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

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in heart of two s●rts 645. In what se●ce God resp●cteth not any that are wi●e 645 646. G d regard●th n●t the ●i●est men who do not fear him 646. The wi est men cannot hinder the C●u●sels of G●d by their wisdom and p●licy 647. Thoughts of the wi●● va n in two respects 648. None ●ise by nature nor are any erfectly wi●e in this world though they have grace 649 Wisdome how ascribed to the Fowls of the Air. 77. The Wisdome of F●wls c. is of God 78. Wisdome of God wherein the strength of it consists 175. How God is only wise 177 178. Wisdome practical what 177. Six Inferences from the Wisdome of God 179 180 Wishes we apt to make strange wishes in times of distress 315 Words rash words turned against the Speaker 12. Sharp words somtimes most profitable 13. Word of God how like Rain 397 398. Word of God preached how like thunder shewed in five things 444. When the Word of God is duly attended shewed in three things 445 Three degrees of the Words coming to us 445 446. Word of God how it may be said to be dark 586 Wo ks of God in Nature to be exactly considered especially the Heavens 26. Some works of God beyond our apprehension 466. Two Inferences from it 467. Men slow to consider the works of God 480. God would have all men study his works 480 God stops men in their work that they may consider his works 481 Works of God of all sorts to be considered 529 530. How the works of God are to be considered shewed four wayes 531. Inference from it 532. The common and ordinary works of God are full of wonder 533 Works good works how profitable to our selves and others 52 5● Work ours shewed us by God in affliction in a two-fold respect 223. Sin is properly our work 224. The faultiness of our work most clearly discovered in affliction 225. Works of God of all sorts are to be magnified 351. Works of G●d visible or invisible 353. Men apt to forget and have low apprehensions of the works of God 356. It is our duty to magnifie the works of God 358. How they are magnified shewed five wayes 359 360. The Ends of God in any wo k much to be eyed 363. What those Ends are 364 365 Wo●ld a godly man is content with a little of but not satisfied with all the world 288 Worldly comforts and mercies may soon meet with a st p. 419 Wrath of God what and where 296. Wrath appears in works of Judgement 297. We should by all means beware of the wrath of God 298. Wrath of God a fire infinitely more dreadful than fire 299 Y Years the measure of mans Life not of Gods 377. The word in Hebrew signifieth changes and why 377 Youth to die in youth what shewed three wayes 269. A TABLE OF Those Scriptures which are occasionally cleared and briefly illustrated in the fore-going EXPOSITIONS The First Number directs to the Chapter the Second to the Verse the Third to the Page of the BOOK Chap. Vers Page   Genesis   1. 6. 402. 2. 1 2. 241. 2. 16. 418. 7. 11. 393. 9. 12 13. 545. 15. 16. 191. 16. 14. 204. 21. 6. 119. 22. 14. 205. 25. 8. 273. 27. 33. 435. 27. 36. 459. 31. 29. 60. 37. 11. 117. 38. 26. 9. 45. 8. 360. 49. 20. 243.   Exodus   1. 17. 187. 4. 17. 515. 4. 43. 238. 5. 8. 200. 9. 16. 184. 14. 11. 122. 15. 11. 6●1 18. 21. 109. 18. 22. 187. 20. 4 5. 119. 32. 25. 559. 38. 8. 570.   Leviticus   25. 21. 519. 26. 41. 327.   Numbers   9. 7. 387. 14. 17. 185. 16. 45. 241. 16. 46. 297. 17. 2. 514. 23. 14. 172. 32. 23. 513.   Deuteronomy   4. 2. 387. 5. 24. 593. 11. 12. 205. 16. 20. 629. 19. 5. 452. 28. 23. 390. 28. 24. 392. 29. 29. 176. 31. 29. 224. 32. 15. 448. 32. 31. 4. 32. 34. 427. 33. 2. 540.   Judges   9. 23. 563.   Ruth   1. 6. 119. 2. 1. 58.   I Samuel   1. 6. 457. 2. 3. 175 109. 12. 6. 64. 15. 23. 263. 22. 8. 230.   II Samuel   15. 31. 647. 16. 10. 360. 23. 15. 241. 24. 14. 283.   I Kings   2. 4. 318. 20. 28. 453. 22. 34. 45●   II Kings   3. 17. ●91 4. 2. 501.   I Chron.   12. 32. 428. 16. 25. 36● 29. 10 16. 42.   II Chron.   20. 12. 282. 28. 13 22. 261. 31. 20 21. 616.   Job   9. 23. 302 14. 10. 15. 14. 21. 7. 188. 21. 25. 243.   Psalms   2. 1 2. 31. 2. 3. 221. 2. 12. 298. 7. 3. 195. 8. 3 4. 27. 9. 9. 336. 10. 3. 173. 10. 16. 380. 11. 4. 203. 12. 5. 196. 14. 2. 649. 16. 3. 42. 16. 7. 73. 17. 3. 72. 17. 13 14. 516. 18. 11. 408. 18. 41. 90. 25. 10. 11. 25. 11. 372. 29. 1 2 3 4 c. 461 462 30. 4. 125. 31. 6 7. 281. 31. 15. 379. 31. 23. 627. 32. 5. 615. 32. 7. 111. 32. 9. 83. 36. 4. 322. 36. 8. 286. 39. 5. 178. 42. 8. 72. 46. 10. 5●8 49. 20. 81. 51. 3 4. 147. 51. 4. 412. 51. 15. 183. 52. 1. 173 60. 55. 23. 192. 5● 1. 484. 58. 1 2. 630. 66. 3. 371. 66. 18. 322 95. 68. 8 9. 38● 69. 33. 268. 72. 6. 397. 73. 1. 363 11. 73. 13. 18. 75. 6. 605. 77. 6. 72. 77. 19. 616. 78. 8 32. 365. 80. 1. 541. 81. 11. 331. 81. 16. 287. 84. 11. 189. 90. 11. 127 185 298. 92. 6. 353. 99. 12. 339. 102. 14. 31● 102. 17. 96. 10● 25 ●6 377. 103. 10. 116. 104. 34 35. 104. 106. 7. 12● 107. 42. 9● 13. 111. 2 7. 32. 111. 2 4. 358. 115. 3. 161. 116. 12. 43. 126. 4. 249 488. 130. 3. 117. 136. 2. 511. 138. 6. 90. 146. 3 4. 380. 147. 15 16. 472. 147. 18. 499. 150. 2. 369.   Proverbs   1. 32. 625. 6. 6. 83. 6. 12 13. 203. 10. 22. 285. 15. 29. 89. 16. 2. 552. 16. 3. 18● ●0 12. 231. 21. 18. 302 21. 17. 244. 21. 27. 229 258. 21. 3● 179. 22. 3. 427. 25. 13. 470. 25. 23. 491. 25. 27. 592 26. 1. 469. 28. 3. 59. 30. 4 40● 31. 31. 356.   Ecclesiastes   1. 6. 505. 2. 14. 428. 8. 11. 626. 12. 2. 470. 12. 10. 588.   Canticle●   2. 14 96. 3. 1. 73. 4. 9. 210. 4. 12. 477. 4. 16. 491.   Isaiah   1. 2. 83. 1. 3. 529. 1. 15. 90. 1. 31. 211. 1. 25 26 27. 623. 3. 11. 193. 4. 4. 6●3 5. 6. 389. 5. 13. 255. 5. 20. 325. 6. 2. 374. 8. 2● 6. 8. 16. 476. 9. 13. 235. 10. 6. 190. 10. 3. 609. 10. 25. 1●8 14. 27. 163. 17. 13. 4●2 21. 1. 488. 25. 6. 2●6 26. 7. 551. 26. 11. 532. 27. 4 5. 172 18● 27. 7 8 9. 632. 27. 11. 628. 28. 7. 5●1 28. 10 11. 138. 28. 22. 2 1. 28.
their life nor their death is precious in the Lords sight as both of the meanest Saints are Psal 116.15 The special Promises of preservation are made to the godly the common Providences of preservation extend to the wicked God preserves many wicked men but not one of them can plead a Promise for his preservation or say Lord thou hast undertaken to preserve me I have thy Word or Warrant for my preservation So then the Lord doth not preserve the life of any wicked man upon a word of Promise Secondly I answer When the lives of the wicked are preserved they are not preserved for any love which God bears to their persons as such but either First to bring them into a better state that is to turn them from their wickedness that being converted they may be saved at last according to his purpose Or Secondly they are preserved to serve some ends and purposes of his in this World For though God hath no pleasure in them yet he makes some use of them and doth his pleasure by them Or I may say they are preserved to be Executioners of his displeasure in chastening and correcting his own people The King of Assyria was preserved in great Power and to what end I will send him against an hypocritical Nation Isa 10.6 He must go on my Errand though he meaneth not so nor doth his heart think so as the Lord spake vers 7. He hath other matters and designs in his head but I have this use of him and of his power even to punish the people of my wrath The Lord made use also of Nebuchadnezar and his Army to serve him in the destroying of Tyrus and of him and his Army he saith They wrought for me Ezek. 29.20 Thus the Lord doth some of his work his strange work especially his work of Judgment by the hands of wicked men and therefore he preserves their lives Yea he preserves them many a time to be a help and a defence to his people A Thorn Hedge keeps the Pasture that strange Cattle break not in and eat it up Wicked men are as Bryars and Thorns and they are suffered to live because the Lord can make use of them as a Fence to his people When the Serpent cast out of his mouth water as a Flood after the woman the Church that he might cause her to be carryed away of the Flood then the Earth that is earthly carnal men helped the Woman Rev. 12.15 16 The Lord used bad men to do that good work the preservation of his distressed and persecuted Church Thirdly As the Lord suffers many wicked men to live that they may be brought out of their sins so he suffers others to live that they may fill up the measure of their sins Why did the Lord preserve the Amorites was it because he loved or liked them no but because they were not then ripe for Judgment Gen. 15.16 The Iniquity of the Amorites is not yet full Some wicked men are to fill up their dayes that they may fill up the measure of their Fathers sins by their own as Christ threatned the Scribes and Pharisees Math. 23.32 Such a grant of life though for a thousand years is worse than a thousand Deaths Fourthly we may answer The wicked are not so much preserved from as reserved unto further wrath 2 Pet. 2.9 The Lord knoweth how to deliver the godly out of temptations and to reserve the unjust unto the day of Judgment to be punished God doth not presently punish all the wicked nor take away their lives there is a day of Judgment coming and till that day come their lives are preserved as persons reserved unto Judgment Fifthly VVhen wicked men are said to be out of the Lords Protection consider There is a twofold Protection First ordinary Secondly extraordinary The Lord doth preserve and protect wicked men in an ordinary not in an extraordinary way he doth not work wonders much less miracles to preserve them as he often doth for the preservation of his own people God will not be at such cost in preserving of wicked men as he is at in the preserving the lives and liberties of his eminent Servants rather than they shall perish or not be preserved he will somtimes work a miracle and put Nature out of its course to save their lives VVhen those three VVorthies were cast into the midst of the burning fiery Furnace God stopt the rage of that furious Element that the Fire had no power upon their bodyes nor was an hair of their head singed neither were their Coats changed nor the smel of fire had passed on them Dan. 3.27 Did we ever hear that the Lord restrained the power of the fire to preserve wicked men When Daniel a man precious in the sight of God was cast into the Lions Den the Lord preserved his life also by stopping the Mouths of the Lyons Dan. 6.22 Did we ever hear that God preserved the lives of wicked men in such a way No sooner were Daniels accusers cast into the Lyons Den but the Lyons had the Mastery of them and brake all their bones in pieces e're ever they came to the bottome of the Den v. 24. The Lord doth not preserve the lives of the wicked by miraculous manifestations of his Power and Glory Sixthly I answer Though some wicked men are commonly preserved as other men yet many by their wickedness hasten their ruine and shorten the number of their dayes We may distinguish of wicked men First wicked men may be taken in a General notion for all that are unconverted and unregenerate Many persons pass for honest and good men in the world who yet are wicked being carnal and abiding in a state of nature wicked men of this sort are ordinarily preserved Secondly Take wicked men and such I conceive the Text especially intends for notorious wicked men such as are murderers blasphemers c. the Lord doth not preserve the lives of such but lets mans Justice seize upon them or divine vengeance overtake them Psal 55.23 The blood-thirsty and deceitful man shall not live out half his dayes that is he shall not live half so long as he might according to the course of Nature because of his nefarious sinful courses Histories are full of dreadful Tragedies sealing to this Truth with the blood and untimely death of gross offenders How often have we seen or heard of the Ve●geance of God following and falling upon those that were signanter notoriously wicked and of ●●ese we are especially to understand the Poynt and Text He preserveth not the life of the wicked Take this Inference from all that hath been said about this awakening Observation How sad is the life of a wicked man indeed of any man on this side the Line of grace but especially of any very wicked man He can scarce be said to live whose life is not preferved by God a wicked man is alwayes in death seeing God doth not preserve his life The Apostle
way of admonition and counsel forasmuch as he had done amiss before and carried himself unduly under the hand of God even so far as to fulfil the counsel of the wicked that therefore he would now for the time to come take heed and be more wary And lest Job should slight this admonition or counsel Elihu adds a powerful motive to urge that duty upon him even the wrath of God Beware Why Because there is wrath Beware and beware lest this wrath breaking forth he take thee away with a stroke And how dreadful the wrath of God is Elihu shews in these three verses by a threefold Consideration First because if we fall into the Lords hand when he is in wrath there is no meanes under heaven that can deliver or bring us off This he asserteth at the latter end of the 18th verse Then a great ransome cannot deliver thee It is dangerous coming un-der that wrath from which a ransome especially a great ransome cannot deliver What that ransome is which cannot deliver us is expressed in the 19th verse Will he esteem thy riches no not gold A Second motive to beware o● this dreadful wrath is this because if once the wrath of God be up as there is no ransom so no power in the creature that can deliver That we have in the latter part of the 19th verse nor all the forces of strength though thou hast armies millions of men in armes yea though thou hast legions of Angels in pay yet they cannot prevail all the forces of strength cannot deliver thee There is also a third consideration to shew the unavoidableness of the wrath of God namely because there is no sleeing no making an escape from it Some indeed are so angry that you cannot satisfy them with a ransom and so powerful that no strength can deliver you from their power yet possibly you may make an escape and hide from them you may get out of the way and lye out of sight but saith Elihu that will not do neither in this case v. 20. desire not the night when people are cut off in their place the night or darkness will be no cover to thee from the wrath of an angry God Thus you have the sum and substance of this admonition to Job Beware because there is wrath and that wrath of God so terrible that nothing can deliver from it no ransom no power nor can we deliver our selves by flight or by darkness I shall now open the words more distinctly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 calor ira a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 caluit incaluit quod iracundi incalescunt Verse 18. Because there is wrath beware c. The word which we translate wrath comes from a root that signifies heat or to be hot and we know they that are angry and in wrath are very hot their mind and spirit are enflamed we use to say to an angry man why are you so hot the wrath of man is hot the wrath of God is certainly much hotter Because there is wrath but where is it I answer First there is wrath in the breast or heart of God there his anger is kindled against sinners Secondly There is wrath in the decree of God against sinners Zeph. 2.2 Thirdly there is wrath in the threatnings of God there it first appeares and breaketh forth Deut. 29.20 So the Apostle Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from heaven How is it revealed As his love is revealed in promises so his wrath in threatnings Fourthly there is wrath in the works of God in his Judgments acted upon the children of men As there is wrath hidden in his breast and decreed so wrath is heard from his mouth in terrible threatnings and seen in his hand by terrible Judgments executed upon his enemies We may see wrath in the dealings of God his works tell us he is angry Therefore fear to persist lest in his anger he take thee quite away We should beware of sinful works lest we provoke and stir up the Lords anger to make bloody work There is wrath particularly as to the dealings of God with thee O Job saith Elihu therefore Beware The word beware is not expresly in the Hebrew tex● but it is plainly intended and supplied by Interpreter● in gene●al to make up and clear the sence of this verse We have a like reading in the 36th of Isaiah v. 18. Beware lest Hezekiah perswade you c. The word beware is a supplement added there in a different character to shew that it is not expressed in the Hebrew As if Raoshakeh had said If Hezekiah perswade you to stand out against my Master Sennacherib you will provoke his wrath to your utter ruine and destruction therefore beware There as here beware bespeakes our caution because there is wrath take heed what you do or say Hence note First There is a wrath of God against sin or God will appear in wrath against sinners The Apostle John in his first Epistle Chap. 4.8 tells us in a direct predication God is love and 't is as true God is wrath The wrath of God is a divine perfection it is the perfection of God as his love is God is one and the same he is not divided into several passions perturbations or affections but thus the Scripture speaks of him to denote what we may expect from him and what he is and will be in his actings towards them who obey him not Secondly note The wrath of God appears and is put forth in his works of judgment As the goodness of God is his love acted or as the good things which God doth for us are love-actions so the evils that are upon us are wrath-actions I do not say that every evil which we endure in this world is the acting of wrath upon us but I say there is wrath in the actings of evil upon us Moses said to Aaron Numb 16.46 Go quickly take a Censer hast hast and make an atonement there is wrath gone out How did he know wrath was gone out He tells us in the next words the plague is begun He saw wrath in that dispensation of God the plague begun argued that God was angry Because there is wrath beware Hence note Thirdly We should by all meanes take heed and beware of the wrath of God The wrath of man is a small matter to the wrath of God yet we are very careful to beware of the wrath of man especially of great men The wrath of the Kings and Princes of the world is like the ●oaring of the Lion saith Solomon and we are ready to tremble at that but O how should we tremble at and beware of the wrath of God! Who knoweth the power of thine anger Psal 90.11 We may take some scantling some measure of the wrath of man and know how far it can go and what it can do but we can take no measure of the wrath of God for it is immesurable and therefore we should avoid every
quem Deus Instituit Aquin. 1. 2 dae q. 21. Art 4. Ad primum nothing can be diminished nothing taken from God by any act of man Yet man as much as in him lyes takes away from and gives or brings to God when he either keeps or doth not keep that order which God hath appointed Sinners shall be judged and dealt with as they that have greatly annoyed and disadvantaged God as they that have rob'd and spoyl'd him as they that have smitten and wounded him as they that have abased him and laid him low And there is reason they should be judged as having done so forasmuch as they do their utmost to do so Thus they are described Psal 2.1 2. The Heathen rage and the People imagine a vain thing The Kings of the Earth set themselves and the Rulers c. And why all this what was it for It was against the Lord and against hû Anointed This was done by the Princes and Great Ones of the world yet they were so far from being able to prejudice the Lord either in his Person or in his Interest that he did but laugh at them for it And 't is considerable that God is described there according to the notion used by Elihu in the Text sitting in the Heavens vers 4. He that sitteth in the Heavens shall laugh the Lord shall have them in derision And why doth the Lord laugh surely because he sees they can no more hurt or hinder him in his purposes by any of or all their sinful advisings and attemptings than if they should hope to batter down the Heavens by discharging a Pot-gun against them And therefore he concludes with a triumphant Yet ver 6. Yet have I set my King after you have done your worst upon my holy Hill of Sion The sins of men do tu●n to the glory of God but to their own shame The sins of Gods own children turn to the glo●y of his mercy those huge heaps and numberless numbers of sins committed by his Children before Conversion what do they in the issue but lift up the glory of his Grace in the pardon of them And the rebellions committed by impenitent sinners going on in obstinacy to the end without Conversion what do they but lift up the glory of God in his Justice and wonderful judgements which he will bring upon them The sins of the old world which was a world of sin all flesh having corrupted their way before God and there being but one righteous Family found in it all those sins I say did not dammage God at all but indeed they glorified both his Patience and his Justice his Patience in sparing them so long even an hundred and twenty years after warning given his Justice in sending the Flood at last which brought swift destruction upon them and swept them all away The unnatural crying sins of Sodome did not hurt the God of Heaven but God took advantage thereby to glo●ifie his Justice in raining Fire and Brimstone upon them from Heaven Gen. 19.24 Pharaoh by all his opposition against the Israel of God did not disadvantage God but gave him an advantage to make his Power known by swallowing up him and his Egyptian Host in the waters of the Red Sea That which is done against the Will of God fulfills the Will of God The sins of men are so far from hurting the God of Heaven that they glorifie him among men on E●rth while they behold him either turning the evil which is dore into good or punishing them ●or their evil doings That which men speak or do against God like an Arrow shot up into the Ayre falls down upon their own heads David Ps 111.2 breaks out wonderfully into the praise of God upon this consideration The works of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure in them These wo●ks of God wherein we should take pleasure are not only wo ks of mercy to the Godly vers 3 4 5. but of vengeance upon the wicked vers 6. He hath shewed his people the power of his w●rks that he may give them the heritage of the Heathen The works of his hands are Verity and Judgement vers 7. That is judgement for Saints in saving them and upon sinners in consuming them De eo quod agitur contra Dei voluntatem voluntas ipsius vel mala in bonum convertentis vel mala punientis impletur August Enchirid c. 100. We should much contemplate the works of God in bringing glory to himself out of the sins of men The Angels sinned and sell man sinned as soon almost as he was set up These Creatures did that which God would not have done yet God brought about that which he would And thus it is to this day among all the child●en of men while they break holy Commandements God fulfills his holy Counsels no thanks to them yea woe to them So then the Lord hath no hurt by sin which way soever sinners turn themselves they cannot turn away his Counsels nor turn from his Counsels When they are disobeying his revealed will Miro et inaffabili modo non fit praeter ejus voluntatem quod etiam contra ejus voluntatem fit quia non fieret si non sineret nec utique nolens sinit sed volens Nec sineret bonus fieri male nisi omnipotens etiam de malo facere posset bene August in Psal 111. he is doing his secret will in which God is most righteous and in his season will lift up his Righteousnesse and Holinesse his righteous and holy Will in the face of all the sinners in the world and they shall know and confesse that he hath served his own wise and holy purposes even in those Providences wherein they have had no purpose but to serve their foolish and unholy lusts and pleasures We have an illustrious proof of this in that extreamly evil and unnatural practise of men good in the main the holy Patriarchs against their own Brother Gen. 50.20 who told them plainly when he meant them no evil but good But as for you ye thought evil against me but God meant it for good to bring to pass as it is this day to save much people alive Further To clear the Point in general we may distinguish of sin as having a threefold opposition First Against our selves Secondly Against our Neighbour Thirdly Against God This division or distinction of sins must be so understood that the two former namely sin against our selves and against our Neighbour brings a real detriment and disadvantage to our selves and to our Neighbour But as sin hath respect to God it doth not bring any real detriment to him Only it may be said First The will of many sinners is raised up to that height of wickednesse as purposely to set themselves to dishonour God to blaspheme his name and do despight to the Spirit of Grace Heb. 10.29 which is the utmost length that sin or lust can go Secondly The nature of
idle away the day and sport and play and sing away the night As good men have holy songs in the night Isa 30.29 Ye shall have a song as in the night when a holy Solemnity is kept c. So the wicked have their wanton vaine revelling songs in the night when their sensual Solemnities are kept Belshazer was drinking in the night and doubtless he had his musick songs that night And as he had his songs mirth and musick in the night so he said not Where is God my maker who giveth me songs in the night he instead of minding God his maker in his mirth minded only the gods which himself had made as the text speaks Dan. 5.4 They drank wine and praised the gods of gold and of silver c. And thus 't is in proportion with all the wicked to whom God gives songs in the night they say not Where is God my maker This interpretation which carrieth the songs to the oppressors before spoken of contains a truth yet I shall not stay upon it but take the words as referring to the oppressed Here it may be queried how doth God give them songs in the night I shall not insist upon those conjectures which some have made about this giving songs in the night As First implying God so gracious that he giveth us not only in the day but in the night occasion of joy in sorrow namely the view and contemplation of the Heavens and Starrs which are very pleasant and refreshing Psal 19.1 Others Secondly conjecture that God may be said to give the sorrowful and oppressed ones songs in the night by the singing of birds in the night of that bird especially which hath its name from singing in the night the Nightingal Some insist much upon these interpretations It is I grant a great mercy of God that when the Sun is down we have Moon-light and Star-light and that in the night we have the innocent harmless birds to sing and make us pleasant melody But leaving these we may take the words in a double notion First Properly Secondly Metaphorically Properly and so to give songs in the night as the night is taken for night time imports the goodness of God to man not only in the day time but in the night Hence Note God in the night season as well as in the day gives his people matter of joy Night-mercies deserve and call for day-praises especially two sorts of night-mercies First Night preservations Psal 3.6 I laid me down and slept for thou Lord makest me to dwell in safety The night is subj●ct to many dangers Qui distribuit nocturnas custodias Sept The Septuagint render fully to this sense Who giveth watch or preservation in the night that 's matter of praise and thanksgiving to God Secondly he gives us cause of praise and singing not only for preserving our lives while we sleep in the night but for refreshing us with sleep in the night Psal 127.2 So he giveth his beloved sleep The Lord gives us not only safety but sleep Sweet sleep is a great mercy Eccl. 5.12 The sleep of a labouring man is sweet whether he eat little or muc● and they who sleep sweetly get refreshing and renewings of strength after all their fo●mer labours for new labours So tha● if we take night properly for the night time there is much occasion of rejoycing given by God to mankind in general and more peculiarly to his faithfull servants in reference to those common mercies of bodily safety and the return of natural strength and spirits Secondly Take night properly and then this assertion He giveth songs in the night may have this meaning The Lord gives his people a praising frame of heart in the night season Et●am cum nulla ad eum laudandum documenta circumfulgent intus Spiritu excitat ad laudes Jun When they are wrapped up and compassed about with outward darkness when they are solitary and alone when no worldly object holds out any occasion of comfort to them yet then the Lord lets in a light or shines into their s●uls by his good Spirit The Lord may well be said to give songs even in the night when by the immediate work of his Spirit he filleth our spirits with joyes unspeakable and glorious These a●e the most ravishing songs of the night Hence Note God by his good Spirit doth often suggest sweet meditations and comfortable thoughts to his people in the night In the night the Lord minds his servants either of such mercies as they have already received or of such as according to his promise he is ready to or will surely bestow that so they may be busied in that heavenly work of praising him and rejoycing in him when they awake or cannot sleep This was Davids experience Psal 17.3 Thou hast visited me in the night Men use to visit us in the day when we are up or awake But saith David God gives me visits in the night when I am in bed he gives me many a song or makes me to rejoyce When we are in our retirements or freest from the hurry of worldly businesses and enjoyments then we are in the fittest posture for the entertainment and enjoyment of God The Lord visits his servants in the night not only as David there to try them or as elsewhere to instruct them but to com●o●t them as David was assured Psal 42.8 The Lord will command his loving kindness in the day time and in the night his song shall be with me That is a song concerning him I will sing and rejoyce even in the night time because of the goodness and kindn●ss of God to me in the day The experience of Asaph or of David communicated in that Psalm to Asaph gives further proof of this Psal 77.6 where having said v. 1. I cryed unto God with my voyce and he gave eare unto me he adds v. 6. I call to remembrance my song in the night that is those occasions of joy and singing which God hath heretofore given me These songs were sweeter to me than sleep As it sheweth an excellent frame of spirit to remember the Commandments of God in the night which David also professed as his practise Psal 119.55 I have remembred thy Name O Lord in the night and have kept thy Law The name of God is any manifestation of God either in his word or works And again Psal 119.62 At midnight I will rise to give thanks to thee because of thy righteous judgements Some watch in the night to give thanks Psal 134.1 others give thanks when they wake at any time in the night both are acts of purest love to God and proceed from purest consolation in God Cant. 3.1 By night on my bed I sought him The Spouse doth not say only by night I sought him but by night on my bed I spend not the night in sleeping but in seeking him whom my soul loveth Psal 16.7 My reines instruct me in the night
serves their turn and answers their state by a common instinct of nature which man hath answerable to his state either by immediate Revelation or by means of instruction from God So then Beasts and Birds receive their peculiar qualities and abilities from God as well as their Being And God hath bestowed those qualities which are shadows of wisdome and understanding upon Beasts and Birds not only for their own preservation but for the benefit of man that they may be more useful to him and fitter for his service As God hath made both Man and Beast for himself so he hath made the Beasts of the Earth and Fowls of the Air for Man either to serve mans necessity or to procure his honest delight And that they might reach both these ends he hath furnished them accordingly A creature which hath not somwhat in it like Reason could be little made use of by the Reason of Man Thirdly Note Man is far better taught than either the Beasts of the Earth or Fowls of the Air. Man as Man hath that in him which wonderfully exceeds the Beasts of the Earth and Fowls of the Air he hath Reason in him which they have not he is a reasonable creature which they are not and so can do that which they cannot Man by the power of Reason is able first to propose to himself an end in what he doth secondly to chuse fit means for the attaining of that end neither of which Beasts can do And if any man be without wisdome to propose to himself a right end and to chuse due means lo●ding thereunto there 's little difference between that man and a beast surely all his wisdome is but brutish Further God hath not only given Man a sense of those things which are hurtful to him as he hath to the Beasts of the Earth and Fowls of the Air but God hath given Man an Understanding by which he knowing God may worship him by which also he may see into and foresee the causes of things and likewise rightly apply known means either to prevent or remedy evils and to bring about that which is good Again as God hath bestowed that wonderful blessing of Reason upon Man above Beasts and Fowls which makes him capable of higher instructions and fruitions than either of them so God hath provided higher and better means for the instruction of Man than he hath for the instruction of Beasts He teacheth us more For First He hath given his Word to Man not to Beasts he hath not made a Bible for the Beast of the Earth and the Fowls of the Air but for Man he hath that he might both know his will and do it know his favour or good will to him and enjoy it Secondly He hath given some men his Spirit he hath not bestowed his Spirit upon any Beasts nor upon any Fowls of the Air and because his Spirit teacheth us we are said to be taught of God eminently taught of God Thirdly he hath given us his Ordinances and appointed Officers or set persons in Office to mannage and hold out those Ordinances wherein himself is both honoured and enjoyed He saith the Apostle Eph. 4.11 12. gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the Body of Christ for the bringing in and building up of souls He sheweth his Word unto Jacob his Statutes and Judgments unto Israel Psal 147.19 and as it follows in the next verse of the same Psalm He hath not dealt so with any Nation as with his Israel his Church to be sure he hath not dealt so with the Beasts of the Earth nor with the Fowls of the Air as was shewed also in opening the Text. Further as to the matter in question about the Providences and dealings of God with man God hath taught Man much more than Beasts As First That all things which befall us come from and are ordered by himself Secondly That we ought to receive the Rule and take instruction from God how to behave our selves under his various dealings Thirdly He hath taught us at all times and in all turns of Providence to stay our selves in waiting upon him Psal 37.7 Fourthly He hath taught us in times of trouble and affliction to cry to him and call upon him as his children in faith not barely to complain much less to be impatiently outragious like Beast● Now if God hath taught us more than the Beasts then we should not live by sense nor pursue sensible things as Beasts do but aspire to and seek after union and communion with God whom the beasts of the earth know not How greatly will this aggravate the sin of man if having been taught more than beasts any man should be found to have learned less than beasts as will appear yet more in the next observation but one Fourthly Elihu at least intimates this Note Men sometimes act but as or indeed below the very beasts of the earth and the fowls of the air For saith he they say not Where is God our maker who gives us songs in the night who teacheth us better or more than the beasts of the earth As if he had said In extremam stultitiae meam incidimus si sapientiores nos eo putemu● qui sapientes nos facit The beasts of the earth answer the instinct of nature which is all the cost God bestows in teaching them better than men do those costly teachings and instructions which God bestows upon them by his Word by his Spirit by his Ministers by his Ordinances and by his Providences for all these wayes doth the Lord teach and instruct men from day to day yet men often act not only beside and below but quite contrary to all these teachings The beasts of the earth keep up to the instruction which they have received the instinct of nature they move according to that but man who hath an understanding doth not alwayes move suitably to his understanding man hath reason yet he doth not alwayes regulate his motions by reason but is hurried by passion or led by sense as a beast Psal 49.20 Man that is in honour and understandeth not is like the beasts that perish that is though his state and spheare be higher than a beast yet he moves by as low a principle as a beast even by sense or sensual appetite either irrascible or concupiscible as a beast doth By the man in honour that understandeth not the Psalmist intends not a fool that hath no understanding nor an Idiot that hath no use of reason but he is said not to understand because he doth not use his understanding as he in the Parable that did not use his Talent is said to have none Mat. 25.29 Understanding is a Talent and a great one a choyce one too A man that hath the greatest natural understanding and reason yea possibly the greatest learning and experience
not regard vaine prayer so when thou sayest to him thou wilt not mark it that is attend to providences as thou oughtest he wil not regard thee There is a truth in this and the Original word may fairly bear this translation yet I shall not stay upon it but rather take this Context as the beginning of a new argument than as the inforcement of the former understanding it so the words have yet a reading different from ours Another modern translater disliking the former reading only in the first part of the verse gives his own thus In this also thou hast sinned Those words are supplyed to make up the sense Etiam in hoc pexasti quòd dixisti te non contemplaturum eum Judica te coram eo expecta eum Pisc as being the bringing in of a further charge against Job In this also thou hast sinned that thou hast said thou shalt not see him judge therefore thy self before him and look for him This is the matter of his new charge Thou hast said thou shalt not see him this is thy sin And having given him this charge Elihu gives him counsel according to this translation in the close of the verse Judge therefore thy self before him and look for him We say in our translation Judgement is before him that is before God this translation saith Judge thy self before him and the reason of it is because some take the word here as a Noune Aliqui 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nomine exponunt Judicium alii pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verbo imperativi modi Judica Merc others as a Verb of the Imparative mood Judge thy self before him and then look to him or trust in him that is thou hast failed greatly and sinned in taking up such a Conclusion as this that thou shalt not see God the sense of which I shall open when I come to our own translation therefore I advise thee to judge thy self thoroughly and humbly to acknowledge thy fault This translation is much insisted upon and because it hath a profitable sense I shall note two or three poynts from the latter part of the verse where it differs from ours and then proceed to our own Translation Job being charged with sin for saying that he should not see God is here advised to judge himself Judge thy self and look to or trust in him Hence Note It is our duty to judge our selves And 't is a great Gospel duty The Apostle gives it in plain words 1 Cor. 11.31 If we would judge our selves we should not be judged of the Lord. We are very apt to judge one another but very backward to judge our selves It is a great work to erect a Tribunal as I may say in our own Souls and Consciences to sit in Judgement upon our selves which that we may do we must do these three things First we must send Summons to our selves we must cite our selves to our own Tribunal for alwayes before Judgement Summons must go out and be sent to the party offending Here we are to send Summons to our selves that is to call together all the powers of our souls to appear in this Judgement and answer what is or may be alledged against us And when we have Summoned our selves then secondly we are to examine search and try our selve● Lam. 3.41 Let us search and try our wayes and turn again unto the Lord. Thirdly having tryed and examined our selves before we can come to Judgement that Judgement which is here intended we must humble our selves under a Conviction of our own vileness and sinfulness whether of our nature or of our actions whether of our state or of our way for whereas there are two parts of Judgement Absolution and Condemnation we can never come to that part of Judgement the judging of our selves as persons worthy to be condemned by the Lord for our sins unless we are first convinced of our sins Now when we have summoned examined and convicted our selves then we are ready to judge our selves to judge our selves even with the judgement of condemnation respecting what we have done yet we should do it with hopes of absolution acting our faith upon the free grace and mercy of God through the satisfaction which Jesus Christ hath made for us Again The scope of this counsel or the reason why Elihu adviseth Job to judge himself was to shew that he had rashly judged of the wayes of God because he had not duly judged himself Hence Note Self-judging or judging our own doings will preserve us from rash judging the doings and dealings of God with us We shall never think God deals harshly or rigorously with us if we do but enter into and pass a right judgement upon our own souls As they that judge themselves shall not be judged of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.31 so they that judge themselves will never judge the Lord no they will acquit and justifie the Lord under all his proceedings even in his sorest and severest ones Thus did Ezra in reference to those great and unparalel'd sufferings of the Jewes in the Babylonian warr and captivity Chap. 9.13 Thou our God hast punished us less than our iniquities deserve And so did Daniel Chap. 9.7 O Lord righteousness belongeth unto thee but unto us confusion of faces as at this day Further Elihu concluded Job very much affected with or highly conceited of himself because he pleaded his own innocency or integrity so much and was so desirous to come to a hearing and have his matter tryed before God and therefore saith he Judge thy self Hence Note Self-judging will keep us from proud or high thoughts of our selves of our own wayes or works how good soever they are Suppose our wayes and our works pure and good as Jobs indeed were for the maine he was a man of the highest elevation in holiness and of greatest integrity yet if we would thoroughly examine and judge our selves consider our short comings in duty our sinnings against duty and the sins that cleave to our best duties we should find our very innocency to be guilty and our righteousness to be unrighteous and surely such a discovery would lay us very low in our own thoughts and go very far towards the subduing of that pride of our hearts which often ariseth from the contemplation of our own wel-doing Lastly Consider this counsel was given Job according to this translation with respect to that which follows Judge thy self and trust in or wait for him Hence Note We are never fit to trust nor to wait upon God in any of his providences till we judge our selves or Judging of our selves will dispose and prepare our hearts for trusting and resting upon the power goodness and mercy of God The more we judge and humble our selves the readier ha●h God declared himself to help us in our extremities 1 Pet. 5 6. we also are then the readier to trust and wait on him both because we then see more clearly what need we
do right But as sure as God knows every mans righ● so certainly he will do him right Abraham pleaded thus with God Shall not the Judge of all the Earth do right Gen. 18.25 Certainly he will do right he cannot but do right Judgement is before him The Scripture is express He will reward every man and award to every man according to his works Every man shall have as he is for as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 4.6 He shall bring to light the hidden things of darknesse and make manifest the counsels of the heart and then shall every man have praise of God that is every man shall have it who is fit for it every man shall have praise who is as we say praise-worthy how much soever he hath been dispraised slurr'd in his credit unworthily dealt with and accused in this world God will not hold or detain the truth of men in unrighteousnesse though men hold both the truth of God and the truth of men the truth of their Causes in unrighteousnesse Judgement is before the Lord. Fu●ther That Particle which we render yet gives us this Note God is never a whit the lesse Righteous because it doth not appear to us that he is so Although thou sayest thou shalt not see him yet Judgement is before him The wayes of God are often secret but none of them are unjust Judgement is before him even then when we think i● is farthest off from him Therefore if we will give God the glory of govern●ng the world and of ordering all our personal conditions we must not measure him by the things we see or which appear for we cannot see the measure of his Judgement by what appears that which appears to us is not his Judgement something else is his judgement and he in the close will make his judgement clear to all men he will make it appear that judgment is his though what his judgement is doth not appear The mis-apprehensions or mis-constructions of men do not at all retard or stop the righteousnesse of God as the Apostle speaks in another case Rom. 3.3 Shall the unbelief of man make the Faith of God that is the Faithfulnesse of God of none effect God forbid God will be Faithful and True though all the world be Unbelievers and Lyars Now as the unbelief of man cannot make the Faithfulnesse of God of none effect so our not believing that Judgement proceeds or our saying it is delayed does not at all take off God from righteousnesse in doing Judgement he is doing Judgement righteously whatever apprehensions men have of his doings Judgement is before him Therefore trust thou in him Elihu according to the first reading of the former words exhorts Job to Repentance Judge thy self and here he exhorts him to Faith Trust thou in him Judgement is before him therefore trust thou in him or wait and hope in him for seeing God is a Just and Righteous Judge he will not neglect or slight the Cause of any of his People therefore they have all the reason in the world to trust in him and wait upon him It is unbelief which makes haste Faith is content to wait and tarry The Original word hath several significations First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Notat 1. Dolere 2. Parturire 3. Manere Perseverare 4. Sperare Forte per metaphoram quia animus sperans futur●m gaudium cum dolore parturit Coc. More general to grieve or be in pain and trouble Secondly In special to bring forth or the pain of a woman in travel to bring forth there is much pain in that travel Thus some translate here Wait for him as a woman in travel waits for deliverance Thirdly As it signifies to have pain and to have that pain in bringing forth children so to attend to wait to stay quietly and expect Rest in the Lord saith David Psal 37.7 and wait patiently for him We may give the reason of this signification from that allusion The woman though she be in pain yet she patiently bears it because she hath hope a man shall be born into the world John 16.21 A woman in that pain hath not only patience but comfort under it because she hopes a child shall shortly be born who will recompence all her sorrows in bearing and bringing him forth into the world That 's the force of this word Trust in him Thou art in pain in trouble in travel for the present yet thou shalt have a blessed deliverance thou shalt certainly find that it is not in vain to trust upon God Thus Elihu a●viseth Job to such a patience as a woman in travel with child hath who bears her pains comfortably being refreshed and supported with an assurance and fore-sense of that joy which she shall have being once delivered Trust thou in him I have in some other places of this Book met with this Point of trusting in God Job said in the 13th Chapter of this Book vers 15. Though he slay me yet will I trust in him And therefore I shall not stay to open that general duty or the exercise of that Grace which here Elihu exhorts Job to Trusting in or waiting upon God Only from the Connexion Note First It is our duty to wait and trust upon God And 't is such a duty as will keep us close to all other duties a mind staid on God is a mind fit to move about any good work whatsoever which God calleth us unto Secondly Put all together Thou sayest thou shalt not see him thou art doubtful whether ever things will mend yet Judgement is before him therefore trust Hence Note When things are not clear to us when we have no light about what God is doing or what he will do yet it is our duty to trust and wait upon God We must wait upon God and trust in him though we do not see him yea though we cannot see him for Judgement is before him That of the Prophet Isa 50.10 is a clear proof of this duty and some expound this Scripture specially respecting outward dark providences as others of inward darkness or darkness of spirit Who is among you that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voyce of his servants that walketh in darkness and hath no light as Job saith here I shall not see him What shall a poor benighted soul do in that case The answer or advice followeth Let him trust in the name of the Lord and stay upon his God How dark soever our condition is yet it is our duty to trust upon God and if once we are enabled to give God the glory due to his name in confessing that Judgement is before him we shall readily trust upon him to order all things for us though all things seem out of order even to amazement though we see heaven and earth as it were confounded yet we shall readily trust upon him because we believe that even then Judgement is before him How soon can he turn our
darkness into light who in the first Creation when all lay together in a confused heap and darkness over all b●ought forth light and set all in order The Lord can command light out of darkness good out of evil order out of confusion and he can do all this easily and at an instant therefore whatever the appearances of things are let not us judge according to appearance but hope and wait and stick to what God hath promised Though providences appear cross to promises and prophesies yet they never frustrate either Let us also be sure to stick to the commandements of God for we may rest assured God will stick to his promises To keep Commandements is our work to keep promises is Gods work though we fayle much in our work God will not fayle at all in his work To believe this is the highest and truest work of faith But if we are faithful in our work the keeping of Commandements we have a further evidence that God will be faithful in his work the keeping or fulfilling of promises a great part the most spiritual part of Gods fulfilling promises being his enabling of us to keep Commandements and then we shall be able to say not only in faith but from experience that Judgement is before him And untill we come to this conclusion of faith in dark times when we cannot see him the soul never sits down in rest Nothing fixes the soul but trust in God we are unquiet yea we boyle with unquietness and toss as the angry Sea with the windes till we trust fully upon God upon his wisdome and power upon his goodness and faithfulness and can say let him do as seems good in his eyes we know he is and will be good to Israel even to such as are of a clean heart When we can once stay our minds on God we are quiet but when we must bring God to our mind and must have God go our pace or come at our time and work in our way none of which he will do what a do soever we make to have it so O how restless and troubled are we even like the troubled Sea when it cannot rest And O how much of this restless trouble discovers it self in the minds of many that I say not the most of men and all because they cannot trust God when they do not see him or because when they do not see him which was Jobs fayling they say they shall not see him If matters come not to pass according to their platforme and model or hit not the dates and dayes the times and seasons which they have fixt in their unscriptural Kalender or by a mistake of the Scripture Kalendar they are ready to say they shall not see him their hopes are as the giving up of the ghost that is they give all for lost and past recovery Many trust God as they do some men no farther than they see him they are the worst and coursest sort of men whom we trust no otherwise How dishonourable then how infinitely below God is such a trust Elihu would have Job and so should we trust God though he could not see him and said he should not Thou hast said thou shalt not see him yet trust in him Lastly From the illative particle therefore that is because Judgement is before him trust thou in him Note hence The consideration of the Righteousness and Justice of God is a mighty argument to provoke us to trust him and wait upon him Trust is not every bodyes due some as we speak proverbially are to be trusted no farther than a man can throw a Milstone that is they are not to be trusted at all Trust I say is not every bodyes due but to trust God is every bodyes duty yea and interest too for he is cloathed as much with righteousness and justice as he is with strength and power Will you not trust an honest man will you not trust a wise man We can come to a height of confidence in man sometimes if we think him a man of judgement and wisdome of honesty and faithfulness we can trust all we have in such a mans hand how much more should we say to God seeing Judgement is before him therefore will we trust in him We have an eminent Scripture urging this duty upon this ground Isa 30.18 The Lord is a God of Judgement Judgement is there taken in the same notion as here in the Text he is a wise and a just God the Lord is a God of judgement what followeth Blessed are they that wait for him There can be nothing said more urging more encouraging to wait and trust on God to do us right then this He is a God of Judgement a righteous God Judgement is before him Thus far of the good counsel which Elihu gave Job in this his dark and deserted state and counsel it was worthy to be embraced with both armes and with an open breast and that Job had need of it he shews in the next words while he tells Job and us it was not so with him yet as appeared by the sad hand of God upon him and his own distemper under it JOB Chap. 35. Vers 15 16. 15. But now because it is not so he hath visited in his anger yet he knoweth it not in great extremity 16. Therefore doth Job open his mouth in vain he multiplieth words without knowledge IN the close of the former verse Elihu called upon and exhorted Job to a patient reliance and trust on God Judgement is before him therefore trust thou in him here in the 15th verse he shews that the reason why God visited him so sorely and yet continued his visitation upon him was because he did not as he ought patiently trust in and rely upon him There are several readings of this verse but I shall only mention one besides our own and having stayed a little about that go on to the explication of the Text as it lyes in order before us Some render thus But know now his anger hath visited thee but a little Hebr Nunc autem cito quod paululum te visitavit ira ipsius neque inquisivit multum admodum Merc Scito perexiguum esse quo te deus iratus plectit nisi levitèr in te inqui ere m●luisset Bez nothing neither hath he made any great inquisition The sense of the verse according to this rendring riseth thus As if Elihu had said God hath dealt with thee O Job far better than thou hast dealt with him or then thou hast cause to expect he hath not laid his hand so heavy upon thee as thy iniquity hath deserved and yet thou complainest much of his severity whereas indeed he hath not strictly inquired into the multitude of thy sins which if he had done he would certainly have brought upon thee a greater multitude of afflictions he would have afflicted thee much more Thou art too well used to complain thus That 's the summe of this rendring which
10.22 Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie Are we stronger than he As if he had said What do ye mean he speaks to those that would venture to go to the Table of Devils that is who cared not how they mingled themselves and held Communion in the things of God with those who worshipped Devil-gods or as all Idolaters do Devils rather than God what mean you saith he to these consider your selves Will you provoke the Lord are you stronger than he are you his match are you able to graple with him not so well as a Child with a mighty Giant or a Lamb with a Lion The mightiness of the Lord his Almightiness should make sinners tremble and fear to provoke him he can crush them as a Moth and break them in pieces like a Potters Vessel As 't is the Joy of all true Believers that God hath laid help for them as 't is said Psal 89.19 upon one that is mighty that is Christ of whom David was but a shadow and as 't is the comfort of the Fatherless how weak soever that their Redeemer is mighty Prov. 23.11 So it may fill the faces of the wicked and presumptuous with confusion and their hearts with despairing sorrow to hear that God who is ready to take vengeance on them is mighty Behold God is mighty that 's a glorious sight and yet behold a sight more glorious if more glorious may be And despiseth not any What a temperament is here God is so mighty that he feareth none no not the mightiest yet so meek that he despiseth not any no not the meanest Elihu having asserted the mightiness of God amplifieth it First by his gracious condescension and moderation in the use of his mightiness he is mighty yet he doth not exercise his might in a proud vaunting or contemning way he despiseth not any that 's the first thing in which he amplifies the excellency of God in his mightiness Secondly As God is thus mighty and moderate in the exercise of his might not despising any so behold another excellency of this might of God He is mighty not only in strength of Arm and Authority but as the last words of the verse set him forth In strength and wisdome Or he is as wise as he is strong Some men have a great deal of might and they presently swell proudly this spoyls all others have a great deal of might but not a bit of wit or wisdome or understanding how to dispose or make the best of it But what a mighty God have we to do with who is mighty and despiseth no man who hath not only might of strength but might of wisdome too Thus we see how Elihu in this latter part of the verse advanceth or extolleth the mightiness of God in these two things the infinite Moderation and Wisdome that go along with it and act it I shall a little open both First his wonderful Moderation in the exercise of his mightiness He is mighty And despiseth not any To despise is an act of Pride Pride is a bad Mo●her of many bad Children these three especially First boasting of our selves Secondly contending with others Thirdly despising of others The word here used signifies to despise with abhorrence or loathing as the Stomack doth meat which is offensive to it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ill savoured meat is loathsome and any thing which the mind nauseates is an abhorrence to us The Lord despiseth not he doth not nauseate any The word any is not exprest in the Original Text that saith only The Lord is Mighty and despiseth not we put that supplement in our Translation any He is Mighty and despiseth not any Others render more strictly thus Behold God is Mighty and despiseth not his own people The Chaldee Paraphrase speaks exegetically The Lord is mighty and despiseth not the righteous man The Greek Version hath a fourth supplement to the same purpose God is mighty and despiseth not the innocent person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Innocentem simplicem integrum Sept. Etsi ●●ga●●r ●usti tamen non ideo quia justi Merc. the man free from evill or wickedness a man of integrity a man of simplicity the Lord will not despise such are often afflicted but never despised especially not as such Lastly thus God is mighty and despiseth not the mean the affl●cted the poor or those of low estate Psal 22.24 He hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted neither hath he hid his face from him but when he cryed unto him he heard And this seems most proper to the scope and meaning of Elihu here God is mighty and despiseth not those who have no might Thus the words reflect chiefly upon Job who at least seemed to charge God that he did not consider him in his affliction or in his low estate when he complained and cryed to him We have two Texts in this Book of Job which might very well move Elihu to speak thus unto him though God be mighty yet he despiseth not the afflicted or the poor Job said Chap. 10.3 Is it good to thee that thou shouldst oppress that thou shouldst despise the work of thy hands and shine upon the Counsell of the wicked As if he had said to God Thou seemest to despise me the work of thy hand now that I am poor low and reduced as it were to dust Again Chap. 19.7 we have neer the same ●●nguage Behold I cry out of wrong but I am not heard I cry a loud but there is no Judgment As much as to say I am despised and neglected I am not regarded when I cry This Elihu takes off in the present Text Behold God is mighty and despiseth not any he despiseth not the afflicted not the poor when they cry un●o and call upon him and therefore in this O Job thou hast misbehaved thy self or spoken amiss But which-soever of these supplements we take the sense is good and the Proposition true he despiseth not what will he not despise we say not any a second his own a third the Just a sourth the Innocent a fifth the afflicted there is a sixth which I shall offer before I part with these words All these are true God despiseth not Hence Note First Though the Lord be infinitely more mighty than the mightiest of men yet he doth not despise any man He doth not despise man in general who is the work of his hand yea Job said once Chap. 14.15 Thou wilt have a desire to the work of thy hand The Lord doth not despise any of his works as they are his works or as they come out of his hand and therefore when Jonah seemed to set so low a rate upon the Ninivites who were the work of his hand his Creatures the Lord reproved him for it by the Gourd which when the Lord smote Jonah was angry but said the Lord Dost thou well to be angry for thy Gourd Hast thou mercy upon a Gourd and should
without fruit to us and therefore he openeth the ear to discipline and sheweth us the meaning of such a cross or sickness of such a loss or affliction He openeth their ear to d●scipline Hence note First It is a special power of God which helps us to understand his mind either in his Word or in his Works We neither understand the dealings nor sayings of God if left to our selves the heart of man is shut his ear is deaf the ear of his heart that 's the ear here intended till God say as in the Gospel to the bodily ear Ephatha Be thou opened Pro. 20.12 The hearing ear and the seeing eye the Lord is the maker of them both That 's a great truth First of the sensitive ear and eye 't is the Lord who hath made the one to hear and the other to see as he told Moses Exod. 4.11 and as 't is said Psal 94.19 Secondly 't is as true if understood of the intellectual eye and ear the hearing ear and seeing eye that is the ear that heareth obediently and practically that ear is of Gods forming and making such an ear did God create Acts 16.14 where it is said A certain woman named Lydia a seller of purple of the City of Thyatira which worshipped God heard us whose heart the Lord opened that she attended to the things that were spoken by Paul Further what was the season of opening the ear It was a day of affliction when they were bound in fetters and holden in cords of affliction Hence learn God useth afflictions as medicines or means to restore spiritual hearing Man is often cured of his spiritual deafness both as to the voyce of the word and workes of God by sickness A good man in health Fles prospera donum est dei consolantis res odversa est donum dei admonentis quod igiturpateris un de plangis medicina est non paena castigatio non damnatio August in Psal 102. Qui juhentis verba non audiunt ferientis verberibus admonentur ut ad bona aeterna paenae trahant quos praemia non invitant Greg l. 26. Moral c. 26. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 et dicit peace prosperity may have his ears so stopped that the Lord sees it needful to send some sharp correction to get out the ear-wax and unlock them Prosperity saith one of the Ancients is the gift of God comforting us adversity is the gift of God admonishing us why then dost thou complain that thou sufferest thy suffering is a medicament not a punishment 't is for thy bettering not for thy undoing 'T is a favour to feel God striking when we have not heard him speaking and he therefore strikes that we may attend what he speaks When words do not prevaile to open the ear fetters and cords shall That 's the second designe of God when he brings the righteous into streights Then he openeth their ear to discipline The third is given in the close of this verse And commandeth that they return from iniquity Here 's the issue of the former two The shewing them their transgressions the opening their ear are that they may return from iniquity and here is a command that they must And commandeth that they return c. The Hebrew text may be rendred He speaketh or saith that they return from iniquity and this speaking may be expounded two wayes First by perswading He speaks perswadingly The Lords afflictions are perswasions his stroaks are entreaties he beseecheth us by ou● sorrows and sicknesses and weaknesses and pains that we would return from our iniquity Secondly we take speaking or saying in the highest straine He speaks by commanding he speaks autho●itatively Thus we render He commandeth The command of God is twofold First formal or express when God gives the rule in so many words Secondly vertual The command of God I conceive is here to be understood in this latter sense When the Lord afflicteth the righteous he vertually commands or sends out his Edict that they return from their iniquity The word return implyes them formerly following some iniquity gone far from the Lord This returning is repenting all the Scripture over I need say no more of that As by sin we turn from God so by repentance we return from iniquity and as the Lord at all times commands the righteous by his word so they even force him sometimes to command them by his rod which is called discipline in the former part of the verse because sinners feel paine and find matter to learn all at once He commandeth that they return from iniquity The word rendred iniquity signifies a vain empty thing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habet significationem nihili Ab operibus suis malis quae similia sunt vanitate nihilo Chald a thing of nought so the Chaldee paraphraseth it here He commands that they return from their evil works which are like to vanity and a thing of nought What is sin but a kind of nothing we look for great matters from sin but it is a vanity it is like an Idol nothing in the world that is it is not such a thing as it doth import or as it promiseth or as the opinion of men make it to be Iniquity is no such thing as it pretendeth or as is pretended The Lord commandeth that they return from iniquity that is from doing that which will profit them nothing at all or no more than a vaine thing a thing of nothing can And yet though iniquity be nothing good or profitable yet 't is all things evil and hurtfull nor had any thing ever hurt us or been evil to us had it not been for iniquity He commandeth that they return from iniquity Hence Note First Affliction hath a voyce God speaks loudly to us by affliction He speaks to us as loud in his works as he doth in his word he trumpets to us he thunders to us in his works God speaks aloud but sweetly to us in his works of mercy he speaks aloud but terribly to us in his works of judgement Secondly Seeing as was touched in opening the words this command is not to be taken for a standing Law for so God alwayes commands men to return from iniquity but the command here is a renewed act or a special dispensation there is as it were a fresh command issued when a man is under the afflicting hand of God Hence Note God reinforceth or reneweth his command to return from sin as often as he reneweth our afflictions That we return from iniquity is a standing an everlasting Law but when we are in affliction then there is as it were a fresh Edition of the command 't is as I may say new printed and proclaimed the fetters print this command upon our heels and the cords upon our hands that we return from iniquity Thirdly Note Iniquity is a vaine thing it is a nothing Shall we not then return from it one would think a little perswasion
from a great P●ince the Duke of Saxony as I remember this came upon his heart I hope God will not put me off with these things with gifts from Princes I shall be hungry as long as I live if I have nothing to feed upon but what is of the World and poor as long as I live if I have no other treasure but what is earthly thereupon protested he would not be satisfied with the best things of this World though content with any thing Thus I say God deals bountifully with a liberal hand to some of his people especially This was made good in the former or Old Testament times when the promises went more upon externals as hath been shewed whereas now they go more upon spiritual and heavenly things yet there wants not examples of Gods dealing bountifully in outwa●ds with his faithful servants under the Gospel he hath caused that which was set upon their Table to be full of fatness This is the first part of the Application wherein Elihu acquaints Job what God would have done for him if he had carried it humbly as he should under his afflicting hand he had been out of his fetters and bonds before that time and set in a large place he had not fed so long upon ashes his Table had been full of fatness As in this verse Elihu applyed the matter to Job by shewing him how it should have fared with him or how graciously and bountifully God would have dealt with him if he had humbled himself as he ought and been duly affected with the afflicting hand then upon him so in the following verse he applyeth the Doctrine to him by telling him that the reason why he was at the present in such an afflicted condition was because he had not so humbled himself in his affliction Vers 17. But thou hast fulfilled the Judgment of the wicked therefore Judgment and Justice take hold on thee This is a home Application indeed he speaks to his face Thou hast done it thou hast fulfilled the Judgment of the wicked which is as a home so a very hard and heavy charge Take a twofold Interpretation of it First Some expound it I think not rightly of Jobs ill carriage in the time of his prosperity as if Elihu had reflected upon that Thou hast heretofore fulfilled the Judgment of the wicked and that First by a general ill course of life As Christ saith to the Pharisees Math. 23.32 Fill ye up the measure of your fathers some conceive Elihu speaking to Job in that sence Thou hast filled up the measure of the wicked following them in their evil wayes ●●●●ium impii imple visti q.d. Optimi et inc●rrupti judicis Offi●io desuisti impii munus et partes obiisti Cajet Sed receptissima vocis Originalis sententia est Judicium est non Officium Pined Secondly That in his Magistratical capacity or that being a Magistrate he had fulfilled the Judgment of the wicked that is what wicked men and their bad Causes wanted of weight and t uth of righteousness and goodness that he filled up by favour by accepting their persons and giving countenance to their wickedness Some charge him thus directly Thou hast done the part or Office of an unjust Judg when thou hadst power in thy hand thou wast defective short or wanting in discharging the Duty of an upright Judge but didst the work of a corrupt Judge corrupting Judgment to the full therefore now Justice and Judgment take hold of thee But as I said before this is not a right Exposition of the Text for Elihu never charged Job with a sinful course of life in former times or before his affliction as his friends had done though he cha●ged him with much sin in his carriage under his afflictions and it may be conceived that Job heard Elihu more patiently and equally than he heard his friends because Elihu dealt more equally and candidly with him than his F●iends did he did not lay it upon him as if in the foregoing part of his life he had traded in wickedness but only reproved him for his boldness in dealing with and appealing so often unto God in his soars and sickness or because his spirit was not broken enough notwithstanding those sore breakings and sicknesses with which he was afflicted So then Elihu in saying this intended not that Job had fulfilled the Judgment of the wicked either by a wicked conversation or by perverting Justice in favour of the wicked Such a charge had been utterly inconsistent with the Testimony which God gave of him in the first Chapter of this Book Therefore Secondly Thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked may be understood first that Job had gone near in his behaviour under his affliction to do even almost as Satan boasted and presumed to God he would do in the second Chapter that if God did but lay his hand home or closer upon him and touch his bone and his flesh then said Satan he will curse thee to thy face Now though Job did never in the height fulfill this wicked opinion or judgement of the Devil concerning him yet by his often complainings of and murmurings about the severe dealings of God with him and his not pittying him in his distress he verged upon it he came somewhat towards and much too near the fulfilling of that judgement of the wicked one and Elihu might say Thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked thou hast done in a degree or shew as the Devil said thou wouldst if the hand of God were heavy upon thy body Secondly These words Thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked may have this meaning Thou hast rendred thy self guilty of or obnoxious to that judgement which God useth to pronounce and execute upon wicked men Thirdly Thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked that is thou under the hand of God hast carried thy self as wicked men usually do thou hast imitated them in a great measure More impiorum causam tuam agisti impaticuter contra deum murmurando Sanct. What do wicked men when the hand of God is upon them they rage and murmur they toyl themselves and are full of the fury of the Lord as a wild Bull in a net thou seemest to have fulfilled this judgment of the wicked for thou hast been so far from humbling thy self as thou oughtest that thou hast stood it out and stouted it with God and desired a day of hearing Hast thou not in all this fulfilled the judgment of the wicked In the 34th chapter of this book at the 8th verse Elihu told Job that he had gone in company with the wicked that is that he had taken the same course with the wicked and as they use to do in the day of their calamity And that 's the meaning of Elihu's charge here Thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked that is thou hast carried thy self too too like wicked men in the day of thy trouble Thus
to what we should shun and avoid which is the work of God alone by his grace and Spirit Thus David shews how God is teaching while he is chastening Psal 99.12 Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest out of thy Law God teacheth First by his Word that 's his ordinary way of teaching Secondly he teacheth by his Works and those both the workes of Creation and of Providence and by those whether workes of Mercy or of Judgement By all these meanes God teacheth But that which Elihu chiefly aimeth at in this place speaking to afflicted Job is his teaching by affliction Who teacheth like him As if he had said God doth not lay his hand upon thee by affliction only to make thee smart but to make thee wise he is instructing thee while he is afflicting thee Further as God teacheth by his Word and by his Works so he teacheth most eminently by his Spirit who alone maketh the teaching both of his Word and of his Works effectual upon the hearts of the hearers and beholders Many are taught but none to purpose without the Spirit Who teacheth like him Note Secondly God is no ordinary teacher The teachings of God are above all other teachings There is no teacher to be compared with God Elihu doth not say Who teacheth besides God There are many other teachers but there is not one who teacheth like him Some may say wherein doth the excellency of divine teaching lie how hath that the supereminence above all other teachings Take the answer briefly in seven words First none teacheth so plainly and clearly as God The teachings of men are but dark and obscure to the teachings of God Christ said John 16.26 I shall no more speak unto you in parables but I shall shew you plainly of the Father God speaks by his Word and Spirit to the lowest and meanest understanding Secondly none teacheth like God that is so mildly so moderately so condescendingly to the condition and capacity of those with whom he hath to do Christ said John 16.12 I have many things to say unto you but ye cannot bear them now and therefore I will not say them now I will not bu●den you beyond your strength I know what lessons what instructions you are fit for and I will give you only these and no mo●e till ye are better prepared to receive them I will give you only milk because ye are children and so not able to digest-st ong meat Thirdly none teacketh like God so patien●ly and meekly There is nothing doth more provoke the passion of a teacher than the untowardness and dulness of those that are taught It was a very good Rule given by one of the Ancients he that will teach children must in a manner be a child He must consider what they are and forme himself to their condition else she will never have the patience to teach them O with what patience doth the infinite and only wise God teach his children Isa 28.9 10. He giveth line upon line and precept upon precept here a little and there a little Here is the patience of God He doth not say if ye cannot take it now I will teach you no more No saith God I will give precept upon precept and line upon line though former precepts have not been received yet I will give you more here a little and there a little ye shall have another little to the former little God was forty yeares tutoring and teaching the Israelites in the wilderness to fit them for the possession of Canaan These three yeares saith Christ have I come looking for fruit and all that while he was teaching them to make them fruitfull nor was he hasty then but upon the in●ercession of the vineyard-dresser waited one year more O the patience of God in teaching Fourthly none teacheth like him that is so constantly and continually He teacheth and he is alwayes teaching there is no hour no moment but one way or other God is reaching By every thing we hear or have to do with in the wayes of his providence he is teaching us B sides how constant is God in teaching us formally as 't is said in the Prophet Jer. 35.14 15. I have sent unto you all my servants the prophets rising up early and sending them As if the Lord did bestir himself in the mo●ning to send our teachers betimes He soweth his seed in the morning and in the evening he doth not with hold his hand as he requireth us to do in all sorts of duty whether of charity and righteousness towards our n●ighbour or of piety and holy worship towards himself Eccl. 11.6 Fifthly none teacheth like him that is so truly so unerringly While men teach they sometimes mis-teach while they lead they often mis-lead they teach error for truth and unsafe doctrine for sound they build wood hay and stubble in stead of gold silver precious stone upon that sure foundation Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.12 The best the wisest and most knowing men may erre only God knoweth the full compass of all mysteries yea he is Truth therefore his teachings are most true Sixthly none teacheth like him that is so authoritatively Men teach in the name and authority of God but God teacheth in his own name and authority The Lord giveth Authentity to his own word If the Lord hath said it that 's warrant enough to receive it and believe it When Christ preached the people wondered at his doctrine Mat. 7.29 For he taught them as one having authority and not as the Scribes that is there went forth a mighty command with the word of Jesus Christ He did not as I may say beg attention and submission to his doctrine but exact it upon them and draw it from them Where God teacheth he commandeth his word worketh mightily when he speaketh all must hear at their peril Wh●●e Princes give the rule and publish their Laws subjects must hear and obe● or suffer for not obeying How much more where God gives the Rule and publisheth his Law Seventhly who teacheth like him that is so effectually so efficatiously As God hath authority to charge his teachings upon us at our peril to receive them so he hath a power to work our hearts to the receiving of them Who teacheth thus like God The M●●isters of Christ teach in the authority of God and charge all to receive what they say in his Name but they cannot give an effect to the charge Isa 48.17 He teacheth to profit One translation saith He teacheth things profitable But that is a lean rendring for so doth every Minister that teacheth as he ought but our rendring carrieth the efficacy of the word of God in it He teacheth to profit that is he can make the dullest Scholar learn he can make the most stubborn heart to submit Christ speaking of this great work of God in teaching saith John 6.45 No man cometh unto me except the Father draw him What is that drawing It is this
will part with them on the account of man Only that which God hath taught us abideth with us and that no man can take from us Men may take the life of such a one from him which God hath given him but they cannot take the truth from him which God hath taught him What God teacheth is written as it were with a pen of iron and the point of a diamond it is graven upon the tables of the heart for ever Thus we may in some measure discern who are taught of God and seeing they who are taught of him are so taught we may very well insist upon Elihu's chalenge Who teacheth like him And as there is no teacher like God so neither is there any ruler like God this also is taught us by Elihu as a matter out of question while in the next verse he proceeds to make more questions or two questions more Vers 23. Who hath enjoyned him his way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pro jubere or who can say thou hast wrought iniquity This verse holds out two things First the soveraignty Secondly the integrity of God God is supream in power and he is righteous in the use of his power and therefore O Job thou hast much forgotten both thy self and him in making so many complaints about thy condition which is indeed to enjoyn God his way or prescribe to him how he shall govern the world And seeing no man hath enjoyned God his way who can question him about it what way soever he is pleased to take either with whole Nations or with any of the sons of men Who hath enjoyned him his way or visited him No man hath no man can enjoyn him his way God hath no visitors over him Mr. Broughton renders Who gave him charge over his wayes Like that Chap. 34.13 The way of God is any course which himself taketh either in governing the world in general or any person in particular who shall instruct him about either what or how he shall do whom he shall spare whom he shall punish whose heart he shall soften whose he shall harden whom he shall save whom he shall destroy how he shall teach which way he shall lead in a word how he shall administer justice and order any of his matters all must be bound to and by his Lawes he cannot be bound to or by the lawes and prescripts of any either in works of Judgment or of Mercy either in doing good to and for man or in dealing out of evil Further Who hath enjoyned him his way By the way of God we may understand both the actions of God themselves as also the reasons moving him to those actions As if Elihu had said Who hath taught God what to do Who hath or who can direct him what to do Who may be so bold with God who is the soveraign Lord over all the earth thus to enjoyn him his way Hence note God is the first mover of all that himself doth No man hath shewed him or enjoyned him his way He is the fountain of light he seeth what to do who hath been his counsellor 1 Cor. 2.16 that is no man hath or may instruct him Isa 40.13 Rom. 11.34 Again he is the fountain of power none hath authority to direct him he is above all as he needs not the counsel of any so he receiveth the rule from none I have had occasion more than once in the process of this Book to say somewhat of the soveraignty of God over all creatures and therefore only remind it here Who hath enjoyned him his way Or who can say thou hast wrought iniquity The world is full of iniquity but in God there is none at all As God is not obliged to give any men an account of his works so no man can find any the least real fault or defect in any of them and if his works do not appear so to us now yet at last they will appear to all without any shadow of iniquity Samuel called together the Israelites and demanded 1 Sam. 12.3 Whose oxe have I taken c. Whom have I defrauded c. Come charge me witness against me who can say I have wrought iniquity It was much and a rare thing for Samuel to carry it so justly that none could challenge him but when all the world shall be summoned before God he will be able to put the question Who of all the sons of men can say I have wrought iniquity None can say it but with utmost impudency and highest blasphemy It is impossible for God to work iniquity not only is his Command but his Will totally against it What-ever God works is according to his own Will and his Will is the Rule of Righteousness therefore he can do no iniquity There is no iniqui y in acting or working according to the Law If men act according to their will they usually act iniquity because their will is no● a Law and 't is seldome conformed to the Law The will of no man is so right or so fixed in the right as to be received fo● a Law But seeing what-ever God doth he doth it according to his o●n Will and his Will is the righteous Rule of all things therefore all must be right which he doth Who-ever took him tripping in his dealings Who can say he bath wrought iniquity But why doth Elihu speak thus to Job Had he ever said that God works iniquity I answer He had not Yet because he thought God might have done better by good men or have given out that which was more suitable to their estate than such continual sorrows and afflictions as he endured therefore this saying is deservedly imputed to him For it would have become Job and doth every man to say that is best done which God do●h and that he hath chosen or pitched upon the best and most proper meanes of doing his own choisest servants good even when 't is worst with them in the world or when he afflicts them with the greatest evils For Who can then say he hath wrought iniquity Hence observe First The infinite purity of God as also his love to righteousness and justice Who though he be so absolute in power that none can call him in question none can enjoyn him his way and therefore none can question him for his way yet he is so perfect in righteousness that no fault can be found in him nor any error in his way Though the Lord hath power to do what he will yet he hath no will to do wrong with his power The Lord neither doth nor can do wrong to those who have to their power continually wronged him And indeed he that hath all power in his hand can have nothing but right in his heart How few are there in power though their way be injoyned to them though they have power meerly by commission from superior powers though their power be such as they are to give an account of yet I say how
few are there in power who do not much iniquity who do not either for want of better information or of a better conscience oppress grieve and afflict those that have to do with them or are subject to them God may do what he will yet will do nothing but what is right How infinitely then is God to be exalted in his truth and righteousness And thus the word of truth exalts him Deut. 32.4 2 Chr. 19.7 Rom 9.14 There is no unevenness much less aberration in any of the ways of God he never trod awry nor took a false step Who can say unto him without great iniquity thou hast wrought iniquity Hence we may infer If God works no iniquity in any of his wayes whether in his general or special providences Then All ought to sit down quietly under the workes of God Though he bring never so great judgments upon nations he doth them no wrong though he break his people in the place of dragons and cover them with the shadow of death he doth them no wrong Though he sell his own people for nought yet he doth them no wrong All which and several other grievances the Church sadly bemoans Psal 44. yet without raising the least dust concerning the justice of God or giving the least intimation of iniquity in those several sad and severe wayes Secondly We should not only sit down quietly under all the dispensations of God as having no iniquity in them but exalt the righteousness of God in all his dispensations as mingled also sprinkled with mercy Though we cannot see the righteousness of God in some of them yet we must believe he is not only so but merciful in all of them though the day be dark we cannot discern how this or that su es with the righteousnes much less with the goodness and mercy of ●od yet sit down we ought in this faith that both this and that is righteous yea that God is good to Israel in the one and in the other When the prophet was about to touch upon that string he first laid down this principle as unquestionable Jer. 12.1 Righteous art thou O Lord yet give me leave to plead with thee about thy Judgments Why doth the way of the wicked prosper Why is it thus in the world I take the boldness to put these questions O Lord yet I make no question but thou art righteous O Lord. It becomes all the sons of men to rest patiently under the darkest providences of God And let us all not only not charg God foolishly but exalt him highly and cry up both his righteousness and kindness towards all his people For who can say to God thou hast wrought iniquity Having in several other passages of this book met with this matter also I here briefly pass it over JOB Chap. 36. Vers 24 25. 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold 25. Every man may see it man may behold it afar off THese two verses contain the third advice counsel or exhortation given by Elihu to Job stirring him up to give glory to God in his providential proceedings with him There are three things considerable in these two verses First The general duty commanded which is to magnifie the work of God Secondly We have here a special reason or ground of that duty the visibility and plainness yea more than so the illustriousness of his work The work of God is not only such as some men may see but such as every 〈◊〉 ●ay see yea behold afar off Thirdly We have here an incentive to provoke to this duty in the first words of the Text Remember Vers 24. Remember that thou magnifie his work which men behold To Remember imports chiefly these two things First to call to mind what is past Mat. 26.75 Then Peter remembred the words of Christ. Secondly To remember is to keep somewhat in mind against the time to come in which sence the Law runs Exod. 20.8 Remember the rest-day that is keep it in mind that when-ever it cometh or upon every return of that day 〈◊〉 may be in a fit posture and preparation for it Remember the rest or sabbath day to keep it holy To remember in this place is set I conceive in a double opposition First To forgetfulness of the duty here called for remember and do not forget it Secondly To the slight performance of the duty here called for the magnifying of the work of God Remember that thou magnifie As if he had said Be thou daily and duely affected with it do not put it off with a little or a bare remembrance the matter is weighty consider it fully As if Elihu had said to Job Thou hast much forgotten thy self and gone off from that which is thy proper work I have heard thee much complaining of the workes of God but thy work should have been to magnifie the work of God Though God hath cast thee down and laid thee low yet thy business should have been to exalt the work of God Remember it would much better become thee to act another part than this thou shouldest have acted the part of a magnifier of the work of God not the part of a complainer gainst it Remember that thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Augeas extollas ejus opus non accuses ut nunc facis Merc. Magnifie The root signifieth to encrease and extol We may consider a twofold magnifying of the work of God There is an inward magnifying of the work of God and there is an outward magnifying of the work of Go● First There is 〈◊〉 ●●d magnifying of the work of God when we think highly 〈◊〉 it thus did the Virgin in her song Luke 1.46 My soul doth magnifie the Lord. Her heart was raised up and stretched out in high thoughts of God Secondly There is an outward magnifying of the work of God To speak highly of his work is to magnify his work to live holily and fruitfully is to magnifie his work We cannot make any addition to the work of God there is no such magnifying of it but we must strive to give the works of God their full dimension and not lessen them at all As we must not diminish the number of his works so we must not diminish the just weight and worth of them There is such a charge of God to the Prophet about his word Jer. 26.2 Go tell the people all the words that I command thee to speak unto them diminish not a word Deliver thy message in words at length or in the full length of those words in which it was delivered unto thee We then magnifie the wo●k of God when we diminish not a tittle As we cannot add any thing to it so we must neither abate nor conceal any thing of it To magnifie is not to make the works of God great but to declare and set forth the greatness of them that 's the magnifying here especially intended Remember
that thou magnifie his works I shall not stay upon that other reading Remember that thou art ignorant of his work The same word which we translate Memento quod ignores opus ejus Vulg. Hieronimus confundit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quanquam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 potius errare quam ignorare significat Drus to magnifie with the variation of a point signifieth to erre hence that translation There is a profitable sense in it for indeed the best knowledge which we have of the work of God may be called ignorance and we said to be ignorant of that work which we are most knowing in Yet because this is straining of the Text I pass it by and keep to our own rendring Remember that thou magnifie His work What work Here is no work specified therefore I answer First All the workes of God are here included Magnify his work What-ever is a work of God what-ever hath the stamp and inscription of God upon it see that thou magnifie it Secondly and more specially We may unde●stand this work of God to be the work of Creation Hujus mundi opificium intelligo Bold the goodly structure and fabrick of this visible world and indeed that 's a work so great and magnificent that it ought to be continually remembred and magnified Thirdly Others restrain it more narrowly to that part of the work of God which is eminent in the heavenly meteors and wonderful changes in the air together with the motions and influences of the stars of which we shall find Elihu discoursing at large like a divine Philosopher in the next Chapter There are strange works of God in these lower heavens where those meteors are born and brought forth Remember to magnifie those works Fourthly I rather conceive though such works of God are afterward spoken of that Elihu intends the work of Providence in both the appearances of it as it is a white or black work as it is for good or for evil as it is in judgment or in mercy A modern Interpreter pitcheth upon the former and upon one particular of the former as if Elihu had directly led Jobs thoughts back to the Deluge that work of God in bringing the Flood upon the old wo●ld and if we can but go back and honour God for his past works of Providence we shall magnifie him for his present As if Elihu had said Thou complainest that thou art overflowed with a deluge of afflictions but doest thou remember how God destroyed the whole world at once in the universal flood But though I think that may be taken in among other works yet to restraine it to that is a great deal too narrow for this Text. Therefore under this work of God we may comprehend any great work of God which is upon record or which we have heard of wherein he hath shewed his power wisdome and justice Remember his work The work of providence Those works of providence which are afflictive have a great place in this Text because the person spoken to was one in an afflicted condition And I conceive Elihu directs Job not so much to magnifie God for the day of prosperity and Sun-shine which he once had as for the day of adversity and darkness which then covered him Remember that thou magnifie his work Which men behold Which the sons of Enosh behold saith Mr Broughton But the word Sons is not in the Text there 't is only men or weak men The word which we translate to behold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath a double signification and that hath caused a double translation It signifieth first to sing secondly De quo cecinerunt viri Quod laudaruni justi viri Chald to see or behold It is translated by several in the former sense Remember that thou magnifie his work whereof men have sang The Chaldee Paraphrase saith For which just men have given praise in Psalmes and songs Beholding fully a good thing and praising it or praising God for it go together as Mr Broughtons glosse expresseth it out of Ramban Gracious and holy men do not only speak but sing the wonderful works of God And that praises were in song or verse both the Scriptures and many ancient Authors testifie God works and men sing the praises of God for his works as Moses David and Deborah did And we find all the Saints Rev. 15.3 singing praises to the Lord for the great work which he will do in bringing forth Judgement to perfection upon Babylon Thus it is a truth the work of God is to be sung and set forth in meeter or in verse We take the other translation Which men behold which with respect to that which followeth v 25. where both expressions refer to the eye is I conceive most proper Magnifie the work of God which men behold As if Elihu had said O Job I advise thee to leave off searching into the secrets of God and set thy self to consider and magnifie those works of God which are plain and lye open to every mans eye The word rendred Behold may note both a transient and an intense or fixt beholding to look wishly as we say to look fastning the eye solicitously yea it imports not only to behold with the eye of the body but with the eye of the mind Some Interpreters put an Emphasis upon the word men Quae viderunt non hominos sed viri praestantes ut sit nomen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sic alibi in loco ubi non sunt viri virum te praesta Drus as noting excellent men vertuous men men of vertue in their qualities and of excellency in thei● abilities such are men indeed worthy men worthy the name of man as it hath been said of old Where there are no men do thou play the man act and speak like a man Some men have nothing but the outside of a man This is a good notion For good men holy men men of divine excellency are most quick-sighted and quick-sented First espying the appearances of God in any of his providences and then making a due improvement of them Therefo●e saith Elihu magnifie his work which men that is holy and good men behold and take notice of David speaking of the wo●ks of God in that notable place Psal 92.6 saith A brutish man knoweth not neither doth a fool understand this that is such a one as he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non tam ex●ellentes quam mi●●● et plei●●●s v●● omnes ●●mmo homines significat cannot behold the work of God And therefore it is more than a cri icisme to restraine the word men to men of this sort yet it must be granted that the word signifies not only excellent men but any sort of men whether wise or foolish rich or poor and the weake sort of men more specially than the stronger and more noble in any kind And to take the word in that universality as compassing and
vastness that all must confess the hand of God hath done it Thirdly We then magnifie the works of God when we freely submit to God in them as just and righteous when we accept and take them kindly at his hand not only when they are outward kindnesses but crosses All the great words and rhetorick we can bestow upon the works of God will not magnifie them unless we freely submit to them as just and righteous They that would magnifie the works of God must say Judgment and righteousness are the habitation of his throne while they can see nothing but Clouds and darkness round about him Psal 97.2 I saith the Psalmist am in the dark about all that God is doing at this day yet of this I am as confident as confidence it self Judgment and Righteousness are the habitation of his throne I know God doth nothing amiss no not in the least Thus John in the Revelation Chap. 15.3 saw them that had gotten the victory over the beast and over his image and over his mark and over the number of his name and they saith he sing the Song of Moses c. saying great and marvelous are thy works just and true are thy wayes The works of God in Judgment upon Babylon are full of justice and we magnifie them by proclai●ing and crying them up as just yea the work of God in judgment upon Zion is exceedingly magnified when Zion submits to it and embraceth it as just and righteous It was the great sin of the house of Israel when they said Ezek. 18 25. The wayes of God are not equal As if they had said are these the Lords equal dealings that we his People should be given up to the hand of the enemy and suffer such things as these yea the house of Israel must say all the works of God not only his exalting works but his humbling works are equal just and righteous for we have sinned This is to magnifie the work of God Fourthly To magnifie the work of God is to look upon his work what-ever it is not only as having justice in it towards all men but as good and being full of goodness to his People Possibly it may be very hard work yet we must bring our hearts to say it is good work good to and for the Israel of God Thus the holy man of old magnified the work of God Psal 73.1 Truly God is good to Israel This he spake while he was bemoaning himself under very afflicting providences We magnifie the afflicting works of God when we submit to them as just much more when we embrace them as good And it was very much the design of Elihu to bring Job off from disputing about the evils with which God had so long exercised him to a ready yeeldance that they were good for him and that in all the Lord intended nothing but his good Fifthly To magnifie the work of God is to answer the end of it Every work is magnified when it receiveth its end if a work be done yet if it have not its effect if it bring not that about to which it was designed the worker receives no honour from it nor is the work honoured To work in vain is a debasing a lessening of any work not a magnifying of it The Apostle was afraid to bestow his labour in preaching the Gospel in vain When people still continue in their blindness and unbelief c. this layeth the preaChing of the Gospel low but when souls are convinced and converted and come flocking in then the Gospel is magnified and the word of the Lord glorified as the Apostle prayed it might 2 Thes 3.1 Now as the word of God is magnified when it attains its end so the work of God is magnified when we give him or come up to those ends for which he wrought it But if we let God lose the end of his work we do what we can to debase his work as if he had done it in vain We say he works like a fool that hath not proposed an end to every wo●k he dot● and he appears not very wise at least not very powerful who a●taineth not the end or ends for which he began his work The most wise God hath his end and aim in all his works in this world and this is the honour we do his work when we labour first to know and secondly to give him his end in every work But if any ask What are the ends of God in his work I answer They are very various First The chief end of all that God doth is the advancement of his own Name and Glory As he made all things for himself in Creation so he doth all things for himself in Providence That which is the sin of man is the holiness of God to seek himself It is most proper for God who is the chief good and whose glory is the ultimate end of all things to set up himself in all things Prov. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself saith Solomon And the Apostle faith as much Rom. 11.36 Of him and through him and to him are all things to whom be glory for ever Amen All things are of him therefore all things should return unto him If we would magnifie any work of God we must be sure to give him this end the glory of it Let it not satisfie us that we are advanced or get up by the works of God unless we our selves advance his glory by them Many advance themselves and are lifted up with pride when God works for them or by them not at all minding that which they should chiefly mind the glorifying of God in by what he hath w ought either for themselves or others Secondly God hath this in design by all his works to make us better If it be a work of Judgment it is to make us better and then we exalt his works of Judgement when we are bettered by them when we are more humbled and weaned from the world by them And as 't is the design of God to make us better by his works of Judgment so by all his works of mercy The Apostle beseecheth us by the mercies of God to present our bodies that is our whole selves a living sacrifice in all holy service to himself Rom. 12.1 What will it advantage us to be bettered in our outward enjoyments by what God works or doth for us unless we learn to be better and do his work better that is unless our hearts be more holy and we more fruitful in every good word and work Some will magnifie the work of God by keeping a day of thanksgiving because they are richer or greater by what God hath wrought for them who yet are not a whit more holy or spiritual by it Wo to those who magnifie the work of God because they think it shall go better with them when themselves are not better Enquire therefore what lust hath the work of God moved you to
to you that you shall not divine and the Sun shall go down over the Prophets and the day shall be dark over them What the Lord means by all this you have exprest in the close of the 7th verse There is no answer of God that is God doth not now any more manifest his mind and will by the Prophets that they might manifest his will unto the People I close this point with the renewal of my former admonition Let us therefore take heed ●e provoke not the Lord to command this light not to shine either to Prophets or People in our Ho●izon Thirdly He commandeth it not to shine by the Cloud that cometh between Though as I said the word Cloud be not exprest in the text yet we know 't is a Cloud that usually cometh between the light and us Hence note Though God can do all things by his bare word yet he ordinarily useth means to bring about his purposes whether for good or evil whether in mercy or in judgement to the children of men There is something comes between God hath a Cloud or somewhat like it to put between us and the light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vers 6. The Apostle 2 Thes 2.6 7. treating of Antichrist the man of sin intimates that he would have filled the world with the darkness of errour and superstition very quickly by a full discovery of himself had not something with-held him had not something come between him and his design for a time What was that 'T is generally conceived 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 7 that which did with-hold or come between the man of sin and his purpose of filling the world with the darkness of his wicked errours and abominable worship was the power of the Roman Empire at that time Antichrist could not put forth his power while that power stood in its strength God could have with-held Antichrist immediately from putting forth of himself but he saw it best to put a block in his way the power of the Roman Empire and until that was thrust out of the way the man of sin could never shew himself fully in that unlimited exercise of his sinful power Now I say as there was then a with-holder of Antichristian darkness somewhat that came between and hindred its effectual working so usually I may say universally somewhat comes between to check and stop the course of the Gospel-light or of any other mercy Sin is a Cloud of our making and God in judgement makes that as a Cloud coming between us and our mercies He did so of old to Israel and he told them so by his Prophet Jer. 5.25 Your sins have with-holden good things from you Sin with-holds good things not formally but meretoriously that is sin is the meriting or deserving cause of their withholding This one Cloud of our sins brings all the Clouds of trouble between us and our mercies and the Lord hath alwayes some Cloud or other of trouble at hand in readiness to cover the light that it shine not to us when we trouble and grieve him by those foggy and filthy clouds of our sins Thus far of that which is preparatory to rain Clouds covering the light It followeth Vers 33. The noise thereof sheweth concerning it the cattel also concerning the vapour Hic versus difficillimus est si quu in toto Jobo in quo quot sunt expositores tot fere sensus afferuntur Merc. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Strepitus ejus quidam deducunt a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 son●vit clamavit vo●iferatus est alii a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 amicus socius This Verse according to our translation as I touched before carrieth on the same thing There we had the preparation as it were for rain Clouds gathered and covering the Sun so making dark weather Now saith he that the rain is coming the noise thereof sheweth concerning it The word which we render noise taken from one root signi●ieth any troublesome clamour and as derived from ano●her root it signifieth a friend or companion as I shall touch afterward But at present leaving that I shall open it according to our own reading as it signifieth a noise Some read his noise that is Gods noise he maketh a noise in the air And this noise of God in the air is either first the noise of the wind winds often fore-run great raines or secondly the noise of thunderclaps that ratling noise heard from the clouds which come between us and the light this noise sheweth concerning it that is this sheweth fowl weathe● is coming or that rain as we speak is brewing in the Clouds Both the blustering winds and the ratling roaring thunder tell us afore-hand and give warning that the weather will suddenly change or that rain is at hand Hence Note God by natural signs gives warning of a change in natural things When God is about to send rain the noise that is in the Clouds tells the world that 't is coming Some are very skilful in observing these things such we call weatherwise From this I would only infer If God doth fore-shew or give signs of the change that he makes in natural things then surely he doth much more give his people warning of the changes he is about to make in civil things in the States and Kingdomes of this world There are some things which do as it were predict or fore-shew such and such changes neer if we were wise to observe them The Jewes were very inquisitive to know of Christ the signs of the times These signs they enquired of him not so much out of curiosity which had been bad enough as out of treachery to int●ap him in his words yet mark what Christ said to to them Math. 16.1 2 3.3 He answered and said unto them when it is eve●ing ye say it will be fair weather for the skie is red a red skie shewes concerning fair weather and in the morning it will be foul weather for the skie is red and lowring When the skie lowres or as here in Job when the Cloud cometh between us and the light that tells us it will be foul weather Now saith Christ do you think that God hath given us such warnings about changes in natural things and hath he not given signs which may fore-shew changes in other things which more concerns us Therefore Christ checks them in the 3d verse O ye hypocrites ye can discern the face of the skie and can ye not discern the Signs of the times that is what changes God will m●ke in the times As if he had said if you were wise ye might discern the signs of ruine approaching ●o you and your City A dreadful black Cloud of destruction hung over the City of Jerusalem at that time as Christ had fore-told them in several places of the Gospel the time is coming saith he when there shall not be left one stone upon another yet you cannot see the signs of these things you are very
heart trembled and it moved out of its place 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth THis Chapter concludes the Conference of Elihu with Job and it consists of three parts First In it we have an enumeration together with a description of divers Meteors or wonderful works of God in the Air Thunder and Lightning Snow and Rain yet before Elihu speaks of them he doth two things by way of Preface to lead us with more reverence towards God into that discourse of Nature in which much of God appeareth First Elihu tells us how himself was affected either with the present sense o● with the fore-ap●●ehension of those things concerning which he was about to speak At this also my heart trembled and it moved out of its place Secondly He stirs up the whole Auditory then present and all others to a diligent attention and serious consideration of them Vers 2. Hear attentively the noise of his voice and the sound that goeth out of his mouth Having spoken thus in way of Preface Elihu proceeds first to a description of Thunder with its immediate fore-runner as to our sence the eye being quicker to receive its object than the ear th●ugh in truth and according to reason its companion the Lightning in the three Verses following 3 4 5 concerning both which he shewes First that they go not at random but have a guide he directeth it that is the Thunder and Lightning Secondly He shews the extent of their motion and Gods direction they are not confined to this or that part He directeth it under the whole heaven and his lightnings unto the ends of 〈◊〉 earth in the same Verse Thirdly He speakes of the irrevocableness of Gods decrees and orders about them at the 4th Verse After it a voice roareth c. and he will not stay them when his voice is heard Fourthly He concludes about these and many other works of God with an Elogie of all his works First In their greatness Secondly In their incomprehensibleness or he concludes them not only great but wonderful and incomprehensible Vers 5. God thundereth marvelously with his voice he doth great things which we cannot comprehend Having thus spoken of Thunder and Lightning he proceeds Secondly To shew the power of God which he describes in Snow and Rain First from their efficient cause at the 6th Verse Secondly By their effects First Towards men in the 7th Verse Secondly Upon or towards irrational Creatures the Beasts of the earth at the 8th Verse Thirdly He sets forth the Power of God in the Winds concerning which we have First Their original whence they come Vers 9. Secondly Their effects or what they produce cold and frost in the latter part of the 9th and 10th Verses Fourthly He treats of the Clouds and about them he declares four things First The melting or dissolving of them into Rain at the 11th Verse Secondly The scattering and dispersing of them by the wind in the latter part of that Verse Thirdly The disposing and ordering of them by the counsel and command of God at the 12th Verse Fourthly Their uses ends and operations at the thirteenth Verse Thus we have the first general part of the Chapter opened containing a description of the Meteors or manifold works of God in the Air all which hold forth and advance his mighty power and righteous administrations in this world towards the children of men which was the poynt that Elihu had laboured in all along and undertaken to demonstrate In the second part of this Chapter Elihu upon the whole matter gives Job serious counsel and admonition wherein First He stirs him up to consider these wonderful works of God at the 14th verse Secondly He asserts and urgeth the weakness and inability of Job or indeed of any man to understand them fully this he doth First In general at the beginning of the 15th verse Dost thou know when God disposed them c. Secondly More particularly in their several kinds First Of the Rainbow at the latter end of that 15th verse and caused the light of his Cloud to shine Secondly Of the Clouds and their various motions at the 16th verse Thirdly Of the heat according to the wind vers 17. Fourthly Of the Heaven or Skie vers 18. All which were such as he could not give a clear account of and therefore at the 19th verse Elihu bids Job do it if he could as for himself he durst not venture upon it verse 20. nor can any saith he vers 21.22 see far into these natural things or into the nature of these things These are the special poynts of his admonition to Job and from these he passeth to the Third Part or Conclusion of the Chapter and of his whole discourse with Job wherein First He makes a recapitulation of or sums up all that he had said of the unsearchableness of God in his works this he doth in the former part of the 23d verse Secondly He sets down positively what God is in a three-fold Excellency First Of Power Secondly Of Judgment Thirdly Of plentiful Justice at the middle of the 23d verse Thirdly He tells us what God will not do at the end of the 23d verse He will not afflict and from all makes two inferences at the the 24th verse Fi●st That therefore men ought to honour and to fear him Secondly That therefore God is not in the reverence nor fear of any man in the close of that 24th verse He respecteth not any that are wise of heart Thus I have given a prospect of the whole Chapter Now to particulars beginning with those two verses by which Elihu leads in his discourse of those wonderful workes of God First By shewing how himself was affected with them Secondly By calling upon others to be affected as himself was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Propter hoc Vers 1. At this also my heart trembled At this that is by reason of this or for this cause or because of this so the word is rendred Gen. 2.23 She said Adam of his wife or Second-self shall be called woman because she was taken out of man So here at this or for this cause my heart trembleth It may here be questioned what it was at which the heart of Elihu trembled I shall give a double answer to that querie First Some conceive that while Elihu was speaking about or about to speak further of that marvelous work of God the Thunder God to confirm what he had said or should say at that very instant caused it to thunder that so Job might be in a more humble reverential frame and so the better prepared to receive what Elihu had further to say unto him That there was a storm at or about that time may appear from the first verse of the 38th Chapter then the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind and said and we find that God hath often given great discoveries of himself in or by Thunder
vel retardabit aliquis fulmen vel fulgur cum deus emittere petit Scult Neque differt illa cum audienda est vox ejus Jun i. e. fulgetra tonitruum praenuncia exhibet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non differt i. e. praemittit Jun Some understand the raine and showers which usually follow upon or after a great thunder and we commonly call them thunder showers Others understand the Lightning and the Thunder as if he had said When Gods purpose is declared that there shall be lightning and thunder he will not stay them or take them by the heele as the word properly signifieth whence Jacob had his name because when Esau was coming into the world Jacob took him by the heele as if he would have stayed or stopped his birth at least have got into the world before him and therefore Esau said Gen. 27.36 Is he n●t rightly called Jacob for he hath supplanted me these two times Which some render according to the letter of the Text My brother may well be called an Heeler for he hath heeled me these two times In this sense the Lord will not stay the birth and breaking forth of these terrible twins Thunder and Lightning Lastly learned Junius referrs them to the Lightnings only rendring He doth not defer them when his voyce is to be heard which he thus expounds He sends lightning before foretelling thunder will follow But I conceive the former exposition more cleare which refers this not staying or he will not stay both to thunder and lightning in consort or together Hence note When once God speaks the word and is resolved upon the doing of a thing there is no stopping of him nor will he stay his work He will not take thunder and lightning by the heele when he hath bid them go We have a parallel sense to this c●ncerning the thunder and lightning of divine Judgements Zeph. 2.1 2. Gather your selves together O gather your selves together before the decree bring forth As if he had said If once the decree bring forth if once God declare that wrath shall come there is no recalling of it He will not stay it when his voyce is heard for then Isa 43.13 The Lord will work and n●ne shall let him he will not stop it himself and none else can Thunder and lightning shall come whosoever stand in their way must down And as none can lett God by power so none shall lett him by prayer if once he be resolved ahd hath sent forth his decree therefore do not provoke the Lord to give out the word for then your case is desperate There 's no opposing the work of God or God in his working He will not stay them when his voyce is heard Vers 5. God thundreth marveilously with his voyce great things doth he that we cannot comprehend Consider how often this word is repeated He roareth with his voice He thundereth with the voice of his excellency and here He thundereth marveilously This may teach us First which hath been noted before that the works of God in nature are to be heeded Secondly that we are very backward to heed them Thirdly this is so often ascribed to God least we should think that thunder is only a work of nature God thundereth marveilously Tonat mirabilia Hebr Numerus pluralis indicat ingentem admirationem stuporem mortalium ad vocem tonitrui Pined The words may be read God thundereth marvels 't is in the plural number We render well God thundereth marveilously but there is a greater Emphasis taking it in the plural number God thundereth marvels Consider thunder and lightning in a proper or in a metaphorical sense there are many marvels or wonders in them Naturalists observe many marvels in natural thunder and lightnings these sometimes melt the sword without hurt to the scabbard dissolve the mettal not consuming the purse break the bones and not the flesh these spoyl the Wine without staving or breaking the cask kill or stifle the child in the womb and not the mother God thunders marveilously in these things Again how many marveilous Judgments hath God wrought by thunder how often hath he destroyed the enemies of his people and the blasphemers of his great Name by thunder and lightning from Heaven Anastatius the Emperour an Eutichian persecutor of the Orthodox Christians was slaine by thunder The History of the Church speaks of a Christian Legion or Brigade of Christians in the Army of Aurelius the Emperour who earnestly prayed the whole Army being in a great strait that God would appear for their help and the defeating of the enemy whereupon the Lo●d sent raine for their reliefe as also thunder and lightning by which the enemy was discomfited and destroyed whereupon that Legion was called The thundering Legion When Julian the Apostate meerly to despite the prophesie of Christ Mat. 24. who had said of the Temple at Jerusalem there should not be left one stone upon another Julian I say in despite of this prophesie yea to despite it gave command for the building of the Temple at Jerusalem and upon his command there was a great quantity of materialls brought together for that purpose but the Lord seeing the pride of this enemy sent a marveilous thunder with an Earthquake which not only amazed the workmen but scattered those materials put a stop to the work Now as there are many marvels wrought by natural thunder and lightning so also by that which is spiritual Nor will it be unuseful for us to consider them upon occasion of what is said of natural thunder in this Scripture God thundereth marveilously in the dispensation of his Word or in his dealings with the souls of sinners to bring them home to himself and to turn them from their sins We may not excluding the proper sense profitably expound the whole 29th Psalm in this spiritual sense wherein the Lord under the Allegory of a terrible thunder-tempest seems to give a prophetical description of his mighty power in propagating the Gospel to the ends of the earth which goeth not out as an empty sound beating the aire but with wonderful efficacy convincing the world of sin and of their need of Christ to save them from their sins And to shew that this is the scope of the Psalm David begins it with a strong exhortation v. 1 2. Give unto the Lord O ye mighty give ye unto the Lord glory and strength Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his Name worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness As if David had said O ye the mighty Princes and Potentates of the world who in most places and times have contemned God and his holy worship and being your selves either irreligious or engaged in a false religion have used your power against and hindered the progress of the Gospel and the advancement of true religion I advise and admonish you to lay down that spirit to embrace th● Gospel to love the power of godliness to propagate
not as noting the hand or power of God sealing men but ●ods sealing the hands of men putting them off from or besides their labour Thus by Snow and Rain he sealeth or shutteth up the hand of every man and why so the reason is given in the next words That all men might know his work God by extraordinary Snowes and Raines stops men from their work But what Is it that they should be idle No but that they may know his work Whose work Some understand it of mans own work As if the meaning were this God stops men a while from further or present work that they may take a view of their past works or he takes them off from their civil works and employments that they may employ themselves in considering their moral works as the Prophet admonished the Jews Isa 1.5 Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts consider your wayes Another Prophet reproved them for the neglect of this duty Jer. 8.6 No man saith what have I done The Lord often brings his people to hard sufferings that they may know their own doings or works This is a profitable sense yet I rather conceive that the work here intended is Gods work and so I shall prosecute the words That all men may know his work This wo●k of God may be taken two wayes First More st ictly thus God by rain shuts up the hands of men from their wo●k that they may know those extraordinary stormes of Snow and Rain which drive them in from their labour and shut up their hands from working are his special work Great Snowes Raines declare to all men the great power of God who doth not only astonish men by terrible thunder and lightning but can by Snow and Rain his much weaker weapons put them beside their purpose and stop their work Secondly Take his work more largly God sealeth up the hands of men that they having a vacancy from their own work may consider his he doth as it were force them from what they were doing or intended to do that so they may have leisure to take notice of what he hath done That all men may know his work Hence note First God can hinder or stop any man or all men in their work He when and as he pleaseth can seal up the hand of every man If God hath a mind to work none can lett him Isa 43.13 Who can seal the hand of God I may say also whose hand cannot God seal How easily did the Lord seal up the hand of the the builders of Babel Gen. 11.7 They were hot upon a mighty work but God by confounding their tongues sealed their hands and they as 't is said v. 8. Left off to build the City Secondly When the text saith God sealeth up the hand of every man that all men may know his work Observe How diligent soever men are about their own works yet they are slow enough too too slow to take notice of the work● of God When the hand of God is lifted up some will not see it they are not only backward to see it but opposite to the seeing of it and though others do not set themselves against yet they do not set themselves to the knowledge of his works 'T is a great and common sin our not studying to know the works of God we should study the works of God as much as we do the word of God we should study both his work of Creation and his works of Providence whether works of Mercy or of Judgment we should endeavour to know all his works From the universality of the expression that all m●n may know his work Note God would have all study this Book the book of his works They whose business and labours lie in fields the Plow-men and the Vine-dressers he would have them know his works as those special works of his the Snow and the Rain so his works in general The meanest of men cannot excuse their ignorance of the works of God seing the Text and Point tell us God drives them many times out of the field home to their houses and will not let them do a stroak of work more abroad on purpose that they might know his work Hence note Thirdly The aim and intendment of God in keeping us at any time from our work is that we may know more of his works It is a great part of our wisdom to answer the designes of God in all his providences to us We seldom think what God intends by a wet day by a rainy day by a tempestuous day we little think the aim of God in calling us from our works is to call us to the consideration of his work Some men would never find a time to bestow their thoughts upon the works of God if God did not take them off from their own work they would never be at leisure if he did not give them a leisure a vacation time and as here in this text seal up their hand God hath various wayes to take men off from the hottest pursuits of their own works he takes many off from them by sickness he binds them as prisoners to their beds others are taken off from their own business by proper imprisonment and restraint of liberty and why what is the reason of this is it not that they may know his work that they may well consider the dealings of God with them A sick bed is a School and so is a Prison where we should study both the Word and Works of God Let us remember when-ever God takes us off from our Callings by sickness or restraineth our liberty by imprisonment his gracious purpose is that we may know his work Possibly when we had liberty to go about our own work we could find little or would not find much leisure to meditate upon the works of God Well saith God I see I must take you off from your works else you will never be Students in mine That 's the effect of Snow and Rain with reference to man He sealeth up the hand of every ma● that all men may know his work But here we have another effect with respect to beasts Vers 8. Then the beasts go into dens and remain in their places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Potius fera quam bestia a viva●itate nam eadem vox vitam significat Drus There are two words in the Hebrew which signifie bruits or beasts The word here used properly signifies wild beasts the other tame beasts such as are for our use and brought up to our hand The text intends the wild beasts the beasts of the forrest the beasts of prey they go into dens these seek shelter in snow time or when the great rain of the strength of God falleth upon the earth The Psalmist Psal 104.20 describes the beasts ordinarily going out of their dens when the night comes Then saith he all the beasts of the forrest go forth Here we have the beasts whether night or day driven to
goodness in all the outward dispensations of God ordering the motions and Meteors of the Heavens the Clouds the Rain the Snow and Hail the Lightning and the Thunder then surely Job ought to sit down convinced that there is a like temperament of eq●ity with severity and of goodness with sharpnesse in all his dealings with men and was with him in particular That 's the scope and purpose of Elihu all along in reading Job this Philosophical Lectu●e or in putting Questions to him about the things of Nature and the regiment of God in these inferiour heavens the Air where all things seem to move without rule or by no rule other than what Nature alone imposeth Vers 14. Hearken unto this O Job We have more than once met with this awakening exhortation which calleth for such an harkening as if a man were to be all ear in attending what is spoken We may well render it Ear this O Job take it drink it in at thine ear Hearken Vnto this Elihu doth not exhort him to attention in general but draws it down to some special matter Hearken unto this O Job Which words may have a double reference either First to what he had said before vers 13th telling him how God sends the Rain and causeth the Cloud to come either for correction or for his land or for mercy Hearken unto this O Job here 's a lesson for thee remember it well God sends forth these servants of his the Clouds to do his work either for correction or for mercy either in favour or in judgment Hearken unto this O Job Or Secondly The words may refer to that which followeth and so as one calls them they are an Exordium a brief Exordium or short preface to what Elihu had further to say as if he would a little relieve the spirits and quicken the attention of Job by acquainting him that he had some new matter to lay before him As if he had said I have not yet uttered all my mind I have somewhat more upon my heart which I cannot hold in both for thy conviction and instruction Hearken unto this O Job Yet it may be questioned why Elihu should thus stir up his attention either to consider what he had spoken or what he was now about to speak Was Job a heedless an un-attentive hearer We may conceive he was occasioned to give him this spur or excitation for these three reasons or at least some of them First We may suppose that Job having been entertained with a long discourse began to grow weary and slacken his attention and therefore as when we see one in a congregation remisse in hearing or sleeping out a weighty point we jog him or say Hearken to this so Elihu here Hence note First A good hearer of the Word may sometimes want an awakening word He that is not as Job was not a first nor second nor third-ground-hearer but as Job was a fourth-ground-hearer one that heareth with a good and honest heart yet even he may a little let down his watch and give just occasion to the speaker for such a short diversion as Elihu here used Hearken I pray to this There is a willingness of spirit in all fourth-ground or right-hearted hearers yet there is also even in them a weakness of the flesh corruption may be stirring temptation may be working therefore 't is no unnecessary jealousie in the Ministers of the Gospel sometimes to mingle or interweave such passages as these in speaking to them pray hearken stir up and awaken your selves There may be need of this I say where there is a general good bent of heart Some pretending hearers are like the Idols of the heathen who have eyes and see not eares and hear not who when they are hearing set themselves at least give way to sleep and willingly yeeld to the drowsiness of their spirits this sheweth an evil heart but a good man may be overtaken with drowsinesse and find much indisposition to duty while he is in duty and then he will count it a favour to hear such a word as this cast in Pray hearken Secondly Elihu might afresh provoke him to more serious attention because the matter he had to deliver was of more importance or did more nearly concern him than what he had said before Hence note Though the whole truth of God is to be attended to yet there are some truths that call for special attention Here is an accent put upon the point in hand Hearken to this We should not let any truth fall to the ground truth is precious quite through and we may say of truth as of gold the very filings of it are precious We save the least dust of Gold every grain of it is of worth and so is every grain or the least dust of divine truth One jot one tittle of the Law saith Christ Mat. 5.18 shall in no wise passe till all be fulfilled Surely then no jot no tittle of it should be lightly passed by by us Yet there are some divine truth like studs of masse gold or as jewels which ought to be more carefully attended to and laid up in the cabinet of the heart Some truths have an emphasis a Selah set upon them O hearken to these Christ saith in the Gospel about the tything of mint annise and cummin These things ye ought to do but be sure ye do not leave the weightier matters of the Law Judgment Mercy and Faith undone Matth. 23.23 so say I attend to the least truths but be sure ye attend to fundamental truths to those truths upon which the whole weight of the soul stands Such is The great Mystery of Godliness God manifest in the flesh and the great Grace of Faith in that Mystery These with several others are the fundamentals the very vitalls of Religion all falls and dies unlesse ye stand fast and live in these O hearken unto them Thirdly Elihu may be conceived to speak thus to Job because he saw him about to interrupt him possibly he might perceive a little passion stirring in him therefore not only to keep up his attention or to wind up his watch but to repress and keep down some stormy troubled motions rising in his spirit Elihu made this short interlocution or digression Hearken to this O Job suffer me to speak out do not take me off I have not yet done Hence note Patience is necessary in a good hearer And that not only for the doing what is heard but for the hearing of it As we can never bring forth the fruit of that which we hear without patience so neither can we without patience hear that which should make us fruitful The great grace to be exercised in hearing the Word is Faith yet we have need of Patience in hearing the Word and that in a double respect First We have need of Patience as to continuance in hearing Some would fain have done presently they cannot sit it out an hour is an year to them the
the special work of the Understanding or of the intellectual Powers To consider is the most proper work of a rational creature It is no easie matter to consider our selves what we are and what we have done or what we are doing Hag. 1.7 Consider your wayes But 't is a harder matter to consider God as good in his being and na●u e and as good in his workings operations That 's the business of this text ●ons●der the wonderous works of God consider them in the fullness of them and consider them fully In which sence the Prophet reproves the Jews for their non-consideration Israel doth not know my people do not consider Isa 1.3 They do not consi●er what I have done nor what I am doing they are an inconsiderate and regardless people and therefore a people not to be rega●ded There 's nothing worth the taking notice of in a people or person who take no notice of the works of God They who will not consider his doings will quickly be inconsiderable and of no account with him Consider the wonderful works of God Consideration is opposed to two things First To slightness of Spirit or the light passing over of what we hear or see Secondly to unquietness and passionatess of spirit because of what we hear or see Some lightly pass things by others think of the wo●ks of God in a passion or with a kind of rage they are rather vexing themselves about the wonderous works of God than considering them Consideration is a wo●k that stands between these two extreams slightnesse and unquietnesse of spirit Consideration requires a serious soul and if right it makes the soul patient They who once consider the works of God rightly will rest in them satisfiedly Consider the wonderful works of God Elihu was speaking of those works of God in the Air the Meteors Clouds and Rain c. as under the rule of his providence now saith he Consider The wonderful works of God This informs us that the works of God are very considerable First In natural things that is what God doth in disposing the course of nature must be duely considered by man Secondly In civil things that is in what he doth in ordering the affaires of men and these either publick in Nations or private in Families In all these God hath his workings and his wo●ks in all must be considered Thirdly In spiritual things what he doth in wayes of grace upon the souls of men in convincing and converting them in humbling and comforting them which are his choicest and most excellent works of all Now though all these works of God are to be conside●ed the last especially yet the workes of God here set before Job are those in Nature and the providential disposure of them these are no small matters Elihu calls them and so they are wonderful Consider the wonderful works of God These works of God in and about natural things may be dist●ibuted into those that are common and ordinary or those that are rare and extraordinary Elihu is not treating here about the rare extraordinary works of God but about the common and ordinary works of God in the Clouds the Rain and Winds c. yet he calls them wonderful Consider saith he the wonderful works of God From the connexion in that Elihu bids Job stand still and then consider the wonderful works of God Observe Fi●st We can never consider things aright till our minds come to a rest and are quiet We cannot make a true use of our reason when we are much moved with passion we must stand still before we can consider Moses when the bush bu ned and did not consume said I will now turn aside and see this great sight why the bush is not burnt Exod. 3.3 He went near and stood considering that wonderful wo k of God He was not in a fright he was not scared to see a burning bush but he stood in a well composed frame of mind to consider what his eyes beheld or the meaning of that strange sight Secondly Note The works of God are matter of great consideration As the word of God is to be conside ed so his works and none can profitably consider the word of God unless they consider the works of God too His wo●ks are a Comment upon his word the word of God is exemplified in his wo●ks what God speaketh that he doth We may find the word of God transc ib●d in his works I saith David Psal 77.12 will meditate also of all thy works and talke of thy doings The Character given of a godly man Psal 1.2 is He meditates in the Law of God night and day and Psal 119.148 M●ne eyes prevent the night watches that I might meditate in thy word N●w ●●●g d●y man should meditate the word so the works of God nigh● and day David was resolved to do so in the place before-men●ioned as also Psal 143.5 I saith he remember the dayes of old I meditate on all thy works I muse on the work of thy hand Did we rightly consider the works of God how just how goo● they are we would b● more in doing good wo●ks and we should do ●u● good w● ks better If any ask How are we to consider the works of God I answer First Consider them in their number that they are many The wonde●full works of God are innumerable he doth not only one not only two or three but many very many wonderfull works Many O Lord my God saith David Psal 40.5 are the wonderfull works w ich thou hast done Secondly Consider the wonderfull works of God in their kinds o● sorts wo●ks of Creation or wo●ks of Providence The wo●ks of God in Providence are very va●ious His wo●ks in the Heavens his wo●ks on the Earth his wo●ks of j●dgment and his works of mercy his wo●ks of patience his wo●ks of vengeance his works in delivering us from evill and his works for the continuance of our good ●●e very various and 't is our duty to consider them all Whatsoever or how●oever God is pleased to wo●k the thoughts of man should work upon it and give him the glory of it Thirdly The wo●ks of God are to be considered as in their number and kinds or so ●s so in their circumstances As we are to conside● ou● sins not only in their kind but circumstances which exceedingly agg●avate and heighten sin so circumstances in the wo●ks of God must be considered for they exceedingly heighten the works of God As the circumstances of a sin may make a sin li●tl● for ●he ma●ter very great and exceeding sinfull so a circumstance in my wo k of God may make it though little in it self great and wonde full We leave out the very strength of a wo k of me●cy when we passe by the circumstances of it A work of me●cy done in su●h a ●ime in such a way a work done for such a people for a people so undeserving renders the work much more
The excellency of God in Judgment as well as in Power But what are we to understand by judgment in which Elihu saith God excells In answer to this Querie I shall first shew that Judgment is taken four ways in Scripture and then prove that God is excellent in Judgment with respect to every one of them First Judgment is an ability of judging A man of judgment and a wise man are the same When we say such a man is a man of Judgment or a judicious man we mean he is a prudent man he is able to discern things that differ he knows how to order state and determine doubtful things aright In this sence we are to understand it here the Lord is excellent in judgment that is in wisdome and prudence to set things right and to give every one his right he sees clearly how to mannage all his affayres and purposes by righteous meanes to right ends The prophet gives God the glory of this title expressely Isa 30.18 The Lord is a God of judgment Blessed are they that wait for him That is the Lo●d is infinitely furnished with wisdom he knows exactly not only what ought to be done but how and when to do it therefore waite for him And 't is encouragement to waite when we have a person of judgment and understanding a discreet and prudent person to waite upon God is a God of judgment in this sence theref re blessed are they that waite for him Secondly Judgement in Scripture is taken for that moderation or due measure which is observed in any thing that is done This follows the former for unless a man have a Judgment or true understanding in the thing it self he can never hit a right measure of it Thus I conceive that Scripture is to be understood Math 23.23 where Christ denouncing or thundering out woes thick and threefold against the proud hypocritical Pharisees he tells them Ye pay tythe of Anise and Cummin and have omitted the weightier matters of the Law Judgment Mercy that i● either they did not give a right judgment according to Law or their legal Judgments were given with rigour not at all attemper'd mixt and moderated with mercy Of such the Apostle James speaketh Chap. 2.13 He shall have judgment without mercy that hath shewed no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against Judgment In this sence the Lord is excellent in Judgment For as he hath wisdome and understanding to see what is just ●ight so in Judgment he remembers Mercy His patience is grea● before he gives Judgment and his moderation is great when he gives it He dealeth not with us according to our sins nor rewardeth us according to our iniquities Psal 103.10 that is his Judgments are not proportion'd to the greatness of our sins and iniquities For as it followeth at the 11th verse of that Psalme as high as the Heave● is above the Earth so great is his mercy towards them that feare him Therefore the Prophet brings in the Chu●ch praying thus Jer. 10.24 O Lord Correct me I conceive it is not a direct prayer for Correction but a submission to it As if he had said I will not murmur nor rebell against thy Correction O Lord Correct me but with Judgment that is with due moderation It cannot be meant of Judgment as it notes the effect of divine displeasure but Correct me moderately or as another text hath i● in measure as thou usest to correct thy people This meaning is plain f●om the opposition in the next words Not in thine anger least thou bring me to nothing Anger transports men to do things undecently wi●hout mode●ation we quickly exceed our limits if carried out in passion and though that anger which the Scripture attributes often to God never transports him beyond the due bounds of his wisdome and justice yet when God is said to do a thing in anger it notes his going as it were to the utmost bounds of justice this caused the Church to pray O Lord if the cup may not pass from me if it cannot be but I must be corrected then I humbly and earnestly beg thou wouldst be pleased to correct me in Judgment not in anger least thou bring me to nothing What the Church prayed for here the Lord promised elsewhere Jer. 30.11 I will not make a full end of thee but I will correct thee in measure and will not leave thee altogether unpunished Thus God is excellent in Judgment He abates the severity of his proceedings and allayes the bitterness of the cup by some ingredients of mercy Thirdly Judgment in Scripture is put for the reformation of things when they are out of order In this sence it is used John 12.31 Now is the Judgment of this world Our late Annotators tell us that by Judgment is meant reformation As if Christ had said I am come to set all things in order that have been out of order and disjoynted in the Jewish Church and every where else Now is the Judgment of this world In this sence God is excellent in Judgment or he excells in this Judgment that is he is for reformation he will set all things right he will make crooked things strait he will make the rough places plain John the Baptist came before Christ in this work yet in this work Christ is before or exceeds John the Baptist The Lord Isa 4.4 will purge away the iniquity of the daughter of Zion with a spirit of Judgment and with a spirit of burning that is with a reforming and a refining Spirit And the Lord will send forth this Judgment unto victory Matth. 12.20 that is he will do it thorowly he will ove●come all the difficulties and put by all the obstacles which hinder the perfect reforma ion of things as well as ●f persons That 's the importance also of that great promise Isa 1.25 26. I saith the Lord will turn my hand upon thee or take thee in hand a●d purely purge away thy dross and take away all thy tinn th●t is all those corruptions which have crept in upon thee I will rest●re thy Judges as at the first and thy Councellors as at the beginning Things and persons are usually best at first The new broom ●ay we sweept clean As time consumes all things here belo● so it co●rupts most things and therefore when the Lo●d promiseth to restore them to a primitive purity he promiseth the purest restauration all which is summ'd up in the 27th verse Sion shall be redeemed with Judgment which is not only if at all intended of a redemption by Judgment on her enemies but by that reformation which ●od would work upon themselves in taking away their dross and tinn Restoring their Judges as at the first and their Councellers as at the beginning Such a Judgment is spoken of Isa 30 22. Ye shall defile also that is utterly disgrace and deface the Covering of thy graven Images of Silver and the Ornament of thy molten Images of Gold
thou shalt cast them away as a menstruous cloth thou shalt say unto it get thee hence This is the Judgment of reformation which God hath and will further work among his people till Sion be built up in perfect beauty and Jerusalem become the praise of the whole earth Thus also God is excellent both in power and in Judgment Fourthly Judgment signifies those evills which God brings upon impenitent sinners that 's a very frequent notion of Judgment in Scripture and the Lord is excellent in this Judgment and that First Upon his own people when they provoke him and sin against him 1 Pet. 4.17 If Judgment begin at the house of God what shall the end be of them that obey not the Gospel There 's Judgment beginning at the house of God that is God will bring evill upon his own house the Church even sore troubles and persecutions The Lord will not spare them who have been slight with him forgetfull of him formal in profession or wanton and vaine in conversation This is a great part of the Lords excellency in Judgment he brings Judgment upon his own house The Lord saith the Prophet Isa 5.16 shall be exalted in Judgment and God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousness that is in bringing his righteous Judgments upon Israel his peculiar people We find that Gospel Prophet Isaiah often interweaving the wyre and whipcord of corporal bondage with the silk and scarlet thread of Sions d●liverances Secondly In Judgment towards his enemies Psal 149.9 He will execute on them the Judgment that is written and that is no inconsiderable nor easie Judgment The servants of God may smart sorely under these Judgments but the wicked and rebellious shall perish and sink under them How dreadfull is that profession or protestation which the Lord made by Moses Deut. 32.41 If I whet my glittering sword and my hand take hold of Judgment I will render vengeance to mine enemies and will reward them that hate me Some possibly may object Surely there is no such appearance of Gods excellency in Judgment upon the wicked of the wo●ld the enemies of his name and wayes It grew to a Proverb Mal. 2.17 Ye say every one that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord and he delighteth in them or where is the God of Judgment Evill men seem to be good in the eyes of the Lo●d when they enjoy good and if it be so said some Where is the God of Judgment I answer First the Lord hath left testimony enough upon Record and written it in the blood of many thou●ands to justifie himself that he is excellent in Judgment by taking vengeance on the wicked Did he not excell in Judgment upon the sinning Angels 2 Pet. 2.8 Jude 6. was he not excellent in Judgment when he destroyed the whole world for sin when he burnt Sodom and Gomorrah with fire for sin How many instances might I give of this from Scripture God hath sufficiently declared himself excellent in this punitive Judgment I answer Secondly God indeed do●h not presently execute J●dgment upon all the wicked we sho●ld rather be lead by sence than by faith if he should do so if he should smite sinners as soon as they provoke him yea if God should take that course he must even break the world to peices and destroy whole generations at once Thirdly God suffers sinners a while that his councels may be fulfilled for though the wicked obey not the command of God yet they fulfill the councel of God Acts 4.28 and they do it chiefly when he with-holdeth Judgment from them Fourthly Unless the Lord did a little give stop to the execution of Judgment in this kind it would neither appear how good nor how bad some men are Let some have but a little power in their hands and the world at will then you shall see whither they will go and what they will do And w●en bad men are suffered to go on unpunished and to be a punishment to others then it appears more fully how good some are and that in a twofold respect First because they refraine from evill though they see that they also possibly might do it impune and not suffer in this world Secondly because ●hey hold fast both thei● profession and practise of Godliness how much soever they suffer for it in this world from evill men Fifthly God is executing Judgments upon wicked men while he seems to spare them from judgment Pro. 1.32 The prosperity of fools slayeth them S●me think a wicked m●n is migh●ily favoured when he is in prosperity no that prosperity is his destruction and destruction is Judgment in perfection The table of a wicked man is made his snare his full table fa●tens his heart which is the sorest of all judgments To be un●ensible is worse than any punishment of sense to be hardned or heartned in doing evill is more penall than the suffering of any evill Now while wicked men escape the suffering of evill they grow resolved that is hardned and heartned in doing i● or to do it Take Solomons observation or experience in the ca●e Eccles 8.11 Because sentence against an evil work is not speedily executed upon themselves or others therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully s●t in them to do mischief So then there are many invisible judgmen s upon wicked men when we see no hand touch them nor judgment neer them God give● them up to vile affections and to a repr●ba●e mind Rom. 1.26 28. to their own counsels Psal 81.12 and to strong d●lus●o●● by ●●hers 2 Thes 2.11 The●e heavy loads o● judgment may be on their hearts upon whose backs we see not s● much as a gaine weight of judgment Thus the Lord is excell●nt in judgment in all the notions of it I have in●●anced fou●e Now l●st any should think that God at any time breaks the rule of justice in his zeale for this latter sort of judgment or while he is powring out vengeance upon the wicked therefore it foll●ws in the next place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And in plenty of Justice God executes great wrath upon sinners but there is g●eat Justice Justiti● est const●ns perpetua voluntas suum cuique tribuendi Justin plenty of Justice in it There is store ●nd abundance of justice and righteousness in his most rigorous ju●gments A little justice is a most precious thing how precious then is plenty of j●stice Justice in it self is the giving of every one his due and where justice is in any man it constan●ly bends and enclines his heart to do so his especially with whom there is as in God plenty of justice And indeed what-ever God hath he ha●h plenty of it He hath mercy and plenty of it he i● plenteous in mercy Psal 103.8 A●d with him i● ple●teous redemption P●al 130.7 There is also plenty of justice in him Some men have no Justice at all in them though their