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

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of a people defending them that is the glory and excellency of a kingdome 2 Chron. 13.25 saith Abijah God is with us for our Captain this was more then all the strength of Judah beside when Jeroboam came against him with 800000 chosen men With you are the golden calves vers 8. you have a great number but God is not with you to be your glory and defence you have the calves which is your shame and nakednesse but God is with us who is our glory and defence And when Jerusalem fell to Idolatry God tels them that they had changed their glory for that did not profit Jer. 2.11 they had driven away their glory and here was the beginning of their woe That 's the misery of a kingdome to have God depart from it then publike enterprises prosper not 2 Chron. 22.24 then counsell failes 1 Sam. 28.15 protection is gone Isa 5.5 then peace loving kindnesse and mercies go Jer. 16.5 This is as taking the Sun out of the firmament the eyes out of the head or soul out of the body now a kingdome and people lie exposed to all evils and mischiefs Hos 9.12 Wo to them when I depart from them all mischiefes presently step croud in upon a people left of God famine wars captivity a perverse spirit and treacherousnesse one to another came upon this people when God left his place And so after Christs dayes when God left them and that voyce was heard in the Temple Migremus hinc Joseph de hel Jud. l. 7. c. 2. L●b 11. which Tacitus in his Annals also mentions Audit● major hum ma vox ex●edere Deos simul ingens motus excedentium after this dreadfull misery befell them war famine dispersion was their portion they are without God Christ and mercy to this day an undone and most unhappy people Wee had almost driven away God by our sins specially by our Idolatry superstitions but God and his glory are not quite gone Jer. 14.9 Yet thou O Lord art in the midst of us and we are called by thy Name leave us not 4. God is glory or glorious there is nothing in God inglorious as in the Son is only light so God is light and in him is no darknesse hee is all light all glory his Attributes are glory his Essence is glory his Life is glory God is only glory Blessed be the glory the Lord. 5. Under the Law God confined himself to a particular place to the Temple there he dwelt appeared received sacrifices gave answers c. So that the Temple was not only locus but medium divini cultus the Jewes were bound to set their faces towards it when they prayed 1 King 8.48 Dan. 6.10 it being also a type of the body of Christ Joh. 2.19 that sanctified their Assemblies and sacrifices Matth. 23.19 But it 's otherwise now under the Gospel neither Jerusalem nor Samaria is the place where God is fixed Joh. 4.21 but Gods habitation is in all places where hee hath Saints Matth. 18.20 Where two or three are gathered together in my name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am there in the midst of them 2 Cor 6.16 Yee are the Temple of the living God and what saith God I will dwell in them and walk about in them that is in the Church of Corinth and so in all Congregations Now the Congregations are Gods habitation he walks amongst the golden Candlesticks there is the glorious God seen the glorious God heard But the place now where the meetings are be neither means nor parts of worship no types of Christ nor do they sanctifie the people or service done in them rather do the people and Ordinances while they are there sanctifie them and yet when the Ordinances are ended and people gone no holinesse abides in them but they are as other places 6. The Lord is worthy of praise when he is in a way of judgement Blessed be the glory of the Lord from his place now he was departing from Jerusalem all woes and miseries taking hold of them yet was he a God deserving praises Gods judgements are deep we oft know not the reasons of them see not the equity of Gods proceedings in them yet wee should be so far from murmuring that we should count him worthy of honour and praise when he deserts Churches and kingdomes Exod. 15.11 God is fearefull in praises 7. It 's the work and office of Angels to praise God the living creatures here said Blessed be the glory of the Lord from his place and Rev. 5.10 11. There were many Angels about the Throne and what did they they sang Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing So the Seraphims in Isa 6.3 their song was Holy holy holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole earth is full of his glory Angels are musicall creatures and make the best melody Arias thinks it was an Angel dictated the Song of Deborah unto her A. Lapid on Judg. 5.23 Luke 2.13 14. there was a heavenly Chorus and sang a heavenly song Glory to God in the highest on the earth peace and good-will towards men this was a short but a sweet song when great things have been done by God the Angels have been brought in praising God as when God created the world Job 48.4.7 Where wast thou saith God to Job when I laid the foundations of the earth When the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy that is the Angels as Interpreters observe who at the sight of that great and glorious work were much affected and sang the praises of God so at the birth of Christ and here at the departure of God out of the Temple the great God doing great works must have great praises even the praises of Angels praise is an Angelicall work and the office of Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod. and the Spirit calls for it at their hands Psal 148.2 Praise him all his Angels and they do it when he is in his judgements The Jewes thought God dealt hardly in punishing them but Angels saw cause to praise God for his departure from them and vindicating his glory in the punishment of hypocrites 8. God doth his works without motion or mutation Here it 's said from his place there is a shew of motion and change but no such thing befalls God his works make motions and changes in the creature not in himself he is infinite fils heaven and earth and never removes from one place to another he is immutable and not subject to changes For the 13th Verse of the wings wheels and noyse of them I have spoken in the first Chapter largely yet a little I shall speak of the Verse it 's said that the living creatures touched one another The Hebrew is from Nashash to kisse and each other in the Hebrew is a woman to her sister Observ 1. God makes use of Angels
it is that Vision is put for prophecy Isa 1.1 3. In a Vision there is alwayes such an irradiation of the mind such divine satisfying over-powering strong light that the partie who hath the Vision is put out of all doubt and dispute concerning the truth of the thing he hath seene or is represented Moller Ps 89.20 4. There is in a vision a strong impulse upon the spirit of the partie to doe that which is the minde of God concerning that vision 5. It is when they are awake God speaks to men by dreames in the darke when they are asleepe but usually visions are when men are awake All these are found here in the Prophet Ezekiels vision 1. There are representations of diverse things to him he was an Hieroglyphicall Prophet he had more things presented unto him of that nature then any Prophet besides All that followeth here in this Chapter are representations of things to Ezekiel in this vision 2. It is of things to come for this Prophecie being either of the ruine of Jerusalem or of the state of the Church still it was of that which was not present but future 3. The Prophet he had strong inlightnings he had such irradiations of his minde that he was satisfied touching the thing therefore he saith The word of the Lord came expresly unto him the hand of the Lord came upon him in a great deale of strength 4. He had a mightie impulse though he was backward unwilling to goe on in the worke of God yet the Spirit came upon him with power and put him on And lastly it was when he was awake walking up and down by the river Chebar there he had these visions Thus much for the nature of a vision now these visions were visions of God I saw visions of God Not that he saw God oft and so every sight of God made a new vision for no man can see God and live but visions revealed to him by God which did in some measure set out the glory and majestie of God and so they are called visions of God Or visions of God by way of opposition and exclusion thus I saw visions of God I had divine visions not Satanicall delusions for Satan hath his Prophets and they have their visions whereby they delude the world not dreames and conceits of mine own no Angel no Devill no dreame no fancy of mine presented them unto me but they were propheticall visions such as God himselfe hath presented Or visions of God lastly in regard of the eminency of them I saw visions of God that is choice rare difficult transcendent visions Things that excell in Scripture-phrase usually are said to be things of God As the Mountains of God the Cedars of God the Citie of God as you may reade Psal 36.6 Psal 80.10 Jonah 3.3 1. Observe here the certaintie of the things contained in this Prophet He doth not say I heard but I saw visions of God The sense of sight is the most certaine most active most discerning most evidentiall of all the senses Therefore 1 Joh. 1.1.3 That which we have seene with our eyes which we have looked upon we declare unto you There was certaintie in that which they saw One eye-witnesse is more then ten heare-says then ten eare-witnesses Thales being asked the Question Quantum ocul● ab auribus How much truth should differ from a lie his answer was As much as the eyes differ from the eares intimating that what you heare may be false but what you see that is certain The Prophet here saw visions of God to shew the certaintie of these visions and so of the whole Scriptures which are visions of God 2. See here the dignitie of these Visions they are visions of God such as are great glorious transcendent things Mens words works things are meane poore and worthlesse but the things the visions of God they are so high so excellent that few can reach them they are beyond the apprehensions of ordinary men yea the Prophets themselves did not see all that was in those visions God did vouchsafe unto them This shews the things of God have transcendency in them are of great authoritie and challenge answerable esteem These are visions of God and must with all Scripture be valued accordingly Hence the Ancients have called the Scriptures An Epistle of God sent from Heaven to the sonnes of men Therefore in them is nothing impertinent empty but all in them is glorious full of sense mysteries and Spirit this strengthens the authoritie of Scripture Ne titubet fides that our faith may not stagger at all but be confident and build upon them as visions and truths of God 3. See here that when God beginneth once to let out mercy to his servants he stints not presently but proceeds I saw not one vision but I saw visions of God hee had many choice ones It was kindnesse that Ezekiel had such a name The strength of God it was kindnesse that the Lord would open heaven to him it had been great kindnesse if he had seen but one vision but for Ezekiel to have heaven opened and to see visions of God many visions one after another this sheweth the great kindnesse of God When Rachel had her first son she called his name Joseph which signifieth adding or increase for she said The Lord shall adde to mee another son Gen. 30.24 Now God hath begun to shew kindnesse he shall not only give me this but he shall give me another son also When the Lord hath bestowed one mercy on you you may name it Joseph increase addition for God will bestow another upon you Abraham had many mercies from God one after another and Moses a multitude of mercies he converseth with God face to face he heareth God speak he hath Gods presence to go along with him yea he seeth all Gods goodnesse and glory to passe before him When mercies come forth God will not presently shut the door of mercy again Heaven is opened visions are presented one after another Psal 36.10 Continue thy loving kindnesse the Hebrew is draw forth or draw out thy loving kindnesse A metaphor either taken from vessels of Wine which being set abroach once yeeld not only one cup but many cups so when God setteth abroach the Wine of his mercy he will not fill your cup once but twice and seven times or taken from a Mother who hath her breasts full of milk drawes them out for her childe not once but often the child shall have the breast many times in the day and many times in the night so when God beginneth to shew mercy to you he will draw out his breasts of consolation and will bestow mercy after mercy upon you or from a line which is extended for so God being in a way of mercy will extend the line of mercy and measure out mercy after mercy for you Is not heaven now opened Do you not see visions of God this day How often is
flesh then went out glory John 1.14 and grace Vers 16. Then was Sol in nube the most glorious Rain-bow that ever was or shall be in the world he was not a signe of peace but our Peace Ephes 2.14 By his blood we are brought nigh for he is our peace 2. God hath his dayes of Rain When the flood was then there was rain to purpose forty dayes together If God hath rained bread Exod. 16. he hath rain'd wrath Job 20.23 snares storms fire brimstone Psal 11. God rains blood upon kingdomes Ezek. 38.22 I will plead against him with pestilence and with blood and I will rain upon him and his bands and the many people with him over-flowing rain great hailstones fire and brimstone 3. That the Lord Christ in wrath remembers mercy he mingles mercy with judgement hee sits as Judge upon the Throne hee pronounces s●●tence against a sinfull kingdome executing the vengeance written against sinners and yet here hee is compassed with the Rain-bow shewing that hee will not utterly destroy the Jewes a remnant should be spared When the great deluge of water was drowning the world yet Noah and his were saved there was mercy in the midst of judgement and here is a Judge with a Rain-bow over his head to assure the godly they should not perish in this flood of wrath now powring out upon the Jews Jerome saith of the Bowe it is a sign of mercy and the covenant which God made with man that when it appeared in the cloud we might know we should not perish by a flood and much more when Christ sits in judgement with the Rain-bow about him may the godly know that they shall not perish by the wrath of God if the glory of his Majesty statelinesse of his Throne terror of his Justice and the greatnesse of his Power do at any time discourage us wee must looke at the Rain-bow round about him and remember his Throne is compassed with mercy It 's said of the Jews when they see the Rain-bow they go forth confesse their sins but will not look upon it Confession of sins or any duty whatsoever will do us no good unlesse wee look upon the Bowe the mercy of Christ now was a storm and in it a Rain-bowe for the Prophet and godly to looke at it 's said in the Text the Bowe in the cloud in the day of rain then it 's a rainy day when God rains snares fire and brimstone and horrible tempest upon the wicked even then the bow is in the cloud and the righteous should look for it and look to it they should remember the covenant and mercy of it Is it not a rainy and stormy time now is not this great Prince angry with the kings and kingdomes of the earth doth he not frown chide and smite and that with deadly strokes in many places Let us look at the Rainbow now and know if there should come an overflowing scourge a deluge of wrath upon the world yet the Noahs shall be arked and safe the righteous shall be hid Christ will manifest mercy to them Saith John Rev. 4.2 I was in the Spirit and behold a Throne was set in heaven and there was a Rain-bow round about the Throne no sooner was John in the Spirit but he saw the Throne and the Rain-bow let us now be in the Spirit look with eyes of faith and wee shall see the Throne him sits on it and the bow round about him and then though kingdomes lie under the floods of errors superstition and ungodlinesse though drown'd in troubles and blood yet wee shall see God and Christ in a way of love and mercy towards us 4. That Justice and Mercy do compasse the Throne of Christ there was brightnesse round about and the bow was round about go to Christs Throne any way there is nothing but justice for the sinner unlesse penitent and believing and if such nothing but mercy This was the appearance of the likenesse of the Glory of the Lord and when I saw it I fell upon my face and I heard a voyce of one that spake Here is the conclusion of the Vision and in it wee have the scope of all was presented to the Prophets view and it is to manifest the infinite glory of God and then followes a double effect First upon sight of it he fell upon his face And Secondly He heares a voyce and so a fit pass … is made to that which followes The first thing is the manifestation of Gods glory a●● 〈◊〉 glory of God is considerable 1. In God himself in the Divine 〈◊〉 and there it is infinite glorious exceeding glory 2. In the creation as it is expressed and opened in the volume of the creatures there Gods glory is greatly seen Isa 6.3 The earth is full of his glory the Hebrew is the fulnesse of the earth is his glory the world is glorious and filled with Gods glory it 's nothing else but Gods glory interpreted and opened unto us in the creatures Quid est mundus nisi Deus explicatus and divine providence about them 3. In divine dispensations towards his Church and people Gods glory is in the firmament in all the creatures but more specially and fully in the Church Psal 29.9 In his Temple doth every one speake of his glory there it is most visible affecting and provoking of every one to speak In the world few take notice of it but in the Temple every one sees it and speaks of it the world is God opened and so glorious the Church is Christ opened and so very glorious this made David long to be in the Sanctuary when hee was in the Wildernesse and why so to see thy power and thy glory Psal 63.2 Could not David see them in the heavens in the mountains in the goodly Cedars and other works of God Yes but not as in the Sanctuary and therefore hee saith to see thy power and glory so as I have seen thee in thy Sanctuary there I have seen thee otherwise then ever elsewhere there he saw the King upon his Throne and in his glory The glory of God in each of these is held forth in this Vision in some measure there was the Spirit in the wheels a fire within by which the glory of the divine nature appeared there was a whirlewind a cloud fire brightnesse living creatures wheels moving severall ways which represent the glory of God in the world and government of it there was a firmament and a throne one sitting upon it surrounded with a Rain-bow which sets out the glory of God in his severall dispensations towards his Church both in his judgements mercies and government thereof A Question is moved Whether our Prophet saw the glory of God The Answer is It was the appearance of the likenesse of the glory of the Lord he doth not say hee saw God in his essence it 's acknowledged by most that we cannot see Gods essence while wee are Pilgrims on earth In
not mercy a little of the hair shall be preserved when the rest goes to the fire sword and wind when all flesh had corrupted their wayes a generall flood was brought in Noah and his family were saved when Sodom was burnt with fire and brimstone Lot was bound up in the skirt of God when Athaliah slew all the seed royall Ioash was hid and escaped that treachery that butchery 2 King 11.1 2. No storm sinks all ships no plague famine war eat up all particulars God will have a number exempt Isa 1.9 God left them a small remnant a few clusters after the Vintage when the cities were to be laid waste the houses unpeopled a great forsaking to be in the midst of the land Isa 6.11 12. in the 13th verse it 's said but yet in it shall be a tenth God would spare a number though small he is mercifull hath tender bowels remembers his covenant his name and therefore in his hottest wrath shewes some mercy this made Ieremiah say Lam. 3.22 It is of the Lords mercies that we are not consumed he and some few more were hid from the common calamities they met with mercy in the midst of fire and sword this made Habakkuk pray Hab. 3.2 In wrath remember mercy 8. That the paucity preserved in common calamities are not all precious truly godly here was hair bound up in the skirt kept from fire sword destruction yet some of that hair of that number must be thrown into another fire reprobates for the present escape as well as elect vessels some choyce ones may be cut off and some vile ones may be kept In the flood all were not naught that were destroyed nor all good that were saved there was a wicked Cham in the Ark and Lots daughters that escaped the fire of Sodom were none of the best that fire had not purged out their lust and those were set at liberty from the brick and clay of Egypt afterward were destroyed for their unbelief Iud. 5. they were patient in their bondage preserved in the red Sea tempted God murmured in the wildernesse and there were destroyed of Serpents 1 Cor. 10.9 they were murmurers fornicators Idolaters unbelievers that God delivered from the tyrannie of Pharaoh and after perished by the stroke of God In a storm Cedars and Oaks are smitten when bushes and briers are spared and yet after they are cut up and cast into the fire Sinners may escape present wrath but there is wrath to come Luke 3.7 9. God may take occasion from the sin of some to bring in judgement upon all he must take of the remnant preserved and throw into the fire and out of that fire went forth fire into all the House of Israel Shechem ravisheth Dinah from thence the Lord took occasion to bring the sword by Iacobs sons upon the Shechemites who slew their males spoyled the city and took their sons and daughters captives Gen. 34. Davids sin in numbering the people and God sent in a plague amongst them for his sin which slew 70000. of them 2 Sam. 24. The people were not innocent if so God would not have destroyed them they were defiled with the contagion of his sin or under the guilt of others God may let in a judgement into a family city kingdom upon the sin of some one or few and when it 's in it may extend to all or most in them when one house is on fire all the rest are in danger that are neer and oft times do suffer Hanuns discourtesie to Davids messengers his sin against the law of nations provoked God and cost the Ammonites and Syrians dear for God stirred up Davids spirit who warred upon them and slew many thousands of them 2 Sam. 10. VER 5 6. Thus saith the Lord God This is Ierusalem I have set it in the midst of the nations and countries that are round about her 6. And shee hath changed my judgements into wickednesse more then the nations and my Statutes more then the countries that are round about her for they have refused my judgements and my Statutes they have not walked in them c. IN the ensuing part of the Chapter is the explanation of the types and in this explanation you have First the subject or head to be shaven opened unto you and that 's Jerusalem vers 5. Secondly Gods dealing with Ierusalem in the same verse Thirdly the motives that made him proceed in such a judiciall way verse 6 7. Fourthly Threatning of judgements answerable to the types from the 8. verse to the end This is Ierusalem It was not Ierusalem literally but represented Ierusalem it was a sign of the city that was to be shaven This head to be shaven is here by the Lords own mouth pronounced to be Ierusalem which was not only the head city of Iudah but of the whole world Things and persons that are eminent among others are call'd the heads or chief of them 1 Sam. 15.21 they took the chief or head of the things should have been destroyed and Chap. 9.22 Hee made them sit in the chiefest place and for persons Deut. 1.15 I took the chief of the Tribes that is the heads of them Psal 110.6 the heads over divers countries and so here Ierusalem was the head and principall of all other cities built upon mount Sion and had the Temple the Prophets the true worship and presence of God so Ierusalem as the head gave light influence and motion to the whole body the Law shall go forth of Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem Isa 2.3 from thence all parts of the body had instruction and direction I have set thee in the midst of the nations and countries round about These words have occasioned some to think that Ierusalem was the heart and center of the earth lying in the midst of it on the South was Africa on the North Scythia Armenia and Pontus on the East Asia and on the West Europe and with these great parts of the world it was compassed about Hence the Spirit of God also affirms it to be in the midst of the earth Psal 74.12 and Ezek. 38.12 And infinite wisdome appeared in it that so the sound of Law and Gospel might disperse the better into all parts of the world But this opinion must not be taken in a Mathematicall sense as if it were so in the midst of the earth as that all other parts should be equidistant from it in their extremes as the line from the center for so it will hardly admit of truth some quarters of the world being of larger extent then others In the midst of the nations and countries we need not to extend to the whole world but only to those that were neighbouring thereunto or if we will have an eye to all nations and countries of the earth we must expound in the midst among or in and the sense then is safe I have set thee in or among the nations as head and chief thus
chiefest in malignancy and opposition this you shall see 2 Chron. 36.14 15 16. All the chief of the Priests and the people transgressed very much they polluted the house of the Lord they mocked the messengers of God despised his words and misused his Prophets this was the practice of those times Was there ever any great disorder corruption in the Church or any sedition treason almost in the State but some of the chief of the Priests have had their hands in it When the Calf was set up in Moses his dayes Aaron the Priest had his head and hand in it when David was a dying Adonijah makes the sedition and stir in the Kingdome but Abiathar the Priest had a great hand in it Both in the State and in the Church you may well observe that the chief of the Priests have had their hands in the evill in the trouble And have not we now a malignant party that oppose the reformation intended and begun Do they not set themselves with all their might against the Ieremies Daniels Ezekiels and Rechabites of the Land that will not defile themselves There is such a party you all know that do oppose godliness that despise the Prophets scorne the Saints make sad the hearts of the righteous and strengthen the hands of wickedness therefore this prophecy may be seasonable enough in regard of that malignant party that doth oppose too openly 3. They had lost their countrey their choysest comforts they were in captivity and constant jeopardy of their lives if they provoked the Babylonians they were ready to fall upon them and root them out presently and those at Ierusalam were in danger every day to have their liberties estates consciences Religion and lives taken from them And are not we like unto them and are not we even in a Land of liberty in a state of captivity Do not our estates our liberties our consciences our Religion our lives and all lie at the stake Wee are even in Babylon in the midst of Sion wee are in a sad and heavie condition therefore this Prophecy may be seasonable now considering our estate is so like to theirs 4. The times then were such that they loathed Manna ordinary and plain truths would not down unless truths were new and transcendent they were weary of them and slighted them Ieremy was too plain a Prophet for them too low and God gives them Ezekiel a dark and hard Prophet And is it not so in these dayes we have been fed with Manna so long that we loath Manna as a wormy thing If we have not something new unheard of transcendent we are weary wee think it not worth our going out of doors if so then here is a Prophet that may be sutable to these times and your desires God gave them this Prophet in a time of affliction and there was something in it for afflictions open mens understandings Vexatio dat intellectum and inlarge their capacities when people are under pressures then their understandings are quickest then they are most apprehensive therefore God gave them such a Prophet as might sute with their condition in exercising their parts and graces to the full when at the best Now is a time of affliction if your spirits be awakened and the bent of them be after high and hard things lo here are difficulties and transcendencies for you here are high things to draw up your thoughts to exercise your spirits be they never so choice and apprehensive One thing more for the seasonablenesse of this Prophet it is said heaven was open Ezekiel saw visions of God If ever God hath opened heaven since Christ now he hath done it in these sad times God hath now caused is causing you every day to see visions out of the Prophets and out of the Gospel These expository Lectures are openings of heaven and let out cleare and choice light unto you from heaven therefore seeing heaven is opened let visions of God be counted seasonable and become acceptable unto you But if this Prophet be so dark and difficult what is the benefit and fruit we shall have by him This is the next head wee are to come unto and the benfits of this Prophet are these the darker the Prophet is the more of God may you look for from him God dwelleth in darkness as well as in light Psalm 18.11 He made darknesse his secret place And Exod. 19.9 God came to Moses in a thick cloud Tenebrae sunt latibulum D●i and there Moses had the most of God Here God is coming to you in a dark Prophet and questionless you shall find much of God in him here you shall see much of Gods mercy in upholding and comforting the spirits of his people and providing for them in a strange land here you shall see much of Gods justice in punishing sinners for their sins and iniquities here you shall see much of Gods truth in fulfilling of prophecies here you shall finde much of Gods power in subverting of Kings and Kingdomes here you shall finde much of his manifold Wisdome in these dark visions here you shall finde more of God then you expect 2. This prophecy is an exact History of the time of the Jewes being in captivity in it you have many passages of Nebuchadnezzars reign and government of his acts abroad and at home and of Gods dealing with his people in the time of this their seventy yeers captivity Were not Daniel and Ezekiel extant wee should have such a great losse as the world could not tel how to repair it the acts of Gods dealing with his Church and people in that seventy yeers would be swallowed up in a Chaos of darkness 3. You shall see for what sins God subverteth and overthroweth Kingdomes and States In this Prophet you shall find that the Lord doth ruine glorious Churches great Cities mighty Kingdomes men of great renown families and posterities and the particular sins for which he doth it Namely for false worship Idolatry injustice uncleannesse prophaning of his Sabbaths contempt of his Word abuse of his Prophets and sins of that nature So that as it is Prov. 21.30 There is no wisdome no counsel nor understanding against the Lord. God will overthrow even Kings and their Councels Kingdoms with their Nobility and Gentry with their Magistrates and people God will overthrow them when he once sets upon such a worke such a designe There is no standing out against him 4. You shall see here also the different carriage betweene the godly and the wicked in times of Judgement When judgements are abroad in the world the inhabitants of the earth should learn righteousness but wicked men they grow more active against God more impudent more desperate and hard-hearted they combine and plot together to roote out the righteous this you shall see in this Prophecie And for the godly you shall finde that when judgements are neare and upon them they are mourning in secret they get together
was let down from heaven unto Peter and so the visions might be neerer unto Ezekiel then the highest heavens The heavens were opened and he saw visions of God it is not said that he saw visions in heaven and grant it to be in heaven Stephen saw Christ there and so might Ezekiel see the object of his vision there yet neither did Stephen by his naturall strength see Christ nor Ezekiel these visions but he that opened heaven did open their eyes strengthened them to see at such a distance Or Secondly you may take it effectively that was done to the eye of faith as if heaven had been opened A thing is said to be opened when that is removed which hinders coming at the thing shut up the seven seals were loosed Rev. 5. then was the book opened when the shuts of the window are turned aside that the eye can come at the light then the window is open the impediments are taken away Vbi discussis omnibus obstaculis Deus facit ut fidelium oculi usque ad gloriam ipsius coelestem penetrent and heaven is open when all lets being set aside God causeth the eyes of his to see divine visions or reveals divine mysteries unto them as if heaven were open and this is the way most peculiar to the servants of God Hereafter saith Christ You shall see Heaven opened and the Angels ascending and descending upon the Son of man The Angels are not corporeall they cleave not the heavens asunder in their descent or ascent that is not the meaning but the spirit of the Text is this the impediments should be taken away from their minds they should be so enlightened with the glory of the Gospel they should see as it were even Angels come down and minister unto Christ they should as the expression is Nova acie apertis oculis 2 Cor. 3.18 with open face behold as in a glasse the glory of God see heaven opened in Christ and the Angels descending upon the Son of man And so did Ezekiel see heaven opened Observ The Key of Heaven is in the hand of God he openeth heaven at his pleasure and letteth out and in what parties and things he pleaseth Angels visions and other things he lets out he openeth heaven and letteth in your prayers your tears your souls at his seasons the key of the grave the key of the womb the key of the clouds the key of hell is in the hand of God and he turns them at his pleasure but above all the key of heaven is in the hand of God he is Lord Chamberlain there is none goeth out nor comes in till God himself turn the key If you would have mercies you must look up to God for them and desire him to turn the key Rev. 3.7 he is said to have the key of David he opens and none can shut he shuts and none can open a key notes power and the key of David chief power in the house in the Kingdome where that key is there is the greatest power God hath that key in his hand the key of David all power to open and shut heaven when he will he can open your hearts at his pleasure he can open Texts at his pleasure he can open dark things unto you therefore seeing all power is in the hand of God look up to him for mercies and desire him to turn the key for your good and his glory 2. That God doth great things for those that are truly godly that are true beleevers Heaven is opened for them and onely for them Wee doe not reade in the booke of God that heaven was ever opened for any wicked man wickednesse shutteth up heaven godlinesse hath the priviledge to the godly heaven is opened To Christ it was opened Mat. 3.16 To Steven Act. 7.56 To Peter it was opened Act. 10.11 To John it was opened Rev. 4.1.19.11 And it is opened to Ezekiel here in the Text I saw heaven opened It is shut against others wicked men shall never see it open in mercie the Judgement at last shall not be in heaven but in the aire or on the earth It is the priviledge of beleevers to have choice mercies Great things God will doe for them that the world shall have no share in It was the godly that saw Christ after the resurrection and not any wicked man It was for beleevers that Christ prayed and not for the world Joh. 17. It is for the heirs of salvation that the Angels are sent forth to be ministring Spirits unto Heb. 1. And it is for the faithfull the heavens are opened that they may see what the glory of their Fathers house is into what a familie they shall ere long be received This sets out the excellency of faith unto us for as it is a hand to receive Christ and his benefits a mouth to eate his flesh and drinke his bloud so it is an eye to see into heaven and the eye for which heaven is opened EZEK 1. The heavens were opened and I saw visions of God c. The Word of the Lord came expresly to Ezekiel the Priest c. And the hand of the Lord was there upon him And I looked and behold a whirlwinde came out of the North a great Cloud and a fire infolding it selfe c. I saw visions of God GOD hath manifested himselfe unto his Prophets severall wayes 1. By speaking immediately unto them without interposition of any medium even mouth to mouth and face to face So he spake to Adam in Paradise to Moses Exod. 33.11 The Lord spake to Moses face to face as a man speaks to his friend This manner of Gods manifesting himselfe was peculiar to Moses above any or all the Prophets besides as you may reade Deut. 34.10 2. God manifested himselfe to his people by Dreames which was in the night season there was some representation of something unto them when they were asleepe Thus God manifested himselfe to Jacob Gen. 28.12 And Jacob saith Gen. 31.11 that the Angel of God spake unto him in a dreame 3. God hath manifested himselfe to his people by Visions Psal 89.19 Thou spakest in visions to thy holy One. And Gen. 15.1 The Word of the Lord came unto Abraham in a vision These three you have together in two verses Numb 6. and part of the 8th If there be a Prophet among you I the Lord will make my selfe knowne to him in a vision and speake to him in a dreame and to Moses will I speake mouth to mouth Here in the Text it is by way of vision that God speaks or appeares unto Ezekiel I saw visions of God In a Vision there are these things 1. There is some species or similitude represented to the sight whether it be to the eye of the body externally or to the eye of the minde internally alwayes something is represented to the eye 2. A Vision is of something that is future whether at some little distance or very remote Hence
betokens rain Exercitat 80. if in the evening fair weather but we may finde by observation that evening Rain-bows in our Horizons have been messengers of rain as oft as morning ones the Grecians call it Iris which Eustathius saith is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nuntio because it doth foretell rain some derive it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contention because it presageth stormy and wet weathee Homer constantly calleth it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a divine messenger to tell the world there should be rain and storm This is the observation of some learned that if the colours of the Bowe appeare thick and end in blacknesse of a cloud rain followes certainly but if they grow cleerer and so vanish a serene followes Besides this signification Lib. 12. c. 22. Pliny attributes a speciall operation to it where the hornes of the Bowe do light Plants and Herbs are made more fragrant and pleasant Iridis incubatu Plantae fiunt odoratiores Exercit. 80. Ad generationem mannae mellis ●eri● and Scal. is of the same opinion who saith the incubation of the Rainbowe upon Plants makes them more odoriferous and Aristotle tels us lib. 5. Hist Animal cap. 22. that it doth much conduce to the generation of hony-deaw 2. For the Theolocall consideration of this Bow it is to put us in minde of the great flood that drowned the world and to assure us that God will never more do so Gen. 9.14 15. When I bring a cloud over the earth and the Bowe shall be seen in the cloud I will remember my Covenant between me you and every living creature and the water shall no more become a flood to destroy all flesh When we see the Bowe therefore in the heavens wee should 1. Be led to consideration of divine Justice against the iniquities of the world which hee punished most severely as to destroy all flesh And 2. To mind the rich mercy of God to our forefathers and our selves to whom hee hath bound himself by covenant and the Bow being the signe of it that hee will never destroy the world again in that kinde and whereas some make the red colour in the Bowe a sign of the worlds destruction by fire at last it hath foundation in mans brain not in any institution of God But I come to the words of our Prophet here is a Bow in a cloud in the day of rain Qui infra lumbos imaginis apparebat Maldon A lapid c. some make the brightnesse here to be that which is downwards from his loynes and to be like unto the Bow in the cloud and so they exclude all the parts from his loynes upward from having reference to this Bow understanding by his upper parts the divine nature by his lower the humane and something there is in it because the Text saith in 27th verse I saw from the appearance of his loynes downwards as the appearance of fire and it had brightnesse round about it That fire had not the other but it seems to mee more suitable to the Text and truth that this brightnesse being in circuit round about it did compasse not the lower parts only but the whole Throne and Person of Christ and so wee finde in Rev. 4.3 where Christ is upon the Throne that there is a Rain-bow round about it and therefore conceive that here also the Rain-bow was round about the Throne We will not stand upon that longer but come to see what the Bow points at And 1. It is an Embleme of glory Gods glory is much seen in the heavens alwayes but when the Bow is set in the cloud Habet accessionem aliquam non spernendam ac si Deus adderet aliquid ad nudum Coeli aspectum Cal. It 's a glorious creature and hath glorious colours in it various and yet beautifull affecting the eye for the present more then all the glory of the heavens besides and I finde among Interpreters that it signifies First the glory and beauty of divine Providence in its various proceedings with the wicked and the godly it punisheth the one it rewards the other and when these are done there is so much glory in it that Angels and men are affected with it Secondly the glory which is conveyed and communicated to the creatures for in the heavens the glory of God doth shine You know the Rain-bowes originall and being is from the beams of the Sun communicated received and reflected and though it be glorious yet it 's a borrowed glory and so informs us that the glory in all creatures is from another from Christ By him Kings raigne He gives gifts to the sonnes of men He enlightens every man that comes into the world 2. It is a token of mercy and favour Symbolum clementiae gratiae misericordiae it 's a Bow without arrows the back saith Ramban of it being towards the heavens and ends downward it 's a signe of mercy for when one shooteth arrowes hee holds the back from him And that it is a signe of grace and mercy we will make out by Scripture unto you that covenant made by Noah about the waters in Isa 54.8 9 10. is applyed to the Covenant of Grace striken with man in Christ In a little wrath saith God I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee for this is ●s the waters of Noah unto mee for as I have sworne that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth so have I sworne I would not be wroth with thee for the mountains shall depart and the hils be removed but my kindnesse shall not depart from thee neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee Here you see the Covenant of waters applyed to the Covenant of grace and in the Revelation you shall see the same signe even the Rain-bow applied for a signe of grace Rev. 4.3 There is Christ sitting upon the Throne and a Rain-bow round about it which shewes that the Throne of Christ is compassed about with mercy and Rev. 10.1 A Rain-bow was upon his head Christ is presented in Visions crowned with the Rain-bow as a messenger of grace and peace Isa 9.6 for hee is the Prince of peace and his Crown is the Rain-bow a certain Embleme of peace Gen. 9.13 14. The Rain-bow hath variety of colours and all glorious and so doth the more fitly resemble the mercies of Christ which are various and glorious This brightnesse then in the figure of a Rain-bow signifies grace and mercy held out to those that were godly or should repent of their wickednesse the brightnesse before noted the glory of his judicary proceeding and here being form'd into a Bowe it betokens mercy Observ 1. That mercy and grace come to us through the humane nature of Christ from thence goeth out the brightnesse and the beams that make the Bow when the Word was made
the glory of the Lord but it 's the greater mercy that God will put forth creating power in a vision and present the likenesse of his glory in variety of things according to the capacity and for the advantage of his servants so Moses saw the glory of the Lord in the Mount so Christ shewed unto Peter James and John his glory in his transfiguration Matth. 17. Isaiah hee had a glorious vision Chap. 6. and so glorious it was that it 's called the glory of the Lord and this did the Prophet Isaiah see in the likenesse and appearance of it not in its own nature for no man you ever could so see the glory of God and live Jehovah this name by the learned Jewes is called 1. Hashsham that name emphatically as the chiefest of all the rest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The name of four letters 3. The great Name 4. The blessed Name for the high Priest did pronounce it only once a yeer and that in the Temple at the feast of Propitiation at the solemne blessing Numb 6.24 25. 5. The glorious Name 6. The name Separate shem Hammephoraash because separate from ambiguity saith Maimon from our knowledge saith the son of Maimon 7. The name appropriated to God because it is most proper to him 8. The name of remembring because it brings to mind the being of God 9. The name of essence or being Shemhaguetzem a name of substance Plebi sub poena mortis ejus pronuntiatio vitita fuit Buxtorf Qui pronuntiat nomen Tetragrammatum non habet partem in suturo seculo The Jewes are exceeding superstitious about this name and say it must not be pronounced they term it The unexpressible Name themselves never utter it but Adonai or Elohim in stead of it they tell us that the womans son in the 24. of Levit. was accused of blasphemy and stoned to death because hee pronounced this name Jehovah And there is a relation of the Priests of the Sanctuary that not knowing how to read this name being written by Moses * Spasmo correpti interiorint Gerard. in loc Shindl. they laughed and were smitten to death of God for it It 's strange to think what miracles the Jewes attribute to this name Moses had it writ in a Rod or Staffe Christ got it and put in his thigh and so by vertue of it they both did all their miracles they tell of one David a Magician that by vertue of this name went in one day a journey of ten dayes But to leave Rabbinicall conceits This name Jehovah imports essence Ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fuit est being existence and by it the eternity independency efficacity and truth of God are laid before us together with his being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and here it 's attributed to Christ and tels us that hee hath his being of himself he is compleat in himselfe and an infinite sea of being Eternall Rev. 1.8 Independent Rev. 1.5 Efficacious giving being life and perfection to all creatures Hebr. 1.2 3. Col. 1.16 17. hee is true yea truth fulfilling the promises 2 Cor. 1.20 Observ 1. Jesus Christ who sate upon the Throne here is JEHOAVH of the same essence with the Father and the Holy Ghost hee is not consimilar but consubstantiall with them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alius pater alius filius alius spiritus but not aliud pater aliud filius aliud spiritus not like the Father or like the Spirit but the same the one differs from the other personally but not essentially 1 Joh. 5.7 There be three that beare record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one one in essence one in propriety one JEHOVAH Jer. 23.6 the Prophet speaking of Christ tels us what his name shall be called Jehovah Zidkenus The Lord our righteousnesse and in Mal. 3.1 Jehovah whom you seek shall suddenly come to his Temple by the name JEHOVAH is meant Christ who is God and this is of great concernment it 's the foundation of our faith in Christ of our worshipping of Christ of our salvation by Christ and of all good from Christ if he were not Jehovab the Gospel should be a lie our faith a fancie our worship false the Church a fable all men lost and that for ever 2 Again that the glory here represented in this Vision was not the glory of a creature but of Jehovah there was a man presented to his eye but Jehovah to his faith it was the appearance of the glory of the Lord not only of Christ as man but as God-man and so the glory was glorious glory And when I saw it I fell upon my face Here is the first effect of it when hee had this vision beheld this glory hee was amazed so smitten with the lustre of it that hee could stand no longer but down hee falls and that upon his face There is frequent mention in Scripture that upon visions and appearances of Divine Majesty the servants of God have falne down Dan. 8.17 He fell upon his face and Saul Acts 9.4 hee fell to the earth Abraham hee fell on his face when God appeared to him Gen. 17.3 The three Disciples Christ took up into the mount when they saw the glory and heard the voyce they fell on their faces There is a great difference between falling on the face and falling on the back To fall forward notes respect and humility but to fall backward is a note of sin and guilt Abraham fell twice upon his face the Prophets oft the godly when they are to deale with God fall forwards the wicked backward Cadere in faciem observantiae est humilitatem semper olet sed retro cadere peccatum supponit aut indicat Jer. except old Eli. Wee read not of any good man that fell backward but all those came to take Christ Joh. 18.6 went backwards and fell to the ground So Isa 28.13 Precept upon precept that they might go and fall backwards There be divers reasons or grounds of mens falling upon their faces in visions and apparitions of God 1. The Majesty of God that is present in these visions and some way or other represented to those that have the Visions so Dan. 10.9 2. The lustre of Divine glory that accompanies the same this made Paul and his company fall to the ground Act. 26.13 14. 3. Some new and dreadfull thing that appeares in the Vision as here creatures with four faces and four wings wheels rings full of eyes and so high that they are dreadfull 4. Sense of their owne frailty and weaknesse Visions having divine Majesty Glory and some terriblenesse in them have wrought strange effects upon infirme men they have lockt up their senses and put them in a deep sleep Dan. 8.18.10 Chap. 9. made them sick and faint many dayes Dan. 8.27 much grieved and troubled their spirits Dan. 7.15 taken away their strength and comelinesse Dan. 10.8
all the Prophets in Canaan 2 Chro. 36.15 16. The Lord God sent to them by his Messengers because hee had compassion on them but they mocked the Messengers of GOD despised his Word and misused his Prophets untill the wrath of the Lord arose and there was no remedy or healing God saw nothing would do them good but that they must be ruin'd by warer be thrown into captivity and buiried in Babylon yet such was the compassion and goodnesse of God that hee gives them a Prophet here to try them what they would do whether they would heare and learn righteousnesse God will not be overcome with mans evill but will overcome evill with good when the Jewes had taken Christ the heire and put him to death yet hee being risen powres out his Spirit upon the Apostles and gives them both to Jewes and Gentiles and Peter at a Sermon converted some of those that had washt their hands in his blood when God will nothing shall hinder his mercy and kindnesse hee will give the choysest Ministers to the corruptest people 3. That sinners in time come to a heighth and perfection of sinning they were not only a rebellious house but a house of rebellion when it comes to the abstract once it 's at the heighth as there is a going on in Gods ways to perfection Heb. 6.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so there is in sins wayes James tels us of sin finished perfected Chap. 1.15 Hence Eccles 8.11 mention is made of hearts fully set to do evill and Jerem. 3.5 Judah is said to speak and do evill as shee could and Israel sins are call'd mighty sins Amos 5.12 Fortia peccata 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the originall is bony sins as men when their bones are come to their full growth are strong and men of might so is it in sinning when sins are come to their full growth then are they mighty sins the like is that in Jer. 44.16 17. As for the word thou hast spoken unto us in the name of the Lord we will not hearken unto thee but wee will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth out of our own mouth to burn incense to the Queen of Heaven and to powre out drink-offerings unto her as wee have done wee and our fathers our Kings and our Princes c. this was the sin of Judah her whole heart and will was in it and Israel was not behind Hos 2.5 I will go after my lovers that gave me my bread and my water my wooll and my flax mine oyle and my drink they sinned with greedinesse as they in Ephes 4.19 which sets out the greatnesse of their sin The Scripture calls such sinners sons of Belial Judg. 19.22 Sons of Belial beset the house round about where the Levite and his Concubine were in the old mans house at Gibeah they got her and forced her to death these were sons of Belial indeed without profit as some interpret the word without yoke as others that is lawlesse rebellious men men of wickednesse given to wickednesse as Hophni and Phineas 1 Sam. 2.12 such as Christ will have nothing to do with 2 Cor. 6.15 unlesse it be to destroy them 4. That sin is an imbittering thing the house of rebellion may be turn'd the house of bitternesse that deals bitterly with me and imbitters my Spirit against them Hos 12.14 Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Peccata sunt amaritudines Dei O iniquitas Peccati quae suavitatem Dei in amaritudinem convertit with bitternesses Ephraim sins were sins full of bitternesse they turn Gods sweetnesse into bitternesse his patience into wrath his bowels into wormwood if any thing can sadden divine nature and imbitter the same it 's sin What a bitter thing is it that God should be thrust out of his Throne and Temple and an Idoll set up What a bitter thing that the heart and conscience which is the seat of God should be the habitation of lusts and Devils when God sees this it doth much imbitter his Spirit When Christ hung upon the Crosse they gave him gall and vineger to drink which was a bitter provocation and when wee sin wee give God and Christ pure gall to drink Lam. 1.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the words there are The Lord is righteous for I have rebell'd against his Commandment the Hebrew is otherwise because I have made bitter his mouth I have given him gall and wormwood to drink a cup of rebellion and disobedience he is righteous in these bitter afflictions because I have imbittered his mouth and Spirit with my bitter sins Felle amaritudine propinare Deo God is all love sweetnesse mercy and would not afflict and deal bitterly with us if wee did not drinke to him in gall provoke him by our sins to it Hos 13.16 Samaria shall become desolate for shee hath rebelled against God the Vulgar is Quoniam ad amaritudinem concitavit Deum suum because shee hath stirred up God to bitternesse and hee will deal as bitterly by her they shall fall by the sword saith God their Infants shall be dashed in pieces and their women with child shall be ript up Here was great bitternesse wee think but it 's nothing to the bitternesse of our sins our sins crosse Gods will darken his glory murthered his Son grieve vex his Spirit deface his work and burthen him daily There is a double bitternesse considerable about sin the bitternesse in sin and that for sin this last God never tastes but all man-kind hath and shall taste feares sorrows troubles sicknesse death c. but the other bitternesse in sin God alwayes tastes it Deut. 32.32 their grapes are grapes of gall their clusters are bitter both their works and worship are bitter there is hypocrisie and superstition in them there cannot be the least dram of Gall in any thing his people do especially in worship but the Lord tastes it and distastes it our mouths are so out of relish that wee finde sweet in sin which is gall wormwood yea bitternesse it self Job 20.12 13 14. Though wickednesse be sweet in his mouth hee hides it under his tongue keeps it and will not forsake it yet his meat in his bowells is turned it is the gall of Asp● within him It 's a metaphor from a man given to his appetite who meeting with some sweet pleasing morsell keeps it long in his mouth sucks out the sweet delights his sense with it Quod palatum oblectavit viscera d srumpit and lets it not go down too quickly but when it 's down it proves a poysoned bit and though it pleased his palate yet it torments his bowels so sin in most mens mouths in their fancies and to their senses is sweet and they roll it up and down in their thoughts and delight themselves in a conceited pleasure of it but there is the gall of Asps in it the bitternesse of death and Solomon who had
unpreaching Doctors and Prelates 4. That the gift of Prophecie is from Christ hee reached out a Hand and gave the roul of a Book hee is the great Prophet and hath all Prophecie and propheticall power in himself and whom he pleaseth hee can make a Prophet and inspire with propheticall vertue and where hee pleases even in Babylon as well as in Canaan VERS 10. And hee spread it before mee IN this Verse yee have the opening of the Roul the fulnesse and contents of it Hee spread it before me that is unrouled it and laid it open before me The word in the originall signifies to expound and interpret and wee may conceive that Christ did not only spread the roul before his eyes Expanditur quando hoc quod obscure prolatum fucrat per latitudinem intellectus aperitur Greg. but caused him to understand it by this spreading he saw it was written within and without but by Christs interpretation of it hee knew that there were written in it lamentations mourning and woes It was written within and without The Hebrew is in the face and in the back that is on both sides such writings the Greeks call Opisthographa that is writings writ on the backside fill'd within and without Lavater thinks that on one side were writ their sins and on the other Gods judgements this fulnesse of the Roul intimates either the length of the prophecie as Vatablus conceives or a multitude of evils hanging over the heads of the Jewes as Maldonate thinks or the abundance of revelations committed to the Prophet as Jun. not what Jerome and Bellarmine conceit that the writing within and without should note the literall and mysticall sense of the Scripture Lamentations mourning and woe Here is the contents of the Roul bitter and sad things Amara moesta the burning of the Temple the overthrow of Jerusalem the captivity of the Jewish nation and all the evill should befall them the word Kinim Lamentation noteth a plain complaint a sad speech testifying the sorrowes of mind as David in the case of Absalom O Absalom Absalom c. this was a naturall complaint and simple lamentation suddenly breaking forth without all premeditation Mourning is more it 's deeper and upon consideration the word in the Hebrewis from Hagah to meditate and noteth suspirium ab imo pectore tractum when one hath mused much and seriously upon the cause and matter of grief and then fetcheth deep sighs such as are inditiall of intense and bitter sorrowes that is the mourning here Isa 38.14 I did mourn like a Dove the Hebrew is I will meditate noting mourning that comes from meditation the Doves mourning is inward Cranes chatter and lament Doves mourne Woe This word vehi noteth not only the voyce in lamentations and grones in mourning but knocking of the breast and clapping of the hands together as is used in greater afflictions thus some Interpreters understand it but I conceive by Woe here is meant the threatnings of Judgement or Judgements threatned according to those woes in Matth. 23. and the fruit of them as it 's Lam. 5.16 Observ 1. That divine mysteries are unknown to men though very easie and familiar till they be unfolded this Roul could the Prophet never have comprehended the meaning of if Christ had not opened it take all the types and ceremonies of the Law there were mysteries wrapped up in them which neither Aaron nor Moses had known if they had been left to their own abilities those elements used in Baptisme and the Supper of the Lord we should never have known the mysteries of them if heaven had not helped us would we think the Rain-bow an Embleme of mercy if Scripture had not held it out to us Indians Heathens do not cannot so apprehend it take any divine mysteries they are too transcendent for our capacities there be depths in them that wee cannot fathome 2 Cor. 2.14 the naturall man cannot know the things of God they are spiritually discerned there must be a great mysterie wrought in him before he can discern mysteries 2. It 's the Lord Christ that opens and interprets mysticall things efficaciously unto the faithfull hee spread the Roul before Ezekiel and made him to understand the mysteries of it what is the Scriptures but a roul folded up a book sealed till Christ open it we may all say as the Eunuch being demanded if he understood what he read said How can I except some man guide mee Act. 8.30 31. so unlesse Christ guide us and lead us into the mysteries of the Word wee cannot understand Rev. 5.5 When none could open the booke sealed up the Lion of the tribe of Judah could do it He hath strength to untie all knots and a spirit to search all deeps Christ himself is the greatest mysterie and he is the great opener of mysteries Matth. 11.27 All things are delivered to mee and my Father and no man knowes the Father save the Son and hee to whom the Son will reveal him if ever God be made known savingly to the soul it must be by the Lord Christ and hee doth not reveal unto all but to whomsoever hee will to his Elect ones from others hee conceals him they have the Letter the Roul but not the mysterie thereof their light is darknesse But there be some in the world that Christ doth interpret the riddles and dark things of the Scripture unto see that place in Joh. 15.15 Hence first saith Christ I call yee not servants for the servant knoweth not what his Lord doth but I have call'd you friends for all things that I have heard of my father I make known unto you these were Christs friends Christ revealed all to them but from other all was kept it was Christ revealed unto the Prophets what they had and to the Apostles what they had the Scripture may well be call'd the Revelation of Christ you have one Book call'd so Rev. 1.1 The Revelation of Jesus Christ which God gave unto him to shew unto his servants that is his faithfull ones if we would therefore understand the Roul of the Book the mysteries in the Scripture wee must look up to Christ and intreat him to spread them before our eyes and to interpret them to our hearts 3. That the servants of God must not refuse to receive and propound large and sad messages to the people Here is a Roul writ within and without and fill'd with lamentations mourning and woe Here was liber mortis a book of death and deadly things this the Prophet must receive and declare to the people how ever they take it people would gladly heare from the men of God good tidings they would have a law of kindnesse in our lips our mouths to drop honey they would have us sons of consolation but wee must speak what our great Lord and Master puts into the ●oul if hee bid us preach lamentations mournings and woes we must do it 4 That the Lord gives
yet hee is also the Lion of the Tribe of Judah and can shake Kingdomes consciences with his voyce let us feare before him 3. When Christ sends Prophets and Ministers hee doth not denude himself of his power and authorize them to condemne or absolve at their pleasure they must depend upon Christ heare him speak and say of the wicked Thou shalt surely die before they pronounce a man a dead man a wicked man their power is declaratorie and if Christ do not declare to them they must not declare against others Jam. 4.12 There is one Law-giver who is able to save and to destroy Who art thou that judgest another none have power to make or impose Lawes upon the good or the bad but Christ all others must have warrant from him be they Princes or Prophets and why It 's he that hath the power to save and to destroy not they and therefore it followes Who art thou that judgest another it's arrogancy and boldnesse in any to step into Christs place and impose any lawes decrees or inventions of men upon the consciences of others or to judge the conditions of men without warrant from Christ and his Word Prophets may not do it much lesse others Hence what the Prophets and all Ministers say must be examined to the Law and to the Testimony Isa 8.20 if they speak not according to this Word it is because there is no light in them no mourning saith the Hebrew because Christ hath not appeared unto them warranted them and then their impositions and censures have no weight in them and we may prudentially refuse them 4. The fruit of sin is death if wickednesse be found in men death will be threatned from God wickednesse calls for its pay and that is death If I say to the wicked Thou shalt surely die when mans wickednesse clamors in heaven Christ will call the sound of death to be heard on earth Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and properly signifies what ever is edible with bread and Synecdochically the wages or salarie of souldiers and it suites in both senses with our purpose Eph. 5.11 sin is a work and a work of darknesse a work of the flesh Gal. 5.19 and they commit it are workers of iniquity Psal 55. and it 's equity that work-men should have meat and wages and here is both death is the delicates that the sinner hath to feed upon and death the wages that the sinner earns such meat and wages he is sure to have others may misse of both work and have no meat work and go without wages but this work-man the wicked man hee shall never misse of either of these hee shall surely die his meat and wages shall not be with-held mans own sin will slay him Prov. 5.22 5. The Prophets and Ministers of Christ must not only warn the people but warn them oft warn them themselves and speak to warn put on others also to do it they must not be flack remisse in this businesse they must do it earnestly constantly use all means to regain the wicked the repetition of the words imports so much if thou givest him not warning nor speaks to warn he must be solicitous and frequent in the work Paul knew it and therefore counsells Timothy not only to preach the Word 2 Tim. 4.2 but to be instant in season and out of season carnall reason counts preaching unseasonable that is upon week dayes and occasionall but the servants of God must take all opportunities to warn sinners of their evill courses and to win souls Christ forbare his meat and drink and Paul his sleep to preach unto the people Acts 20.7 flesh and blood judges night preaching unseasonable if not unlawfull but Paul thought it not unseasonable to preach even till midnight to do them good hee was a night preacher and a day preacher vers 31. saith he by the space of three yeeres I ceased not to warn every one night and day such was his vigilancy and diligence he was exceeding carefull to prevent evill and to do them good Phil. 3.18 he told them often of the thing and warn'd them to take heed of the same men 6. There is hope of wicked men that live in dissolute wayes before the Lord term'd them a rebellious nation impudent children stiffe-hearted Briers Thorns Scorpions most rebellious that rebellious house and here he calls them wicked ones and yet they must be warn'd that they may return from their wicked wayes and live some are hopefull and curable where wickenesse prevails generally and all seems desperate Manasses was as wicked a King as lived a great Idolater a great dealer with Inchaunters Wizards and familiar Spirits a great seducer of the people to make them do worse then the nations did a great shedder of innocent blood so that the Text saith hee did wickedly above all that the Amorites did 2 King 21.11 yet this great sinner found mercy greater then all his sins 2 Chron. 33.12 13. hee humbled himself greatly hee prayed and God was intreated of him he is wicked one day may turn another day he may become penitent and believing the next day that is cursing blaspheming this day as in Saul some come in early at the third sixth ninth hour others late at the eleventh and twelvth the Thief came in at the last hour let times be never so corrupt persons desperately wicked yet there is hope and God may have a seed amongst them let us throw the net oft we may catch fish in mari mortuo 7. The end and scope of a Prophet and Ministers labours must be to save life he must warn the wicked that so hee may save his life preserve his soul Paul tels Timothy that by preaching and continuing in the Word hee should saye himself and those that heard him 1 Tim. 4.16 Mens lives and souls are in great danger daily Errours Heresies Lusts Temptations threaten ruine and destruction to men continually the work and care of the Prophets is to secure them from these and to recall them from their sinfull practices Jam. 5.20 He that converts the sinner from the errour of his way shall save a soul from death and hide a multitude of sins that which Ezekiel calls the sinners wicked way James calls the errour of his way his sinfull manners actions courses opinions humors affections and principles from these must the servant of God labour to deliver him It 's Ministers work and the end of the Ministery to save souls therefore First their scope must not be to shew learning wit eloquence 1 Cor. 1.17 The Apostle preached but not with wisdome of words not with excellency of speech Chap. 2.1 not with inticing words of mans wisdome vers 4. and he gives the reason of it lest the crosse of Christ should be made of none effect that is lest men should think they are saved rather by vertue of mans wisdome then Christs passion
the conscience warn them they must and so warn them that they may take notice else it 's in vain and shall be before the Lord as no warning this they must do and do it oft and why else the blood of the wicked will be required at their hand their blood their lives lye at the stake for sinners souls they have a hard task a dangerous Calling and therefore had need preach and tell them of their sins that if it be possible they may save their souls if not their own people wonder many times at some Preachers they are so fierie so particular so terrible so long you may cease to wonder their lives their souls go for it if they do it not the hazard of souls and lives will make dumb men speak Croesus son being dumb and seing one ready to strike and endanger the life of his father cry'd out What will you kill my father and if our dumb Ministers had any faith if they did believe that sin was slaying the souls of their people they would lift up their voyce they would speak Psal 116.10 I believed said David therefore have I spoken and godly Ministers believe mens souls are in danger that their own do lie at the stake and therefore they have spoken do speak and will speak you that have curam animarum the charge of souls look about you if you discharge not your duty you undo them and undo your selves let not feare favour credits gifts hopes misbiass you let not difficulties mistakes of people or any other thing discourage you but remember your own danger warn sinners else their blood will be upon you and that is a dreadfull thing did men well consider this they would not be so greedy of Livings and pawn their souls for pelf if the death of the body were only here meant as it is not wee have great cause to feare silence for if we be liable to death for the death of that which is perishable and must die what guilt then doth a Prophet contract for the death of a soul which might have lived for ever if he had done his duty David knew the weight of blood-guiltinesse Psal 51.14 when he cryed out so Deliver me from blood-guiltinesse c. that was but the blood of the body what then is the blood of souls it's a mountainous sinking thing we have sins sufficient of our own we had not need to draw the guilt of others upon us a Alienas mortes addimus quiae tot occidimus quot ad mortem ire quot idic tepidi tacentes v●demus Greg. in loc so many we kill as we see to sin and silently suffer to go on in their sins Paul knew it and therefore said Wo is unto me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 And there is a wo to all that have charges that preach not unto them it 's b The world is full of Priests Sed tamen in messe Dei rarus valdè invenitur operator we take upon us the office but opus officii non implemus Gre. Hom. 17. needfull for us all but especially for Non-residents dumb Ministers those are negligent in their preaching or impertinent to meditate oft on these words his blood will I require at thy hands which words are fulmina non verba saith Erasmus when the Bell rings for a wicked man feare lest there be blood to be required at thy hand f Herod l. 9. Euenius a Shepheard that had the Sheep belonging to a city committed to him through his negligence a Wolf entred and devoured sixty of them upon this hee was condemn'd and lost his eyes Not only Ministers but Parents and Masters their souls are ingaged for their children and servants and they must be responsible for them if they warn them not if they perish through their default 12. It 's the duty of people to heare their Ministers and willingly to receive instructions and take warning from them especially people of their Ministers because they watch for their souls they work for them and they venture for them even their own lives and souls it 's mercy God will send any to admonish us if we hearken to admonitions we shall live if we do not wee grieve the servants of God if they be silent our sins are not the lesse VER 19. Observ 1. THat men may be warn'd from their wicked wayes and yet be never the better they may go on still this is too evident amongst us daily 2. It is not fruitlesse if wicked men return not from their evill wayes upon warning The Prophet hath warn'd the wicked and hath freed his own soul and this was a great comfort unto Paul Act. 20.26 when he appeals to the people themselves I take you to record this day that I am pure from the blood of all men and how doth he prove it thus for I have not shunned to declare unto you all the counsel of God He left none unwarn'd of sin danger untaught their duty towards God and man and therefore he had this testimony yeelding sound comfort I am pure from the blood of all so when hee had preached Christ to the Jewes and they opposed blasphemed hee shook his rayment and said your blood be upon your own heads I am clean Act. 18.5 6. much like that of David 2 Sam. 3. I and my kingdome are guiltlesse before the Lord for ever from the blood of Abner Let it rest on the head of Joab That which Paul calls clean David calls guiltlesse when a man is guiltlesse he is clean he hath solid comfort a Minister having conscionably warn'd the wicked and nothing comes of it in regard of them yet somewhat comes of it in regard of himself he is a free man a cleer man the blood of souls shall not be charged upon him A Minister that is faithfull shall not need to complain of the want of successe if he save not others he shall save himself VER 20 21. Again when a righteous man doth turn from his righteousnesse and commit iniquity and I lay a stumbling block before him he shall die because thou hast not given him warning hee shall die in his sin and his rightousnesse that he hath done shall not be remembred but his blood will I require at thy hand 21. Neverthelesse if thou warn the righteous man that the righteous sin not and he doth not sin he shall surely live because he is warn'd also thou hast delivered thy soul IN these words is laid down the other part of the Prophets Charge it 's not only the wicked but the righteous also fall under his care and if he sin and be not warn'd that effect will be dangerous and deadly to the Prophet he is not only to deal with the wicked to get them into the way of God but also with the righteous to see that he go not out of the way and if he do to reduce him guilt will lie upon a Prophet if he do
sufferings would be lost have you suffered so many things in vain When men in war forsake their colours and run to the other side all the good services they have done are forgotten and they are accounted traytors to their Countrey and Cause and so it is when men run from God and his Truth to the worlds and Satans service Lumb l. 4. d. 14. Inanis est poenitentia quam sequens culpa coinquinat But this is not all that his righteousnesse shall not be remembred for him but it will be remembred against him 2 Pet. 2.21 It had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousnesse then after they have known it to turn from it and why better because they now sin against righteousnesse and that way they have affected and profest and their righteousnesse will be a witnesse against them Let us all take heed lest there be an evill heart in any of us to depart from the living God Heb. 3.12 4. Mans ruine is from himself he departs from his righteousnesse commits iniquity and God layes a stumbling block this in justice he doth because man hath sinned but who causes him to fall not God that is mans own act he looks not to his way it 's his own lust drawes him aside inticeth him Jam. 1.14 the cause is from within only the occasion is from without riches honour friends peace credit parts beauty truths Christ are the good and great blessings of God and God in his wise disposition of things may lay these as occasion of stumbling before us but if we do stumble that is mans not Gods fault Hos 13.9 O Israel thou hast destoyed thy self but in mee is thy help destruction is mans salvation is the Lords Man fell by his own free will but if ever he be raised it 's by Gods free grace and if God will not have mercy he will turn their iniquity upon them Psal 94.23 Hee shall bring upon them their own iniquity and shall cut them off in their own wickednesse yet Prov. 1.32 it 's said The turning away of the simple shall slay them and the prosperity of fooles shall destroy them 5. Gods proceedings with the wicked and godly are divers Here he speaks of laying a stumbling block before the wicked man and in Jerem. 6.21 Behold I will lay stumbling blocks before this people the father and the sonne together shall fall upon them the neighbour and his friends shall perish yea Isa 8.14 God himself will be a stone of stumbling a rock of offence to both the houses of Israel for a gin and for a snare to the inhabitants of Jerusalem and Jerem. 46.6 They shall stumble and fall but it 's otherwise with the godly touching them he saith Take up the stumbling block out of the way of my people Isa 57.14 hee will remove what offends and indangers them and Isa 63.13 Lest they should stumble hee leads them and Prov. 4.12 when they turn they shall not stumble and Psal 119.165 Great peace have they which love thy Law and nothing shall offend them God is carefull of the godly that they be not offended if they should be so offended as to stumble and fall at any time Psal 37.24 He shall not be utterly cast down for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand and keepeth them that they dash not their feet against the stones if God do lay stumbling blocks at any time before his it is in the wayes of sin as Hos 2. I will hedge up thy way but for the wicked he layes stumbling blocks in the way of mercies they stumble at the Word 1 Pet. 2.8 it 's the savour of death to them 2 Cor. 2.16 they stumble at the Lords Supper they eat and drink damnation there 1 Cor. 11.39 they stumble at Christ himself 1 Cor. 1.23 6. An unfaithfull Minister is perfidious to God and man because thou givest him not warning he shall die in his sin and his blood will I require at thy hands God hath put honour upon the Minister set him in a great place made him a watchman trusted him with souls and hee now through sloth feare inconsideratenesse intanglements in the world neglects to warn the sinner hereby souls are lost Satan robs God of them is diligent to get and keep them this will be treachery and sacriledge too at last and fall heavie upon him is guilty if a band of men be slain through the Captains fault or taken through falshood all cry out of it and when souls perish through the fault and falshood of the Prophet it 's dreadfull Mont. in loc Zeph. 3.4 Her Prophets are light and treacherous persons the word treacherous in Hebrew is viri praevaricationum qui debitam Deo populo fidem pariter violaverint such as falsifie their faith to God and man and it 's the highest treachery that can be to be false to God and to rob him of the souls of men 7. That if a Minister may perish for not warning of sinners much more for incouraging them by corrupt doctrine and by a lewd life if death be in an omission much more in positive evils corrupt doctrine and a corrupt life are strong traces to draw men to perdition 2 Pet. 2.1 hee speaks of false teachers that bring in damnable heresies and withall that bring upon themselves swift destruction but their damnable heresies and opinions prevail with the people they follow their pernicious wayes and meet with their destructive ends Isaiah 9.16 The leaders of this people cause them to erre and they that are led of them are destroyed VER 21. Neverthelesse if thou warn the righteous man that the righteous sin not c. THe words need little opening He shall surely live in living he shall live he shall have his life for a prey in time of danger or he shall live comfortably that persists in this righteousnesse he shall be secure for feare of death Observ 1. A Minister or Prophets care must extend to all sorts of people before he had said the wicked must be warn'd here he saith the righteous also must be warned good and bad fall under admonition and circumspection of the Prophets both are committed to their charge and they must warn them give account of them and if they fail of their duty die for it the best and worst they must tell of their sins 2. The Ministery of the Word is very needfull wicked righteous must be warn'd that they may not sin return when they have sinn'd escape death and be saved the warnings of the Prophets are salutarie remedia adversus mortem animarum not only the ministery of the Word in generall but admonitions and reproofes are means through God to prevent the death of souls Prov. 15.31 it 's call'd the reproof of life there is life in reproofes as death in sin increpationes sunt salutares vivificatrices they teach the way to live and lead to eternall life hence you have such expressions as that
winde that filled all the house and the Spirit with it that filled all them So when Cornelius and his company heard Peter preach in a private room the holy Ghost fell on them all Acts 10.44 As no place can include the Spirit of God so can none exclude it There were Saints in Neroes Court and this hand of God had been working there it 's not a dungeon any prison can keep out the Spirit of God from comming to and comforting of his servants Glover found the truth of it when he said O Austin he is come 4. The more separate from the world the more fit for communion with God Ezekiel must goe into the plain and there the Lord would talk with him hee could have conversed with him at Telabib among the people in his own habitation but the Lord declines that intimating that while we are conversant with worldly and wicked men wee are incapable of divine mysteries but when we are remote from them solitary and sedate we are fitter to heare God speake When the Church was allured into the Wildernesse Hosea 2.14 then God would speak and that comfortably unto her It was by the river Cbebar he had his former visions when he was absent from popular noyse domestick troubles his minde serene and contemplative then the Lord opened himselfe unto him Christ oft left the multitude and when he was gotten aside into the mount then was his transfiguration and the voyce This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased heare him Matth. 17. VERS 23. Then I arose and went into the plain c. IF ought have need of opening in this verse it is the glory of the Lord and there is no cloud upon this The verse expounds it selfe it is the glory he saw before by the river Chebar that glorious vision he had there is represented again here unto the Prophet The Vision was not like the Temple fixed to a place but it was moveable it was first presented to him at Chebar and now again in this plain The reasons of this second apparition of the glory of God are First to possesse the heart of the Prophet with greater reverence of divine Majesty hee was unwilling to the service called to by God sought excuses thought to decline it which argued neglect of divine Majesty to strike out such distempers and to strike in a deeper impression of feare and respect to God This glorious vision is set before his eyes and frames him to a fitnesse for that imployment he might now see Christ sitting as Judge compassed about with glory having Angels ready to execute his pleasure power in and over all parts of the world and if hee should refuse the imployment appointed hee ran a manifest hazard of his life Secondly to confirme the truth of the Prophesie and him in it Thirdly to prepare the Church in all ages to an high esteeme of this Prophesie that was ushered into the world with such glorious vision Observ 1. Divine vertue makes men obedientiall unto the command of God The hand of the Lord was upon him hee bids him goe forth and presently he arose and went forth into the plaine If things enjoined suit not with our wills opinions and humours we deny them excuse and take off our selves from the doing of them or deferre them but let God enjoyn what hee will bee it harsh to flesh and blood contrary to our wills carnall reason c. if divine vertue once come upon us and the Spirit move in us wee will doe it God bid Abraham take his sonne his onely sonne Isaac whom he loved goe and sacrifice him upon a mountaine in the land of Moriah Gen. 22. Flesh and blood had much to object here but because hee was acted by divine vertue therefore hee obeyed presently he rose early took his sonne went to the place stretched out his hand to slay him and to make him a Sacrifice we stick oft at small things when nature only workes not at any thing when the Spirit of God works in us 2. They are obedient to God simply upon his command meet with mercies unexpected Ezekiel goes forth upon command not knowing what was to come what was to be done and hee meets with an extraordinary mercy he saw the glory of the Lord a ravishing a satisfying mercy Abraham obeying the command of God heares the voyce of an Angel twice and meets with a multitude of blessings Gen. 22.17 In blessing I will blesse thee and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the starres of heaven and as the sand of the sea shore and thy seed shall possesse the gate of his enemies and in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blessed because thou hast obeyed my voyce So Jacob returned from Laban to his fathers house upon divine command and he meets with Angels Gen. 32.1 hee met with God and like a Prince prevailed with him for a blessing vers 28. No man ever lost by his obedience unto God though we see no reason for things yet if we have the will of God that 's reason enough let us be tractable and forward to do the will of God and wee shall not lose our labour wee may meet with mercies unexpected as some by coming to the Ordinances have done 3. See the goodnesse of the Lord in two things First in that hee will manifest his glory to the view of mortall sinfull creatures his glory is precious a hidden thing and not obvious to creatures yet here as before he is pleased in a Vision to present it to the sight of Ezekiel it was to the Ambassador of a Prince that Hezekiah shewed the house of his precious things Isa 39.2 and it was a great favour to let them see such rarities it was a greater favour from God to let Ezekiel see this rarity of rarities his Glory Secondly that God should act over the same thing again present the same Vision in living creatures wheels eyes firmament a throne and one sitting upon it and give a sight of his glory the second time this sets out Gods goodnesse abundantly men are unwilling to do the same thing twice when as they may do it better the second time then the first and advantage themselves by it but God hath no advantage doth it perfectly at first yet simply for mans good he condescends to do the same thing again So Ezekiel may be brought to a fitnesse for divine dispensations incouraged too and in his work he shall have a sight of glory and a glorious Vision presented to him the second time by Gods own hand wee think repetitions of things in vain a Sermon twice over is stale unwelcome oft neither Minister nor people find any savour in it and so of other things but God repeats the Vision without prejudice to himself or damage to the Prophet 4. Sin makes us uncapacious of happinesse it 's mans happinesse to see the glorious God and have communion with him While Adam stood
tile 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word Labenah is a brick or a tile it 's questioned whether one greene or one dryed and if dryed whether in the Sun or fire and whether white or red which I will passe over as not being of any great moment It signifies also any figure that is fouresquare and so any table or thing that may be ingraven upon and because it 's from a roote in Hebrew that is to be white it 's conceiv'd to be a table of chalke or some other whitish stone in the forme of a brick or tile whereon incision might easily be made bricks and tiles are neither white nor easily admit ingravement Pourtray upon it the Citie even Jerusalem That is expresse the picture of it by incision and ingraving in the same it 's more then describing with the pen or pencill The Citie being pictured upon the tile or table he is commanded in the next verse to lay siege to it and so builds a fort casts a mount sets a Camp and battering Rammes against it and hereby shewes what the Chaldeans should shortly doe against Jerusalem A sort 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew word is Daeck and diversly expounded by the learned Rabbi Solomon thinks it to be an Engine to throw stones within the walles which might annoy them The Chaldee renders it Machinas Engines The Vulgar Munitiones Defences for the Souldiers and such as might prevent the flight of adversaries Some other Rabbies think it to be a wooden Tower Libr. 10. out of which they threw stones and weapons to batter the walls and brain the Citizens Vid. Joseph Lib. 10. Antiq. cap. 11. 6. de bel Jud. Vitruvius saith that some of them were 120. cubits high some 60. some lesse and 20 cubits broad at least The Septuagint hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propugnacula Strong holds Block-houses Fortresses and so it agrees with our translation Forts 2 King 25.1 when Nabuchadnezzar came against Jerusalem with his forces they built forts against it Cast a mount against it Solela it 's per enallagen numeri a singular number for a plurall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cast mounts against it The word is from Salal which is to raise up the way aggesta terra when stones turfes and other earth are heaped up together that makes a mount Job 19.12 The Troop is come together and raise up their way against me it 's the same word when they besieged Townes it was their manner to raise mounts before them that they might come without hurt to the walls Set the Camp Or pitch tents against it draw out forces and let them sit downe before the Citie Set battering rammes against it The word Carim signifies rammes living creatures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and here it 's put for a warlike instrument which was made with an iron head and hornes like a ramme to batter and break down the walls of Cities it was drawne back by a great number of men and then driven on with violence against the wall and so made breaches in them and hence it had its name because in forme it was like a ramme adversa fronte in muros incurrebat Some understand here the chiefe Leaders in the Armie that like as Rams are the leaders in the flocks so Princes Nobles Generalls Collonells and Captains are leaders in Armies 2 King 11.4.19 The word Captaine there is the same in Hebrew with that here for Rammes and notes the chiefe Leaders but in this place we are to take it for Military instruments which at the command of the chiefe ones were imployed Take thee an iron pan and set it for a wall of iron between thee the city The Hebrew is a pan of iron 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Hebrew by this doth note out the hard-heartednesse of the Jewes they were as iron or brasse inflexible before God others set out by it the great wrath of God against Jerusalem which now was come to that heighth that no sacrifice no prayers or tears could divert or abate Lam. 3.44 Thou hast covered thy self with a cloud that our prayers should not passe thorow This pan stood as a wall between the city and the Prophet a great impediment between God and them so that neither their prayers or miseries should come up to God nor his mercies descend upon them according to that in Isai 59.2 Your iniquities have separated between you and your God and your sins have hid his face from you that he will not heare others think it notes out miseries and tortures the Jew should suffer from the King of Babylon when he besieged and took Jerusalem this pan was such an one as they used to frie things in and Jerem. 29.22 it 's said that Ahab and Zedekiah were rosted in the fire by the King of Babylon they suffered hard things they were fried in the pan of afflictions and this sense agrees with that of Jeremiah Chap. 1.13 who saw a seething pot from the North which set out the terrible afflictions Nebuchadnezzar should boile the Jewes in There may be some truth in these severall senses but we may I conceive understand by this iron pan set between the Prophet and the City the firm resolution of Nebuchadnezzar to besiege this city to continue it till hee had obtain'd his design hee would not be moved from it but be as inflexible as iron and as unmovable in it as a setled wall or to go a little higher the resolution of God himself by Nebuchadnezzar to besiege and destroy this city and that without remedy for the Prophet besieging the city acted Gods part and this iron pan sets out his firm purpose to besiege them and his implacable displeasure against them which is also noted in these words Set thy face against it Which as Pradus saith is Severitatis signum gestusque Judicis constantis in decreto Vultus obfirmatus non annuit deprecanti qui nullius auctoritate precibus aut fletibus commoveatur ad veniam and this noted out Gods setting his face against them of which hee told them Jerem. 21.10 I have set my face against this city for evill and not for good saith the Lord it shall be given into the hand of the King of Babylon and he shall burn it with fire This shall be a sign to the house of Israel Here was the end of all that the Jewes at Jerusalem might no longer trust in the lying words of false Prophets which promised safety to them and their city whereupon they decided those were gone into Babylon and insulted over them and likewise that those in captivity with the Prophets might lay aside all thoughts of returning again into their countrey and see it mercy that they were from Jerusalem which was to undergo the greatest wrath of the Lord. Obser 1. The Lord deals with his people not only by his Word but also by signes and types here is a Tile and Jerusalem
verses read we shall make inquiry into sundry things 1. Whether our Prophet did in the literall sense lie so many dayes upon his side or was it only in Vision Some make it reall and say Ezekiel did lie upon his side all the dayes are mentioned although hee slept not all the time yet he lay in that posture and that it was by speciall help of God if nature could not of it self reach unto it yet it 's related of a Noble man of Lonaim who lay sixteen yeers in one posture viz. with his face upwards and Pradus saith he saw a mad man which had lien upon one side fifteen yeers Theodoret thinks he lay bound all this time and felt most grievous pain that so hee might represent the great miseries of Jerusalems siege which suffered great famine This opinion hath many and great Authors yet I must joyn with those who are for the Prophets visionall lying on his side for besides that nature could not bear it how shall we clear the justice of God that should for the Idolatries and sins of others which former Prophets had reproved so greatly afflict and punish one innocent Again he was to prepare himself bread verse 15th of this Chap. he was to set his face against the mountains of Israel Chap. 6. v. 2. and if hee lay still all these dayes on his sides how could either of these be done It 's also said in the 8th Chapt. v. 1. In the sixt yeer in the sixt moneth in the fift day of the moneth as I sate in my house and the Elders of Judah before me the hand of the Lord God fell there upon me if Ezekiel did in the letter lie so many dayes the time was not expired for the Prophet had his first vision in the fifth yeere of the captivity the fourth moneth and the fifth day Chapt. 1. v. 12. and seven dayes after this vision he had another Chapt. 3. v. 15. which made it the twelfth day of that moneth and on that day he was commanded to lie on his side and if you reckon from thence you will find not above 413. as Pradus reckons it or 418. and then if you joyn the days the Prophet lay on his side they amount to 430. So it will then appear the Prophet had twelve or seventeen dayes to lie on his side when the Text saith he sate before the Elders this lying therefore is to be taken visionally not really 2. What the lying on the left side points out unto us and why the iniquity of Israel is laid upon that side There is some mysterie in it and the opinions of men are different some make the reason of it to be the situation of Samaria which was the head city of the ten Tribes Isa 7.9 and this city was on the left hand of Jerusalem Ezek. 16.46 and thereupon the Prophet lay on his left side to represent them and their sins and on his right to represent the house of Judah and their sins but beyond this there is something to be taken hold of and it 's this the left side or hand notes disrespect the right side or hand dignity or favour Mat. 25.34.41 the good were on the right hand the bad on the left By this posture of the Prophet is typed out to us the different respect of God to the house of Israel and Judah the ten Tribes were lesse deare to God then the other they had grievous sins and God would shew them lesse mercy deal with them as those at his left side but for Iudah whose sins was as great as theirs yet God would chastise with lesse severity hee would not take away his loving kindnesse from Iudah though he did from Israel Iudah was at his right side and God would in his distribution of sorrow and wrath remember mercy 3. Whom we are to understand here by the house of Israel the ten tribes which are usually so call'd in the Scripture were carryed into captivity 130. yeeres before by Shalmaneser in the 6th yeere of Hezekiah 2 King 18.9 10. To what end therefore should they be brought in here under a typicall siege of Ierusalem when they sinn'd not at Ierusalem and if they had were now gone and under the severity of God Some take the house of Israel to be meant distinctly of the ten Tribes and this lying of the Prophet on his left side not to refer to Ierusalems siege but to the sins of the Tribes and the patience of God towards them others include the house of Israel in the house of Iudah and so make not the Prophets literall lying to look at the ten Tribes in captivity but at those of them who were joyn'd to the house of Iudah for when the great rent was by Ieroboam all of the ten Tribes did not cleave to him and many that at first did afterwards seeing the evill of his Idolatrous wayes withdrew from him and closed with the house of Judah 2 Chro. 11.16 17. when they saw what Jeroboam intended those that set their hearts to seek God came to Jerusalem to sacrifice and strengthened the kingdome of Iudah and in Asa's dayes many fell to him out of Ephraim Manasseh and Simeon 2 Chron. 15.9 yea in abundance Asa being a good King they came flocking to him and willingly sate down under his shade It 's more then probable also that when Shalmaneser came out against Samaria and carryed away the Tribes that many fled to Ierusalem and the parts there-about for it 's said in 2 Chron. 30.6 that they escaped out of the hands of the Kings of Assyria and in the 11th verse that divers of Ashur Manasseh and Zebulon humbled themselves and came to Ierusalem this was to receive the Passeover and then they returned to their possessions in their own cities Chap. 31.1 So that there were some of the other Tribes left which did partly mingle with them of Iudah and Benjamin and partly dwell by themselves these I conceive our Prophet means by the house of Israel and together with these their predecessors which were dead and in c●ptivitie and that because the three hundred and ninetie dayes which import so many yeers as it 's expressed in the 6th verse of this Chapter must needs fetch the house of Israel into this consideration from before the time of their captivitie and that in the next thing wee are to examine namely Where these three hundred and ninety dayes typing out so many yeers are to begin Various and intricate are the thoughts of men about the beginning and ending of these yeers and it would take up much time to present them unto you and perplex your thoughts much I will give you in this point not what my self but the soundest Interpreters and Chronologers do judge the truth Funccius and Bibliander two famous Chronologers begin this accompt at the falling off of the ten Tribes 1 King 12. and so do Interpreters of much worth Lavater Polanus Pradus A Lapide and Sanctius begin it
let that be the prayer of such which you find Psal 79.8 O remember not against us former iniquities Let thy tender mercies speedily prevent us for wee are brought low and take heed of sinning for the future against God for be sure your sin will find you out Numb 32.23 and be thorns not in your flesh but in your consciences old sins will be old Serpents sting unto death Isa 10.3 What will you do in the day of visitation Ezek. 22.14 Can thine heart indure or can thine han●s be strong in the dayes that I shall deal with thee 3. Such is the nature of States and Churches that falling into sinfull wayes they seldome return but proceed adding sin to sin filling up the measure of their iniquities Ieroboam makes a rent layes a foundation in Idolatrous practices and the House of Israel continue in that way three hundred and ninetie yeers not one king of Israel right Solomon he goes out by the inticing of his wives to false worship he corrupts Iudah leavens it w th Idolatry and not all the good Kings in Iudah could get out that leaven again perfectly if there were a stop of Idolatrous passages made in one Kings raign there was liberty granted in anothers Idolatry and other sins so abounded in Ahaz Manasses and Zedekiah's dayes that the Lord was weary of them and not quiet till he had rejected them And this is not only so in States and Churches but also in particular cases if men fall into any way of wickednesse so corrupt is nature so prone unto sin that it persists unto its own perdition rather then returns to its own salvation it must be a mercifull and powerfull hand of God that reduceth a straying sinner much more a straying State 4. That length of time is no good plea for errors false worship sinfull customes and practices they could plead hundreds of yeeres for their high places Calves Samaritan Rites Altars Priests c. yet antiquity would not exempt them from guilt and punishment he must bear the iniquity of the House of Israel they had sinned in the direction use and retention of these and God had visited and would yet visit more for them what if wee have had Prelacy and Popery Ceremonies and Superstitious Rites among us hundreds of yeers they are plants not of Gods planting and through age so rotten that they need plucking up and it will be his honour whose shoulder and strength is imployed that way 5. The Lord shewes more favour to his sinning great sins then he doth to others that are not his the House of Israel hath the left side is Loammi none of Gods people and therefore utterly rejected sent into captivity and return not the House of Iudah hath the right side God would shew them favour in their captivity and return them after seventy yeers correction in Babylon Gods carriage towards his is different from that towards others Psal 89.30 31 32 33. If his children forsake my Law and walk not in my judgements if they break my Statutes and keep not my Commandements then will I visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes neverthelesse my loving kindnesse will I not utterly take from him here God took not away loving kindnesse utterly from Iudah sending her into captivity but it was utterly taken from Israel if the one be whipt with rods the other is whipt with scorpions Saul he sins in offering sacrifice 1 Sam. 13. in sparing Agag 1 Sam. 15. David he sins in the defilement of Bathsheba in the murthering of Vriah 2 Sam. 11. in numbring of the people 2 Sam. 24. Solomon he sins in hearkening to his wives in falling to Idolatry yet God dealt not with David or Solomon whose sins were greater then Sauls as he did with Saul thy kingdome shall not continue saith Samuel and the Lord hath rejected thee from being king and it repented God that he had set up Saul to be King 1 Sam. 15.11 and he dealt severely with him he would not answer him in his straits but cut him off by the Philistims and his own sword so that he and his were broken in pieces and rooted out by the wrath of God but David and Solomon were chastised with the rods of men 2 Sam. 7.14 and see what followeth in the next verse My mercy shall not depart from him meaning Solomon when he committed iniquity I took it from Saul whom I put away from before me God proceeds otherwise with wicked men then he doth with his children there is much love in all their afflictions and meer wrath in all the wickeds sufferings Peters sin in denying Christ was greater then Ananias and Saphira's in denying a portion of their goods and almost parallel with Iudas's yet he hath a gracious aspect from Christ fetching penitent tears from his heart when the others are smitten with strokes of death 6. The instruments God uses in the execution of his judgments shall be resolute ready and active Set thy face toward the siege and thine arm shall be uncovered and thou shalt prophesie The Chaldeans were resolute upon the siege came fitted every way to it and were active in the work Hab. 1.8 9 10. They shall flee as the Eagle hasteth to eat They shall gather the captivity as the sand They shall deride every strong hold for they shall heap up dust and take it When God will have any notable work done he raiseth up instruments for it 7. Gods power and providence over-rules secondary agents so that they shall execute his pleasure and not disappoint it God laid bands upon the Prophet and he could turn no way till he had accomplished the dayes of the siege and when the King of Babylon and his forces were come to the work God held them to it and executed his judgements by them Pilate would have quit his hands of Christs death but he was to be an instrument together with Iudas and others and they did what the hand and counsell of God determined to be done Act. 4.28 Moses would have declined the work of bringing out the Israelites from Egypt and bringing in of judgements upon the Egyptians but God ordered and over-rul'd his spirit VER 9 10 11 c. Take thou also unto thee the wheat and barley and beans and lentiles and millet and fitches and put them in one vessell and make thee bread thereof according to the number of the dayes that thou shalt lie upon thy side three hundred and ninety dayes shalt thou eat thereof 10. And thy meat which thou shalt eat shall be by weight twenty shekels a day from time to time shalt thou eat it 11. Thou shalt also drink water by measure the sixt part of an Hin from time to time shalt thou drink 12. And thou shalt eat it as barley cakes and thou shalt bake it with dung that cometh out of man in their sight 13. And the Lord said Even thus shall the children of Israel eat their defiled
pleasure upon sinners Take thee a sharp knife a razor and cause it passe upon thy head and beard the Prophet might not take what instrument hee pleaseth but what Christ appointeth it was he set apart Nebuchadnezzar Nebuzaradan and the Chaldeans to shave Ierusalem and therefore the whole work is given to God Isa 7.20 The Lord shall shave with a razor that is hired by them beyond the river by the King of Assyria the head and the hair of the feet and it shall also consume the beard this is spoken of Senacherib and verified also in Nebuchadnezzar both these were razors in the hand of God by which he shaved the head the Princes and Nobles Counsellors were out off by him The beard the Priests and strong men The feet the common people It 's the Lord appoints and sets instruments on work to afflict Churches and States Amos 3.6 Shall there be evill in a city and the Lord hath not done it there is no razor shaving in a city but the Lord hath set it on work there Micah 1. ●2 evill came down from the Lord to the gate of Ierusalem it came from above and it came to Ierusalem hereupon the Prophet in Chap. 6.9 said to them the Lords voyce cryeth to the city and the men of wisdome shall see thy Name hear yee the rod and who hath appointed it 3. When God hath been long provoked by a people the comes with sharp and sweeping judgements amongst them and that is set out by the razor he had waited much upon them they went on in their sins but now God calls for a razor and that should go to the quick Muscul in Isa Radere non est simpliciter auferre sed sic auferre ut praecedentis status vix ulla supersint vestigia God would not reap them or lop them in those cases the stub and trunk are left but hee would shave them not leave a politique body or Church state that place in Isa 7.20 holds out the truth fully he would spare neither head beard or feet every condition of people the honourable the mean the lowest should be shaven he would not only strip them of their clothes but shave them and take away their native beauty he would fill them with mourning make them a scorne cut off their limbs and destroy their lives there should be no city no Temple no King no Priest no Sabbath no God left them but hath not God shaven them in Germany in Ireland and is he not shaving us now 4. That there is no standing out against God what ever our number or strength is his judgements are irresistible men here are compared to hairs his judgement to a razor can the softest or harshest hair withstand the razor can any one or all the hairs of the head or beard do it no the razor will easily passe through all as a fithe through grasse or corn hairs are weak things razors sharp and strong Pharaoh was the strength of Egypt but God by the red Sea did shave him and many thousands more from off the face of the earth the great men of the world are no more to God then hairs before the razor he cuts off the spirit of Princes Psal 76.12 he challengeth the briers and thorns of the earth Who would set them against me in battell I would go through them I would burn them together Isa 27.4 5. The judgements and proceedings of God with sinners are not rash sine consilio but su●●●● judicio he weighs out the hair and proportions suitable judgements unto those that were represented by it the infinite wise God is exact in his proceedings hence you have it in Scripture that God doth weigh actions Psal 1.2 3. the paths of men Isa 26.7 their spirits Prov. 16.2 he examines how they are clog'd with sin and guilt God measured the covetousnesse of Babylon which was exceeding great and he brought answerable judgements upon her Ierem. 51.13 14. God would send Caterpillars to eat up all her wealth Let God deal with Babylon or Sion hee observes a proportion in his judgements Ier. 46.28 speaking of Iacobs seed hee tells them hee will correct them in measure the afflictions of the Church seem great and oft are great yet never are they without measure Psal 80.5 Thou feedest them with the bread of tears and givest them tears to drink in a great measure 6. There is no escaping of Gods judgements for hard-hearted sinners here are diversity of judgements fire sword dispersion if one did not take then another would overtake them if the fire did not scorch them the sword should cut them off if not that they should be scattered 1 King 19.15 16 17. God bids Elijah anoint Hazael King of Syria Iehu King of Israel and Elisha Prophet in his room and tels him there should be no escaping for sinners if they escaped Hazaels sword they should die by Iehu's if not by his they should by Elisha's not that he used the sword but by his prayers and by his prophecies in Ier. 1.10 he was set over kingdomes to root out pull down and to destroy many escape the swords of Princes and are smitten by the swords of Prophets Let not sinners think to delude God he will meet with them one way one time or other Amos 9.1 2 3. God comes there in judgement he stands upon the altar and bids them smite the lintell of the dore that the posts may shake this was spoken of Ierusalem not of Dan and Bethel God would not at all appear there and what followes God would destroy them there would be fleeing presently and what saith hee Hee that fleeth shall not flee away and hee that escapeth of them shall not be delivered let them dig to hell climb up to heaven hide themselves in Carmel in the botome of the Sea God will follow them find them out and make them smart if enemies should carry them away and shew favour to them God will send a sword and it shall slay them vers 4. See Amo. 2.13 14 15 16. nothing will priviledge not speed strength courage bow horse these are good but in time of judgement they will not secure not a great house though of stone Amos 3.15 not gods of gold and silver Isai 2.20 21. not heaps of such treasure Ezek. 7.19 They shall cast their silver in the streets and their gold shall be removed their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver them in the day of the wrath of the Lord not horns of the Altar 1 King 2.28 30.31 not prayer Jer. 11.14 not fasting and sacrifice Ier. 14.12 7. That in great judgements and generall destructions God of his infinite mercy spares some few Ezekiel must take a few and bind up in his skirts all must not be destroyed the fire and sword devoureth many but the dispersion preserved some and some few are left in Iudah God is just and yet when hee is in the way of his judgements he forgets
with Jerusalem First They observed not the laws of God 2. Not the lawes of the Nations but multiplyed more then they and thirdly before them unto whom they should have been patterns of pietie Because thou hast multiplyed more then the Nations Some Expositors referre these words to their mercies not their sinnes and make the sense thus Because thou hast multiplyed in number in riches in honour and strength in victory in profits in ordinances in all blessings for which yee ought to have been thankfull fruitfull and obedient unto that God who blessed you thus above the Nations but in stead of this hast dishonoured God growne loose Idolatrous c. therefore will I deale accordingly with thee Take it thus and you have this note That prosperitie rather worsens then betters a people they had more mercies then the Nations and more sinnes then they as they abounded in Gods blessings so they abounded in ingratitude Deut. 32.15 Jesurun waxed fat and kicked c. Hos 13.6 But others referre this multiplying to their sinnes and the sense is this Because thou hast not satisfied thy selfe with a little wickednesse but multiplyed sinnes iniquities transgressions and that more then the Heathens that had not thy mercies nor thy light therefore will I judge thee and that they multiplyed sinne is evident Ezek. 16.25 Thou hast built thy high places at every head of the way thou hast opened thy feete to every one that passeth by and hast multiplyed thy whoredomes shee sinn'd with the Aegyptians Assyrians Chaldeans vers 26.28 29. The judgements of the Nations The Gentiles have their judgements their laws rules and wayes of living and worshipping Some understand here the lawes of nature what men have written in their hearts naturally according to what you finde Rom. 2.14 15. and the Jewes that had the laws of God superadded to the law of nature did not abstaine from those sinnes the Nations did They observ'd the Law the Jewes brake Others referre it to their laws decrees and practise touching their gods and the worship of them they were tenacious of both and would not alter their worship nor exchange their gods It was a Maxime among heathens Ne quid novarent in religionis forma and it was an Oracle of Apollo Eos deos rite coli qui traditi essent à majoribus and they thought it impious to depart from what they had received When Paul came to Athens they did and would worship their unknowne God Paul could not prevaile with them to exchange a lye for truth not all the miracles Moses did in Egypt prevail'd with Pharaoh the Egyptians to forsake their false gods so that these words are a reproach to the Jewes who were not so constant as the Nations to their god Observ 1. That God walkes not into the way of judgements till men doe walke out of the way of his statutes Because yee have not walked in my statutes nor kept my judgements therefore I will doe so and so by you God's delights are in wayes and works of mercy Judgements are his strange works and strange acts Isa 28.21 he is provoked unto them as a Bee unto stinging it 's the child's wantonnesse causes the father to use the rod. David's sin brought the sword to his owne house the plague to the people when the wickednesse of the earth was great then the windows of heaven were open and the flood came Gen. 6. 2. When God intends judgements he usually convinces sinners judgements and convictions are not far asunder God sets their sinnes before them they walked not in his statutes they sinn'd more then the Nations therefore he would proceed in judgement with them he convinces them of their sinne to make way for a farther conviction namely of the equitie of his judgements when the Lord shall convince a sinfull people to be guiltie and that of great sinnes it stops their mouths and proclaimes the equitie of his judgements which are ever short of the merit of mens iniquities Ezr. 9.13 Our God hath punish'd us lesse then our iniquities 3. That Heathens are oft more true to their principles then the people of God The Nations kept their judgements their gods their worship they would not suffer ought to be spoken against their gods Demetrius and others were in a rage against Paul and his companions for it Act. 19. They were free from many of those sinnes were practised and countenanced among the Jewes who kept neither to the true God nor to his statutes and judgements Ahaz is better pleased with an Altar from Damascus then that the Lord had appointed 2 King 16. Solomon that excell'd in wisdome shewed his folly in this that he built high places for Chemish and Molech and not onely a particular man but the body of the people turn'd aside from the true God Judg. 2.12 They forsooke God that brought them out of Egypt and followed the gods of the people that more round about them they bowed to them they served Baal and Ashtaroth and Chap. 10.6 it was an ordinary thing with them The Children of Israel did evill againe in the sight of the Lord and served Baalim Ash●aroth the gods of Syria the gods of Zidon and the gods of Moab and the gods of the Philistims They were not satisfied with one or two false gods but fetched in the gods of the Nations round about them Hos 4.12 Hence this people are said to goe a whoring from under their god his lawes statutes worship government would not suffice them but they would out and have strange gods and strange lawes 2 Chron. 12.1 Rehoboam forsook the Law of the Lord and all Israel with him Gods Law was exchanged for the lawes of men They kept the statutes of Omri and brake the statutes of Jehovah Mic. 6.16 The Jewes were as unconstant to their God and in his worship as any Nation under heaven God upbraids them for it Jer. 2.36 Why goddest thou about so much to change thy way God had given them a good way a way of life and they would not abide in it but hasten into wayes of sinne and death they loved to wander Jer. 14. Hath not England been weary of Gods wayes wandered to Rome and other parts to fetch in somewhat of theirs Have we not been upon conjunctures of Protestants and Papists in Doctrine Discipline and Ceremony Vers 8. In the 8. ver is laid down a dreadfull threatning Behold I even I am against thee and the denunciation of judgement runs on to the end of the Chapter with many aggravations Here the Lord is brought in a just and severe Judge and the chiefe Author of all the judgements were to come upon them I even I am c. It 's doubled and notes 1. Evidentiam That so they might be perswaded of it the Jewes thought that God would never be against Jerusalem but to convince them he tells them I even I am against thee 2. Certitudinem That whether they beleeved it or no
in legally uncleane Ezek. 44.7 Yee have brought into my Sanctuary strangers uncircumcised in heart and in flesh to pollute it With all thy detestable things Shikkutzim The word notes not offensive things simply but so offensive as to offend the senses and the minde and so to offend them as it causeth an abhorring with execration and such things are Images and Idolls 2 King 23.24 those had familiar spirits the Wisards the Images the Idolls and all the abominations The word is Shikkutzim all the detestable and execrable things did Josiah put away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Spirit of God speaks of them with detestation Jer. 11.13 Yee have set up Altars to that shamefull thing even Baal Act. 15.20 Pollution of Idolls dunghill or Jakesie gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the word Gillulim signifies Ezek. 22.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are terror to them that worship them 1 King 15.13 Maachah made an Idoll a thing to terrifie the word is and Psal 135.15 The Idolls of the Nations it 's the griefe torment of the Nations These names expresse the detestation of God against Idolls and should quicken us to the detestation of them according to that in Deut. 7.26 Thou shalt utterly detest or utterly abhorre an Idoll or any part of it the Originall is In detesting thou shalt detest and in abhorring thou shalt abhorre noting the great detestation and abhorrency should be in Gods people to Idolatry for they defile mens consciences Gods worship and Sanctuary therefore the Septuagint renders the word abominations or detestations in Jer. 22.34 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pollutions Therefore will I also diminish thee The Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Vulgar renders confringere I will break thee and then the sense runs thus My purpose was to have preserv'd the Temple safe from all violation if so be you had kept it unpolluted but now seeing you have defiled it with your detestable things I must and will break it down as being no better then a common prophane house It signifies also to shave as in Jer. 48.37 Every beard shall be clipt or shaven the Nazarites were holy to the Lord and if by the sudden death of any they were defiled their cleansing was by shaving of their heads Num. 6.9 So also was the Leper to be cleansed by shaving off his hair Lev. 13 33.14.8 And so here they were defiled and God would cleanse them by shaving and so it corresponds with the razor men trimmed in the first verse and both these senses fall in with the word diminish which the Hebrew word also denotes diminuere detrahendo so is contrary to Joseph which is to add to a thing God would not add any more mercies but take away their mercies and diminish them they had diminished his honour hee would diminish their comforts they had stain'd his glory and he would take away their glory the Temple and City Some render it succidam I will cut down God would deal with Jerusalem as an Husbandman doth with a barren or rotten tree Neither shall mine eye spare This kind of expression is much used in this Prophecie more seldome in others The eye is the Index of the minde the disposition whereof is seen discern'd there as in a looking glasse anger joy love grief are inmates yet visible in the eye that is the casement they look out at the hidden things of the heart are revealed by the eye pity sparing compassion are affections of the heart and mind and God speaking after the manner of men saith Mine eye shall not spare as it 's in Isa 13.18 Their eye shall not spare children there should be no sign of pity or remorse in them sparing is given to the eye as the sign of it From the eye is intelligence given of mercy or severity within you shall not have the least hint of mercy from mine eye but evidence of wrath only and whereas others were wont to be affected with the miseries they behold their eye affects their heart Lam. 3.51 I will not be at all affected with their miseries let a great army sit down before them let famine plague sword devoure let all mischiefe be upon them mine eye shall not affect mine heart I will not repent I will not have any pity What could have been said more dreadfull the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to be of a prone pitifull affection towards any though they deserve ill Joel 2.18 Gods people had sinned greatly were under sore judgements deserv'd utter destruction but let them fast pray and turn then will the Lord pity them though they deserve no mercy yet hee will shew them mercy so in 2 Chron. 36.15 they were exceeding ill yet God had compassion on them it 's the same word and hath a contrary signification to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is to destroy without mercy and so the word in this place when it hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 joyn'd unto it signifieth as much as I will not have any pity that is I will destroy without mercy 1 Sam. 15.3 Smite Amalek utterly destroy all that they have and spare them not that is have no pity on them and when God ceaseth to pity a people it 's sad then no redemption for them Isa 63.9 God will deliver them into the hands of their enemies Zach. 11.6 hee will harden others against them when God pities not yet if men will it 's some comfort but men shall not do it Jer. 21.7 When in Nebuchadnezzars hands he shall not spare pity or shew mercy when they should fall down beg for their lives at the hands of Babylonians they should finde no mercy only bitter words and bloody deeds in Amos 1.11 it 's said Edom cast off all pity and his anger did tear and so God he cast off all pity and destruction followed Jer. 13.14 I will dash them one against another even the fathers and the sons together I will not pity spare nor have mercy but destroy them and you may see this fulfill'd in the Lamentations Chap. 2.2 The Lord hath swallowed up all the habitations of Jacob and hath not pitied as a wilde beast doth his prey as a Sea doth ships God left not one no pity at all see vers 17.21 Observ 1. That sin defiles the holy things of God they defiled not only themselves but the Sanctuary and worship of God in it the land of Canaan was holy and sin defiled that Jer. 16.38 the Temple was holy and sin defiled that Ezek. 23.38 the Altar was holy and sin polluted that Mal. 1.7 the Sabbaths were holy and sin prophaned them Neh. 13.17 the Priesthood and Covenant was holy and sin defiled them Neh. 13.29 Gods name is holy Ezek. 20.39 sin pollutes that 2. That defilement of Gods worship brings certain and severe judgements they had defiled his Sanctuary with Idols superstitions polluted bread blind lame corrupt sacrifice by suffering unclean and uncircumcised persons to
goes on by degrees in his wrath against a people he did not accomplish his anger and fury at first he began with lesser judgements but at last came up to a perfection before he had whipt them with scourges now hee would do it with Scorpions he had formerly done much vexed them with wars famine plague but never laid waste their city ruin'd their Temple scattered them into the four winds as now he would do hee had in times past corrected them like a father he would now execute them like a Judge the drops of his wrath had done no good now they should have the full vials all the wrath conceived against them should be inflicted accomplished 2. That wrath let out against a sinfull people oft times lies long upon them I will cause my fury to rest upon them they were 70. yeers under Gods displeasure in Babylon Gods wrath hath been upon the Jews that rejected the Gospel these 1600. yeers they would not be under the blessing of Christ they are under the curse of God his wrath abides upon them Gods anger and fury hath rested upon Germany above twenty yeers these kingdomes of Ireland and England are under it fervent prayer is requisite that God would remove his wrath and not let it rest upon us It 's a dreadfull thing to have settled plague or war amongst us The Barons wars in King John's Henry the third's and Edward the second 's dayes made sad times Gods wrath rested then for a long season upon this kingdome the choycest blood of it was let out and it brought a deplorable condition Let us repent and reform that wrath may not rest upon the kingdome and let us believe that wrath may not abide upon us John 3.36 He that believes not the wrath of God abideth on him man came into the world a childe of wrath an heir of wrath Christ is a remedy propounded for removall of that wrath if men believe not the wrath of God abides still on them goes along with them and will eternally sink them 3. God takes pleasure in executing judgement in accomplishing his wrath and causing his fury to rest upon impenitent and incurable sinners he will be comforted in it Prov. 1.26 I will laugh at your calamity God would bring calamities upon them just judgements for the setting at naught his counsels refusing his reproofs and rejoyce in them for as judgements are satisfaction to divine justice they are delightfull unto God Isa 30.32 in every place where the grounded staffe shall passe which the Lord shall lay upon him it shall be with Tabrets and Harps when God should destroy the Babylonians and Assyrians it should be with delight which the Tabrets and Harps expresse which were musicall Instruments used in wars and victories Exod. 15.20 And when God executed judgement upon spirituall Babylon Rev. 18.20 it was with joy therefore the Spirit of God calls for it Rejoyce over her thou heaven and yee holy Apostles and Prophets for God hath avenged you and himself on her also which was a comfort and ease a delight to God hence judgements in Scripture are term'd his pleasure Isa 46.10 11. I will do all my pleasure Calling a ravenous bird from the East and Chap. 48.14 Hee will do his pleasure on Babylon 4. The Word of God may be preached among a people and they through ignorance and malice not know it nor entertain it they shall know that I the Lord have spoken it they conceived not that it was the word of God which the Prophets delivered they thought them to be no more then other men and their word humane and therefore sleighted it there was much affected ignorance in them Isa 27.11 it 's a people of no understanding Jer. 4.22 My people are foolish they have not known me and as many were blind so many were malicious against the Prophets and their messages they brought from God Jer. 44.16 As for the words which thou hast spoken in the name of the Lord wee will not hearken unto thee but wee will do whatsoever thing goeth forth of our own mouth Christ came and preached to his own and they received him not they neither knew him nor his doctrine or if they did they maliciously rejected both 5. That wicked men shall be convinced and left without excuse they shall know that I the Lord have spoken they eyed men and not me they deem'd it mans voyce not heavens but they shall find that it was the voyce of God amongst them and what can men say when God hath spoken and hath not been hearkened unto every mouth will then be stopt they would not know but they shall know they would not own my truths but they shall feel my judgements and when they are upon them then will they remember the Prophets and their words which will be as burning coals in their bosomes then they will see what desperate revolts they have made from God how they are besieged with his power and cannot escape the stroke thereof when men shall see it 's the infinite great and glorious God that they have sleighted in the Prophets in the Ordinances then they will be struck dumb and fall under the wrath of that God 6. God will justifie his servants in their zealous labors for him They shall know that I have spoken it in my zeal it 's God speaks in the Prophets it 's his zeal they expresse let men be zealous against sin the iniquities of the times they are counted mad fiery fellows troublers of Israel seditious factious c. Paul was a zealous man and not only Festus an Heathen counted him mad Act. 26.24 but even the Christian Corinthians 2 Cor. 5.13 thought him besides himself and such conceits had the people of Christ who was a man of zeal they thought him too hot that his zeal was beyond his judgement Mar. 3.21 they plainly said he was besides himself Michal scoft at David as one of the fools for his zeal Let the world passe what censure it will upon Gods Ministers God will justifie those who are sincerely zealous and count their zeal his zeal 7. That the Lord is intense and will not recall his indignation when he deals with unfaithfull covenant-breaking persons as in Gods zeal there is intense love towards his Church when God promises mercy to his people it 's seal'd with this The zeal of the Lord of Hosts shall do it 2 King 19.31 so here is intense hatred wrath against his enemies therefore God beats them off from their own inventions in the second command by this consideration that he is a jealous God and his jealousie extensive to the 4th generation and Deut. 32.22 saith God A fire is kindled in mine anger and shall burn unto the lowest hell and shall consume the earth with her increase and set on fire the foundations of the mountains and what 's the reason of this indignation it's given in vers 21. they have moved me to jealousie with that which is not
breaches of England let them be instructions unto us Let us all say with Isaiah 26.8 9. In the way of thy judgements O Lord have we waited for thee the desire of our souls is to thy name and to the remembrance of thee with my soul have I desired thee in the night yea with my spirit within me will I seek thee early for when thy judgments are in the earth the inhabitants of the world will learn righteousnesse Heathen inhabitants will do it and shall not Christians it's seasonable wisdome to learn by the blows of others An astonishment Not for stupifying and hardening which sometimes is the end and fruit of judgements but for admiration God would so deal with Jerusalem and her inhabitants that the nations round about should be astonished at his dealings God would make them an astonishment an hissing and a perpetuall desolation Jer. 25.9 yea the plagues of the city should be such that every one that passeth by should be astonished and hisse Jer. 19.9 yea many nations should say Wherfore hath the Lord done thus to this great city Jer. 22.8 Deut. 29.22 23 24. God saith The plagues of that land should be such as that it should be like Sodom and Gomorrah so great so strange that all nations should say Wherefore hath the Lord done thus unto this land What meaneth the heat of this great anger God might have done thus with this great city with this pleasant land but he hath spared us and we have cause to be as much astonished at his mercies as they were at his judgements Let us fear reform lest our sweet mercies be turn'd into astonishing judgements When I shall execute judgement in thee in anger and fury and furious rebukes There is mention of executing judgement in the 8th and 10th verses and here in this verse with addition of anger fury and furious rebukes the Prophet may seem too repetitious and verbous but it 's otherwise repetitions of the same thing serve to confirm the truth of the matter to shew the speed of the event and to excite the minds of those the things concern all which fall in here the Prophet prophesying against the Jews at Jerusalem their city state and threatning destruction to all himself keeping in Babylon conceived that they would not believe what he said and fear what he threatned neither affected with what he delivered to prevent these evils he repeats the thing oft and strengthens it with variety of words that so his doctrine might be the more weighty the sooner believed they awakened and the judgement that was at hand feared In furious rebukes The Hebrew is in rebukes of heat Pradus observes that jacach notes rebuking before witnesse and God would do it before the nations and these rebukes were not to cure but to destroy I the Lord have spoken Lest they might think the Prophet and his Prophecy might die together and come to nothing the Lord tels them it was himself spake and that the Prophecy should take place what ever became of the Prophet because it was from him who was the living God and would see it fulfill'd at Jerusalem though uttered in Babylon VER 16. When I shall send upon them the evill arrow of famine which shall be for their destruction and which I will send to destroy you and I will increase the famine upon you and break your staffe of bread I Have spoken of famine and breaking the staffe of bread in Chap. 4.16 Only I shal open unto you that expression The arrows of famine they are either the arrows that bring famine or the arrows that famine brings The arrows that bring famine are great droughts Palmer-worms Locusts Canker-worms Caterpillers thunder lightning winds storms immoderate rains great hails long frosts murrains transportations of commodities monopolizing hoording up of creatures wars c. many of these are shot down from heaven by God and all are sent from God and cause famine and they are call'd arrows for that they do to the corn cattell fruits and State where they are what arrows do to the bodies of man or beast wound disquiet consume hence when mention was made of a famine in Habakkuks dayes Ch. 3.11 the Lord is said to march through the land in indignation ver 12. and his bow to be made quite naked then did God shoot amongst them the arrows of famine The arrows famine brings are leanness faintness sickness loathsomeness frettings fears of death longings for death gnawings of the stomach pinching of the wind got into the bowels eating of their own flesh thirsting and burning heat c. these are arrows that famine brings and kill like arrows shot into the liver which wounding deeply pain greatly and kill quickly and in this sense I rather take it here because the judgement spoken of concerning the Jews who were to be besieged if it be taken in the other sense it would have been a judgement to the besiegers who lay in the field and were not so well fortified against those arrows as they within it is therefore meant of the arrows famine brought upon them chiefly not excluding the arrows brought that famine namely war and these arrows were prepared in Moses dayes Deut. 32.23 I will heap mischief upon them I will spend mine arrows upon them and what arrows They shall be burnt with hunger and devoured with burning coals and with bitter destruction vers 24. Famine is like a multitude of hot coals in a mans bowels and bones that cause grievous pain even bitter destruction and therefore they are call'd here the evill arrows of famine because they bring many evils and at last a miserable death this Jeremiah acknowledges made good Lam. 3.12 13. speaking in the person of the Church and State Hee hath bent his bow and set me as a mark for the arrow he hath caused the arrow of his quiver to enter into my reins VER 17. So will I send upon you famine and evill beasts and they shall bereave thee and pestilence and blood shall pass through thee and I will bring the sword upon thee I the Lord have spoken it HEre is a repetition of the former judgment only one is new that is evill beasts some would have it meant of the Chaldeans that were like evill beasts that with their horns teeth heels hoofs should tosse gore rend and devoure them others understand it literally for evill and wilde beasts Lions Bears c. which were threatned Deut. 32.24 I will send the teeth of beasts upon them with the poison of the Serpents of the dust Lev. 26.22 I will send wild beasts which shall rob you of your children destroy your cattel make you few in number and your high way desolate see the truth of it 2 King 17.25 Lions were sent that slew them they feared not God But this was past and our Prophet speaks of that was to come Know then that as God sent Lions to destroy them there so he could send Lions to destroy
Gods glory be visible 198 how considerable 197 198 glory here is but appearance of glory 201 choyce ones have a sight of the glory of God 201 sight of glory is an humbling thing 205 368 manifestation of divine glory argues divine goodnesse 367 two things required to the sight of glory 367 Gnarum Vsed in a contrary sense 258 God Tied to no place 32 is carefull of his Church when lowest 34 he works invisibly 113 whether his essence may be seen 198 199 200 his presence and departure the greatest happiness misery of a people 311 God bears with the weaknesses of his 328 his proceedings are different with his and others 359 402 knowes things to come 387 hee yeelds to the weaknesses of his and mitigates what is grievous 414 415 Gods being against a people is dreadfull and wherein 437 438 439 how known 440 then he doth unheard of things 445 God no polygamist 227 Godly Mingled with wicked 34 they fare the better for the godly 36 God doth great things for the godly 50 51 there is opposition in the godly to the work of the Spirit 60 they must stir up themselves to farther reception of grace 293 may do the will of God unwillingly 319 whence that is 320 their condition is very changeable 325 they have need of new influence 363 the godly before Christ had the same Spirit and comforts that we now have 370 they will not defile themselves with little sins 413 414 Goiim 225 put upon the Jewes 226 Grace Where it is is ability to act 294 means of grace denyed to those would imbrace the same 299 grace insupportable 302 a gracious heart deprecates that is against it 413 H Haire Wherein citizens are resembled to the haire of the head 418 shaving off the hair what it notes 419 Hand Hand of the Lord what it is 56 it notes action 111 Heathens Truer to their God and principles then the Jewes 432 434 435 Heart A hard heart a great evill 238 it's the treasury for the Word 303 Heaven Opened how to be understood 48 49 heavenly things too high for us 80 they are pure and glorious 168 yea dreadfully glorious ibid. Hin How much it contain'd 406 Humble Fittest to heare divine things 206 quickely comforted 214 man hath in him principles of humiliation 214 the humble not long without the Spirit 370 Hunger Makes any thing pleasant 411 Holy They be holy are heavenly 103 holiness imboldens 274 holy men record their own infirmities 317 Holy-Ghost Is God 316 I Jehoiachin Observable things about him 37 Jehovah Of that name 202 Jerusalem The head City 426. how said to be in the midst of nations 427 Eulogies of it ibid. Jewes Vnconstant in Religion 435 Ignorance It will not excuse 346 Impudence 236 237 where the face is impudent the heart is hard 238 Infirmities Great best Saints have infirmities 317 they oft do Gods will unwillingly 319 they interrupt not Gods love 320 who heals helps them 321 Ingratitude It provokes God much 431 Josiah His posterity four times in 23. yeers carried captive 40 Israel Whence what 225 all not true Israelites are called so 230 house of Israel who meant by it 394 Judgements and Statutes 428 Judgements Of God upon Kingdomes cities are dreadfull 174 they speak 175 works of judgement glorious call'd glory 191 God is praise-worthy in them 312 they succeed one another 409 they are not casuall 413 end of them 416 they are sharp 422 irresistible ib. judicious and in measure 423 no escaping of them ibid. in great judgement some are spared 424 not all good that are spared 425 what makes God walk in the way of judgements 434 God is the great actor in all judgements 437 executeth them openly 442 severity in them 446 they are pleasing to God 460 judgements are instructions 465 Justice Execution of it makes glorious 78 K Kab How much it contain'd 411 Key Of heaven in Gods hand 50 Kingdome Wherein the happinesse and misery of kingdomes lyeth 311 Knowledge Should issue out into action 112 a tongue with a hand under it was the Egyptian Hieroglyphick ibid. L Law The godly under it had the same Spirit grace and comforts wee have under Christ 370 Living Creatures 82 83 Lifting up what it not●s 154 Life Power of life and death in Christs hand 342 Log How much 406 how many made a Hin 407 Looks of men daunt 256 M Magistrates should be forward to do justice 126 it makes them glorious 192 they must not be fearfull and why 269 Malice Nothing priviledges from it 375 entertains not the Word 461 Megillath 3 242 Man Not capable of immediate accesse to God 180 men in place meet with scratches 264 men of the world are politick for their own ends 324 his ruine is from himself 359 Mercy God addes one to another 54 Ministrations Service imployment in all these we must have instructions from Christ 101 God raiseth the spirit of the creature sometimes to great services 156 Ministers Subject to reproach 47 must deliver what they have from God 58 must see their call be clear ib. come with the Spirit of God 61 Ministers put upon hard things 238 their preaching provokes it 's plundring men of their lusts will c. 238 239 they must not look at event but their call 239 they witness for or against their hearers 249 not be fearfull 269 270 they must first digest truth and then deliver truth 292 they should feed upon the Word 294 what they have is given 301 they may not remove at pleasure from place to place 324 they are watchmen and must be men of knowledge 332 must indure hardship 334 they must depend upon Christ for more light 336 they must learne before they teach ib. warn others 337 343 do their office in the name of Christ 338 their power is declaratory 342 they may not impose upon conscience 342 their scope should be to save life 344 not to shew wit ib. not to please men not to get a living 345 their office is honourable ib. what Ministers are cruell and bloody 347 doing their duty shall save themselves if not others 349 unfaithfull Ministers perfidious to God and man 360 they need new supplie 363 they must expect bands and chains 374 oft are severely dealt with 375 it 's not new for them to be roughly handled 376 More No more opened 444 Mourning Why they used to mourn seven dayes 323 N Names Names given suitable to events 7 alteration of names 37 name of the wicked odious 41 Naturall abilities reach not spirituall things 219 O Oath Gods oath 447 lifting up the hand anciently the sign of an oath ibid. Obedient Obedience unto Christ must be absolute 291 what makes obedientiall 336 absolute obedience meets with mercies unexpected 366 Occasion God takes occasion from the sin of some to bring in judgement upon all 425 Officers Who fit for publike offices in State and Church 99 Christs officers indued with his Spirit 219 to set
up and send officers belongs to Christ 228 unable ones not sent by Christ 229 Ordinances do good when the Spirit is on them 60 efficacy of them is from Christ 294 they are Gods name 454 P Pan What the iron pan signifies 385 Patience God bears long with the sins of his people 400 yet forgets not their sins ibid. People enemies to their own good 375 their sins deprive them of spirituall mercies 379 like to hair in three respects 418 Gods people may become worse then Heathens 432 Perseverance Angels go on 116 Pestilence The etymologie and nature of it 455 Pity What the word notes 453 Place God hath three places 309 no holiness in them now 312 449 no place can hinder the working of the Spirit 364 how places become holy 448 Pope And his Hierarchy not of Christ 228 229 Principles There are opposite principles in the best of men to the wayes of Christ 319 Priest Occasion of setling the Priesthood upon Levi. 45 Prophet Whence 8 of the first and second Temple 9 a Prophet in Babylon 23 subject to scorne reproach 47 they were carried on in their propheticall work hy the might of the Spirit 316 they could not prophecy at their pleasure 326 they must speak the words of the Lord 336 how a Prophet should be received 338 counted mad men 373 Providence Acts in all motions 144 it puzzles the ablest unsearchable dreadfull 149 it 's in the least motions 152 works of it glorious beautifull ibid. 287 it over-rules secondary agents 403 Punishment conformable to sin 412 Q Quiet The quiet spirits are fittest to receive and act spirituall things 329 R Rainbow The naturall cause of it 192 the naturall and theologicall signification of it 193 194 Ram A war-like instrument and why so called 385 Rebellion What 226 what in Gods account 279 Relatives Vsed in Scripture without Antecedents 23 24 Repetition Of the same words and things of what use 466 Reproached such honoured 48 reproaches are bitter piercing things 464 Reproof People are impatient of them and why 378 379 Righteousnesse A double righteousnesse 350 two sorts of righteous men 351 righteousnesse of faith never fails and why 352 353 there be deceiveable righteousnesses 356 we must not confide in our own righteousnesse ib. three rules to help against it 357 Roul 282 the eating of it what 290 Prophets must feed upon Christs rouls 292 Ruine Kingdomes States the cause of their ruine is in themselves 77 mans is in himself 359 S Salvation Few saved 241 Saphire What it signifies and represents 177 178 Seraphims What. 80 Sephar 3. Shekel Of sanctuary why so called 405 Side The Prophet lying on his side and left side 393 394 Sight the certainest sense 53 54 Sgnification To impose higher significations on things then they have by nature belongs to God 72 281 Signes God deals with his people in signes and types 387 why ibid. hee gives to the sign the name of the thing signified 429 Sin A fire infolding 76 disables us from seeing glory 205 causeth Gods people to lose their glory 231 sin is rebellion ibid. progresse in it causeth impudencie 237 sinners come to a height of sinning 243 it's an imbittering thing 244 the fruit of it is death 343 difference betweene Hamartanein and Poiein hamartian 353 sin it makes uncapacious of happinesse 367 cuts off spirituall mercy 379 sin may so provoke that neither God nor man will shew mercy 391 God forgets not the sins of men 400 seldome any return from sinfull wayes 402 it defiles 453 Son of man opened and what it notes 210 how oft given to Ezekiel and why 211 Speed It 's required in Gods service 100 Spirit Why called the hand of the Lord 56 57 it's author of all good done and received 60 how said to move or go 122 the Spirit is the great agent in all 123 363 it works any where and cannot be shut out of any place 364 how the spirit of the living creature is said to be in the wheels 160 it moves all ib. consent between Angels and wheels is from the Spirit 162 the Spirit is living and lively 164 what is meant by Spirit 216 entrance what 218 369 a chief comforter ibid. whether it goes alwayes with the Word 221 it affects and visits the humble 370 it's a comforting and encouraging Spirit 371 Spirit speaks in a man 372 the Spirit enables to discerne 223 why the Spirit took up the Prophet 306 heals our infirmities 321 it works invincibly ibid. Standing Of that posture 212 Stubbornnes Men wil not hear God 299 Stumbling-block What meant by it 354 how God layes it 354 355 takes them out of the way of his 350 Sword What it doth 456 T Tel-abib What it signifies 322 Temple Was a part of worship 312 consecrate to what end 448 449 what defiled it 450 Terrible What makes so 166 Throne What it signifies 176 Christ sate not stood in it 179 Christs throne must be of Saphire 182 Time No good plea for sinners 402 Tongues Thorny in what respect 254 255 how the Prophets clave to the roof of his mouth 377 power of it in Gods hand 378 Tree Dropping water in a dry Iland 153 Truth All truth should be received 204 sweet to taste bitter in operation 318 V Vision What things are in a vision 52 visions have excellency in them 54 effects of them 204 why men fall upon their faces at visions 204 why the Prophet had a second apparition of Gods glory 365 Voyce Of Christ how taken 206 W Watchman Christ appoints watchmen in the Church 332 they must be knowing not sleepy 333 must endure hardship ibid. they are for the flocke 335 Weary Godly may be weary in but are not weary of Gods worke 120 121 Wheels What is meant by lifting up the wheels 154 none can hinder the motion of the wheels 156 God puts stands to them at his pleasure 158 they cannot move otherwise then they do 160 motion of the wheels never unseasonable 161 wheels move whither the Spirit will have them 163 wheele why the world likened to it 130 secret motion in the wheele 140 high dreadfull 143 149 motions of the wheels are judicious 151 Whirlewind Nebuchadnezzar compared to it in three things 67 68 Wicked The worse for the Word 245 without excuse having means 246 shall see what mercy they have refused 247 248 they are like thornes and wherein 252 like scorpions 258 we must take heed of them 262 267 their acquaintance not to be sought 265 what fruits they bring ibid. their losse not considerable 266 Christ knows who are such 241 there is hope of those are very wicked 344 they deal cruelly with the Prophets 375 lesser sins punished in the wicked more severely then greater in the godly 402 403 wicked men are worthlesse 252 421 Gods people more wicked then heathens 432 Will Mans will his ruine 299 Wisdome Mans crosse to Christ 318 Word The power of it from the Spirit 220 it's the Chariot of the