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A85668 An exposition continued upon the XX, XXI, XXII, XXIII, XXIV, XXV, XXVI, XXVII, XXVIII, and XXIX, chapters of the prophet Ezekiel, vvith many useful observations thereupon. Delivered at several lectures in London, by William Greenhill. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1658 (1658) Wing G1856; Thomason E954_1; ESTC R207608 447,507 627

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his daies After the flood at the building of Babel God confounded the languages and dispersed the posterity of Noah into diverse Lands and set them their bounds Gen. 11.9 and so when hee brought the Israelites into the land of Canaan hee gave them their bounds according to what you find Psal 78.55 Hee cast out the Heathen before them and divided them an inheritance by line and made the Tribes of Israel to dwell in their tents hee drove out and destroyed the Hittites the Girgashites the Amorites the Canaanites the Perizzites the H●vites and the Jebusites seven great and mighty Nations Deut. 7.1 and gave the land unto his people the Jews If God now will drive out the bloudy perfidious and Idolatrous out of Ireland and give it unto others that the seed of his servants may inherit it Martin in the lives of the Kings of England Heylin in his Cosmograph Fox in Act and Monum Grafton Speed and that those which love his name may dwell therein who shall fault and blame him for it and that England hath had right thereunto not onely from Henrie the eighths days who was proclaimed King thereof in Parliament here and in an Irish Parliament likewise if Heylin say true but also from Henry the Seconds Time yea from Edgars who was long before appears by English History Obs 3 The Lord provides and bestows the choicest mercies upon his own people If there bee a land in the World that flowes with milk and Honey that exceeds other lands for plenty and ple●santnesse his people shall have it hee espies out Canaan for them that land was too good for Heathens his people must have it When God carried Jacob and his family into Egypt hee provided the good and fat of that land for them Gen. 45.18 yea they were placed in the best of the land chap. 47.11 God fed and filled his with the finest of the wheat Psal 147.14 Moses mentions seven things together in Deut. 32.13 14 15. as honey out of the rock Oyle out of the flinty rock Butter of Kine milk of sheep fat of lambs and Rams of the breed of Bashan and Goats fat of Kidnies of wheat the pure bloud of the grape these the Lord provided for his people and they had all an excellency in them When Gods gives honey oyle butter milk fat flower wine hee giveth the best and purest you may read what choice mercies God bestowed upon this people Ezek. 16.10 11 12 13. they had goodly pleasant things Joel 3.5 the Hebrew is goodly desirable things and David acknowledgeth hee had a goodly heritage Psal 16.6 God had not measured out to him a mean portion but a good yea a goodly heritage that which was so in the eies of all even a wealthy place Psal 66 12. God provided the best places in the Court for Esther and her maidens when in Babylon Esth 2.9.16 so likewise Daniel and the three Children were set in eminent places Dan. 2. 3. ch God made his people to ride tread upon the high places of the earth and of their enemies Deut. 32.13.33.29 Obs 4. Spiritual mercies make a land glorious yea more glorious than all that lands want the same whatever mercies they else injoy Canaan was the glory of all lands not so much for its flowing with milk and honey its great plenty it had as for the spiritual mercies it injoyed There was the Lords presence his Prophets his worship his Oracles and his Ordinances and these made it glorious yea more glorious then all the Nations farre or near Psal 76.1 2. In Judah is God known his name is great in Israel in Salem also is his Tabernacle and his dwelling place is in Sion God was not known in Babylon in Egypt in other Nations his Tabernacle and dwelling place was not amongst them therefore they were not glorious but see what is in the 4. vers Thou art more glorious than the mountains of Prey Thou Judah thou Israel thou Salem thou Sion that hast spiritual mercies and blessings art more glorious than they whatever their glory bee have the Nations abroad goodly towers thou hast the Temple have they stately Cities thou hast Jerusalem the City of God have they wise men thou hast the Prophets have they gods of gold silver and stones thou hast the true living God Jehovah to bee thy God have they humane Laws that are good thou hast Divine Laws that excel have they temporal excellencies thou hast spiritual have they the glory of the world thou hast the glory of Heaven Psal 50.2 Out of Sion the perfection of beauty God hath shined what made Sion so glorious and beautiful it was the presence of God if hee had not been there Sion had been like other mountaines and Canaan like other Nations but his presence was like the Sunne darting out her beams and making all lightsome glorious and beautiful Spiritual mercies are beams and raies of that God who is ten thousand times more bright than the Sunne by these hee shined in Sion and made it the perfection or universality of beauty by these hee shined out of Sion and darkned all the glory of the Nations what or how great soever it was where God and his Ordinances are there is glory and where these are not there is no glory but Egyptian Darknesse a land without the Sun In Canaan was spiritual light and glory There were glorious appearances of God glorious praisings of God glorious conversions of sinners unto God glorious sabbaths and assemblies and glorious beauties of holinesse glorious types of Christ and people who were the glory of God Isa 4.5 and had glorious communion with God There were glorious Truths Ordinances and dispensations of God So then wise Counsellors good Magistrates stout Souldiers rich Merchants industrious Labourers strong Towns stately Houses high Mountaines fertile Vallies pleasant Rivers goodly Corn-fields heards of Cattle flocks of sheep with plenty of all outward things do not make a land so glorious as spiritual mercies do if God Christ Gospel and the Ordinances of it bee in a land they make it glorious and glorious beyond all other things and above all other Nations Let us learn to know our true glory even spiritual mercies and prize them highly though loathed by some like Manna of old and pray that such glory may ever dwell in our Land Vers 7 Then said I unto them cast yee away every man the abominations of his eyes and defile not your selves with the Idols of Egypt I am the Lord your God This Verse is a command wherein you have the Commander the things commanded and the reason thereof 1 The Commander Then said I unto them 2 The things Commanded which are 1 Casting away of abominations where 1 You have a specification of these abominations they are the abominations of their eyes 2 The extent of this act every man 2 Non-defilement of themselves with Egypts Idols 3 The reason I am the Lord your God Then said I to
hearts and cause them to hearken to and honor him they should know him practically do his will they should know him to be faithful in performing his Promises powerful and gratious in doing greater things than they looked for and so should set themselves to serve the Lord. Others knew him by his judgements v. 38. which knowledge produced no real effects in their hearts and lives but these by his mercies and goodnesse which knowledge rested not in their heads but was operative in their hearts and extant in their lives so knowing is to bee taken 1 Chron. 28.9 When I shall bring you into the Land of Israel c. Of these words or not much differing you heard in the 28. vers Though the Land of Israel were a fruitful Land flowing with milk and hony and so it was a great mercy to bee brought in upon that account yet that was not all It was the Land of Promise the inheritance of their fathers and their repossession of it evidenced that they were their children their heires the people of God Obs 1 Experimental knowledge of God affects the heart and makes obedient to his will to worship and honour God which other knowledge doth not What ever knowledge a man hath of God and his waies without this it s a form of knowledge rather than knowledge it self 1 John 2.4 Hee that saith I know him and keepeth not his Commandements is a Lyar and the Truth is not in him that is hee hath no true knowledge of God in him for what hee saith of love ch 5.3 This is the Love of God that wee keep his Commandements that is true of knowledge there is no right knowledge of God if yee keep not his Commandements Hence saith the Lord Isa 1.3 Israel doth not know and Jer. 4.22 ch 8.7 my people know not the judgement of the Lord they had the Law the Prophets yet they did not know and why they did not keep his Commandements Violation of them is an argument men know not God where works of iniquity are committed there the knowledge of God is wanting Hos 5.4 the spirit of whoredomes is in the midst of them and they have not known the Lord and ch 4.1 when there was no truth nor mercy in the Land then there was no knowledge of God in it When men are disobedient to the Commands of God they are ignorant of God in their hearts deny God in their lives what ever knowledge they have of him in their heads you may finde it in holy writ that as those do evil are said not to know God Jer. 9.3 so those that do good are said to know him Jer. 22.16 and pure religion which is the right knowledge of God is put upon doing James 1.27 Daniel therfore tells us that turning from iniquity and so walking in the waies of God is the way to understand truth and so to know God Dan. 9.13 and Christ hath affirmed it that doing is the way to knowing Joh. 7.17 Obs 2 The Goodness mercy and kindnesse of God begets experimental knowledge of him in the hearts of men Yee shall know that I am the Lord when I shall bring you into the land of Israel When God should knock off the Babylonish yoak and replant them in Canaan then their hearts should taste and bee affected with the dealings of God Great mercies had great operations upon them and made deep impressions in them God teaches men by his works experimentall knowledge comes in that way when his word is fulfilled in Promises or threats in mercy or judgement then men come to know God Hee is known by executing of judgement Psal 9.16 and known by his mercies Psal 19.20 21 22. It s one thing to hear of Physick another to feel the workings of it in ones bowels One thing to hear of Wine another to finde the vertue of it in the stomach So it s one thing to hear of God and his mercies another to taste of the loving kindnesse of God in his mercies Psalm 34.8 taste and see that the Lord is good Gods goodnesse had bred experimental knowledge in David and hee could sensibly speak of it and provoke others to partake of what hee had Ver. 43 And there shall yee remember your waies These words wee had in the 16. chap. vers 61. the word remember notes remembring with affection so as to do something thereupon And all your doings wherein ye have been defiled The Septuagint reads the former words with a part of these thus There shal ye remember your waies wherein yee have defiled your selves and leave out these words all your doings but they are in the Hebr●w and import their Idolatries and other abominations They corrupted Gods worship fell to Babylonish practises and greatly defiled themselves And ye shall loath your selves in your own sight In the sixth Chapter vers 9. were these words opened where they are thus They sh●l loath themselves for the evils which they have committed in all their abominations The Septuagint is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aquil. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Displicebitis vob●s Theod. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 insensi critis Sym. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They shal smite their faces Others you shal be displeased and wroth with your selves Symmachus hath it thus you shal be little in your own eyes for all the wickedn●sses ye have done The meaning of the verse is that they should seriously consider their waies bee ashamed of them tru●ly repent of them yea so repent as to judge themselves worthy to bee cut off from being Gods People and to be made a curse Obs 1 ●ense of Mercies rather than of Judgements makes sin bitter and le●ds unto Repentance Their Captivity and sad things they suffered therein 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 excindere execrari significat saith Maldona did not imbitter their sinne unto them and break their hearts but Gods kindnesse in bringing them out of Babylon into the Land of Israel that prevailed with them when they had received marvellous kindnesse from God then they were marvellously affected greatly ashamed of their waies and loathed themselves Mercies in Sion produced that which judgements in babylon did not Quem vexatio non dat dat beneficentia intellectum Pradus Great mercies bestowed upon great sinners do preach the Doctrine of repentance most effectually convincing them strongly of their unworthy and vile carriages towards the Lord 1 Sam. 24. Davids kindnesse brake the heart of Saul and made him to weep and say Thou art more righteous then I for thou hast rewarded mee good whereas I have rewarded thee evill If humane favour hath such influence into a sinfull heart what hath Divine Moses by his stroaks fetched water out of a Rock David by his kindnesse God somtimes by his judgements humbles men and brings them to repentance but mostly by his mercies The sweet influences of the Gospel have pierced deeper into sinners hearts than the terrours of the Law Obs 2
and ruling any more in Judah None of them shall ever come to kingly dignity Vntill he come whose right it is Hebrew is Ad bo asher lo hammishphat which Jun. renders thus Donec venerit is cujus est jus ipsum till hee come whose right it is Aecolamp Donec veniat ei qui judicet untill it come to him who may judge Vatab. Donec is veniat cui jure convenit till hee come to whom of right it belongs The sense is the Crown shall neither fit nor bee fastened to any head till hee come that hath the true right to it and that is neither Nebuchadnezzar nor Zerubbabel nor Aristobulus Alexander or Hyrcanus who assumed Kingly dignity to themselves in time of the Maccabees but Christ the Messiah who is the true heir and successor of David when hee comes hee shall raise up the Kingdome of Judah being miserably afflicted destitute and lost to the eye of the world he changing it into a spiritual Kingdome shall restore it to as high yea an higher glory than ever it had The crown here was reserved and laid up for the Lord Christ who was born King of the Jews Mat. 2.2 to whom the Angel told Mary that the Lord should give the Throne of his Father David and that hee should reign over the house of Jacob for ever and have an endlesse kingdome Luke 1.32 33. upon this account it was that Nathaniel called him the King of Israel John 1.49 and that Christ said The Father hath committed all judgement unto the Sonne John 5.22 The Father had appointed Christ to bee King and Ruler Micah 5.2 gave him power Isa 9.6 hee was to succeed David sit upon his Throne and kingdome to order the same vers 7. and his right thereunto both Matthew in his first Chapter and Luke in his third do clear up shewing how he descended from David And I will give it him Christ when hee comes shall not bee kept off from his right I will give it him and hee shall have the Crown it will fit his head and sit fast upon it though hee come in a mean and low way yet he shall be King and reign Obs 1 The Lord doth lay the glory of Crowns and Scepters in the dust when hee pleases I will overturn overturn overturn it There is no Crown so sure to any Mortals head no Kingdome so stable but the Lord can pluck away the Crown shake the Kingdom to peeces throw out the possessors and dispossesse their Heirs He pulled the Crown from Zedekiahs head he brake his Kingdome in peeces hee threw him out of his Throne deprived him and his Sonnes of ever inheriting more Sometimes the Lord doth suddainly overturn Empires and Kingdomes as Belshazzars by Darius the Median Dan. 5.30 31. Sometimes hee proceeds gradually and so hee did with the Kingdomes of Israel and Judah Hos 5.12 I will bee unto Ephraim as a moth and to the house of Judah as rottennesse a Moth eats up a garment by degrees now it makes one hole in it and anon another so Rottennesse enters by degrees into a Tree first into one branch then another after into the body and root So God by degrees eat up wasted and consumed those Kingdomes But bee it suddainly or gradually hee overturns them when hee pleases God overturned the Persian Monarchy by the Goat which had the notable Horn Dan. 8.5 that was Alexander the Great King of Greece and when hee was grown very great ruled according to his will his Kingdome was broken divided to others and not to his posterity Dan. 11.3 4. the Lord pluckt up his Kingdome and quartered it among those were not his Heires The Lord made the Scepter depart from Egypt Zech. 10.11 hee cut off him held the Scepter from the house of Eden Amos 1.5 hee breakes the staves of the wicked and the Scepters of the Rulers Isa 14.5 Crowns Scepters Kingdomes he tumbles down and laies in the dust Obs 2 When God overturnes Crowns and Kingdomes hee keeps them in such a condition while hee pleases I will overturn overturn overturn and it shall bee no more untill he come whose right it is This was neer five hundred years for from Zedekiahs deposal to the birth of Christ were four hundred ninety and two years which was a long season for his crown and kingdome to lye in darknesse and a desolate condition Hosea told us long since that the children of Israel should abide many daies without a King and without a Prince ch 3 4. the Kingdom of Israel was overturned by the hand of God above one hundred years before the kingdome of Judah and lyes overturned to this day and so hath been above two thousand years in a sad dark distressed condition When Kingdomes Scepters and Thrones are once overturned they are not quickly raised up again Their sinnes were great which caused the Lord to overturn them and hee lets them lye under the punishment of their iniquity many daies and years When Kingdomes are down many struggle to lift them up again to their former dignity glory and greatnesse but it must not it cannot bee till the Lords time come till he please to put forth his hand and do it Obs 3 The Lord Christ the promised Messiah was the true King of Judah and Prince of Sion Vntill hee come whose right it is and I will give it him The Father had appointed him to bee King given him the Kingdome and made it known long before his comming in the flesh Hee was spoken of Gen. 49.10 Hee was the Shiloh the Prosperer unto whom the gathering of the People should bee hee gathered Jewes and Gentiles together Hee was spoken of Numb 24.17 There shall come a star out of Jacob and a Scepter shall rise out of Israel So in Psalm 45.6 7. The Scepter of thy Kingdome is a right Scepter and God hath annointed thee See Isa 11.1 2. ch 42.1 2 3. Jer. 23.6 Ezek. 34.23 24. Dan. 7.14.27 Zach. 9.9 In these places and many other the Kingdome of Christ his right thereunto and the Fathers donation th●rof unto him are spoken of The Peoples hearts were towards him and they would have made him a King John 6.15 however hee appeared to the world the Apostles beheld glory and majesty in him John 1.14 2 Pet. 1.16 and Pilate writ over his head This is Jesus the King of the Jews M●t. 27.37 Christ was not a contemptible person whatever men thought of him the Father designed him to bee a King gave him a Kingdome the Prophets foretold his Kingly dignity he was born a King dyed a King he lives and reigns at this day King of Sion and of all Saints Rev. 15.3 wee have no cause to bee ashamed of our King but ought to honour him as wee honour the Father seeing all judgement is committed to him Joh. 5.22 23. Obs 4 The wisdome and goodnesse of the Lord towards his that when hee tells them of the severest judgement hee mingles some mercy I will
to bud In that day or after that time when his justice had fallen upon Egyptians then his Mercy should bee extended to Israel Jerem. 50.4 5. when the Medes and Persians should have laid Babylon waste and made her land desolate what then In those daies and at that time saith the Lord the Children of Israel shall come they and the children of Judah together going and weeping that is for gladnesse for the mercy vouchsafed them they shall go and seek the Lord their God they shall aske the way to Zion with their faces thitherward When the Babylonians were brought into bondage then God gave the Jews their liberty Isa 10.26 27. when the Assyrians should bee destroyed then should the Jews bee eased of their burdens Obs 2 How low weak afflicted soever the Church bee God is able to raise it up to bring it to glory strength and to a flourishing condition The house of Israel was low and much afflicted the Horn of it weak and hardly visible yet God caused the Horn thereof to bud When we look upon some beasts they have no hornes but in a short time their heads do bud and bring forth hornes which are their strength So God in a little time would cause the glory strength happinesse of his Church and People to appear though at that time they lay in the dust The Church of God looks oft times like a dry and dead tree but his divine influences makes it bud blossome and flourish Isa 35.1 the desert shall rejoyce and blossome as the rose it shall blossome abundantly When Sion was turned into a wildernesse he made it like Eden and her desert like the garden of God Isa 51.3 when the Church was in the most desolate and hopelesse condition hee made it glorious beautiful and strong when the Tabernacle of David was quite fallen nothing but ruines and breaches discernable what said the Lord in that day will I raise up the Tabernacle of David that is fallen and close up the breaches thereof and I will raise up his ruines and I will build it This was done litterally after their return out of Babylon when the second Temple was built and the two Tribes of Judah and Benjamin grew up into one body but spiritually in Christs time not in the resurrection of his body from the grave but in bringing in the Gentiles after his ascention to make up all the breaches and ruines were made in the Jewish state so it s applyed Act. 15.16 God that gives being to things that are not can give more glorious and excellent beings to things that are Obs 3 When God shews kindnesse to his Church hee gives his Prophets and Servants matter freedome and opportunity of speaking and professing the true faith publikely When the Lord caused the horn of the house of Israel to bud when he shewed favour to his people then hee gave Ezekiel the opening of the mouth In the times of enemies prevailing Prophets are silent or prophesy faintly if they have matter to utter they want freedome they whisper mutter and speak as it were clauso ore and oft have not opportunity to do so much Amos 5.13 they are necessitated to be silent but when times grow better and God shines upon his people then the Prophets are full of matter free to speak and want not seasons to declare the goodnesse of God then they are not afraid or ashamed openly to professe the Truth and to praise the Lord. The opening of the mouth is the gift of God the illnesse of the people and times may shut the mouths of Prophets but none can open them but God Since God began to shew mercy to his people in this land hath he not vouchsafed the opening of the mouth to his Prophets their mouths were shut in the Prelates daies but now there is a great opening Blessed be the Lord for it Obs 4 The end of Gods shewing kindnesse to his Church and opening the mouthes of his Prophets is that hee may have honour and glory thereby from all sorts And they shall know that I am the Lord They Babylonians they Jews shall acknowledge that I have done these things and that I am the Lord. FINIS A Table containing the Principall things in the precedent Expositions A ABomination of the Eyes what Pag 31 32. Abundance happinesse lies not in it 479. Dangerous Pag 525 Abstract oft rendred by the concrete Pag 121 122 Accepting what it imports Pag 123 124 Action Actions of men are over-ruled by the Lord. 175. see youth Pag 554 Adultery The Punishment thereof Pag 307 Adonai what it notes Pag 486 Affliction God hath times to shew mercy in them 18. hee reveals himself by one way means or other to the afflicted 19. what brings sad afflictions 218. may bee long yet are not endlesse 571. in them persons do strange things 311. they are cups 312. bitternesse argue not hatred Pag 365 366 Aholah what Pag 291 Aha what it notes Pag 386 Aholibah what Pag 292 Agate whence named Pag 471 Alienate what Alienates God Pag 303 Altars high places Pag 89 Affections Conjugal ple●sing to God Pag 363 Ammonites their Original 198 386. Enemies to the Jews ibid. they reproached them 199. insulted over their miseries 387. how called 389. their despight Pag 391 Arme stretching out of Gods arm what it notes Pag 101 Army nothing without Gods assistance 554. it and its Commanders may labour serve and suffer much and yet bee disappointed 584. they are Gods instruments Pag 585 Apostates their punishment and evil of Apostacy 103. God accounts not them his Pag 127 Aram who descended from him Pag 469 470 Arvad a City and where Pag 455 B BAbylon a description of it Pag 25. Babylonians how called Pag 388 Bamah what Pag 89 Baalmeon Pag 401 Bashan Pag 448 Blasphemy wherein it consists Pag 83 Balm Pag 472 Best God must have the best sacrifices and services Pag 130 Bed the bed of love what 299. when defiled 302. two sorts of beds Pag 322 Bethie Shimoth a City and where Pag 401 Boiling-pot 329 331. sinners boiled in it to purpose Pag 333 Beauty of wisdome what 498 subject to spoil 501. perfection of beauty in what 50● marr'd by what Pag 525 Bryars who are such Pag 534. 535 536. C CAlamus what Pag 474 Calamity suddain and what it should work 365. laughing at Calamitie grievous 395. why we should not Pag 396 397 Chronology of some things and times specially to be ●oted 330 546. best kept in adversity Pag 582 Carim what it signifies Pag 173 Camels their strength and nature Pag 390 Captivity what the Jews lost then Pag 132 Cassia what Pag 473 Chittim and the Isles thereof Pag 450 Canaan upon what account said to flow with milk and honey 22 23. of what length and breadth 24. Commendations of it ibid. wherein it excelled Babylon 25 26. what sorts of people in it 271 differenced from other lands 443. Godly shall bee brought in to it Pag 541 Christ hee hath
Tim. 2.8 I will that men pray every where lifting up holy hands and Psal 88.9 Heman saith he called upon God daily and stretched out his hands unto him Lamen 2.19 Lift up thine hands unto him for the life of thy children Levare manum est signum gratiae auxilii sumpta figura d●cendi a porrigentibus manum infirmioribus ad opem ferendam Pradus Gestus est ejus qui potentiam robur suum exerit Vatablus 3. It notes open mercy favour aid Isa 49.22 I will lift up my hand to the Gentiles that is I will reach unto them the Gospel and by the power and grace of it bring them to Sion In this sense it is to bee taken Psal 10.12 O God lift up thy hand forget not the humble that is evidence thy power and help the humble and afflicted against their oppressors 4 To lift up the hand imports threatning hurting smiting Psal 106.26 hee lifted up his hand against them to overthrow them in the wilderness when men are angry with others and threaten to do them harm to ruine them they oft lift up their hands and fists against them thus it signifies in Mich. 5.9 Ezek. 44.12 5 To lift up the hand implies swearing it was a gesture used in that sacred act Gen. 14.22 Deut. 32.40 it is expressed so in Esa 3.7 in that day shall hee swear the Hebrew is lift up the hand The first and second sense pertains not to this place and though some would have it meant of Gods lifting up his hand to help the Israelites out of their bondage by the smiting of Pharaoh and the Egyptians yet to mee the last sense seems most suitable and lifting up the hand here imports swearing the Chaldee is juravi it referres to what you have Exod. 6.8 I will bring you to the Land concerning which I did swear or lift up my hand to give it to Abraham to Isaac and to Jacob. God had promised and sworn to them that hee would bring their seed out of Egypt into Canaan Gen. 50.24.15.7.14.16 Unto the seed of the house of Jacob. Montanus reads the words for the seed of the house of Jacob Super semen domus Jacob. Vatablus upon or on the seed Here it s unto the seed Gods promise and oath was for them over them and unto them By Seed is meant the posterity of Jacob. God had told Jacob that his seed should bee as the dust of the earth Gen. 28.14 and his seed did greatly multiply in Egypt Exo. 1.7 and his seed is called sometimes the seed of Israel Isa 45.25 and seed of the house of Israel Jer. 23.8 sometimes the seed of Jacob Psal 22.23 and here the seed of the house of Jacob because Jacob or Israel was the root stock family out of which the Jews in Egypt sprung And made my self known unto them Great were the afflictions of the Jews in Egypt they were like men in a storm at Sea and that in a dark night when day breaks it is some refreshing and such was Gods making himself known unto them This making himself known unto them was for their deliverance God appeared to Moses in the burning bush and told him who hee was and what hee was about to do Exod. 3.2.6 7 8. hee had promised Abraham Isaac and Jacob to give their seed the land of Canaan and now he was come to give being to that promise to make himself known by his name Jehovah which they knew not in this sense they saw not that promise fulfilled but Moses Aaron and their seed should now see it chap. 6.3.8 God would put forth his mighty power and by a strong hand bring them forth ver 1. God made himself known to them by Moses who was Gods messenger and instrument to speak and do what hee pleased Psal 103.7 he made known his waies unto Moses his acts unto the children of Israel Gods pitty faithfulnesse and power were abundantly made known After the Lord had appeared to Moses answered all his Objections hee made against undertaking the difficult work of delivering the People and joynd Aaron with him for his assistant In the 4. chap. they gather all the Elders of Israel together they told them all the words God had spoken and did the signs by which God had confirmed the words concerning their deliverance which the people beleeved bowed and worshipped God ver 29 30 31. here God was made known unto them I am the Lord your God Hebrew is I Jehovah your God The first is absolute the second relative Of Jehovah I have spoken heretofore it notes Gods nature and being which is of its self within its self and dependent upon none all other beings are from him and depend on him according to what you have Rom. 11.36 of him through him and to him are all things and Act. 17.28 in him we live move and have our beings Your God This is a great word and hath great mercy in it an ingageing word tying God and all his attributes to them your God to counsell you your God to protect you your God to deliver you your God to comfort you your God to plead for you your God to teach you your God to set up my name and worship among you your God to bless you with the dews of heaven and fulness of the earth your God to hear your prayers and to make you happy While they were in Egypt God professed himself to bee their God Exod. 6.7 I will take you to mee for a people and I will bee to you a God and yee shall know that I am the Lord your God Hee would not bee a Titular God unto them like the Heathens Gods but they should have experience of him and his Attributes hee would do by them and for them as a God in Covenant Obs 1 There bee times when the Lord is pleased to shew mercy to people in misery and great afflictions In the day that I chose thee Israel was in a distressed condition in Egypt in a very low estate Their lives were imbittered with hard bondage insomuch that they sighed and cryed Exod. 4.23 and now at this time and being in this condition God heard their groanings looked upon and had respect unto them now hee chose them ver 24 25. therefore Isaiah saith cha 48.10 God chose them in the furnace of affliction times of misery are times of Gods shewing mercy when they were in a hot fiery furnace ready to bee consumed to ashes no likely-hood of escaping yet even then did the Lord appear and manifest his choice of them Ezek. 16. when this people were in their bloud filth nakedness saith God I passed by thee and looked upon thee and behold thy time was the time of love I spread my skirt over thee and covered thy nakednesse vers 8. at that time God took this people into favour God hath his day to bind up the breach of his people and to heal the stroak of their wound Isa 30.26
Nations Heylin Cosmogr● Vide Lyra in Ezek. 20 6 besides women children and such as were not able to fight 2 Sam. 24. this land was the glory of all lands in regard of the fruitfulnesse and plenty of it of which see Deut. 8.7 8 9. cha 32.13 14. Isa 36.17 a land beyond Egypt though some have affirmed the contrary for Deut. 11.10 11 12. the land thou goest in to possesse is not as the land of Egypt from whence ye came out when thou sowedst thy seed and wateredst it with thy foot as a garden of herbes But the land whither thou goest to possesse it is a land of Hells and Vallies and drinketh water of the rain of Heaven A land which the Lord thy God careth for the eyes of the Lord thy God are alwaies upon it from the beginning of the year unto the end thereof This is a divine Testimony and an high praise of it and doth justly intitle it to bee the glory of all lands What our Prophet saith here of Canaan may bee suspected and seems to bee contradicted by Isaiah ch 13.19 where hee calls Babylon the glory of Kingdomes and if that be the glory of them how can Canaan bee the glory of all lands Hee speaks of the City Babylon which was the head of Chaldea and gave denomination to a great part of Mesopotamia and Assyria the walls whereof were two hundred foot high filty Cubits broad and sixty miles in Compass which the Babylonians counted the glory of Kingdomes and boasted of if it did exceed Jerusalem in its greatnesse richnesse strength and populousness yet it fell short of it in other things Jerusalem represented the true Church Gal. 4.26 Heb. 12.22 Babylon the malignant and false Church Rev. 17.5 glorious things were spoken of Jerusalem and it was the faithful City Isa 1.21 the Holy City Isa 52.1 the City of Truth Zach. 8.3 a City of Righteousnesse Isa 1 26. the City of the Lord of Hosts such things were never spoken of Babylon Again if Babylon bee the Glory of Kingdomes it s not said to bee of all kingdomes it might bee the glory of Heathenish Kingdomes it was not the glory of Canaan for there was the Idol Bel other Images and abominable Idolatry Jer. 51.44 47. which eclipsed the other glory it had Again if it bee granted that Babylon was the glory of all Kingdomes and so of Judea or Canaan yet take Canaan in its latitude with all its excellencies and so considered it is the Glory of all Lands and beyond Babylon taken for the City or the Countrey for besides its milk and honey its fruitfulnesse and plenty there was something of an higher nature which made it so For 1 It was the land of promise Heb. 11 9. 2 A type of Heaven Heb. 3.11 3 The land God chose to dwell in Ps 132.13 14. Exo. 15.17 4 In it was the Temple Worship Ordinances and Oracles of God 1 Kin. 6. 8. chapt Whence it was called the Holy Land Zach. 2.12 holy Habitation Exod. 15.13 the land of the Lord Isa 14.2 Ps 85.2 the land of uprightnesse Isa 26.10 the land of Immanuel Isa 8.8 and upon this account it was the glory of all lands For no land besides in all the world was so called as this or had such prerogatives Obs 1 Old mercies should bee minded not onely by those they were first bestowed upon but also by their posterity who had benefit by them also In the former vers and this God mindes them of Old mercies his choice of them his making known himself unto them his professing himself to bee their God his bringing them out of Egypt which were some eight or nine hundred years before and his espying out a land for them which was four hundred years before that for it was in Abrahams daies that God took notice of that land Gen. 12. get thee to a land that I will shew thee vers 7. unto thy seed will I give this land These Old mercies God would have them to mind though they were in Babylon and deprived of that good land God had given them Let men bee in what condition they will Old mercies should not bee forgotten especially signal great emphatical mercies When God shall publikely own a people deliver them from great slavery put them into a state of freedome safety and honour provide all good things for them such mercies ought not to bee forgotten but to bee remembred from generation to generation This was done in Davids dayes Ps 44.1 2. Wee have heard with our ears O God our fathers have told us what wor● thou didst in their daies in the times of Old how thou didst drive out the Heathen with thy hand Judges 6.13 Fathers told their children of the miracles God had wrought for them and how hee brought them out of Egypt and because men are apt to forget former mercies when they grow old they grow out of minde the Lord laid a charge upon the Jews that they should not forget them Deut. 6.10 11 12. And commanded them to remember the daies of Old and to consider the years of many generations and to inquire of the ancient what he had done for them Deut. 32.7 There bee no works like unto Gods works and they ought to bee had in remembrance David kept them in mind for hee professes to the Lord himself I remember the daies of Old I meditate on all thy works I muse on the work of thy hand he looked back to the daies of Noah of Abraham of Joseph of the Israelites and of Gods dealing with them because the heart is not quickly affected with old mercies and works of God he meditated and mused on them and that till his heart was warmed and stirred up to praise as it is Psal 105.5 remember his marvellous works that hee hath done his wonders and the judgements of his mouth O yee seed of Abraham his servant Obs 2 That Lands Countries and Habitations of People are appointed ordered and disposed of by the Lord hee brings them forth of the land of Egypt into a land that hee had espyed for them All souls and all lands are the Lords and whom hee will hee plants where hee pleases Hee distributes lands and habitations to whom hee thinks meet The earth is the Lords and the fulnesse thereof Psal 24.1 hee is the sole owner thereof the true Lord of the soil and all it brings forth and hee hath given it to the children of men Psal 115.16 hee hath assigned them their several portions Deut. 32.8 the most high divided to the Nations their inheritance when he separated the Sonnes of Adam the most high God being Lord paramount would not have the Sonnes of Adam to live all in one Country or Land but appointed them several lands and Countries to dwel in and set them their bounds and limits as you may see in Gen. 10. especially vers 25. where Eber names his Son Peleg which signifies division because the earth was divided in
reverently Gods Name is great glorious excellent holy and dreadful and ought to bee reverenced Psal 111.9 3 When Occasion is given to the wicked to speak evil of God and his waies as 2 Sam. 12.14 David by his sinnes gave great occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme So Ezek. 36.21 the Jews by their sinful carriage caused the name of God to bee prophaned among the heathen Had the Lord then destroyed this people in Egypt according as he purposed the Egyptians and other Nations would have slighted him spoken evil of his doings blasphemed his name and wounded his honour Therefore though this people deserved to dye in the way of justice yet God spared them in the way of mercy for the honour of his name Quae. Seeing God purposed to destroy them and did it not is not his will alterable and inefficacious Ans The Counsels Purposes Decrees of God are unalterable and do take place Psal 33.11 Isa 14.27 ch 43.13 ch 46.10 Mal. 3.6 Heb. 6.17 for that said and done here it s more humano God saw cause sufficient to move him to their destruction but seeing what evil was like to come on 't he would not destroy them had the Lord decreed it before the world it must have taken place no change or alteration could have been Before the Heathen The Hebrew is in the eies of the Heathen God would not have them to see or behold any thing which might occasion them to dishonour him hee would not slay his people in their sight but made himself known by his word and mighty works unto the Jews in the sight of the Heathen so that hereby he was known unto both Obs 1 The Lord spares and saves sinners deserving death even for his name sake but I wrought for my name sake thou for thy Rebellion Idolatry and other sinnes didst deserve to dye and I could almost have cut thee off but for my mercy and name sake I spared and saved thee Jsa 48.8 9. I knew that thou wouldest deal very treacherously and wast called a transgressour from the womb that is worthy so to bee called seeing as soon as ever thou camest out of the womb of Egypt in which thou wast shut up as a child in the womb thou fellest to Idolatry here was enough to have caused God to stifle this childe but what follows For my name sake will I deferre mine anger and for my praise will I refrain for thee that I cut thee not off Nothing in this metaphorical childe this Jewish people moved him to shew mercy but his own Name his own Praise prevailed with him to preserve them from destruction Gods honour and glory are strong arguments to move him to shew mercy to his people This the servants of God have known and made use of in their streights when Jerusalem was in a manner laid desolate and the jealousy of God burnt like fire what argument did the Church use then to move God to shew mercy but his name and glory of it Psalm 79.9 Help us O God of our salvation for the glory of thy name and deliver us and purge away our sins for thy Names sake The Church was low weak beset with enemies and sinnes at once and now it would have help deliverance pardon and upon the account of Gods name for thy name sake help us for thy name sake deliver us for thy name sake purge away our sinnes What hurt would it be to Gods name if hee did it not it would not bee glorious but dishonoured for in the next verse its said Wherefore should the Heathen say where is their God they trusted in their God and hee is a non-helping God a Non-delivering God a Non-pardoning God This was the argument Joshuah used when Israel fell before their enemies Lord what wilt thou do unto thy great name Gods name was pretious to Joshuah but more pretious to God himself Josh 7.9 and he did great things for his name sake When the people forgat the multitude of great mercies they had in Egypt and provoked him at the Sea even at the red Sea and deserved to bee drowned in it and that their bloud should have skarletted the waters thereof what saith the Text Psal 106.8 Neverthelesse he saved them for his name sake When nothing induced him to do it Vide Muscul in locum the honour of his Name did that hee might appear faithful merciful powerful God did not save them for their prayers for their faith for their fathers sakes for their righteousnesse or for their enemies sakes being very malicious and wicked but for his own Name sake God doth more upon that account alone than upon the account of all the rest You may hear the Lord speak graciously to this purpose Isa 4.3.25 I even I am hee that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake here is I twice one I referring to them it s I that blot out their transgressions and none besides the other referres to God I blot them out for mine own sake not your sakes God doth all freely Obs 2 God's sparing of his people and preventing the reproaches blasphemies and mischiefes would come by his destroying of them is an honouring and sanctifying of his name I wrought satih God that my name might not bee polluted before the Heathen that is that it might bee honoured and sanctified in their sight God doth often spare his people being ripe for destruction that the enemy might not blaspheme and prophane his name and when hee doth so hee honours his name Deut. 32.26 27. God saith there hee would scatter and destroy his people but why did hee it not hee feared the wrath of the enemy least their adversaries should behave themselves strangely and least they should say our hand is high and the Lord hath not done all this God foresaw what they would say and do if he should have used them as instruments to punish his children they would have been very outragious bloudy and cruel and when they had vented all their malice against them and done whatever they would they would have denyed Gods hand to have been therein and arrogated all to themselves which had been a great dishonour to God hee therefore prevents their blaspheming by sparing of his people and so provides for the honour of his Name Moses once and twice put God upon it to take heed hee caused not the Egyptians to speak evil of him and his waies when hee was upon the designe of destroying his people for their sinnes Exod. 32.10 11 12. Numb 14.12 13 14 15 16. God deals with his people sometimes not after the ordinary rule and course of his proceedings but in a prerogative way hee spares them though their sinnes be great because their enemies would bee proud arrogant bloudy and blasphemous and hath hee not spared England upon this account Obs 3 That notwithstanding the sins of Gods people hee shews them kindness openly and in the face of their enemies though the
law was given of which the next verse speaks Into the wilderness God did bring them to try them to humble them and do them good at their latter end Deut. 8.16 Obs 1 That God for the honour of his name shews mercy after mercy to his people deserving no mercy yea deserving destruction In the former verse to prevent the dishonour of his name hee spared them made himself known to them and here hee goes on adding mercy to mercy wherefore I caused them to go forth Obs 2 No length of time no depth of misery no power or policy of adversaries whatsoever can hinder God from delivering his people when his time is come The Jews had been long in Egypt suffered very hard things for the space of one hundred and sixteen years or one hundred twenty one from the time of Josephs death till their departure out of Egypt that house of bondage which was thereabout they were under heavy pressures and great tyranny Pharaoh that great Dragon used all his cunning and power to keep them longer in that condition but notwithstanding all these the Lord caused them to go forth his time was come The like did God for this People when they had been in Babylon seventy years were as dry bones and out of hope Ezek. 37.11 hee opened their graves and caused them to come up out of them and come to the land of Israel vers 12. There is no thing too hard for the Lord to do hee can and will remove all obstructions break through all difficulties and shake the foundations of heaven earth and hell to bring to pass his good pleasure in the time thereof The state of the Jews in Egypt represents mens condition under sin and Satan that in Babylon the condition of Gods Servants under Antichrist Now let men bee never so long in bondage to either or both of them suffer never such hard things let Satan that red Dragon and Antichrist that man of sin improve all their craft skill and power to hold men in darknesse and waies of false worship yet when the Lords day is come hee will cause them to come out of Egyptian bondage and Babylonian darknesse hee will fetch them off from all sinfull practises all invented waies of worship and bring them into his marvellous and glorious light Obs 3 When God doth shew his people special mercy in freeing them from old and special miseries hee doth not wholly exempt them from new miseries though hee caused them to go forth of Egypt yet hee brought them into a Wilderness where they met with hunger thirst danger and death they were freed from Egyptian miseries not from wilderness miseries They thought if once they were freed from their making brick gathering straw and rigid Task-masters they should bee happy but they met with new-hardships new-miseries they did ride upon the back of mercy out of old miseries into new out of an house of bondage into a wildernesse an howling wildernesse a wildernesse that made them howle many a time It s Gods method oft to mingle water with our wine miseries with our mercies crosses with our comforts to lead us out of great streights in much mercy and to lead us into others for tryal David was delivered oft out of streights but shortly after hee was freed from one he was brought into another and that by the same hand which made him say thou hast shewed mee great and soar troubles Psal 71.20 sometimes hee was on the mount of mercies and sometimes in the valley of miseries yea in the valley of the shadow of death take it in a spiritual sense when men are converted do they not meet with hard things are they not brought out of Egypt into a wildernesse where are dangers fiery Serpents Scorpions c. Vers 11 And I gave them my statutes and shewed them my judgements This people being brought out of Egypt and freed from great bondage being in a wildernesse might now phansy a total liberty to themselves and exemption from all obedience to prevent this some fifty daies after their comming out the Lord at Mount Sinai gives them out his Law by which they might be ordered and regulated Of statutes and judgements hath been spoken formerly by them both Morals and Ceremonials are comprehended Shewed them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew is I made them to know that is I caused them to bee written in the Tables of stone and proclaimed amongst them yea I caused them to bee opened and expounded unto them The Lord made known his mind unto them though not so efficaciously as in these daies Which if a man do he shall live in them In eis or propter ea The doing here is mans keeping observing and obeying these Statutes and judgements and if so hee should not bee punished as transgressors are but live a long and prosperous life and not onely so but an happy and eternal life for if the keeping Gods Statutes and Commands Hebrei de vita eterna intelligunt q.d. qui ad impleverit haec precepta credens in Christum ventutum vivet vi●a aeterna Varabl Hoc modo etiam Chaldaeus paraphrastos id should reach but unto a temporal prosperous life what benefit had the Jews thereby above the Gentiles who by their justice Civility and Moral vertues obtained great prosperity and length of daies The Lord Christ clears it up unto us that by life promised upon keeping the Law is meant eternal life Luke 10.25 saith a Lawyer to Christ Master what shall I do to inherit eternal life Christ saith What is written in the Law how readest thou hee tells him vers 27. what hee found there and Christ upon it tells him vers 28. that if he did so hee should live that is live eternally There was a righteousnesse of the Law which if men came unto the Law conferred life upon them Gal. 3.12 Rom. 10.5 Lev. 18.5 there was life in them life by them and life from them but because no man could attain unto the righteousnesse of the Law through the weaknesse of the flesh Rom. 8.3 Therefore the Law was so farre from conferring eternal life upon man that it excludes him from that life Rom. 3.20 and takes away the life hee hath Rom. 7.10 the Commandement which was ordained to life hee found to bee unto death that which in it self held out life accidentally and eventially proved death unto him Paul seems to deny any power to be in the Law of giving life Gal. 3.21 if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily righteousness should have been by the Law The impotency is not Originally and intrinsecally in the Law for that is perfect and able to give life to a●●● to all that keep it Mat. 19.17 Christ makes the keeping the Commandements the entrance into life the fault is in us not in the Law which is Holy just and good if we could keep the Law it could give us life Obs 1 When God brings
at but when they sinne wilfully despising mee my Laws my worship they reproach blaspheme provoke mee so that they shall hear of it Son of man go and speak to the house of Israel go and tell them how they have dealt with mee and how I take it Such sins did deserve death Num. 15.30 31. The soul that doth ought presumptuously whether he be born in the Land or a stranger the same reproacheth the Lord. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it s the same word is here for Blasphemed and may as well bee rendred so as reproacheth for hee that reproacheth the Lord blasphemes him and hee that blasphemes him reproacheth him they are joyned together 2 King 19.22 and what then That Soul shall bee cut off from among his people because hee hath despised the word of the Lord and hath broken his Commandement that soul shall utterly bee cut off There was no mercy for those sinned in that manner Heb. 10.26 28. many I fear commit such trespasses in these daies by speaking against Providence Ordinances Scriptures Angels Christ God himself and so sin away mercy and their own souls at once David prayed that God would keep him back from presumptuous sinnes Psal 19.13 and wee had need do it for there is that in our natures which carries us on strongly towards them as much as they did him remember what Solomon saith Prov. 28. Happy is the man that feareth alwaies but hee that hardeneth his heart that presumeth that is wilful pertinacious shall fall into mischief into mischievous sinnes into mischievous judgements chap. 13.13 Who so despiseth the word shall bee destroyed but hee that feareth the Commandement shall bee rewarded hee that sleights the word and waies of God destruction is his portion but he that fears to violate the command of God shall bee rewarded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hee shall have peace safety a man by despising or fearing the word command of God doth neither hurt the one nor advantage the other but hee may hee doth hurt or advantage himself and that greatly 28 Then they saw every high Hill c. In this verse you have the Idolatry they fell into when they came into the Land of Canaan with the degrees thereof First Their Leaving of God and looking unto the Hills Iis locis arboribus quae prae caeteris erant insignes aliquid divinitatis in esse purabant Gentes Ideo ibi idolis sacrificabant Mariana yea every high hill and all the thick trees they gave liberty to their eies to spy out places suitable to their Idolatrous thoughts on hills and places beset with thick trees the Heathens worshipped and their Hearts and eyes were towards such places 2 Their making Altars and sacrificing there they offered there their Sacrifices c. they should not have sacrificed any where but in the place God appointed which was first the Tabernacle afterwards the Temple but they spied out hills groves thickets set up Altars and sacrificed on them those offerings which were peculiar unto God 3 Their Continuance and expencefulnesse therein they offered Sacrifices They poured out there their drink offerings 4 Their Content and delight they took therein there also they made their sweet savour The provocation of their Offering The Hebrew is The indignation and anger of their Corban 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Korban omne donum significat quod ad sacros usus offertur de pecoribus frugibus aliisque rebus Mincha Non tam late patet sed de frugibus terrae tantum in elligitur that is their approaching gift or offering Jun. hath it irritamentum oblationis suae the irritation of their oblation Piscat Oblationes irritantes provoking oblations because by them they did provoke God to anger to judgements There is a figure in these words called Hyppalage which is such a transposing of words as that is said of one which should bee said of the other as here provocation of offerings for Offerings provoking There also they made their sweet savour The Original for sweet savour is Reach nichochehem The Odour of their rests Odores grotos suos their acceptable odours when they had offered these they thought the Lord smelt a sweet savour was well pleased with them and so rested in them which phansied rest was pleasing to them though it lasted not neither had reality in it for their incense or sweet savour was a provocation to God Obs 1 That what the Lord promiseth hee makes good how difficult or impossible soever it seems to man The Lord had promised them Canaan and how should they come to it they were bond-men in Egypt there is a red Sea a vast wildernesse between Egypt and Canaan and beside Canaan had strong men in it sonnes of Anack Cities walled and great several Kings to oppose and keep them out but notwithstanding all these difficulties God having promised to bring them in hee did it when I had brought them into the Land for the which I lifted up my hand to give it to them His hand that was lift up to confirm them it should be done was let out for the doing thereof that hand could take away all doubts could also take away all difficulties There is nothing too hard for the Lord hee will work and who shall who can let it Isa 43.13 As hee is gracious to Promise so faithfull and able to perform and doth in due time make good whatever hee hath promised though it seem impossible hee said a Virgin should bring forth Isa 7.14 and was it not made good Mat. 1.18 that Abraham who was aged should have a Childe and his seed bee as the starres of Heaven and were not both made good Gen. 21.2 Exod. 12.37 Numb 11.21 not one word fail'd of all that God promised Moses 1 King 8.56 this should make us beleeve the promises of God what ever flesh and bloud objects Obs 2 Mens habitations are given and assigned unto them of the Lord I brought them into the Land I gave it them If men bee removed from place to place seated here or there the hand of the Lord is in it if they have commodious pleasant gainful habitations if they dwell safely under vines and fig-trees as it is 1 King 4.25 it s the Lords doing his providence disposed it so and wee should be thankful in and for our habitations and minde the heavenly Canaan and those mansions mentioned Joh. 14.2 prepared for those do beleeve and glorify God out of which when once we are possessed of them wee shall never bee removed Obs 3 Circumstances of time and place do aggravate mens sinnes and make them hainous When I had brought them into the Land then they saw every high hill there they offered sacrifices there they presented the provocation of their offerings there they made their sweet savour there they poured out their drink offerings here bee four theres every one aggravating and accenting their sinnes This was ingratitude with a witnesse that the Lord should
that which redounds to his honour and praise Laudabor propter meam erga vos misericordiam atque beneficentiam Piscator Gentes laudabunt me propter liberationem vestram Vatablus Cum omnes nationes viderint vos a me esse liberatos sanctum me justum que judicabunt quod facerim quod promiseram Maldon Glorificabor sanctus potens mirabilis predicabor Pradus So A Lapide Pintus Lavater and thus diverse interpreters take it in this place I will bring you out of Babylon into your own Countrey unite you into Church order give you another Temple with all the Ordinances of it sanctify you by my word and Spirit cause you to worship mee with pure worship bringing me the best you have for Sacrifices that so you may praise mee for my goodnesse unto you and the Nations for the great things done for you The Lords bringing them out of the countrys where they were scattered was a great work and filled the Heavens with admiration making them to say The Lord hath done great things for them Psalm 126.2 and the Jews also to say The Lord hath done great things for us v. 3. when the Jews were brought out of Egypt it s said Psa 114.2 Judah was his Sanctuary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Sanctitatem ejus or Sanctificatio ejus and so the French read it Juda fut sa sainctete God separated them from the Egyptians as these from the Babylonians to inhabit their praises and to bee worshipped by them and so they were his Sanctuary and Sanctification God doth Sanctify himself when he doth vouchsafe a people manifestations of his goodnesse wisdome mercy love and faithfulnesse and God is sanctified when a people doth that is pleasing and acceptable to God Numb 20.12 Because ye beleeve not to sanctify mee in the eyes of the children of Israel unbeleef is a non sanctifying of God and beleeving is a sanctifying of him Obs 1 God accounts not Apostates and Idolaters but those are true Israelites to bee his people his Church for in mine holy mountain there shall all the house of Israel bee those were Rebels and would serve wood and stone that would not hearken unto him hee purged out and the house of Israel purged must bee in his holy mountain God esteems those who are Godly true Beleevers Israelites indeed to bee his There bee none but such in the invisible Church Rom. 11.26 Gal. 6.16 but in the visible there bee tares and wheat yet God doth not reckon the tares to bee wheat they are Satans not the Lords Mat. 13.38 there be goats and sheep yet the Lord reckons not the goats to bee sheep Matth. 25.33 Psal 15.1 Lord who shall dwell in thy holy hill hee that walketh uprightly and worketh c. Obs 2 Where-ever Gods people are scattered hee will bring them and all of them into or unto Sion to serve him In mine holy Mountain c. There shall all the house of Israel all of them in the Land serve mee God would bring them out of Babylon into Canaan from Heathenish mountains to his holy Mountain from the World and Synagogues of Satan into the true Church Where-ever God hath any sheep hee will gather them and all of them into his fold These verses do speak and hold out Gods dealing with his People under Christ and the Gospel wherein God would bring them from all Nations to enjoy the great and good things provided for them of which the Evangelical Prophet Isay speaks at large chap. 60. so Zach. ch 8.20 21 22. and hereof spoke our Lord Jesus Christ when hee said John 10.16 Other sheep I have which are not of this fold them also I must bring and they shall hear my voice When the Prodigal was in a far Countrey did not the Lord order things so that hee returned to his fathers house when the sheep was strayed and lost did not the Lord seek it out and bring it home to the fold Luke 15. and did not Christ send out his Apostles into all Nations to gathet in those were given him of the Father Mat. 28.19 20. Obs 3 The Lord is to bee worshipped especially in Sion in his holy Mountain in the solemn assembly There shall all the house of Israel serve mee It s not sinful to worship God any where 1 Tim. 2.8 or alone Matth. 6.6 but chiefly in the Congregation it should bee where his worship is publikely held forth and with the harmoniousnesse of many spirits held up where strangers may come in and see yea say God is here 1 Cor. 14.25 For hee is in the assembly of the Saints Psalm 89.7 This made the Prophet say Isa 2.23 it shall come to pass in the last daies that the mountain of the Lords house shall bee established in the top of the Mountains and shall bee exalted above the hills and all Nations shall flow unto it and many people shall go and say Come yee and let us go up to the Mountain of the Lord to the house of the God of Jacob and hee will teach us of his waies and wee will walk in his paths But in our daies this gracious prophesy hath been greatly crossed for many have said Come let us go from the Mountain of the Lord from the house of the God of Jacob Let us go to our own Mountaine follow our own Teachings and walk in our own paths but God hath made it evident that their mounts are mounts of Corruption their Teachings Delusions their paths crooked and cursed Let us therefore take the Apostles counsel Heb. 10 13 24 25. Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering and let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works not forsaking the assembling of our selves together as the manner of some is Nor let us meet as the manner of some is viz. to wickednesse Let us fulfill the Prophesy call upon one another to go up to the Mountain of the Lord c. And say he will teach us his waies and wee will walk in his paths Obs 4 In the Lords mountain in the Church God will shew favour and mercy to his people There will I accept them That is pardon approve of and receive them when wee come to serve the Lord after his own way in Gospel congregations meeting in this name of Christ to know the mind of God and glorify him God is the Master of such assemblies hee dispenseth many mercies and distributes sweetest comforts therein Isa 60.7 they shall come up w●th acceptance to mine Altar is spoken of the Gospel times men should come from several quarters to the Christian congregations with acceptance God would meet them there welcome them thither there hee would blesse them see Jer. 31.12 Isa 66.18 2 Cor. 6. as every Christian so every congregation is the Temple of the living God therefore hee told the Church of Corinth hee would dwell in them bee their God and father and they should bee his people his Sonnes and
iron rod and sword hee had in his hand The father speaks concerning his son to the Prophet and the 11. v. strengthens this interpretation Hee hath given it to be fourbished Who is that hee but the Son and who gave it into the hand of the slayer but he and that was Nebuchadnezzar Obs 1 Christ hath Rods and judgements in his hand the rod of my Son Christ is not all mercie though full of mercy the father hath committed all judgement unto him Rev. 6.16 the Lambe hath wrath in him as well as meeknesse Christ is a Lyon to tear in peices as well as a Samaritan c. Psal 2.12 Obs 2 When sinners profit not but are worse under lesser judgements this provokes Christ to bring forth more heavy judgements The Rod of my Son contemning every tree Though they stood it out against other rods they should not bee able to do so against this when the Axe comes to the root of Trees they must down a knife they may despise but an Ax despises them Obs 3 Some judgements are so grievous as they sweep away all This rod despised every tree the strongest Oakes the tallest Cedars the King Princes Nobles Counsellers Souldiers Artificers c. Obs 4 From the 11. v. Enemies cannot hurt unlesse they have power and furniture given them The Sword was fitted for and given into the hand of the slayer Nebuchadnezzar could not have stird destroyed a man in the Land of Israel unless Christ had impoured him Pilate had no power but what was given him No man or Nation hath power against another unlesse they bee armed from God or Christ Had the Jews kept in with them none should ever have harm'd them Vers 12 Cry and howl Son of man The word for Cry is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to cry out propter angustiam compressionem animi Jer. 30.15 why cryest thou for the affliction afflictions straitned and pressed the spirit of Jacob so that be cryed out you have the word in Ezek. 9.8 ch 11.13 where it notes crying from sorrow and pressure of minde Howle Beasts do howle when pinched with hunger or suffer some great misery The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Abenacius hath affinity with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words which signify night Quando aliquis est in summa augustia ut fere ad nihilum redigatur non habet preter noctem tenebras molestiatum tu●e incipit ululare plorare and reduction in a manner to nothing and when men are incompassed with great calamities and ready to perish then they howl Isa 65 14. they shall cry for sorrow of heart and howle for vexation of spirit the Hebrew is for breaking of spirit when their spirits should bee broken and they ready to sink and be ruined then they should howle For it shall be upon my people The Hebr. is Hajetha it hath been upon my People its usual with the Hebrew to put a praeter-tense for the future to signify the certainty of the thing and so it s here The French is il est fait pour mon peuple The Sword is made for my people to eat their flesh and drink their bloud Upon all the Princes of Israel In the 11. Chapter 1. you have Princes of the People The word there is Sar whence our English word Sir which is as much as Prince or Lord here its Princes of Israel the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nesiee from Nasa to prefer lift up set on high Montanus hath it in cunctis praelatis Israel upon all the preferred ones of Israel The Vulgar In cunctis ducibus Israel upon all the Dukes of Israel Others upon all the Princes Terrors by reason of the Sword The word for Terrors is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is variously rendered The Septuagint is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and referres it to all the Princes of Israel dwelling or sojourning there Theodoret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Those that dwell nigh me The Vulgar is qui fugerant the sword shall bee upon all the Princes and Potentate● that should fly Montan. hath it timores ob gladium fears by reason of the sword The French Crainte de glaive fear of the sword shall bee upon my people Castal Terrores a gladio imminent populo meo Terrors from the sword hang over the heads of my people Vatablus Pavores ingruent ab hoc gladio in Populum meum Aecolampad Formidines ad gladium erunt populo meo So Piscat Formidines propter gladium Lavater Terrores gladii erunt Populo meo Junius and Polanus read the word thus Detrusi in gladium sunt saith one erunt saith the other cum populo meo and in the margent of your Bibles it is So they are thrust down to the sword with my People that is the Princes shall fare no better than the People but together with them shall bee cut off The reading wee have I like best and most Expositors agree in it and so the word is rendred Lam. 2.22 Jer. 6.25 The sword of the enemy and fear is on every side Smite therefore upon thy thigh In the 6 Chapter 11. v. the Lord commanded the Prophet to smite with his hand stampe with his foot and here to smite upon his thigh which were gestures to expresse grief and sorrow Traxit ex intimo ventre suspirium dentibus frendit icit femur Plautus in Truculento in great and sad calamities Tundebant faemora palmis they smote upon their thighs with their hands Obs 1 The Calamities of wars are matter of great mourning and sad gestures cry howle smite upon thy thigh Jer. 4.6 7 8. God would bring evil from the North upon them Nebuchadnezzar the Lyon was comming for this gird you with sackcloath lament and howle Obs 2 The sword makes no distinction of Persons it shall be upon my People and upon all the Princes of Israel They should finde no more favor than others not any not the greatest of them should be exempted from the evils of the sword Jer. 52.10 the King of Babylon slew the Sons of Zedekiah before his eyes he slew also all the Princes of Judah in Riblah Then he put out the eies of Zedekiah Obs 3 Times of war are times of fears terrors by reason of the sword shall be upon my People The sword drawn is a terrible thing Josh 2.9 ch 10.12 Jer. 15.8 chapter 46.3 4 5. chapter 49.24 29. The sword is Magor-missobib fear round about it makes families towns Cities Nations to fear and tremble when the sword is without there is terror within and such terrour oft times as is destructive Deut. 32.25 mens hearts meditate such terrors as bereave them of their wits senses lives 13 Because it is a tryal The word for Tryal is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bochan from Bachan to Prove examine Try By the Septuagint here it s rendred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because it is justified
at the end thereof hee would shew them mercy This is that Jeremy speaks of chap. 46.25 26. The Lord of Hosts the God of Issael saith behold I will punish the multitude of No that was a great City in Egypt afterward called Alexandria and Pharaoh and Egypt with their gods and their Kings even Pharaoh and all them that trust in him that was Johanan and all the Jews who fled into Egypt for safety contrary to the mind and counsel of Jeremy chap. 42.19 20 21 22. and I will deliver them into the hand of those that seek their lives and into the hand of Nebuchadrezzar King of Babylon and into the hand of his servants here you have the judgement of God upon Egypt Egyptians and the Jews trusting in them but now what followes And afterwards it shall bee inhabited as in the daies of old after forty years suffering Egypt should receive her scattered ones and become a Kingdome again 14 And I will bring again the captivity of Egypt Here the abstract is put for the Concrete Captivity for Captives so you have it Jerem. 48.47 I will bring again the captivity of Moab and Ezek. 39.25 I will bring again the captivity of Jacob that is the Captives of Jacob the Captives of Moab and the Captives of Egypt or Egyptian Captives And will cause them to return into the land of Pathros Maldonate makes Pathros a City towards the South borders of Egypt furthest off from Chaldaea Bonfrerius judges it to bee that City in Egypt called Babylon but here it s called The Land of Pathros and Jerem. 44.1 The Country of Pathros where the Jews which fled into Egypt dwelt and though it were distinct from Egypt Isa 11.11 for it s said there God shall recover his People from Assyria from Egypt and from Pathros yet it was in the land of Egypt Jerem. 44.15 The Jews dwelt in the land of Egypt in Pathros Junius conceives this Country to bee near unto Arabia Petraea and by Jerome it was reputed formerly to be Nemus Arabiae a wood of Arabia Pathros its most probable was so called from Pathrusim the Son of Misraim Gen. 10.14 as all Egypt was called Misraim from the father so might some part be called Pathros from the Son viz. that part lay between the Red-Sea and the Mediterranean Sea and as God had carried them out that way so he would bring them again the same way Into the land of their habitation The Hebrew for Habitation is Mecuratham Negotiationum tuarum the land of thy tradings where they did buy and sell for the word is from Machar to sell and deliver wares to others Piscator hath the words thus into the land of their commerce The Egyptians dealt in fine linnen broidered works flax silk and other rich commodities now God would bring them into the land of their trading again Obs 1 The goodnesse and mercy of God extends to heathens he hath a care of them in their Captivity and after they have suffered his appointed time hee will shew kindnesse to them The Egyptians after forty years scattering shall bee gathered Isa 19.23 24 25. In that day shall there bee an high way out of Egypt to Assyria and the Assyrian shall come into Egypt and the Egyptian into Assyria and the Egyptians shall serve with the Assyrians In that day shall Israel bee the third with Egypt and with Assyria even a blessing in the midst of the Land whom the Lord of Host shall bless saying blessed be Egypt my People and Assyria the work of my hand and Israel mine inheritance The Assyrians Egyptians and Israelites had their daies and times of suffering and God had his daies and times of shewing mercy to those Heathen Nations as well as to Israel It s blessed bee Egypt my People and blessed be Assyria the work of my hand and blessed be Israel mine inheritance Obs 2 The afflictions of nations and Persons may be long yet not without end they may suffer seven and seven years yea twenty thirty fourty years together which is a long time and then see an end of their suffrings At the end of forty years will I gather c. the Egyptians were Captives forty years to the King of Babylon the Israelites were in bondage to the Philistims forty years Judg. 13.1 and then there came an end of their slavery they and many other Nations were captives to the King of Babylon seventy years which was a long time to sufferers but when they were run out their captivities ended Jerem. 25.11 God sometimes lengthens out the afflictions of people very much for ends best known unto himself as Gen. 15.13 God said unto Abraham know of a surety that thy seed shall bee a stranger in a land that is not theirs and shall serve them and they shall afflict them four hundred years here was a long season to bee afflicted but then it had an end Jehoiachin was thirty seven years a prisoner in Babylon but in the twelfth moneth of that year hee was set at liberty Jerem. 52.31 the man in the Gospel had been afflicted thirty eight years with an infirmity Joh. 5.5 and then hee was delivered from it Though warres famines plagues Captivities diseases and other afflictions may bee long yet they are not they shall not bee for ever they must have an end Ob. 3 That God sometimes deals more favourable with heathens than with his own people At the end of forty years will I gather the Egyptians but it was the end of seventy years before hee gathered the Jews out of Babylon his own people were thirty years or near upon longer under the Babylonish yoak than the Egyptians There was just cause for this Gods people had sinned worse than the Heathens and so provoked him above them Ezek. 5.6 Jerusalem hath changed my judgements into wickednesse more than the Nations and my statutes more than the Countries round about her there were no people near or far off who did like unto the Jews they forsook God the fountain of living waters and trusted in Pharaoh that great Dragon and in his rivers of waters Obs 4 Nothing is too hard for God or can hinder the fulfilling of his will The Egyptians were scattered among the nations here a family and there a family and that forty years together so mingled with the people of other Countries that they had well nigh forgotten Egypt and had so drunk in the manners and customes of the places where they lived that they were naturalized thereunto they were so rooted among the Nations that it seemed impossible to pluck them up and plant them in their own Countries yet notwithstanding these things saith God I will gather the Egyptians from the people whither they were scattered It s like the Babylonians and other Nations that had them held them under and made advantage of their labours made laws against their flight or departure and struggled hard to detain them as they of old in Moses daies did to retain the