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A85667 An exposition continued upon the sixt, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, with useful observations thereupon. Delivered in severall lectures in London, By William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1649 (1649) Wing G1854; Thomason E577_1; ESTC R206361 436,404 591

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Lord for he is good for his mercie endureth for ever c. And Psal 107.8 O that men would praise the Lord for his goodnesse and for his wonderfull workes to the children of men 4. Unspirituall worship pleases not God neither profits the worshippers they had the Temple ordinances of it appeared oft before God brought their Sacrifices but God threatens them and all their worship their Civill estate and Ecclesiasticall also should be ruined God in worship lookes at the hearts and spirits of men if they be absent from but halfe or in part in the worship God regards it not Their oblations are vain oblations Isa 1.13 Their fasts and prayers are a trouble a weariness to God v. 14. And he tels them that he had mouth-neerness heart-farnesse lip labour heart-dishonour Isa 29.13 yea Ezek. 33.31 He had mouth-love mouth-worship when their silver and gold had heart-love Cor est principium vitae cogitationis omnis voluntatis actionis heart-worship It 's the heart is the principall thing in Gods eye My son give me thy heart Prov. 23.26 If that be not given him in worship nothing is given nothing is accepted that we think given David therefore prays Ps 119.80 Let my heart be sound in thy statutes that I be not ashamed If a man have a deceitfull spirit a rotten heart hee will be asham'd when he shall find that all his prayers fasts services shall be thrown back as dung in his face Oain gave the fruit of the earth not the fruit of his heart and it was not accepted neither doe they gaine ought at Gods hands who worsh p him carnally 1 Tim. 4.8 Bodily exercise profits little 5. Men are apt to rest in outside worship blesse themselves for it they cryed the Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord c. Jer. 7.4 They look at the Temple and worship of it and hence concluded safety to themselves they thought it not probable that ever destruction should come to them their City State Church they looked upon their Temple as a glorious thing and that worship therein would secure them from all but God oft threatens the defilement removal and destruction of it from this 20. vers to the 25. The Pharisee went up to the Temple he fasted prayed gave tiths of all and in such out-side services did he rest Men now have their Chappels and Chaplains and think that by the prayers of the one and holinesse of the other they shall be fitted for heaven CHAP. VII 25. Destruction commeth they shall seeke peace and there shall be none HE told them before that the worst of the Heathen should come and now that destruction was comming and annexeth a new calamity their vain expectation and reall disappointment of peace Destruction The Sept. is quite out in rendring it mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Praecisio venit propitiation commeth Others read it thus A straight griefe commeth The Heb. signifies more a breaking a cutting off so the word is used Isa 38.12 The Chaldee hath it precision or forecutting Piscator excisor The cutter up the destroyer or man of destruction commeth and he proves it must be taken so because it s joyned with a verb masculine and so the sense is Nebuchadnezar the destroyer the man that cuts down Nations that breaks Kingdomes in pieces is comming upon you even Nebuchadnezzar who is destruction it selfe They shall seeke peace God had threatned by his Prophets the utter ruine of Jerusalem which they would not believe the false Prophets suggested the contrary they cryed peace peace Jer. 8.11 Ezek. 13.10 Seduced the people so that they feared not they considered the strength of their Scituation Tower Temple Souldiers and what these Prophets had said and would not believe that Enemies should come within their gates Lam. 4.12 But when the Enemy was come they sought for peace and safety but found it not Ezek. 38.22 They excus'd Zedekiah that he brake with Nebuchadnezzar in the point of Tribute they tendered silver and gold to buy a peace and that would not doe it Isa 13.17 Ezek. 7.19 They conceiv'd that men come farre could not lye long before their Walls and Gates but that they would be consum'd or glad to retire with shame so they should be safe Or if things came to the worst that the City must be yielded yet it should be upon good and honourable terms at least with security of life and liberty but neither their money their policy their prayers or ought else could prevaile for peace or safety they had found them perfidious would hearken to no terms of peace the Chaldeans were Cockatrices and would not be charmed Jer. 8.17 Therefore it s said v. 15. We looked for peace but no good came and for a time of healing but behold trouble Some refer this seeking of peace to God they should in their streights at the destruction by Nebuchadnezzar cry to God make many fasts and prayers in the time of the siege and seeke for peace with God whom they had offended with their grievous sins and he would not heare them peace they should not finde Jer. 14.12 Ezek. 14.17 18. Obser 1 That wicked men in time of Divine judgements when they come upon them are peacelesse destruction commeth and they should seeke peace they had neither peace within nor peace without wars were in their gates and wars in their hearts their own consciences did accuse smite condemn them Common calamities rous'd their sleepy consciences they saw themselves in ill case from Nebuchadnezzar in worse by reason of God the one threatning their lives the other their soules So that which way soever they looked peace they saw none The winds of affliction stir'd the waves of their corruption Isa 57.20 21. The wicked are like the troubled sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up mire and dirt When the great winds are abroad the Sea hath no rest it cannot rest it rages and throws up and out mire and dirt So when great and death-threatning calamities are abroad wicked men rest not they cannot rest they are mire Isa 10.6 And their expressions are miery and what 's the conclusion there is no peace to the wicked saith the Lord. They may say they have peace others may confirme their assertion but God saith they have none nothing of that is included within the sweet name of peace is to be found in them You may find Sathan there a hellish conscience there sinfull lusts there fears sorrows terrors there but no peace there The way of peace they know not there is no judgement in their goings they have made them crooked paths whosoever goeth therein shall not know peace Isa 59.8 2. Great necessities and streights cause sinners to seek for that they formerly neglected violated viz. peace with God and peace with man Zedekiah these Jews had broken the Covenant made with Nebuchadnezzar they provoked God 2 Chron. 36.12 13. And now when destruction was
preserved they being under heavy pressures from God and man yet they are brought to know God to loath themselves and their former wayes these were times wherein they had no sacrificing little or no helpe for their soules but lay in darknesse and notwithstanding all this God shewed mercy neither their sinnes nor the sinnes of the place both which were great nor the time of wrath they were under for so it s cal'd Isa 54.8 could obstruct the free grace of God but some he spares some he touches with the lively sense of their sins and puts into a state of grace in the midst of enemies of sins of judgements God could shew mercy in Babylon as well as Zyon let the holy Land holy City holy Temple holy Altar holy Sacrifices and all the holy things be layd waste and persons be brought to the greatest improbabilities of finding mercy be as great sinners as any living as these were and in Babylon yet God is free can will doth shew mercy even to such in such a place and at such a time when his wrath is powring out Manasseh was a great sinner a Murtherer an Idolater a Sorcerer carryed into Babylon and in the eye of all in a hopelesse condition yet there God visits him his spirit breaths and blows upon him 2 Chron. 33.11 12 13. he humbles his soule greatly prayes effectually is returned to Jerusalem and knowes the God of his Fathers Nothing could keep off God from shewing mercy God tooke Abraham the Father of the Faithfull from Vr of Chaldaea he found favour among Idolaters and God shewed mercy to his Posterity Gen. 6. Acts 2. even in that Land When all flesh had corrupted its wayes yet mercy was showne to Noah Yea those put Christ to death had their hearts pricked To the Gentiles that had lived in abominable Idolatries God granted repentance unto life Acts 11.18 There is nothing in man in any place or time that can impede God from shewing mercy that is an act of his will nothing in us moves him to it nothing in us hinders him from it I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have comp●ssion on whom I will have compassion Rom 9.15 Obser 3 3. That often God shews the choisest mercy when he hath cause to execute the sharpest judgement they shall remember me because I am broken with their whorish hearts had they broken Gods heart he had cause to have broken their bones and destroyed them utterly but the Lord would deale graciously with them and in stead of destruction cause them to remember him to loath themselves and to come in to feare and serve him They would not feare remember and honour God in Zyon where they had the Prophets the Ordinances of God and mercies of all sorts but provoked God to plague them and when they were ripe for destruction and nothing to be expected but severity even then doth God deale graciously with them Isa 57.17 18. saith God For the iniquity of his covetousnesse was I wroth and smote him I hid me and was wroth and he went on frowardly in the way of his heart He adds sin to sin in a presumptuous manner and what could be looked for now but destruction Doth the great and glorious God smite and doth man sin more Yes he doth and God sees it and what then I have seene his wayes and will heale him Not wound him more not destroy him but I will heale him I will lead him also and restore comforts to him and to his mourners Isaiah 43.24 25. Thou hast made me to serve with thy sinnes thou hast wearyed me with thine iniquities And what then I even I am hee that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Gods thoughts are not as mans that which is argument of death in mans apprehension is argument of mercy and life in Gods Psal 25.11 David knew it therefore presseth God with an argument might have undone him in the judgement of reason O Lord pardon mine iniquity for it is great God might have said therefore will I not pardon thee because thy sinne is great I have suffered much by thee by thy murther and adultery and thinkest thou that I will pardon such great sins Is this an argument to come to mee withall I have as great wrath as thou hast sins thou art a man of death for what thou hast done thou shouldest dye by the Law for thy murther and dye for thy adultery and thou hast given the sentence thy selfe The man that hath done this shall surely dye and bound it thou hast with an Oath as the Lord liveth 2 Sam. 12.5 and therefore dye thou must thou shalt Such language as this might David have looked for but he heares of pardon and that from the mouth of a Prophet and when he mov'd God with the argument of the greatnesse of his sinnes he did it in the judgement of faith knowing it would be much for the honour of God to pardon great sinnes that he was as ready to shew mercy as his sinnes had made him ripe for judgement Hosea 2.13 14. Israel followed Baalim and forgate God had hee not now cause to destroy her It was Gods way to destroy such Psal 73.27 Yet it follows Therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the Wildernesse and speake comfortably unto her Because shee had fo●got God God would remember her because shee had been drawne away by Idols God would allure her from Idols because shee had vexed God he would comfort her Here God lets out choise mercy when he had cause to execute severe wrath When Peter had denyed Christ thrice and forswore him and the knowledge of him was there not cause that Christ should have renounced him smitten him with some great Judgement Matth. 26.72 74. and made him an example for Selfe-confiders and Christ-denyers to the end of the World Surely Christ had cause enough and the opportunity for it was faire before him but Christ turned and look't upon Peter and in stead of ruining him rayses him Obser 4 4. False worship doth most afflict God I am broken with their whorish heart Their Idolatries Superstitions and corruptions did not simply displease or grieve God but oppressed afflicted broke the heart of God great injuries enter deep worke strongly eate up the spirits of any they are done unto and what greater wrong can be done to God then to set at naught his counsels to forsake his Worship to withdraw from his Government and to proclaime to the World that there are better ways then his and better Gods then himselfe Those are Idolatrous and worship God a false way they doe so by God therefore Jer. 3.5 it s sayd of them that they did speak and doe evill as they could men cannot doe more to breake God then to worship Idols wrong gods or the true God a wrong way Such sins breake Gods Covenant Deut. 31.16 This
for God denounces fix woes against them in the Chapter afterwards Wary he would take heed how he bestowed his choise mercies upon such people others that would be more fruitful and thankful should have them Mat. 21.43 The Kingdome of heaven shall be taken from you and given to another Nation bringing forth the fruits thereof Not their own fruits but such as Christ and the Gospel appointed Alap in Es This sin was so prodigious that Lycurgus would make no law against it but God hath made a law Psal 9.17 The wicked shall be turned into hell and all the Nations that forget God Ingratitude is the greatest and worst forgetfulnesse Judas forgat the kindnesse and bounty of Christ he betrayed him and therefore was turned into hell Verse 21. And I will give it into the hands of strangers for a prey c. They had sin'd shamefully and God would punish them severely Strangers that is Chaldeans should come and have Temple City them and all they had in their hands and God whom they flatter'd themselves in thought stil to be their friend their help even he would give all into their hands These Chaldeans he cals the wicked of the earth David calls such men of the world Psal 17.14 Men of the earth Psal 10.18 That is base and vile men as it 's in Job Children of base men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viler then the earth fit for any cruell and bloody designes The Septuagint hath it pestilentiis terrae the plagues of the Earth The King of Babylon and his cursed crow went up and downe in the world plundering Nations shaking Kingdoms and laying all wast Isa 14.16 17. They were the pests and vipers of the earth and into their hands must the Jewes Gods owne people fall they must spoil the Temple have all the ornaments vessels and treasures in it all the pictures of silver and gold They shall pollute it The Temple was an holy place the habitation of the holy God had in much reverence by all sorts of people but now they should see it not regarded as a thing consecrate to God now Heathens uncircumcised ones should enter it which was against law Ezek. 44.7 Now their blood should be spilt in it now it should be made a prison a stewes a stable the Jews had polluted it with Images and these Barbarians should pollute it many other wayes Obser 1 The abuse of spiritual mercies causeth God to take them a-away Jer. 11.15 Their lewdnesse caused the holy flesh to passe from them they had the Temple the beauty and worship of it for their glory to make them glorious within as wel as glorious without but they abus'd their mercies polluted Gods Ordinances and therefore he removed the Temple farre from them He tooke it away the Lord had set his Name at Shilo pitched his Tabernacle there Josh 18.1 and they abus'd his name and worship as you may see Psal 78.58 Then he was wrath and greatly abhorred Israel Then he forsooke the Tabernacle of Shilo and delivered his strength into captivity and his glory into the enemies hands vers 59.60 61. which some interpret of the Arke taken by the Philistines 1 Sam. 4.11 And in Jer. 7. when they liv'd loosely and blessed themselves with their carnall confidence in the Temple and worship of it vers 4.9 10 11. God sends them to Shilo and bids them search and see what he did there for the wickednesse of his people and threatens to do so by them even destroy their Temple worship them and their seed they sin'd in special things and God punished them in that wherein they sin'd they pollute the Temple and God causes the Chaldeans to pollute it they confide in the Temple and God laies it wast they make an Idol of it and set it neer their hearts and God removes it far off they look upon it as cleane as their glory and God removes it as vomit as a polluted loathsome thing It s a dreadfull thing when God gives up a Church a State either or both to the wils of wicked men I will give it into the hands c. Vers 21. I have set it far from them If evill come to the gates of Jerusalem and doors of the Temple it 's from the Lord Mica 1.12 And it 's very grievous when God judges Kingdomes and Churches First They fall into the hands of men strangers they know not the wicked of the earth such as neither feare God nor regard Men Buls Lyons Dogs Psal 22.12 13.16 2. They are for a prey and spoile their names estates habitations chastity children limbs consciences lives are prey'd upon they eate up Gods people as they eate bread Psal 14.4 They make them meate to the fowles of heaven and beasts of the field They crush their bones and shed their blood like water Ps 79.2 3. 3. Prophaning and polluting of holy things They shall pollute it Gods holy name is blasphemed Psalm 79.10 Where is their God why doth he not now help them they have prayed fasted hoped in him made lheir boast of him why comes he not to help them all holy things are defiled and therefore Asaph in that 79. Psal vers 1. made upon the destruction of Jerusalem cries out O God the heathen are come into thine Inheritance thy holy Temple have they defiled This came first and struck deepest into the heart of this holy man that heathnish idolatrous bloody prophane persons should come and pollute the holy ordinances of God The Church laments this as a dreadful evill Lam. 1.10 The adversary hath spread out his hand upon all her pleasant things for she hath seene that the Heathen entered into her Sanctuary whom thou didst command that they should not enter into thy Congregation 4. Removal of all true worship Divine ordinances I will set it far from them Now they should be without God the meanes to know him and way to worship him Now God would have no Oblationt Incense new Moons Sabbaths solemn Feasts or any worship at Jerusalem There only was he knowne worshipped and now Temple Ordinances and all must down be taken away God be unknown unworshipped in the world no publique place for him left Isaiah foreseeing this saith Chap. 42. This is a people robbed spoiled and hereupon having a speciall quere to make he cals for attention Who among you wil give eare to this and hearken for the time to come Ver. 23. and make use of it will any of you doe it Then thus Jacob is spoiled but who gave Jacob for a spoile and Israel to the robbers Was not Jacob the beloved of God his excellency his glory c. Did not the Lord doe it he against whom we have sinned for they would not walke in his wayes nor be obedient to his lawes therefore he hath powred upon him the fury of his anger and the strength of battaile and it hath set him on fire round about yet he knew not it burned him round
8.3 Hee hath in this tenth Chapter a vision much like that mentioned in the first Chapter yet with some difference as will appear in the opening Three things chiefly are observable in this Chapter 1. The scattering of burning coales over the City Jerusalem which some call the vision of coales v. 2 3.6 7. 2. The Lords change of his place 4.18 19. 3. A description of the Cherubims in the 5.8 9 10 c. The scattering of the coales is specified in the 2d vers and prefigured the burning of Jerusalem and this is set out to us 1. From the Author commanding who is the Lord in the 〈◊〉 vers 1. 2. From the instrument acting the man cloathed with linnen vers 2. 3. From the command it selfe where we have 1. The place whither he was to goe in between c. 2. What to doe 1. Fill his hand with coales of fire 2. Scatter them over the City 4. The execution of the command vers 2.6 7. He went and this is illustrated 1. From the witnesse thereof Ezekiel in my sight 2. From the place where the Cherubims stood on the right side of the house v. 3. 3. From the event the cloud fill'd the inward Court Ibid. 4. From the manner of conveying of the fire vers 7. A Cherubim put forth his hand tooke fire and put into the hand of him cloathed with linnen In the first vers the Majesty and greatnesse of him commands is set out 1. By the Firmament above 2. By the Cherubims underneath 3. By a throne which was of Saphir In the first Chap. 22. hath been spoken of the firmament Rachiah from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to extend expand expansum because stretched out over the whole earth The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of it's strength and firmenesse not melted or changed by its motion This firmament the footstool of the Lord was over the head of the Cherubims Cherubims This word is not in the first vision Chap. 1. there they are cal'd the living creatures here Cherubims which is evidence that they are the same and may strengthen the interpretation given to be of the Angels There is a difference between the words Chap. 1.22 where it 's said the firmament upon the heads of the living creature And the words here which are the firmament that was above the head of the Cherubims there its living creature and heads here its Cherubims and head which may mind us of their onenesse and consent in judgement and operations If there be heads it s but as one living creature acts from those heads if there be Cherubims they have all but as one head Why are they cal'd Cherubims here and not living creatures as before I suppose the reason is this The former vision was at Chebar in the open field by a rivers side this was in the Temple where the Cherubims were 1 Kings 8.6 7. and so that notion suited with them there 2. In Babylon a prophane land the Prophet sees living creatures he had a generall and confus'd apprehension of them but when he is in the Temple he hath a more cleare and distinct knowledge of them Hence you have this note The Lord did more clearely make known himselfe and mysteries in the holy land then in other places Psal 76.1 In Judah is God knowne more fully and familiarly then elsewhere A vision in Babylon is not so cleare as a vision in Sion Psalm 29.9 In his Temple doth every one speake of his glory A saphir stone Jerome derives it from shaphar pulcher because these stones are faire and pleasant to the eyes Coelesti Colore conspicui sunt Ruens The Saphir notes 1. Liberty Exod. 24.10 God appeared to them with a paved work of Saphir under his feet when the Israelites were going from bondage to liberty 2. Purity therefore it s brought in a foundation stone of the new Jerusalem Rev. 21.19 3. Of chastity Cant. 5.14 Christs belly is overlaid with Saphirs and his Spouse must be chast 4. Glory greatnesse among the Aegyptians the chiefe Priests being Judges wore a Saphir about their necks these and some other particulars were spoken of in the first Chapter vers 26. Throne A Throne is a seate of Majestie and belonging to Kings and great Governours John 3.6 2 King 11.19 Neh. 3.7 and therefore 1. are call'd Kingly Dan. 5.20 and put for Kingdom Prov. 20.28 for government Heb. 1.8 2. Glorious Isa 22.23 and hence are put for Angels Col. 1.18 for heaven Acts 7.49 for great dignity Job 36.7 Here it notes a seate of judgement according to that in Psalm 122.5 There are set thrones of judgement Here was a Throne of judgement set and that of Saphir holding out the Majestie power and greatnesse of him sate in it who was in a readinesse to give out sentence against Jerusalem The Firmament Cherubims Saphire Throne are mentioned but not he sate in it that one was in it is evident from the next vers He spake unto the man cloathed c. that was hee in the Throne In the first vision one like the appearance of the Sonne of man was in the Throne and because no such appearance is here it s conceived to be Jehovah Obser 1. The Lord is King and hath Kingly power he hath a throne and Isa 66.1 Heaven is my Throne And hee sitteth King for ever Psal 29.10 He hath a double Throne 1. A throne of justice Psal 9.7 Hee hath prepared his throne for judgement and this throne is terrible Dan. 7.9 10. It 's like a fiery flame and sends out a fiery stream to scorch and consume delinquents The law is cal'd a fiery law Deut. 33.2 and the breath of him sits in this throne its fire and kindles upon those appeare before it unquencheablie 2. A throne of mercy and grace Heb. 4.16 no sinners dye before this throne they may come boldly to it and finde yea obtaine mercy and grace to help in time of need Jerusalem was at the throne of justice and coals of fire were giving out to burn her to ashes 2. His throne is the chiefest of thrones it s in the Firmament Psal 11.4 The Lords throne is in heaven it s above all thrones he hath Angels men and D●vils under his command the Cherubims heads were under the firmament whereon his throne was those immortall and glorious spirits He is King of nations Jer. 10.7 Of all the earth Psal 47.7 A great King above all gods Psalm 95.3 They have their expansums over their heads of some rich stuffe which shewes their subjection to some other but it s otherwise with God he is above the expansum Hee is the blessed and only potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords 1 Tim. 6.15 3. The Lord who hath so glorious a throne is much more glorious himselfe his throne is saphirine very beautiful like the colour of the heavens If an earthly throne be a throne of glory as Hannah stiles it 1 Sam. 2.8 what is this
but doing the will of the Lord Christ 4. It is not from mans strength but Gods grace that any walke in his statutes keepe his Ordinances and doe them I will take away the stony heart give them an heart of flesh and put a new spirit within them that they may walk keep and doe Man is a feeble impotent Creature he cannot thinke a good thought make an haire white or black and how then can he walke in the Statutes of the Lord Satan is powerfull and politick he makes strong assaults and such as that if God did not assist by his grace we should fall every moment hence those expressions of David Ps 119.5.35.36 Moses and the Covenant of works cald for obedience contributed no strength but God in Christ gives strength to do what is cal'd for Ezek. 36.27 I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walke in my statutes and yee shall keepe my judgements and doe them Heb. 13.20.21 5. Gods statutes and Ordinances are to be the Saints way to walke in and rule to walk by statutes Ordinances are cal'd wayes paths Jer. 6.16 Young men must cleanse their wayes according to the word Psal 119.9 David would have his steps ordered by the word vers 133. The word is the way to walke in and a rule to walke by we must try all spirits and doctrines by it Isa 8.20 1 Thes 5.21 1 Joh. 4.5 Acts. 17.11 All things we beleive Acts. 26.27 Ephes 2.20 John 20.31 Gal. 1.8 All things we practice 2 Tim. 3.15.17 Eccles 12.13 Mat. 28.20 What God and Christ command must we observe not what others Isa 8.11 Walk not in the wayes of this People not in the light of our owne fire Isa 50.11 Not after customes of men Acts 21.21 6. Those God reneweth by grace giveth newnes and tendernes of spirit unto he lookes they should make progresse in his wayes keepe in mind his Ordinances and doe them exactly fullfill them Deut. 6.17 You shall diligently keepe the Commadements of the Lord and his Testimonies and statutes Psal 119.4 Thou hast commanded to keepe thy precepts diligently The Hebrew is Valde greatly the Septuagint vehemently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Vulgar Nimis too much which Expressions shew that we should endeavour to the utmost to keep them God expected they should keep the Sabbath exactly Isa 58.13 And so the rest of his commands They shall be my People and I will be their God These words have two things in them 1. Gods asserting them to be his people 2. A gracious promise to be their God You have these words often mentioned in the Book of God once in Levit. 26.12 Seaven times in Jeremiah Chap. 7.23 11.4 24.7 30.22 31.1.33 32.38 Foure times in our Prophet Ezekiel Cha. 36.28 37.23.27 And here in this Vers Once in Zacharie Chap. 8.8 Twice in the new Testament 2 Cor. 6.16 Revel 21.3 In all they are 15 times set downe which intimates to us that there is great weight in them that they are of great consideration and use 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shall be my people Hebrew is they shall be to me in Populum for a People And so I will be to them Lel●him in Deum for a God I will shew you 1. What is imployed in these words They shall be my people 2. Wha● in the other I will be their G●d They shall be my people 1. They shall acknow edge me to be their God they shall not owne any other God There is difference betweene knowing and acknowledging you may know such an one to be a child but not acknowledge him to be your child you may know such Townes Countries Kingdomes but not acknowledge them yours This phrase My people imports acknowledging God to be theirs Psal 48.14 This God that dwells at Jerusalem that breaks the Ships of Tarshish this God is our God for ever and ever Psal 77.13 Who is so great a God as our God Here is acknowledgement of God not onely to be great but to be their God Isa 25.9 This is our God and we have waited for him Exod. 29.45.46 I will be their God and they shall know that I am the Lord their God That is they shall acknowledge me to be so it s cald vouching God to be their God Deut. 26.17 2. They shall worship me onely Exod. 5.8 Let us goe and Sacrifice to our God not to other Gods when a people is Gods people they are possessed with apprehensions of his glory greatnesse authority over them and infinite worthinesse to be honour'd ador'd admir'd and magnified by them and will say as its Psal 95.6 Oh come let us worship c. And as its Hos 14.8 What have we to doe any more with Idols they would not meddle with the worship of the Nations their owne inventions but they would worship God and him onely Joel 2.27 1 Sam. 12.24 Psal 147.1 Rev. 19.1 3. They shall trust and rely upon me and not any other Gods or armes of flesh Hos 14.3 Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon Horses neither will we say any more to the worke of our hands you are our Gods for in thee the Fatherlesse find mercy Zeph. 3 12. Psal 9.10 4. They shall be a People unto me when God takes a people to be his they are holy unto him Deut. 7.6 Thou art an holy people unto the Lord thy God God separated them from the World and other Nations to be holy unto himselfe therefore it follows The Lord thy God hath chosen thee to be a speciall people unto himselfe Levit. 19.2 Hence they were cald an holy Nation Exod. 19.6 5. They shall hearken unto my voyce and doe my will and yeild obedience unto me Jer. 7.23 Obey my voyce and I will be your God and yee shall be my people Josh 24.18 We will serve the Lord for he is our God Deut. 6.17 Psal 50.7.81.8.13 6. They shall love me and lay out their strength for me Deut. 6.5 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy might Mar. 12.30 is added With all thy mind If God be ours he must have all Psa 68.28 7. They shall stand for my glory and make my name honourable Isa 43.21 This people have I formed for my selfe they shall shew forth my praise I will be their God These are gratious words and they doe import much 1. The free grace of God in pardoning their sins Jer. 31.33.34 When he speaks of being their God he tells them he will forgive their Iniquity and will remember their sin no more Psal 85.2 Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of thy people thou hast covered all their sin The word Forgiven signifieth to lift up and take away sin is a great burden when God becometh a God in mercy to a People then he takes off that great Burthen he lif● it up carries it quite away and it s hid out of sight and remembrance
rending of the heart Joel 2.13 Plowing up of the fallow ground Jer. 4.3 Travelling in child birth Jsa 26.17 Pricking of the heart Acts 2.37 All which evidences that repentance is an heart businesse it workes strongly upon that and brings it up to loathing when the heart is truely penitent what it before loved and delighted in it loaths and abhorres the voyce of Ephraim repenting is Hos 14.8 What have I to doe any more with Idols I now loath them will not lift up mine eyes or hands unto them nor speake a word for them nor thinke of them Jer. 31.19 After that I was turned I repented I smote upon my thigh I was ashamed yea even confounded because I did bear the reproach of my youth I had sin'd in my former dayes with Idols false worship satisfied my lusts but now I am confounded with the shame and reproach of them Now I loath them and cannot indure them Isa 31.7 when they are turned unto God In that day shall every man cast away his Idols of Silver and Gold they cannot stand before Repentance no more then Dagon before the Arke After God had scourged and purged them with the Babilonish Captivity it s observed that they could never abide Idols more nor would suffer any to come up unto the Temple When Caius Galigula sent his Statue to Pretronius President of Judea to honour it with a place in the Temple the Jewes professed they would dye rather then behold that abomination in the Temple if that came there they would not come there if that liv'd they would dye This is the nature of true Repentance that what ever Errours false Worship wayes lusts things it delighted in before now it loaths as dung as filth and abhorres as Pestilentiall and deadly The Jewes repenting cursed their Idols and their owne madnesse in running a whoring after them Here be three evidences of the reality and truth of this Repentance First Their loathing themselves it s a hard thing to bring a man to selfe-loathing every man loves exalts himselfe and labours to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 somebody in the World Diotrephes affects preheminence but true Repentance will make the greatest loath himselfe Repentance sees what black defiled creatures they are Ezek. 20.43 You shall remember your wayes wherein you have beene defiled and shall loath your selves in your owne sight A repentant eye sees matter enough of selfe-abhorrence Job 7.5 When Job saw his sores filth and wormes in his flesh he loathed himselfe but not so much as when he saw the sinnes sores 42.6 and lusts of his heart then he abhorred himselfe and all had excellency in it before he though fit to be buryed under dust and ashes Secondly For the evils which they have committed not for the evils which their sinnes had deserved or God had inflicted did they loath themselves but for the evill of their owne wayes so that they did mourn for sin as sin not for the evill of sinne but for the evill in sin which is the contrariety of it to Gods will the offence of Divine Majesty its burdening God himselfe breach of union between him and their soules its violation of his Law it pollutes the soule hardens the heart turnes the Gospell of Christ all mercies and meanes of Grace to our hurt and is a foundation of eternall Ruine It was the evill of sin and not of punishment that David prayed against 2 Sam. 24.10 17. Psal 51.2 Thirdly It s impartiall and universall They shall loath themselves for the evils which they have committed in all their abominations It s not one or two but all comes into question when the heart is in a penitent way Ezek. 20.43 Then shall you remember your wayes and all your doings wherein you have beene defiled and yee shall loath your selves in your owne sight for all your evils that you have committed Sinnes great or small in any place with any person or thing but especially of worship come into fall under censure and are abhorr'd Manasseh when he was humbled in Babylon he loathed his practises in Zyon and took away all the Altars that he had built in the Mount of the House of the Lord and in Jerusalem and cast them out of the City 2 Chron. 33.15 Let us look back see the evill of our wayes especially in worship and loath our selves for the evill of them all that we have defiled Gods Name Ordinances our selves with Altars Crucifixes Cringings conformity to the Impositions Innovations of men Subscriptions Oaths of Canonicall obedience supporting of a false and Tyrannicall Government in the Church of Christ have been contented under a dull formall way of worship c. Ezek. 43.11 If they be ashamed of all that they have done shew them the forme of the House and the fashion thereof Shame for false corrupt worship opens a door for sight of and entrance in of true and pure worship 1. That before men are afflicted and humbled for their sin Obser Ver. 10. they refuse and sleight the Word of God let his Prophets come and Preach powerfully and terribly unto them lay Gods Judgements before them they mind it not at least tremble not but they shall know they have refused my word and messengers the time is comming they shall be in Babylon be sorely afflicted and then they shall know as for the precedent time their hearts were stout against God his truth his servants and they were secure Who hath beleeved our report saith Isaiah 53. chap. 1.2 and Chap. 44.4 I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for naught his hearers sleighted his Prophesies So in Zech. 7.11 12. They refused to hearken and puld away the shoulder and stopped their eares that they should not heare Yea they made their hearts as an Adamant stone least they should heare the Law and the words which the Lord of Hosts hath sent in his spirit by the former Prophets 2. That a heart under affliction broken for sinne and loathing its selfe for its owne sinnes will give due honour to the Word of God submit to it acknowledge him and his Prophets Then shall they know c. That is when they have smarted in the Captivity been cut to the heart for their sinnes loathed themselves for all the evils of them even then shall they know Affliction opens mens eyes blows beget braines and men come to see their Ingratitude towards God their abuse neglect contempt of meanes what great losse they have made thereby and so mourne for each prize the Word tremble at threatnings close with promises subject to commands honour the Lord and his Prophets The truest Penitent doth most abhorre himselfe his lusts his errours his owne wayes and the more abhorrencie of these the more complacency in Truth and the God of truth such an one understands the dealings of God acknowledges the Majesty of God in his Ordinances the equity of God in his Judgements the mercies of God in his deliverances
the Law the Priests should have no sound or true knowledg of it Read it But the law c. The sense will not much differ they look for visions from Prophets But they shall not have the law from Priests vision and Preaching both shall fail them This phrase To perish from is an Hebreisme and noteth not abolition but absence the law should not be dissolv'd lost But taken from those Priests they should be without the law Take some places where you have the like speeches Psal 142.4 Refuge failed me The Hebrew is perished from mee I was without refuge Amos 2.14 Flight shall perish from the swift Power of flying shall be absent And Joel 1.5 Howle ye drunkards because of the new wine for it is cut off from your mouth That is there is none for you and so here The law shall perish from the Priests That is the sound knowledg and true interpretation of the law shall be absent from them their lippes shall preserve no knowledge Counsell from the Ancient Elders some refer these to Church-officers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa 37.2 Elders of Priests the Prophets were to teach them the Priests to offer sacrifices and the Elders to order and discipline them which required wisdome and Counsell Others refer them to State-Elders in which sense the word is frequently used Gen. 50.7 Exod. 17.5 Psal 105.22 and is there translated Senators Take it in which sense you will Counsell should perish from them they should not be able to advise for the welfare of Church or State Obser 1 When a people is under Divine displeasure there is a succession of evils for them mischiefe after mischief they may not expect a few but many Saul after he had sin'd in sacrificing rejected God Samuel tels him that his Kingdome should not continue 1 Sam. 13.14 Then 3. Companies of spoilers came Mischiefe from the Philistines vers 17.18 Then had they no Smith in all Israel v. 19. After Chap. 15.23 He heares God had rejected him from being King that he had rent the Kingdome from him v. 28. After this he was trobled with an evill spirit from the Lord Chap. 6.14 In the 17.10 Goliah defies the Armies of Israel Chap. 18.7 8. David is magnified above Saul which vexed him to the heart and filled him with fear vers 29. He is disappointed of David whom he attempts to kill Chap. 19. He distrusts his servants and complains of their unfaithfulnesse Ch. 22. The Philistims invade his Land being in pursuit of David Chap. 23. David Abishai came upon Saul sleeping and could have kil'd him Chap. 26. Being sore distressed he seeketh to the Witch of Endor When God was departed no answer by Prophets and the Philistims were upon him the Witch raises the Devill who tels him of nothing but his own and Israels ruine Chap. 28.19 These tidings struck him halfe dead v. 20. After this his sons are slaine his Army is routed he and his Armour bearer ki l themselves Chap. 31. here mischiefe followed upon mischief Pharaoh had ten plagues one after another and in the Revelations you read of 7. Trumpets 7. Vials they came not single but by seavens and brought in mischief after mischief and judgement after judgement Jer. 51.31 32. One Post shall run to meet another and one messenger to meet another to shew the King of Babylon that his City is taken at one end that the passages are stopped the reeds burnt and the men of War affrighted Many evils and troubles doe befall States and Churches when they are under Gods wrath Deuteronomie 31.17 Then my anger shall be kindled against them in that day and I will forsake them and I will hide my face from them and they shall be devoured and many evils and troubles shall befall them so that they will say in that day are not these evils come upon us because our God is not amongst us When God is in a way of revenge hee is continually at his work so that one misery is but the messenger of another and here is the misery of the wicked they shall perish rather an hundred times over then goe unpunished 2. God proceeds by degrees and steps to severity of judgements though people be exceeding guilty deserve as much wrath as is in all the vials of God yet he pours not out all his wrath at once mischief comes after mischiefe and rumour after rumour First Some drops of a viall then some little streams Mansuetudo iram Clementia paenam moderatur after that the strength God hath clemency in him moderating his punishments If little ones will prevaile with sinners he will with-hold the greater Sometimes though he see no amendment in the Creature his own goodnesse bowels and compassion doe cause him to forbear Psalm 78.38 He did not stirre up all his wrath He had cause to have done it they flattered with him lied unto him their heart was not right they brake Covenant vers 36.37 And yet hee stir'd not up all his wrath he kindled not the fire so hot as utterly to consume them Nay that wrath which was up and comming out he turn'd away And why He was full of compassion and remembred they were but flesh Yet because they were a stubborn people profited neither by mercies nor judgments but fell to Idolatry it's said vers 9. Hee greatly abhorred Israel and then the consuming fire was kindled vers 63. At first Gods wrath is little Psal 2.12 I was a little displeased Z●ch 1.15 But if sin grow Gods wrath grows as Ahab's cloud at first little as a hand but quickly it covered the face of heaven it was black with clouds and winds and there was a great raine How little soever Gods wrath be in the rise it can sodainly cover the face of heaven cause a great raine a raine of fire and brimstone an horrible tempest Psalm 11.6 God hath great wrath and fiercenesse of wrath 2 Kings 23.26 He hath a little finger a hand an arm and loins to be heavy upon sinners He begins with the little finger if that doe good he will stop if not you shall feele his hand his arme and weight of his loines he hath wrath reserved Nahum 1.2 W●ath to come 1 Thess 1.10 3. Wicked men in great streights will sue to them for help whom before they hated they should seek for a vision from the Prophet now they were in extreamities and they run from Prophet to Prophet to get some Counsell and Comfort The false Prophets who had been countenanced by them had deceived them the true were hatefull to them Jeremiah Zephaniah Baruch were left and now they sue unto them for visions see Jer. 37.17 and 38.14.27 and 42.1 2 3. There the King Princes and people being distressed seek to Jeremie yet he was cursed by them Jer. 15.10 Beaten and put into prison Chap. 37.15 Ahab sends for and consults with Micaiah whom he hated when he was to goe out to Warre and in a streight
them that feare the Lord Psal 34.7 They are invisible guards and do invisible things for us their hands work when we feel them not so the hand of providence is doing when wee slumber and discern it not Joseph is sold into Aegypt and it was not discern'd by the sellers or the sold what work God was about the hand of providence was secret but wrought strongly for the raising of Joseph and safety of Jacob and many thousands besides Mordecai will not bow to Haman was the hand discern'd here which was working Hamans ruine I believe not Haman goes on plots the death of all the Jewes had almost accomplished his desire but providence acts in an unexpected way and cuts off this bloody man A secret hand of heaven hath done the great things in all ages invisible vertue hath done more then all visible instruments In our Counsels Armies undertakings had not Gods hand of Providence wrought we had been ruin'd Was it not a strange hand of Providence that began the work in Scotland If ought be done in the work of Reformation amongst us is it not the hand of God rather then the hand of man Isa 1.25 I will turne my hand upon them and purely purge away their drosse Math. 8.3 Jesus put forth his hand and healed the leper If our leprosie he healed or healing it 's by the hand of Christ put forth The safety of this Nation is from a secret hand we are held and hid in the hollow and shadow of an invisible hand So the hand of the Spirit doth secret work in Sion Christ by the finger of God Luk. 11.20 by the spirit of God Mat. 12.28 cast out Devils It s this hand that mortifies and kils the lusts Rom. 8.13 It 's this hand which quickens and brings life Job 6.63 It 's this hand works holinesse in you that comforts and supplyes you that guides and seales you it s this hand that brings you out of the ways of sin errour death into the ways of Christ truth and life it s this hand makes all ordinances effectuall 2 Cor. 10.4 Our weapons are mighty through God to the pulling downe of strong holds Through God that is through the spirit of God weapons must be in some hand or other these were spirituall weapons and in the hand of the Spirit as well as in the Apostles hand else had they not been able to pull down strong holds 4. When Gods work is done we should hide up our hands that doe it the Cherub stretched out his hand took fire put it into Christs hand and what then the hand is hid under the wing Angels are not vain-glorious they seek not themselves but the honour of him they serve they say not this have I done hath my hand wrought they hold not forth their hand for mortals to admire or adore but rejoyce the work is done and hide up their hands This is a good president for us who are apt to be puft up with what we doe and to expose not onely the work but the hand also too much to view If actions be done and others reap the good thereof without selvish respects of ours it is Angelicall Paul was of this judgment and practic'd answerably 1 Cor. 15.10 I laboured more aboundantly then they all yet not I. See here how he hides up himselfe and puts all upon God Not I but the grace of God which was with me It was not Paul but Gods grace that did all the work So Isa 26.12 Thou hast wrought all our works in us we have done nothing but thou hast done all VERS 9 10 11 12 13. And when I looked behold the four wheels by the Cherubims one wheele by one Cherub and another wheele by another Cherub and the appearance of the wheels was as the colour of a berill stone And as for their appearances they four had one likenesse as if a wheele had been in the midst of a wheel When they went they went upon their four sides they turned not as they went but to the place whether the head looked they followed it they turned not as they went And their whole body and their backs and their hands and their wings and the wheels were full of eyes round about even the wheels that they four had As for the wheeles it was cryed unto them in my hearing O wheele IN these verses and most of the rest to the end is a description of the wheels and Cherubims which represent things earthly and heavenly and both under the command and dispose of Divine Majesty take things below in States or Churches they passe not without the interposure of Providence the hand of heaven acts in them takes things above they are not absolute there is one in the Throne over-rules them For the wheels which are the Principall subject of these verses and note out inferiour things and causes unto us they are 1. Described 2. Explained They are described 1. From their number four wheels 2. By their reference dependency or scituation they were by the Cherubims 3. By a particular and speciall distribution of one to another the 4. wheels were not altogether by the 4. Cherubims but one wheel by one Cherub another wheel by another Cherub 4. From their appearance or likenesse which was as the colour of a berill stone and those foure are in the ninth verse 5. From their likenesse and coherence among themselves they 4. had one likenesse c. vers 9. 6. From their motion vers 11. They went which is set out 1. From the way they went to those parts were upon their sides into those quarters of the world which were next them whither the head looked 2. Their progresse they turn'd not backe but went on 7. From their eyenesse vers 12. Their whole body backs hands wings were full of eyes 2. The explication of the wheels and that is in the 13. verse it was cryed O wheel O world I have spoken largely of the wheeles in the first chapter and therefore now shall say little of them the most will be of those particulars wherein there is difference from what is there set downe In the first Chap. mention is made 1. of the living creatures and then of the wheels Here the wheels are first set down and after them the Cherubims or living creatures Why there is a great inversion and change made in the vision I finde no reason given neither do I conceive any satisfactory reason can be given but the will of the Lord it pleased him to represent the vision in that way to the Prophet and that may suffice us Yet if we may conjecture the wheels are set first here for that changes motions of 2d causes in the world are more obvious unto our eyes wee observe them first and that vertue acts them is more out of sight In the first Chap. v. 15. there is one wheel upon the earth by the living creatures here in the 9. vers are 4. wheels by the Cherubims
And David professeth he had seene God in the Sanctuary Ps 63.2 God would be a Sanctuary to them in this sense they should have his special presence he had left the Temple at Jerusalem the glory was gone and now he was with them in Babylon Ezekiel had the Heavens opened to him by the River Cheb●r saw visions of God God did manifest himselfe in a speciall manner to him and to Daniel even in Babylon God had no Church elsewhere and now he was with his people there and calls them his flock foure times in one v. Ezek. 34.8 and twelve times his flocke in the whole Chapter 3. Acceptance in the Temple and sanctuary their persons and prayers were accepted there Hence was it that they freequented the Temple so much for prayer Acts 3.1 Luke 18.10 And that David intimates Ps 20.3 that the Offerings and Sacrifices in the Temple were accepted He heard my voyce out of his Temple Ps 18.6 So Jer. 6.20 When they had corrupted the worship of God he tells them there burnt Offerings were not acceptable nor their Sacrifices sweet before they were and the Prophesie is Isa 60.7 That they shall come with acceptance to Gods Altar Where his Altar was setled there was the acceptance this they had likewise in Babylon When Daniel made his prayer to God for himselfe and his People Chap. 9. Gabriel comes and tells him he was greatly beloved of God a man of desires So when Mordecai and Esther fasted their persons and prayers were regarded accepted in Babylon 4. Incouragement and helpe Ps 20 2. Helpe came from the Sanctuary and strength from Sion Strength and beautie are in his Sanctuary Ps 96.6 There they had councell to direct them Ordinances to Sanctifie them and promises to comfort them These they should not want in Babylon God would be to them such a Sanctuary as should afford them helpe Therefore he stirred up the Spirit of Jeremiah to write to the captives and to counsell them what to doe Jer 29.5 6.7 Build you houses and dwell in them plant Gardens and eat the fruit of them take Wives beget Sonnes and Daughters and take wives for your Sonn● and give your Daughters to Husbands that they may beare Sonnes and Daughters that yee may be increased there and not diminished And seeke the peace of the City whether I have caused you to be carryed away Captives and pray unto the Lord for it for in the peace thereof shall yee have peace And God gave them prophets in Babylon Though they had no materiall Temple to worship God in yet God would sanctifie them and give them grace to worship him metu interno Ezekiel and Daniel by whom he counseld them from tyme to time some Ordinances they had what they wanted God made up himselfe being a speciall Sanctuary unto them he also made Babylon an ordinance to cleanse them and for promises they had many divers in this Chapt. and others as the 34. the 36. Which is full of sweet gracious and comforting promises A little Sanctuary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Some take this word Adverbially and render it Paulisper So Polanus Junius and Castal God would be a Sanctuary to them a little time and so to point out the shortnesse of the time they should be in Babylon and thereby to comfort them against their Captivity 70 Yeares was not long and all that time they should have God a Sanctuary Others take the word adjectively Sanctuarium parvum or modicum so Montanus Pisc the Vulgar and the French Why his expression is layd downe a little Sanctuary we must inquire 1. In opposition to that they had at Jerusalem that was very beautifull rich and glorious set in Ivorie Ezek. 7. ●0 eyed of all resorted unto by all the Jewes and famous throughout the Earth God would be a Temple to them but not such a materiall conspicuous Temple You think upon that great glorious Temple are troubled for it I will be a little Temple to you 2. Little in regard of the paucitie that were there you are but a fe● and a little Temple will suffice you Vatab. hath it Templum pauc●rum Here they have no great Congregations but Exiguae domunculae supersunt in quibus congregatis adero Aecolamp and Calvi● Sanctuarium paucitatis many fell to the wayes of the Heathens being mingled with them they learned their wayes and served their gods few were godly 3. In regard of the hidden vertue power and goodnesse conveyed unto them which Babilonish eyes saw not they thougth their God had wholly forsaken them d d nothing for them but he was an invisible spirituall wonderfull and strange Sanctuary unto them all which was little to that they had in their owne Land there they had mercy more openly and more plentifully Will bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Et fui I have beene a little Sanctuary and will be Ps 69.11 I became a Proverb to them the word is Vaaebi I have been its future yet rendered in the preter tense and so much it sheweth here that God had been and would be a Sanctuary to his people in Babylon Obser 1 The harsh dealing of wicked and corrupt men with the godly occasions God to give out comfortable tru hs and promises unto them they at Jerusalem that were very evil said get yee farr from the Lord unto us is this Land given in possession therefore say thus saith the Lord c. because they spake so bitter therefore God speaks so comfortably because they rejected them denyed them to have to do with God or the land therfore God receives them tells them he will be a Sanctuary unto them When others beat the Child the Parents Bowells yerne especially if unjustly and shew the more ki●d●esse When Rabshakeh rayld against Hezekiah Gods People and blasphem'd from thence did the Lord take occasion to signifie by Isaiah to Hezekiah and the rest things very comfortable 2 Kings 19.6 Thus saith the Lord Be not affraid of the words which thou hast heard with which the servants of the King of Assyria have blasphemed me Behold I will send a blast upon him and he shall heare a rumor and returne to his owne Land and I will cause him to fall by the Sword in his owne Land God tooke a rise from the enemies blasphemies and rough proceedings against his people to give in promises of mercy to his and of destruction to them when the enemy had dealt barbarously with Rachell slaine and captiv'd her Children and she refused to be comforted because they were not hereupon the Lord steps in and saith Refraine thy voyce from weeping and thine eyes from teares for thy works shall be rewarded and they shall come againe from the Land of the enemy because they have destroyed thy Children therefore will I give thee Children because they are scattered abroad therefore they shall returne When the Pharisees had cast out the blind man Jesus sought him out found him and told him who he wa●
and miserable conditions God sends in hope and helpe they were now stript naked of all their comforts amidst Barbarians in a servile sinking condition saw no likelyhood of bettering their condition being under the hand of a potent and severe Adversary yet now hope and helpe comes in I will gather you you that are Captives desolate more low and miserable then ever you were even you will I gather thus God lets in comfort to them in their comfortlesse estate and its Gods way to doe so When the Israelites cryed in Aegypt by reason of their bondage when they were sorely afflicted saith the Text God heard them remembred them looked upon them and had respect unto them Exod 2.24 25. And in the next Chapter he appeares to Moses tells him he had seen their affliction knew their sorrows and was come to deliver them vers 7 8. When people are outwardly or inwardly low its Gods method frequently if not constantly to afford reliefe Psal 116.6 I was brought low and he helped mee He was low in Sauls dayes low in Absoloms but the Lord helped him When power is gone from a people and none to be found in publique or private to help a people then are they in an afflicted miserable condition yet then God affords helpe Deut. 32.56 So Nehem. 9.27 In the time of their trouble when they cryed unto thee thou heardest them from Heaven and according to thy manifold mercies thou gavest them Saviours When the Jews were brought low by Haman and at the borders of death all of them God appeared in Esther Abasuerus turned the storme upon Haman himselfe and helped the Jewes in that strait 3. Things which are hard and seem impossible to flesh a●d blood are easie unto God How difficult was it to the judgement of those Captives to conceive a returne they were farr from Jerusalem the journeys long and dangerous they at Jerusalem had rejected them they were under a mighty Tyrant the terrour of Nations they were scattered in severall places imployed to servile worke for the profit pleasure of the Chaldeans as digging in their Mines plowing of their Fields dressing of their Vines if they should stirre to get away the King had command of 127. Provinces and could presently raise Forces to fetch them back or cut them off c. These and such like thoughts made it seem difficult if not impossible to them that they should ever returne againe to Jerusalem but the Lord would gather them it was an easie act to him no more then a Shepheard gathering of his Flock into the fold he whistles or sends out his Dogg and presently they all runne into his Fold so when God spake the word mov'd the heart of Cyrus he made a Proclamation for the Jewes to go up to Jerusalem and presently it was done In Ezek. 37.11 You may read the Jewes apprehensions of their conditions they say Our bones are dryed our hope is lost we are cut off for our parts They thought themselves like dead and dry bones that lye in the bowels or on the face of the earth without hope of life or ever returning into their owne Land but by the Parable of the dry bones which at a word of Prophesie were inl●ve●ed raysed and made a great Army God shewed what he could easily doe in things seeming to man impossible and he applyes it to them Vers 12. Behold O my people I will open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves and bring you into the Land of Israel They conceived it as impossible for them to repossesse their Countrey as for a dead man to live bu● it was easie with God There is nothing too hard for God he could bring a great Nation out of Sarahs dead womb Gen. 18.14 Jer. 32.27 God tells them that he is the Lord the God of all flesh and then askes them this Question Is there any thing to hard for me Did I not bring you out of Aegipt Laed you through the red Sea through the Wildernesse set you in the pleasant Land and can I not bring you back into it though scattered up and downe in Babylon Vers 37. Behold I will gather you out of all Countries whither I have driven you in mine anger and will bring you to this place and cause you to dwell safely Luke 18.27 Things unpossible with m●n are possible with God 4. Lands and Countries are the Lords to dispose of to whom he pleases I will give you the Land of Israel the Earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof the World and they that dwell therein Psal 24.1 And he disposes the Kingdomes thereof Psal 115.16 The Earth hath he given to the Sonnes of men There is not a Sonne of man which hath any spot of Earth or Kingdome in the World but the Lord gave it him he rules in the Kingdomes of men he takes them away and gives them to whom he will Dan. 4.31 32. He is God of all the Kingdomes of the Earth Isa 37.16 And Cyrus acknowledged that God had given them all to him Ezra 1.2 Being the Lords he may justly dispose of them as seems good to himselfe This Land of Israel was possessed by Canaan the Son of Cham and called the Land of Canaan but his Posterity for their wickednesse were spued out of it Levit. 18.25 and then God gave it to the seed of Abraham Isaac and Jacob whose name was changed to Israel and thence his Posterity called Israelites and so this the Land of Israel but they through their Idolatry and oppression forfeited this Land and now God had given it into the hands of Nebuchadnezzar after they had possessed it 850. yeares Sin thrusts people out of their Countrey and robs them of their rights and priviledges Isa 13.22 And had not God given them this Land againe they had had little or no right to it God gave it to Abraham when the Canaanites had it and he gives it to the Israelites when the Chaldeans had it 5. The afflictions of the Church though great and grevious yet have their period now Israel was in Babylon their Countrey City Temple Ordinances Publique worship were gone They were amid'st Idolaters prophane blasphemous persons in a polluted place which was very sad yet this condition should have an end God would gather them out from Babylon into the holy and pleasant Land where they should enjoy choice mercies againe God will not alwayes chide The Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neither keepe his anger for ever Psal 103.9 Here at the beginning of their Captivity Gods heart was relenting and he laid in this gratious promise to refresh them Man when he is offended is not onely angry but bares grudges in his heart seeks revenge and the ruine of them have wrong'd him as Haman Mordecai and the Jewes but it 's not so with God he may be angry for 70 yeares but that is not alwayes for ever Isa 54.7.8 It was but a moment a small moment
Law but by the Preaching of Faith Gal. 3.2 and that spirit made their hearts tender When Job was in his great afflictions they softened not his heart but he sayth God made soft his heart Job 23.16 that was by his spirit Easily admitting or receiving this is the formall intrinsicall nature of this tendernesse that its like Wax taking in impressions the stony heart yeilds not but resists this resists not but yeilds like Gideons Fleece it drunke in the dew as fast as it fell Judges 6. Like the soft earth which drinkes in the raine not like the Rocks and Mountaines which shoot it off Heb. 6.7 Hence sayth Moses Deut 33.3 speaking of Saints who have tender hearts and sit at Gods feet Every one shall receive of thy words And Paul speaking of a naturall man 1 Cor. 2.14 he sayth The naturall man receives not the things of the spirit his heart is stony not tender and so without a capacity of receiving what ever spirituall things are propounded its ready to say as Samuel Speake for thy servant heareth 1 Sam. 3.10 Let God or any from God offer any spirituall things unto a tender heart its ready to receive them Acts 9.6 sayth Saul Lord what wilt thou have me to doe propound what thou pleasest unto me Discoveries of this tendernesse 1. It s affected with and mournes for that hardnesse remaines in it that it is not more tender and wrought upon by the mercies Ordinances judgements of God David was sensible of his hardnesse and deadnesse and therefore cryes oft to God for quickning Psal 119.154 Quicken me according to thy word 156. Quicken me according to thy judgements 159. Quicken me according to thy loving kindnesse 2. It feeles the least sins and rysings of corruptio● as some bodies are so tender that they discerne any distempers stirre in them presently others are hardy and discerne little till it come to some dangerous disease It s not so here a heart spiritually tender is sensible of the least sinne Davids heart smote him for cutting off c. the least moat in the eye crumme in the windpipe are troublesome to them and so the rysing of corruption the very being of sin in the heart is troublesome to a tender heart Paul saw and felt the Law in his members warring against c. 3. It hearkens and yeilds to reproofes Salt will not enter into a stone but into flesh seasons it and makes it savory Reproofes are Salt they enter into fleshy and tender hearts Prov. 17.10 A reproofe entereth more into a wise man then an hundred stripes into a foole Vatablus hath it Descendit in cordatum increpatio his heart is tender and a reproofe presently makes impression the doore opens and it goes in whereas the heart of a foole will not be beat open with many stripes Nec credit nec cedit but the tender hearted wise and godly beleeve and yeild David Psal 141.5 Let the righteous smite me it shall be a kindnesse and let him reprove me it shall be an excellent oyle Reproofes soften tender hearts harden stony ones Proverbs 29.1 4. It hath a lively sense of Gods dishonour and the Saints wrong 1. Of Gods dishonour Psal 119.136 Rivers of water run downe mine eyes because they keepe not thy Law When David saw Gods worship corrupted heard his name blasphemed beheld his Law openly violated his tender heart bled with●n him melted into teares and wept abundantly that the infinite holy glorious great God should be so dishonoured by sinfull dust and ashes And Psal 69.9 The reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me David reproved men that reproached God by their lips and lives and they reproached him for it Lots righteous soule was vexed at the filthy c. 2 Pet. 2.7 2. The Saints wrong and Churches suffering 2 Cor. 11.29 Who is offended and I burne not When any member of the Church suffered Paul was afflicted grieved as a man burnt with fire and the more tender the flesh is the greater is the paine and so in the heart the tenderer that is the greater sense and paine hath it of others sufferings especially the Churches read the 79. and 80. Psalmes and you shall see how greatly Asaph was afflicted for the miseries of the Church the Saints suffered m●ch without and he suffered much within they were broken in their states and comforts and he was broken in his heart and spirit so Jer. 9.1 O that my head were waters and mine eyes a fountaine of teares that I might weep day and night for the slaine of the daughter of my people Acts 12.5 When Peter c. As Christ was tender of the Sain s when persecuted by Saul Acts 9. So every member of Christ participating of his tendernesse feeles in his degree the injuries done to the rest 5. It trembles at the word of God Isa 66.2 Contrition of spirit and trembling at the word doe goe together there is such Majestie authoritie holynesse severitie and glory in the word that a tender heart trembleth at it 2 Chron. 34.27 Josiahs heart was tender he trembled and humbled himselfe before the Lord when the Law was read before him And those in Ezra trembled at the words of the God of Israel Chap. 9.4 6. It s obedient unto the call and will of God its Cor ●equax morem gerens domino let the Lord call it saith here I am what wilt thou have me to doe whether shall I goe I am ready for it Abraham had a tender heart and when God cal'd for his Isaac and bad him goe and offer him upon mount Moriah Gen 22. he had a tractable heart he yeilded presently to the Lord without any dispute or delay a tender heart is an obedientiall heart J siah was tender he●rted and he did the will of God most throughly of any of the Kings of Judah none of them did reforme so as he did 2 Chron 35.18 David was a man of a tender spirit and he fullfil●'d all the wills of God Acts 13.22 7. It s tender towards o he●s a tender heart hath a tender tongue and a tender hand the man hath such an heart speaks evill of none doth harme to none such an one is mercifull to his Beast much more to men he pities those are in a perishing way and would pull them out of the fire ahe Law of kindnesse is in his lips and actions of love are in his hands Jobs heart was soft Job 23.16 and you may finde what his words and actions were Chap. 29 11 12 13 15 16. When the eare heard me then it blessed me he spake such comfortable words to them gave them such good counsell that they blessed him for it and his actions were delivering the poor and fatherlesse helping the blind and lame and making the Widowes heart to rejoyce Tendernesse of heart breeds tendernesse towards others Its sayd of Esau he was red all over like a hairy Garment Gen. 25.25 hee was red and rough
bloody and bitter it were well there were no Sons of Esau in our days men bloody and bitter seeking the ruine of plaine hearted Jacobs If others by their rough speeches and dealings doe shew the hardnesse of their hearts let us by the softnesse of our tongues and bounty of our hands shew the tendernesse of our heart● Ephes 4.32 Be kind one to another tender hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you 8. It enterteines and reteines the motions and truths of Gods spirit a tender heart will not suffer the spirit to knock long at the doore Bereans received tke word with all readinesse of minde Acts 17.11 and then goe away grieved but it opens quickly and receives the message When the spirit came to Peter Acts 10.19 20. and bade him goe to Cornelius and Preach Christ unto him he went immediately When the Gospell was Preached to the Thessalonians in demonstration of the spirit it s sayd They received it with joy of the holy Ghost That joy of the holy Ghost may as well referre to the holy Ghost it selfe who rejoyced at their speedy receiving the word and spirit in it as to the Thessalonians who had joy wrought in them by receiving of the word 2 Cor. 3.3 the Corinthians had fleshy hearts and they are cald the Epistle of Christ and why because the spirit had writ the Gospell in them with ease Moses had much adoe to write the Law in the Tables of stone but the spirit did it easily in the fleshy Tables of their hearts those truths are written in the heart are held so fast that men will rather loose their lives then loose them Obser 1. A Tender heart is a choice and great mercy where this is the understanding is apprehensive of Divine things the Lord Christ who was without sin and so nothing but tendernesse was quick of understanding Isa 11.3 and the more free from sin our hearts are the quicker our understandings will be Mat. 13.15 Where there is a grosse and hard heart there is an un-understanding heart an unperceiving heart Mark 8.17 On the contrary where a tender heart is there is the clearest understand●ng The will is plyable to the truth of the Gospel Rom. 6 1● Yee have obeyed from the heart that forme of Doctrine which was delivered you and into which yee were delivered The conscience is awake and will not indure the guilt of any sin to lye upon it Peter had sin'd but he goes out and weepes bitterly The affections are lively and stir much towards God David had a tender heart and how strongly did his affections stir after God Psal 42.1.2 As the heart panteth after the water brooks so panteth my soule after thee O God my soule thirsteth for God for the living God when shall I come and appeare before God Psa 63.8 My soule followeth hard after thee and the zeale of thy house c. It s that the Lord intends to write his whol will in Jer. 31.33 I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts first he will make them soft and then write in the Law and Gospell It receives discipline correction Jer. 5 3. Thou hast stricken them but they have refused to receive correction they have made their faces harder c. An hard heart doth not receive correction but a tender one doth 2. It is the gift of God he gives this tender heart unto us we can harden our hearts through sining but we cannot soften them being once hardned by any meanes we use Tendernesse of heart is a speciall grace so i● onenesse of heart newnesse of spirit and all these are from God who is stiled The God of all grace 1 Pet. 5.10 There is not any grace but what is from God he is the author of it In this case of an heart of flesh he puts his hand into the heart and pulls out the stone and puts in tendernesse He that can turne stones into children Mat. 3.9 is he that turnes stony hearts into flesh and this he doth freely there is no motive of his will Phil. 2.13 His working is of his good pleasure James 1.18 Of his owne will begat he us Not the pleasure of man or his will appeares in this worke God consults not with man about it but doth the work himself I will take away the stone c. It is exclusive and shuts out all Isa 44.3 I will poure floods upon dry ground hence those sweet promises Isa 41.18 I will open Rivers in high places and Fountaines in the mid'dst of the Valeys I will make the Wild●rnesse a poole of water and the dry Land springs of water I will plant in the windernesse the Cedar the shittah trees the mertle and the oyle tree I will set in the desart the firre tree the pine and the boxe tree together that they may see know consider understand together that the hand of the Lord hath done this and the holy one of Israel hath created it God softens the heart by dropping his word upon it Deut. 32.2 My doctrine shall drop at the raine c. By the blood of Christ by revealing his free grace c. VERS 20. That they may walke in my statutes and keepe mine Ordinances and doe them and they shall be my people and I will be their God c. HEre is the end of Gods grace and goodnesse towards them with an asserting of such to be his and his promise to be their God Obser God multiplies mercies when he is in a way of mercy when he is giving out promises he gives not one or two but many Jer. 31.33.34 There is an heape of promises so in Ezek. 36.25.26.27.28.29 There be eight or nine promises together Hos 14.4.5.6.7 Promise after promise is given out Isa 60. Is full of sweet promises one after another This is a sweet Subject to meditate upon but I come to open the words That they may walke Walking here is metaphoricall taken from the motion of the body moving by steps from place to place and is applyed to the conversation and life of man in a spirituall sense and imports progresse in the way of God Psal 119.1 In my statutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word Chukkim notes rites pertaining to the Ceremoniall Law cald also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not onely ●o but Chukkim includes the whole Ceremoniall Law the Seaventie doe sometimes translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Commandement which Mitzuoth properly signifies containing the Morrall Law or Tenne Commandements and not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but Deut. 4.40 They render Mitzuoth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Chukkim by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 2.15 Paul calls Chukkim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Law of Commandements in Ordinances Mine Ordinances 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mishphatim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judgements these some refer to the outwa●d policie of Israel their civill estate but statutes and
Ordinances are used promiscuously And here by them I conceive is ment the whose Law of God revealed This walking in his statutes is set out in holy writ by such expressions as these Viz. Walking after the Lord. Deut. 13.4 Walking before God 1 Kings 9.4 Walking in the light of the Lord. Isa 2.5 Walking in the truth John Epist 3. Vers 4. Walking in the name of the Lord Micah 4.5 Walking according to rule Gal. 6.16 And Walking with God Gen. 6.9 Keepe mine Ordinances Keeping imports 1. Remembring Luke 2.51 Mary kept all these sayings in her heart 2. Holding fast 2 Tim. 1.14 The good thing committed to thee keep that is hold fast here we must take in both remembering and holding fast but in order to doeing men may know remember and hold fast the mind of God but not doe the same Deut. 5.1 Heare O Israel the statutes and Judgements which I speake in your eares this day and keepe and doe them the Hebrew is keepe to doe them Doe them Doing implies 1. The performing and practice of them Psal 15.5 Facere ●st exacte custodire decenter quicquam operari He that doth these things shall never be moved 2. Fullfilling of things required 1 Kings 5.8 Saith Hiram to Solomon I will doe all thy desire that is fullfill thy desire both may be understood here not simply to doe but to doe exactly Obser 1. The end of Gods giving us temporall and spirituall mercies is that we should be obedient unto him He gathered them out of Babylon planted them in Canaan gives them onenesse of heart newnesse of spirit c. And why that they might walke in his statutes and keepe his Ordinances God hireth us with mercies to doe his will Psal 105.43.44.45 He brought forth his People with joy and his chosen with gladnesse and gave them the Lands of the Heathen and they inheritied the labour of the People that they might observe his statutes and keepe his Law 2 Sam. 12.7.8.9 David was obliged by Gods bountie to obedience why did God so much for his Vineyard Isa 5.2 but that it might bring forth Grapes the end of all mercies and meanes offorded us were to make it fruitfull in obedience All in Gods works in his word are so many inducements to obedience God hath given us the Earth and fullnesse of it and the end is to provoke us thereby to walke in his statutes He hath given us his good word choyce O●dinances Heavenly Councells pretious promises profitable commands holy examples and his end in all these is to quicken us up to obedience It s the end of Election 1 Pet. 1.2 It s the end of Redemption Luke 1.74.75 It s the end of our new Creation Ephes 2.10 Paul beseeches the Romans By the mercies of God to present their Bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto God Our mercies should prevaile with us we are Planted in a good Land we have the dewes of Heaven and fatnesse of the Earth God hath done great things amongst us and for us we have had wonderfull Deliverances and shall not we be incouraged thereby to walke in the statutes of our God Deut. 11.7.8 Your eyes have seene all the great Acts of the Lord which he did therefore shall you keepe all the Commandements which I command you this day Let the great things we have seen and heard put us upon obeying the Lord and so obeying him that our obedience may be 1. Generall God requires you should walke in all his wayes Deut. 10.12 2. Heartie yea with the whole heart Deut. 26.16 3. Constant Deut. 4.9 Gal. 6.9 4. Willing chearfull Phil. 2.14 Deut. 28.47 5. With strength and courage Josh 23.6 If we doe not walk in the statutes of the Lord and keepe his commands we know not God 1. John 2.3.4 We doe not love God 1 Joh. 5.3 Nor Christ Joh. 14.15 Our prayers will be unfruitfull and succeslesse 1 John 3.22 2. Note that walking in Gods statutes keeping his Ordinances and doing his will doe evidence the worke of grace in the heart and what the man is God would give them onenesse of heart newnesse and tendernesse of spirit that they might walk keepe doe c. If then they did so this declared what was within Luke 1.6 Zacharie and Elizabeth were both righteous before God walking in all the Commandements and Ordinances of the Lord blamelesse their w●lking witnessed their righteousnesse see 1 John 3.10 2 Chap. 29. Luke 6.44 What ever the fruit is such is the Tree Figgs doe not grow upon thornes nor Grapes upon brambles where you finde Grapes it is a Vine and not onely doth God and Christ know them but Mat. 7.16 you shall know them by their Fruits not by their leaves but their fruits not some few actions but by a dayly observat●●n of them sometimes delay and times alwayes attention is required to discerne them 2 Tim. 3.5 Having a form of godlinesse c. this may be discerned for vers 9. Their folly shall be manifest to all men James 2.18 Works ●re the glasse picture Child of faith Adam begat a Sonne after his Image and faith begets Children after its owne Image Abrahams offering of his Sonne dec●a●ed his faith Heb. 11.17 Works justifie faith and faith justifies the man Some doubt whether works will prove grace whether sanctification will evidence justification But John tells us there is a witnesse of Water as well as of blood and of the spirit 1 Joh. 5.8 if the Law written in Bookes may be knowne and the sense of it evidenced by Commentaries surely the Law written in the heart may be knowne and evidenced by works 3. Grace in the heart will appeare in the life if there be a new spirit a tender heart there will be walking in the Statutes A new spirit cannot be imprisoned within but it will breake out into action when the seed is sowne in good ground it will not lye long under ground but spring forth Marke 4.20 Grace is light and that will manifest it selfe vers 21.22 God hath determined that hidden things shall bee manifested grace cannot alwayes be hid 1 Pet. 2.9 Such vertue will out 1 Thes 1.5.6.7 The Coritnhians were the Epistle of Paul written in his heart read and knowne of all men The Romans faith was spoken of throughout the World Rom. 1.8 That was in all the Churches of the World So their obedience Chap. 16.19 There be diverse things cannot be hidden as the light fire life the wind a spring and of this nature is grace which is all those its light and fire John was a burning and shining light Its life Luke 15.24 It s the wind of the spirit Cant. 4.16 Joh. 3.8 It s a Spring Joh. 7.38 A good Tree cannot bring forth evill fruit and it cannot but bring forth good fruit Acts 4.20 We cannot but speake the things we have heard and seene Paul when converted presently said Lord what wilt thou have me to doe He would not be idle
Hos 14.4 2. The presence of God amongst them Levit. 26.11.12 The Jewes were Gods people and he saith I will set my Tabernacle amongst you and will walk among you and be your God and ●ou shall be my People The Tabernacle and walking were arguments of his presence and evidenced him to be their God God is essentially present every where but especially present with his People Rev. 21.3 No Creature no Angel no representation of God but God himselfe shall be with them as a Father with his Children as a Husband with his Wife God will not onely be with them but in them 2 Cor. 6.16 He will indwell in them and walke in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. The peculiar and speciall care of God over them Deut. 32.10.11.12 The Lord was as tender to them as any Creature could be to her young the Eagle is very carefull of her young carrying them not in her Tallons but on her wings So God deals by his People he preventeth harms that might befall them Psal 68.7 He went forth before his People and did march in the front of them through the Wildernesse Psal 77.20 Isa 26.20 God doth provide for and protect his People Deut. 33.27 Psal 125.2 Isa 4.5 Vpon all the glory shall be a defence 4. Deliverance if in streights dangers misery Exod. 3.10 I have seen the oppression come now therfore and I will send thee unto Pharaoh that thou mayest bring forth my People out of Aegypt Ezek. 37.12 Behold O my People I will open your graves and cause you to come up out of your graves Where God is a God to any he is a delivering God he is affected with their condition and sufferings Exod. 3.7 Isa 63.9 1 Sam. 9.16 Isa 3.15 5. Singular comfort Rev. 21.3.4 They shall be his people and God himselfe shall be with them be their God and he shall wipe away all tears from their eyes and there shall be no more death nor sorrow nor crying nor paine Isa 40.1.49.13.30.26.51.3 He doth encourage and hearten them Isa 41.10 6. Speaking and pleading for them Isa 51.22 Thus saith the Lord the Lord and thy God that pleadeth the cause of his people Their cause is many times like to suffer men are unwise unfaithfull mannage it strangely but God will plead the cause of his people and he will not do it faintly as if he cared not whether his people should have the day or no but to purpose will he doe it Jer. 50.34 Their redeemer is strong the Lord of hosts is his name he shall throughly plead their cause that he may gaine lest unto the Land and disquiet the inhabitants of Babylon Mica 7.9 Joel 3.2 7. Exalting and honouring of them Deut. 26.18.19 The Lord hath avouched thee to be his peculiar people and what then To make thee high above Nations in praise in name in honour God makes his people renewed Isa 28.5 He is a Crowne of glory unto them Isa 60.11 Thy God thy glory Jer. 2.11 Isa 43.4 8. Teaching and instructing of them Isa 28 26. his God doth instruct him to discretion Isa 51.4 Hearken unto me my people and give ear unto me my Nation for a Law shall proceed from me and I will m●ke my judgement to rest for a light of the people Deut. 4.36 Isa 48.17 9. Delight in them Isa 65.19 I will joy in my people no freinds can rejoyce more in one another no bridegroome more in his bride then God in his people them he calls his strength and his glory Psal 78.61 Yea a Crowne of glory Isa 62.3 Thou shalt be a Crowne of glory in the hand of the Lord and a royall diadem in the hand of thy God No King can delight more in a Crowne then the Lord doth in his people which are his Crowne Gods people are near unto him Psal 148.14 They are his jewells Mal. 3.17 His Portion Deut. 32.9 His Heritage Joel 2.17 His peculiar Treasure Exod. 19.5 The Hebrew Word Segullah noteth an exquisite treasure a thing very desirable singular and peculiar Eccles 2.8 The peculiar treasure of Kings Aquila hath it substance Vatablus a treasure intirely beloved Gods people are his choyce treasure dearly bloved Things we delight in we oft thinke upon and speake of and you may find this expression oft Viz. His treasure or peculiar people it s in Deut. 7.6 speciall people it s the same word so in Deut. 14.2.26.18 Psal 135.4 Titus 2.14 1 Pet. 2.9 10. Blessing and communicating choice and satisfying mercies where a People are his he will Crowne and load them with variety of blessings Psal 3 8. Thy blessing is upon thy People thy people are distingu shed from all others and thy blessings are distinct from all others Gods blessings note a plentifull bestowing of all good things as appeares Gen. 24.35 Ephes 1.3 Among his people are all his springs the lower and upper ones He blessed them with choice mercies with his secrets Psal 25.14 With his name Dan. 9.19 Isa 63.19 The Shulamite was so cald from Solomon Cant. 6.12 When God takes a people to himselfe that people is marryed unto him and it hath his name the Church is cald Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 With his holynesse Hebr. 12.10 With the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 With grace and glory Psal 84.11 Yea with satisfying mercies Psal 65.4.36.8 He will satisfy them with goodnes Jer. 31.14 With himselfe Gen. 15.1 Obser 1. God prepares a people for himselfe and then marries that people unto himselfe he gives them onenesse newnesse tendernesse of heart and spirit and then they shall be his people and he will be their God Ezek. 16.6.8 When thou wast in thy blood I said unto thee live I spread my skirt over thee and covered thy nakednesse and thou becamest mine when Abraham was come out of his Country had left his idolatrous wayes walked uprightly before God then he hears I am thy God and the God of thy seed Gen. 17.7 This is the way of Christ Ephes 5.26.27 He is sanctifiing and cleansing of his Church that he may present it to himselfe a glorious Church without spot 2. It s great happinesse to have God to be our God many thinke happinesse to lye in other things but in nothing else onely in this it consists Psal 33.12 Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord and the people wbom he hath chosen for his owne inheritance They are the bless●d people Psal 144.15 It is not thousands of Cattel ful barns laughter in the streets peace and plenty which make a people happy the happinesse of a people is in having God to be theirs Great parts honours friends estates doe not happifie a man but happy is he that hath the God of Jacob for his helpe whose hope is in the Lord his God Psal 146.5 When God is the God of a people he will doe great things for them 2 Sam. 7.23 He wil shew them the power of his workes Psal 111.6 He will not leave his people 1
Sam. 12.22 When Heaven and Earth shake the Lord will be the hope of his people Joel 3.16 The Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the place of repaire or harbour 3. It is free grace and favour that God doth take any people to be his and becometh a God unto people chuse not God he saith They shall be my people and I will be their God We are vile in our natures wicked in our works no lovelinesse or profitablenesse is in us or by u● Ezek. 16.5.6 When thy person was loathed and thou wast polluted in thy blood I sayd unto thee live There is nothing in a Nation that sets his heart a work to doe a people good it was not their greatnesse moved him Deut. 7.7 They were the fewest of all people nor their goodnesse for what was their father Abraham Josh 24.2.3 Terah Abraham and Nachor were idolaters they served other Gods saith the text and I took your Father Abraham so when God tooke his seed in Aegypt they were idolatrous Ezek. 20.5.6.7 There is no righteousnesse in people to moove God neither can any sin in them hinder God from putting forth acts of his free grace D●u 32.10 Speaking of Israel he found him in a desart Land and in the wast howling Wildernesse to which some allusion may be Cant. 8.5 God found out and tooke this people in a wicked lost distressed condition and brought them out by his power and made them his people by his grace 1 Sam. 12.22 It pleased the Lord to make them his people 4. God doth not equally dispense his grace and favour some are his people and he is their God others are not many Nations were left when the Jewes were taken yea all other Nations Amos 3.2 You onely have I knowne of all the Families of the Earth The Lords favour fell upon the Jewes and not others Some infer from Gen. 22.18 In thy seed shall all Nations of the Earth be blessed that God loves all equally at that time he did not the words are a promise of what should be not of what was neither is it so now for if he l●ves all alike why doth he deny the means of grace to many Nation why doth he not blesse and make the same effectu●l equally to al where they are Besids such an opinion over ●●ow Election Gods dominion over the Creatures and his freedome in dispensation of grace and mercy John 10.26 Acts 13.48 5. Those are the Lords have a strong ground to plead with God in prayer for any mercy Where is relation and intrest there is encouragement to aske if God be ours and we his surely we may plead with him for great things in our prayers The people of God did so of old Jer. 14.9 Psal 80.4 Isa 64.9 Deut. 9.26 2 Chron. 20.12 Chap. 14.11 VERS 21. But as for them whose heart walketh after the heart of their dteestable things and their abominations I will recompence their way upon their owne heads saith the Lord GOD. THis Verse is a threatning to those should persist in their evill wayes yet a comfort to the godly that the Lord would judge them and ease them of them Detestable things and abominations These words have been opened in the 18. vers and Chap. 5.11.7.20 Quorum cor ambulat ad cor Heart of their detestable things Hebrew is their heart going to the heart of their detestable things Aprez le desire de leur infametes Idolls have an interpretative desire to be worshipped Heart is sometimes put for the midst of a thing Exod. 15.8 The heart of the Sea Which is cald Ezek. 27.4 The midst of the Sea So their heart was in the midst of their Idols or amongst their Idols what was delightfull in them that was as the heart of the Idoll and their hearts were carryed thereunto Or thus you may take the words they conceiv'd some deity to be in their Idols and they labourd to please and doe those things delighted the heart of that deity Those rites ceremonies wayes whereby they worshipped their Idolls may be cald the heart of their detestable things It was a law among the Heathens that every God should be worshipped as he thought good and the way prescribed by him of worshipping was as the heart and life of the Idoll and the Idolatry I will recompence their way upon thtir owne heads Of these words see what hath been said Chap. 9.10 Chap. 7.3.4.8 That when the Lord makes gracious promises to a people Obser 1. they doe not refer to and fetch in all This Observation rises from the two former Verses this laid together God promises to give them onenesse newnesse tendernesse of heart he promiseth that he will be their God and they shall be his people These promises were absolute yet made good unto some of the Captives not unto all But as for them whose heart walketh after c. They should not come within the compasse of them Many promises of the Lord are delivered indefinitely without restriction and absolutely without condition and yet are made good onely to some even those are given of the father unto Christ many of these after the Captivity never had these promises made good unto them yet God was faithfull in that some had the fruit and comfort of them 2. Tares Hypocrites and naughty ones will be in the Church alwayes some had new spirits tender hearts and walkt in Gods Statutes others had old spirits hard hearts and walked after detestable things some threw away all abominable things and others there hearts went after them They comming out of Babilon and laying the foundation of a new Church it was probable that none but choice ones should have been of it or in it but their were Usurers Sabbath-breakers and such had mingled themselves with strange Wives Nehem. 5. 13. C ham was in the A●ke Judas among the Apostles the Church abounded with Hypocrites in Christs dayes Matth. 13.30 there will be Tares among the Wheat to the end of the World 3. Afflictions great and long doe not sanctifie they were to be in Captivity and that seventy yeares yet after their returne the hearts of many would be carryed to their detestable things It s granted that after they came out of Babylon they never fell to Idolatry that is the body of them did not but doubtlesse some particulars did their hearts went to the heart of their detestable things when they saw some of the old Idols or relicks of them they were affected with them Affl ctions of themselves purge not out corruption nor take the heart off from evill things 4. Mens hearts are in false wayes and worship they take pleasure in superstitious and idolatrous practices Things invented by men and brought into the worship of God are pleasing to humane senses to carnall reason mens corruptions and so take their hearts when the Calfe was made Exod. 32.19 they were greatly affected with it and danced about it 1 Pet. 4.3 Lasciviousnesse
they said What doest thou God mindes the Servants he imployes there words and actions shall not be in vain He makes speedy inquiry here after all In the morning came the word of the Lord unto me saying Sonne of man hath not the house of Israel said unto thee c. If they understood them not it was their duty to come to the Prophet for resolution and his duty to resolve them VERS 10 11 12 13 14. Say thou unto them Thus saith the Lord God This burden concerneth the Prince in Jerusalem and all the house of Israel that are among them Say I am your signe as I have done so shall it be done unto them they shall remoove and goe into captivity And the Prince that is among them shall bear upon his shoulder in the twylight and shall goe forth they shall dig thorow the wall to carry out thereby he shall cover his face that he see not the ground with his eyes My net also will I spread upon him and he shall be taken in my snare and I will bring him to Babylon to the Land of the Chaldaeans yet shall he not see it though he shall die there And I will scatter toward every wind all that are about him to helpe him and all his bands and I will draw out the Sword after them IN these Verses you have the application of the type to the Prince and all the house of Israel which is in generall laid downe in the 10. Verse then the common calamity of both in the 11. Verse They shall goe into captivity Then a more speciall application of it to the King in the 12. 13. Verses where his bearing stuffe upon his shoulder his flight digging through the wall and covering his face are set downe together with his apprehension excaecation deportation into Babylon and death there This burden H●mmassa from Nasa to lift up a word so rich in signification and efficacy Vt vix centum aliarum linguarum verbis explicentur ejus divitiae Pradus it may be rendered this burdensome doctrine or prophecy which these types doe speak by burden is meant the typicall signe of captivity which was a burden to the Prophet to act to open unto them a burden to them to hear and especially to bear grievous prophesies are cald burdens in scripture Nabum 1.1 Hab. 1.1 so Isa 15.1.17.1.19.1 The Prince It was Zedekiah a wicked and timerous King the Hebrew is Hannasi from Nasi to lift up either because he is lift up above the people or should populi onera levare ease and lighten the greivances of the people as they in Exod. 18.22 But if they grow tyrannicall and impose heavy burdens upon the people the Lord hath a burden for them as here Zedekiah must dig through the wall carry forth on his shoulder flye c. This you may see fullfill'd Jer. 52.7.8.9.10.11 Where you have his flight mentioned the Chaldaeans persuit and apprehension of him his carrying to Riblath where his eyes were put out and after to Babylon where he dyed Say I am the signe c. This relates to the few in Babylon they conceiv'd there should no judgemtnt befall Jerusalem nor the men there by this typicall worke of the Prophet the Lord shewes them their error that it should not be well with them at Jerusalem its true they condemne you for remooving into Babylon and justifie themselves that they are the onely people righteous and acceptable unto me and therefore are safe in Jerusalem but you shall see and they shall know how vaine and foolish their thoughts and reasonings are as I have dealt with you so will I doe by them they shall be made C●ptives very speedily and meet with sorer judgements then you did My net alsa will I spread upon him and he shall be taken in my snare These words you have again in the 17. Chap. 20. Verse The Chaldaeans here are likned unto Fisher men who usually dwell by the water sides now Babylon was among the waters Euphrates and Tygris running by it or through it hence Jer. 51.13 O thou that dwellest upon many waters Therefore fitly are they compar'd to Fisher-men and the Armie was the net a net spreads abroad compasses and catches by this net was Zedekiah the Princes City and all pretious things therein taken In my snare Lam. 3.13 He hath spred a net for my feet Snares are for the Land and its thought to be a hunters snare such as is set for wild Beasts which beeing hunted and chased hard are driven into snares and so taken they are set secretly catch suddenly hold certainly The hebrew word Meizudab as Junius observes signifies also a strong hold and in this sense it may represent to us Riblath whether Zedekiah was carryed where he receiv'd judgement and had his eyes put out or that hold he was put ●nto in Babylon Obser 1. The great mercy and goodnesse of God who takes occasion from their sin to afford them this mercy the exposition of this type they were stupid and minded not the Prophet and his actions or if they did they derided him as a foolish or madd man to doe such things hence the Lord is pleased to take an advantage to acquaint them with it have they not asked thee what doest thou Say thou unto them thus saith the Lord this burden concerns the Prince c. Hos 2.13.14 Isa 57.17.18 Gen. 8.21 In those places God takes occasion from mans sin to shew mercy So in Joh. 20.25.27 From Thomas his unbeleife c. Takes an opportunity to come and shew his wounds c. 2. To secure and confident sinners God will render judgement most certainly and impartially Say to them as I have done so shall it be done unto you What ever their thoughts are at Jerusalem or yours here their condition shall be like yours have you been afflicted with Warre Famine Plague have you lost the Temple City your Countrey and estates are you brought into an Heathenish Land so shall it be with them 3. The Lord hath burdens for Princes if they be wicked there be burdensome Prophecies against them and burdensome judgements for them Zedekiah did evill in the sight of the Lord 2 K. 24.19 And you may see what burdens he had 1. A burden of fear he durst stay no longer and Jer. 38.19 I am afraid of the Jewes fallen unto the Chaldaeans least they deliver me into their hand 2. A burden of shame he covers his face he will see none nor be seen of any he leaves Jerusalem in a shamefull manner carrying some burden upon his shoulder as if he were some vulgar man he is disguised as being asham'd of a Princely title 3. A burden of flight he is put to it to flie for his life 4. A burden of darknesse in the evening or night he steales away 5. A burden of difficulties he must dig through a wall goe in by-wayes 6. A burden of sad judgements 1. He is taken by
21.8 Thine hand shall finde out all thine enemies thy right hand shall finde out those that hate thee 9. Thou shalt make them as a fiery Oven in the time of thine anger 1 Sam 5.7 His hand is soar upon us Chap. 6.3 It shall be knowne why his hand is not remooved from you God had smitten them with the Emrods and that they call the hand of God the phrase here implyes that God will in some speciall manner punish these Prophets They shall not be in the assemblie of my people Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Montanus interprets in Secreto Va●ablus in arcano the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the instructing of my people they shall not Prophesie or preach unto them their liberty and power of speaking shall be taken from them French It s ne serout plus au conseil de mon peuple They shall be no more of the counsell of my people Castalio ut in meorum concilio non sint Junius In consilio populi mei one is with C. the other with S. That with C. Notes the companie of Gods people Pisc the other with S. Notes the counsells of that company some have it Iucaetu populi mei in the company of my people This differ●nce of interpreting the word arises from the severall significations of the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a secret councell and the company of those who consult or counsell If we take it here for secret they shall not be in the secret of my people and so besides those mentioned the Chalde Paraphrast saith Non erunt in seoreto then the sense is they shall not know those secrets nor pertake of that good which I reserve for to make knowne and communicate to my people Oecolam The Targum hath it thus In occultis bonis quae reposita sunt populo non habebuntur They shall not be accounted among those secret good things which are laid up for my people Prophets were great mercies for people and God gave them out upon occasion but these should not be numbred amongst them they should be detected and have their reward This secret of Gods people is some choyce knowledge of God and his will beyond what is vulgarly knowne by men of the World Psal 25.14 The secret of the Lord is with them that feare him Prov. 3.32 His secret is with the righteous Micaiah knew the secret of the Lord touching Ahab which neither Zedekiah nor any other of the false Prophets knew 1 King 2.4 Mic. 3.7 The Lord revealeth his secret unto his servants the Prophets not to those are false and against him If we take is for assembly as the word is sometimes used in holy Writ as Jer. 6.11 I will powre out my fury upon the assemblies of young men Hence Sodalitium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Super congregationem juvenum then we must inquire what assemblies are meant There were two kind of Assemblies among the Jewes First An Assembly of Elders Psal 107.32 I will praise him in the Assembly of Elders these were the Magistrates and Senators that had authority and bare rule over the people it might be the Seventy or Sanedrim bemoshab Zekenim in cathedra seniorum Secondly An Assembly of Saints Psal 89.7 God is greatly to be feared in the Assembly of Saints the Jewes were a holy people and when there were publique Congregations of them they were an Assembly of Saints To this Pradus applyes that in Psal 1 5. the ungodly shall not stand in judgment You may understand it of both Assemblies that these false Prophets should neither come amongst the Senators to sit in Councell there to consult about any matters of State or Church nor amongst the Saints they should have no communion with Gods people and this sense I like best for tbe Prophets came to Ecclesiastick meetings as appeares 2 Kings 23.2 The Prophets were present when Josiah read the Booke of the Covenant Jerem. 26.7 the Priests and Prophets heard Jeremiah in the House of the Lord. Neither shall they be written in the writing of the house of Israel What this writing of the house of Israel was search must be made Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the Scripture of the house of Israel they shall not be written by Scripture some understand the Canonicall Bookes of Moses and the Prophets and will have the sense to be that the prophesies of these false prophets should not be written in or among those Books but surely it was never in the thoughts of any true prophet that the lyes and vanities of false prophets should be joyned to sacred Writ What hath the Chaffe to doe with the Wheat We must look out some other meaning of these words When it pleased the Lord to bring his people out of Aegypt he commanded them to be numbred Numb 1.2 3. The names and number of all from twenty yeares old and upwards were to be taken and when they were numbred they were to give every man a ransome for his soule unto the Lord Exod. 30.12 In like manner when they came out of Babylon they were numbred as appeares Ezra 2. and 8. Chap. Nehem. 7. Where you have the number set downe Vers 66.67 the whole Congregation together was forty two thousand three hundred and threescore besides men and Maid servants seven thousand three hundred thirty seven and two hundred forty five Singing Men and Women The Catalogues in which the names of these were writ are judged to be the writings of the house of Israel by these the Tribes were knowne preserved distinct and those were not found in the writing were displaced Nehem 7.64 These sought their Register among those that were reckoned by Genealogy but it was not found therefore were they as polluted put from the Priesthood Isa 4.3 Every one that is written among the living in Jerusalem shall be called holy He speakes of great calamity a destruction which should be upon the Jewes and few should escape but he that was left and written among the living c. All those who came to Jerusalem from the Captivity and were Citizens thereof were written in some Book Catalogue or Register which was the writing of the house of Israel and was called also the Booke of life or of the living For upon the death of a man his name was razed out of this Booke or if he did any thing unworthy the name and right of a Citizen and then he was counted as a dead man The sense of these words you may hence then take up thus Viz. These false Prophets shall be reckoned amongst the dead not the living they shall not be written in the writing of the house of Israel when they come back to Jerusalem they shall be like trees puld up and never planted againe they shall be cut off and destroyed by some soare judgement In this sense some take those words of Moses Exod. 32.32 Blot me out of thy booke which thou
be pleasing to other carnall hearts and least you may thinke I deceive you observe the next Verse They say still unto them that despise me the Lord hath sayd yee shall have peace and they say unto every one that walketh after the imagination of his owne heart No evill shall come upon you What is more pleasing to man then to have his owne mind doe his owne will Isa 3.12 They which lead thee are they which call thee blessed walke after the imaginations of his owne heart and what softer words more suitable to him can be sayd then no evill shall come upon him false Prophets speake Verba lactis Milkie Oylie words such as please men and battle their humours and so have a great advantage with men who love to be humor'd but true Prophets speake Verba veritatis which have salt and fire in them and so crosse fret provoke mens lusts and stirre up their hatred against them and as the other with their lyes and flatteries find favour with men so these for their truths with God who loves truth Paul durst not Preach to please men but Christ Gal. 1.10 John would not please Herod 3. The Prophesies and Doctrines of false Teachers seem unto them and those cleave to them to have much strength they built up a wall walls are things of strength be they Earth Timber or Stone Walls they prophesied peace that Nebuchadnezzar should not come against them or depart if he came without prejudice to them they sayd that the Vessells and people should speedily returne from Babylon c. These Doctrines of thei●s were as walls unto them of strength and defence Solomon tells us that A rich mans riches are a high wall in his owne conceite Prov. 18.11 and so the opinions and tenets of false Teachers are a high wall in their owne conceits they thinke the people are strengthened and secured by them There are scarcely any opinions abroad be they never so erroneous hereticall blasphemous tending to licentiousnesse but the Authors of them judge them to have strength in them and looke upon them as walls to advantage the people and those are deceived by them think the like of them 4. That false Prophets and Teachers doe concurre and mutually endeavour to countenance and strengthen each others Doctrines and Tenets one built up a Wall and loe others daubed it the true Prophets oft prophesied the same things and so strengthened the hands each of other and so did the false Prophets they improv'd their art and parts to strengthen one another they brought their Visions Divinations Dreams Lyes and whatever they had to playster and daube up this wall they told them of Gods mercy Covenant Promise to dwell at Jerusalem for ever how greatly God was delighted with that place that they were a holy people had the Law Ordinances Sacrifices which none else in the World had that God had no Church but them and therefore unlikely that ever he would destroy them that his heart was towards them thus they agreed all in falshood and strengthened themselves and the people in wickednesse So all the false Prophets concurred in deceiving Ahab Zedekiah the cheife makes hornes and saith With these shalt thou push the Syrians till they be consumed 5. Whatever Prophets give out of their owne unto the people its weake unsollid and unserviceable these Prophets prophesied of their owne heads out of their owne spirits they had nothing from God and what was all but untempered Morter a thing unsavory and foolish did any of their Visions Divinations or Prophesies strengthen the hearts or hands of this people were they not altogether seduced by them they fil'd them with vaine hopes flattered them in their sinfull wayes prophesied of peace and plenty and so healed the hurt of Gods people slightly they skin'd it over with faire words but did not search it to the bottome Jer. 8.11 and launce it with sound and wholesome truths they brought of their owne not of the Lords and therefore it was unserviceable they brought lyes Jer. 27.10 False dreames Jer. 23.32 The deceit of their owne hearts Vers 26. False Visions D●vinations and things of nought Chap. 14.14 Can lyes dreames deceits false and things of naught strengthen or build up The truths and Doctrines of God are sollid savory strengthening lutum paleatum well tempered Morter they are tempered with the glorie wisedome mercy and love of God with the blood of Christ with the power of the spirit and they will build up a Wall be strength unto us Zecharie 1.13 his words are good and comfortable Mic. 2.7 they do good Psal 91.4 His truth is a Sheild and Buckler its sure and will not deceive 2 Pet. 1.19 The Doctrines of the Apostles confirmed the Brethren and the Churches Acts 14.22 15.32 The Doctrines and Opinions of men are windy deceitfull things and hinder growth and strength Eph. 4.14 but the truths of God cause growth in all things and so strengthen making us firme as Walls What men bring of their owne 2 Pet. 2.3 are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fained words untempered Morter but what they have from God are wholesome words and Doctrines according to godlinesse 1 Tim. 6.3 6. Seducing of people by false flattering unsound Doctrines doth greatly provoke God Because even because they have seduced my people saying Peace and one built c. Prophets work is to make knowne truth and to bring men out of their by and base wayes into the way of truth but if they turne men out of that way into the wayes of errour they worke but their worke is not pleasing unto God it exasperates his spirit against them and no marvell they undoe soules which are precious things James 5.20 He converts a sinner from the errour of his way saves a soule from death and hides a multitude of sins that would appeare by his going on in an erroneous way if on the contrary a man seduce a man from the truth and lead him into wayes of errours he destroys a soule discovers and multiplies sin and so did these false Prophets and so doe all false Teachers Peter tells you of false Teachers 2 Epist 2.1 who bring in damnable heresies and draw away many thereby and is that all No they bring upon themselves swift destruction they so provoke God by their corrupt and damn●ble Doctrines that he intends and hastens their destruction and let the seduced looke to it least destruction be their portion Isa 9.16 The Leaders of this people cause them to erre and they that are led of them are destroyed 7. Whatsoever works men worke God will try them if the Prophets build Walls daube with untempered Morter Preach visions of their owne heads c. God will prove their walls what strength is in them examine their Morter whether tempered or no whether ought of God be in it or all be humane Vers 11. There shall be an overflowing showre great hailestones and a stormy winde When men build
this and hath weight in it Our Prophet was now in a vision at Jerusalem and as hee had had many things offered to his sight so many things were yet offering and to be offered to his view all which had beene disturbed and prevented if there had been present execution of the command he could not have seen what follows here in the vision nor that in the next Chapter Further I conceive sometime was allotted between the command and execution for repentance Obser 1. Angels watch and take opportunites to serve Christ he comes unto them to take fire and presently one of them takes the fire and puts it in his hand being glad of such an opportunity to doe him service Angels are vigilant creatures and wait for opportunities and when they come they will not lose them Psal 103.20 They hearken to the voyce of his word they neither slumber nor sleep but hearken constantly what the Lord will say what opportunity there will be for action so in Ezek. 1.11 they are described with their wings stretched upward manifesting their watchfulnesse and readinesse for service When Christ was born a multitude of them appeared and celebrated his nativity Luke 2.13 When Christ was taken by Judas and his traine Peter drew his sword in his Masters defence but what saith Christ put up thy sword it 's not a time now to fight but to suffer thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to my Father he shall presently give me more then 12. legions of Angels It 's not a time now to pray for helpe I must dye Scripture must be fulfilled but if I would my Father would bid the Angels to aid me and they presently would come whole legions of them yea all the Angels in heaven Let us learne of Angels watch opportunities and take them There be nicks of time wherein to doe the works of Christ Eccles 3.1 To every thing there is a season and a time to every purpose under the heaven It 's wisdome to observe those seasons and times Rom. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Angels doe honour the Lord Christ exceedingly to their utmost they resigne up themselves and all they have to the will and command of Christ their wings hands feet faces their natures their knowledge zeale active vertue shall be all for Christ One tooke fire and put into his hand This is great honour to Christ when any creature gives up what it is what it hath and what it can doe unto him fully More cannot be required or expected by any superior and divine power more cannot be performed by any creature They are Angelicall who can resign up all into the hand of Christ Let us learn this duty The Scribe Matth. 8.19 said well Master I will follow thee whithersoever thou goest I will trace thy steps learn thy doctrine doe thy will be at thy dispose And Isa Chap. 6.8 Here am I send me Lord I give up my selfe unto thee all the fire in mee all my knowledge zeale active vertue are at thy dispose So Paul Acts 9.6 Lord what wilt thou have me to doe I have been against thee I will now be for thee I give up my selfe to thee wholly If Angels did it whose nature Christ tooke not for whom he dyed not how much more should we doe it whose nature he took for whom he did and suffered all 3. Things done seasonably are acceptable to Christ the Angel observ'd Christ comming for fire to demand their service and he takes fire and puts into Christs hand and Christ tooke it which notes his acceptance He neither reprov'd nor rejected the Angel or his service but was well pleased the putting fire into his hand was seasonable and so acceptable There be seasons which if taken sweeten actions and open the doore for their better entertainment Prov. 25.11 A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver The Heb. is a word spoken upon its wheels Fit times and seasons are wheels to carry words with great advantage and so for actions when things are done in the due time they are beautifull acceptable when God gives raine to a Land in season how acceptable is it when a tree bears fruit in its season its gratefull So when Angels or men do things seasonably its pleasing to the Lord Christ there be idonea tempora which if we misse actions are unlovely and misse of their aimes Psal 32.6 For this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee in a time when thou maist be found There be times if we have the wisdome to discern them when prayer will be seasonable acceptable effectuall VERS 8. And there appeared in the Cherubims the forme of a mans hand under their wings OUr Prophet having seene the Cherub stretch out a hand take fire and put it into the hand of the man cloathed with linnen here hee describes what kind of hand it was and where it was For the kind it was a mans hand there appeared the form of a mans hand for the place it was under their wing I have spoken hereof Chap. 1.8 There is mention of hands here of a hand not that they had only one hand but under every wing was a hand they had wings and under them he saw the form of a hand Their wings set out not only their swiftnesse in motion but also their divine instinct and secret guidance of God which carries them as wings this or that way to this or that action and hand imports both vigour to act and action active vertue and the activity it selfe Oeserv 1. Angels are furnished with abilities and are fitted for employments they have hands and wings what ever the Lord calls them to doe they want not ought tending to the accomplishment thereof If speed be required they have wings to flye If work be to be done they have hands and can doe much in a little time 2. They doe not things rashly but advisedly judiciously they have the hands of a man mens hands are ordered by judgment in their operations and so are Angels they doe all things wisely understandingly they observe the best seasons and all circumstances which may adde beauty and advantage to their actions and therefore vers 12. it 's said their hands were full of eyes they see into all the intrinsicals or extrinsicals of any businesse 3. The works of God are done by hidden and secret meanes by ways unthought of by hands under wings Here a Cherub stretches out a hand from under a wing takes fire and puts into the hand of Christ God hath secret hands to do his work somtimes angels hands sometime the hand of providence sometime the hand of his spirit Angels are invisible agents and we have unknown mercies from their hands an Angel rol'd away the great stone from the Sepulchre they remove many difficulties out of our way it was the hand of an Angel that brought the Apostles out of prison Act. 5.19.12.9 Angels encamp round about