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A85666 An exposition of the five first chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. / Delivered in severall lectures in London, by William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1645 (1645) Wing G1851; Thomason E272_1; ESTC R212187 422,046 514

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flesh then went out glory John 1.14 and grace Vers 16. Then was Sol in nube the most glorious Rain-bow that ever was or shall be in the world he was not a signe of peace but our Peace Ephes 2.14 By his blood we are brought nigh for he is our peace 2. God hath his dayes of Rain When the flood was then there was rain to purpose forty dayes together If God hath rained bread Exod. 16. he hath rain'd wrath Job 20.23 snares storms fire brimstone Psal 11. God rains blood upon kingdomes Ezek. 38.22 I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood and I will rain upon him and his bands and the many people with him over-flowing rain great hailstones fire and brimstone 3. That the Lord Christ in wrath remembers mercy he mingles mercy with judgement hee sits as Judge upon the Throne hee pronounces s●●tence against a sinfull kingdome executing the vengeance written against sinners and yet here hee is compassed with the Rain-bow shewing that hee will not utterly destroy the Jewes a remnant should be spared When the great deluge of water was drowning the world yet Noah and his were saved there was mercy in the midst of judgement and here is a Judge with a Rain-bow over his head to assure the godly they should not perish in this flood of wrath now powring out upon the Jews Jerome saith of the Bowe it is a sign of mercy and the covenant which God made with man that when it appeared in the cloud we might know we should not perish by a flood and much more when Christ sits in judgement with the Rain-bow about him may the godly know that they shall not perish by the wrath of God if the glory of his Majesty statelinesse of his Throne terror of his Justice and the greatnesse of his Power do at any time discourage us wee must looke at the Rain-bow round about him and remember his Throne is compassed with mercy It 's said of the Jews when they see the Rain-bow they go forth confesse their sins but will not look upon it Confession of sins or any duty whatsoever will do us no good unlesse wee look upon the Bowe the mercy of Christ now was a storm and in it a Rain-bowe for the Prophet and godly to looke at it 's said in the Text the Bowe in the cloud in the day of rain then it 's a rainy day when God rains snares fire and brimstone and horrible tempest upon the wicked even then the bow is in the cloud and the righteous should look for it and look to it they should remember the covenant and mercy of it Is it not a rainy and stormy time now is not this great Prince angry with the kings and kingdomes of the earth doth he not frown chide and smite and that with deadly strokes in many places Let us look at the Rainbow now and know if there should come an overflowing scourge a deluge of wrath upon the world yet the Noahs shall be arked and safe the righteous shall be hid Christ will manifest mercy to them Saith John Rev. 4.2 I was in the Spirit and behold a Throne was set in heaven and there was a Rain-bow round about the Throne no sooner was John in the Spirit but he saw the Throne and the Rain-bow let us now be in the Spirit look with eyes of faith and wee shall see the Throne him sits on it and the bow round about him and then though kingdomes lie under the floods of errors superstition and ungodlinesse though drown'd in troubles and blood yet wee shall see God and Christ in a way of love and mercy towards us 4. That Justice and Mercy do compasse the Throne of Christ there was brightnesse round about and the bow was round about go to Christs Throne any way there is nothing but justice for the sinner unlesse penitent and believing and if such nothing but mercy This was the appearance of the likenesse of the Glory of the Lord and when I saw it I fell upon my face and I heard a voyce of one that spake Here is the conclusion of the Vision and in it wee have the scope of all was presented to the Prophets view and it is to manifest the infinite glory of God and then followes a double effect First upon sight of it he fell upon his face And Secondly He heares a voyce and so a fit pass … is made to that which followes The first thing is the manifestation of Gods glory a●● 〈◊〉 glory of God is considerable 1. In God himself in the Divine 〈◊〉 and there it is infinite glorious exceeding glory 2. In the creation as it is expressed and opened in the volume of the creatures there Gods glory is greatly seen Isa 6.3 The earth is full of his glory the Hebrew is the fulnesse of the earth is his glory the world is glorious and filled with Gods glory it 's nothing else but Gods glory interpreted and opened unto us in the creatures Quid est mundus nisi Deus explicatus and divine providence about them 3. In divine dispensations towards his Church and people Gods glory is in the firmament in all the creatures but more specially and fully in the Church Psal 29.9 In his Temple doth every one speake of his glory there it is most visible affecting and provoking of every one to speak In the world few take notice of it but in the Temple every one sees it and speaks of it the world is God opened and so glorious the Church is Christ opened and so very glorious this made David long to be in the Sanctuary when hee was in the Wildernesse and why so to see thy power and thy glory Psal 63.2 Could not David see them in the heavens in the mountains in the goodly Cedars and other works of God Yes but not as in the Sanctuary and therefore hee saith to see thy power and glory so as I have seen thee in thy Sanctuary there I have seen thee otherwise then ever elsewhere there he saw the King upon his Throne and in his glory The glory of God in each of these is held forth in this Vision in some measure there was the Spirit in the wheels a fire within by which the glory of the divine nature appeared there was a whirlewind a cloud fire brightnesse living creatures wheels moving severall ways which represent the glory of God in the world and government of it there was a firmament and a throne one sitting upon it surrounded with a Rain-bow which sets out the glory of God in his severall dispensations towards his Church both in his judgements mercies and government thereof A Question is moved Whether our Prophet saw the glory of God The Answer is It was the appearance of the likenesse of the glory of the Lord he doth not say hee saw God in his essence it 's acknowledged by most that we cannot see Gods essence while wee are Pilgrims on earth In
chiefest in malignancy and opposition this you shall see 2 Chron. 36.14 15 16. All the chief of the Priests and the people transgressed very much they polluted the house of the Lord they mocked the messengers of God despised his words and misused his Prophets this was the practice of those times Was there ever any great disorder corruption in the Church or any sedition treason almost in the State but some of the chief of the Priests have had their hands in it When the Calf was set up in Moses his dayes Aaron the Priest had his head and hand in it when David was a dying Adonijah makes the sedition and stir in the Kingdome but Abiathar the Priest had a great hand in it Both in the State and in the Church you may well observe that the chief of the Priests have had their hands in the evill in the trouble And have not we now a malignant party that oppose the reformation intended and begun Do they not set themselves with all their might against the Ieremies Daniels Ezekiels and Rechabites of the Land that will not defile themselves There is such a party you all know that do oppose godliness that despise the Prophets scorne the Saints make sad the hearts of the righteous and strengthen the hands of wickedness therefore this prophecy may be seasonable enough in regard of that malignant party that doth oppose too openly 3. They had lost their countrey their choysest comforts they were in captivity and constant jeopardy of their lives if they provoked the Babylonians they were ready to fall upon them and root them out presently and those at Ierusalam were in danger every day to have their liberties estates consciences Religion and lives taken from them And are not we like unto them and are not we even in a Land of liberty in a state of captivity Do not our estates our liberties our consciences our Religion our lives and all lie at the stake Wee are even in Babylon in the midst of Sion wee are in a sad and heavie condition therefore this Prophecy may be seasonable now considering our estate is so like to theirs 4. The times then were such that they loathed Manna ordinary and plain truths would not down unless truths were new and transcendent they were weary of them and slighted them Ieremy was too plain a Prophet for them too low and God gives them Ezekiel a dark and hard Prophet And is it not so in these dayes we have been fed with Manna so long that we loath Manna as a wormy thing If we have not something new unheard of transcendent we are weary wee think it not worth our going out of doors if so then here is a Prophet that may be sutable to these times and your desires God gave them this Prophet in a time of affliction and there was something in it for afflictions open mens understandings Vexatio dat intellectum and inlarge their capacities when people are under pressures then their understandings are quickest then they are most apprehensive therefore God gave them such a Prophet as might sute with their condition in exercising their parts and graces to the full when at the best Now is a time of affliction if your spirits be awakened and the bent of them be after high and hard things lo here are difficulties and transcendencies for you here are high things to draw up your thoughts to exercise your spirits be they never so choice and apprehensive One thing more for the seasonablenesse of this Prophet it is said heaven was open Ezekiel saw visions of God If ever God hath opened heaven since Christ now he hath done it in these sad times God hath now caused is causing you every day to see visions out of the Prophets and out of the Gospel These expository Lectures are openings of heaven and let out cleare and choice light unto you from heaven therefore seeing heaven is opened let visions of God be counted seasonable and become acceptable unto you But if this Prophet be so dark and difficult what is the benefit and fruit we shall have by him This is the next head wee are to come unto and the benfits of this Prophet are these the darker the Prophet is the more of God may you look for from him God dwelleth in darkness as well as in light Psalm 18.11 He made darknesse his secret place And Exod. 19.9 God came to Moses in a thick cloud Tenebrae sunt latibulum D●i and there Moses had the most of God Here God is coming to you in a dark Prophet and questionless you shall find much of God in him here you shall see much of Gods mercy in upholding and comforting the spirits of his people and providing for them in a strange land here you shall see much of Gods justice in punishing sinners for their sins and iniquities here you shall see much of Gods truth in fulfilling of prophecies here you shall finde much of Gods power in subverting of Kings and Kingdomes here you shall finde much of his manifold Wisdome in these dark visions here you shall finde more of God then you expect 2. This prophecy is an exact History of the time of the Jewes being in captivity in it you have many passages of Nebuchadnezzars reign and government of his acts abroad and at home and of Gods dealing with his people in the time of this their seventy yeers captivity Were not Daniel and Ezekiel extant wee should have such a great losse as the world could not tel how to repair it the acts of Gods dealing with his Church and people in that seventy yeers would be swallowed up in a Chaos of darkness 3. You shall see for what sins God subverteth and overthroweth Kingdomes and States In this Prophet you shall find that the Lord doth ruine glorious Churches great Cities mighty Kingdomes men of great renown families and posterities and the particular sins for which he doth it Namely for false worship Idolatry injustice uncleannesse prophaning of his Sabbaths contempt of his Word abuse of his Prophets and sins of that nature So that as it is Prov. 21.30 There is no wisdome no counsel nor understanding against the Lord. God will overthrow even Kings and their Councels Kingdoms with their Nobility and Gentry with their Magistrates and people God will overthrow them when he once sets upon such a worke such a designe There is no standing out against him 4. You shall see here also the different carriage betweene the godly and the wicked in times of Judgement When judgements are abroad in the world the inhabitants of the earth should learn righteousness but wicked men they grow more active against God more impudent more desperate and hard-hearted they combine and plot together to roote out the righteous this you shall see in this Prophecie And for the godly you shall finde that when judgements are neare and upon them they are mourning in secret they get together
verses read we shall make inquiry into sundry things 1. Whether our Prophet did in the literall sense lie so many dayes upon his side or was it only in Vision Some make it reall and say Ezekiel did lie upon his side all the dayes are mentioned although hee slept not all the time yet he lay in that posture and that it was by speciall help of God if nature could not of it self reach unto it yet it 's related of a Noble man of Lonaim who lay sixteen yeers in one posture viz. with his face upwards and Pradus saith he saw a mad man which had lien upon one side fifteen yeers Theodoret thinks he lay bound all this time and felt most grievous pain that so hee might represent the great miseries of Jerusalems siege which suffered great famine This opinion hath many and great Authors yet I must joyn with those who are for the Prophets visionall lying on his side for besides that nature could not bear it how shall we clear the justice of God that should for the Idolatries and sins of others which former Prophets had reproved so greatly afflict and punish one innocent Again he was to prepare himself bread verse 15th of this Chap. he was to set his face against the mountains of Israel Chap. 6. v. 2. and if hee lay still all these dayes on his sides how could either of these be done It 's also said in the 8th Chapt. v. 1. In the sixt yeer in the sixt moneth in the fift day of the moneth as I sate in my house and the Elders of Judah before me the hand of the Lord God fell there upon me if Ezekiel did in the letter lie so many dayes the time was not expired for the Prophet had his first vision in the fifth yeere of the captivity the fourth moneth and the fifth day Chapt. 1. v. 12. and seven dayes after this vision he had another Chapt. 3. v. 15. which made it the twelfth day of that moneth and on that day he was commanded to lie on his side and if you reckon from thence you will find not above 413. as Pradus reckons it or 418. and then if you joyn the days the Prophet lay on his side they amount to 430. So it will then appear the Prophet had twelve or seventeen dayes to lie on his side when the Text saith he sate before the Elders this lying therefore is to be taken visionally not really 2. What the lying on the left side points out unto us and why the iniquity of Israel is laid upon that side There is some mysterie in it and the opinions of men are different some make the reason of it to be the situation of Samaria which was the head city of the ten Tribes Isa 7.9 and this city was on the left hand of Jerusalem Ezek. 16.46 and thereupon the Prophet lay on his left side to represent them and their sins and on his right to represent the house of Judah and their sins but beyond this there is something to be taken hold of and it 's this the left side or hand notes disrespect the right side or hand dignity or favour Mat. 25.34.41 the good were on the right hand the bad on the left By this posture of the Prophet is typed out to us the different respect of God to the house of Israel and Judah the ten Tribes were lesse deare to God then the other they had grievous sins and God would shew them lesse mercy deal with them as those at his left side but for Iudah whose sins was as great as theirs yet God would chastise with lesse severity hee would not take away his loving kindnesse from Iudah though he did from Israel Iudah was at his right side and God would in his distribution of sorrow and wrath remember mercy 3. Whom we are to understand here by the house of Israel the ten tribes which are usually so call'd in the Scripture were carryed into captivity 130. yeeres before by Shalmaneser in the 6th yeere of Hezekiah 2 King 18.9 10. To what end therefore should they be brought in here under a typicall siege of Ierusalem when they sinn'd not at Ierusalem and if they had were now gone and under the severity of God Some take the house of Israel to be meant distinctly of the ten Tribes and this lying of the Prophet on his left side not to refer to Ierusalems siege but to the sins of the Tribes and the patience of God towards them others include the house of Israel in the house of Iudah and so make not the Prophets literall lying to look at the ten Tribes in captivity but at those of them who were joyn'd to the house of Iudah for when the great rent was by Ieroboam all of the ten Tribes did not cleave to him and many that at first did afterwards seeing the evill of his Idolatrous wayes withdrew from him and closed with the house of Judah 2 Chro. 11.16 17. when they saw what Jeroboam intended those that set their hearts to seek God came to Jerusalem to sacrifice and strengthened the kingdome of Iudah and in Asa's dayes many fell to him out of Ephraim Manasseh and Simeon 2 Chron. 15.9 yea in abundance Asa being a good King they came flocking to him and willingly sate down under his shade It 's more then probable also that when Shalmaneser came out against Samaria and carryed away the Tribes that many fled to Ierusalem and the parts there-about for it 's said in 2 Chron. 30.6 that they escaped out of the hands of the Kings of Assyria and in the 11th verse that divers of Ashur Manasseh and Zebulon humbled themselves and came to Ierusalem this was to receive the Passeover and then they returned to their possessions in their own cities Chap. 31.1 So that there were some of the other Tribes left which did partly mingle with them of Iudah and Benjamin and partly dwell by themselves these I conceive our Prophet means by the house of Israel and together with these their predecessors which were dead and in c●ptivitie and that because the three hundred and ninetie dayes which import so many yeers as it 's expressed in the 6th verse of this Chapter must needs fetch the house of Israel into this consideration from before the time of their captivitie and that in the next thing wee are to examine namely Where these three hundred and ninety dayes typing out so many yeers are to begin Various and intricate are the thoughts of men about the beginning and ending of these yeers and it would take up much time to present them unto you and perplex your thoughts much I will give you in this point not what my self but the soundest Interpreters and Chronologers do judge the truth Funccius and Bibliander two famous Chronologers begin this accompt at the falling off of the ten Tribes 1 King 12. and so do Interpreters of much worth Lavater Polanus Pradus A Lapide and Sanctius begin it
up and send officers belongs to Christ 228 unable ones not sent by Christ 229 Ordinances do good when the Spirit is on them 60 efficacy of them is from Christ 294 they are Gods name 454 P Pan What the iron pan signifies 385 Patience God bears long with the sins of his people 400 yet forgets not their sins ibid. People enemies to their own good 375 their sins deprive them of spirituall mercies 379 like to hair in three respects 418 Gods people may become worse then Heathens 432 Perseverance Angels go on 116 Pestilence The etymologie and nature of it 455 Pity What the word notes 453 Place God hath three places 309 no holiness in them now 312 449 no place can hinder the working of the Spirit 364 how places become holy 448 Pope And his Hierarchy not of Christ 228 229 Principles There are opposite principles in the best of men to the wayes of Christ 319 Priest Occasion of setling the Priesthood upon Levi. 45 Prophet Whence 8 of the first and second Temple 9 a Prophet in Babylon 23 subject to scorne reproach 47 they were carried on in their propheticall work hy the might of the Spirit 316 they could not prophecy at their pleasure 326 they must speak the words of the Lord 336 how a Prophet should be received 338 counted mad men 373 Providence Acts in all motions 144 it puzzles the ablest unsearchable dreadfull 149 it 's in the least motions 152 works of it glorious beautifull ibid. 287 it over-rules secondary agents 403 Punishment conformable to sin 412 Q Quiet The quiet spirits are fittest to receive and act spirituall things 329 R Rainbow The naturall cause of it 192 the naturall and theologicall signification of it 193 194 Ram A war-like instrument and why so called 385 Rebellion What 226 what in Gods account 279 Relatives Vsed in Scripture without Antecedents 23 24 Repetition Of the same words and things of what use 466 Reproached such honoured 48 reproaches are bitter piercing things 464 Reproof People are impatient of them and why 378 379 Righteousnesse A double righteousnesse 350 two sorts of righteous men 351 righteousnesse of faith never fails and why 352 353 there be deceiveable righteousnesses 356 we must not confide in our own righteousnesse ib. three rules to help against it 357 Roul 282 the eating of it what 290 Prophets must feed upon Christs rouls 292 Ruine Kingdomes States the cause of their ruine is in themselves 77 mans is in himself 359 S Salvation Few saved 241 Saphire What it signifies and represents 177 178 Seraphims What. 80 Sephar 3. Shekel Of sanctuary why so called 405 Side The Prophet lying on his side and left side 393 394 Sight the certainest sense 53 54 Sgnification To impose higher significations on things then they have by nature belongs to God 72 281 Signes God deals with his people in signes and types 387 why ibid. hee gives to the sign the name of the thing signified 429 Sin A fire infolding 76 disables us from seeing glory 205 causeth Gods people to lose their glory 231 sin is rebellion ibid. progresse in it causeth impudencie 237 sinners come to a height of sinning 243 it's an imbittering thing 244 the fruit of it is death 343 difference betweene Hamartanein and Poiein hamartian 353 sin it makes uncapacious of happinesse 367 cuts off spirituall mercy 379 sin may so provoke that neither God nor man will shew mercy 391 God forgets not the sins of men 400 seldome any return from sinfull wayes 402 it defiles 453 Son of man opened and what it notes 210 how oft given to Ezekiel and why 211 Speed It 's required in Gods service 100 Spirit Why called the hand of the Lord 56 57 it's author of all good done and received 60 how said to move or go 122 the Spirit is the great agent in all 123 363 it works any where and cannot be shut out of any place 364 how the spirit of the living creature is said to be in the wheels 160 it moves all ib. consent between Angels and wheels is from the Spirit 162 the Spirit is living and lively 164 what is meant by Spirit 216 entrance what 218 369 a chief comforter ibid. whether it goes alwayes with the Word 221 it affects and visits the humble 370 it's a comforting and encouraging Spirit 371 Spirit speaks in a man 372 the Spirit enables to discerne 223 why the Spirit took up the Prophet 306 heals our infirmities 321 it works invincibly ibid. Standing Of that posture 212 Stubbornnes Men wil not hear God 299 Stumbling-block What meant by it 354 how God layes it 354 355 takes them out of the way of his 350 Sword What it doth 456 T Tel-abib What it signifies 322 Temple Was a part of worship 312 consecrate to what end 448 449 what defiled it 450 Terrible What makes so 166 Throne What it signifies 176 Christ sate not stood in it 179 Christs throne must be of Saphire 182 Time No good plea for sinners 402 Tongues Thorny in what respect 254 255 how the Prophets clave to the roof of his mouth 377 power of it in Gods hand 378 Tree Dropping water in a dry Iland 153 Truth All truth should be received 204 sweet to taste bitter in operation 318 V Vision What things are in a vision 52 visions have excellency in them 54 effects of them 204 why men fall upon their faces at visions 204 why the Prophet had a second apparition of Gods glory 365 Voyce Of Christ how taken 206 W Watchman Christ appoints watchmen in the Church 332 they must be knowing not sleepy 333 must endure hardship ibid. they are for the flocke 335 Weary Godly may be weary in but are not weary of Gods worke 120 121 Wheels What is meant by lifting up the wheels 154 none can hinder the motion of the wheels 156 God puts stands to them at his pleasure 158 they cannot move otherwise then they do 160 motion of the wheels never unseasonable 161 wheels move whither the Spirit will have them 163 wheele why the world likened to it 130 secret motion in the wheele 140 high dreadfull 143 149 motions of the wheels are judicious 151 Whirlewind Nebuchadnezzar compared to it in three things 67 68 Wicked The worse for the Word 245 without excuse having means 246 shall see what mercy they have refused 247 248 they are like thornes and wherein 252 like scorpions 258 we must take heed of them 262 267 their acquaintance not to be sought 265 what fruits they bring ibid. their losse not considerable 266 Christ knows who are such 241 there is hope of those are very wicked 344 they deal cruelly with the Prophets 375 lesser sins punished in the wicked more severely then greater in the godly 402 403 wicked men are worthlesse 252 421 Gods people more wicked then heathens 432 Will Mans will his ruine 299 Wisdome Mans crosse to Christ 318 Word The power of it from the Spirit 220 it's the Chariot of the
and so to impudencie when the Calves were first mentioned in Israel the people trembled at it but afterwards they could kisse Calves and sacrifice to Baal Hos 13.1 and out-stand the threats of the Prophet Sin banisheth shame from its habitation so that the sinner and shame are disacquainted Psal 52.1 Why boastest thou thy selfe in mischief O mighty man Doeg boasteth of his bloodinesse that hee had kill'd the Priests at the command of Saul Zeph. 3.5 The unjust knoweth no shame Though men foam out their shame Jude 13. and glory in their shame Phil. 3.19 yet they will know no shame It 's an exceeding evill to be past shame to be impudent in sinning if ever God shew mercie to such sinners they must be ashamed What fruit had you in those things whereof now yee are ashamed Rom. 6.21 yee were impudent in committing but now yee are ashamed in confessing and remembring of them 2. That where there is an impudent face there is a hard stiffe heart if the heart were not stony before God the face would not be impudent before man Act. 7.51 Yee stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart there was brawnishnesse within and impudency without and a hard heart is one of the greatest evills Mercies prevail not what mercies had they in the Wildernesse in Canaan and yet they did not move them Miracles will not do it when they took Christ hee said I am hee and they all fell backward to the ground after this Peter cuts off Malchus his ear Christ heals it here were two miracles yet they did no good upon their hard hearts they went on laid hands on Christ who wrought the miracles bound him as a malefactor and thought to make him sure for doing any more miracles Pharaoh saw ten miracles the Israelites woar a miracle about them fortie yeers their clothes and shoes ware not out they were new at fortie yeers end yet these wrought not upon their hard hearts Pliny tels of a river in Lucania that turns leaves and sticks into stones It is not fasting and prayer will do it many are hardened in them There be waters that what ever is cast in they turn into stone and some mens hearts grow stonie in what ever Ordinances they are A hard heart is a grievous disease worse then the stone in the reins or bladder It was Nabals disease and death and most men are sick and die of that disease 3. That God sends his Prophets and Ministers about hard services such as are full of discouragements when they are look'd upon with a carnall eye Ezekiel had presently to object Lord wilt thou send mee to a people that is impudent I shall never make them blush to a people hard-hearted I shall never make impression on their spirits by any truths I shall preach unto them my labour will be in vain are they a rebellious nation do they rebell against thee and will they not much more rebell against me this is a hard task if thou regard'st not me yet regard thy truths What shall they be cast away about such a people as this O spare me and spare thy truths No saith God I send thee unto them and thou shalt speak unto them they are hard tasks that God puts his servants upon Isaiah was called to a hard service Chap. 6.9 10. to preach ruine and destruction to a people and so unwelcome he was that he saith Chap. 8.18 I am for a signe and wonder in Israel Jeremiah is set over nations and kingdomes to root out Quid est praed care nisi furorem populi in se derivare Luth. to pull down and to destroy Chap. 1.10 the Kings of Judah the Princes Priests and People he was to deal withall and Vers 19. it 's said They shall fight against thee Preaching provokes all sorts of men and so hard did Jeremiah find his work although God promised to be with him he was so derided saw so little good come of his labours that he resolved to lay down his Calling and to speak no more in the name of the Lord Jer. 20.9 Knox when called to preach he burst forth into an abundance of tears and so withdrew himself to his chamber and was full of grief and troubled till he was compell'd to preach Preaching is a warring 2 Tim. 2.4 and Preachers are souldiers hence Paul calls Timothy a good souldier of Christ and when we come to spoil and plunder people of their goods their lusts wills humours opinions and to take away their strong holds their carnall reasoning against Christ in the Gospel and wayes of God they are in a rage take up arms against us Paul fought with Beasts at Ephesus 1 Cor. 15.32 and they gored him and sought his death The Galatians that would have at first pull'd out their eyes for Paul thrust out their tongues against Paul hee was their enemy because hee told them the truth those cryed Hosannah a little before were ready to cry Crucifie crucifie hardly a Prophet or an Apostle but suffered by the hands of their hearers 4. Ministers should not so much look at the persons they are sent to or the event of their ministerie as at their Call I send thee saith God look thou to that trouble not thy self at the persons that are so wicked nor at the successe of thy ministerie but consider I have call'd and sent thee Gods will and command must content us support us what if wee be scoffed at reviled made the off-scouring and filth of the world yet here is the comfort of a true Prophet of a true Minister Christ sent him and hee that set him awork will pay him his wages whether they heare or heare not to whom hee is sent the Nurse hath her wages whether the childe live or die and wee are a sweet savour of Christ unto God in them that are saved and in them that perish 2 Cor. 2.15 The souldier hath his respect and reward whether hee kill men or take them alive and wee are acceptable unto God as well in the deaths as the lives of men This consideration comforted Isaiah Chap. 49.4 5. I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for nought yet surely my judgement is with the Lord and my work with my God and though Israel be not gathered yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord and my God shall be my strength Hee would look at God and not at the difficulty of the work or discouragements from men and want of successe sometimes God gives large incouragement promises hope successe providing for our infirmities at other times bare a commission and command must suffice to do that would make ones heart ake it 's his prerogative to send whom he will and upon what service he will Let us lay aside all discouraging thoughts look to our Call rest in Gods will and know it's honour to be in his service though nothing come of it wee are acceptable to him if not to men and shall
all the Prophets in Canaan 2 Chro. 36.15 16. The Lord God sent to them by his Messengers because hee had compassion on them but they mocked the Messengers of GOD despised his Word and misused his Prophets untill the wrath of the Lord arose and there was no remedy or healing God saw nothing would do them good but that they must be ruin'd by warer be thrown into captivity and buiried in Babylon yet such was the compassion and goodnesse of God that hee gives them a Prophet here to try them what they would do whether they would heare and learn righteousnesse God will not be overcome with mans evill but will overcome evill with good when the Jewes had taken Christ the heire and put him to death yet hee being risen powres out his Spirit upon the Apostles and gives them both to Jewes and Gentiles and Peter at a Sermon converted some of those that had washt their hands in his blood when God will nothing shall hinder his mercy and kindnesse hee will give the choysest Ministers to the corruptest people 3. That sinners in time come to a heighth and perfection of sinning they were not only a rebellious house but a house of rebellion when it comes to the abstract once it 's at the heighth as there is a going on in Gods ways to perfection Heb. 6.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so there is in sins wayes James tels us of sin finished perfected Chap. 1.15 Hence Eccles 8.11 mention is made of hearts fully set to do evill and Jerem. 3.5 Judah is said to speak and do evill as shee could and Israel sins are call'd mighty sins Amos 5.12 Fortia peccata 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the originall is bony sins as men when their bones are come to their full growth are strong and men of might so is it in sinning when sins are come to their full growth then are they mighty sins the like is that in Jer. 44.16 17. As for the word thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee but wee will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth out of our own mouth to burn incense to the Queen of Heaven and to powre out drink-offerings unto her as wee have done wee and our fathers our Kings and our Princes c. this was the sin of Judah her whole heart and will was in it and Israel was not behind Hos 2.5 I will go after my lovers that gave me my bread and my water my wooll and my flax mine oyle and my drink they sinned with greedinesse as they in Ephes 4.19 which sets out the greatnesse of their sin The Scripture calls such sinners sons of Belial Judg. 19.22 Sons of Belial beset the house round about where the Levite and his Concubine were in the old mans house at Gibeah they got her and forced her to death these were sons of Belial indeed without profit as some interpret the word without yoke as others that is lawlesse rebellious men men of wickednesse given to wickednesse as Hophni and Phineas 1 Sam. 2.12 such as Christ will have nothing to do with 2 Cor. 6.15 unlesse it be to destroy them 4. That sin is an imbittering thing the house of rebellion may be turn'd the house of bitternesse that deals bitterly with me and imbitters my Spirit against them Hos 12.14 Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peccata sunt amaritudines Dei O iniquitas Peccati quae suavitatem Dei in amaritudinem convertit with bitternesses Ephraim sins were sins full of bitternesse they turn Gods sweetnesse into bitternesse his patience into wrath his bowels into wormwood if any thing can sadden divine nature and imbitter the same it 's sin What a bitter thing is it that God should be thrust out of his Throne and Temple and an Idoll set up What a bitter thing that the heart and conscience which is the seat of God should be the habitation of lusts and Devils when God sees this it doth much imbitter his Spirit When Christ hung upon the Crosse they gave him gall and vineger to drink which was a bitter provocation and when wee sin wee give God and Christ pure gall to drink Lam. 1.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the words there are The Lord is righteous for I have rebell'd against his Commandment the Hebrew is otherwise because I have made bitter his mouth I have given him gall and wormwood to drink a cup of rebellion and disobedience he is righteous in these bitter afflictions because I have imbittered his mouth and Spirit with my bitter sins Felle amaritudine propinare Deo God is all love sweetnesse mercy and would not afflict and deal bitterly with us if wee did not drinke to him in gall provoke him by our sins to it Hos 13.16 Samaria shall become desolate for shee hath rebelled against God the Vulgar is Quoniam ad amaritudinem concitavit Deum suum because shee hath stirred up God to bitternesse and hee will deal as bitterly by her they shall fall by the sword saith God their Infants shall be dashed in pieces and their women with child shall be ript up Here was great bitternesse wee think but it 's nothing to the bitternesse of our sins our sins crosse Gods will darken his glory murthered his Son grieve vex his Spirit deface his work and burthen him daily There is a double bitternesse considerable about sin the bitternesse in sin and that for sin this last God never tastes but all man-kind hath and shall taste feares sorrows troubles sicknesse death c. but the other bitternesse in sin God alwayes tastes it Deut. 32.32 their grapes are grapes of gall their clusters are bitter both their works and worship are bitter there is hypocrisie and superstition in them there cannot be the least dram of Gall in any thing his people do especially in worship but the Lord tastes it and distastes it our mouths are so out of relish that wee finde sweet in sin which is gall wormwood yea bitternesse it self Job 20.12 13 14. Though wickednesse be sweet in his mouth hee hides it under his tongue keeps it and will not forsake it yet his meat in his bowells is turned it is the gall of Asp● within him It 's a metaphor from a man given to his appetite who meeting with some sweet pleasing morsell keeps it long in his mouth sucks out the sweet delights his sense with it Quod palatum oblectavit viscera d srumpit and lets it not go down too quickly but when it 's down it proves a poysoned bit and though it pleased his palate yet it torments his bowels so sin in most mens mouths in their fancies and to their senses is sweet and they roll it up and down in their thoughts and delight themselves in a conceited pleasure of it but there is the gall of Asps in it the bitternesse of death and Solomon who had
2. Book de divinationibus Quid habet authoritatis furor iste quem Divinum vocatis ut quae sapiens non videt ea videat insanus is qui humanos sensus amiserit divinos assecutus sit vaticinari idem sit quod insanire This opinion was also in the Apostles time Act. 26.24 Festus the Governour of Syria tells Paul that he was besides himselfe that much learning had made him mad In the Metaphoricall sense take it thus The Jewes cannot endure thee nor thy prophecy they are so bitter so rebellious obstinate and set against thee that they will not suffer thee to look out of doores and come among them they decline thee and thy prophecy they will not endure either of them and so thou art as a prisoner and man in bands not that he had any materiall bands upon him but was bound up in this sense their sinnes were the Prophets bonds and we may take up this observation from it That peoples sinnes doe imprison and imbondage the spirits of the Prophets and so hinder the course of the word This Paul knew and therefore requests the Colossians to pray That God would open to him and others a doore of utterance Col. 4.3 that they might not be straitned in the work of their Ministery Mens sinnes doe silence the Ministers and send them to prisons if you look not well to it your sinnes may quickly make this good I incline to the literall sense and then it 's doubtfull who bound the Prophet They shall put bands c. Not the Angels though God use them in the Government of the world yet we finde not that God uses them to binde his Prophets Some conceive it to be his friends and familiar acquaintance and that it was done in love if others had done it they would have left him in custody other where then in his own house but without prejudice to any I conceive it came from the people who either bound him or bespake his binding And my ground for it is this He is made a Watchman to the House of Israel in that capacitie and relation the Lord speaks unto him here is no mention of any domestick friends but of the people it was they without not they within as is cleare from the words They shall put bands upon thee and thou shalt not goe out among them Observ 1. Christ deales fairely not fraudulently with his he tells them at first what they must expect not gold and silver but bands and chaines They shall binde thee He told Jeremy they shall fight against him Jerem. 1.19 So Paul no sooner is called to preaching but he heares of suffering Act. 9.16 I will shew him how great things he must suffer and Mat. 24.9 Christ tells all the Apostles that they must be afflicted hated killed and this he doth in faithfulnesse love and wisdome that they might not be deceived in looking for other kinde of entertainment in the world that they might not have hard thoughts of him for hiding away such things from them that they might be confirm'd against such evills when they fell out and remember it was no more then the Lord foretold them of Job 16.2 They shall put you out of the Synagogues yea they shall kill you and think they do God good service and ver 4. These things have I told you that you may remember I told you of them when the time comes 2. No excellency exempts a Prophet from the malice of mens tongues and hands Ezekiel is immediately call'd and sent by Christ sees extraordinary Visions hath much converse with Christ is fill'd with the Spirit yet all this keeps him not out of bands they spake evill of him and bound him Christ himself was all excellency beauty goodnesse yet these preserved him not out of the hands of malice there 's nothing will satisfie it but mens liberties and lives malice feeds on such dainties 3. The generality of people are enemies to their own good and active to their own ruine the house of Israel they are against the Prophet they fetter and chain him up and think they have done well to make him secure from coming amongst them and alas what have they done thrust away the physician should cure them shut out mercy by shutting up a Prophet put out the light and now are there not droves and multitudes of people that would think it a happinesse to get all the Prophets silenced imprisoned banished if not more they would live in darknesse and die in darknesse and so undo themselves for ever Christ the great Prophet the people after all his precious Sermons and glorious miracles cry Away with this man Crucifie him crucifie him Luke 23.18 21. They had cryed Hosanna formerly but now the time being turn'd they turn against Christ there be many that shew some kindnesse outwardly to the Prophets but inwardly they are against them 4. Wicked ones deal severely cruelly with the Prophets when they fall into their hands they put bands not one or two but many bands upon Ezekiel and they were wreathed twisted heavie thick bands such as might not only hold but hurt and pain the Prophet when Ahab had got Micaiah into his hands he sends him to prison and commands him to be fed with bread and water of affliction that is with so little and so unsavory ut longam potius mortem trahat quam vitam sustentet hee would kill him non brevi morte sed lenta fame Jeremiah the Princes are wroth with him smite him put him in the prison Jer. 37.15 yea into the dungeon where he sunk into deep mire and had perished if Ebedmelech an Ethiopian had not been more propitious to him then his own countreymen the Jewes were Jer. 38.6 7. Josephus saith Antiq. 10. they put him into a muddy pit ut ibi praefocatus moreretur which might easily have been for he was usque ad collum mersus others think they aimed not at his present death but thought paedore fame lingeringly to consume him Peter when he fell into Herods hands he was bound with two chaines Acts 12.6 You may observe something in that verse there is a prison chains souldiers keepers all these mentioned in it which shew the severity of Herod A bare prison had been too much for such an Apostle but he must be chain'd and with two chaines and for feare he should get out of his chaines hee must be between two souldiers which probably were more afflictive to his spirit with their oaths c. then the iron was to his body and lest hee should get from these there was also the keepers at the dore watching Paul tels you how he was handled by wicked men 2 Cor. 11.23 24. In stripes above measure in prisons frequent in deaths oft of the Jewes five times received I forty stripes save one thrice beaten with rods once stoned thrice shipwrackt 5. Afflictive conditions seldome better mens spirits they were in Babylon under captivity and