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A64467 The reconciler of the Bible inlarged wherein above three thousand seeming contradictions throughout the Old and New Testament are fully and plainly reconciled ... / by J.T. and T.M. ... Thaddaeus, Joannes, fl. 1630.; T. M. 1662 (1662) Wing T831_VARIANT; ESTC R33916 334,239 278

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a Tongue extant at this day partly consisting of Greek and partly of old Aegyptian is used for Saturn as Kircherus saith We know the Septuagint was writ in the Land of Aegypt at the instance of Ptolomeus Philadelphus where the Translators using Rephan the noted name for Saturne instead of Chiun altered the word and reteined the sense a liberty lawfully assumed by the most faithfull Interpreters And probably Saint Stephen spake to the Jewes in their own language But Saint Luke writing in Greek alledgeth his words according to the Septuagint Translation And whereas Saint Stephen addeth to worship them 't is but an amplification of the meaning which changeth not the sense at all onely shew the end of their making such a God Lastly One place nameth beyond Damascus The other beyond Babylon Saint Stephen onely more clearly Interprets what the Prophet meant for 2 Kings 16.9 Damascus was not far from thence 712. Amos 8.14 They shall fall and never rise up again 1 Cor. 11.22 We shall all rise The first place speaks of a resurrection from sinne to grace or from death to life which is denyed to impenitent sinners But the latter speaks of the generall resurrection of our bodies at the last day OBADIAH HIS PROPHESIE HE Prophesieth against the Idumeans He comforteth the Jews and promiseth grace and help to the people of God He prophesied in the year 3337. 713. OBad Vers 15. As thou hast done it shall be done unto thee Rev. 18.6 Double unto her double In both places is manifested the just revenge of God he is commanded to mix double for Babylon according to her works thereby to shew that the Kingdome of Antichrist shall be most miserably destroyed and trod down 714. Obad. Vers 21. And Saviours shall come upon Mount Sion Matth. 1.21 Jesus shall save his people from their sins The Prophet means ministeriall Saviours that is Jer. 3.18 1 Tim. 4.16 Jam. 5.20 Isa 53.11 Joh. 1.29 Eph. 1.7 the Apostles and other Ministers of the Church who do serve for the salvation of those that believe in Christ by the ministry of the word and not by the merit of their works and these turning sinners from their evill wayes do save their souls from death Christ Jesus is the onely Saviour who takes away the sins of the world in whom we have redemption by his blood and remission of our sinnes according to the riches of his grace nor is there salvation in any other Act. 4.12 JONAH HIS PROPHESIE THe sonne of Amittai of the Tribe of Zebulon He was sent to Nineveh the Metropolis of Assyria to Preach First when he refused he was cast into the Sea swallowed by a Fish and the third day he was cast on the Shoar then being sent again to Nineveh he was angry because God spared them upon their repentance therefore he was reprehended by God He prophesied in the year 3110. 715. JON. 1.3 Jonas rose up to flee unto Tharses from the presence of the Lord. Vers 9. I fear the Lord the God of Heaven who hath made the Sea and the dry Land Jonas would not flee from God so much as to escape his office by flying Vers 9. In the midst of the tempest he gives the Mariners an account of his Religion and of his flight confessing that for his disobedience that great tempest was sent 716. Jon. 1.10 Jonas fleeth to Tharsis from the presence of the Lord. Psal 139.7 Whither shall I go from thy Spirit or whither shall I flee from thy presence Jonas was not ignorant that no man could so flee from the face of the Lord but he thought that if he forsook the holy Land then all divine apparitions to him would cease and that God would then call some other man to the office he had laid upon him 717. Jon. 2.6 The earth with her barres was about me for ever Vers 10. The Fish cast Jonas on the dry Land Jonas thought in the belly of the Whale that he should remain there but God brought him forth and shewed thereby that he had power over life and death 718. Jon. 3.4 Yet forty dayes and Nineveh shall be overthrown Vers 10. God spared them The divine commination was conditionall if they repented not but because they did embrace the Word of God and detesting their wickednesse Jer. 10.7 8 9 10. they did turn to the Lord with all their hearts God spared them Of such God means speaking thus If I speak against a Kingdome or a Nation that I will root it out and that Nation repents of their evill wayes I will repent that I thought to do so to them 719. Jon. 3.4 Jonas foretold the overthrow of Nineveh and it was not performed Deut. 28.22 If a Prophet speak in the name of the Lord and that thing cometh not to passe the Lord hath not spoken it but the Prophet hath spoken it presumptuously That Sermon of Jonas was not so much a prophesie as a commination Moses speaks not of comminations and Prophesies which have a condition included but of such Prophesies as are absolute as Samuel foresaid to Saul that two men should meet him 720. Jon. 3.9 Who knows whether God will return and repent Mal. 3.6 I the Lord change not Numb 23.19 Jon. 1.7 Repentance and passions of men are attributed to God not properly but figuratively and by way of comparison and by Anthropopathy whilst God shews himself as a man repenting otherwise with God there is no change Jam. 1.17 721. Jon. 4.11 In Nineveh were more then sixscore thousand persons which partly by want of age and partly by simplicity did not know their right hand from their left Gen. 8.21 The imagination of mans heart is prone to evill from his youth Between the right and the left hand they did not know the difference who were yet so young as to be free from actuall sinnes and others in years that were simple and sincere MICAH HIS PROPHESIE THe Morasihite against the Kings the Judges the Priests and false Prophets in Judah and Israel He threatens perdition to impenitent sinners and promiseth salvation to the Saints which remained He prophesied in the year 3197. 723. MIcah 5.2 And thou Bethlehem Ephrata though thou be little amongst the thousands of Judah out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be Ruler in Israel Matth. 2.6 And thou Bethlehem in the Land of Judah art not the least amongst the Princes of Judah for out of thee shall come a Governour that shall rule my people Israel The Prophet calls it Bethlehem Ephrata and Matthew Bethlehem Judah for a difference from an other City so called in the Tribe of Zabulon It was indeed a little Town before Christs coming before Christ was born but afterwards it became a most noble City because the Messias was born there Matthew cites the place of the Prophet faithfully which the Pharisees had corrupted and sets down the words which the Pharisees speak unto Herod Micah 5.2 And thou Bethlehem
for Sepulchres a common thing in Scripture 3. He useth an Elepsis a cutting off a Conjunction And. So that the sen●e seems to be And Jacob and our Fathers died and were removed to Shichem and were laid in Sepulchres in that which Abraham bought for money and in that was bought from the Sons of Emmor the father of Shichem 1109. Acts 7.38 Moses received in mount Sinai the lively Oracles 2 Cor. 3.7 Paul calls the Law the ministration of death The words of the Law were words of life because the Law hath life in it self and leads us to Christ it is not the Ministration of death in it self but in respect of mens infirmities and our corrupt nature Acts 7.38 with 2 Cor. 3.7 That which Moses received was lively Oracles for they were lively delivered to him and not only written as some part was they were lively because the Moral and Ceremonial Laws together brings a man to life for the Moral Law lets us see our infirmities and necessity of a Saviour to take us from our sins and the Ceremonial shewed Christ the Messiah which would take us from our sins Paul calls the Law the ministration of death not that of it self and qua Lex brings death but that it pronounceth and worketh a sense of death to and in the disobedient and rebellious * 1110. Acts 7.43 Ye took up the Tabernacle of Molech c. Amos. 5.26 The Tabernacle of Molech In Amos it is Succuth Malkekim which is rendred by some Succuth the King or the Tabernacle of the King or the observance of your King Moloch was the Idol of the children of Ammon 1 Kin. 11.17 And singularly prohibited to Israel Lev. 18.20 20.2 This Image was without Jerusalem and set within seven Chappels which seven Chappels help us to understand what is meant by Molechs Tabernacle he is called Succuth or the Covert God because he was retired within so many Cancelli before one could come at him You took up Succuth or the Covert God your King which is the Tabernacle of Molech that Idol you prize as highly as the chiefest King Molech Molech Milcham or Malcham are the same Baal And the Star of your God Rempham Amos saith Chijim your Images the star of your God Chijim is either taken as the proper name of an Idol as Hercules which by the Aegyptians was called Chon Or Saturn which by the Arabians was called Chevan Or else Chijim is an appellative word and so it signifies the whole host of heaven which one Idoll cannot do Malchom Besides Chijim Tsalmecon the latter word in the Plural number and as it seemeth by the very posture of it the latter of two Substantive and not in apposition for if Chijim were but one Idol it is somewhat improper to say Chijim your Images as speaking of more Chijim may be construed for the ordering or disposing of their Images Stephen saith they had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or representations of the whole heaven and host of it in one Series or in one body beset with variety of stars and figures representing this or that Planet and this or that Constellation Amos sai●h You took up Succuth your King and the frame or disposal of your Images in one compact piece the stars of your God which you have made to your selves Remphan upon this word are several conjectures The seventy have rendred Chijim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mistaking one piece of a Letter reading ד for ב but to omit these it seems 1. That Stephen doth something follow the seventy in this word as well as he doth in the rest of the Text for the New Testament to follow them differently from the Hebrew Text is no wonder 2. That Stephen doth adde a letter to the word or doth a little change it from those very syllables that the Septu●gint use that he might give the sense of the Prophet the more clearly and plainly As the Prophet in the word Chijim expressed the Fabrick of the Host of heaven which the Idolatrous people had wrought and represented in one piece so should Stephen speak to the very same sense and therefore forsaketh the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which he found in the seventy and taketh up or formeth it into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies the high face or high representation or that whole peece that represented the whole heaven which he calleth their God because in that they adored all the Stars and Hosts of heaven at once and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is but one number put for another one Star for many And I will carry you beyond Babylon in Amos it is beyond Damascus and so in the seventy which Stephen seems purposely to have changed beyond Babylon because that as he had treated in the beginning of the Chapter of Abrahams coming out of those parts into that Land he would now shew e contra how they for their Idolatry should be carried out of that Land into those parts again 1111. Acts 7.51 You do alwaies resist the Holy Ghost as your fathers did Rom. 9.19 Who hath resisted his will To resist the Holy Ghost is not to hear him in the Word of God so the Jews rejected grace proffered unto them and despised it revealed in the Word and so were the cause of their own damnation The Apostle speaks of Gods absolute will according to that he doth all things to which we must be subject * 1112. Acts 7.56 Jesus standing at the right hand of God Mar. 16.19 And Jesus sat at the right hand of God Sitting and standing are not words properly used no more than the word at the right hand of God These Metaphorical Phrases must not be strained to signifie several things He saw him standing that is he saw Christ as an Advocate standing to plead his cause with God the Father And Jesus sat that is He was now sitting to judge and order the actions and sins of men 1113. Acts 7.59 Lord Jesus receive my spirit Luk. 16.22 Lazarus was carried by the Angels into Abrahams bosome All the godly and faithful children of Abraham must commend their spirits into the hands of the Son of God who enlivens us there is that bosome and the soul of Abraham rests there 1114. Acts 8.1 And they were all scattered abroad throughout the Region of Judah and Samaria except the Apostles Mar. 16.15 Go into all the world and preach the Gospel The beginning of the Apostles preaching was at Jerusalem where they suffered persecutions building a Church unto Christ before they went to other Nations * Acts 8.1 with Mar. 16.15 The former place shews de facto how they were dispersed The latter shews how de jure they ought to disperse themselves to preach the Gospel The former place shews how Providence offered an opportunity and the latter that they ought to make use of all opportunities in any place to preach the Gospel Though the latter place did tye them to the performing of the duty yet it did
THE Reconciler OF THE BIBLE INLARGED WHEREIN Above Three Thousand seeming Contradictions throughout the Old and New Testament are fully and plainly RECONCILED A Like Work never yet extant and may serve for the Explanation of the most difficult places of the Bible being usefull for all such as desire to understand the Sacred Scriptures aright unto SALVATION Humbly submitted to the Censure of the Sons of the Prophets By J. T. and T. M. Ministers of Gods holy Word and Sacraments LONDON Printed for Simon Miller at the Starre in St Pauls Church-yard near the West end 1662. THE STATIONER TO THE READER IT S not yours I seek but you else I could have facilitated my Expence and frustrated your Expectation The Addition in this Edition may serve you for other Volumes of greater price each line being an hint and Compendium of the larger dictates of the Learned You will find this to be usefull even in the explaining of Texts I alwayes held Contraria juxta se posita clarias elucescant None can so well cleare the sense as he which considers the opposition If you find not resolution in the one place consult the other or a parallel place and before you judge consult Authors and the Text. However the Author may run the Gantlop yet I hope I shall escape the Lash But in regard every man is left to his freedome of Judgement and men may easily halt in such flinty way 't were but charity to deale kindly with the Augmentor who modestly proposeth his own without refuting others opinions It s my confidence this will neither burden your Person or Purse so it will engage you to think well of Your Obsequious Friend S. Miller Reader take notice the Additions in this Book are marked thus * throughout the whole Work TO THE READER SEverall places of Scripture compared sound as severall strings in an Instrument jarring and at odds but by a more heedfull eye and attentive eare though a fift and a third are no full concord yet with a third and an eight or a fift with a first will make a sweet Symphony Some Scriptures upon a slight view seem as much at odds as the Poles but the context or phrase the intent or time may so farre facilitate the agreement that the whole Scripture may seem without any doubting to be a Web spun by the same hand I am not ignorant that the climbing up these Hills is a work both tedious and difficult even the hardest Piece of Divinity other parts being delightfull Valleyes whose variety of matter and fruitfullnesse in use will be sufficient reward this may advantage no further than censure and contempt and though the issue be no other yet it must not be neglected in regard Atheists Antiscripturists Hypocrites and the c. of prophanenesse make these seeming contradictions to be the Catholick Patron for their errors and practice I had not adventured on these rough Billows but that the Stationer who formerly had caused the Reconciler to be Printed which was no more than Johannes Thaddaeus Translated finding that Book to be defective both as to multitudes of places which were not handled at all and as to the obscurity of severall which were there undertaken he engaged me to make a Supplement which might in some measure run parallel with the design How I have performed you may best judg when you have consulted Magrio Calvin Doctor Hammond Pezelius Gerhard Mayer Musculus Mannassa Ben Israel Lorinus Willet the Assembly Diodat c. Some on one some on another place The Quotations of Authors were forborne to forbear abruption of sense and repeating of their very words the substance being most an end reserved without an exact account of the words themselves Thaddaeus seems to have lighted his Candle constantly at Scorpius his Sun what he omitted is superadded with the addition of the Authors own opinion and yet leaving a just place for every mans own additionall Judgement This may at the first seem a work of a few houres Houses are viewed at a glance which when one considers in their severall Materials the Stone in the Quarry the Beam in the Wood the Lime in the Stone the Workman in his Hewing c. will take up the thoughts as of a larger extent Books presented as finished is an easie work for the eye and understanding and yet the consulting Authors examining opinions leaving of rubbish and taking what is fit both is a labour to the head and hand It s easier to read than compose Books and as easie to censure as either But no wise man will censure him who by writing would help the weak and by his weaknesse invite the strong to afford the energy of their brains However the world may censure the work I hope they will see it their duty to pray for him who is hereby engaged to be Their assured T. Man THE PREFACE THE Scripture of the Old and New Testament revealed from God by the Prophets and Apostles 2 Tim. 3.16 since it is the rule of heavenly Doctrine it ought to be held in high account amongst us Gal. 6.16 For so many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God c. But for as much as the enemies of Divine truth are adversaries to those who continue in the same it is no wonder that they fear not both to resist the Spirit by whom it was inspired and to accuse the work of contrariety and imperfection Though the Scripture have no reall contrarieties indeed in it self for the Spirit of God 2 Peter 1.21 Chrys in Gen. hom 1. by whom those holy men that writ it were led being not contrary to himself did so govern the matter that it should wholly agree in all parts yet some apparent contrarieties there are in it which cause some difficulty to the Reader yet the whole body of the Doctrine is not therefore to be accused of obscurity as though the will of God could not thence be certainly known concerning things which appertain to Religion Nothing is searched out there which is not to be found easily in some oth●r place nor is there any opposition in the Scripture witnesse Aug. lib. 5. cap. 8. de Genes I will never dare to think saith Justin Martyr in Dial. cum Tryph. Judaeo nor speak that the Scriptures can be adverse to themselves but if any Scripture seem to be so and hath a colour as though it did contradict some other Scripture I will rather confess that I understand not the things there spoken being certainly perswaded that no part of Scripture can be opposite to any other part thereof c. This is that I undertake to prove in this Reconciliatory Bible wherein are Reconciled Three Thousand places of the Sacred Scripture opposite in appearance in a plain order by the Canonicall Books of the Old and New Testament short collections of each Book and Chronologicall numbers being set down before them and the truth
Lord will do The first That wicked men will not take notice of the Lords glorious works though the works being considered in themselves are glorious The second place shews what a glorious work that of redemption should be that even all that would see and take notice of it not shutting their eyes and being obstinate as the wicked do might see it * 607. Isai 26.14 They are dead they shall not live Vers 19. Thy dead men shall live The condition of wicked men perishing is one thing the Saints rising is another There is a difference betwixt men that are dead to God and men that are Gods dead men or that die for God or are his The former Texts speaks of oppressors which are but dead though they live they are many times cut off in the midst of their dayes they shall not live but those that are dead or slain upon Gods account shall live again live for ever 608. Isai 26.20 The wicked will not behold the Majesty of the Lord. Chap. 40.5 And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it together for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it The Prophet speaks concerning the Kingdome of Christ and the state thereof and he teacheth in the former place that the wicked shall be so blinded that they cannot perceive the mighty worke of God wherein he hath shewed his greatnesse his glory his power and his mercy which blindnesse of theirs doth not take away the glory of God and of Christs Kingdome which all men may see in the saving work of mans Redemption 609. Isai 28.16 Behold I lay in Sion a stone a sure foundation faith the Lord. 1 Cor. 3 10. I have laid the foundation saith Paul God laid the foundation of our salvation in respect of his decree the sending of his Sonne and the perfection of mans salvation Paul laid the foundation in respect of manifestation and of his office and of the Christian Religion at Corinth * 610. Isai 30.26 The light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun and the light of the Sun seven-fold Matth. 24.29 The Sun shall be darkned and the Moon shall not give her light Spirituall shining is one thing naturall is another The light and knowledge of God should so farre exceed that which it had been that as much as the Moon light was inferiour to that of the Sun so much the knowledge of that time should be inferiour to that which was to be in after ages Nor yet doth this hinder but that at the generall desolution of the world the naturall lights of the Sun and Moon should be obscured * 611. Isai 30.20 Thy Teachers shall not be removed into a Corner any more Phil. 5.1 Paul a prisoner c. The former place speaks comparatively thy Teachers shall not as formerly be removed into corners but there shall be more plenty Nor doth this hinder but God may upon speciall occasions remove this and that Teacher and suffer them to be imprisoned as Paul though he never leaveth his Church in generall without Teachers Some distinguish betwixt teaching in Corners and Teachers to be driven to Corners by persecution * 612. Isai 31.7 Idols of Silver and of Gold which your own hands have made 1 Cor. 8.4 We know that an Idol is nothing Idols are something materiall or in relation to the substance that they are framed of they are nothing in relation to their effects and energies an Idol is of no force or value * 613. Isai 33.52 The Lord is our Law-giver Gal. 3.19 The Law was Ordained by Angels The former place speaks of God as the Author the latter place denies not God to be the Author but speaks of Angels as instruments or meanes by which the Lord gave the Law * 614. Isai 35.8 He was taken from prison and from judgement and who shall declare his generation Act. 8.33 In his humiliation his judgment was taken away It is one thing to quote the word another thing the sense Luke quoted the sense and substance of what the Prophet had said and not the words He was taken away from the judgement of his adversaries and delivered from prison What else was that but the exalting of his own judgement above them that past upon him The word that is rendred is as well to lift up a thing as to take away 615. Isa 38.1 2 Kings 20.1 2 Chron. 32.24 Set thy house in order for thou shalt dye and not live Vers 5. I will adde unto thy dayes fifteen years saith the Lord. Augustine saith that Ezechias was in order to dye according to some causes of future events In Gen. tit lib. 6. cap. 17. yet God added fifteen years to his life doing onely that which he foreknew he would do before the beginning of the world Gods justice brought the command for Ezechias death but his mercy prolonged his life and so Ezechias Piety and Repentance is proved 616. Isai 41.7 Chap. 46.6 They lavish gold out of the bag and weigh silver in the ballance and hire a Goldsmith and he wageth it a God 1 Cor. 8.4 An Idoll is nothing Silver and Gold and such materials as the Idols are made of were created by God but relatively unto God they are said to be nothing because they have nothing of God in them for God will not be worshipped by Idols 617. Isai 42.8 Chap. 48.11 I will not give my glory to another Matth. 11.29 Chap. 28.19 All power is given to me in Heaven and in Earth God will not give his praise and glory to an Image Christ to whom all power and glory is given is not only man but the true and eternall God also with the Father and the holy Ghost having co-equall glory with them but by reason of his office of Mediator all things are given him of the Father 618. Isai 42.8 I will not give my glory to another Rom. 8.14 The glory of God shall be revealed in us The first place is concerning those things wherein God will be glorified by us in this life that is by worship adoration invocation The letter concerning the participation and place of glory in the life to come which he will communicate to us 619. Isai 42.10 Sing unto the Lord a new Song that is the Gospell Gen. 3.15 It was Sung in Paradise concerning the blessed seed of woman That Evangelicall Song is called new not for time but because it comprehends new and wonderfull things a new light is kindled by it it makes a new Creature and shews us the new way to heaven 620. Isai 45.6 7. I am the Lord and there is none else I forme the light and create darknesse I make peace and create evill I the Lord do all these things Gen. 1.31 And all that God made was good God makes evill not of sinne but of punishment and calamity by which he justly afflicts sinners Also the Prophet here opposeth the evill of the misery of war to the good
greater amongst all men but not that all under the New Testament should have the gift of Prophesie The latter places are of publick and ordinary Prophesie * Joel 2.28 with 1 Cor. 14.34 I suffer not a woman to speak in the Church If women were to have the spirit powred upon them in the times immediately after Christs Ascention then why must they not speak in the Church The former place speaks of extraordinary gifts given to some women the latter of a duty lying upon all The former ●s to be restrained to the times ●ext after Christs life the latter is a duty lying upon all times The former hath reference to extraordinary parts and gifts the latter hath reference only to ordinary preaching and teaching by way of office 702. Joel 2.32 Whosoever calls upon the name of the Lord shall be delivered Heb. 6.4 Chap. 10.26 They that are once enlightned if they fall they cannot be restored The first place speaks of the faithfull who call on the Lords name in faith The latter concerning Apostates that sinne against the holy Ghost who have neither faith nor true prayer though they pray with their lips for they do it not sincerely and therefore their prayers are an abomination to God * Joel 2.32 with Heb. 6.4 The former place is a promise to those that can pray The latter to those who cannot pray but actually fall away The former is spoken of Gods Children for God heareth not sinners the latter speaks of the wicked for Gods Children never fall away finally from grace enlightning not being put here for saving knowledge but a Theory of Christ 703. Joel 3.20 But Judah shall dwell for ever and Jerusalem from generation to generation Amos 9.11 The Tabernacle of David is fallen down Matth. 24.1 Acts 15.16 The promises of the perpetuity of the Temple and Kingdome of Judah belong not to the building and walls of the City or the civill Kingdome but to the perpetuity of the Kingdome of Christ and his Church against which the gates of hell shall never be able to prevail and they ●re conditionall upon their faith obedience and purity of Divine worship * Joel 3.20 with Matth. 24.1 The former place is meant of the spirituall Jerusalem and Judah the Children of God The latter of the materiall Temple and Jerusalem The former is a promise if it be meant of the externall Judah and Jerusalem which hath a condition if not expressed yet implyed viz. that they should walk with the Lord. The latter by the threatning of such judgements shews and implies that they had broke their promise The former place useth the word for ever But that in Scripture is many times used for a long season and so it was in the latter before the judgment came on Jerusalem after Joels time AMOS HIS PROPHESIE VVHO was of the common people amongst the Heardsmen of Tekoa He prophesieth of the wrath of God to the Kings and Kingdomes of Judah and Israel and he threatens Famine Sword Pestilence devastation and ruine to the neighbours who were enemies to Gods people He prophesied in the year 3153 in the dayes of Josiah King of Judah 704. AMos 1.3 6 9 11 13. Chap. 2.1 4 6. For three transgressions and for four I will not spare And at length he reckons but one It is a periphrasis of the seventh number which three and four do make which is called a perfect number in the Scriptures and a certain number is put for anuncertain as if he would have said For many iniquities I will not spare those Nations * 705. Amos 3.6 Is there any evill in a City that I have not done Deut. 32.4 The Lord is a God of truth void of iniquity The former place speaks of God as the Author of malum poenae of affliction the latter of him not as Author malum culpa of sinne In the former sense affliction is not simply and in it self evill or as it is a punishment of God but in respect of mens understanding or apprehension and if God should punish sinne with sinne we cannot say but the punishment is good as from God though the sinne be naught as practised by man 706. Amos 5.18 Woe unto you that desire the day of the Lord that day of the Lord is darknesse Matth. 6.10 Thy kingdom come Chap. 24.30 Let it come with glory The Prophet speaks of the day of Judgement of this world which hypocrites desire who look to be justified in their works and not of the last judgement which godly men ought to pray for and to cry without ceasing Rev. 22. Come Lord Jesus * 707. Amos 5.18 with Matth. 24.30 Rev. 6.10 The former place speaks of a profane or scoffing desire either as daring and provoking God to bring that once to passe which he hath so long threatned Or as believing that the day should never come to passe or by an impudent presumption as if God coming to Judgement should find them innocent or lesse guilty than they were adjudged to be and so they are the words of profane persons The latter place of the desire of the faithfull in humility for the coming of Gods grace God comes sometimes as a Judge with vengeance to the wicked so in the former and he comes by his Spirit to the godly as a sanctifier so in the latter 708. Amos 5.21 I hate I despise your feast dayes Exod. 20.8 Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath day God hated the feasts and solemnities of the Israelites because they were defiled with humane traditions and a Pharisaicall opinion of merit But he doth not despise the Sabbaths appointed by himself and feasts which are kept at his command 709. Amos 5.26 But ye have born the Tabernacle of your Moloch and Chiun your Images the star of your God which you made for your selves I will cause you to go into captivity beyond Damascus Act. 7.43 You took up the Tabernacle of Moloch and the star of your God Rempham figures which you made to worship them and I will carry you beyond Babylon Rom. 16.19 1 Esd 8.17 Stephen cites this Prophesie though in divers words yet in the same sense so Christ and his Apostles cite other places of the Old Testament Moloch and Rempham were the Idols of the Ammonites The Israelites of Damascus by Cyromedia were carried further into Persia and the Countrey of the Caspians beyond Babylon * 710. Amos 5.26 with Acts 7.43 The places have some seeming differences but thus reconciled The former place useth the words the latter place the matter and sense of those words which accorded to the institution and transposed some words for perspicuity and evidence Rempham in the latter place is added or put for Chiun if by Chiun as some will the Planet Saturne is meant Plautus in his Penulus calls the Ciun and the Aegyptian Anubis calls Cyon in Greek Plutarch conceives to be the same with Saturne then its the same with Rempham Besides Rephan in the Coptick language
speaks of the will of his secret purpose 1146. Acts 20.35 It is more blessed to give than to receive Paul saith that these were the words of the Lord Jesus which are not found in the Evangelists Though the words be not found there in the same letters yet the sense of them is found in the words of Christ Lend looking for nothing again Give and it shall be given to you for all Christs words and deeds are not set down but only those which suffice for true faith and our salvation 1147. Acts 21.4 The Disciples said to Paul that he should not go up to Ierusalem Chap. 20.22 Now behold I go bound in the spirit to Ierusalem saith Paul The Disciples by suggestion of the Spirit warned him of bonds and afflictons using also some perswasions of their own as they were moved with brotherly affection being ignorant that it was the will of God that Paul should go up thither which he had revealed to him after a singular manner 1148. Acts 21.9 Philip had four daughters Virgins which did prophesie 1 Cor. 14.34 Let your women keep silence in the Churches The first place is concerning private and extraordinary gifts the latter of the publike Ministry and that which is ordinarily used from which women are excluded 1149. Acts 23.3 Paul reviled Ananias the High Priest 1 Cor. 6.10 Revilers shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Reviling is either lawful which riseth from zeal to Justice and hath the observation of the Law for its object that is just and honest so Peter reviled Ananias Simon Magus Paul Bar Jesus or Elymas and God all wicked men Or unlawful which proceeds from a wicked desire and mind of revenge that Paul had not Acts 5.8 c. 13.10 * Acts 23.3 with 1 Cor. 6.10 The words in the former place are by some not words of reviling but a Prediction of the destruction of the Legal Priesthood being figurative The true High Priest being come he was but a shadow and whited wall Or else it was a free and confident denouncing of Judgment by a kind of Apostolical authority Or else he did it in passion and repented in the following words Revilers in the latter place is meant of such as practice it not such as repent of it and seldom use it Acts 23.3 Sittest thou to judge me after the Law c. 2 Cor. 11.10 For ye suffer c. It is one thing to plead the equity of their cause another thing after the pleading of their cause to bear their sufferings patiently Pauls pleading here against the High Priests unjust proceedings doth not imply that he was impatient in his sufferings 1150. Acts 23.6 Paul cryed out in the council Men and brethren I am a Pharisee 1 Cor. 1.12 He reproves and condemns denominations from men Paul amongst those that disagreed admits the denomination only for distinction sake and so thinking with the Pharisees he distinguisheth himself from the Sadduces So the faithful Professors of the Gospel are called Christians but when the persons agree in Doctrine he forbids to prefer one before the other * Acts 23.6 with 1 Cor. 1.12 Paul calls not himself a Pharisee as if by that name he would abet names to make sects among Christians or those of the same body who agree in substantials but he useth a name which was generally known to hold forth such and such an opinion as that of the Resurrection from the dead I am of Paul c. That shews names to distinguish Christians from Christians as it was corruptly used They all agreed in the main and substance only one gloried he was for Paul another for Apollo c. as they were Teachers one excelling another in the manner of delivery not in the matter delivered 1151. Acts 25.10 Paul will be judged at Caesars Judgement seat 1 Cor. 6.1 Dare any of you go to Law before the unjust Civil Judicatures are to be had in honour the abuse of them is condemned and he admonisheth Christians that they should avoid contentions before unjust Judges lest so contending concerning small matters they should prostitute their sacred Religion * Acts 25.10 with 1 Cor. 6.1 It is one thing for one Christian to implead another another thing for an Heathen to implead a Christian It is lawful for a Christian being impleaded by an Heathen before Heathens to appeal from one Heathen Judicature to another though it be unlawful for two Christians contending which may have the conclusion made by Christians to fly and appeal to Heathens which is the thing the Apostle condemns in the Corinthians * 1152. Acts 25.15 Agrippa and Bernice came down to Caesarea Chap. 12. He was eaten with worms This Agryppa was the son of Herod Agryppa who was eaten to death the brother of Drusilla nor was he King in Judea but in Trachonitis * 1153. Acts 27.12 We came to Phaenice to winter in the Port of Crete Phaenicia is a Province of Syria Phaenice is either a Province which is not here meant or a City and Port in the Island of Crete which Crete is at this day called Candy and subject to the Venetians * 1154. Acts 27.33 The fourteenth day fasting Which cannot naturally be in regard no man in his health can live without meat above seven daie● taking nothing by way of set meal or a full refection only now and then a little to keep them alive 1155. Acts 28.28 Be it known therefore unto you that the salvation of God is sent unto the Gentiles Mat. 15.24 I am not sent but to the l●st sheep of the house of Israel The Gospel ought to be preached by the Apostles first to the Jews they not believing it came to the Gentiles So Christ preached to the Israelites before he gave command to his Disciples Go and teach all Nations Mat. 28.19 St. PAULS Epistle to the ROMANS IT may be said to be the Method of the holy Scripture in this are contained that which convinceth all both Jews and Gentiles of their sins it demonstrates Justification from sin by the Grace of God by Redemption of Jesus Christ which we apprehend by faith and testifie by good Works as the fruits of our faith It was written in the year of Christ 55. and sent from Corinth 1156. ROM 1.1 Paul a servant of Jesus Christ Joh. 15.15 I will not call you servants There are servants of sin and servants of Righteousness Christ speaks of servants of sin the Apostle was an Apostle of Righteousness either in respect of the common condition that he was freed by Christ from the power of Satan or of his Apostolical office being placed in the sacred Ministry by a singular manner 1157. Rom. 1.2 The Gospel of God which he had promised before by his Prophets in the holy Scriptures Chap. 16.25 The Gospel was kept secret since the world began but is now manifested The Gospel is taken either largely as it signifies the doctrine of Glory concerning Christ revealed in the Word or strictly properly for
If the Creditor do forgive his debt unto one and exact it of another he doth no wrong It is free for him to do what he will with his own Mat. 20.15 The re-acceptation of persons properly is where the Judge leaving the merit of the cause doth find somewhat in the person for which he giveth sentence with one against another But so doth not God he finds no difference in the persons but all being in the same cause of damnation he of his own free will forgiveth his debt unto some and requireth it of others Though God give unequally yet it is not accepting of persons but when this is done with respect to some quality in the person 1223. Rom. 9.16 It is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy Mat. 19.17 If thou wilt enter into life keep the Commandments It is therefore said not to be of him that willeth because salvation is not given for our merit but of Gods mercy but it is also of him that willeth not because we will though no man is saved against his will but of unwilling to receive Gods call he is made willing 1224. Rom. 9.18 God hath mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth Chap. 11.32 God hath concluded them all in unbelief that he might have mercy upon all The first place is concerning the most free will and power of God who may have mercy on whom he please his Antecedent will reacheth to all men his consequent will is restrained to the believers and unbelievers and so he will have mercy of the faithful that they may be saved but he justly punisheth and hardneth the unbelievers and wicked men who resist his grace freely offered unto them * 1225. Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law Mat. 6. I came not to destroy the Law The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or end signifieth not the abolition or destruction but the scope or drift of the Law him whom the Law would have us to believe and to whom by its strictness it sends us unto Christ is the end which the Ceremonial Law aims at demonstrates and declares The Sacrifices were types of our having reconciliation by Christ and the Politick part of the Law was a shadow of the Kingdom of heaven or the Church of Christ The moral Law which the Apostle principally intends in this Epistle in that it cannot receive satisfaction from our transactions and holding forth the Messiah of which man stood so much in need of is terminated in Christ not that Christ is effective only the end of the Law as if he giving us his Holy Spirit whereby our souls are regenerated and enabled to walk in obedience which the Law requires but that principally he is the end of the Law by imputation of his righteousness to us whereby we stand clear in the account of the Law 1226. Rom. 10.10 With the mouth is made confession unto salvation 1 Cor. 4.20 The Kingdom of God is not in word In the first place is spoken of confession with faith in the latter of humane words which the false teachers used in preaching wherein the Kingdom of God consists not but in the vertue that is in a true performance of those things they profess with their mouths * 1227. Rom. 10.17 Faith comes by hearing Rom. 15.21 They that have not heard shall understand Faith though it be the gift of God yet it is wrought by the preaching of the Word The latter place tells us that they which had not the Law nor the Prophets they shall now hear the preaching of the Apostles and understand or believe So that the latter place contradicts not the former but tells us that they which yet heard not shall hear and so understand and by understanding believe He which promiseth the end implies the means conducing to that end * 1228. Rom. 10.20 I was found of them that sought me not Isa 65.1 I am sought of them that asked not for me I am found of them that sought me not c. St. Paul neither exactly followeth the Hebrew Text nor yet the Septuagint as Erasmus observeth and as may appear unto him that will compare them together But he taketh the sense 1. The order is somewhat inverted for Isa 65.1 the first part of the sentence I was found of them that sought me not is there the latter And the latter here I was made manifest to them that asked not after me is there the first 2. The word in the Hebrew which St. Paul translateth I was made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 manifest is there Nidrashti not I was sought for of them that asked not after me for how can that be But I caused them to seek me as Beza and Pagaine observe 1229. Rom. 11.2 Who hath known the mind of the Lord. 1 Cor. 2.16 We have known the mind of Christ These words were spoken by Elias in Passion however not as if there were none at all that knew the mind of the Lord for he himself knew it but that he conceived there was very few for they did visibly appear to him to be few The latter place shews that some do know the mind of Christ though it implies not that all do it 1230. Rom. 11.7 Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for Mat. 7.7 Seek and you shall find In the first place he speaks of works so they that seek God and righteousness attain it not but in the latter the promise is made to them that seek by faith * Rom. 11.7 with Mat. 7.7 There are two kinds of seeking God a lawful right and true seeking of God wherein there must be both observed the manner which must be of faith and the end which is of the glory of God And the other is not right which faileth of either of these as the Jews failed in both for they sought not righteousness by faith and therefore missed of that which they sought for and beside they went about to establish their own righteousness and would not submit themselves to the righteousness of God i. e. They sought their own praise and glory and not Gods and therefore they failed of their desire * 1231. Rom. 11.9 Let their table be made a snare Mat. 5.46 Rom. 12.14 c. Bless them which persecute you bless I say and curse not We must distinguish first the cause whether private wich concerns one person only in which cause it is unlawful to curse or publick concerning the glory of God as Acts 5. Secondly We must consider the condition and calling of them which use imprecations whether they do it out of private affection which is unlawful Or of a Prophetical spirit as the Prophets and Apostles did Acts 13.9 Thirdly The things themselves whether temporal which may tend unto their amendment Psal 89.16 Or eternal but these cannot be denounced without Gods special warrant Fourthly The persons are to be distinguished which are cursed some are such as
ordained or ordered first in respect of God because they are by him instituted and appointed Secondly in regard of themselves the Lord hath set them certain limits and bounds whereby they should be ordered Thirdly in respect of those which are to be ordered God would have order among men some to rule and some to obey Magistracy is said to be the Ordinance of man that is the framing and ordering of Civil Government is of man or intended by or hath this or that mode from men or is proper to men or is discharged by men 1253. Rom. 13.5 You must needs be subject not only for wrath but also for conscience sake Gal. 5.1 Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free Submission is either active or Passive If we cannot the active way we must the passive way The decrees of the Magistrate if they agree with Gods Word and are appointed for good order they bind the conscience so also Ecclesiastical Constitutions for keeping the Moral Laws are to be piously observed so far as they hinder not the use of our Christian Liberty * Rom. 13.5 For conscience sake Gal. 5.1 Stand fast c. For conscience sake of the Divine Precepts which being obeyed brings peace of conscience but to resist Gods Ordinance i. e. the Magistrate in Licitis Honestis or actively is a deadly sin sauciens conscientiam wounding the conscience The second place forbids not obedience to the Magistrate but bids us stand fast in that liberty which Christ hath given but Christ never gave liberty to resist the Magistrate as before I said 1254. Rom. 13.8 He that loveth another hath fulfilled the Law Mat. 22.40 On these two Commandments the love of God and our neighbour hang all the Law and the Prophets The love of our neighbour proceeding from the love of God is the fulfilling of the Law since we have but the Image of God in our neighbour therefore God must be principally beloved * Rom. 13.8 with Mat. 22.40 Hath fulfilled the Law The Apostle rehearseth not all the Commandments but only those of the second Table because he treateth of those Duties which are to be performed unto men and by the keeping of the second Table is better observed and discerned the keeping of the Law than out of the first We must restrain the word Law to the second Table but in the former place we must take in both the Tables Besides the love of our Neighbour may be said to be the fulfilling of the Law because it proceeds from the love of God and he that loves his Neighbour first loves God and then his Neighbour in order to God 1255. Rom. 13.13 Let us not walk in strife and envying 1 Cor. 14.39 Covet spirituall gifts Emulation joyned with envy by reason of anothers profit is evil and meant by the first place in the latter sincerity of love proceeding from good zeal and justice 1256. Rom. 14.1 Him that is weak in the faith receive but not to doubtful disputations Gal. 2.11 Paul withstood Peter to the face saying if thou being a Jew livest after the manner of the Gentiles They are weak who know not the true use of indifferent things Peter being taught by the heavenly vision that distinction of Meats was taken away deserved to be reprehended because what he learned of God and taught in the publick Council he yet observed not but was scandalous both to Jews and Gentiles 1257. Rom. 14 3. Let not him that eateth despise him that eateth not Col. 2.21 Touch not taste not handle not In the former place abstinence and observation of meats proceeding from faith without scandal is left free for the Ceremonial Law ended at Christs coming In the latter he reproves the superstition of the Colossians who being taught the use of things indifferent yet brought them in as a part of Gods worship necessary to salvation The Apostle doth not so much condemn them for observing Ceremonies as that they did keep them opinione necessitatis with an opinion of necessity In the latter place the Apostle speaketh not so much of abstinence from meat and marriages but of the Precept of abstinence from both which should be brought in by wicked Hereticks the Manichees Talions and others which condemned them as evil 1258. Rom. 14.6 He that regardeth the day regardeth it unto the Lord and he that regardeth not the day to the Lord he doth not regard it Gal. 4.10 He reprehends them for observing daies and months and times and years The first place leaves it free to the weak who had tender consciences either to observe or not observe the legal festival daies so they did it without opinion of merit or necessity or offending their neighbour The latter reprehends the Galathians who with a kind of tye of conscience did observe the Sabbaths and Festival times of the Jews according to the Law as if they had not been set free by Christ * 1259. Rom. 14.9 That he might be the Lord both of the dead and of the living Mat. 22.32 He is not the God of the dead In the one place they are said to be dead according to the Sadduces sense that had no being at all but were utterly perished and extinct both in body and soul of such the Lord is not God For he is not a God of that which is not he is not their God as they are dead but as he purposeth to raise them again But hereby the dead the Apostle understandeth them that are alive in soul though dead in body 1260. Rom. 14.15 Destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ died Joh. 10.28 My sheep shall no man pluck out of my hand The Elect may be destroyed by themselves as weak men and by reason of Satans malice that puts so many offences in their way but not in respect of God for no man can snatch them finally out of his hands * Rom. 14.15 with Joh. 10.28 He is said to destroy his brother who though he really cannot yet g●ves occasion to such a ruine The Apostle speaks not here exactly and precisely of those whom indeed Christ died for but of such as in our charitable opinion are held to be of that number Omnes fidem Christi profitentes pro redemptis habet charitas Christiana All that profess the faith of Christ Christian charity holdeth to be of the number of those which are redeemed 1261. Rom. 15.2 Let every one of us please his neighbour Gal. 1.10 Should I yet please men I should not be the servant of Christ We must please men for their edification both by words and examples but not to seek for glory at the mouth of the people for so the Apostle would not please men * Rom. 15.2 with Gal. 1.10 We must consider three things Who wherein to what end men are to be pleased 1. Who if I should please the incredulous Jews and Infidels I should not please Christ He must seek to please the brethren and believers 2.