governours as the day which the true Prophets foretold them would come unlesse they repemed 7. The Lord in the dispensation of his Providence toward men hath an especial regard to his own Word carried by his servants that the truth and certainty thereof may be seene therefore also is their stroak called the day of thy watchmen that they might take notice that what his servants spake was certain 3. Gods Ministers ought carefully to study the condition of his people and labour to stand in Gods counsel that they may understand his minde concerning the Church and faithfully give warning thereof therefore are they called watchmen by a name borrowed from the practice of Centinels in armies or cities 9. Albeit men in their wicked wayes dream that they ought not to be accountable unto any yet the Lord will take inspection of their wayes and call them to an account for them thy visitation cometh 10. The Lord will so pursue guiltinesse with affliction as the guilty man shall be entangled and have no way to shift the rod and guiltinesse in a time of need will reduce men to such straits and perplexities such anxieties and pressures of minde that they shall not know whither to turn them therefore saith he now shall be their perplexity or intangling whereas to the righteous even in darknesse there ariseth light of clearnesse and comfort Ver. 5. Trust ye not in a friend put ye not confidence in a guide keep the doores of thy mouth from her that lieth in thy besome 6. For the son dishonoureth the father the daughter riseth up against her mother the daughter in law against her mother in law a mans enemies are the men of his own house A third instance of this defection in all ranks and conditions of men is held forth in the unfaithfulnesse and inhumanity that was among them insomuch that neither intimate friends whom men do in a sort intrust themselves to to be guided by them Psal 55.14 nor yet wives are to be trusted in yea those whom the strictest bonds of nature affinity or subjection would tie to be friendly do prove treacherous Doct. 1. Want of natural affection and mens turning monstrous in their dispositions and behaviour is the usual companion and lymptome of a declining time for saith he the son dishonoureth the father the daughter riseth up against her mother and so violate the bonds of nature the daughter in law against her mother in law and makes void the bonds of affinity a mans enemies are the men of his own house no bond of subjection will tie
which might seeme to stand in the way of it for whereas it might be objected How could she expect that God would be her light seeing she by sin had provoked him to anger and to cast her into these troubles and so was her party She answers that she submissively stooping and accepting in these troubles the punishment of her iniquity out of his hand did expect that in due time the Lord whom she had provoked to afflict her would plead her cause against her enemies who unjustly oppressed her and plague them and would restore her to her ancient glory and in publick view give her to enjoy the effects of his bounty and fidelity Doct. 1. The Lord may have fatherly indignation against his people for their sins and may testifie the same by inflicting of outward calamities and yet not reject their persons for this cause is the godlies trouble called here the indignation of the Lord though men were instruments See 2 Chron. 19.2 2. It is the duty of the godly when God is angry and chastiseth to be sensible of their sin procuring the same to stoop humbly under his afflicting hand and to bear it patiently and submissively accepting the punishment of their iniquity I will bar the indiguation of the Lord because I have sinned against him saith she 3. Sense of sin and of its great demerit will make men submissive and stoop patiently under the rod who otherwise would repine more for this is the re●son of her bearing the rod because I have sinned This is the cause wherefore men get so many rods dipped in their own guilt because they bear not cleanly reds patiently there being no crosse so humbling as a sinful crosse See Lam. 1.18 4. True patience and submission unto God in affliction ought to pre●sc●ibe no term-day unto it self but to refer all to his will I will bear until he plead 5. Such as humble themselves before God and patiently stoop under a procured affliction may expect that God will take their part against all the instruments having hand in the same trouble and clear their righteous cause in respect of those who sought only their own ends in afflicting them and their humility and patience ought to be seasoned with this hope He will plead my cause saith she who bears his indignation See Isa 47.6 Zech. 1 15. 6. The Lord will not only clear his peoples right against their oppressors by pronouncing sentence in their favour in his Word but will accordingly put his sentence to execution for so doth she expound his pleading He will execute judgement for me 7. The Lord having by affliction humbled his people for sin and exercised their patience and faith will restore unto them their wonted priviledges and as it were in publick view and make manifest that they are his therefore saith he He will bring me forth to the light that is not only comfort but publickly own and honour me and I shall behold or enjoy to my satisfaction his righteousness or the wonted effects of his fidelity in keeping Covenant notwithstanding this seeming interruption Vers 10. Then she that is mine enemie shall see it and shame shall cover her which said unto me Where is the LORD thy God mine eyes shall behold her now shall she be troden down as the mire of the streets This hope for deliverance is further commended from the effects thereof upon the Churches enemies to her satisfaction she is he●e directed to professe her hope that her enemies who mocked her faith should be confounded at the sight of her deliverance and be ignominiously cut off to her great joy and satisfaction Doct. 1. God seeth it fitting sometimes to make his peoples happinesse conspicuous to the world yea even to their enemies that it may make them a sore heart for then she that is mine enemie shall see it to wit her deliverance See Rev. 3.9 Psal 112.10 2. Fai●h in God and adhering to the true Religion hath been an old subject of derision to the Churches enemi●s when she was in trouble for they said unto me Where is the Lord thy God 3. Scorning of saith and piety whatever disadvantage seem to follow it shall resolve into the scorners shame and confusion by seeing God to do for his people according as they expected from him for mine enemie shall see it and shame shall cover her she shall be utterly confounded with it who said unto me Where is the Lord thy God 4. When the Lord hath tried his people then the cup is put to the head of the wicked and the enemies of the Church and mockers of her considence will be destroyed as contemptible things for now shall she be troden down as the mire of the streets 5. It will be a comfortable sight to the people of God to see Gods justice against their enemies and his good-wil toward them cleared and made manifest after long trials for saith she mine eyes behold her Otherwise to take pleasure in the calamity of others though enemies is not lawful Prov. 24.17 further then in that God is hereby glorified in the execution of his justice and clearing of his keeping Covenant with his peoples See Ps 58.10 11. Vers 11. In the day that thy walls are to be built in that day shall the decree be far removed 12. In that day also he shall come even to thee from Assyria and from the fortified cities and from the fortresse even to the river and from sea to sea and from mountain to mountain A second ground of encouragement and comfort is held forth in Gods promise to his Church confirming her formerly professed hope wherein he assures her of restitution and of deliverance from the yoke of strange authority and their cruel decrees whereby they had been scattered among the Gentiles oppressed by tyrants and the work of God obstructed amongst them as when the building of the Temple was discharged Ezra 4.5 6 21 22 23 24. And he assures them further of the enlargement of the Church of Israel not only by their returne from all the parts where they had been scattered and detained Isa 27.12 13. but by the Conversion of many Nations who should joyne themselves to the Church from Assyria and from Egypt and from all the quarters of the world This decree may also without wronging of the text be safely understood of the Doctrine of the Gospel called a decree Psal 2.7 which after the restauration of the Jewes should be sent through the world for promoting of this promised enlargement whereby both Jewes and Gentiles should be gathered to the Church as by the decree of Cyrus the Jewes were set at liberty to return to their countrey from all quarters where they were scattered Doct. 1. The Church endeavouring to comfort her self with hope in God in her troubles will abundantly be confirmed therein by God for after her professed hope v. 8 9 10. the Lord confirmes her here by a promise See Psal 27.14 2. The Church may procure
to the present purpose and in opposition to this his goodnesse his severity against the Assyrians is held forth comprehending the sum of all the threatening that the City or Empire shall be so suddenly and violently overthrown as if a deluge had swept it away and in that any who escape that storm shall be pursued and cut off with judgements Doct. 1. The people of God ought to learn to esteem highly of their safety in him by considering the wofull case of such as are without him therefore is this calamity set in opposition to their safety that they may stand as it were upon the bridge of this deluge and seeing the wicked perish may rejoyce in him who is become their salvation The Lord is good c. But with an over-running flood he will make an utter end c. 2. The judgements of an angry God are as irresistible and make as great havock of persons or places as if an inundation or deluge brake in upon a land so doth this similitude import with an over running flood he will make an utter end of the place thereof to wit of Nineveh or the Assyrian Empire it should be so destroyed and swept away as the place where the city stood should bear no monument thereof no● should there be any face of the Empire This form of speech doth frequently point out totall extirpation Psal 37.10 Dan. 2.35 Rev. 12.8 3. There is no possibility for man to shun the righteous judgements of the Lord nor can exemption in horridest calamities secure a sinner from other plagues for though they escape the deluge or think to flee yet darknesse shall pursue his enemies 4. The portion of Gods enemies is to be cut off and sent out of the world in affliction ignominy and terrour and afterward to be sent to the pit for so much doth darknesse import See Job 10.21 22. Jer. 13.16 Matth. 8.12 darknesse shall pursue his enemies and where he pursues he will overtake Ver. 9. What do ye imagine against the LORD he will make an utter end affliction shall not rise up the second time This sentence is confirmed in that their enterprises against the Church would be so far from taking effect and their projects to uphold themselves and their Monarchy stand in so little stead that he should totally ruine and cut them off so that there should be nothing left for a second stroak to hit upon Doct. 1. It is a presumptuous and vain course for men to plot and enterprise evil against the Church of God considering that this is to oppose themselves against God and to draw speedy destruction upon themselves from him which will marre their project for what do ye imagine against the Lord he will make an utter end saith he to the Assyrians plotting the Churches destruction 2. All humane endeavours to keep off judgements will prove vain when God is a party and about to punish for sin for so much also are we to understand in this place by imagining against the Lord which he contemnes and judges as foolish thoughts to think to be delivered thereby What do ye imagine against the Lord See Prov. 21.30 2. However the Lord spare wicked States when his own Church is often troubled yet when their cup is full he will once for all pay them home with totall ruine for he will make an utter end affliction shall not rise up the second time Ver. 10. For while they be folded together as thorns and while they are drunken together as drunkards they shall be devoured as stubble fully dry A further confirmation of this sentence and of the certainty and compleatnesse of their calamity is held forth in a threefold similitude 1. Of thornes folded togethar which while one cannot separate he casts into the fire and so all do easily burn 2. Of drunken men who are easily overcome and slain 3. Of stubble fully dry which easily takes fire whereby also they are taught the vanity of all they had to oppose against Gods stroak for whereas they confided in their numbers union and terriblenesse as thornes folded together and pricking on all hands may signifie they should indeed prove a fit bundle for the fire and be perplexed in their own counsells that they may run on destruction and whereas they confided in their pleasures they should be infatuated thereby and prove as drunken men ready to hurt themselves and fit to be slain by others and their sun-shine of prosperity should but dry them as fuell for the fire Doct. 1. God can make use of such things as men conceive to be their advantages for to procure their ruine and blast all of them for so do these similitudes before explained teach us God can turn their confided in union and terriblenesse into perplexity and totall destruction as thornes folded together are fit to be cast into the fire 2. Abused pleasures and prosperity do ripen the abusers and fit them for judgement while as their hearts being effeminate therewith cannot in Gods just judgement upon them stand out against any blast of trouble and withall trouble comes from God unexpectedly upon such while they are taken up with the noise of their delights for while they are drunken as drunkards who have not their wits about them they shall be devoured 3. There is as little ability in sinfull man to stand out against the just vengeance of God as in drie stubble to resist the fire that it should not kindle in it and burn it for though they be both folded together and drunken with pleasure yet that shall not so much as make them endure trouble as thornes do the fire but yet more they shall be devoured as stubble fully dry Ver. 11. There is one come out of thee that imagineth evil against the LORD a wicked counsellour Followeth the Lords controversie and cause of this calamity which was the injuries done by Sennacherib not excluding others of their Kings before who purposed and plotted the ruine of the Church and by his servant Rabshakeh uttered blasphemy against God and counselled his people to quit their confidence and yeeld to him See 2. King 18. 2 Chron. 32. Isay 36 This verse makes it clear that the threatenings in this chapter are not chiefly directed against Senacherib and his army though it may sometimes be hinted at as a presage of great ruine but against the Assyrian Empire for Sennacherib is one come out of thee that is out of Assyria or Nineveh who are here threatened Doct. 1. Injuries done unto Gods people do bring most speedy and total ruine upon any State for such was the quarrel here imagining evil against the Lord. 2. Wicked governours and rulers do draw on speedy calamities on such as they rule over and lead in wrong courses for Assyria and Nineveh are to be cut off because there is one come out of thee c. 3. When the Lords people are wronged he will still appear in the quarrel and resent the injury as done
to himself his people being under his protection and the design tending to deprive him of a people and of a throne in the Church therefore all their enterprises are expounded to be imagining evil against the Lord. Se● Zech. 2.8 4. The Lord doth observe and will severely punish the wicked projects and machinations of enemies whatever effect he in his providence permit them to have for it is laid to their charge that there is one come out of thee that imagineth evil against the Lord a wicked counsellour albeit he get no leave to execute all his purpose See Psal 21.11 5. It is a wicked imagination in men that leads them to blaspheme God in denying his power and providence and mocking of his peoples confidence in him or to think that this is the way to prosper and it is a wicked counsel to perswade Gods people to renounce their confidence and renounce the way of his worship that it may be well with them the authors of all which God will not suffer to go unpunished for thus also did Sennacherib and Rabshakeh imagine evil against the Lord and prove a wicked counsellour as the sacred History relates and for this is Assyria threatened 6. It is the character of one indeed desperate and a never-do-well who dares enter the lists in opposition to God by plotting against his glory and people for he is a wicked counsellour or a counsellour of Belial that is not only one who having cast off all yokes and awe of God hath fallen upon such devillish plots but one who will never do well as the word signifies Ver. 12. Thus saith the LORD Though they be quiet and likewise many yet thus shall they be cut down when he shall passe thorough though I have afflicted thee I will afflict thee no more Ver. 13. For now will I break his yoke from off thee and will burst thy bonds in sunder Upon the back of this challenge they are again threatened with destruction notwithstanding of their quiet and secure condition or of their confidence in their great multitudes and this sentence is further amplified from Gods end in it which is to comfort his Church in Judah that had been afflicted by the Assyrians to whom he promiseth that she should no more be smitten with that rod but that by the destruction of Assyria she should be delivered from that slavery and bondage under which she had been held by them Doct. 1. As prosperity makes a people usually fat and rank so doth their waxing grosse call for stroaks for they being quiet became likewise many and therefore shall be cut down or shorne while the Prophet saith Thus shall they be cut down or shorne he either hath in delivering this message used some gesture representing the way of cutting down or mowing or he alludeth to the signification of the word cutting down which is used of cutting down rank grasse wool or haire by sharpened instruments so signifying the cutting short their flourishing and luxuriant condition or the word translated thus may be rendered likewise as it is immediately before and so it imports that as they had tasted of peace and likewise of multiplication so should they also finde cutting down or it may be rendered certainly as it is frequently used in Scripture 2. Nothing the creature can enjoy is able to hold off Gods stroak nor needs he any time to ruine his enemies but can do it with one sudden stroak for though they be quiet free of trouble and secure in their fortifications yet shall they be cut down and that when he shall passe through or with a sudden stroak alluding to the stroak on Sennacheribs Army 3. This repetition of the sentence teacheth how hard a thing it is to get threatened judgments believed in a prosperous condition therefore the Lord doth again undertake it whatever they had to oppose And teacheth that it is useful for the Church to look on injuries done to her as a sufficient quarrel to bring judgements on her persecutors for therefore after that challenge v. 11. the sentence is again repeated 4. The Lord would have his Church observing the kindnesse shewed to her and the benefits that redound to her by his judgements on the world therefore doth he direct the speech to her that she may observe it Though I have afflicted thee c. 5. The Lord takes with the stile of being the afflicter of his people whoever be the instruments and would be seen of them to be so therefore saith he I have afflicted thee See Isa 10.5 6. Albeit the Church of God will never get an end put to her afflictions until eternity come when God shall wipe away all tears from her eyes yet ought she to acknowledge the Lords great mercy in cutting off her present enemies and giving a breathing time for so must this promise I will afflict thee no more be understood in this place with relation to the present enemy that the Church should be free of their trouble and enjoy a little rest 7. The Lords former sharp dealing ought to be no obstacle to our faith in expecting of good things for he can easily when he will change his dealing Though I have afflicted thee saith he I will afflict thee no more 8. As the Lord seeth it fitting at some times to humble his Church by bringing her into bondage so he easily can and in due time will set her at freedome therefore saith he Now will I break his yoke from off thee and will burst thy bond in sunder Vers 14. And the LORD hath given a commandment concerning thee that no more of thy name be sowen out of the house of thy gods will I cut off the graven image and the molten image I will make thy grave for thou art vile Albeit it be true that Sennacheribs glory was stained by that discomfiture received in Judah Is 37.36 and he was shortly after killed in the house of his gods Is 37.38 whereby that temple was polluted from being the habitation of their idols where the King was slain and belike buried yet this cannot exhaust this full threatening seeing his son reigned in his stead Isa 37.38 and so his name was yet sowen and therefore the threatening is to be looked on as reaching the whole Empire of Assyria the final and irreparable ruine whereof is yet divers ways pointed out 1. By having no more of their name sowen whereby we are given to understand that their very memory should be quite cut off and the dreadful report which went of them among other Nations quite forgotten and so their cutting down v. 12. should differ from the condition of grasse or other things which grow up again after they are cut down and of corn which is yearly sowen after cutting down 2. By destroying of their idol● and supposed sacred things which is another signe of total ruine of an idolatrous land continuing so still when the stroak reacheth even to these 3. By burying of them
and destitute of counsel as men in a slumber and that they should not prove active for defence of the countrey and city but dwell or lie still as the Original hath it in their strong holds as if they were sick so Jer. 51.30 and that by this means even the King to whom the speech is directed should be undone and the people be exposed to al hazards as sheep scattered upon the mountains without a shepherd Doct. 1. The greatnesse of men however it be often too much confided in can contribute nothing for standing out against his judgments who is higher then the highest for this also is declared here to be a vain confidence and therefore ought not to weaken the Churches faith in expecting vengeance on the wicked 2. Men do debase their own greatness when by reason therof they take liberty to drown themselves in sensual delights and to give themselves to effeminate idlenesse for such were these crowned as the locusts and captains as the great grashoppers 3. It is incident even to great men whatever they pretend of generosity to make themselves and their own commodity the scope and drift of all their actions and so to walk as may lead to that end for saith he thy crowned as well as merchants ver 16. are as the locusts and thy captains as the great grashoppers which camp in the hedges in the cold day but when the Sun ariseth they flee away and their peace is not known where they are 4. It is an iniquity and great baseness and a plague on rulers to be stupid sluggish selfish and careful only of their own defence and safety when publick hazards are imminent or incumbent Such was their judgment here Thy shepherds slumber thy Nobles dwell or lie still 5. Such as have most eminently abused days of prosperity shal be made to feel most of adversity were they never so great therefore is this threatening directed to the King as he who should feel it most Thy shepherds slumber O King of Assyria c. 6. Evil rulers are sent of the Lord as a plague and presage of ruine to come upon a sinful people for when shepherds slumber then people are scattered upon the mountains and no man gathereth them See Isa 3.4 5 and 19.13 14. Vers 19. There is no healing of thy bruise thy wound is grievous all that hear the bruit of thee shall clap the hands over thee for upon whom hath not thy wickednesse passed continually The judgment is here summed up and declared that it shal be an irreparable stroak a wound not to be drawn together nor wrinkled as wounds do when they begin to heal and that as it should not be healed so it should be very painful and grievous and that there should be none to comfort them under all this but all ready as they should hear of it to clap their hands for joy and insult over them and that because of a long time they had been wicked oppressors of all round about them Doct. 1. As the Lords chastisements of his people end all in mercy so his last and final word to the wicked is wrath for this message closeth with denouncing of judgment without hope of recovery or comfort under it 2. It is matter of great comfort in trouble to have hope of a blessed issue in due time for so much may be gathered from Assyrias misery that stroaks are then only deplorable when there is no healing of thy bruise 3. It is also a great mercy in troubles to get an easie way of bearing them and breathing under them for to the wicked it is not so but their wounds are daily ripped up afresh thy wound is grievous or painful 4. It may make afflictions the more easie when the afflicted have any sympathizers to bemoan and condole with them in their troubles for it is yet more of Assyria's misery that all that hear the bruit of thee shall clap their hands 5. The world shall in due time be refreshed and comforted with seeing or hearing of the ruine of oppressors for they shall clap their hands over thee upon whom thy wickednesse hath passed 6. Cruelty and oppression shall be rewarded in its own coin by the cutting off of the authors thereof without piety or commiseration from any for so doth that re●son of the worlds insulting and joy import for upon whom hath not thy wickednesse passed continually Habakkuk The ARGUMENT IT cannot be certainly determined at what time this Prophet lived and exercised his function whether under Manasseh in whose reign iniquity was come to a great height or rather at the same time that Jeremiah began to prophesie yet certain it is that he lived towards the latter end of Gods patience with the Jews and before the last destruction by the Caldeans a part if not the whole whereof it seems was to be inflicted in their dayes to whom he treached as appeareth from chap. 1.5 The prophecie is held forth partly by way of doctrinal prediction chap. 1. and 2. and partly by way of meditation or prayer chap. 3. and may be summed up in a Dialogue betw●xt the Lord and his servant wherein the Prophet complaining of the iniquity of the times and being forewarned of the destruction and captivity of the Jewes by the Caldeans doth again plead with God about the prospering of such a wicked people as the Caldeans were chap. 1. and waiting for an answer he is commanded to stir up the godly to live by faith and take heed of Ap●stafie in the time of their captivity expecting the ruine of the Caldeans their oppressors chap. 2. In which answer the Prophet acquiesceth submitting unto the Lords will and praying and believing that God would preserve and at length deliver his work his Church and Elect chap. 3. all which exercises the Prophet publisheth and leaveth on record for terrifying the wicked and inviting them to repentance and for the encouragement of the godly under the sad calamities that were approaching CHAP. I. IN this Chapter after the Inscription ver 1. First the Prophet complains to God of the iniquity of the times and that no course was taken to correct or suppress the desperate wickedness of that people notwithstanding either his former complaints v. 2. or the vexation of his or the godlies soules by it v. 3. or the fearful abuse of Gods indulgence ver 4. 2. The Lord in answer to this complaint sheweth to the Church by the Prophet the admirable incredible and speedy judgements that were to come upon them ver 5. and that by the Caldeans whose dispositions furniture and actions together with the ill use they should make of their successe is held forth ver 6 7 8 9 10 11. 3. The Prophet receiving this establisheth himself in the faith of the preservation of the Church and the godly in the midst of this destruction ver 12. and expostulates with God concerning his holy Providence in permitting so wicked a people as the Caldeans to
prevaile against the Church though sinful v. 13. considering both their unjust and violent conquest v. 14 15. and their finful abuse of it ver 15 16. which therefore he thinks should not prosper ver 17. Vers 1. THe burden which Habakkuk the Prophet did see This verse holdeth forth the subject matter of this prophecie which is chiefly grievous threatenings first against the Jews and then against the Caldeans together with the Penman and divine authority of this Scripture that he not only was a Prophet by office but had this doctrine by vision and speciall illumination Doct. 1. In our making use of any portion of holy Scripture we ought to begin at the study of the divine authority thereof to the end we may labour to come to it with more reverence considence and with more of that spirit which endited it for therefore is it prefixed that the Penman of this Scripture was a Prophet and did see it in vision 2. The studie of the divine authority of Scripture may hide and take our mindes off looking to or stumbling at the weaknesse or meannesse of instruments carrying the same for the Spirit of God thinks it a needlesse work for those who take up this doctrine as a divine vision to enquire much about the Penman and therefore only expresseth his name and office Habakkuk the Prophet See 1 Cor. 15.11 3. The doctrine of divine vengeance against sin and sinners being rightly considered will be found sad and insupportable therefore albeit all divine doctrine may be called A burden as it is Prov. 30. 1. in the Original in regard of the weight it ought to have upon our spirits whether directions how to get them obeyed Rev. 2.24 25. or comforts how to walk answerably under them yet in the ordinary Scripture-phrase and by the Prophet here the name is applied to threatenings He calls this doctrine The burden as being sent from a God burdened with the wickednesse of sinners Isa 1.4 Amos 2.13 as being a grief and burden to the messengers to carry such tydings as being burdensome to the secure to hear their sinful wayes contradicted and reproved Jer. 23.33 as being sad to the penitent when they lay it to heart as portending sad ruine however men account them but winde Jer. 5.13 And finally it ought to be a burden that God who delights to speak in other termes to his Church should be provoked to write only bitter things 4. Albeit that vengeance on impenitent sinners being long forborne may seem incredible yet it is most certain and clear that it is coming therefore however that secure people blessed themselves yet the Prophet not only hears but seeth their burden as if it were present and albeit the extraordinary gift of prophesying be ceased yet every godly man may be as certain from the Word of judgements on impenitent sinners as if they saw them with their eyes Vers 2. O LORD how long shall I crie and thou wilt not heare even cry out unto thee of violence and thou wilt not save The Prophet in his own and the godlies name begins at an expostulation with God that the generality of the Jewes being so desperately wicked as he instanceth in several iniquities especially against the second Table yet the Lord in his patience did bear with them and took no course to vindicate his own glory or abate this deluge of sin one way or other This complaint he amplifieth and aggravateth from other considerations whereof the first is in this verse that he having taken so much pains on this people to no purpose but their injustice swelling up and breaking out in open violence had been forced of a long time to cry to God against them but neither was his prayer regarded nor the oppressed saved from violence which he thinks strange of We are not to understand this so as if the Prophet were quarrelling with God or cruel to this people toward whom he evidenceth so much tendernesse afterward but that having long dealt with that people and with God by prayer for some successe to his Ministery and finding iniquity to abound to the dishonour of God and oppression of the godly he not so much out of any hatred against them as out of zeal to Gods honour out of hatred of sin and pity toward the oppressed complains that there was no redresse of this and that neither by amending of them nor correcting of them the course of sin was stopped Doct. 1. As the duties of the second Table are a touchstone whereby to try the sincerity of those who professe true Religion and are within the visible Church so when Professors once declare their unsoundnesse that way they may readily come to a very great height in it for here they were come to the extremity of violence and combustions among themselves 2. The ready way to make mens endeavours in their calling especially such as are employed in dealing with soules effectual is to be much with God in prayer therefore the Prophet having spent much time in vain is put to cry to God about it that he would interpose Cries to God are our best weapons against sin 3. The iniquity of a visible Church may come to that height that such as would stand in the gap may be ready if not to cry against them yet to submit if God should send judgements for the Prophet is so put to it with their sin dishonouring God and oppressing the godly that he crieth that God would one way or other stop the course of their iniquity See Numb 16.15 4. Zeal for God and his honour and hatred against sin ought to oversway our respects to any creature whatsoever for from this principle it is that the Prophet cries to God against this people otherwise dear to him 5. The truly godly and especially such as are called to carry the Lords Name unto his people are to lay their reckoning not to have a smooth and easie life but to wrestle under much humbling toile and vexation for such was the Prophets lot here and the godlies in whose name he complains 6. So unsearchable are the Lords counsels as he may see fit to delay the answer of desires which are put up from much zeal to his glory and compassion toward the godly oppressed against sinful men and their courses for the Prophet here hath cried and that so long as he is like to quarrel and question God about it and yet the Lord did not hear nor save 7. The patience of God toward his sinful Church and People doth sarre surpasse the patience of the best of men for when the Prophet is wearie and like to fall into impatiencie at Gods long-suffering yet the Lord was not wearie to wait upon them Verse 3. Why doest thou shew me iniquity and cause me to behold grievance for spoiling and violence are before me and there are that raise up strife and contention A second amplification of this complaint which cleareth more the ground of his
Admirers of the hand of God against her both these are held forth in that Preface Behold ye among the Heathen and regard and wonder marvellously for I will work a work c. as hath been before explained 4. It is usual that when judgement cometh upon an impenitent people they attain not to any right use of it but are surprised with admiration and astonishment under it for so is fore prophesied even of the Jewes that they shall behold and regard and wonder marvellously at their own calamity and go no further 5. This stupid disposition as it flowes from former contempt of Gods Word which hath so stupified them as judgements cannot pierce so it will prove fruitlesse and doth portend the further ruine of such as continue in it so the Apostle citing this place Acts 13.41 makes clear that they are despisers who wonder as is also clear from v. 4. and that they wonder and perish or vanish that is as their admiration and astonishment usually vanisheth and cometh to nothing without any fruit so such a disposition portends ruine and such a stroak will undo a people they not being able to endure and bear out under both the stroak and fearful astonishment accompanying it 6. As the Lords judgements upon the Church may be far beyond the expectation of the Heathen and her very enemies Lam. 4.12 so it is just with God that those who doting on their priviledges do contemn the Word should meet with unexpected and incredible judgements for so saith he to these prophane Jews I will work a work which ye will not belive though it be told you 7. Divine indignation against sin is more terrible and will appear more sad when it is inflicted then secure sinners do ordinarily imagine so much also is intimated in that this work will be above belief Ye will not believe though it be told you See Psal 90.11 8. The contempt of the Gospel and the rejection of Christ offered unto lost man is the height of iniquity and draws on all the judgements that at any time have been threatened against any sin therefore the Apostle Acts 13.41 denounceth the same judgement here threatened for contempt of the law and sins against the second Table to come upon the Jews who opposed the Gospel and rejected the Messiah as being then fully accomplished when wrath came upon them to the uttermost for casting off of Christ Ver. 6. For lo I raise up the Caldeans that bitter and hasty Nation which shall march through the breadth of the land to possesse the dwelling places that are not theirs The Prophet subjoynes a particular description of this calamity in describing the instruments of it the Caldeans under Nebuchadnezzar their King whose disposition furniture and proceedings are so exactly set down as may confirme the truth of the prediction may set forth the justice of God in repaying the Jewes in their own coine may be terrible to the stout-hearted among them and may confirme the godlies hope of a deliverance from the way of the Caldeans their managing that work This description is contained in several particulars the first is that they are a Nation of a bitter cruel fierce and active temper who therefore to satisfie their ambitious covetousnesse should speedily and without fear over-spread the land of Judea not only to over-run it but to make a Conquest thereof for themselves Doct. 1. When God hath a controversie against a people he will not want instruments by whom he may prosecute it or he can fetch the Caldeans from afar who being already satiated with victories and conquests needed not otherwise much to have minded so remote a corner as Judah 2. Instruments of vengeance upon the Church would be looked upon as imployed by God and therefore the Churches eyes would be more on God then on them for Lo I raise up the Caldeans saith the Lord. 3. It is usual for the Lord to give up troublers and oppressors of the world to meddle also with his Church that it may hasten their ruine however the Church be sinfull therefore the Church is to be chastised by the Caldeans who were the hammer of the whole earth Jer. 50.23 that this might hasten the filling of their cup. 4. The Lord can make holy use even of the sins of creatures imployed for executing of his judgements for He raiseth up the Caldeans that bitter and hastie Nation and makes use of this their temper without any imputation to his holinesse 5. When the Lord armes any instruments with vengeance against a sinfull people they will not want dispositions and successe for attaining his end for if God raise up the Caldeans against the Church then they are not only bitter and fierce but a hastie or active Nation and will march through the breadth of the land without opposition or fear and will not only overcome but so carrie all before them as they may possesse the dwellings that are not theirs without molestation 6. The Lord in executing vengeance doth righteously proportion mens sins and his judgements and pay home transgressors in their own coine therefore the Jews who had been cruel meet now with bitter adversaries and they who had used spoiling and violence towards others v. 2. are now over-run and cast out of their own possessions The like also may be read in the following purpose 7. However men account it purchase good enough when they are able by power to overturne others and sit down in their room yet the Lord doth not so reckon but will put a difference betwixt mens power or possession and their right for albeit the Caldeans conquered Judah yet in the Lords account They possesse the dwelling places that are not theirs Verse 7. They are terrible and dreadfull their judgement and dignity shall proceed of themselves The Caldeans imployed in this work are yet further described that being armed with divine vengeance emboldened with former victories and exercising the same cruelly they should fill the land with terrour and dread of them which they should also tyrannically improve and be their own carvers in all matters of advantage and honour standing to no law either of Nature or Nations in their dealing with a terrified and subdued people but meerly following their own will armed with power Doct. 1. Divine indignation pursuing sinners will take away their heart and courage in a strait and make their enemies terrible to them for so are the Caldeans to the sinfull Jewes terrible and dreadfull 2. When a people do not stand in awe of God speaking from his Word to them he doth righteously send judgements upon them which will cause their hearts to faint for the Caldeans are terrible and dreadfull to these wicked Jews who sleighted the Law God Almighty speaking in it v. 4 3. It is a great height of impiety before the Lord when besides the unlawfullnesse of a war in general and many particular acts of injustice in the heat of hostility a Conquerour even in
their ends and neglect piety or to wait on God for counsel will prove shameful sinful men who lean to their own wits will finde that their most serious consultations will leave them in the mire Thou hast consulted shame to thy house saith the Lord. 5. It is a high degree of impiety and a clear presage of ruin when a man in managing his affairs casts off all his love to his neighbours and not onely mindes himself only but stands not upon the prejudice of others to rise upon their ruins or to cut them off though never so many and he but one if he think it may tend to his advantage for Thou hast consulted shame to thy house by cutting off many people 6. As men for the most part neglect their soules when they are mad upon their worldly designs so it is a dangerous c●se when it is so and it will prove a poor bargain in the end when men having gained never so much yet have sinned against their soul which the Lord here not only makes use of as a challenge but declares it as a judgement on the Chaldean 7. Sin and guilt will pursue and finde out the sinner and will of it self call for vengeance though all the world should be silent and not challenge him for the stone will cry out of the wall and the beam out of the timber shall answer it Ver. 12. Wo to him that buildeth a Town with bloud and establisheth a City by iniquity The third branch of the controversie points chiefly at the way of their prosecuting of their covetous and ambitious ends which was as one fin cometh not readily alone but dra weth other sins with it by oppression cutting off of people and other unjust wayes This course the Lord pronounceth to be accursed however they gilded it over with specious pretences of publick good or that thereby they endeavoured to perfect settle their civil State Doct. 1. The Lord looks much unto and tryes the dispositions of men much by the meanes they make use of in a course whether it be right or wrong in it self for the Lord chargeth upon them here that they carried on their work with blood and by iniquity 2. Pretence of publick good and zeal to advance the State and government is one of the fig tree-leaves where with men think to cover their oppression and make it plausible but all in vaine for Wo to him that buildeth a Towne with blood and establisheth a City by iniquity 3. Though all oppressions be not alike horrid in themselves and men readily do account themselves good enough when they go not the length they might or that others do in that fin yet the Lord will pursue the fairest way of oppression men can take with vengeance as being sinful in it self and sometime being more cruel in its lingring way then the most violent oppression in hot blood for Wo to him that establisheth a City by iniquity be what iniquity it will as well as to him that buildeth a Towne with blood Ver. 13. Behold is it not of the Lord of hosts that the people shall labour in the very fire and the people shall weary themselves for very vanity The Lord explaineth this Wo and denounceth that he should appear eminently against them in making all their endeavours to establish themselves wherein they employed many nations and had much toile as in a fiery furnace every head being made bald in their wars Ezek 29.18 to prove not only vain to no purpose but to tend also to their own prejudice as one whose work is cast into the fire loseth both his materials his labour and endangereth himself by following it to get it prosecuted or rescued so should they perish in their hunting after wealth and with it See the like threatning Jer. 51.58 Doctr. 1. Men taking sinful wayes to prosecute their designes may meet with much toile and vexation in their work as an earnest of further judgement for the people that is the Chaldeans and many instruments employed by them labour and weary themselves 2. The utmost of mens endeavours shall not promote or perfect a work which God is against nor uphold what he hath a minde to overthrow for though they labour and weary themselves yet it shall be for very vanity and to no purpose 3. Such as by bloody oppression seek to exalt and establish themselves shall not only lose their labour but incur further dammage by their attempt and lose themselves their work the materials which they had to begin their work upon for the Chaldeans shall labour in the very fire which shall not only breed them toil pain in labouring but shall devoure all their conquests themselves and the Kingdom of Babel which they had when they began their tyranny 4. The Lord will so order his judgments upon violent oppressors as that his hand shall be visibly and remarkably seen by all to be the inflicter of them and he shall prove himselfe omnipotent by frustrating men of their wicked purposes and consuming all their labours for Behold is it not of the Lord of hostes that the people shall labour in the very fire c. Ver. 14. For the Earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea The Lord subjoynes a reason to this sentence clearing how he should be so much seen in this judgment to wit that however he seemed to let his own Name and glory be obscured when he suffered the Chaldeans to oppresse the world and lead his people into captivity yet in due time he would make his glory so conspicuous in their just destruction and his powerful asserting of Judah into liberty as the Nations should be filled with the knowledge therof as the sea is full of water all this as a type and pledge of the glory to be revealed in Christ the knowledge of his Name then to be communlcated Doct. 1. When oppressors do prosper and the Lords people with the rest of the world are brought into bondage by them the Lords glory is engaged for his appearing against them in due time for it is subjoyned as a reason of the Chaldeans evil successe for the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord c. 2. The greatnesse of oppressors doth contribute to illustrate and set forth the glory of God in bringing them down and therefore is rather an argument why the Lord should destroy them then any hinderance to it the Lord wil bring down the Chaldeans for in so doing the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of his glory See Ps 9.16 3. As God is most glorious in himself so he will make his glory to shine in the deliverance of his people though for a time he suffer them to be in bondage for in bringing back Judah at the ruine of Babylon the Earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as
the waters cover the sea See Ps 126.2 4. All the glorious manifestations of God against his enemies and for his people of old were but shadowes of what he manifested and doth manifest in and by Christ in the latter dayes and any effects of these his workes which appeared among his people or the Gentiles were but a taste of what the glory of God shining in Christ and made known to the world by the Gospel should produce among Jewes and Gentiles therefore this prophecy is applyed to the dayes of the Gospel Isai 11.9 as getting then full accomplishment Ver. 15. Wo to him that giveth his neighbour drink that puttest thy bottle to him and makest him drunken also that thou mayest looke on their nakednesse The fourth branch of the controversie if we take it properly holds forth a denunciation of vengeance to come upon them for their beastly luxury and sensuality usual in the Babylonish Court that not only in their own persons but they did draw one another to drunkenness that so they might mock at their infirmities which they could not hide in their drunkenness alluding to that of Noah Gen. 9.21 22. or that they might abuse one another in an unnatural way through their drunkenness And so it teacheth 1. When men abuse their prosperity to luxury it is an evidence of a curse upon them and it so it was with the Chaldeans Wo to him that gives his neighbour drinke c. as having no other end wherfore he troubled all the world but thus to abuse himself and others 2. Sin is come to a great height and neer a curse when men do entice draw others to the same excesse of riot with themselves for Wo unto him that giveth his neighbour drinke that puttest thy bottle to him and makest him drunken also 3. It is a beastly dispofition to take pleasure in making men abuse themselves by drink a Wo is denounced against it nor is it a mark of any true kindnesse as the prophane reckon but it is done that they may look on their nakednesse and bring it out to open view 4. Intemperance is an usher to let in any other vice for when a man is drunk discovering of or looking on nakednesse will not be accounted shameful nor unnatural filthinesse an abomination But the words may also be taken figuratively and so the scope is to taxe them for their endeavours by Politick practices and faire promises to engage their neighbours in their undertakings and that as they were drunk with ambition themselves so they filled their neighbours with the like principles drunken heaps of sharing in their victories though indeed they minded nothing less but if any inconvenience should befal their Confederates they would despise them or be ready themselves upon occasion to bring them unto slavery and to make them base Thus doth the whore make the world drunken with her Idolatrous cup Rev. 17. and thus did Nineveh entice the world with her whoredom and witchcrafts Nah. 3.4 This interpretation teacheth 1 Great men in the world are ordinarily so infatuated with their hopes and projects that like drunken men they reel cannot be sober nor ruled by sound principles for the Chaldeans are thus drunken and they make their neighbours drunken also as well as themselves 2. Carnal policy and interest is the greatest Steersman of humane affaires among men which frequently brings a curse on the users thereof for Wo to him who thus gives his neighbour drink c. 3. No true kindnesse can be expected from men who walk politickly and on interests of State pretend what they will for all that such do this way to others is that they may look on their nakednesse Ver. 16. Thou art filled with shame for glory drinke thou also and let thy foreskin be uncovered the cup of the Lords right hand shall be turned unto thee and shameful spewing shall be on thy glory Whatever way we expound the challenge the Lords judgement is very equitable that all these courses should tend rather to their ignominy then their honour and that as they had been Butlers to draw others to sensuality and to intoxicate and allure them to joyne in their oppressions of the Church and the world so the Lord should bring about the Cup of his wrath to them and make them drink of it to satiety whereby they should be as contemptible as when a drunken man is lying naked and that with his uncircumcised foreskin which was an abomination to the Church uncovered or when he is polluting all his bravery or stately house with his filthy vomite Doct. 1. The sinfnl courses which men follow to advance their greatnesse would appear most ignominious to a cleer discerner and will at last be seen to be so to the conviction of all for Thou art filled with shame for glory saith the Lord. 2. The measuring of all afflictions and judgements is in Gods hand so as none can adde to them or diminish from them nor get them shifted when God layeth them on therefore they are called a Cup which is a set measure and the Cup of the Lords right hand which is irresistibly powerful See Jer. 25.28 3. As the Lord will at last bring about the storme of vengeance upon the head of wicked men who were instruments to execute it upon others so they drinking last of the Cup and therefore nearer the dregs and having been eminently wicked and withal being oft-times without the Church as the uncircumcised and so without God their stroak shall be more eminently ignominious then any others for when the Cup of the Lords right hand is turned to them after others have drunke thereof Jer. 25.26 then they shall drinke and their foreskinnes shall be uncovered and shameful spewing shall be on their glory Ver. 17. For the violence of Lebanon shall cover thee and the spoile of beasts which made them afraid because of mens blood and for the violence of the Land of the City and of all that dwell therein To cleer the equity of all these judgments the Lord subjoyns and recapitulates his controversie threatning that the Chaldeans should be overwhelmed for the violence done to the Land of Israel bordering upon Lebanon or the Temple made of the wood of Lebanon yea and for the very destruction of that forrest and spoiling and affrighting of the beasts there as they came through it and cut down the timber for the siege of Ierusalem and for their beastly and bloody violence upon the Inhabitants of city and country wherever they came especially in Judea Or it may be thus interpreted that as in the forrest of Lebanon beasts are hunted affrighted and destroyed so should they be pursued and ruined because of their horrid cruelty violence and so it is the same in substance with v. 7 8. Doct. 1. It is necessary that we study over over again the Lords controversie with impenitent sinners that we may adore his equity in punishing and tremble at
in money by reason of trade dwelt who are threatned that they shall be made to howle and be cut off this place of the City seemeth to be the same with that Neh. 3.32 Doct. 1. When God pursueth a controversie it is folly for any in any place to dream of safety for the Inhabitants of Maktesh the securest and inmost part of the City are threatned with howling and cutting downe as well as those at the gates 2. As former abundance of prosperity will make judgements more bitter so unlawful courses whereby men inhaunce and heap up riches will draw on the bitter judgment therefore the Lord not only threatens particularly that merchants and all they that bear silver should howle as being a fore stroak to such but the word merchant being in the Original a Cananite imports that this judgement came upon them because they had dealt rather like Cananites then Jewes in gathering their riches Ver. 12. And it shall come to pass at that time that I will search Jerusalem with candles and punish the men that are settled on their lees that say in their heart The LORD will not do good neither will be do evil Ver. 13. Therefore their goods shall become a booty and their houses a desolation they shall also build houses but not inhabit them and they shall plant vineyars but not drink the wine thereof The Lord threatens yet further in this taking of the City to take order with all Atheists and Epicures who abounding in wealth lay secure and at ease like wine on its dregs when it s not removed in their heart denying Gods providence or that he took any care of things beneath to reward good or punish evil and therefore neither loved nor believed his promises that they might walk in his way nor feared his justice so as to abandon sin Concerning these the Lord threatens that as a man searcheth for what is hid or lost with a candle so he would narrowly search out their sins themselves to punish them for their sins so as none should escape and their goods to give them for a spoil whereby their houses should become desolate and they should be disappointed for all their expectations from their enjoyments according to his sentence pronounced of old in his law Deut. 28.30 39. Doct. 1. Ease and prosperity slayeth the fool and breeds such distempers of security and setling on the earth as justly provokes God to smite for God will punish the men that are setled on their lees 2. Prosperity and want of exercise by vicissitudes of dispensations it s a great feeder of Atheisme and an enemy to the observation and making use of divine providence and this again doth embolden and harden men yet more in their secure and wicked courses for the men that are setled on their lees are also the men that say in their heart The Lord will not do good neither will he doe evil which is both the effect of their secure condition and a ground they lay down forsetling themselves yet more in it 3. Secure Atheists and contemners of God and his providence may expect that God will refute them in a language which they will understand and make them know his providence upon their own experience by effects which they shall not get avoided for the Lord will prove his Omniscience and care of things below by searching Jerusalem as with candles that they may not esscape him and his effectual providence by punishing them making their goods become a booty and their houses a desolation 4. When the Lord strips a sinful person or people of any mercies which they enjoyed they will finde upon narrow search that their enjoyment thereof hath been a snare to them to draw them to sin and they shall read this in the stroak for Therefore that is because these things had emboldened them to settle on their lees deny a providence therefore their goods shall become a booty c. 5. As the Lord will prove the infallible verity of his threatnings however contemned upon such as dare run that hazard so the holy justice of God is to be adored in disappointing men of any happinesse or contentment they expected in these things for which they hazzard their souls and so rendring them twice losers who will not serve him for here an old sentence of the law was to be executed wherein this just procedure shines They shall also build houses but not inhabit them c. Ver. 14. The great day of the LORD is neere it is neere and hasteth greatly even the voice of the day of the LORD the mighty man shall cry there bitterly The Lord having hitherto denounced his judgments to be neer and declared the causes of them now to the end all these threatnings and the sins procuring them may have weight and sinners may yet if possible be rouzed up and put from all their subtersuges he holds out this approaching day of Vengeance in its terriblenesse which he clears from several instances whereof the first is that the most couragious much more the feeble amongst them should be affrighted by it and be made to cry and weep bitterly Doct. 1. Though secure sinners contemne all opposition from men and do put the evil day far off and think nothing of vengeance when it is looked on at a distance yet God is a terrible party against such and can bring evil on a sudden and when it is imminent it will be sad and dreadful for it is the day of the Lord that they should not eye weak Prophets or the Chaldeans only and it is neer and haste●● greatly the sound or voice of its approaching being in their eares that they may not dream of it as afar off and being neer it is terrible and the great day of the Lord. 2. Natural courage and magnanimity however it may promise much yea and suffain many infirmities yet it will not bear out but saint when God pursueth a controversie for sin for the mighty man shall cry there bitterly Ver. 15. That day is a day of wrath a day of trouble and distress a day of wasteness and desolation a day of darkness and gl●ominess a day of clouds and thick darknesse A second instance of terriblenesse is that in this day the wrath of an angry God should be made manifest by distresse and trouble on men and wasting and desolation on cities and countreys and that all those calamities should he without any light of comfort the clouds of their sin and of Gods judgement rendering all things black and dismal-like Doct. 1. As the Lord may justly for sin testifie wrath against a visible Church and fatherly displeasure against his own in it so that will make a judgement terrible when his anger is seen and felt in it for that is an instance of the terrour of that day that it shall be a day of wrath 2. Though God testifie his displeasure against sin many wayes yet such is the stupidity of men that
his anger is little seen or laid to heart till it appear in sad calamities therefore is that day called a day of wrath 3. In a time when God is pursuing a land for sin none are to expect case but in some measure or other to be put to it and to taste of calamities for that day will be a day of trouble and distresse a day of wastenesse and desolation to persons and places 4. As judgements inflicted for sin or sin and wrath for sin meeting together will make a black representation of affaires will hold out the judgement in its saddest colours and discover many clouds betwixt the sinner and Gods countenance so it is the capestone of a calamity when spiritual comfort or some favour from God is denyed or hid under it when he smites and hides himself it speaks wrath indeed for this makes the day terrible that when all this is on it is withal a day of darknesse and gloominesse a day of clouds and thick darknesse Ver. 16. A day of the trumpet and alarum against the fenced cities and against the high towers A third instance that wrath pursuing them for sin should make the alarme given to stir up souldiers against them terrible and make their enemies successefull against their most fortified places Whence learn As the alarmes and calamities of War cannot but be affrightful and sad to the most godly Jer. 4.19 So it is a great addition to its terrour when guilt makes men read Gods wrath in it especially when wrath from the Lord lets it not prove a false alarme but makes the enemy so successeful as nothing stands in his way nor can pursued sinners finde any place of safety or shelter for being a day of wrath ver 15. this adds to the terrour that it is a day of the trumpet and alarm against the fenced cities and high towers Ver. 17. And I will bring distress upon men that they shall walke like blinde men because they have sinned against the LORD and their blood shall be poured out as dust and their flesh as the dung A fourth and fifth instance is that the distresse shall be so great because of sin as to leave them destitute of all counsel not knowing what to do more then blind men know whether to walk and that they shall be cut off with the sword their blood poured out in as great abundance with as little regard as the dust they tread upon and their carcasses left like dung on the ground Doct. 1. As it is a dreadful condition in a day of strait to be void of light to direct men what to do so howsoever finful men trust much to their own policy in a calm day yet a day of wrath will overturn all their designs leave them destitnte of counsel for I will bring distresse upon men that they shall walke like blinde men 2. When judgements are accompanied with darkness and perplexity Gods hand is to be eminently seen in that stroak and he is to be justified by our reading the bitter fruit of sinne in it for saith the Lord I will bring distresse that they shall walke like blinde men and that because they have sinned against the Lord. 3. It is just with God when he hath pursued sinners with judgements in this life to cut them off also in their iniquity and send them out of the world to receive their full reward yea and to testifie his displeasure on their very dead bodies for so it is threatned their blood shall be poured out as dust and their flesh as dung 4. The gredinesse and cerriblenesse of divine wrath against sin may be read in the measure of a calamity in the ignominy of a stroak and in Gods not owning nor evidencing that he pitties in affliction for all these are in this stroak to be matter of terrour to them their blood shall be poured out as dust and their flesh as dung Ver. 18. Neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the LORDS wrath but the whole land shall be devoured by the fire of his jealousie for he shall make even a speedy riddance of all them that dwell in the land The terriblenesse of this day doth appear further in this that all helps shall prove vain and their riches wherein they trusted or whereby they might think to ransome their lives should not be able to deliver them from wrath nor hinder the Lord in his kindled jealou●●e to make short work in wasting the land and consuming the Inhabitants Doct. 1. Many are the false confidences whereby men think to secure themselves against a day of vengeance which it is no easie work to refine that wrath may be seen in its terriblenesse for after all their imaginations that this evil day was far off that it should be light that their fenced Cities would shelter them c. which have been declared uselesse in the former purpose there remaineth yet their riches to be declared vaine 2. The wrath of God pursuing sin is so dreadful as no riches or treasures wherein men trust can ward off the stroak nor any thing else save the blood of Christ fled unto by the selfe-condemned sinner for neither their silver nor their gold shall be able to deliver them in the day of the Lords wrath See Prov. 11.4 Ezek. 7.19 3. When Gods love toward his people is provoked unto jealousie by their breach of mariage-duty and embracing strange lovers it produceth most sharp and violent judgements and acts as a fire which speedily consumeth all before it and with which no paction or treaty can be made for the whole land shall be devoured by the fire of his jealousie for he shall make even a speedy riddance of all them that dwell in the Land CHAP. II. THE Lord having thus threatned his sinful people comes now to exhort them to make right use thereof by inviting the body of the land to repent before the sentence were executed vers 1 2. and the godly remnant to seek God and follow their duty in hope of favour when the evil day should come v. 3. and that these exhortations may be more effectual he sets before them the sad judgements that were to come upon the Nations round about such as the Philistins vers 4 5 6 7. Moabites and Ammonites vers 8.9.10.11 the Ethiopians vers 12. and the Assyrians with their chiefe City vers 13 14 15. Vers 1. GAther your selves together yea gather together O Nation not desired 2. Before the decree bring forth before the day past as the chaff before the fierce anger of the LORD come upon you before the day of the LORDS anger come upon you The sum of the first exhortation directed to the impenitent body of the Nation is that no wever they were not a people de●irous of their own good nor worthy of any favour yet the Lord would make offer of it and therefore invites them to make a serious
3.9 Doct. 1. In declining times the Lord hath a peculiar eye to the godly and expects much from them Therefore leaving the wicked Nation he turneth to them with exhortations and promises 2. The truth and reality of grace will manifest it selfe in mens being of subdued meek and humble spirits stooping to the Word abasing themselves trembling under judgements and tender towards others and in their not giving way to discouragement from duty however they be humble but stirring up themselves to seek God for himself and adorning their profession with righteous conversation respecting Gods commands whatever their own natural inclinations be Thus are the Godly described here to be seekers of the Lord the meek of the earth or of the land which have wrought his judgment or obeyed his righteous ordinances enjoyned to them 3. Though it be incident to the godly to fall into some decay in a time of general defection and to be discouraged from their duty by the evil example of others yet the truly godly ought to prove themselves to be such by their perseverance and needing and seeking more of what they already have and of Christs righteousnesse to cover all and especially they ought to be on the growing hand if they would beare out and finde favour in an evil time therefore in such a time is this exhortation given seek ye the Lord seek righteousnesse seek meeknesse the repeating of the exhortation shewing the necessity of the thing exhorted to 4. As it is the Lords great mercy toward such as fear him that he puts the remission of their sins and their eternal happinesse out of all doubt so also he is able when he pleaseth in hardest dayes to give them proofes of love in temporal favours by taking them into his protection and either delivering them from trouble or moderating it for here there is no doubt made of the first and even in the second it is declared possible it may be ye shall be hid 5. The Lord seeth it fit to exercise his dearest children with great uncertainties what their lot may be in common calamities not that they should doubt of his power or good wil but that they may be sensible of the difficulty of the thing it self and that in so great overflowing calamities the righteous shall scarcely be saved that so i● may appear to be a singular favour when God doth it that the godly having done their duty may yet humble themselvs before the Lord as not meriting any such thing as hiding That they may be excited yet to more diligence that they may learn to expect the free reward of piety in temporal things with much submission and that amidst all improbabilities and incertainties the seeker of God may learne by faith to venture much on God and absolutely rely on his goodness and tendernesse who will not withhold any good thing from his own Ps 34.10 and 84 11. For these causes it is that this exhortation is seconded with so uncertain-like an encouragement it may be ye shall be hid c. 6. Whatever uncertainty seekers of God may be put to as to receiving of temporal favours yet they ought to be fixed in this That seeking of God is the shortest cut and onely way to speed even in these things for though they get but a may be yet upon that they are exhorted to seek the Lord as the only way to be sure and their getting but a may be puts it out of all doubt that they who turn aside to crooked ways may expect nothing of that kind See 1 Pet. 4.18 Vers 4. For Gaza shall be forsaken and Ashkelon a desolation they shall drive out Ashdod at the noon day and Ekron shall be rooted up 5. Wo unto the inhabitants of the sea coast the Nation of the Cherethites the word of the Lord is against you O Canaan the Land of the Philistines I will even destroy thee that there shall be no inhabitant 6. And the sea coast shall be dwellings and cottages for shepherds and folds for flocks To make the preceding exhortation have the more effect the Lord subjoynes a denunciation of sad judgements to come upon the enemies of the Jews on all hands of them intermixing some promises that these stroaks should tend to the advantage of truth and the Church The first he begins at are the Philistines on their west side wherein he first threatens four of their great Cities with being made solitary and desolate with being openly and violently stormed and the inhabitants led into captivity when it should be impossible to travel for heat and with total extirpation which judgements are expressed in the first language with fit allusions to the names of the Cities v. 4. and Gath the fifth principal City of the Philistines is omitted in this sentence either because it was then in possession of the Jews or because it is comprehended under the rest as Amot 1.8 2. He threatens the inhabitants of the country about lying upon the sea coasts who were either Cherethites of whom see 1 Sam. 30.14 Ezek. 25.16 or Philistines properly so called who descended of cursed Cham. Gen. 10.6 13 14. These he threatens with his wo a purpose against them to lay them desolate so that their fertile and populous Country should be turned into a place of pasture and for flocks and herds to dwel in v. 5 6. The ground of this sentence is insinuated in that they are called Canaan that is not only of his posterity but possessors of a part of the land of Canaan which belonged to Israel Josh 13.2 3. And these judgements were inflicted on the Philistines partly by Pharach Jer. 47.1 Partly by the Babylonians Jer. 47.2 3 4 5. and partly by the Jewes the mselves after their return ● and afterward by Alexander the Great as histories do record Dect 1. It is a profitable meanes for stirring up the visible Church to repentance and the godly to perseverance in an evil time to consider the hand of God upon nations about and enemies to the Church therefore are these threatnings brought in upon the back of the former exhortations and subjoyned to them with the particle for as pointing out his scope in the subsequent purpose to be for their stirring up and we may conceive the dependance thus 1. Judgments threatned or executed upon others ought to stir up the wicked in the Church to repent Gather your selves for Gaza shall be forsaken 2. The godly may perceive Gods tender care of them in calamities whereof they taste when they look upon the full measure which he meets our to others seekers of God will see themselves hid in all their troubles when they look on Gaza forsaken Ashkelon a desolati●● 3. It is an encouragement to persevere in godlinesse notwithstanding any trouble to consider that God will recompence men for all the wrongs done to the godly and will yet restore them and make all tend to their good Seek the Lord saith he for Gaza
wicked proud boasting and wicked enterprising far more wicked acting against the Lords people their land and rights but it will in due time be reckoned for for it is put upon these enemies score that they magnified themselves against the border threatning to possesse it Ver. 9. Therefore as I live saith the LORD of hostes the God of Israel Surely Moab shall be as Sodom and the children of Ammon as Gomorrah even the breeding of nettles and salt pits and a perpetual desolation the residue of my people shall spoile them and the remnant of my people shall possess them 10. This shall they have for their pride because they have reproached and magnified themselves against the people of the Lord of hostes Follows the judgement threatned for this sin and confirmed by an oath that these enemies should be made as Sodom and Gomorrah not for the way of their destruction but for Gods rooting them and their memory out and laying their land utterly desolate as a salted land which makes it barren to bear onely weeds and that for a long time if not for ever as to them though there be a promise of their restitution especially spiritual Jer. 48.47 49.6 And whereas they encroached upon Judah the Lord threatens to make Judah spoile and possesse their land v. 9 which is to be understood as that promise v. 7. is and that they may know the cause of this stroak the Lord repeats it againe that all this should come upon them for their proud insolency against and reproaching of his people v. 10. Doct. 1. The Lord is in great earnest that he will meer with the Churches enemies as having both power and reason so to do he being the Churches Protector in Covenant with her though it be little believed either by the Church or his enemies therefore he assures them of it by his oath and takes unto himself titles of power and interest As I live saith the Lord of Hosts the God of Israel 2. Though the Lord think is not fit to smite every sinful Nation with immediate judgements from heaven or to make their countreys utterly and for ever unuseful as Sodom and Gomorrah were yet his displeasure is no lesse against the enemies of his people then against those he hath so smitten and he will in due time evidence it by sore desolation and of long continuance being compared with the Churches lot therefore is the Lords wrath on these Nations compared with that which he let forth on Sodom and Gomorrah Surely Moab shall be as Sodom and the Children of Ammon as Gomorrah even the breeding of nettles and salt-pits and a perpetual desolation 3. Though the Church may oft times be exposed as a prey to her enemies yet the day may come when the Church will be employed to do that to enemies which they threatned to do to them and in part attempted to do for whereas Moab and Ammon magnified themselves against Israels border v. 8. now the Lord threatens that the residue of my people shall spoil them and the remnant of my people shall possesse them 4. In a time of judgements upon enemies there will be need of frequent inculcating of Gods controversie if they would have a blessed use of stroaks in turning to God and that so much the rather as they will be ready to see many things before they see their injuries done to the Church as a cause of their calamity tharefore is this quarrel again repeated This shall they have for their pride c. 5. Pride and insolency will not misse a fall and stroak in due time especially when pride leads men to act sin and wrong not out of infirmity or ignorance but with an high hand and that against the Church for This shall they have for their pride because they have reproached and magnified themselves against the people of the Lord. 6. A chiefe cause of the Lords appearing for his reproached and wronged people is that the wrongs done to them seem to reflect on him as if he were not keeping Covenant with them or not able to defend or redresse their wrongs and therefore as he affects them even in troubles so he will in due time by visible acts set out his power for them and his love to them therefore this stroak is threatned because they were infolent against the people of the Lord of hoasts where both his power and his interest in Israel are asserted as rubbed upon by them and to be cleared in the judgement to come upon them Vers 11. The LORD will be terrible unto them for he will famish all the gods of the earth and men shall worship him every one from his place even all the Isles of the Heathen This stroak is farther illustrated from an effect that when the Lord shall thus terribly plague enemies and vindicate the wrongs done to his Church he will consume the idols of the Nations also by blasting their reputation that could not help their worshippers whereas God helps his people and shal withdraw worship from them as useless things and so famish them of their food and oblations and make them lean whereby way shall be made for spreading of the knowledge of the true God especially in the dayes of the Gospel wherein without distinction of place John 4.21 or of Nations Acts 10.34 35. all the remotest Nations lying beyond the sea to Judea and the Iflanders shall serve him and yet more particularly in the day of the saving of all Israel which shall be life from the dead to the generality of the Gentiles Rom. 11.15 the fame of Gods doing for them inviting all Nations to renounce their idols and serve him Doct. 1. God is a dreadfull Party for weak man to provok and albeit he be oft times little regarded of the secure siuner yet in a day of anger he will be found terrible The Lord will be terrible unto them 2. As idolatry is a great cause of Gods anger against a people provoking him to smite them so people are ordinarily so addicted to idols that they are undone before they cease to esteem of them so much doth the conexion of these two import The Lord will be terrible unto them for he will famish all the gods of the earth he will terribly destroy them because he hath a mind to bring down their Idols 3. As it is a sweet fruit of judgements when they bring down Idols as well as lay other things waste so howsoever the Lord doth suffer idolatry for a time yet at last by judgments on idolaters and by mercies toward his people he will abolish idols and exalt himself as the only true God to be chosen and served by the world for He will famish all the gods of the earth and men shall worship him 4. It is the priviledge of the new Testament and a part of the glory of Christs Kingdome that the Lords worship is not confined to a Temple at Jerusalem nor to the Nation of Israel and such
as became Proselytes and joyned to them but that in every place even from the remotest Isles all nations have access to God through the Mediator for so is here fore-prophecied Men shall worship him every one from his place even all the Isles of the Heathen 5. It is of great concernment to all the Churches of Christ to mind much and by their prayers to help forward and hasten the conversion of Israel as tending to the advancement of the Gospel among the Gentiles for then this prophecy will get a new and farther accomplishment Rom. 11.15 Vers 12. Ye Ethiopians also ye shall be slaine by my sword The third denunciation is against the Ethiopians who were either a Nation commonly called so beyond Egypt who had served in armies employed against the Church as these other Southern Nations were usually employed abroad Nahum 3.9 Ezek 27.10 or rather a people in Arabia descended also from Cush and lying on the other side of the red sea over against Ethiopia commonly so called who are the people usually called Ethiopians in Scripture these as they had been destroyed by Asa 2 Chron. 14.9 c. and given into the hands of Sennacherib as a ransome for Judah Isa 43 3. with 2 Kings 19.9 so the Lord here threatens to cut them off by his sword in the hand of Nebuchadnezzar either in his conquest of Arabia or when he subdued Egypt and destroyed those other Ethiopians amongst Egypts Associates as they were Jer. 46.2 with 9. Doct. 1. Though the enemies of the Church were never so many on all hands and never so sar remote yet Gods hand is enough for them all for here he undertakes against enemies on all quarters and besides the Philistines Moab and Ammon he threatens that the Ethiopians also which soever of these Nations it be shall be slain 2. It is a special part of right reading of judgements to see Gods hand in them that his quarrel may be studied that his love to his people in avenging their quarrel may be seen that his soveraign power and providence over al the world may be adored and the smitten may know whither to flee for an issue therefore it is added Ye shall be slain by my sword Vers 13. And he will stretch out his hand against the North and destroy Assyria and will make Nineveh a desolation and dry like a wilderness Ver. 14. And flocks shall lie down in the midst of her all the beasts of the Nations both the Cormorant and the Bittern shall lodge in the upper lintels of it their voyce shall sing in the windows desolation shall be in their thresholds for he shall uncover the Cedar-work The last denunciation is against the Assyrians in the North and the chief City of that Empire which he threatens to make desolate by his out-strerched hand and like a barren wildernes to be an habitation for all kinde of beasts and monstrous creatures of all sorts in stead of eminent Princes and many people who frequented there and that for this end where there had been so many stately habitations he would cause to pull down their roofs and leave nothing but bare walls fit for such guests to huant in Doct. 1. God in executing of judgements will not forget to reach greatest enemies saddest stroaks therefore the Lord sets out Assyria and Ninevehs judgements in so dreadful and ample a way not only to give more ample encouragement to his people whose faith might readily faint most in this particular but to testifie the greatness of his displeasure against them for leading his Israel captive He will stretch out his hand against the North and destroy Assyria and will make Nineveh a desolation and dry like a wilderness 2. Howsoever God may seem to own a prospering enemy against his people and they may think so because of their succesle yet God will in due time testifie the contrary for they boasted of old that they came not up without the Lord 2 Kings 18 25. therefore the Lord will stretch out his hand against the North c. 3. Albeit that smful wayes and oppression may for a time raise up men to great power and glory and make cities and countries to flowrish yet ere all be done it will lay them as low yea make them more desolate then is imaginable so did Assyria and Nineveh feele when flocks lay down in the midst of her all the beasts of the Nations when the Cormorant and Bittern did lodge in the upper lintels of it c And no wonder for these creatures were no more monstrous in mens account then the former inhabitants were in Gods sight Vers 15. This is the rejoycing City that dwelt carelesly that said in her heart I am and there is none beside me how is she become a desolation a place for beasts to lie down in every one that passeth by her shal hiss and wag his hand The equity of this sentence upon that City is confirmed from the causes thereof where not recounting her particular sins he takes notice of the result of all her sins and the common sink into which they all ran to wit her security and insolency that being blinded with the splend or of her prosperity she despised all other Nations and cast off all fear of any change because of which it was righteous with God by laying her so desolate to make her an ignominious spectacle to all beholders Doct. 1. It is not possible for wicked m●n to guide their prosperity and successe in ill courses well but they will swell in pride thereby and so provoke God yet more to anger against them for This is the rejoycing City that dwelt carelesly that said in her heart I am and there is none beside me 2. Look how much wicked men prospering in sin have been admired by others or have admired themselves for their prosperity divine indignation shall indue time make them as remarkable for ignominious calamity for How is the rejoycing City become a desolation a place for beasts to lie down in every one that passeth by her shall hisse and wag his hand CHAP. III. AFter these threatnings denounced against other nations the Lord returns to speak to the Church threatens Jerusalem for the many iniquities done in her v. 1 2. particularly for the sins of Rulers in State v. 3. and of Church-guides v. 4. and confirmeth the equity of this sentence from Gods justice and their incorrigibleness either by the Word v 5. or by the rod v. 6 7. And because the godly could not but be affrighted by these threatnings therefore he subjoyns many comforts to them concerning the returning of their captivity and the mercies of the Gospel exhorting them to wait on God in expectation that he who punished the Church would appear and punish her enemies v. 8. at which time he would propagate true Religion and make Jews and Gentiles jointly serve him v. 9. would gather his people from the remotest parts of the world v. 10. would