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A85769 The throne of David, or An exposition of the second of Samuell wherein is set downe the pattern of a pious and prudent Prince, and a clear type of of [sic] the Prince of Princes Christ Iesus the sonne of David and his spirituall kingdome by William Guild D.D. and minister of Gods word at King-Edward in Scotland. Guild, William, 1586-1657. 1659 (1659) Wing G2212; Thomason E984_8; ESTC R207805 271,425 357

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us and as David looked unto when he mourned and fasted for the sicknesse of the first Child that was borne unto him by Bathsheba 10. Next his mourning and lamentation was with intuition of his spirituall and now eternall estate dying so without repentance in his sinnes of bloodshed incest and rebellion which s●ould be in like manner the chief cause of mourning to all who fear God when they their friends or any other of neerer relation to be wicked and incorrigible and running headlong to their own damnation and which was the cause of Samuels going to Ramah and mourning for Saul all the dayes of his life 11. Out of his two tender and fatherly affection he cryes out with ingemination My Son my Son Absolom would God I had dyed for thee Where we see that the best men have not wont to be least passionate but what shall we say of our Saviours love to us fervency thereof who has said of us wretched rebells Not would God I had dyed for you but I have dyed for you a bloody a painfull a shamefull and a cursed death Behold then how he loved us with a love matchlesse and marvellous in fruit like himself and incomprehensible whereat Angels stand amazed and wherewith Saints are ravished would God that we had hearts as we should to love him again II. SAM Chap. 19. from the 1. vers to the 16. AFter the History of the former battle are in this Chapter set down the consequences that followed thereon which may be called the generall argument thereof and may be divided in seven particulars The first whereof is the universall deploring of Absoloms death by the people following the Kings example to the 5. Verse 2. Is set down Joabs sharp and minatory reprehension of David for lamenting so for Absolom and his exhortation to shew himself cheerfull and to speak comfortably to the people to the 8. Verse Wherein also is set down Davids obedience to the Counsell of Joab 3. From the 8. Verse to the 16. Are set down the deliberations and resolutions of the tribes of Israel for the reduction and restitution of the King with the reasons thereof and David his sending of Zadok and Abiathar the Priests to the elders of Judah and to Amasa for their concurrance herein and the motives thereof with the successe that ensued 4. From the 16. verse to the 24. Is set down Shimei his meeting the King with a thousand men to conduct him His confession of his fault and begging pardon Abishais opposition thereto but Davids gracious granting the same and confirming it with an oath 5. From the 24. verse to the 31. Is contained Davids accusation of Mephibosheth that he went not with him Mephibosheths excuse thereof and laying the blame on Ziba his servant who unjustly had calumniated him then Davids decision of parting the Lands between them and Mephibosheths modest acquiscing thereto 6. From the 31. verse to the 40. Is set down Barzillai his meeting with David to conduct him Davids liberall offer to Barzillai for his former this his recent favour His modest refusall thereof with the reason of same and in his place the offer of his Sonne Chimham to go with David and to accept any favour that it pleased the King to bestow upon him whereupon David accepts the offer kisses and blesseth old Barzillai who returnes to his place 7. From the 40. verse to the end We have a sharp contest between the men of Israel and the men of Judah concerning their being first in the Kings reduction and that they despised the men of Israel being ten tribes or major part and had not first advised with them in bringing back the King As for the first consequence or action mentioned which is Davids mourning for the death of Absolom we have spoken before and here we see by his example and sympathy with him the Victory that day is likewise turned to mourning unto all the people and in place of their shewing themselves joyfull in a publicke triumphing way they privately steale into the Citie like them who are ashamed and steale away when they flye in battle And as for the King himselfe he covereth his face as the manner of mourners was and cryes out bitterly O my sonne Absolom my sonne my sonne Whereof Joab being advertised he comes to the King and boldly 1. Reprehends him for mourning so for Absolom and giving such a bad example to the people 2. Exhorts and counsells him to arise and go forth and to speak comfortably to the people And 3. Threatneth him if he did not so that he should be deserted by all the people speedily and that should be a worse evill to him then all the evill that had befallen him from his youth till then In his reprehension of David he upbraids him 1. With ingratitude that in place of honouring or rewarding his servants who had saved his life and the lives of his sonnes his daughters his wives and concubines he had shamed them by mourning for a traitour who sought his life and the lives of his servants and therefore had justly suffered and for which fact they needed not to be ashamed as it seemes he would have them 2. He upbraids him with the greatest iniquity that can be that he hated his friends and loved his enemies which might be a sufficient ground hereafter to any not to prove his friends as they had formerly done hazarding their lives and fortunes for him but to prove his enemies 3. He labours to prove the truth thereof by Davids so bitter mourning for Absolom whereby he declared that he regarded not his Princes or servants whom rather he should have cheerfully welcomed from the battle thanked or rewarded than withdrawne himselfe from them and mourned for a traitour 4. He upbraids him with a preposterous and wrong choice or election rather of Absoloms life though they all had died the last whereof had pleased him better then the death of Absolom 5. Unto this he therefore subjoynes his advice and exhortation that David go forth shew himselfe cheerefull for the victory and speak comfortably to his servants which if he obeyed not by an argument ab incommodo he threatneth him with a speedy and totall desertion of all the people and Army which he had under his charge and had hazarded so for him which would prove the greatest evill that ever as yet had befallen him Whereupon David is moved to do as Joab had advised he comes forth to publick view in the most publick place of the Citie the gate thereof which when the people heare the● they flock and resort unto him Followes next the strife that was throughout all the tribes of Israel that had adheared to Absolom before and being now defeated were ●led every man to his tent concerning the reduction and restitution of David to which they who were for him labour to perswade the rest 1. From the benefits which they had formerly received from him and whereof without
discipline militarie together with the record of the Lords battles as mention is made likewise thereof Joshua 10. 13. Which book with diverse others that were composed by Salomon were burned in the first destruction of Jerusalem by the Chaldeans and so the whole Bibliothek hebraick fell not into the hands of Esdras In the third period we have the generall pathetick proposition of this lamentation proponed by poeticall figures of Apostrophe turning his speech to God and the people in a verse interrogative which the Greek poets call Amoebeus by fiction of persons which we call Prosopopeia and by a description of the calamity which is called Periphrasis The verse is O honour of Israel in thy high places how are the mighty slaine and overthrowne by interpretation O God who art the honour of Israel and O Israel that had the honour to have so many mighty men how miserable is thy calamity by the which thy God is dishonoured and thou art spoiled of so many honourable and strong men the cause of all this doubtless is thy manifold sinnes For we must understand that the scope of this oration is to bring Israel to understand that this calamity proceeds from sinne and can not cease but by unfained repentance In the 20. and 21. verses which is the fourth and fift periods he amplifies this calamity by the events the first in the twenty verse containing a deprecation proponed by Enallage of the Imperative mood for the Optative after the manner of poets Tell it not in Gath nor publish it in the streets of Ashkelon by which as the capitall Cities he meanes the whole land the reason assigned is lest the daughters of the uncircumcised Philistims rejoice and in praising their Idol gods dispraise the name of the true God of Israel and so the end of this deprecation is the glory of God which he doth tender But how doth he will here a thing which is impossible in saying tell it not or let it not be told It is answered this comes from a perturbed mind wherein falls no certain deliberation and to testify his care of the glory of God is spoken not as assured of performance but optative and as he would wish it By Daughters some meanes the little townes of Palestina but the common opinion and literall sense is more simple and better and confirmed by the custome used after victories in those daies both amongst the faithfull 1 Sam 18. 5. c. And amongst the infidels Judg 16. 23. By the Philistims rejoycing over Sampson The second period of amplification of this calamity containeth vers 21. An imprecation against Gilboa by the figure of Prosopopeia and Apostrophe cursing that place wherein that misery befell to Israel with drougth and barrenness to remaine so as monuments of that calamity In the five verses following is the speciall lamentation for Saul and Jonathan taken 1. From their couragious acts against Gods enemies and happy victorious success 2. From their mutuall love and lot to dye together 3. From their provident diligence and undaunted courage in prosecuting the affaires 4. From the effects of the government that thereby they enriched their subjects 5. From his private interest and dammage received by the loss of Jonathan with whom he had such conjunction that he compares his love which he did beare to Jonathan to the love of brothers and preferreth Jonathans love towards him to the vehement love of women which they can or do beare to Husbands Children or any others whereunto he subjoynes the conclusion by way of interrogation called Amoebeus O Israel againe I must say how great is thy calamity whereby thy God is so dishonoured and thou spoiled of men of such qualities surely sinne hath thus provoked God to deale with thee therefore timely and truely reconcile to him least he altogether consume thee where as we saw upright justice before so here is true piety O happy beginnings therefore of a happy King OBSERVATIONS 1. V. 17. WE see here by the example of David and practice of the primitive Church that the use of funerall orations amongst Christians is indifferent and lawfull if without flattery partiall affection and ostentation they be made to the glory of God encouragement and example of virtue and godliness stirring up to the consideration of our mortality and duty of repentance and for confirmation of the doctrine of the resurrection all tending to the instruction of the living and not to the superfluous or unjust praise of the dead 2. Here is a most Godly and imitable example in David who mourneth not only for the death of Jonathan his friend but likewise for Saul his foe and adversary whereby we see that the rule of godly or Christian love extends not only to thy friends natuturall or civill but to all men albeit in the first place to the family of Faith yea to thy very enemies as is confirmed by Christ in the disputation he had with the corrupted Pharisees Math 5. 44. The chiefe cause hereof is the honour of God which we ought to tender and the enlargement of his kingdome which by the fall of men in defection is hindred Gods truth slandered and the Lord stirred up in wrath for to punish but on the contrary by their conversion God is glorified the kingdome of Christ so farre amplified and the Church comforted But what shall we say of the unnaturall world now and the manners of men who would be called Christians in this latter age who not only attaines to the Christian perfection but on the contrary proponing their particular passions to Gods glory are not only rejoyced at the calamities of men their adversaries but also are void of naturall affection to parents and friends and are so full of envy and ungodly emulations that they are sorry for the good same and estimation of their very brethren these are they of whom the Apostle speaks 2 Tim 3. 3. Let us learne then to be compassionate with the calamities of all men for Gods cause following the example of the godly herein and that Apostolicall precept 2 Pet 3. 8. But especially mourning for the affliction of Joseph Amos 6. 6. 3. Vers 18. David teaching Israel to learne the exercise of the bow gives the argument of the right use of armes as lawfull to invade or defend in lawfull waies against the erronious opinion of the Anabaptists and agreeing with the chiefe part of a Kings office to whom is said to be given the sword by which is understood the Jurisdiction and power and the execution thereof at home and abroad as just cause requires Examples of Abraham Moses Joshua the Judges Samuel David and constant practice received in Israel by divine command warranting the same Let no man doubt therefore in lawfull causes to follow the Supreame Magistrate and lawfull Authority in just persuit or defence where they are required 4. Vers 19. The honour of every Nation consists in these two God and valiant men or true religion and
anointed Knowing well where the warrant of Cods direction is had in acceptation there the comfort of his aidfull protection shall never be wanting in the execution of an office which should teach us how to behave our selves in the entry to our particular callings in like sort and not to runne before we be sent 7. Vers 2. According to the Lords direction so David goeth up to Hebron so as he is carefull to know Gods will so is he diligent to practise and to obey the same Not like to Johanan and his company who would enquire the Lord by Ieremie what way they should walk in and what they should do with a solemne protestation to obey the Lords direction whatsoever it were but when the Lords direction was declared unto them they said unto the Prophet that he spake falsly and that they would do what pleased themselves like most men now adayes in like manner who will hear but neglect to doe labour for science but omity conscience are whole in words of professing but nothing in works of practising and will acknowledge Christ to be a Priest who hath offered up himself for them and a Prophet to teach but will not admit him to be a King and to rule over them subdueing their affections unto his holy obedience those and their faith are alike dead though they would seem to live let us practise then as we pray Fiat voluntas tua and do as we are directed 8. In bringing up his wives and men with him with their families to Hebron he shewes his equitable and thankfull minde in that he would have those who were Portioners with him in his adversity pertakers likewise with him in his prosperity and preferment his honours not changing his manners much unlike to the arrogant formes of many ingratefull great men and courtiers and others now a dayes who are forgetfull like Pharaohs Butler of curtesies and good deeds formerly done unto them when they were shrubs like other albeit they are become since like tall cedars and in their advancement consider neither from whence preferment cometh nor yet remember Joseph As we should be thankfull therefore to God for his benefits and carefull of the first table so let us be likewise unto men as good instruments and practise the duties of the second God hath joyned them let no man then seperate them 9. Vers 3. David distributeth his men and followers with their housholds amongst the villages of Hebron wherein his royall wise and loving care at his first entry appears towards his subjects in respect that he will not over burden Hebron it self nor any other one part with a multitude but so prudently appoint the places of their habitations that both they should be eased and those amongst whom their abode should be should have no overcharging whereby he saves himself from giving occasion of grudging and gaines greatly the love of their hearts as afterwards appeares A good example for all Princes and Magistrates to follow and not like foolish Rehoboam to be reguardlesse of their ease and not to overburden their subjects or like tirannous Pharaoh to make them marks to deal so in holy discretion and loving prudence with others as having a due and compassionate regard to the strength and ability of every one not straining nor straitning them above the same 10. Vers 4. David is no sooner come up to Hebron but the men of Judah came also and there they anoint him King where we see that to them who obey Gods direction all things shall succeed albeit though Laban be following after and Esau be meeting Jacob before both of a cruell intention towards him yet seeing he was following the Lords direction in his returne Labans tongue and Esaus hand is so restrained that the one is commanded to speak nothing but good to him and the others heart so turned that he embraces Jacob and his journy becomes prosperous let every one therefore who would have a blessing and happy successe in their callings or affaires obey the Lords direction and then things expected yea and things unexpected to their comfort shall fall out and come to pass and who doth otherwise contrary to that direction shall with Jonas find crossings and disappointments unawares so that they shall never attaine to their aimes more then he did to Tarsis but was forced to go unto Niniveh 11. In that he is formerly here elected and accepted to be the King by the men of Judah and albeit that David had the undoubted right yet he will not proceed but by the consent and the ordinary way his practice herein serves sufficiently to condemne all these who intrude themselves in any eminent place in Church or policy Magistracy or Ministry upon whose government and labours a blessing cannot be expected nor in their crossings can they be sure of comfort witness Abimelech and the men of Sechem because they entered not in an orderly way 12. Judah who doth anoint David King dissenting therein from all the tribes of Israel who refuse him and accept Ishboseth and yet Davids right and election is better then Ishboseths neither doth Judah's paucity serve to improve Davids title nor Israels multitude to approve Ishboseth's personall succession therefore multitude is no sure note of the true Church nor of a good cause therefore a wise caveat is set down in Scripture follow not the multitude to do evill but try the quality and warrant of the cause and resolve with Joshua albeit all should forsake the Lord yet for thy part still to obey and serve him Ioshua 24. 15. 13. In respect likewise that Iudah apart from all Israel anointeth David their King being warranted herein both in generall by the promises of God made concerning the preheminence of that tribe and in particular by the manifest declaration of Gods will concerning David by the Prophet Samuel therefore having and following the warrant of Gods will and Word herein they are not the division or Schisme-makers but Israel wanting the same though the greater multitude by farre It is not they then who separate themselves from the company or persons of men but who separate themselves from the truth and Gods Word which is the touchstone thereof that are schismaticall or rent-makers in the Church and all those who follow the direction of it as Iudah doth here assuredly shall goe aright where such as contemne the same and with Israel glorie in multitude shall be seduced and goe astray 14. David long ago had gotten title unto the kingdome but after many yeares till now he gets no entry unto the same and not now unto the whole but a small part till afterwards but at last he getteth possession of all So by degrees doth the Lord performe his workes to exercise the faith the hope the patience and constancy of his chosen but at last to the full he accomplisheth whatsoever he promiseth that still we may learn to depend upon him without fainting being assured in his own time he
how he should fulfill his desire and so he comes in as the third actour in this tragedy and wicked crime and is discribed 1. From his name 2. From his friendship to Amnon 3. From his consanguinity with him being Davids brothers sonne and so they being brothers Children And 4. From his subtility which was seen after like that of Achitophels in his wicked counsell vers 5. The occasion whereof is set down vers 4. Towit his questioning Amnon why he waxed leaner daily being the Kings sonne and so not having any probable cause to be so and Amnons revealing to him that it was his love to Tamar whereupon ensueth Jonadabs pernitious counsell how he might easily compass his desire vers 5. Which Amnon greedily embraces and does follow vers 6. By lying down and making himselfe sick upon the hearing whereof David as the fourth actor in this tragedy out of Fatherly affection coming to visit Amnon he desires that his sister Tamar might come and dress him some meate which he might eate from her hand whereunto he rashly and inconsiderately consents and directs his daughter vers 7. to go to Amnons house to dress him meat not considering the perill which might and did ensue by reason of youth and lubricity of that sex where there is occasion had of enticement and provocation So that as we see the foure actours in this tragedy so we may see the foure antecedent occasions provoking and promoting this wicked fact of incest which are 1. Tamars beauty alluring and coming to Amnons house whereas abefore she was carefully keeped at home according to the custome of Virgins so that as vers 2. Amnon thought it hard to come at her to do any thing unto her 2. Amnons lust inraging 3. Jonadabs counsell promoving And 4. Davids indulgence and facility throw circumvention consenting to Amnon his sonnes petitioning After this followeth the manner of the committing of this wicked fact 1. By removing the impediments which might hinder vers 9. Commanding all who were in his bed-chamber to go out from him 2. By intaeating of her to lye with him and when she could not be so moved but had refused 3. By forcing her which deniall of her's and disswading of him is grounded upon foure arguments vers 12. and 13. 1. From naturall neareness of consanguinity he was her brother and therefore it would be incest 2. From being against the law which makes it capitall Levit. 18. 9. Whereunto Israel Gods people are bound to obey and therefore to do no such thing 3. From the consequents of this sinne 1. That Amnon should be counted a foole in Israel and so unworthy to reign after his Father 2. It should bring not only sinne but shame upon her which a brother should not wish let be to be the doer thereof And 4. That it were better to speak to the King to give her to him in marriage which she saies he would not refuse All which arguments have this event vers 14. 1. He would not hearken to her 2. Being stronger then she he forces her and lyes with her Whereupon ensueth these sad sequells 1. Having satisfied his lust he hates her more then ever he loved her vers 15. 2. Uncivilly and unbrotherly he not only bids her begone but also commands his servant that waited on him to put her out violently and bolt the dore after her although she shew him that the doing of this unto her would be a greater wrong then the other because the former might be either covered by secrecy or cured by future marriage whereas this disgracefull manner of putting her away would tend to her shame and dishono●r and make any remedy impossible upon which this his barbarous uncivill and unnaturall dealing 2. She fall's into desperate lamenting vers 19. Putting ashes on her head as the custome of such was and tearing her garment and crying 3. Absolon her brother comforts his sister and receives her into his house where she remained desolate but conceives a deadly hatered against Amnon for this wrong done to his sister vers 20. and 22. And the fourth sad sequell or consequence is vers 21. When King David hard of all these things he was very wroth OBSERVATIONS 1. IN this tragicall history of the performance what Nathan had threatned Chap. 12 10 11. We see that one jot of Gods Word and threatnings shall not faile as we see in that of our first parents the first world against the Idolatrous Jewes and the incredulous in our Saviours time and here c. beware then to sinne and to hearken to Satan to put the day of the Lord farre from us as he said to our first parents yee shall not dye at all But by speedy repentance either to prevent Gods wrath as Niniveh did or to remove it as David did chap. 24. 2. These tragicall accidents fall out after that notable victory over the Ammonites and Davids triumphant returne to Jerusalem which shewes the vicissitudes that are in this life as are in the seasons of that yeare summer and winter night after day ebbing after flowing and hereafter rejoycing sorrowing no sublunary thing being permanent nor perfit and therefore neither to be trusted unto or delighted in but only in God and only to expect elsewhere plenitude of joy and perpetuity thereof Psal 16. 11. 3. Vers 1. The motive and inducement to Amnon to lust after Tamar is her beauty wherewith he is allured and insnared by a lustfull looking thereon as we read the like Gen. 6. 2. Whereby we see the wrong use that many make of the benefits of God either bestowed on others as in the forenamed examples or on themselves as Sampsons strength Achitophel's wisedome Hamans preferment and the like and that we should watch over our selves and the use of our senses as Job did chap. 31. 1. For it was no fault in Tamar to be beautifull it being a good gift if joyned with grace Psal 45. 13. but the fault was in Amnon lusting thereby as it is no fault in the candle it burning but in the flie that scorches it selfe in the flame he making it the occasion of her disgrace and his own ruine Also we see whither will not lust carry the inordinate minds of pamper'd and unruly youth's if grace do not restraine 4. We see here in that Amnon loved Tamar not with a chast love but a lustfull and unchaste love Where sinne beginnes towit at the heart and affections which are the root and spring and not being sanctified and set on the right object sends forth rotten and filthy streames and brings forth wicked and ill fruit which should make us to watch over our hearts with diligence and to beseech God to sanctify our affections to love what he loves and hate what he hates 5. Vers 2. It is said that this unlawfull lust vexed him that he fell sick which shewes what an ill guest this was as we see covetousness was to Ahab and pride to Haman and as these and the
and so committed that vile act of incest against the lawes both of God and man and which the baptist reprehended in Herode and which the Apostle also 1 Cor. 5. condemned as deserving excommunication and giving over into the hands of Satan where we see that where Satan prevailes no arguments neither from reason equity dammage or the Word of God will prevaile but what God or man saies is despised as we see is said Chap. 12. 9. Yea God himself is contemned as vers 10. is shewne 18. It is said that Amnon forced her he being stronger then she Where we see when gifts of body or mind or any other benefit that God gives is abused to sinne against the giver from blessings or benefits they turne to curses and to their destruction in the end who are the abusers of them as we see in the strength of Sampson the wisdome of Achitophel he preferment of Judas the riches of the rich glutton and foole the beauty of Absolon and here the strength of Amnon 19. Vers 15. Then Amnon hated her exceedingly more then he loved her Which shewes the shortness of unlawfull pleasure enduring no longer then the sinfull act and for which like fooles they hazard and loose pleasures for evermore and next wherein the fulfilling of unlawfull lust and carnall sinfull pleasure as also all ill grounded love and friendship at last doth end when once the conscience is touched and awaked towit in a bitter hatred more then ever they loved sinne as we see 1 Cor. 7. 11. The same being as those locusts Rev. 9. 20. Herein also is a resemblance of true repentance when we are not only grieved for the committing of sinne but also hates the same exceedingly and puts it to the dore from us in the practise of our lives and bolts the dore upon it that it may never after returne to us nor we to it like the dog to the vomit or the sow to the puddle 21. Vers 20. In Absolons speech to Tamar saying that Amnon is her brother and not to regard that thing for which himselfe conceaved a deadly hatered against Amnon and resolved to kill him though he was his brother we see the pattern of a notable and dangerous dissembling hypocrite who spoke so faire extenuating the matter to Tamar and in that particular spoke neither good nor evill to Amnon but on the contrary thereafter invited him to a feast where he caused crually to murther him as hereafter also chap. 15. He played the cunning hypocrite as shall be shewne in their own place whereby he stole the hearts of the people from his father first and next would have stolen his Crowne 22. Vers 21. When David hard of these things he was very wroth Doubtless both at himselfe for his own simplicity and indulgence the sad fruit thereof he now saw as also at his sonne Amnon for his wicked fact of incest which proceeded from idleness pampering the flesh and carnall delight in the beauty of women the pests of Kings courts Wherein we see that oftimes the Child which the father loves most as David did Amnon as we see vers 36. and 37. becomes their greatest griefe through too much indulgence towards such As we see in the sonnes of Eli in Amnon here and Absolon hereafter 23. Where it is said that Absolon hated Amnon because he had forced his sister as this teaches us that such wrongs should not be done lest we incurre the hatred of those whose love rather we should seek to injoy So likewise this sheweth where sin and especially murther here beginnes towit at the heart as we see in Cain And therefore we should resist beginnings and watch over the heart with all watchfulness and diligence It being like the fort or citadell which if Satan once take in he will the more easily command all the rest II. SAM Chap. 13. from the 23. vers to the end FOllows now the second part of the Chapter in it the Tragicall history of Absolons murthering of Amnon for the forcing of his Sister Tamar and as an accomplishment of that threatning in part of Nathan against David for the killing of Vriah whose blood did crye like Abels for revenge In which History we have to consider 1. The haynousnesse of this sinne of fratricide and muther 2. The persons actors in this Tragedy 3. Their severall vices or errours 4. The manner of this murther and acting thereof And 5. the consequences First what a haynous sinne murther is we may see not onely in the prohibition thereof in Gods Word and the punishments that ensueth thereon as we may perceive in these wherewith Vriahs blood was avenged and Naboths the Lords Priests whom Saul caused to be killed c. the same making a man like to Satan who being a murtherer from the beginning and innocent blood crying ever to heaven till the same be avengend as we see in Abels and Rev. 6. 10. And debarring from the Kingdome of Heaven as we see Rev. 22. 15. But of all sorts of murther paricide and fratricide is the most haynous as we see that of Cains murthering of his Brother Abel and Abemelechs murthering of his Brethren Judg. 9. And therefore perishing thereafter shamefully and of Absolons murthering here of his Brother Amnon Secondly the persons actours in this Tragedy are 1. Absolon King Davids third Son procreat upon Maacha the Daughter of Talmai King of Geshur an infidell who is the principall actour deviser commander and avower of this cruell murther 2. David the King in his simplicity and indulgence to his Children albeit by circumvention yet he is the exposer by his authority of his Sonne Amnon to this murther 3. Amnon the Kings eldest Sonne incircumspectly and yet by Gods just judgement is he who is murthered 4. Absolons servants are the burreans and executers of this murther 5. The Kings other Sonnes were spectatours being invited and present at this bloody banquet 6. Jonadab acts the part of an inconstant courtier his friend Amnon now being slain implying Vers 32. That the fact was a just revenge of the forcing of Absolons Sister Tamar notwithstanding that he had plotted the way how it should be done and therefore now he turnes to Absolons part who was living the other being dead and gone 7. Gods part is not to be a bare spectatour in all this or a permitter onely but also a worker directing all these evills to a good end As he did all that which was done to Joseph by his Brethren towit to his own glory in the punishment of vice and fatherly correction of his servant David and so to performe what his word was by Nathan threatned Thirdly the vices of these actouns are 1. In Absolon we see hatred Grosse dissimulation implacable malice desire of revenge ambition to the next to the Crown treason effeminate cruelty commanding others to do what he durst not himself and want of all reverence or duty to his Father or his authority and herein
waters even so did the Lord preserve him by delivering him from all these troubles 2. He amplifies this deliverance from the persons and their quality from whom he was delivered towit 1. Positively that they were strong Enemies that hated him this being the ground of their Enmity 2. Comparatively that they were much stronger than he and therefore by his own strength could not be delivered from them but by his who is omnipotent and is stronger than they Next he amplifies his deliverance from the vigilancy and craftinesse of his Enemies whereby they prevented him in the day of his calamity and sought to surprise him before he was awar or could provide sufficiently for his own defence as we see in his own Sonne Absoloms insurrection but the Lord was his stay whereupon he did rely trust And lastly when he was redacted to great straits and knew no outget nor what to doe except that with good Hezekias his eyes were towards the Lord and as he said to Jonathan 1 Sam. 20. 3. When there was but a step between him and death Then the Lord brought him forth as out of a prison and delivered him for no merite of his as the impulsive cause although he was a man according to Gods own heart but because of the Lords free love and that he delighted in him OBSERVATIONS 1. DAvid calleth himself a Servant to the Lord being a great King over men Which should be an example to teach all men and especially those who are in great places the vertue of humility and that the chief point of their office is to serve God and to use their power for him as the same is from him which while any neglect as glorious and proud Tyrants do they become base slaves to Satan and their own beastly appetites 2. From the nature of this song of praise we learn out of the same inscription Psal 18. And first verse of this Chapter Where beside the generall deliverance from all his Enemies he particularizes Saul That as it is the duty of all men to be thankfull to God for all his benefits in generall as we see Psal 103. 2. So likewise in the same Psalme and elsewhere to recount and be thankfull for some of the chiefest which we have receaved in particular 3. From the time of peace and tranquillity wherein David doth this when the Lord had delivered him from the hand of all his Enemies We observe what should be the right use of peace and prosperity towit to expresse our thankfulnesse to God for the same both by word and deed in the course of a Godly conversation and neither to be lulled asleep thereby like Laish in a carnall security nor to pamper our bodies like the rich glutton nor to glory thereof and confide therein with the rich fool in the Gospell 4. We see here likewise that albeit David used the secondary and ordinary means of his deliverance from his Enemies yet he attributes the same onely to God and his blessing of the means without which all had been in vain which he could have used as we see Psal 127. 1. 1 Cor. 3. 6. And elsewhere and therefore in all our enterprises this should be sought and in all our successes this should be acknowledged 5. Vers 2. From Davids amplifying of the Lords goodnesse to him by so many and diverse Epethites which afford comfort and instruction We see that a Godly and sensible soul of the Lords mercies can never sufficiently enlarge it self in the expression of and acknowledgment of the same and when it hath expatiated it self and done all it can it thinks that it is deficient in duty and can never enough magnify the riches of the Lords mercy and glory of his grace and goodnesse 6. From his comparing him to a Rock a Fortresse a Horne and a Tower c. We see that from every thing a Godly man can gather a lesson of comfort or duty as the Bee can gather Hony from every flowre therefore ungrate Israell Isai 1. Is sent to the Ox and Asse to learn and the sluggard to the Bee and Ant and such as are onely Verball Professors to the fruitlesse Figtree that was cursed and the unprofitable servant and hider of the Talent as also wicked livers to the Vineyard spoken of Isa 5. 7. Vers 3. From the conclusion which he makes upon all the former Epethites that therefore in God he will trust We see the use that the Godly make of the Lords by past goodnesse or mercies towards them towit from their bygone experience they resolve still to trust and put their confidence in God for future favours and manifestation of his care and kindnesse towards them as we see in Davids reasoning from the Lyon and Beares overthrow to the like of Goliah 8. Vers 4. Davids next resolution after trusting in God is That he will call upon him still as he had done formerly Which shewes unto us not onely that as we trust in God for his mercy goodnesse so we must seek the same by prayer but also that we must be constant in the exercise of this holy duty praying alwayes as the Apostle exhorts us and upon all occasions amongst all the benefits of God there being none greater then this the moving of our heart to call upon God and pouring upon us the Spirit of grace and supplication and then which we can have no greater assurance of obtaining our requests then when we get a heart to seek the same earnestly at the Lords hands wherefore he subjoynes so shall I be saved from my Enemies 9. In like manner where David sayes he will call upon the Lord who is worthy to be praised We see that prayer is onely to be made to God and neither to Sainct nor Angell for as the Apostle sayes Rom. 10. 14. How shall they call upon him in whom they have not believed That seeing we must onely believe in God therefore sayes our Saviour proving thereby himself to be God Joh. 14. 1. Ye believe in God believe also in me therefore it will follow that we must onely call upon God these two being the Lords prerogatives royall as it were religious prayer and praise as we are taught here as also Psal 50. 15. 10. Vers 5. By the waves of death that compassed David and the floods of wicked men that made him afraid We see that the Godly are not onely vexed with outward Enemies but also exercised sometimes with inward troubles and disquietings as we see Job was Job 16. 12. and 18. 10 11. And David Psal 22. 1 14 15. And therefore none who are so exercised with such inward wrestlings should think the same uncouth or unusuall 11. Where in like manner we see that David sayes That the floods or multitude of wicked men made him afraid We observe that the best of men have their infirmities and their best graces a mixture there with So that although David trusted in the Lord to be saved from all his
Sodomites Midianites Judg. 7. and others And as is threatned against that Mysticall whoore of Babylon Revel 18. 8. Therefore dreame of impunity as they please and let them put the day of evill as farre from them as they list Gods judgments being farre above their heads and therefore unseen by their blinded minds yet assuredly the Lord in justice shall surprise them with his punishments while they are like the people of Laish lying in deepest security or as Zebul said to Gaal Judg. 9. 38. While they think that Gods threatnings are but shadowes or scarecrowes 22. Vers 17. Where it is said That he sent from above and drew him out of many waters whereby troubles are usually understood David hereby shewes that as has been said Many are the troubles of the righteous but the Lord delivers them out of them all and therefore as their deliverance is from above so their eyes are to him who is above and seeing their troubles are not few but many which they have in this life therefore they loath this 〈◊〉 and long for a better wherein are no troubles at all but rest forever Rev. 14. 13. With fulness of joy and pleasures for evermore Psal 16. 11. 23. Vers 18. He shewes that as his Enemies are many so they are strong and too strong for him Whereby we observe that worldly power or strength is not on the Godlies or Church of Gods side but rather on their enemies wherein therefore they glory as in multitude riches power and worldly grandure as we see Rev. 17. But therein is the comfort of the Godly that as Elisha said to Gehezj concerning the host of Angells there are more for them than against them and he who is for them is stronger than they who are against them they being but as the pot in the hands of the potter As we see in the example of David and Goliah Gideon and the Midianites Israell and Pharaohs Army and others Therefore though we be but like simple and weake sheep and our enemies be as strong Lyons and Beares yet let us not faint diffide or despaire seeing our security and safety stands not in our own strength but in his watchfull care and strength who is our shepheard and who as David overcame the Lyon and Beare and delivered his Fathers sheep from being their prey so will he who is the sonne of David subdue and hath subdued all our Enemies and has delivered us from being their prey and so will even to the end 24. David also sets down the ground of their enmity against him to be their hatred of him not that he had done any wrong to them to procure their enmity but rather he had done good offices to them as he did to Saul and loved them though they hated him as he did Absolom but their hatred of him without a cause was only from that root of that proclaimed enmity in paradise that the seed of the serpent should hate the seed of the woman the wicked and the world ever hating the Godly for Godliness sake as they hated our Saviour and as he foretells that the world would also hate his disciples Therefore let none now adaies think it uncouth that they are either hated for piety for which they are beloved of God and the Godly or as Micholl derided David and despised him that they are likewise mocked and contemned 25. Vers 19. As his Enemies were many and strong so David in like manner shewes that they were subtile and sedulous crafty and vigilant preventing him in the day of his ●●●mity that so they might surprise him before he was aware 〈◊〉 could sufficiently provide for his own safety As we see in the Counsell of Achitophell Chap. 17. 1 2. Such are the enemies of Christ Church many for multitude strong for power and crafty for Counsell as Pharaoh said Let us work wisely and such are the spirituall enemies with whom every Christian has to encounter with but this is our comfort in place of many enemies we have one as the people said of David more worth than ten thousand of them and for strength is the almighty God and Creator by whose word he made all things and upholds them by his power and in place of their craftiness he who is wisdome it selfe derides them from heaven and as he did Achitophells can turne their wisdome to folly therefore most justly as David professes here does the Godly make him their stay 26. Vers 20. David ascribes here his liberty or enlargement his life and preservation thereof and all other his benefits which he had received from God only to his free love and favour as the Prophet speaks Hos 14. 4. And not to any merit of his though he was a man according to Gods heart Which should teach all men the like humble acknowledgment for what have we as the Apostle tells us but what we have received and therefore why should we glory as if we had not received the same and when we have done all that we should do if it were possible our Saviour hath taught us no less truly then humbly to acknowledge our selves to be but unprofitable servants as we see also David acknowledgeth Psal 16. 2. And Eliphaz declares Job 22. 2. And Elihu Job 35. 7. 27. We may see here in like manner matter both of admiration and instruction Admiration of the Lords free love that he should pass by the fallen Angells who were created glorious spirits and that he should delight in the sonnes of men sinfull dust and ashes so that we may justly cry out with David what is man that thou should so regard him or the sonne of man that thou should be mindfull of him no cause of any such delight being on mans part but the contrary as we see at large Ezek. 16. Next we may see matter of instruction that if God delight in man therefore man should in like manner delight in God his service and ordinances and not as many do in the service or rather slavery of sinne Satan and like the prodigall that fed swine in their own beastly lusts and fulfilling thereof II SAM Chap. 22. from the 20. Verse to the end DAvid having spoken before of his deliverances and liberation he continues in the confirmation of the proposition of Gods goodness and benefits bestowed on him and from the 21. to the 26. He declares the Lords goodness towards him in a mercifull remuneration 1. According to his righteousness 2. According to the cleanness of his hands both which he repeates vers 25. By which righteousness is understood either the righteousness of his cause against his enemies whose cause on the contrary was unrighteous or if personall and not only causall the righteousness of integrity or sincerity is to be understood as he saies vers 24. I was also upright before him And by the cleanness of his hands is meant the innocency of his Actions and that as he had a just and righteous cause on his side so
sword of Pestilence And O how little pleasure doth the Lord take in the death of sinners ere David could see the destroyer the Lord had restrained him whose compassions if they did not both withhold and abridge his judgments what could we look for but hell and destruction 16. Vers 17. In Davids supplication to God we see his admirable Love to his poore subjects who would ingrosse the plague to himselfe and his house from this people of Israell and sues to interpose himselfe between them and the destroyer Thus did our Saviour Christ and sonne of David who is that good and great shepheard of his sheep offer himselfe to death which they had deserved yea more did dye for them and interposed himselfe between the Fathers wrath and them to deliver them there from and from everlasting destruction and as David did for his people still interced's for his Church to the worlds end 17. We see likewise though David saw the Angell with the destroying sword above Jerusalem yet he supplicates not the Angell but him who is the God of Angells and of heaven and ear●h which shewes us how farre the practice of this holy King and Prophet doth disagree from the practice and doctrine of Romanists who pray to Saints and Angells and so gives that religious worship to the creature which is only due to the Creator as we have shewen before and is so farre from ahe example which we have in the Word of God Revel 22. 9. ●nd that Apostolicall precept Coll. 2. 18. 18. Vers 18. It is said that Gad came to David and said Go reare an Altar to the Lord. And vers 19. It is said that David went up to do so as the Lord had commanded So that David reverenced and obeyed the Word of the Prophet as the Word of God which should serve as a good and imitable example to all people of high and low degree to heare reverence and obey that which is taught out of the Word of God and warranted therefrom by his faithfull Ministers not as the word of man but as the Word of the Lord this being the cause of so small resort to the hearing thereof so little attention thereto or reverence and obedience to the same and consequently of so great loosness of life and abounding in sinne that Gods Word which is preached is not accounted to be Gods Word and that they that heare not the sam● as our Sav●our speakes heare not him 19. This Alter must be reared up in the threshing floore of Arannah the Jebusite which was as we have shewne upon Mount Moriah so that on that very hill where the Angell held the sword of Abraham from killing his sonne Isaac who was a tipe of Christ doth God now with hold the sword of the Angell from killing his people and upon this very ground after did the temple also stand where the holy Altar should be whereon the expiatory and propitiatory sacrifices for Gods people should be offered up in succeeding generations not without a mysterie of that oblation of Christ Jesus as is said prefigured by Isaac and whose blessed body was the true Temple tiped by that of Solomon as Christ himselfe shewes Joh. 2. 19. And his oblation of himselfe is that expiatory and propitiatory sacrifice by which Gods wrath is appeased and we reconciled unto God his Father neither was that also without a mysterie that it was on the floore of a Jebusite prefiguring thereby the calling of the Gentiles 20. Vers 22. David having declared to Arannah the cause of his coming up unto him for buying his threshing floore to reare an Altar to the Lord that the plague might be stayed from the people he meets David in so holy a motion and liberally offers the same freely in gift unto him with his oxen and wooden uteusills for a fire to the b●rnt offering Where we see that a Godly heart will part with any thing that is needfull and may serve for the worship of God who is the giver of all good things which we have here and of all good things which we hope or look and long for hereafter Which serves to rebuke and condemne the tenacious and base avaricious disposition of many in this age who can part with nothing for the maintenance of Gods worship or promoting of religion or any good work 21. Vers 23. Arannah's liberality and princely munificence is therefore highly praised by the spirit of God and registrate to all after ages in the holy Scripture that all these things did Arannah as a King gives to a King and that he said to David the Lord God accept thee Whereupon we observe that what is done by a pious heart to the honour and worship of God shall never want its own reward and blessed remembrance as was the breaking of that box of precious oyntment by Mary Magdalen upon Christs head and as here is the remembrance and registrating both of Arannahs liberality and power whereas on the contrary the remembrance and name of the wicked shall rot and either be buried in oblivion or else like the parcells of traitours and malefactours bodies that are executed and fixt up in publick places remaine to posterity as a badge of eternall infamy 22. Vers 24. Since it was for God and to David Arannah would give but seeing it was for God and offering sacrifice which should be of his own substance David will not take O laudable and pious contention into which would God or in like all contentions amongst Christians were resolved David therefore who knew that it was more blessed to give than receive therefore would not receive from Arannah what he offered in gift but as Abraham delt in like manner with the sonnes of Heth Gen. 23. He would buy it of him as he did for 50. shekells of silver and built there an Altar unto the Lord and offered thereon burnt offerings and peace offerings and so the Lord was intreated for the Land and the plague ceased To which God Father Sonne and Holy Ghost invisible and indivisible be all honour praise and glory for ever more Amen FINIS Ioshua 7. 1 Sam. 4. * The Hebren word is Shabatz c. See Exod. 28. 4. 11. 13. 1 Sam. 30. 2 Chr. 20. 12. 1 King 13. Iudg. 9. 1 King 16. 1 Sam. 15. 35. John 10. Act. 8. Math 5. 35 s 27. 52. Job 30. 9 10. c. Rev 11. 10. Revel 18. 2 King 13. 2 Tim. 3. Gen. 31. Joshua 21. and 14. Gen. 32. Gen. 34. Jerem. 42. 5. 43. 2. 1 King 2. 34 35. Matth. 5. Deut. 20. Judg. 20. 2 Sam. 20. 2. Chro. 32. Josh 5. Eccles 9. 11. Iudg. 21. 2 3 6. Prov. 16. 9. 1. King 20. 11. 1 King 21. 20. 1 King 22. 17. Math. 8. 9. Prov. 16. 6. Genes 4. 19. 2 Chron. 20. Revel 16. 19. Revel 18. 1 Sam. 23. 27. 2 King 19. Act. 23. 7. Judg. 14. Judg. 9. 23. 1 King 13. 1 King 18. Job 31. 35. * Hic murus aheneus esto nil conscire sibi nulla pallescere culpa Genes 38. 1 King 14. 2 Chron. 16. Act. 27. Deut. 6. 16. Math. 4. Exod. 10. Act. 16. Prov. 9. 17 18 Prov. 20. 25. ●●ov 12. 3. Prov. 11. 4. Esther 6. 7. Numb 24. 10. Prov. 16. 7. Exod. 34. 16. 1 King 20 2 Chron. 18. 1 King 11. 2 King 20. Gen. 21. Gen. 14. Iosh 8. Job 31. 4. 23. Gen. 31. 53. Gen. 20. 34. Gen. 50. 19. Exod. 5. 2. 1 Sam. 15. 1 Sam. 2. 32. Judg. 8. 27. Genes 22. 15. Numb 25. 13. See 1 King 15. 4. Iudg. 1. 7. Gen. 38. See 2 King 9. 31. 2 Chron. 15. 13. 2 King 23. 21. 2 Chron. 30. 1. Matth. 22. Iob 31. 29. Prov. 24. 17. Prov. 25. 21. 2 Chr. 19. 6. Dat veniam coruis vexat censura columbas Judg. 16. Dan. ● Exod. 8. Gen. 49. 23. Psal 103. Rom. 15. 5. Rom. 3. 4. Rom. 8. 31. b. 1. 14. Job 10. 4. Job 14. 1. and 14. (a) Note also that Davids sentence vers 5. threatning death is the voyce of the Law but Nathans words vers 13. Promising life to penitents is the voyce of the Gospel 2 Sam. 5. 4. 1 Chron. 22 5.