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A46823 A help for the understanding of the Holy Scripture intended chiefly for the assistance and information of those that use constantly every day to reade some part of the Bible, and would gladly alwayes understand what they read if they had some man to help them : the first part : containing certain short notes of exposition upon the five books of Moses, to wit Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomie : wherein all such passages in the text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any reader of ordinary capacity ... / by Arthur Jackson ... Jackson, Arthur, 1593?-1666. 1643 (1643) Wing J67; ESTC R35433 692,552 595

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A HELP FOR THE UNDERSTANDING OF THE HOLY SCRIPTURE Intended chiefly for the assistance and information of those that use constantly every day to reade some part of the Bible and would gladly alwayes understand what they reade if they had some man to help them The first part Containing certain short notes of exposition upon the five books of Moses to wit Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers and Deuteronomie Wherein First all such passages in the Text are explained as were thought likely to be questioned by any Reader of ordinary capacity Secondly in many clauses those things are discovered which are needfull and usefull to be known and not so easily at the first reading observed and Thirdly many places that might at first seem to contradict one another are reconciled By ARTHUR JACKSON Preacher of Gods word in Woodstreet LONDON MATT. 24. 15. Who so readeth let him understand Act. 8. 30. 31. And Philip ran thither to him and heard him reade the Prophet Esaias and said Understandest thou what thou readest And he said How can I except some man should guide me Omnes qui legimus nitimur hoc indagare atque comprehendere quod voluit ille quem legimus Aug. Confess lib. 12. cap. 18. Printed by Roger Daniel Printer to the University of Cambridge And are to be sold at the signe of the Angel in Lumbards treet ANNO DOM. MDCXLIII To my well beloved friends and neighbours of my charge in WOOD STREET LONDON Right dearly beloved in the Lord THis poore work of mine the first-fruits of my labours in this kind must needs passe through your hands to the publick view not onely in regard of the speciall interest you have in me whom your selves were pleased many years since to chuse to be your Pastor to feed your souls but also in regard the work it self was at first collected and composed purposely for your service and use It is now above twenty years since the Lord was pleased to open a doore unto me for the preaching of the Gospelof Christ amongst you wherein though with much weaknesse I have endeavoured to the utmost of my power I blesse God to build you up in the knowledge of God and of Christ and need no other witnesses then yourselves that I have not sought yours but you as having indeed from my first entrance amongst you resolved with the Apostle very gladly to spend and to be spent for you though the more abundantly I loved you the lesse I were loved by you Amongst other wayes wherein I have studied to be serviceable to your souls it pleased God to put into my heart that I would undertake the unfolding of such passages of the holy Scripture as were somewhat more difficult and obscure to such as would come in and partake of my labours therein and the end I propounded to my self in this was both that I my self might hereby be the better enabled in publick also to declare unto you the whole counsell of God as occasion was offered and that you likewise might with the more advantage and comfort exercise your selves in your private reading of those sacred volumes Now having for severall years spent some time every Lords day in this imploiment I was at length importuned by some friends that were partakers of my labours therein to prepare those Annotations for the Presse which were the chief substance of that which I had collected for that service They alledged what satisfaction and comfort themselves had received in the hearing of them and what an advantage it might be both to them and others if they might have them ready at hand at all times to inform them in any thing they scrupled in their private reading and so farre I was swayed with what they said that I resolved in the publishing of one part of them to make triall whether they would find that approbation and welcome abroad that might give encouragement to send ●orth the rest after them These indeed come forth in a sad time when arms are in farre more request then books but we must herein submit to the good will of God It hath fared with this Book in this as with many a traveller that hath prepared for a journey when the sunne shined fair and yet was constrained at last to go forth in a storm When I began first to transcribe these Notes for the Presse the skie was clear and shined upon us and yet now when they should go forth the whole kingdome is overspread with a cloud that is like to poure down showrs of bloud upon the whole land the Lord give us grace to turn to him who hath promised to be a refuge from the storm Well but yet the book being passed the Presse and being withall to go upon Gods businesse I was unwilling to forbear the publishing of it especially when I began to consider that the drift of it was to help men to reade the Scripture with profit and that there is never more need for men to be much in studying Gods word then in troublesome and sad times God having there stored up those cordialls for us which in such times must chear up the sick fainting spirits of his poore afflicted servants unlesse thy Law had been my delight saith David Psal 119. 92. I then had perished in my afflictions Having therefore resolved to publish it and to leave the successe to the good providence of God I here present it to you in the first place to whom it doth of right belong If it may prove a means to bring you whose souls God hath committed to my charge to be in love with the Scripture or adde any thing to your stock of knowledge and grace I have if not all yet my chief desire Now our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God even our father which hath loved us and hath given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace comfort your hearts and stablish you in every good word and work And so I commend you to Gods grace and desire likewise your prayers unto God for him who is Yours in the surest band of Christian affection ARTHUR JACKSON from reading his word because there are some places they shall meet with which they shall find above their reach yet because of this we presse t●em to be the more carefull to search diligently for the meaning of what they reade to be wary of perverting the good word of God and to that end both to pray unto Go● often that he would therein reveal the truth unto them and to make use of those for their help whom God hath furnished with gifts above others for the re●olving of such doubts as they shall meet with in their reading And indeed that I might be serviceable to the weaker sort of Gods people herein hav● I yielded to publish the●e Annotations which at first I gathered for the more private use of my self and some others Many I know there are that are carefull every day to redeem some time from their worldly
God is in exacting purity in those that consecrate themselves to his service And this must be done on the day of his cleansing on the seventh day for this last clause on the seventh day shall he shave it is added by way of explaining the clause before in the day of his cleansing for the seventh day was the usuall day of cleansing for those that were defiled by the dead as we may see chap. 10. 11 12. Vers 11. And the priest shall offer the one for a sinne-offering c. Though it were no fault in the Nazarite that a man should die very suddenly by him yet because it was contrary to the Law that enjoyned the Nazarite not to come nigh any dead body therefore he was to bring a sinne-offering for his cleansing Vers 12. And he shall cons●crate unto the Lord the dayes of his s●paration That is he shall begin anew to consecrate unto God the very same number of dayes which before his defiling he had vowed unto God And he shall bring a lambe of the first year for a trespasse-offering By this trespasse-offering which also figured Christ he was prepared for the observations of his renewed vow because all grace and ability to do good is of God obtained by Christ Jesus our Lord. Vers 13. And this is the Law of the Nazarite That is this that follows is the Law that must be observed by the Nazarite when he hath fulfilled his vow and is to be discharged thereof in an orderly manner Which Law it is conceived the Apostle Paul was perswaded to observe to decline the offence of the Jews Acts 21. 26. Vers 14. And he shall offer his offering unto the Lord one he-lambe c. Those offerings the Nazarite was to offer when he had fulfilled the dayes of his separation and was now to be freed from his vow 1. by way of thankfulnesse to God as acknowledging that it was through his grace that he had been enabled to fulfill his Nazarites vow and 2. to make atonement thereby for his sinnes committed under his vow thereby also confessing that notwithstanding his strictest endeavours after holinesse he had failed many wayes if God in Christ should not be mercifull to him Vers 15. And their meat-offering and their drink-offerings That is beside● the cakes and wafers before mentioned enjoyned as an extraordinary meat-offering he was also to bring the ordinary meat-offerings and drink-offerings appointed for appendances to all sacrifices whereof see Numb 28. Vers 18. And the Nazarite shall shave the head of his separation c. All the time of his separation he was to keep his hair uncut but now he was to shave his head called here the head of his separation because the hair on his head was the signe of his separation and that at the doore of the tabernacle to shew that his vow was now at an end whereby he had consecrated himself to the Lord and then afterwards he was to put it in the fire which is under the sacrifice of the peace-offerings that is not the fire on the altar of burnt-offerings for there onely the fat of the peace-offerings was burnt but the fire under the ca●drons or pots wherein the peace-offerings were boyled and all this was done as by way of thankfulnesse to God to signifie that he had the perfection of his Nazariteship from him Vers 19. And the priest shall take the sodden shoulder of the ram c. That is the left shoulder the right shoulder was due unto him raw of all peace-offerings Levit. 7. 32. And the right shoulder shall ye give unto the priest for an heave-offering of the sacrifices of your p●ace-offerings this gift of the sodden shoulder was peculiarly given from the Nazarites ram onely and taught them that as they had received more speciall grace of God so they should give him more speciall thanks then other men Vers 21. This is the Law of the Nazarite who hath vowed and of his offering unto the Lord for his separation besides that that his hand shall get That is besides that which of his own free will he shall vow to give according to the estate wherewith God hath blessed him That which is formerly prescribed was necessarily to be done both by rich and poore when they took upon them this vow of Nazariteship if being able they vowed more offerings they must perform their vow but this before prescribed must by all be brought the poorest are not allowed lesse Vers 23. On this wise ye shall blesse the children of Israel c. This blessing thus pronounced by the priest did include a promise of Gods blessing them delivered as it were out of Gods own mouth and that by and through Christ of whom they were types Acts 3. 26. Unto you first God having raised up his sonne Jesus sent him to blesse you in turning away every one of you from his iniquities and so again Luke 24. 50. And he led them out as farre as Bethany and he lift up his hands and blessed them Therefore when Christ was to come the priest of Aarons seed was speechles Luke 1. 22. to teach them to look for another priest in whom all nations were to be blessed Gal. 3. 8. Vers 24. The Lord blesse thee and keep thee c. Some conceive that the repeating of this word the Lord or Jehovah three severall times in this blessing did imply the mystery of the Trinity But whether so or no sure w● are it was pronounced in the name of God who is one in essence but three in persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost and evangelically we have this very blessing explained by the Apostle 2. Cor. 13. 14. The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Amen Vers 25. The Lord make his face shine upon thee and be gratious unto thee That is the Lord be favourable kind and loving to thee and let him so manifest his love and grace to thy heart and conscience that thou mayest plainly perceive it A chearfull loving countenance we call lightsome as on the other side we call an angry countenance cloudy In the sight of the kings countenance is life saith Solomon Prov. 16. 15. So that by the Lords making his face to shine upon his people nothing else is meant but his love and the manifestation of his love and favour to them according to that Psal 44. 3. They got not the land in possession by their own sword neither did their own arm save them but thy right hand and thy right arm and the light of thy countenance because thou hadst a favour unto them Vers 26. The Lord lift up his countenance upon thee and give thee peace By this clause of the Lords lifting up his countenance upon them two things may be implyed 1. the Lords love and favour as in the former clause for as the hiding and casting down and turning away of the face testifies the
corner for otherwise we cannot say whether the corner pillar was to be numbred amongst the twenty pillars appointed on each side for the length of the court or the ●●n appointed for the breadth Vers 16. And for the gate of the court shall be an hanging of twenty cubits c. See the note chap. 26. 36. Vers 18. And the height five cubits c. This court therefore of th● tabernacle was but half so high as the tabernacle and therefore the tabernacle might be easily seen yet these hangings were so high that men could not overlook them Vers 19. All the vessels of the tabernacle c. shall be of brasse That is such as were onely for the taking down and setti●g up of the tabernacle as the pinnes or stakes which were driven into the ground to fasten it Vers 20. And thou shalt command the children of Israel that they bring pure oyl olive beaten c. It seems that oyl which was first gotten out of the olives by beating or stamping of them was farre purer ●nd clearer from dregges then that which was afterward crushed out with a presse This therefore th e children of Israel were appointed to provide for the lamp in the golden candlestick even pure oyl olive beaten wherewith the priests were to maintain the lamps to cause the lamp to burn alwayes that is every night by renewing them still at the appointed times As the daily sacrifice is called a continuall burnt-offering Exod. 29. 42. and yet it was offered but twice every day at morning and evening And so this word alwayes is explained in the following verse Aaron and his sonnes shall order it from evening to morning before the Lord. At the East end of the ta bernacle either abov● the vail or at the opening of it there might come in light sufficient in the day time and therefore I conceive then the lamps burnt not but in the night onely and were put out in the morning which some inferre also from that 1. Sam. 3. 3. where it is said that the Lord appeared to Samuel ere the lamp of God went out in the temple of God to wit before the break of day Now by this pure oyl was signified the gifts and graces of the Spirit whereby the ministers of God are fitted to be as lights among the people Vers 21. In the tabernacle of the congregation c. The ●abernacle is here called the tabernacle of the congregation because though the people did not enter into this place yet to the doore of this tabernacle they brought their offerings and there did the Lord meet with the people and make known his will to them Aaron and his sonnes shall order it c. Signifying that the priests lippes should preserve knowledge CHAP. XXVIII Vers 1. ANd take thou unto thee Aaron thy brother c. Because Aaron was the brother of Moses to prevent any envy amongst the people this is in the first place expressed that it was by the Lords appointment and command that he and his sonnes were set apart to the office of the priesthood Vers 2. And thou shalt make holy garments for Aaron thy brother for glory and for beauty That is glorious and beautifull And hereby was signifyed 1. the insufficiency of Aarons priesthood that there was not in him if you look on him in his own person sufficient worth that he should mediate between God and man for th●refore was this holinesse in his garments to cover the pollution of his own p●rson 2. the more then angelicall purity and holinesse of Christ whose type Aaron thus attired was Heb. 9. 14. Christ through the eternall spirit offered himself without spot to God By whom also his Church is clothed with garments of beautifull glory Isai 52. 1. Put on thy beautifull garments oh Jerusalem the holy citie Rev. 19. 8. To her was granted that she should be arrayed in fine linen clean and white for the fine linen is the righteousnesse of the Sain●s 3. to shew the extraordinary degrees of holinesse required in those that serve at the altar Vers 3. And thou shalt speak unto all that are wise-hearted c. that they may make Aarons garments to consecrate him c. That is to be a signe of his consecration and sanctification from God therefore it was death to minister without these garments Vers 6. And th●y shall make the ephod of gold c. It was called the ephod of an hebrew word which signifieth to close compasse or gird about because it compassed fitly the body and was tied thereto it was the outmost of all Aarons garments and covered his whole body both back and breast from the shoulders down to the loyns excepting onely the breast where the breast-plate was fastened Vers 7. It shall have the two shoulder-pieces thereof joyned at the edges thereof and so it shall be joyned together These shoulder-pieces were either the pieces which went up both before and behind from the body of the ephod and so met together on the top of each shoulder and were joyned together in the edge thereof a hole being left in the midst through which the priests head went when he put on the ephod or else it is meant of certain wings as we call them which were joyned to the ephod in the edge round about each shoulder Vers 8. And the curious girdle of the ephod which is upon it shall be of the same c. By this is meant two pieces or slaps which came from the back part of the ephod under the arm-holes and are called the curious guard or girdle because the nether lappets served as a girdle to fasten it below and it is said that it should be upon it that is is joyned as a part of it which is added to distinguish it from the girdle mentioned ver 39. Thou shalt make the girdle of needlework which was not a part of the ephod as this which is therefore called often the golden girdle Vers 9. And thou shalt take two onyx-stones and grave on them the names of the children of Israel These two onyx-stones whereon were graven the names of the twelve sonnes of Jacob signified the firm and perpetuall love of Christ toward his Church and also how precious they be to him how continually mindfull he is of them Cant. 8. 6. Set me as a seal upon thy heart as a seal upon thy arm for love is strong as death See also Hag. 2. 23. In that day saith the Lord of hosts will I take thee O Zorobbabel my servant c. and will make thee as a signet Vers 10. Six of their names on one stone and the other six names of the rest on the other stone according to their birth That is first Reuben then Simeon and so the rest according to their age And this signified the like precious faith and dignity which all have obtained before God in Christ 2. Pet. 1. 1. To them that have obtained the like precious faith So Gal. 3.
shew Gods acceptation of it that it should be as meat to him and withall to expresse his love who reckons himself as a guest at their feasts Vers 16. All the fat is the Lords That is it must be burnt upon the altar neither may the priest nor owner eat of it Vers 17. It shall be a perpetuall statute for your generations throughout all your dwellings c. Upon the Lords setting apart the fat of all sacrifices to be his peculiar portion and to be burnt upon the altar there is here a more generall statute given them in charge towit that the people should never eat any of this fat of these beasts fit for sacrifices no not in their o●n private dwellings when they killed them for their ordinary food and not sor sacrifices which was doubtlesse to keep in them a reverend remembrance of these holy rites and the spirituall mysteries signified thereby Indeed there is great difference of judgement amongst Expositours concerning this law to wit whether the eating of all fat was here forbidden the Israelites or onely the eating of the fat of their sacrifices But for this we must know 1. that it is meant onely of the fat of beasts that were appointed for sacrifices for so much is expressed chap. 7. 23. Y● shall eat no manner of fat of ox of sheep or of goats 2. that it was not meant of such fat as is mixed with the flesh of such beasts as in the shoulder breast c. for such fat they were doubtlesse allowed to eat whence Deut. 32. 14. The fat of rammes and lambs of the breed of Bashan and goats is r●ckoned amongst the dainties which God had given the Israelites in the land of Canaan but it is meant onely of the fat which we call suet or tallow the fat before mentioned which when these beasts were sacrificed was alwayes burnt upon the altar and 3. for this fat it is farre more probable that the Israelites were by this law forbidden to eat of it at all times and in all places whenever they killed either sheep or ox or goat for their ordinary food not onely because it is said that this should be a law for them throughout all their dwellings that is even when they killed these cattel at home in their own private dwellings but also especially because fat and bloud are here joyntly alike forbidden Now the bloud even of those cattel which they killed at home for their private use they might not eat the reason whereof see in the note upon Gen. 9. 5. and therefore not the fat neither CHAP. IV. Vers 2. IF a soul shall sinne through ignorance c. Hitherto in this book direction hath been given for burnt-offerings meat-offerings and peace-offerings Now the Lord here beginnes his directions for those offerings whereby expiation was made for some particular sinne which the offerer found himself guilty of which in some cases were called sinne-offerings and in some cases trespasse-offerings The first generall command concerning these is in these words to wit that if a soul that is any person whatsoever should sinne through ignorance against any of the commandments of the Lord then that person should bring a sinne-offering by way of expiation for that sinne where by sinnes committed through ignorance or errour for so the word in the originall may also be rendered are not onely meant such sinnes as men commit and yet know not that they sinned as being ignorant of the fact done or of the unlawfulnesse of the fact thinking they did well when indeed they transgressed some law and commandment of God but also such sinnes as men commit through infirmity and weaknesse when they are suddenly overtaken in a fault as the Apostle speaks Gal. 6. 1. overborn by the strength of their lusts and corrupt affections which do for the present as it were blind their judgement and reason and so they do not for the time mind the law of God or not lay it to heart as they ought to do Yet withall we must consider that it is no way probable that all sinnes of this nature are here intended but onely such greater externall sinnes for which the conscience is more likely to be stricken then for every ordinary aberration for who can think that there was a severall sinne-offering to be brought for every transgression of Gods law though but in thought or word which in the best are every day so many No other sinnes were expiated by the dayly burnt-offerings which were offered for the whole Church or by the sacrifice offered on the day of atonement concerning which it is said Levit. 16. 30. On that day shall the priest make an atonement for you to cleanse you that you may be clean from all your sinnes before the Lord. These sinne-offerings were onely for such particular sinnes for which their consciences were in a more speciall manner smitten and they were all types of Christ for For God made him to be sinne for us who knew no sinne that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2. Cor. 5. 21. Vers 3. If the priest that is anointed do sinne c. That is the high priest who onely was anointed in the ages following as is before noted upon Exod. 29. 7. 40. 15. now in that the Leviticall high priest had himself need of an offering for sinne they were taught that he was not the Mediatour that could stand between God and them and make a perfect atonement for them but that they were to look for another in whom there was no sinne of whom the Leviticall high priest in his holy garments was a shadow and type See Heb. 7. 26 27 28. For such an high priest became us who is holy harmlesse ●ndefiled and separate from sinners who needeth not dayly as those high priests to offer ●p sacrifice first for his own sins and then for the peoples c. Then let him bring for his sinne which he hath sinned a young bullock c. A greater sacrifice then the common persons vers 28. or the rulers vers 22. and equall to the congregations vers 14. because his sinne was greatest and most pernicious to the people Vers 4. And shall lay his hand upon the bullocks head c. So testifying his faith and resting on Christ whom that sacrifice figured See the note upon chapter 1. 4. Vers 5. And the priest that is anointed shall take of the bullocks bloud This anointed priest is the sinner himself Heb. 7. 27. who is here injoyned to take of the bullocks bloud and bring it to the tabernacle of the congregation that is into the tabernacle which was not yet prescribed to be done in any other sacrifice and this shewed that by the bloud of Christ we have a way opened into heaven Heb. 10. 19. 20. Having boldnesse to enter into the holiest by the bloud of Jesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the vail that is to say his
slain and for the satisfaction of the people that they may know he did it by the speciall motion of my spirit because I the Lord have thus both approved and rewarded the fact say that is make it known that behold I give unto him my covenant of peace where Gods covenant with Phinehas for the settling of the priesthood in his posterity is called a covenant of peace first because they should peaceably enjoy it and secondly because the work of the priesthood was to make peace betwixt the Lord and his people Vers 13. And he shall have it and his seed after him even the covenant of an everlasting priesthood That is a priesthood that shall be continued to his seed as long as ever the Leviticall priesthood shall continue But the dignity of being high priest should have come to him and his by descent may some say because he was the sonne of Eleazar Aarons eldest sonne I answer though he was so yet that it should not be removed to another family for want of his issue that was of Gods goodnesse and is here promised as the reward of his zeal Indeed the greatest doubt concerning this promise is whether it were continued in his posterity or no. Concerning which all that we find in the Scripture is this first that we find the posterity of this Phinehas recorded unto the time of the Israelites captivity in Babylon 1. Chron. 6. 4 15. secondly that if it be true which some hold that in the dayes of the Judges the high priests office was wrested from the sonnes of Phinehas the sonne of Eleazar and conferred upon Eli who was of the stock of Ithamar yet in the dayes of Solomon it was again taken from Abiathar who was of Elies house and settled upon Zadok and so it came again into the line of Phinehas and so continued unto the Babylonian captivity 1. Kings 2. 25. and thirdly that though it be no where expressely said of what stock the high priests were after the Israelites return out of Babylon yet we find that Esra that great priest and scribe was of his line Ezra 7. 1 c. and it may be probably thought that the high priests still continued in that line unlesse it were in those times when there was nothing amongst them but disorder and confusion Neither indeed is there any cause why we should understand this promise to be so absolute but in case of the sinnes of his posterity they might for a time be deprived of this dignity Vers 14. Zimri the sonne of Salu a prince of a chief house among the Simeonites It is particularly expressed how great a man he was whom Phinehas slew because herein the zeal of Phinehas was notably discovered Vers 15. He was head over a people and of a chief house in Midian He is reckoned one of the five Kings of Midian chap. 31. 8. Vers 17. Vex the Medianites and smite them c. These words smite them imply a promise of victory But why are they not to smite the Moabites as well as the Midianites first because he had already forbidden Israel to distresse the Moabites Deut. 2. 9. And the Lord said unto me Distresse not the Moabites neither contend with them in battel secondly because the Midianites had the chief hand in the mischief as seems probable first by Balaams stay amongst them wh●n Balak had left him in displeasure and secondly by this parti●ular fact of Cozbi who was a Kings daughter amongst them c. CHAP. XXVI Vers 2. TAke the summe of all the congregation of the children of Israel c. Of the two first numbrings of the people see Exod. 30. 11 12. and Numb 1. 1 2. But now the reasons of this third numbring of the people as we may gather by some passages were these first because this would make way to the more equall dividing of the land which they were presently to go about according as they found the tribes more or lesse in number see vers 53 54. Unto these the land shall be divided for an inheritance according to the number of names c. secondly to manifest how fully that which God had threatned chap. 14. 29. was now accomplished vers 64 65. But among these there was not a man of them whom Moses and Aaron the priest numbred when they numbred the children of Israel in the wildernesse of Sinai For the Lord had said of them They shall surely die in the wildernesse c. Happely all the old company were not dead till this last plague wherein foure and twenty thousand were cut off and therefore it may seem expressely noted ver 1. that it was after the plague that God gave this charge to Moses and Eleazar for numbring the people because then God had exactly brought that to passe which he had long since threatned as they should now see in taking the number of the people thirdly to manifest Gods power and goodnesse in preserving unto them so many notwithstanding they had wandred so many years through a wildernesse wherein they were encountred with so many difficulties and had so often by their sinnes provoked God to cut off many amongst them as also his truth and faithfulnesse who had so wondrously increased them as he promised their forefathers notwithstanding they had often by their rebellion provoked him to destroy them the more seasonable it was to comfort them in this kind because it was immediately after foure and twenty thousand had been taken away by the foregoing plague chap. 25. fourthly it was because they should hereby see Gods care over them and love towards them as Moses at their coming out of Egypt received Gods flock by tale so now before his death he must deliver them up by tale again Vers 4. Take the summe of the people from twenty years old and upward as the Lord commanded Moses c. That is after the same manner as he commanded Moses to number the people when they were newly come out of Egypt so hath he now again commanded to number them before their entring Canaan Vers 7. And they that were numbred of them were fourtie and three thousand and seven hundred and thirty At their last numbring the Reubenites were fourty six thousand and five hundred chap. 1. ver 21. so that this tribe was decreased two thousand seven hundred and seventy which may in part be ascribed to the conspiracy wherein they joyned with Korah Vers 10. And the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up together with Korah c. This place according to our translation clears it beyond all exception that Korah was swallowed up into the earth together with Dathan Abiram ch 16. And they became a signe That is for an example that others might take warning by them as sea-marks are set up to give us warning of danger 1. Cor. 10. 6. Now these things were our examples to the intent we should not lust after evil things as they also lusted Vers 11. Notwithstanding
the judgement is Gods that is the judges represent Gods person and sit in his seat and God speaks and judges by them and therefore they should judge no otherwise then God would do and when they judge unj●stly they dishonour God and forget how able God is to defend them who●e work they do Vers 18. And I commanded you at that time all the things which ye should do He gave them all the Laws delivered here in Horeb and taught the Judges their duty in more full manner then is here expr●ssed Vers 19. We went through all that great and terrible wildernesse which you saw by the way of the mountain of the Amorites That is the way which leadeth to the mount of the Amorites Vers 23. And the saying pleased me well c. That is their desire that spies might be sent before them yet it seems he enquired whether God would have it so who approved or at least permitted it Numb 13. 1. for prudent policy so it be not mixed with unbelief doth well beseem Gods people Yet it may be this request of theirs proceeded from distrustfull fears and if so then God gave way to them herein to harden and punish them for their unbelief Vers 25. And they took of the fruit of the land in their hands c. As grapes pomegranates figs Numb 13. 23. And said It is a good land which the Lord our God doth give us Moses expresseth not here at first the discouraging words of the timerous spies but onely that wherein they agreed with Caleb and Joshua concerning the goodnesse of the land because this which was confessed should have been more prevalent with the people to have heartned them to go on then their tales of the strength of the people and their cities to beat them off Vers 31. The Lord thy God bare thee as a man doth bear his sonne c. This word implyes first Gods assistance in carrying them through unpassable difficulties the way they could not in their own strength have overmastered but God by his almighty power bare them as when a father takes up and carries his child in his arms secondly it implyes his bearing with their perversnesse and rebellions and this concerning Gods fatherly love to them and care over them he opposeth to that desperate speech of ●heirs vers 27. Because the Lord hated us he hath brought us forth out of the land of Egypt c. Vers 35. Surely there shall not one of these men of this evil generation see that good land c. Though Moses prayed for them Num. 14. 13. 19. and the Lord pardoned them that they were not then destroyed Numb 14. 20. yet he sware that they should not come into the promised land Vers 36. Save Caleb the sonne of Jephunneh he shall see it and to him will I give the land that he hath trodden upon c. See Josh 14. 9. Vers 37. Also the Lord was angry with me for your sakes c. For the people provoked his spirit whereupon he spake unadvisedly with his lippes Psal 106. 32 33. So then these words are not added to justifie himself and to cast all the blame upon them but onely to shew how by their rebellion he also was involved in sinne and brought to do that which was so displeasing to God Yet there is another exposition which may seem most probable the Lord was angry with me for your sakes that is because I did that in my unbelief and impatience which was likely to be prejudiciall unto you as those words which God there used imply Numb 20. 12. because ye believed me not to sanctifie me in the eyes of the children of Israel And so this passage seems here inserted onely by the way having spoken how God had sworn that they should not set foot in Canaan he addes as in a parenthesis this sentence of the like nat●re pronounced against himself for their sakes Vers 39. Moreover your little ones which ye said should be a prey c. In these words thus repeated there is couched an encouragement for the Israelites to whom Moses at present spake Vers 44. And the Amorites which dwelt in that mountain came out against you and chased you as bees do Which being angred use to come out in great swarms and to pursue them with strange eagernesse and fury whence is that also of the Psalmist They compassed me about like bees Psal 118. 12. Vers 46. So ye abode in Kadesh many dayes according unto the dayes that ye abode there To wit a long time as appears by the number of the dayes that ye abode there Thus many Expositours conceive that this clause is to be taken as spoken indefinitely that according to the number of the dayes they abode there it is manifest they abode there many dayes But others very probable understand it thus that as they stayed there a long time before the return of the spies so they stayed there again a long time after yea some ●ake it more particularly that as they stayed there fourtie dayes whilest the spies searched the land so accordingly they stayed as many dayes more after the return of the spies and others again conceive it is meant of the whole time of their wandring after this in the wildernesse to wit that in the fourtieth year they were gotten no farther then Kadesh and so wandred up and down fourty years according to the number of fourtie dayes wherein they searched the land and so that this alludes to that Numb 14. 34. CHAP. II. Vers 3. YE have compassed this mountain long enough turn you Northward Hitherto they had travelled Southward from Kadesh-barnea to the red sea now they were commanded to turn again Northward toward Canaan not the way they went before by Kadesh-barnea but between the coasts of Edom on the one hand of Moab and Ammon on the other so to enter into Canaan through Sihon the Amorites land Vers 4. Ye are to passe through the coast of your brethren the children of Esau which dwell in Seir and they shall be afraid of you c. This clause and they shall be afraid of you is prefixed before the following charge that they should not meddle with the Edomites as a hint to give them warning not to encourage themselves by their fear to set upon them and withall the charge given them that they should not meddle with the children of Esau is limited to those children of Esau which dwell in Seir purposely to exclude the Amalekites whom God had commanded them to destroy Exod. 17. 14. and yet the Amalekites were also the children of Esau Gen. 36. 12. Vers 6. Ye shall buy meat of them for money c. Hereby it is evident that the Israelites did not eat manna onely in the wildernesse but other meat likewise when they were where other meat could be gotten Vers 7. For the Lord thy God hath blessed thee c. Three arguments there are couched in these words whereby Moses is to
Lord commanded me at that time to tea●h you statutes and judgements c. That is besides the ten commandments written by the Lord himself he at that time also gave me other statutes and judgements which he commanded me to teach you Vers 15. Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves c. Lest again confidence of themselves should make the Israelites slight this warning of avoiding all idolatry in these words he implyes how prone mans nature is to this sinne charging them to be jealous of themselves in this regard and to watch diligently over themselves lest they should be drawn away into this grosse and brutish finne Vers 19. Which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven Moses speaking here against worshipping the sunne moon and starres and then adding this clause which the Lord thy God hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven he doth therein imply with what admirable wisdome God hath disposed these lights in severall parts of the heaven whereby the sunne moon and starres do according to their severall stations give light sometimes to one part of the earth sometimes to another and some starres do onely shine in some parts of the world and others to other parts B●● withall the chief drift of this clause is to shew what a baseness● of mind it 〈◊〉 be in Gods people to worship such things as are given for servants unto all men even to infidels and heathens Vers 20. But the Lord hath taken you and brought you forth out of the iron furnace c. This is added to imply in what a speciall tie they were bound to be carefull above other people not thus to dishonour God first because God had redeemed them out of the iron furnace that is the furnace wherein iron is melted and so Egypt is called to set forth the miserable and cruell oppression which there they underwent enough to dissolve the spirits of the stoutest and to have wasted and consumed any people and secondly because having thus redeemed them out of Egypt he had taken them to himself as a people of inheritance that is his own people purchased for himself upon whom this blessing should remain from generation to generation Vers 21. Furthermore the Lord was angry with me for your sakes c. This is added first to set forth the wondrous care that God took of them who was angry with Moses for their sakes because he did not sanctifie the Lord in the eyes of the children of Israel Numb 20. 12. secondly to manifest Gods love and mercy to them granting them that favour which he denied his servant Moses to wit of carrying them into that good land of Canaan thirdly to give them a hint how carefull they had need to be to walk uprightly with God who was so farre displeased with him because of his infidelity Vers 24. For the Lord thy God is a consuming fire even a jealous God c. The Lord is here called a consuming fire because of his ex●eeding great indignation against his people when they provoke him by their rebellions and because when he resolves to take vengeance on them he doth many times consume and destroy th●m even as the fire burns up all that stands in its way and again he is called a j●alous God with respect unto the covenant which he made with his people wherein he had taken them to be his spouse and had engaged himself to be as a husband to them and so was as jealous of having the worship due onely to him to be given to any creature as husbands use to be of their wives dealing falsely with them and Solomon we know saith of jealousie that the coals thereof are coals of fire which hath a most vehement flame Cant. 8. 6. Vers 25. When thou shalt beget children and childrens children and shalt have remained long in the land c. That is be not secure and bold to sinne because you are therein settled for if you do God will soon cast you out again Vers 26. I call heaven and earth to witnesse against you c. This obtestation of heaven and earth may be understood of God and the Angels in heaven and men on earth But I rather conceive it to be meant of the dead and unreasonable creatures and that hereby is implyed first that as surely as there was a heaven and an earth so surely should they perish from off the land secondly that the bruit creatures were not so stupid as they if notwithstanding all these warnings given them they should neverthelesse go after strange gods Vers 34. Or hath God assayed to go and take him a nation from the midst of another nation by temptations c. The miracles and wonders which God wrought in Egypt are here called temptations because he did thereby try both the Egyptians to see whether they would be wonne to yield to him and let the people of Israel go and the Israelites to see whether they would be wonne to ●ear the Lord and to trust in him who had done so great and wonderfull things for them Vers 37. And because he loved thy fathers therefore he chose their seed after them c. Not for any thing which he saw in you or in your fathers did he choose you to be his peculiar people but of his own free grace and love and from that love of his it was merely that he brought thee out of Egypt in his sight that is the eye of his providence being still fixed upon them even as a father causes his child to go before him that he may keep his eye upon him and no● suffer him to fall into any danger Vers 44. And this is the law which Moses set before the children of Israel c. He meane●h that which hereafter followeth this therefore is a preface to the next chapter where the repetition of the laws beginneth Vers 49. And all the plain on this side Jord●● Eastward even unto the sea of the plain c. See chap. 3. 17. CHAP. V. Vers 1. ANd Moses called all Israel and said unto them c. That is all the elders and chief of the people It was not possible that so many hundred thousands as the Israelites now were should hear Moses speaking to them But as Exod. 12. 3. where Moses and Aaron were appoined to speak unto all the congregation of Israel vers 21. it is said that they called for all the elders of Israel so it was here Vers 3. The Lord made not this covenant with our fathers c. That which Moses here speaks of is that which he made with the Israelites at Horeb when he gave them the law as is expressed in the former verse The Lord saith he made not this covenant with our fathers that is with our fathers in Egypt or it may be meant of the Patriarchs Abraham and Isaack and Jacob even including all from Adam unto Moses yea and all their ancesters before the giving of
from th●m their utmost endeavours to observe Gods Laws I know there are some Expositours do otherwise conceive of the aim of these words to wit that Moses therein doth shew the people how wary they had need to be of keeping Gods love and favour to them and not to provoke him by their sinnes namely because the fruitfulnesse of that land which they were now to have did wholly depend upon the Lords sending them rain from heaven the want whereof they could not supply with digging ditches and water-courses as they did in Egypt in regard the land of Canaan was a mountanous and ●illy countrey to which it was not poss●ble to convey water from rivers as in Egypt they might But the first exposition I conceive is most proper and most ag●●●able to the aim of Moses in setting forth the excellency of Canaan above that of Egypt from whence he had brought them and yet happely we may best say that both were implyed Vers 11. But the land whither ye go to possesse it is a land of hils and valleys c. Hereby is commended the commodious healthfull and pleasant situation of the land yet withall some conceive that hereby is implyed also that because it was hils and dales rivers could not overflow it but it must needs be barren if it had not alwayes rain in due season Vers 12. A land which the Lord thy God careth for c. That is Canaan is a land which is not watred as Egypt is by the art and industry of man but by the speciall care and providence of God whose eyes are upon it all the year long to send rain upon it as he finds there is need But may some say Was it not of the providence of God that Egypt was made fruitfull by the overflowing of Nilus I answer Yes but yet because the fruitfulnesse of Egypt was much advanced by their watering the land as a garden of herbs whereas Canaan was continually watred with rain from heaven and where there is least use of mans indu●try but the blessing comes immediately from heaven there the care and providence of God is most evidently seen therefore is it said here of Canaan that it was a land which the Lord their God eared for c. Vers 14. I will give you the rain of your land in his due season the first ra●n and the latter rain c. The first after the sowing of the seed that it might take rooting in the earth the latter a little before harvest that the eare might be full and it is to be noted that though Moses had hitherto spoken to the people as in his own person yet here he speaks as in the person of God I will give you the rain of your land and vers 15. I will send grasse in thy fields c. Vers 21. That your dayes may be multiplyed as the dayes of heaven upon earth That is that you and your posterity may continue in the land of Canaan so long as the heavens shall continue in their place over the earth namely so long as the world shall last for the like phrase we have concerning the perpetuity of Davids kingdome which was accomplished in Christ Psal 89. 29. His seed also will I make to endure for ever and his throne as the dayes of heaven And indeed had not the Jews provoked the Lord by their sinnes to cast them out of that good land this promise should have been made good to them yea and from this promise happely we may conceive hope that upon the repentance of the Jews and their embracing the Lord Christ as their promised Messiah they shall be again reestablished in this land and therein continue with great glory to the end of the world Vers 26. Behold I set before you this day a blessing and a curse This phrase of setting before them the blessing and the curse was purposely used no doubt to intimate that they might take their choice of either of these and so to manifest that if the curse came upon them they caused it themselves and could blame no body but themselves onely Vers 29. Thou shalt put the blessing upon mount Gerizim and the curse upon mount Ebal That is thou shalt cause the blessings which the Lord hath promised to them that keep his laws to be pronounced on mount Gerizim and the curses which the Lord hath threatned to them that break his laws to be pronounced on mount Ebal and so shalt make those mountains to be as it were continuall remembrancers to the people of the blessing and the curse that when they see mount Gerizim they may see the blessing set before them and so likewise the curse when they see mount Ebal This is afterward enjoyned again Deut. 27. 11. 12. c. where it is also more fully expressed how it was to be done and Josh 8. 33. we may see how this which God here enjoyned was accordingly done And it seems that from this very commandment given to Moses concerning mount Gerizim the Samaritans many ages after this took occasion to build a temple there as taking Gerizim to be a blessed place because the blessings were pronounced on it for that the Samaritans temple was built upon mount Gerizim is the common opinion of most Writers and we may find it very probable by comparing together John 4. 3 20. with Judg. 9. 7. since there to wit Judg. 9. 7. it is evident that mount Gerizim was nigh unto Shechem because from the top of mount Gerizim Jotham spake to the men of Shechem that were gathered together and had made Abimelech their King and by that which is said of the woman of Samaria John 4. it is as evident that the Samaritans temple was built on a mountain nigh unto Shechem because that Samaritan woman dwelling at Sychar which was Shechem as appears by the words that follow John 4. 5. where it is noted that this Sychar was near by the parcell of ground which Jacob gave to his sonne Joseph and that was certainly at Shechem as is noted upon Gen. 33. 19. and 48. 22. speaks of the Samaritans temple as of a place that was hard by and perhaps in their view John 4. 20. Our father 's worshipped in this mountain ye say that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship CHAP. XII Vers 2. YE shall utterly destroy all the places wherein the nations which ye shall possesse served their Gods c. That is all their temples and chappels and whatever other places they had wherein they served their idol-gods And this God enjoyned them first to shew how he abhorred idolatry and secondly to prevent the Israelites being tempted to worship God in those places Nor doth it hence follow that we may not worship God in such churches and chappels as have been polluted with idolatry but ought to pull them down as some have thought for this clause of this law i● judiciall pecul●ar onely to the Jews as being chiefly intended
worship false Gods or to worship the true God in a false manner which is all one for he that pretends to worship the true God with false worship doth not indeed worship the true God but an idol-god which he pha●cieth to himself thou shalt not hearken to him that is thou shalt not because of his signes and wonders regard what he saith And indeed though a false Prophet may be known by his foretelling things which afterwards come not to passe according to that rule chap. 18. 22. Whou a Prophet speaketh in the name of the Lord if the thing follow not nor come to passe that is the thing which the Lord hath not spoken c. yet the accomplishment of what a Prophet foretells is no sure signe that he is a true Prophet nor to be regarded if his doctrine be not according to the truth which God hath taught us Vers 3. For the Lord your God proveth you c. These words are added as the reason why they were not to hearken to any Prophet that should perswade them to idolatry yea though he gave them any signe or wonder which should accordingly come to passe to wit because hereby the Lord did prove them to see whether they did sincerely love God or no. For the understanding whereof we must know the Lord is here said to prove them by that which the false Prophets did to seduce them to idolatry first because even the Lord himself may by the Spirit of prophecy reveal things to come even to wicked men and false Prophets as he did to Balaam and Caiaphas as knowing how thereby to bring glory to himself though they onely intend to corrupt and seduce his people secondly because though these predictions given and wonders wrought are usually either mere forgings and impostures or else satanicall delusions whereby men are made to think they see those things done which indeed are not done or lastly are such wonders as are indeed done but by the power of the devil yet it is of God that either men or devils are permitted to do such things who could easily restrain them if he saw cause to do it and thirdly because the Lords aim in suffering the devil and wicked men thus to abuse men is to make tryall that is by this tryall to make it known whether they love the Lord their God with all their heart and with all their soul this being a sure rule that those whose hearts are upright towards God will not be drawn away from the truth of God by such delusions according to that of the Apostle 1. John 2. 19. They went out from us but they were not of us for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us Vers 5. And that Prophet or that dreamer of dreams shall be put to death c. Here they are enjoyned to put the false Prophet to death that shall so seduce the people for the better understanding whereof we must note first that every spreading of false doctrines in matters of lesse consequence was not thus to be punished but onely the seducing of men from the true religion to the direct worship of false Gods and in this case though many Expositours hold that this Law concerned onely the policie of the Jews yet I see not but that it gives the Christian Magistrate power also to provide for the securing of his people even by the capitall punishment of those that seduce them to an apostacy of so high a nature secondly that in the reason here rendred why they should put such false prophets to death the phrase that is used because he had spoken to thrust thee out of the way which the Lord thy God commanded thee to walk in is intended to imply what a dangerous and strong temptation that of pretended miracles is to seduce men from the way of truth and therefore our Saviour also speaking of such said Mat. 24. 24. They shall deceive if it were possible the very elect and thirdly that the last clause so shalt thou put the evil away from the midst of thee is meant both of the evil men that were the seducers and the hurt which they might have done to wit that by cutting off these evil men the hurt which they might do amongst the people should be prevented Vers 6. If thy brother the sonne of thy mother c. The drift of this place is to let them know that not onely false prophets of whom he had spoken in the former verses but all others whatsoever were to be put to death that should seduce them to idolatry not openly but secretly and that they were not to spare those that were dearest to them c. And for the fuller clearing of this we may note first that this phrase If thy brother the sonne of thy mother is here used either to distinguish true brothers from kindred yea from all other Israelites who are frequently in the Scripture called their brethren or else emphatically to expresse that brother that is usually most beloved to wit a brother both by father and mother at least a brother by the mothers side that lay in the same belly with them and that because our love to such is naturally the strongest and secondly that in the particular mention that is here made of the daughter as well as of the sonne as also of the wife there is not onely respect had to the love that men bear to them but also to the pity that men are prone to take of that sex men are naturally enclined to take compassion of that sex and therefore this is particularly expressed that in case a daughter or wife seek to seduce them to idolatry they must be put to death and there must be no pity shown them because of their sex Indeed because there is no mention made here of father and mother therefore some have thought that by this Law the child was not bound to accuse either father or mother if they sought to seduce him to idolatry the Lord not enjoyning this in regard it was so much against the reverence which children do naturally bear to their parents But these build upon too weak a ground Doubtlesse in Gods cause there is no more reason for the child to regard the parents then for the husband to regard the wife of his bosome and Levi in this case is commended for closing his eyes against his parents because he said unto his father and to his mother I have not seen him chap. 33. 9. and therefore questionlesse under these that are named all other persons that are most dear to men even parents also are comprehended Vers 7. Namely of the Gods of the people which are round about you c. In this clause of the Gods of the people which are round about you c. there is a warning couched that they should not be moved with this argument that the nations round about them farre and near all over the face of the earth went
into a covenant with them that he would be their God and they should be his people and so gave them his laws to which they were bound to submit themselves or else rather onely to imply the desperate danger wherein the Israelites were when they were in the wildernesse but that God came to their succour when they were ready to perish for indeed I do not think that the drift of this word found was to shew when God began to take pity of Israel or when they first began to be his people but onely to set forth how likely they were to perish there but that God delivered them to wit that they were then like a poore helplesse infant laid forth in a desert whom some man casually sinds and preserves when before he lay ready every moment to perish Yea beside under this which is said concerning their outward danger in the desert I doubt not but the spirit of God intended also to imply the desperate danger of their spirituall condition when God first set his love upon them and chose them to be his people to wit that they were in the state of corruption and death but that God received them for thus the Lord by the prophet Ezekiel sets forth the danger of their naturall estate by comparing them to a new-born infant laid out in some desperate place Ezek. 16. 4. As for thy nativity in the day thou wast born thy navel was not cut neither wast thou washed with water to supple thee thou wast not salted at all nor swadled at all None eye pitied thee to do any of these unto thee to have compassion upon thee but thou wast cast out in the open field to the loathing of thy person in the day that thou wast born He led him about he instructed him c. This place may be read he compassed him he instructed him c. and then the first clause must be meant of the Lords providence wherewith they were compassed about as with a wall even when they were travelling towards Canaan so that none of their enemies could come at them to hurt them But reading it as it is in our bibles He led him about he instructed him the first clause must either be meant of that we reade Exod. 13. 18. when it is said that God led the people about through the way of the wildernesse of the red sea purposely to avoid a nearer way there was through the land of the Philistines lest the people sho●ld be discouraged if at the very first they should be encountred with warre or else of the whole time of their wandring about for fourty year● together in the wildernesse wherein the Lord went before them by day in a pillar of a cloud and by night in a pillar of fire Exod. 13. 21. till he had brought them at last to the land of Canaan As for the following words he instructed them either is it meant solely of the Lords giving them the law in Sinai or else joyntly of his instructing them both by his word and works the severall dispensations of his providence towards them in this time of their passing through the wildernesse for all these were to instruct them their afflictions to teach them to fear God Heare ye the rod and who hath appointed it saith the prophet Mich. 6. 9. and the mercies God afforded them to teach them to love God and to delight in his service c. Vers 11. As an Eagle stirreth up her nost fluttereth over her young c. The Lords dealing with the Israelites in carrying them from Egypt to Canaan is here compared to the Eagles dealing with her young ones when she first carrieth them forth abroad and therefore having told us how the Eagle stirreth up her nest that is her young ones in her nest rowsing them up with the cry that she makes how she fluttereth over them and spreadeth abroad her wings as it were preparing her self to flight teaching and provoking her young ones to do as she did and to fly along with her and then at last yet farther to encourage them how she takes them and beareth them on her wings then in the next verse he applyes all this to the Lords carrying the Israelites towards Canaan so sa●th he the Lord alone did lead him that is with such tendernesse and care did the Lord carry them to the land of promise stirring them up and quickning them by his promises and threatnings encouraging them with manifold mercies defending them from all dangers and bearing with them in their many infirmities and at last he concludes and there was no strange God with him that is no strange God had any hand in this which was done for the Israelites and so thereby he implyes how injurious they were in giving away that glory which was due onely to the Lord to these strange gods that had done nothing for them See also the notes upon Exod. 19. 4. Vers 13. He made him ride on the high places of the earth That is to conquer and subdue the mountanous places and high-walled cities of their enemies and to possesse a land farre excelling others for all commodities whatsoever and by riding or treading upon the enemies high places is meant the subduing of their strong holds as chap. 33. 29. Thine enemies shall be found lyars unto thee and thou shalt tread upon their high places for riding is often used for conquering and subduing Psal 45. 8. And in thy majesty ride prosperously c. Rev. 6. 2. And I saw and behold a white horse and he that sate on him had a bow and a crown was given unto him and he●went forth conquering and to conquer Isa 58. 14. I will cause thee to ride upon the high places of the earth c. He made him to suck ho●y out of the rock and oyl out of the flinty rock That is hony of bees nestling in the holes of rocks or trees in rocks or hony-fruits growing on trees in rocky places The drift of the words in doubtlesse in generall to set forth the admirable fertility of Canaan where even the most barren places should yield such store of royall dainties Vers 14. With fat of lambs and rammes of the breed of Bashan The choice●t fatted lambs rammes c. With the fat of kidneys of wheat That is the finest of large plump and full kernel● of the sweetest and choicest wheat which are like kidneys in shape The very word here rendred the fat of wheat is elsewhere translated in our Bibles the finest of the wheat as Psal 81. 16. He should have fed them also with the finest wheat And thou didst drink the pure bloud of the grape That is pure wine red like bloud Vers 15. But Jesurun waxed fat and kicked That is Israel Deut. 33. 5 26. And he was King in Jesurun when the heads of the people and the tribes of Israel were gathered together There is none like unto the God of Jesurun c. Esa 44. 2. Fear not
also the same title is given elsewhere both to the prophets in the old restament and to the ministers of the Gospel in the new for so Samuel is called 1. Sam. 9. 6. Behold now there is in this city a man of God and he is an honourable man and vers 7. The bread is spent in th● vessels and there is not a pr●sent to bring to the man of God and Timothy 1. Tim. 6. 11. But thou O man of God flee these things c. Vers 2. The Lord came from Sinai and rose up from mount Seir unto them he shined forth from mount Paran The drift of this Preface prefixed before the blessings which we have in this and the three following verses is first by r●hearsing the former goodnesse of God to his people Israel especially when he gave them his law by the hand of Moses and so entred into a covenant with them that he would be the●● God and they should be his peculiar people to shew the ground of these following blessings to wit the free grace of God and his singular love to them above all nations that were upon the face of the earth and secondly to intimate that it was of God that he now spake to them and that he was onely subordinate to God in pronouncing these bl●ssings as formerly in giving them the law As for these first words of the Preface The Lord came from Sinai and rose up from Seir unto them he shined forth from mount Parau either they are all joyntly meant of th● glorious manner of Gods revealing himself unto the Israelites when he gave them the Law onely there i● mention made of Gods rising from Seir and his shining forth from mount Paran which were places not farre from mount Sinai and so the glorious brightnesse wherein God appeared on Sinai did seem to shoot out and spread forth it self from all these places or else the severall branches thereof are meant of severall manifestations of God unto this people as he conducted them along from Egypt to the land of Canaan for the better understanding whereof we must note that Moses comparing the Lords revealing himself to Israel to the shining of the sunne upon the world as the prophet Habakkuk also doth Hab. ● 3 4. God came from Teman and the holy one from mount Paran Selah His glory covered the heavens and the earth was full of his praise and his brightnesse was as the light c. accord●●gly he alludes to the severall degrees of the sunnes appearing to men in men●ioning the Lords severall manifestations of himself to his peopl● first the sunne gives forth its light to us in some smaller measure before it riseth and to this he alludes speaking of the Lords appearing ●o them when he gave them the law The Lord came from Sinai secondly after that the sunne riserh in the open sight of men and to this he compares the Lords farther manifestation of himself at mount Seir in that second clause and rose up from Seir to wit when he commanded the brasen serpent to be set up amongst them by looking whereon the Israelites were cured that were mortally bitten with fiery serpents a notable type of the promised Messiah that sunne of righteousnesse who was to arise with healing in his wings Mal. 4. 2. And 3. the sunne being once risen shines brighter and brighter unto perfect day and to this he alludes in the last clause he shined forth from mount Paran meaning thereby the Lords repeating and explaining the law to them by the ministry of Moses in the wildernesse of Paran But doubtlesse the best Exposition of these words is that Moses hereby meant the whole course of Gods proceeding in the glorious manifestation of himself to Israel as they went along to Canaan to wit in the pillar of a cloud and fire whereby they were led the Manna and quails which he sent them the giving and the repeating of the law and all other the marvellous works which he wrought for them And he came with ten thousands of saints That is he came attended in royall majesty to wit at the giving of the law on mount Sinai with an infinite multitude of those glorious spirits the Angels who are here called saints because of their purity and holinesse and from hence it was that both S. Stephen and S. Paul said of the law that it was given by the disposition of the Angels Acts 7. 53. and ordained by Angels by the hand of a Mediatour Gal. 3. 19. and that it was the word spoken by Angels Heb. 2. 2. From his right hand went a fiery law for them The law given to the Israelite● from mount Sinai is called ● fiery law both because God spake it out of the midst of the fire Deut. 5. 22. and also to imply that the work of the law is to terrify men to humble them and to be the ministration of death and condemnation 2. Cor. 3. 7 9. this expression From his right hand went a fiery Law for them was either onely to intimate Gods giving them his Law or else rather to signifie that the Law was the sceptre in Gods right hand whereby he meant to govern his people and keep them in order as the Gospel is also called the rod of the Lords strength whereby he rules in the midst of his enemies Psal 110. 2. Vers 3. Yea he loved the people As this tends to the generall drift of the preface namely to discover the ground of the following blessings the speciall love which God bare to the Israelites so it hath also particular relation to that which immediately went before concerning Gods giving them his Law as intimating that to be a singular effect of Gods speciall love unto them From his right hand went a ●iery Law for them Yea he loved the people God doth many wayes testifie his love to his people but one of the choicest pledges of his love is that he gives them his word which he denies to others Psal 147. 19. 20. He sheweth his word ●o Jacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel He hath not dealt so with any nation c. All his saints are in thy hand That is all Israels saints are in thy custody and protection O Lord. To be in Gods hand is to be under his power and custody under his guidance care and protection as Christ saith of his sheep John 10. 28. I give unto them eternall life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluek them out of my hand But this priviledge Moses limits to the saints in Israel that is those that are Israelites indeed as Christ said of Nathaniel John 1. 47. a holy people as they professe themselves to be for such as professe themselves Israelites but are not saints that is truly sanctified by the spirit of God but live a wicked and unclean life God will not foul his hands with them such drosse are not worthy to be kept so charily Thou puttest away all
though their enemies did for a while triumph over them and carrie them captives into a strange land yet they should return again into their own land and out of their stock the Messiah should come All which how it was accomplished we see first in the exaltation of David to be their king which cost him many prayers secondly in the many glorious victories of David Asa Jehoshaphat and other kings of Judah against their enemies who having prevailed more by their prayers then by their swords returned in triumph unto their people of which many understand that clause and bring him unto his people thirdly in the return of this tribe out of the Babylonian captivitie for whereas the tribes of Israel carried captive into Assyria did never r●●urn thence this tribe of Judah and those of Benjamin that were united to them in the ●ingdome of Judah upon their repentance and prayers to God were brought back again into that land of promise and there were settled and so continued unto the coming of Christ and of this doubtlesse those words are principally meant and bring him unto his people and fourthly chiefly in the victorie of Christ that lion of the tribe of Judah over our spirituall enemies of which also as in relation to his prayers we see what the Apostle saith Heb. 5. 7. That in the dayes of his flesh when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death he was heard in that he feared Let his hands be sufficient for him and be thou an help to him c. That is he shall through thine aid be able to make good his part against his enemies without seeking any help from any bodie else Vers 8. Let thy thummim and thy urim be with thy holy one whom thou didst prove at Massah c. In this first branch of Levies blessing is foretold first that the high Priesthood to which appertained the breastplate that had the urim and thummim in it Exod. 28. 30. should be continued in Aarons posteritie and secondly that God would still furnish them with those gifts and graces that knowledge and pietie requisite for their calling and signified by the urim and thummi● As for that following clause whom thou didst prove at Massah and with whom thou didst strive at the waters of Meribah for the fuller understanding thereof we must note first that this is meant of that storie Numb 20. when upon the Israelites murmuring for want of water Moses and Aaron were commanded to fetch water out of the rock but through their indignation against the people did not glorifie God as they ought to have done and therefore were excluded from entring into the land of Canaan for though the place where this was done was called Meribah onely not Massah Numb 20. 13. it was the place where Moses first fetcht water out of the rock in Horeb that was called Massah and Meribah Exod. 17. 7. yet because the Lord did there prove Moses and Aaron even that place is also called Massah that is temptation or proof secondly that it is said that the Lord did prove Levi that is Moses and Aaron at Massah and did strive with them at the waters of Meribah because he did there trie their faith and sharply reprove them for their infidelitie and thirdly that this is here added both by way of commending the zeal of Aaron for zealous for God he then shewed himself though weak in faith and also by way of magnifying Gods mercie in settling the priesthood upon his posteritie though he at that time so greatly offended him through his unbelief Vers 9. Who said unto his father and to his mother I have not seen him c. This may have respect both to that law Levit. 21. 11. Neither shall he go in to any dead bodie nor defile himself for his father or mother or else to that notable fact of the Levites Exod. 32. when at the commandment of Moses they slew their idolatrous brethren that had worshipped the golden calf not sparing those that were most nearest allied to them for therefore it is that Moses here saith of them that he said unto his father and to his mother I have not seen him neither did he acknowledge his brethren nor knew his own children because they did execute Gods judgement upon parents brethren children no lesse then if they had been mere strangers to them Vers 11. Blesse Lord his substance and accept the work of his hands That is though the Levites have no inheritance in the land of Canaan amongst their brethren yet the Lord will provide for them and blesse them in their outward estates and besides the service they do to him and to his people the Lord will take in good part and this we may well think is added to hearten the Levites against the discouragements they might meet with in their calling Smite through the loyns of those that rise up against him c. That is God shall destroy their enemies Because those that are set apart to take care of the peoples souls are usually hated and persecuted by those whose sinnes they reprove Wo is me my mother that thou hast born me a man of strife and a man of contention to the whole earth Jer. 15. 10 therefore is this promise made here to the Levites that God would fight against those that fight against them and sooner or later would surely destroy them Vers 12. And of Benjamin he said The beloved of the Lord shall dwell in safetie by him c. For the understanding of this blessing of Benjamins tribe we must note that the main thing promised herein is that the Temple should be built in that portion of the land which should fall to the lot of Benjamin and in expressing this Moses useth this phrase The beloved of the Lord shall dwell in safetie by him and the Lord shall cover him all the day long and he shall dwell between his shoulders by way of alluding to Jacobs dealing with Benjamin the stock from whom this tribe was descended first because as Jacob kept his Benjamin alwayes at home with him he would not let him go out of his sight so this tribe did alwayes enjoy the speciall presence of God in his Temple and was as it were every day in the eye of their heavenly father secondly because as Jacobs keeping of Benjamin alwayes at home with him was an effect of his tender love to him he was his darling and therefore he would not part with him so this tribes continuall enjoying of Gods presence in his Temple was a speaking pledge of Gods singular love to them the Lord seemed herein to make this tribe his darling as once Benjamin was to Jacob and therefore this tribe is called here the beloved of the Lord and thirdly because as Jacobs keeping of Benjamin at home with him was to make sure as he could that no evil should befall him Gen.