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A42016 The exposition continued upon the nineteen last chapters of the prophet Ezekiel with many useful observations thereupon delivered in several lectures in London / by William Greenhil. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1662 (1662) Wing G1857; ESTC R30318 513,585 860

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a great burden A stone saith Solomon Prov 27.3 is heavy and the sand weighty but a fools wrath is heavier then them both and guilt is heavier then them all A wounded spirit who can bear Prov. 18.14 What is guilt then with punishment but a consuming a devouring thing When David had sinned and Gods hand was upon him what saith he Psal 38.3 There is no soundnesse in my flesh because of thine anger neither is there any rest in my bones because of my sin Mine iniquities are gone over my head● as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me v. 4. I am feeble and soar broken I have roared by reason of the disquietnesse of my heart v. 8. Gods hand and his own guilt did eat up his spirit and bring him to the gates of death this made him to say Psal 39.11 When thou with rebukes dost correct man for iniquity thou makest his beauty to consume away like a moth The word for beauty notes that is desireable in man whatever is desireable that melts away when God doth visit man for sin A little touch of a mans hand crusheth the wings and hazards the life of the moth a little touch of Gods hand where guilt is marrs the beauty strength and desireables of man Secondly Observe Sinners under sad judgements are apt to despond yea to despair If our transgressions and our sins be upon us and we pine away in them how should we then live They had greatly sinned against God stood it out against his Prophets threatning judgements and now the judgments were come upon them their hearts sunk within them and they conclude there is no mercy for them our sins are great Gods judgments heavy upon us he is resolved now upon our destruction and what course soever we shall take all is in vain What these said in Judaea the like said they in Babylon Ezek. 37.11 Our bones are dryed and our hope is lost we are cut off for our parts We are like the bones in a Grave that have all the marrow dryed out of them or like a branch of a Tree cut off and all the sap dryed out of it there is no hope we should ever live go to Jerusalem and grow there again into a Church or State Not only the wicked but even a Godly man may be in a desponding yea a desparing condition as David himself Psal 31.22 I said in my hast I am cut off from before thine eyes Thou wilt never look upon or favour me more So Asaph Psal 77.7 Will the Lord cast off for ever will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone for ever doth his promise fail for evermore hath he forgotten to be gracious c. What sad expostulations were these of a good man Thirdly Observe The cavills objections and unbelief of sinners put God unto his oath As I live saith the Lord it s not so as you fancy I have told you that if you turn from your evill ways you shall live that I have no pleasure in the death of a sinner Ezek 18.21 22 23 27 28 31 32. But ye believe not my word ye cavill against it and say ye shall pine away in your sins that what course soever ye take ye shall not live Men are backward to believe the word of God and deal worse with God then with man they will give credit to an honest man upon his word but not to God yea how many do believe the Devils suggestions and delusions who is the father of lyes and will not believe the word of God and what a harsh thing is it that men will not attribute so much to God as to the Devil Eve took the Devils bare word in Paradice she put not him to his oath when he said ye shall not dye your eyes shall be opened and ye shall be as gods knowing good and evill She believed him presently But men will not take Gods bare word they put him to his oath As I live saith the Lord. It s a great thing for God to speak but more for him to swear he that made the world with a word is not believed upon his word he must take his oath upon it so that it stands God in more to be believed in the world then it did to make the world his single word sufficed for the one his oath was required for the other O beatos nos quorum causa Deus jurat O miserr imos si nec juranti Domino credimus Tertul Si non credimus promittenti Deo credamus juranti Deo Jerom And here appears the great goodnesse of God that for the good of man will please to take an oath O happy we for whose sake God swears O most unhappy we if we believe not God swearing Having therefore Gods word and oath let us believe firmly and stagger no more Fourthly Observe Sinners in what condition soever they be have no cause to despond or despaire of mercy so that they turn from their evill wayes Let them be great sinners old sinners sinners under judgements ready to be destroyed and cut off by the hands of enemies as these were yet if they turn from their sins there is hope of mercy for them For First God takes pleasure rather in their conversion and salvation then in their death and destruction I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked-turn from his way and live If a State say to a company of its Subjects who are Traytors and upon trayterous designs I have no pleasure in your wayes which lead unto death but my pleasure is that you turn from them and live is not here a large door of hope opened unto them whatever their Treasons be Secondly Least men being deeply guilty should suspect the reallity of God herein for guilt is full of jealousies the Lord sweares to it and that by his life which is the most unquestionable thing of all for none doubts whether he be the living God As I live saith the Lord I have no pleasure c. So that here is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods word and oath two sufficient bonds to secure it Thirdly Here is Gods command and earnest desire of their turning Turn ye turn ye from your evill wayes When a mans servant is abroad in some dangerous design and his Master commands him again and again to leave it off and come home to him or if the servant be in a deep water and the Master sees he will be drown'd if he come not back again he calls to him and commands him to return is not this an argument that he seeks his good and would have him safe Fourthly God sets the strongest arguments before them that can be thought of life and death If ye go on there is no hope of mercy you must dye if you will turn here is life ye shall live here is great mercy They are not left unto uncertainties whether they shall
many Chapters before it adds weight to the prophesie making those concern'd to mind it more seriously When the Lord speaketh who can but prophesie Amos 3.8 And who can but mind what is prophesied Vers 2. Son of Man prophesie The immortall God speaks to a mortall man honours him with Divine Revelations and that he might not be exalted therewith he minds him of his meannesse and mortality saying Son of Man prophesie Prophesying was not at the will of man but when the Spirit mov'd them to it 2 Pet. 1.21 Thus saith the Lord God What the Prophets gave forth as Prophets was not from their own hearts and heads some humane thing but it was altogether Divine from Jehovah Adonai whose Being is of himself and hath Dominion over all What they and the Apostles writ was the word of God and so ought to be esteemed and received 1 Thess 2.13 Howl ye He speaks to the Egyptians and others upon whom sad judgments were coming he calls to them to lay to heart and lament for the evils were at hand The Hebrew Jalal hath agreement with Alal which signifies in nihilum rediger● to reduce a thing to nothing because when men do mourn and lament greatly it wastes and consumes them so as it well nigh brings them to nothing Woe worth the day The words may be read Ah the day alas for the day as Joel 1.15 Or O the woe of the day an unhappy day wherein thy Cities shall be made heaps man and beast destroyed all laid waste and desolate The French is malediction sur ta journee a curse be upon that day Vers 3. The day is near even the day of the Lord is near Day here is put not for a day in strictnesse of sense but for the time wherein those judgements should befall Egypt and other parts and it s call'd the day of the Lord because of his special manifestation of himself When God doth either in mercy or judgement declare himself Emphatically that is said to be the day of the Lord. Other dayes are his dayes but such in a special manner The duplication of the day here is to make the deeper impression both upon the Jews who rested too much upon Egypt and also upon the Egyptians who were secure and feared not he tells them of the nearnesse of it that they may be awakened that they might the more fully be awakened he tells them what kind of day it will be A cloudy Day The Hebrew is Dies Nubis a Day of a Cloud there will no Sun shine that day a black thick dark cloud will arise that day and make a terrible tempest Gods judgements are likened unto clouds and rain for the sadnesse and terriblenesse of them Psal 11.6 He shall rain snares fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest The French is iour tenebreux It shall be the time of the Heathen Heathen may be taken either for the Babylonians who should come and conquer Egypt and then do what they pleased therein and so it should be their day or for the Egyptians and the Nations adhering to them and so it should be their day to be spoiled and suffer grievous things it was a time of undoing these and a time of making the other God had appointed that time for them both Vers 4. The sword shall come upon Egypt The Chaldean Army shall come and make war●e upon the Egyptians and they shall be under all the miseries and mischiefs which attend warre and they are many And great pain shall be in Ethiopia The word for pain in Hebrew is Chalchalah which Montanus renders Vacillatio shaking the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trouble or perturbation the Vulgar pavor fear others dolor magnus great grief which the word imports for it s from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 parturire to bring forth notes such grief and pain as women have when they are in travail When the King of Babylon came into Egypt Ethiopia was in travail When the slain shall fall in Egypt It were better rendred when the wounded shall fall men slain are fallen men wounded are ready to fall or falling The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chalal signifies one wounded and so the French hath it qui seront naurez tomberont en Egipt And her foundations shall be broken down By Foundation● Cityes Towers Forts Castles any strong holds may be understood Some make the foundations of Egypt to be their riches forces and confederates but the first sense of the Word is more Genuine because he speaks of breaking down which is proper to the one and not the other Vers 5. Ethiopia In Hebrew Chus so call'd from Chus the Son of Cham Gen. 10.6 who first inhabited that part of Africa and from him the people were called Cussites from the Grecians it received the name of Ethiopia which is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to burn and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the countenance because the heat of the Sunne there is such as it scorcheth the faces of the people This Country is judged to be as large as Germany France and Italy but not very populous because of the extream heat they circumcise their Males and Females baptizing the Males fourty dayes and the ●emales eighty dayes after their Circumcision and they rebaptize themselves in Lakes and Ponds every year on the day called Epiphany Heylin in his Microcosm because they conceive that the Lord Christ was baptized by John in Jordan that very day But whether this was the Ethiopia Nebuchadnezzar should spoil some question because it is said chap. 29.10 That Egypt should be made desolate from the Tower of Syene unto the border of Ethiopia that is to the Asian Ethiopia Syene was at the front of the African Ethiopia and whether Nebuchadnezzar entred that Ethiopia is doubtful In locum Quistonpius is peremptory in it and saith he never passed beyond Sy●ne into it Lybia In Hebrew Phut from Phut the son of Cham Vid. suum in Gen. 10.6 Gen. 10.6 and the inhabitants thereof were at first called Phuthaei or Phuttians and afterward Lybians the Country being named Lybia from Lybs a King of Mauritania or from Lybs the Southwind which gently breatheth there or from Lybia a Queen thereof it 's now call'd Sorra which signifies a Desert because its a Country full of sandy Deserts And Varro will have it called Lybia Heylin in Microcos quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it wants raine Heretofore all Africa was called Phut afterwards only the Western Parts of Africa as Mauritania and Tingitana Shindler Martinius where the Kingdome of Fez or Lybia now is Lydia The Hebrew is Lud from Lud the Son of Shem Gen. 10.22 as some will have it or from Ludim the Son of Mizraim as others affirme This Lydia was a Region of Asia the less formerly called Maeonia in it were those famous Cities Philadelphia Sardis Pergamus Thyatira and Laodicea Alapide would not have it to be this Lydia
the Word of the greatest King no earthly King hath fertility or sterility at his Command as God hath Haggai 1.11 He called for a drought upon the Land it came 2 Kings 8.1 He called for a famine and it came and sojourned seaven years with them If God call for a judgement or a mercy it comes presently Let us fear to offend him least he call for a famine the pestilence or a sword let us improve mercies for his honour that he may call for the Corn and Fruit and continue the same unto us Fourthly Observe Whatsoever plenty is in a Land it is from the power blessing and bounty of the Lord. I will call for the Corn and encrease it Though the Land have kept her Sabbaths hath not been ploughed or sown in many years yet I will cause it to bring forth and that richly I will multiply the fruit of the Tree the Vine Fig-tree and the Olive shall be laden with fruit and that ye take no pains for the tender Grasse and Herbs the encrease of the Field These even all these are from the call benediction and bounty of God which we should take notice of and be thankfull for All the Corn we have for bread all the Fruit we have for delight all the Herbs we have for Physick and all the grasse and fodder we have for Cattle are all from the Lord and if we do not use all for his glory but abuse the same as Ephraim did God will deal by us as he did by Ephraim Hos 2.8 9. even take all from us I will take away my Corn in the time thereof c. Fifthly Observe God takes notice how wicked ones reproach his children being under his judgements and will cause their reproachings to cease Ye shall receive no more reproach of famine among the heathen It was a vile thing for the Babylonians to cast it in the Jews Teeth That their Land was a Land of famine and so to reproach them for that judgement which God for their sins did oft lay upon them this was inhumane barbarous to adde affliction to the afflicted God observed it and to comfort them against so soar an affliction he gives in a promise of a plentifull maintenance I will call for the Corn and multiply all things so that there shall be no occasion for an enemy for any Babylonian to say so any more Ye shall receive no more reproach of famine among the heathen Vers 31. Then shall ye remember your own evill wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and for your abominations THis Verse is the last of the speciall Promises made here unto this people and it is a promise of repentance Something like part of this vers we had Chap. 6.9 almost the same words we had Chap. 20.43 Then shall ye remember When I have broken the Babylonish yoke off their necks brought you into your own Land and done great things for you Then ye shall remember that is not simply to call to mind what ye have done but to rowle up and down in your thoughts seriously to muse upon and ponder for so much the word Zacar signifies and so to ponder as to do something thereupon Your own evill wayes and your doings that were not good In Chap 20.43 it s your wayes and all your doings wherein ye have been defiled and here it is Your own evill wayes and your doings that were not good What their wayes and doings were you may see Ezek 22. throughout the whole Chapter they did speak and do evill as they could Jer 3.5 They were worse than the Nations and Countreys round about them Ezek 5.6 than Sodom and Samaria Ezek 16.47 And shall loath your selves in your own sight Montanus renders the Hebrew thus Reprobabitis vos in faciebus vestris Ye shall reprobate your selves in your own sight ye shall judg your selves worthy to be cut off and to be made a curse so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies saith Maldonate The Vulgar is your iniquities shall displease you there is more in the word than displeasing Fastidio eritis vobis ipsis Ye shall be for a disdain a loathing to your selves Compungemini saith Aecolampadius Ye shall be pricked at the heart ye shall see your selves so defiled and deformed through sin that ye shall loath and abhor your selves For your iniquities and for your abominations Iniquities are perverse crooked and unrighteous actions abominations things disaffecting and loathsome to the senses First Observe Gods loving kindnesses and mercies do work more with sinners than his judgements do All the time they were in Babylon their hearts were never so affected for their sins as after God brought them out setled them in Canaan and shewed much love unto them Then they should remember their evil wayes before they minded them no● then they should loath themselves Mercies in Sion are more efficacious with sinners than judgments in Babylon Gods favour sooner melts hard hearts than the fire of his indignation his kindness is very penetrative it gets into the hearts of sinners sooner than his threats and frowns it is like a small soaking rain which goes to the roots of things when as a dashing rain runs away and does little good It was Davids kindness brake the heart of Saul 1 Sam. 24. And it is Gods kindnesse which breaks the heart of sinners The Milk and Honey of the Gospel affect the hearts of sinners more than the Gall and Wormwood of the Law Christ on Mount Sion brings more to repentance than Moses on Mount Sinai Secondly Observe When God brings his People out of Babylon into Canaan out of the world and Antichristian wayes into neer relation to himself and into Gospel order then he will frame their spirits so that they shall review their former wayes be ashamed of and loath themselves for them Vers 28. Ye shall dwell in the Land that I gave to your fathers and ye shall be my people and I will be your God and then shall ye remember your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves in your own sight for your iniquities and abominations When people are delivered from the power of darkness and translated into the Kingdome of Christ then they come to see what works of darkness they committed and so to abhorre and loath themselves for the same When men come out of Popish darkness or the profane courses they have lived in and are brought neer to God how do they judge condemn and loath themselves for the same When Paul was translated from his Pharisaisme into Christs unity then God moulded his spirit so that he saw and confessed what a Blasphemer Persecuter and injurious person he had been and loathed himself saying He was the chief of sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 And when the Jews shall be brought out of that Babylonish condition they now are in and become a people neer to God being in the Church of Christ
desire love delight in a thing as Gen 34.19 Shechem delighted in Dinah he desired her loved her and took delight in her Chophetz notes the highest delight content that can be taken Psal 16.3 in whom is Col Cheph-Zi all my delight that is my greatest delight Now here it s said God hath not pleasure in the death of the wicked This is not an absolute negative denying God wholly to have delight in death or in the death of sinful wicked man or of any sinfull man for God took delight in the destruction of Pharoah and his Hoast in the red Sea which Moses shews saying Exod 15.1 He hath triumphed gloriously the Horse and his Rider hath he thrown into the Sea God sent Saul to smite Amaleck utterly to destroy him and all his when Agag was spared with the best of the sheep and oxen was he not wrath with him 1 Sam. 15.3.11.23 When Jehu cut off Ahabs house what said the Lord Because thou hast done well in executing that which is right in my eyes and hast done unto the house of Ahab according to all that was in mine heart thy children of the fourth Generation shall sit on the Throne of Israel 2 Kings 10.30 The destruction of Ahabs house was pleasing to God he commended he rewarded it And that God takes no pleasure in the destruction of a sinfull wicked man is contrary to these Texts Deut. 28.63 Prov. 1.26 27. Isa 1.24 Jer 14.12 The words they are not to be taken as an absolute negative but comparatively thus I have pleasure in the turning of the wicked from his wayes rather then in his death or its more pleasing to me that a wicked man should turn and live then that he should continue and dye Such an expression is that in 1 Cor. 1.17 Christ sent me not to baptize but to preach the Gospell Not absolutely not to baptize but rather to preach then to baptize he had more pleasure in my preaching then in my baptizing and so here Let me not live if I have so much pleasure in the death of a sinner as in his turning from his sin By Death here some understand eternall Death and it cannot be otherwise saith Quistorpius for he speaks of that death which may be avoided by repentance and turning to God but temporal death cannot be avoided either by the penitent or impenitent But to him that well considers this place it will appear that here it s spoken of a temporal and violent death for vers 3. He speaks of the sword coming upon a Land They were at this time either straitly besiedged or newly taken by Nebuchadnezzars forces and complain'd that their sins were upon them provoking God to destroy them that they pin'd away and there was no hope for them of life though they should repent them of their iniquities this God answers unto and tells them if they turn from their evill wayes there is hope they shall live for repentance prevents and removes judgements that are destructive The Ninivites by their repentance prevented the destruction of themselves and their City at Davids repentance the plague was stayed Ahabs humbling himself prevented Gods bringing the evill in his dayes So that its true of natural death that cannot be avoided by penitency or impenitency but a violent death may a death by sword by famine by plague by wild beasts may 2 Chro 7.14 If my people which are called by my name shall humble themselves pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked wayes then will I hear from Heaven and will forgive their sin and w●ll heal their Land Had he spoken of eternall death it had been no answer to the Jews objection Lavater tells us that by Death is meant Malum and by Life Bonum Men by their sins bring sad calamities and judgements upon themselves they cause God to punish them with variety of evills which he hath no pleasure in nor they cause to complain of Lament 3.33 39. He had rather they should turn from their sins and live comfortably But that the wicked turn from his way and live The word for wicked is Rashang which the Septuagint renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the irreligious lewd ungodly man here wicked wicked in opinions wicked in practice troublesome to God and man running the wrong way The word for way signi ies a path which leads from place to place and men walk in it Metaphorically it s applyed to the customes manners actions religions and lives of men Jer. 16.2 Pro 1.19 Prov 21.2 of this before Chap. 16.61 The sense lyeth thus As I live I delight not in the death of the wicked but if the wicked turn from his way and live or shall live that is according to what I have prescribed in my word I shall delight in this or thus If he turn from his sinfull way that he may live and live comfortably I shall delight in it Turn ye turn ye from your evill wayes Here is an earnest exhortation of them unto repentance setting out the mercy and goodnesse of God who was ready and willing to pardon them upon their turning from their evil wayes The doubling of the word notes the earnest and reall intention of God in it The sum and substance of the words is to shew that if sinners repent of their former wickednesse he will forgive them and take pleasure in them Turn ye turn ye from your evill wayes If ye pine away under my judgements the fault is yours you turn not from your idolatries oppressions perjuries and profanations of my Sabbaths and Ordinances these are wayes of death but if ye would hearken to my wayes and turn unto them they are wayes of life Of turning hath been spoken Chap. 14.6 The Septuagint is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Turn you by turning turn throughly from your evill wayes For why will ye dye O house of Israel Ye are the Nation I took and brought out of Egypt by a strong hand Deut 4.34 Ye are the people that entred into Covenant with me avouched me to be your God Deut. 26.17 and I you to be my peculiar people vers 18. ye are they upon whom I have bestowed great priviledges holy Ordinances to whom I have shewed mercy and truth Ps 76.1 2. Ps 98.3 ye are the people I have taken most delight in of all people under Heaven whom I have most honoured done most for and made the greatest promises unto Jer. 31.33 34. Chap 33.8.14 Why therefore have you left me and my wayes and fallen into wayes of death why do you wound and stab your selves if you have no regard to me yet pity your selves cease from those wayes will be your death Why will ye dye O house of Israel Is it not better to live in my wayes then to dye in your own First Observe The guilt and punishment of sin are heavy and consuming things Our transgressions and our sins are upon us and we pine away in them Guilt alone is
have life or no but life is propounded and offered unto them and where that is promised there is a wide door of mercy opened God is troubled at it that sinners forsake mercy and embrace it not Why will ye dye Why will ye not turn from your evill wayes unto me the living God Am I so ill a God Have I dealt so unkindly with you as that you will not come unto me testifie against me tell me wherein Like that in Micah 6.3 O my people what have I done unto thee and wherein have I wearyed thee testifie against me If there be any such thing lye in the way I am ready to remove it Fifthly Observe The nature of true repentance lyeth in turning Turn ye turn ye God at first made man upright with his face towards himself but he sought out inventions and turn'd away from God to the creature which was a madnesse to leave an universal everlasting and satisfying good for a particular fading and an unsatisfying good this madness is in the hearts of all men Eccl 9.3 till they come to repenting turning again unto God and setting him in his right posture to behold the Lord. This turning must be from his evil wayes Turn ye from your evill wayes and from all of them Ezek. 14.6 Chap. 18.21.31 Else it s no turning if the heart be towards any one sin lust creature or evill way it s not turn'd his back is towards God and not his face he prefers a creature a lust before God Sixthly Observe Sinners are the Authours of their own destruction Why will ye dye They went on in their idolatry profaness oppressions pollutions of Sabbaths c. and so brought judgement upon themselves 2 Chron 36.16 They mocked the Messengers of God despised his word and misused his Prophets untill the wrath of the Lord arose against his people till there was no remedy therefore he brought upon them the King of the Chaldaeans who slew their young men with the sword in the house of the Sanctuary and had no compassion on the young man or maiden c. So in Christs dayes he would have kept Jerusalem from destruction but Jerusalem her self would not she brought it upon her selfe Matth. 23.37 The Corinthians abuse of the Supper brought judgement upon them 1 Cor. 11.30 And the false Teachers brought swift destruction upon themselves 2 Pet. 1.1 Verses 12 13 14 15 16. Therefore thou son of man say unto the children of thy people The righteousnesse of the righteous shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression as for the wickednesse of the wicked he shall not fall thereby in the day that he turneth from his wickednesse neither shall the righteous be able to live for his righteousnesse in the day that he sinneth When I shall say to the righteous that he shall surely live if he trust to his own righteousnesse and commit iniquity all his righteousnesse shall not be remembred but for his iniquity that he hath committed he shall dye for it Again when I say unto the wicked Thou shalt surely dye if he turn from his sin and do that which is lawfull and right If the wicked restore the pledge give again that he had robbed walk in the statutes of life without committing iniquity he shall surely live he shall not dye None of his sins that he hath committed shall be mentioned unto him he hath done that which is lawfull and right he shall surely live THese words do explain and confirm what God had said in the 11 vers and that by way of contraries 1. He sets a righteous man before them and bids the Prophet tell them That if a righteous man turn from his righteousnesse and become wicked his righteousnesse will not benefit him but his wickednesse will bring judgement upon him 2. He sets a wicked man before them and bids the Prophet tell them That if he turn from his wickednesse that shall not prejudice him he shall not fall thereby but he shall live Here is nothing in these verses of Gods decrees of life or death of salvation or condemnation and mens being under them It s said whilest they are righteous they are under the decree of life and salvation and when they cease from their righteousness they are under the decree of death and condemnation and so if a man be righteous one day and wicked another and that interchangeably all dayes of his life he doth daily passe from under one decree to another forward and backward I find no foundation in the words for such a conceit they hold out Gods dealings with men here in this world according to the conditions he finds them in if they be just and righteous he will bless them if they be unjust and wicked he will punish them the one shall live comfortably the other shall be cut off by some judgement here is nothing pointing at the decrees of God Vers 12. The righteousnesse of the righteous What righteous man is here meant the 15. verse informs us viz. a man legally righteous such a man as restores the pledge gives again what he hath robbed and walks in the statutes of life without committing iniquity If a wicked man did these things he was righteous it s therefore a righteousnesse of the Covenant of works not the righteousnesse of faith here spoken of a moral not a Gospel righteousnesse which the 13. verse is clear for calling it his own righteousnesse Shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression The word for transgression is Poshang which signifies sin scienter contumaciter commissum presumptuous and wilfull sin rebellion apostacy Sometimes it is taken for any sin or failing as Lament 1.22 Do unto them as thou hast done unto me for all my transgressions Jeremiah had no great sins against light he did not rebel against God his transgressions were such as are the ordinary failings of men so it s used Job 13.23 And the Septuagint hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the day he shall erre Let him have done never so much good and continued long in so doing that shall not deliver him in the day of his erring transgressing fayling Had Adam stood many dayes months years and then eat of the forbidden fruit all his righteousnesse would not have delivered him and so here under the Covenant of works there is no deliverance upon any failing But rather it notes here some grievous sin and way of wickednesse which exposes unto and hastens Gods judgements As for the wickednesse of the wicked he shall not fall thereby in the day that he turns from his wickednesse Let the wickednesse of the wicked be great of what kind soever against God and man idolatry profaness oppression c. it shall not bring destruction upon him make him to fall and perish when he repents of it turns fom it and walks in those wayes that are contrary thereunto then his former sins shall not be imputed to him nor the judgements deserv'd
one hundred twenty and seven Provinces Esther 8.5 with Chap. 1● 1. and so it seemed impossible that these should be drawn out and carried to Canaan which was so far off especially for them who were seated neer India but what saith the Lord to this I will take you from among the heathen He would but put forth his hand and lay hold of them saying Come go with me and it should be done he would gather them out of all Countreys as an Hen gathers her Chickens that are dispersed up and down among the Bushes Trees or Weeds in an Orchard And as he carried them upon Eagles wings from Egypt to Canaan so would he bring them upon the same wings from Babylon to Canaan This work God is upon in these dayes of Christ he is bringing out of all Nations some unto Christ and gathering them into spirituall Canaan Vers 25. Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean from all your filthinesse and from all your idols will I cleanse you WE are now come to the last generall part of this Chapter which consists in the multiplication of promises both Spiritual and Temporal with the ground of them The Spiritual are 1. Remission of sins vers 25 29 33. 2. Regeneration vers 26. 3. Sanctification vers 27. 4. Renovation of the Covenant between God and them vers 28. 5. Repentance vers 31. The Temporal are 1. Repossession of their Land vers 28. 2. Plentifull maintenance vers 29 30. 3. Re-edifying of their Cityes and waste places vers 33 35. 4. Increase of men vers 37 38. The ground of all these sweet and great promises is Gods free grace not mans desert vers 32. Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you When they were call'd and come out of Babylon then would the Lord sprinkle clean water upon them The Jews by water mean the abundance of outward things Some others interpret it of the water in baptisme but neither doth abundance of outwards nor the water of baptisme cleanse from the pollution of idols For after their return from Babylon Jason sent money for the sacrifice of Hercules he Menelaus and others fell to the customs of the Gentiles desired to be like them in all things they set not by the honour of their Fathers but liked the glory of the Gentiles best of all 2 Maccab. 4. And are not many baptized ones amongst the Papists and others idolaters Some other sense of the word therefore must we seek out By water the bloud of Christ is intended say the best Expositors Some make Grace the thing but that 's too general unlesse we limit it to the bloud of Christ which of Grace is given to wash sinners with These words I will sprinkle clean water upon you have some allusion unto the waters mingled with the ashes of the red Cow which being sprinkled by a branch of Hyssope upon the unclean party he was cleansed and this water was call'd The water of separation or purification for sin Numb 19.9 The Septuagint call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The water of sprinkling and so the 18. and 19. verses expresse it This red Cow figured out Christ in his afflictions and sufferings and the water mingled with the ashes of it the bloud of Christ which from hence is call'd The bloud of sprinkling Heb 12.24 The water they used in sprinkling was clean water running or spring water free from all filth so the bloud of Christ is pure he was without sin any blemish or spot his bloud was precious and pure 1 Pet 1.19 and here it s called clean water This sprinkling of clean water upon them is the application of the bloud of Christ by the Spirit of God as the Priest was to take of the bloud of the red Heifer with his finger and to sprinkle it so God by the hand and finger of his Spirit doth take and sprinkle the bloud of Christ that is apply the fruit and benefit of it unto the hearts of men 1 Cor 6.11 And ye shall be clean There be three things among other which water serveth for viz to cool to nourish to cleanse 1. It quencheth thirst caused by heat and so coole the like doth the bloud of Christ being drunk by faith John 7.37 2. It nourisheth and causeth growth and Christs bloud doth the same John 6.55 3. It cleanseth which is the use of it here mentioned water washeth away the filth of garments vessels and persons so the bloud of Christ is a cleansing thing Heb 9.13 14. If the bloud of Bulls and of Goats and the ashes of an He●fer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the bloud of Christ who through the eternall Spirit offered himselfe without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God The argument is a minori ad majus if the bloud of typical sacrifices could do that to the flesh for which they were appointed much more the bloud of Christ the true sacrifice will do that to the soul and conscience for which it was appointed viz purge away the guilt of sin otherwise the honour and efficacy of the Type should be greater than the honour and efficacy of the Substance which the Apostle denyes when he tells us Types were shadows of good things to come Heb 10 1. This cleansing is the remission of their sins through the bloud of Christ or the justifying of their persons so as they are before God without spot or fault Col. 1.14 Rom 5.9 Rev 14.5 When sins are forgiven the persons are clean in the fight of God From all your filthinesse and from all your idols will I cleanse you They had State defilements and Temple defilements Family and Personal filthinesses Zeph 3.3 4. Micah 3.9 10 11. Ezekiel 22. Jer 6.13 Chap 7.9 Whatever their filthinesses were God would cleanse them and because idolatry is a sin which exceedingly defiles and provokes the Lord to jealousie Exod 20.5 To fury vers 18. of this Chap and they might apprehend there was no mercy for them therefore the Lord mentions the filthinesse of idols and tells them He will cleanse them from that filthinesse It s not material water washes from the filth of idolatry but spiritual water First Observe When it pleases God to gather his people out of Babylon and to bring them to Sion then he will multiply mercies upon them and do for them great things I will gather you from among the heathen out of all Countrey● and bring you into your own Land and then will I sprinkle you with clean water then will I give you a new heart then will I put my Spirit into you then will I call for the Corn and multiply the fruit of the tree and increase of the field After great afflictions God bestowes great kindnesses after sharp sufferings he gives solid comforts Isa 54.7 For a small moment have I forsaken thee but with great mercies will I
gather thee Berachamim gedolim When God gathers his out of Babylon a state of confusion that is mercy and when he brings them into Sion to behold the order beauty and glory thereof that is great mercy and God will not leave them there but go on with them and heap great mercies still upon them see Isa 49.18 19 20 21 22 23. Jer. 32.37 38 39 40 41. Secondly Observe Justification is a gracious act of God upon a sinner I will sprinkle clean water upon you It s Gods prerogative to forgive and blot out sins Mark 2.7 Isa 43.25 and this he doth freely it s an act of grace and mercy Rom 3.24 Being justified freely by his grace Now in this act nothing is done in a sinner there is no grace infused no change made in the heart by it there be no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therein it s upon a sinner justifying grace is subjectively in God objectively on man for its a judicial act of God which puts nothing into the creature Rom 3.22 It s upon all them that do believe Thirdly Observe The bloud of Christ applyed by the Spirit of God is efficatious to free sinners from the guilt of their sins and of all their sins of what bind soever they be I will sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean Their sins were great very great they were guilty of bloud oppressing the widow and fatherless of idolatry of despising and profaning holy things Ezek 22.8.26 They were under the guilt of all crying and notorious sins Ezek 16.47 worse then Sodom or Samaria then the Nations Ezek 5.7 yet the Lord would cleanse them by the bloud of Christ there was virtue in that to cleanse them from their old spots from their deep guilt yea from all their guilt they should be clean from all their filthinesses As water washeth all the filth out of a cloath so doth the bloud of Christ all sin out of the soul 1 Joh 1.7 The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin the guilt of our thoughts words acts neglects there is no sin defiles the conscience so but the bloud of Christ will purge it away Heb 9.14 Chap 1.3 Christs bloud is of great virtue it purges away all sin and procures peace Coloss 1.20 So that being justified by his bloud we shall be saved from wrath as it is Rom 5.9 Fourthly Observe All sin defiles and makes guilty before God yet some sins defile more then others and make more deeply guilty God would cleanse them from all their filthinesse from every sin that had poluted them and made them guilty and from their idols which had made them more deeply guilty Idolatry hath more guilt adhering to it then many other sins that 's a sin breaks Covenant with God deposes God and sets up an Idoll in his stead Verse 26. A new heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh THis is another great promise even a promise of Regeneration and in it there is considerable 1. The party promising I I I I. 2. The things promised 1. A new heart 2. A new spirit 3. Removall of the stony heart 4. An heart of flesh 3. The parties to whom the Lord will do these things You You You. 4. The manner of Gods doing these things which is by giving putting and taking away A new heart also will I give you By heart in Scripture is signified the judgement and understanding Eph 4.18 The will and affections Prov 23.26 and the conscience 1 John 3.20 all which are here comprehended in the word heart New notes sometimes that which is for substance new totally new as new ropes Judges 16.11 12. A new wife Deut 24.5 New gods Deut 32.17 And sometimes that which is only for quality new as the new Moon Isa 66.23 From one new Moon to another The Moon is not new for substance but renewed with light new in regard of quality so New tongues Mark 16.17 They had not their old Tongues plucked or cut out of their mouths and other new ones put in but these Tongues they had before had new Languages put into them new gifts and graces Here then by A new heart is not intended one new for substance or nature of it but the same heart altered for the qualities of it renewed and indued with other qualities then it had before such qualities are wrought in the heart that a man thereupon is said to be regenerate or born again John 3.3 5 6 7. and to be a new creature Gal 6.15 This new heart lyeth not in those common gifts which many have yet without alteration in their hearts Judas had a covetous an earthly an old heart notwithstanding those great gifts he had He could cast out Devils and heal all manner of sicknesses Matth 10.1 4. And those Matth 7.22 23. Who had the gift of prophesie of casting out Devils and working wonders had no new hearts for Christ sends them going for workers of iniquity but it lyeth in grace infused which is a principle of light and life supernatural and permanent Man since the fall of Adam is in a state of darknesse and death Ephes 5.8 Chap 2.5 and when grace is infused that brings light and life unto the heart John 8. ●2 it s call'd The light of life and when a blind heart sees a dead heart lives there is a great and glorious alteration so that it is become a new heart it hath a new principle which is supernatural and permanent call'd The Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Divine to shew the supernaturalnesse of it and Nature to shew the permanency of it And a new spirit will I put within you These very words we had Ezek 11.19 where they were largely opened New spirit there was interpreted to be those excellent qualities and graces God put into the soul and shewed upon what account they were call'd Spirit and New Here I conceive a new spirit is added Exegetically being the same with a new heart This new heart or new spirit causeth the partie in whom it is to look at God as a Father and so to honour him Mal. 1.6 To love him 1 John 5.1 To fear him 1 Pet. 1.17 To yield obedience to him Rom 6.17 1 Pet 1.14 15. Patiently to bear his chastisements Heb 12.6 7 8 9. To eschew sin and work righteousnesse 1 John 5.18 Chap 3.9 10. To acknowledge how he hath offended him Luke 15.18 To pray fervently unto him Rom 8.15 To be like unto him in mercifullnesse and doing of good Luke 6.36 To delight in his wayes and to have communion with him and his Son Christ 1 John 1.3 To worship him in spirit and truth John 4.23 To be thankfull alwayes unto him for all things Ephes 5.20 To live nobly and spiritually minding the things of Heaven Rom 8.5 1 Pet 1.14 John 3.6 2 Cor
5.16 And to love those that are regenerate 1 John 5.1 and these doing so God their Father hath a special care of them and love unto them Matth. 6.26.32 Luke 11.13 Chap 12.32 Will I give you will I put within you The new heart and new spirit comes from God he that to the Authour of every good and perfect gift is the Author of the same Now in the working of this new heart and new spirit there be several Attributes of God set on work As First His infinite mercy That he should mind sinners who have old rotten filthy hard dead hearts within them so at enmity with God that they would pull him out of Heaven had they power to do it for God to mind such hearts and spirits and make them new so as to affect him and his wayes argues unspeakable mercy loving kindness superabundant It was a time of love when God saw Jerusalem in her bloud and said unto her live Ezek 10. It was infinite love infinite mercy for him to pity Jerusalem in such a case and to say so unto her the same it is when God makes of an old heart a new heart of an old spirit a new spirit Secondly Gods infinite power is imployed in this work The making of a dead heart to live a blind heart to see an old heart and spirit to become new requires an omnipotent arm By the preaching of the word men have great convictions strong resolutions and are perswaded almost to be Christians but those convictions and resolutions dye away and they never come altogether to be Christians altogether to be new hearted and new spirited till the Lord put forth his allmighty power and create new hearts and spirits in them it s a work of creation Psal 51.10 2 Cor. 4.6 Eph. 2.10 And such hearts and spirits are call'd new creatures Gal 6.15 2 Cor 5.17 Thirdly Infinite wisdome The heart of man is deceitfull above all things and desperately wicked who can know it Jer 17.9 It s beyond the knowledge of man it hath so many windings turnings pretences shifts arguments wiles depths methods as that none but God knows it he being infinitely wise can answer all the objections arguments and subtle distinctions of the heart so that it shall be silent Mans heart whilest its old hath the cunning of the old Serpent in it and pleads hard to keep its old principles its old ungodly lusts its old ignorance its old darkness its old formal wayes of worship its old fleshly confidences its old delights and pleasures its old company its old customes its old aims and ends which were selfe it musters up many arguments to defend these and who can convince the heart of the evill of these and take it off from them but God by his infinite wisdome To make an heart or spirit which hath so many oldnesses in it new argues more skill and wisdome then dwels in any creature Fourthly His Infinite holinesse and purity When God takes an old heart which is as dark as hell as stinking as any Sepulchre Math 23.27 an old spirit which is as unclean and loathsome as the Devils are when he takes these and makes them new he scatters darkness abolisheth death separating filthinesse and instead thereof brings in marveilous light 1 Pet. 2.9 A glorious life Ephes 4.18 And true holinesse vers 24. which import that God is light without darknesse life without possibility of dying holinesse without any spot or imperfection When the wind cleanseth the aire infected pestilential and stinking it argues the wind is pure when a vessel or house is noysome and one cleanses and sweetens them as not enduring them in that condition it argues their cleanlinesse and if they could make them new it would argue it much more so here God makes them new He puts them into the fire that they may be refined and partake of his holinesse Heb 12.10 Its Gods holy arme which makes an unholy heart to become holy and glorious in holinesse The dignity and excellency of this new heart and new spirit is worthy the notice First It s that doth discriminate and difference a man from all others They that have old hearts old spirits and new hearts new spirits differ as much from them as light from darknesse life from death holinesse from filthinesse a man with a new heart a new spirit is a living man whereas others be dead Ephes 2.1 He is a seeing man whereas others be blind 1 Jok 5.20 1 Cor 2.14 He is pure whereas others are filthy 1 Pet. 2.9 Tit 1.15 Hereby a man is differenced from all profane civill and moral men from all gifted men from all hypocrites what specious forms of religion and holinesse soever they have whoever hath a new spirit is distinguished from all other spirits yea from the Devils who are but unclean spirits Secondly It doth ennoble a man A new heart and new spirit doth not only distinguish from others but makes more excellent then others Prov 12.26 The righteous is more excellent then his neighbour Righteousnesse is one of the qualities in the new heart in the new spirit Eph 4.23 24. and that Nobilitates a man such a one is born not of blood that is not of the Princes and Nobles of the world who stand upon their blood and greatnesse nor of the will of the flesh that is not in the ordinary way nor of the will of man viz not by education and School principles but of God John 1.13 He is descended from the highest the King of Kings he is of the most Royal blood even the blood of God Acts 20.28 Others are vile but he is precious Jerem 15.19 2 Pet. 1.1 He is partaker of the Divine Nature and lives the life of God 2 Pet. 1.4 Ephes 4.18 Thirdly It fills them where it is with new joyes New things affect much when the Apostles had new tongues given them they were greatly affected therewith and when men have new hearts new spirits they abound in joy the greater the mercy the more full the joy If when a sinner is converted there be joy in Heaven what joy is in the sinners heart then When Christ came to Zacheus and gave him a new heart a new spirit he was fill'd with joy Luke 19. and new joyes Before his joy was to get money by any means and treasure it up now his joy was to disperse make satisfaction and to give away vers 8 9. His new heart begat in him new joyes and inabled him to joy in that he could not do not think of before without sadness So Paul when he had a new heart and spirit he had new joyes fullnesse of them in those things he could not rejoyce in before 2 Cor. 7.4 I am filled with comfort I am exceeding joyfull in all our tribulations Chap 12.10 He took pleasure in infirmities in reproaches in necessities in persecutions in distresses Here 's the excellency of a new heart and a new spirit it fills with
fixeth no● happiness upon riches honours peace parts multitudes of Souldiers Subjects or Counsellers but in mutual relation between God and a People the one owning the other When God owns a people to be his inheritance and a People own God to be their God and Portion this is true happiness such a people may plead with God for great things in prayer and expect them as Jehoshaphat did 2 Chron. 20.12 and as Asa did 2 Chron 14.11 and Moses Exod 32.11 12 13 14. Verses 29 30. I will also save you from all your uncleannesses and I will call for the Corn and will increase it and lay no famine upon you And I will multiply the fruit of the Tree and the encrease of the Field that ye shall receive no more reproach of famine among the heathen THese two Verses hold out two more great Promises unto this people which are 1. Ablation of evills as uncleannesses famine reproach 2. Collation of good things Corn Fruit and encrease of the field Vers 29. I will also save you from all your uncleannesses This is a speciall Promise and of great concernment Some refer it to Justification and make it to be Gods free taking away the guilt and punishments deserved by their uncleannesses Some refer it to Sanctification and make it to be Gods cleansing them from the filth and delivering them from the power of sin They are mistaken who interpret the words of Babylonish uncleannesses as if God would deliver them out of Babylon and save them from the pollutions thereof if that had been the sence the words should have run thus I will save you from all their uncleannesses not from all your uncleannesses To let that Exposition passe we may take in here both their Justification and Sanctification and so make the sence full I will save you from all your uncleannesses by my pardoning grace that shall acquit you from the guilt and punishment of all your sins and I will save you from all your uncleannesses by my sanctifying grace that shall purge out all your defilements and spots The word for uncleannesses is Tumeoth which notes not only Ceremonial uncleanness but Moral also as Levit. 18.27 I will call for the Corn and will encrease it The Hebrew is I will call to the Corn I will command the Corn to grow and bring forth I will give but a word of power and as that hath caused all things to be and bring forth so shall it do with the Corn and not only cause it to grow but to encrease so that there shall be plenty and plenty continued for it follows And lay no famine upon you The Jews had oft been under grievous famines as appears 2 Sam. 21.1 2 Kings 6. 1 Kings 18. Joel 1. Amos 4.6 2 Kings 25.3 The Lord called for and laid famines upon them but here he promises not to lay any famine upon them they should be free from that judgement and live in the abundance of good things Vers 30. And I will multiply the fruit of the Tree Not only should the Corn thrive and bring forth but the Trees also they should be fruitfull yea very fruitfull God would multiply the fruit of all the Trees which used to bear fruit Some Trees are for ornament of the earth some for Timber some for Fire but most for fruit and those that were for fruit should bear fruit in abundance The encrease of the field These words are spoken of those things which sponte nascuntur do grow of themselves without setting sowing or planting they are properly the encrease of the Field That ye shall receive no more reproach of famine among the heathen The Heathens took occasion from the famines the Jews met with to reproach them and say What do you want bread is your God the chiefest and best of Gods and will he see you want is he hard-hearted and will not afford you necessaries to live surely our gods are better and more mercifull than the God of the Jews they suffer us not to want any thing we have no such famines as you Jews have you are hunger-starved wretches and beholding to us for bread These were grievous reproaches which the Lord promised here to take away by giving unto them plenty of all things for their maintenance They had upbraided the Jews vers 13. That their Land was a Land devoured men God therefore now told them Their Land should bring forth Corn fruit and other good things and so maintain the inhabitants of it First Observe When God enters into or renews Covenant with a People he will do much for them I will be your God I will also save you from all your uncleannesses and I will call for the Corn and encrease it and lay no famine upon you and I will multiply the fruit of the Tree c. Here God renewed Covenant with them and promised them spiritual and temporal mercies which in due time he gave them in so when he first entered into Covenant with them Ezek. 16.8 9 10 11 12 13 14. what great things did God do for them Then washed I thee with water yea I throughly washed away thy bloud from thee and anointed thee with oyl I cloathed thee also with broidered work and shod thee with Badgers skin and I girded thee about with fine Linnen and I covered thee with silke c. When God is once ingaged to a People he doth much for them and great things he layes out himself and his Attributes for their good Secondly Observe God is a perfect Saviour I will save you from all your uncleannesses They had many and variety of uncleannesses Ceremonial and Moral impurities inward and outward pollutions they had much guilt and much filth but God saved them from them all he doth perfectly justifie and will perfectly sanctifie in due time there is not one inherent corruption within cleave it never so fast unto the spirit of man but God will work it out He will take away all iniquity Hos 14.2 the guilt of sin the power and pollution of sin yea the very being of sin vers 13. of this Chapt I will sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean from all your filthinesse and from all your idolls will I cleanse you God will do his work of this nature throughly and perfectly David acknowledged it Psal 103.2 3. Blesse the Lord O my soul and forget not all his benefits who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases Thirdly Observe It is no difficulty unto the Lord to make plenty of things he can easily do it I will call for the Corn and will encrease it It is but calling for it and it comes if he call for fruitfulness of the Field or Tree or both they come as servants come at the call of their masters so any creatures Corn Wine Oyl come at the call of God if God do but say Let the earth bring forth it will bring forth there is power in his Word it is
diligent and careful inquiry The Vulgar is Adhuc in hoc invenient me domus Israel moreover in this shall the house of Israel find me when they pray and seek me I will be found of them they shall prevail with me to do this for them Vatablus in his Notes hath the words thus Ero requisitus à domo Israel I will be required by the house of Israel they shall come and mind me and intreat me to do this for them Junius is otherwise Expositus ero domui Israelis ut hoc faciam eis I will be exposed to the house of Israel that I will do this for them Piscator is more plain Inveniendum me exhibebo Domui Israelis I will shew my self to the house of Israel to be found of them that I may do this for them Lavater and the French is I will be required I will have the house of Israel sue unto me for it What it is that God will be enquired of for is next to be spoken of Maldonate makes it Quicquid petiverint whatsoever they shall ask Some refer it to all the promises mentioned before but both these are too large and the words would not have been for this but for these things or these promises will I be enquired of Lavater makes for this to be Vt multiplicentur that they may be multiplyed and increased again or For this viz which I have spoken and said I will do I have said I will return rebuild replant them and make their desolate Land like the Garden of Eden so that the Heathens shall wonder at my dealings with them now for this will I be enquired of by the house of Israel I will increase them with men like a flock The Hebrew may be read thus I will increase them like a flock of men The Septuagint is I will increase the men themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as sheep I will so multiply them that they shall be like a flock The Jews greatly desired issue alwayes and it is probable more strongly after their reduction from Babylon then ever that so they might plant build and fill the Land again Vers 38. As the holy flock as the flock of Jerusalem in her solemn Feasts so shall the waste Cityes be filled with flocks of men and they shall know that I am the Lord. IN the Hebrew it is As the flocks of holinesses or holy things The Jews besides other feasts had three great solemn Feasts every yeer at Jerusalem 1. The Passeover 2. Pentecost 3. The Feast of Tabernacles unto which the people came up from all parts of the Land and for their use at those times great flocks of sheep and herds of Cattel were brought to Jerusalem In Josiahs time there were 30000 Lambs and Kids besides Oxen and small Cattel which were for holy services and therefore here are called The holy flock and flock of Jerusalem John 15.2 You read of a sheep Market and by it a Pool great flocks of sheep were brought unto that Market and they were washed in that Pool before they were used in holy services Jerusalem at these Feasts were filled with flocks of sheep and men and God here promiseth That the waste and desolate places of Judea should be filled with men and made to abound with inhabitants again how improbable soever it seemed to the Jews or Heathens And they shall know that I am the Lord. They shall acknowledge that my thoughts are not theirs nor my wayes theirs and that I am faithfull and able to do great things First Observe God expects that his People should seek to him for performance of those Promises he graciously makes them I will for this be enquired of by the house of Israel to do it for them It is tender mercy and loving kindness in God to make promises unto sinners and it is duty in man to mind them being made and to sue them out by prayer David did so Remember saith he the word unto thy servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope Psal 119.49 And again Quicken me according to thy Word vers 154. He minded God of his word and promises and pressed him by hearty prayer to make the same good So Jacob Lord didst not thou bid me return unto my Countrey and saidst thou wouldest deal well with me deliver me I pray thee from the hand of my brother from the hand of Esau for I fear him Gen 32.9 11. Had not Jacob improved the promise he might have gone without deliverance Promises as they are foundations for faith so they are incentives unto prayer and provoke those to whom they are made to sue them out O Lord God said Solomon let thy promise unto David my father be established 2 Kings 1.9 Thou didst promise him that I should sit upon the Throne Lord make it good Jeremy holds out this truth most cleerly That God expects to be sought unto for the performance of what he promiseth Chap 29.10 11. After seaventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will visit you and perform my good word towards you in causing you to return to this place for I know the thoughts that I think towards you saith the Lord thoughts of peace and not of evill to give you an expected end Here is the promise what now follows in the 12 13 14. verses Then shall ye call upon me and ye shall go and pray unto me and I will hearken unto you c. See it put in practice Dan 9.2 3 4 c. God tells them Isa 43. That he blots out transgressions for his own sake and will not remember their sins but then it is added Put me in remembrance vers 25 26. Secondly Observe That the increase of Children is the blessing of God and he can increase them in a short space to become like a flock They multiplyed and filled the Land after their return and were as the Stars of Heaven the Sand of the Sea-shore and Dust of the earth the Key of the womb is in Gods hand and he maketh the barren woman to keep house and to be a joyfull Mother of children Psal 113.9 And he makes the fruitfull woman to be more fruitfull He multiplyed his People as the Bud of the field Ezek 16.7 Thirdly Observe How desperate soever the conditions of men and things are the Lord can restore them to their Pristine estate yea to a better They were in a low and lost condition in Babylon all their Cityes laid waste in their own Land and never like to be built or inhabitated but God delivered them and restored them to their Primitive state and made all their waste Cityes populous Jerusalem formerly was filled with men now the waste Cityes should be also filled abounding with men now their Land should be planted and inhabited things in that Land were often at the point of ruine and incurable in the eye of men but God relieved them raised and restored them When Sennacherib was there with his great Army and all seemed lost
Exod. 23.22 I will be an Enemy unto thine Enemies and an Adversary unto thine Adversaries Whoever set themselves against Israel have the God of Israel against them Secondly Observe Wicked men may be in great honour and have great power Gog here one whom the Lord declared himself against was a Prince a chief Prince of Meshech and Tubal Ahashuerus an Heathen Idolater had honour and power enough when he had 127. Princes under his command Esther 1.1 Thirdly Observe There be seeming contradictions in holy Scriptures In one God saith Behold I am against thee O Gog In another I will cause thee to come up from the North parts or sides and will bring thee upon the Mountains of Israel God was with Gog and against Gog with him by his Providence to bring him forth to manifest his spleen and gall against the Land of Israel and against him by his Power and Justice to destroy him for his cruelty and bloudiness Gen. 14.14 It 's said Abraham pursued the Enemies unto Dan. And Josh 19.47 There was no Dan in Abraham's dayes for it was so call'd from Dan the son of Jacob who was long after him Moses who writ the Book of Genesis speaks of it as it was call'd in his days not as it was call'd in Abraham's dayes Joh. 1 21. When John was asked the question whether he were Elias he said I am not but Mat. 11.14 Christ saith of John This is Elias which was for to come John denies himself to be Elias personally which was the sense of the Questionists and Christ affirms that he was Elias mystically that Elias Malachy spake of chap. 4.5 There be many Scriptures seeming to destroy one another but if rightly understood they do sweetly comply and shake hands together Fourthly Observe Gods hand is in the undertakings of Enemies against the Church I will cause thee to come and bring thee upon the Mountains of Israel and if thou lingerest I have uncum seu avium a sixt hooked-hook to draw thee Warrs are not fortuitous but by a special hand of God he brings forth Enemies as to correct his Church by them so to destroy them in the presence and view of his Church being corrected Were not Gods hand there they would ruine the Church and because his hand is in such things therefore are they ruin'd After Pharaoh had afflicted the Jews the time appointed God drew him on into the Red-Sea and there in the face and view of them sunk him like lead into the bottom of the deeps Fifthly Observe It 's in the Lord to disable and disappoint Warriours when they are ready for battle When Gog and his Souldiers should have the Bow in the left hand and the Arrow in the right hand then I will smite the Bow out of the one and the Arrow out of the other hand saith the Lord. All military strength he can easily blunt and make all weapons of warr inefficacious he can take off the wheels of Charriots Exod. 14.25 He breaks the Bow he blunts the Sword and makes all weapons form'd against Israel unprosperous at his pleasure Isa 54.17 God stopt Rhehoboam when he was going with a great Army to fight Jeroboam and bring the ten revolted Tribes to himself 1 King 12. God hath oft put such fear into the hearts of Souldiers that when it hath come to a pitch'd Battail they have presently thrown down their weapons and call'd for quarter Sixthly Observe That in the same place where G d shews rich mercy to the godly even there he executes severe judgements upon the Enemies Thou shalt fall upon the Mountains of Israel Upon those Mountains in that Land the Lord had shew'd marvellous kindness to his people Psal 76 1 2 3 4. and there should Gog fall In the Red-Sea God preserv'd the Israelites and destroyed the Egyptians where the one met with signal mercy there the other had severe judgement so Joel 3.2 I will gather all Nations and will bring them down into the Valley of Jehoshaphat and will plead with them there for my people God would punish them even there where he had done much for his 2 Chron. 20 26. The Valley where Jehoshaphat blessed God for a Victory it 's conceived to be here meant and call'd the Valley of J●hoshaphat The powers of darkness have oft and still do invade the Mountains of Israel the places and persons among whom God doth record his Name and there God overthrows them Seventhly Observe That Armies and others are exposed to publick shame and miserable ends is of God Thou shalt fall upon the open field and I will give thee to the ravenous Birds of every sort and to the Beast of the field to be devoured Want of buryal is amongst Gods judgements Jer. 8.2 14.16 To lye in open view dead and to be mangled torn by Fowls Beasts Swine and Dogs is a dishonourable and lamentable thing but how dishonourable or lamentable so ever it be it 's the Lords doings He makes wicked Armies and Persons sometimes as dung upon the face of the Earth They lye unburyed rotting and stinking Eighthly Observe What the Lord speaks that shall certainly take place Thou shalt fall upon the open field for I have spoken it saith the Lord God With God is not yea and nay what he saith is truth must infallibly be effected As nothing can be done unless the Lord speak so nothing can fail of being done when the Lord hath spoken Josh 21.45 There failed not ought of any good thing which the Lord had spoken unto the house of Israel all came to pass God promised them to root out the Nations to plant them in Canaan and to do much for them and all God had spoken was made good so when God threatens evil whatsoever he speaks in that kind must be fulfilled because he is faithful and able to make good his word whoever opposes Ninthly Observe When God begins to visit the Enemies of his Church he makes progress therein Not only shall Gog fall and all his Bands and people but God will send a fire on Magog also and upon the Isles that dwell carelesly they thought themselves invincible being fortified by the Sea but when God arises to punish the Inhabitants of the Earth who are Enemies to his he goes from Countrey to Countrey at Land and from Isle to Isle at Sea When God draws the Sword and gives it Commission it proceeds from place to place and is restless till all at Sea and Land be cut off who are numbered out for destruction Jer. 47.6 7. O thou Sword of the Lord how long will it be ere thou be quiet put up thy self into thy scabbard rest and be still How can it be quiet seeing the Lord hath given it a charge against Askelon and against the Sea-shore there hath he appointed it God appoints the Sword to visit at Land and at Sea when he begins with the Enemies of his People he will make an end with them Tenthly Observe
God Princes may not change any thing in the Worship of God abrogate or institute ought by their wills or power Vzziah was smitten with the leprosie for medling 2 Chron. 26. and Ahaz for his adding 2 Kings 16. his altering detracting and abrogating 2 Chron. 28. was branded for his wickedness They kept not at the post and threshold of the gate but entred into the inner Court 2. They are to countenance and maintain the Worship of God The Prince must stand at the post of the gate and see the Priests do their Office He found the Burnt Peace and Meat Offerings and the Priests prepared them that is fitted them for Sacrifices The Princes and Powers of the Christian World should countenance preserve propagate and maintain the true VVorship of God in their Territories VVhen Joash was made King he had the Testimony given unto him 2 Chron. 23.11 that was the Book of the Law And why was this given him It was to inform Princes that they should rule according thereunto that they should countenance preserve propagate and maintain the same and the VVorship it held forth 3. That Princes must worship the Lord publiquely on Sabbath days and when special occasions are as well as other people He shall worship at the threshold of the gate Let Princes be never so great rich learned wise yet they must fall down at Gods foot-stool serve him with fear and kiss the Son they must observe the times of Gods VVorship bow to him and not leave all to their inferiors 4. They must not impede the Worship of God The Prince shall go forth but the gate shall not be shut where he hath worshipped he must not hinder oth●rs It was a vile practice in those who shut up the doors of the Lords house and would not let the people or Priests come there to worship 2 Chron. 28.24 Princes should see to it that the door be open for publique Worship not onely at the appointed times but upon special occasions If we take the Prince here to be Christ as Oecolampad and Polanus do then his coming to and standing by the post of the gate his sacrificing and worshipping do prefigure his coming in the flesh and his standing at the gate of Heaven for us offering up Prayers and Supplications for us with strong crys and tears Heb. 5.7 Luke 22.44 and whereas it is said The Priests shall prepare his burnt-offering and his peace-offering this presignified the Priests delivering up Christ to be crucified for us Luke 24. ●0 The chief Priest and Rulers delivered him to be condemned to death and crucified him who was the Prince of life Acts 3.15 yet he laid down his life freely Joh. 10.17 18. And for his worshipping at the threshold of the gate it may point out that time when Christ being on the Cross said It is finished and so bowed his head and gave up the Ghost John 19.30 Now was he at the threshold of the gate for he said to the Thief immediately before This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Luke 23.43 Then his soul went forth of its earthly tabernacle and shortly after reassuming that he left the world and went to his Father John 16.28 The gates standing open until evening that so the people might come and worship at the door of the gate before the Lord this some interpret of the door of Mercy and Reconciliation which Christ hath set open for sinners during this life and if they come not thither before death and worship God then it s shut for ever against them On Sabbath days men should draw near to God seek Reconciliation with him for on such days the gate is widest open for Grace and Mercy On the six days it s shut that is comparatively shut Christians do celebrate Sabbaths and New-Moons when they have inward spiritual rest in their souls through faith in Christ and do receive light from him to see what is evil and so to avoid it and what is good and so to practice it In Vers 4 5 6 7. the Offerings Oblations and Sacrifices of the Prince for the Sabbath days and New-moons are mentioned The Ola● or Burnt-Offering for the Sabbath was to be six compleat Lambs without blemish and one Ram which differs much from the appointment in Moses days Numb 28.9 then there were but two Lambs here six are appointed And so the Meat-Offering is larger here then there but for the Offering in the day of the New-Moon it was short of that in Moses time for then two Bullocks seven Lambs and one Ram were appointed and here one Bullock six Lambs and one Ram are nominated for the Offering which shews the Levitical VVorship was to be changed And taking the Prince for one of the Princes of the earth it tells us he ought to provide for the VVorship of God But if we take this Prince to be Christ then it imports that Christ hath ordained more spiritual pure and efficacious VVorship on Sabbaths under the Gospel then was under the Law and more extensive then was before also that Jewish shadows are fled away by the coming in of the glorious light of the Gospel that old things are past away and all things become new Neomen●● nostra est spiritualis est novum in Christo seculum saith Polanus These Sacrifices do point out Christ he was instar omnium he was the Lambs the Rams the Bullock the Meal the Flowre and the Oyl This Prince sacrificing of himself did more by that one and once Sacrifice then all the Sacrifices from the first to the last Hebr. 10.14 Verse 5. As he shall be able to give The Hebrew is the gift of his hand and so it s in the Margent in Verse 7. it is thus as his hand shall attain unto and in the eleventh as he is able that is as God hath blessed him God in that dispenced with mens disabilities in Moses Law Lev. 5.11 and 14.21 if they were poor and not able to bring Lambs or two Turtle Doves they must bring one Lamb or the tenth part of an Ephah of flower something he would have and to such a proportion But here it s left to mans liberty to give according to his ability no proportion is prescribed so men give freely what ever it be it shall be accepted God looks not for much where little is The grace and favour of God under the Gospel exceeds what was under the Law Verse 6. And in the day of the New moon New-moon days were holy and had special Sacrifices as in this ver 8. Numb 28.11 on those days they might not buy or sell or do worldly work Amos 8.5 but they were to look unto Christ of whom those days were shadows Col. 2.16 17. and to meditate of that light grace and comfort comes by him The gate of the inner Court was to stand open on these days as well as on Sabbaths ver 1. And Isaiah prophesied Isa 66.23 That all flesh should come to worship
the Gentiles are in and of the Church of God The Gentiles had repentance granted to them unto life Acts 11.18 6. The tenders of mercy and invitations to Sion were first to the Jews and after to the Gentiles The Land of Canaan was first for Israelites and then for Sojourners Christ first tendred himself and all Gospel means unto the Jews John 1.11 Mat. 23.37 he sent his Disciples first to them Matth. 10.5 6 7. afterwards to the Gentiles Mat. 28.19 Hence said Paul and Barnabas Acts 13.46 It was necessary that the Word of God should first be spoken unto you but seeing ye put it from you lo we turn to the Gentiles The Jews were the seed of Abraham the friend of God Isa 41.8 They were his first-born Exod. 4.22 They were the children of the Prophets and of the Covenant and to them God first sent his Son to bless them Acts 3.25 26. 7. That one and the same inheritance belongs to the beleiving Jew and Gentile the same land was both the Jews and the strangers to inherit which prefigured their being in one and the same Church their having the same priviledges the same interest in Christ there is one and the same inheritance to both Col. 1.12 Give thanks to the Father who hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light All the Saints have but one inheritance and that is reserved in heaven 1 Pet. 1.4 This inheritance was typified by the ● and of Canaan So then the partition wall is broken down between Jews and Gentiles all former differences are taken away and they are no more two but one they are both one one new man one body Ephes 2.14 15 16. Jew and Gentile are so united as if there had been no distinction between them Col. 3.11 There is neither Greek nor Jew circumcision nor uncircumcision Barbarian Scythian bond nor free but Christ is all and in all The Lord Christ by his death and sufferings hath reconciled those who were at the greatest enmity CHAP. XLVIII Verse 1. Now these are the names of the Tribes from the north end to the coast of the way of Hethlon as one goeth to Hamath Hazar-enan that border on Damascus northward to the coast of Hamath for these are his sides east and west a portion for Dan. 2. And by the border of Dan from the east side to the west a portion for Asher 3. And by the border of Asher from the east-side even unto the west a portion for Naphtali 4. And by the border of Naphtali from the east-side unto the west-side a portion for Manasseh 5. And by the border of Manasseh from the east-side unto the west-side a portion for Ephrahim 6. And by the border of Ephrahim from the east-side unto the west-side a portion for Reuben 7. And by the border of Reuben from the east-side unto the west-side a portion for Judah BEing come through the assistance of God to open the last Chapter of Ezekiels prophesie we have in it three parts 1. An assignation or destribution of particular portions to each Tribe in the first seven verses and in 23 24 25 26 27 28.29 verses 2. A description of the offering or holy portion of Land as it it is called chapter 45.1 with the bounds and parts allotted 1. To the Sanctuary ver 8 9. 2. To the Priests ver 10 11 12. 3. To the Levites ver 13 14. 4. To the City and suburbs v. 15 16 17 18 19. 5. To the Prince ver 21 22. Thirdly A description of the City 1. From the dimension of it on each side v. 30. 2. From the gates of it v. 31 32 33 34. 3. From the compass of it v. 35. 4. From the name of it ibid. Concerning the destributions of the Land to particular Tribes they differ much from those were made in Joshuahs days then the Tribe of Benjamins lot was between Judah and Joseph as it is Josh 18.11 but in this Chapter Benjamins lot is between Judah and Simeon vers 22 23 24. Then the Tribe of Simeon had its lot within Judah Josh 19.19 Here it is out of Judah and next to Benjamin v. 24. And so of other Tribes their lot is otherwise in this visional destribution of Ezekiel then it was formerly and many things he had concerning the Temple Sacrifices the lot of the Prince Priests and Levites which Solomon never had and never were had under the second Temple and therefore pointed out the change of Mosaical and Levitical ways and led to a new state of the Church Vers 1. These are the names of the Tribes from the North end c. Of the Twelve Tribes seven were in the North and five in the South as they are set down in this Chapter and the portion of the Sanctuary Priests Levites Cities and Prince lay between the Tribes thus divided Dan is the first Tribe mentioned in Ezekiels division it was not so in Joshua's then Dan was the last Tribe which had his portion as is evident Josh 19.40 49. and because it was too little for them the men of Dan took Leshem or Laish named it Dan and so enlarged their borders This Tribe first fell from God and imbraced Idols for after they had gotten Laish they set up a graven image Judg. 18.29 30 31. and therefore this Tribe is left out of the catalogue when the other Tribes are mentioned 1 Chron. 7. and Rev. 7. In the prophetical blessings of Jacob Dan and Issachar were in the midst Gen. 49.14 16. Here Dan is in the front which gives us to consider 1. The truth of what our Lord Christ hath given out Matth. 19.30 The last shall be first Dan was the last and here he is the first he hath the honor and preheminence above the rest David was the youngest and last of Jesses sons and he was made the first being anointed to be King by Samuel 1 Sam. 16.11 12 13 14. Those workers in the vineyard the Lord ordered that his Steward should pay the last first and the first last Matth. 20.8 16. Mark 10.31 Luk. 13.30 There are last which shall be first the Gentiles were last in the Jews account but God made them first and there are first which shall be last the Jews were first in their own eyes but they were made last and of no esteem in the eyes of God Luk. 18.14 The publican who was last in the account of the Pharisee was first in the account of God 2. Those that have deserted God and his ways gone far and long from him may find mercy repent and be received to favour These Danites met with mercy from God repented them of their Idolatry and returned to him again else they had never been honored so far as to be set in the first place When great sinners come unto God who were looked upon as the last and worst of men God doth not onely pardon them but oft-times honors them and makes them the first as Paul Acts