Contemplations.
THE ARKE and DAGON.
MEN could not arise to such height of impiety, if they did not mistake God: The acts of his iust iudgement are imputed to impotence; that God [Page 2] would send his Arke captiue to the Philistims, is so construed by them, as if he could not keep it: The wife of Phinehas cryed out, that glory was departed from Israel; The Philistims dare say in triumph, that glory is departed from the God of Israel; The Arke was not Israels, but Gods, this victory reaches higher then to men. Dagon had neuer so great a day, so many sacrifices, as now that he seemes to take the God of Israel prisoner; Where should the captiue be bestowed, but in the custodie of the Victor: It is not loue, but insultation, that lodges the Arke close beside Dagon: What a spectacle was this, to see vncircumcised [Page 3] Philistims laying their profane hands vpon the testimonie of Gods presence? to see the glorious mercy seat vnder the roofe of an Idoll? to see the two Cherubins spreading their wings vnder a false God?
OH the deepe and holy wisdome of the Almightie, which ouer-reaches all the finite conceit of his creature, who while he seemes most to neglect himselfe, fetches about most glory to his owne name; He winks, and sits still on purpose, to see what men would doe, and is content to suffer indignitie from his creature, for a time, that he may be euerlastingly magnified in his iustice, and power: That [Page 4] honor pleaseth God and men best, which is raised out of contempt.
THE Arke of God was not vsed to such porters; The Philistims carry it vnto Ashdod, that the victory of Dagon may be more glorious: What paines superstition puts men vnto, for the triumph of a false cause? And if profane Philistims can thinke it no toyle to carry the Arke where they should not, what a shame is it for vs, if we doe not gladly attend it where we should? How iustly may Gods truth scorne the imparitie of our zeale?
IF the Isralites did put confidence in the Arke, can we maruell [Page 5] that the Philistims did put confidence in that power which (as they thought) had conquered the Arke? The lesse is euer subiect vnto the greater; What could they now thinke, but that heauen and earth were theirs? Who shall stand out against them, when the God of Israel hath yeelded? Securitie and presumption attend euer at the threshold of ruine.
GOD will let them sleepe in this confidence; in the morning they shall finde, how vainely they haue dreamed. Now they begin to finde they haue but gloryed in their owne plague, and ouerthrowne nothing but their owne peace: [Page 6] Dagon hath an house, when God hath but a Tabernacle; It is no measuring of religion by outward glory: Into this house the proud Phoenitians come, the next morning, to congratulate vnto their god, so great a captiue, such diuine spoiles, and in their early deuotions to fall downe before him, vnder whom the God of Israel was fallen: and lo, where they finde their god, fallen downe on the ground vpon his face, before him, whom they thought both his prisoner, and theirs: Their god is forced to doe that, which they should haue done voluntarily; although God casts downe that dumbe riuall of his, for [Page 7] scorne, not for adoration. Oh yee foolish Philistims, could yee think that the same house could hold GOD & DAGON? could yee thinke a senselesse stone, a fit companion and guardian, for the liuing GOD? Had yee laid your Dagon vpon his face, prostrate before the Arke, yet would not God haue indured the indignitie of such a lodging; but now, that yee presume to set vp your carued stone, equall to his Cherubins, go read your folly in the floore of your temple, and know that hee which cast your god so low, can cast you lower.
THE true God owes a shame to those which will be making [Page 8] matches betwixt himselfe and Belial.
BVT this perhaps, was onely a mischance, or a neglect of attendance, lay to your hands, ô yee Philistims, and raise vp Dagon into his place; It is a miserable god that needs helping vp; Had yee not beene more senselesse then that stone, how could you choose but thinke, How shall hee raise vs aboue our enemies, that cannot rise alone? how shall he establish vs in the station of our peace, that cannot hold his own foot? If Dagon did giue the foyle vnto the God of Israel, what power is it, that hath cast him vpon his face, in his owne Temple? [Page 9] It is iust with God, that those which want grace shall want wit too; it is the power of superstition, to turne men into those stocks, and stones, which they worship: They that make them are like vnto them; Doubtlesse, this first fall of Dagon was kept as secret, and excused as well as it might, and serued rather for astonishment, then conviction; there was more strangenes then horror in that accident; that whereas Dagon had wont to stand, and the Philistims fall downe, now Dagon fell downe, and the Philistims stood, and must become the patrons of their owne god; their god worships them vpon [Page 10] his face, and craues more helpe from them, then euer he could giue: But if their sottishnes can digest this all is well. Dagon is set in his place, and now those hands are lift vp to him, which helped to lift him vp; and those faces are prostrate vnto him, before whom he lay prostrate. Idolatry and superstition are not easily put out of countenance; But will the ielosie of the true God put it vp thus? Shall Dagon escape with an harmelesse fall? Surely, if they had let him lye still vpon the p [...]ement, perhaps that insensible statue had found no other reuenge; but now, they will be aduancing it to the rood-loft againe, and affront Gods [Page 11] Arke with it, the euent will shame them, and let them know, how much God scornes a partner, either of his owne making, or theirs.
THE morning is fittest for deuotion, then do the Philistims flocke to the temple of their god; What a shame is it for vs to come late to ours? Although, not so much piety as curiositie did now hasten their speed, to see what rest their Dagon was allowed to get in his owne roofe; and now behold their kinde god is come to meete them in the way; some peeces of him salute their eyes vpon the threshold. Dagons head and hands are ouer-runne their fellowes, [Page 12] to tell the Philistims how much they were mistaken in a god.
THIS second fall breaks the Idoll in peeces, and threats the same confusion to the worshippers of it. Easie warnings neglected end euer in destruction. The head is for deuising, the hand for execution; In these two powers of their god, did the Philistims cheifly trust; these are therfore laid vnder their feet, vpon the threshold, that they might a farre of see their vanitie, and that (if they would) they might set their foote on that best peece of their god, whereon their heart was set.
THERE was nothing wherein [Page 13] that Idoll resembled a man, but in his head, and hands, the rest was but a scalie portraiture of a fish, God would therefore separate from this stone, that part, which had mocked man, with the counterfeit of himselfe; that man might see what an vnworthy lumpe he had matched with himselfe, and set vp aboue himselfe: The iust quarrell of God is bent vpon those meanes, and that parcell which haue dared to rob him of his glory.
How can the Philistims now misse the sight of their owne folly? how can they bee but enough convicted of their mad idolatry, to see their god lye broken to morsells, vnder their [Page 14] feete? euery peece whereof proclaimes the power of him that brake it, and the stupiditie of those that adored it? Who would expect any other issue of this act, but to heare the Philistims say, we now see how superstition hath blinded vs? Dagon is no god for vs, our hearts shall neuer more rest vpon a broken statue: That onely true God, which hath beaten ours, shall challenge vs by the right of conquest: But here was none of this; rather a further degree of their dotage followes vpon this palpable conviction: They cannot yet suspect that god, whose head they may trample vpon, but in steed of hating their [Page 15] Dagon, that lay broken vpon their threshold, they honor the threshold, on which Dagon lay; and dare not set their foote on that place, which was hallowed by the broken head, and hands of their Deity: Oh the obstinacie of Idolatry, which where it hath got hold of the heart, knowes neither to blush, nor yeeld, but rather gathers strength from that which might iustly confound it. The hand of the Almighty, which moued them not in falling vpon their god, falls now neerer them vpon their persons, and strikes them in their bodies, which would not feele themselues stricken in their Idoll: Paine shall humble [Page 16] them, whom shame cannot. Those which had entertained the secret thoughts of abhominable Idolatry within them, are now plagued in the inwardest and most secret part of their bodies, with a loathsome disease; and now grow weary of themselues, in stead of their idolatry. I doe not heare them acknowledge it was Gods hand, which had stricken Dagon their god, till now, they finde themselues stricken: Gods iudgements are the racke of godlesse men; If one straine make them not confesse, let them be stretched but one wrench hyer, and they cannot be silent. The iust auenger of sinne will not loose the glory [Page 17] of his executions, but will haue men know from whom they smart.
THE emerods were not a disease beyond the compasse of naturall causes, neither was it hard for the wiser sort, to giue a reason of their complaint, yet they ascribe it to the hand of God: The knowledge and operation of secondary causes should be no preiudice to the first; They are worse then the Philistims, who when they see the meanes, doe not acknowledge the first mouer; whose actiue and iust power is no lesse seene in imploying ordinarie agents, then in raising vp extraordinary; neither doth hee lesse smite by a [Page 18] common fever, then a reuenging Angell.
THEY iudge right of the cause, what doe they resolue for the cure? (Let not the Arke of the God of Israel abide with vs) where they should haue said, let vs cast out Dagon, that we may pacifie and retaine the God of Israel, they determine to thrust out the Arke of God, that they might peaceably inioy themselues, and Dagon: Wicked men are vpon all occasions glad to be rid of God, but they can with no patience, indure to part with their sins, and whiles they are weary of the hand that punishes them, they hold fast the cause of their punishment.
[Page 19] THEIR first and onely care is to put away him, who as hee hath corrected, so can ease them. Folly is neuer separated from wickednes.
THEIR heart told them that they had no right to the Arke. A counsell is called of their Princes, and Priests: If they had resolued to send it home, they had done wisely; Now they doe not carry it away, but they carry it about from Ebenezer to Ashdod, from Ashdod to Gath, from Gath to Ekron: Their stomacke was greater then their conscience; The Arke was too sore for them, yet it was too good for Israel; and they will rather dye, then make Israel [Page 20] happy. Their conceit that the change of ayre could appease the Arke, God vseth to his own aduantage; for by this meanes his power is knowne, and his iudgements spred ouer all the country of the Philistims: What doe these men now, but send the plague of God to their fellowes? The iustice of God can make the sinnes of men their mutuall executioners; It is the fashion of wicked men to draw their neighbours into the partnership of their condemnation.
Wheresoeuer the Arke goes, there is destruction; the best of Gods ordinances, if they be not proper to vs, are deadly. The Israelites did not more shout for [Page 21] ioy, when they saw the Arke come to them, then the Ekronites cry out for greefe, to see it brought amongst them: Spiritual things are either soueraigne, or hurtfull, according to the disposition of the receiuers. The Arke doth either saue, or kill, as it is entertained.
AT last, when the Philistims are well weary of paine & death, they are glad to be quit of their sinne; The voice of the Princes and people is changed to the better, (Send away the Arke of the God of Israel, and let it returne to his owne place,) God knowes how to bring the stubbornnest enemie vpon his knees, and makes him doe that [Page 22] out of feare, which his best childe would doe out of loue and dutie: How miserable was the estate of these Philistims? Euery man was either dead, or sicke: those that were left liuing (through their extremitie of paine) enuied the dead, and the the cry of their whole Cities went vp to heauen. It is happy that God hath such store of plagues and thunderbolts for the wicked: If he had not a fire of iudgment, wherewith the yron-hearts of men might be made flexible, he would want obedience, and the world peace.
THE ARKES Reuenge and Returne.
IT had wont to be a sure rule, wheresoeuer God is among men, there is the Church: Here onely it failed: The testimonie of Gods presence was many moneths amongst the Philistims, for a punishment to his owne people, whom he left; for a curse to those forrainers, which entertained it; Israel [Page 24] was seuen moneths without God: How do we thinke faithfull Samuel tooke this absence? How desolate, and forlorne did the tabernacle of God looke, without the Arke? There were still the Altars of God, his Preists, Leuites, tables, vailes, censers, with all the legall accoustrements: These without the Arke, were as the Sunne without light, in the midst of an eclipse: If all these had bin taken away, and onely the Arke had bin remayning, the losse had bin nothing to this, that the Arke should be gone, and they left: For what are all these without God, and how all-sufficient is God without these? There are [Page 25] times, wherein God withdrawes himselfe from his Church, and seems to leaue her without comfort, without protection: Sometimes we shall finde Israel taken from the Arke, other-whiles the Arke is taken from Israel: In either, there is a separation betwixt the Arke and Israel: Heauy times to euery true Israelite, yet such, as whose example may releeue vs in our desertions: Still was this people Israel; the seed of him, that would not be left of God without a blessing; and therefore without the testimony of his presence, was God present with them: It were wide with the faithfull, if God were not often-times with them, when [Page 26] there is no witnesse of his presence.
ONE act was a mutuall penance to the Israelites and Philistims, I know not to whether more: Israel greeued for the losse of that, whose presence greeued the Philistims, their paine was therefore no other then voluntary: It is strange, that the Philistims would endure seauen monthes smart with the Arke, since they saw, that the presence of that prisoner would not requite, no nor mitigate to them, one houres misery: Foolish men will be strugling with God, till they be vtterly either breathlesse, or impotent. Their hope was, that time might abate displeasure, [Page 27] euen whiles they persisted to offend: The false hopes of worldly men cost them deare, they could not be so miserable, if their owne hearts did not deceiue them with mis-expectations of impossible fauour.
IN matters, that concerne a God, who is so fit to be consulted with, as the Preists? The Princes of the Philistims had before giuen their voices, yet nothing is determined, nothing is done without the direction, and assent of those, whom they accounted sacred: Nature it selfe sends vs in diuine things, to those persons, whose calling is diuine: It is either distrust, or presumption, or contempt, that [Page 28] carries vs our owne waies in spirituall matters, without aduising with them, whose lips God hath appointed to preserue knowledge: There cannot but arise many difficulties in vs about the Arke of God, whom should wee consult with but those, which haue the tongue of the learned?
DOVBTLES, this question of the Arke did abide much debating: There wanted not faire probabilities on both sides: A wise Philistim might well plead, If God had either so great care of the Arke, or power to retaine it, how is it become ours? A wiser then he would reply; If the God of Israel had wanted either [Page 29] care or power, Dagon, and we had beene still whole; why doe we thus grone, and dye, all that are but within the ayre of of the Arke, if a diuine hand do not attend it? Their smart pleads enough for the dismission of the Arke: The next demand of their Preists and Soothsayers, is, how it should be sent home: Affliction had made them so wise, as to know, that euery fashion of parting with the Arke would not satisfie the owner: oftentimes the circumstance of an action marres the substance: In diuine matters we must not onely looke, that the body of our seruice be sound, but that the clothes be fit: Nothing hinders, [Page 30] but that sometimes good aduise may fall from the mouth of wicked men. These superstitious Preists can counsell them not to send away the Arke of God empty, but to giue it a sin-offering: They had not liued so farre from the smoake of the Iewish Altars, but that they knew, God was accustomed to manifold oblations, and cheifly to those of expiation. No Israelite could haue said better: Superstition is the ape of true deuotion, and if we looke not to the ground of both, many times it is hard by the very outward acts to distinguish them: Nature it selfe teacheth vs, that God loues a full hand: Hee that hath beene so [Page 31] bountifull to vs, as to giue vs all, lookes for a returne of some offering from vs; If wee present him with nothing but our sins, how can wee looke to be accepted? The sacrifices vnder the gospell are spirituall, with these must we come into the presence of God, if wee desire to carry away remission and fauour.
THE Philistims knew well, that it were bootlesse for them to offer, what they listed, their next suite is to be directed in the matter of their oblation: Pagans can teach vs, how vnsaf [...] it is to walke in the waies of religion, without a guide, yet here, their best teachers can but guesse at their dutie, and must deuise for [Page 32] the people, that, which the people durst not impose vpon themselues: The golden Emerods and Mise were but coniecturall prescripts: With what securitie may wee consult with them, which haue their directions frō the mouth and hand of the Allmighty?
GOD stroke the Philistims at once in their god, in their bodies, in their land: In their god, by his ruine, and dismembring: nI their bodies by the Emerods: In their land, by the Mise: That base vermine did God send among them on purpose to shame their Dagon, and them, that they might see, how vnable their god was (which they [Page 33] thought the Victor of the Arke) to subdue the least Mouse, which the true God did create, and command to plague them: This plague vpon their fields, began together with that vpon their bodies, it was not mentioned, not complained of, till they thinke of dismissing the Arke: Greater crosses doe commonly swallow vp the lesse: At least, lesser euills are either silent or vnheard, while the eare is filled with the clamour of greater. Their very Princes were punished with the mise, as well as the emerods; God knowes no persons in the execution of iudgements, the least and meanest of all Gods creatures is sufficient [Page 34] to be the reuenger of his Creator.
GOD sent them mise, and emerods of flesh, and blood: they returne him both these of gold, to imply, both, that these iudgements came out from God, and that they did gladly giue him the glory of that, whereof hee gaue them paine and sorrow, and that they would willingly buy off their paine, with the best of their substance: The proportion betwixt the complaint and satisfaction is more precious to him, then the metall. There was a publike confession in this resemblance, which is so pleasing vnto God, that he rewards it, euen in wicked men, with a [Page 35] relaxation of outward punishment. The number was no lesse significant, then the forme: Fiue golden emerods, and mise for the fiue Princes, and diuisions of Philistims: As God made no difference in punishing, so they make none in their oblation; The people are comprised in them, in whom they are vnited, their seuerall Princes: They were one with their Prince, their offering is one with his; as they were ring-leaders in the sinne, so must they be in the satisfaction: In a multitude, it is euer seene, as in a beast, that the body followes the head. Of all others great men had neede to looke to their waies, it is in them, as in figures, [Page 36] one stands for a thousand: One offering serues not all, there must be fiue, according to the fiue heads of the offence. Generalities will not content God; euery man must make his seuerall peace, if not in himselfe, yet in his head: Nature taught them a shadow of that, the substance and perfection wherof is taught vs by the grace of the Gospell; Euery soule must satisfie God, if not in it selfe, yet in him, in whom we are both one, and absolute: we are the body, whereof Christ is the head, our sinne is in our selues, our satisfaction must be in him.
SAMVEL himselfe could not haue spoken more diuinely, then [Page 37] these Preists of Dagon; they doe not onely talke of giuing glory to the God of Israel, but fall into an holy and graue expostulation (wherefore then should yee harden your hearts, as the Aegyptians, and Pharaoh hardned their hearts, when hee wrought wonderfully among them? &c.) They confesse a supereminent, & reuenging hand of God ouer their gods, they parallell their plagues with the Aegyptian, they make vse of Pharaohs sinne, and iudgment; What could be better said? All religions haue afforded them, that could speake well: These good words left them still both Philistims, and superstitious: [Page 38] How should men be hypocrites, if they had not good tongues? yet (as wickednesse can hardly hide it selfe) these holy speeches are not without a tincture of that Idolatry, wherewith the heart was infected: For they professe care not only of the persons, and lands of the Philistims, but of their gods; (that he may take his hand from you, and from your gods.) Who would thinke, that wisdome and folly could lodge so neere together? that the same men should haue care both of the glory of the true God, and the preseruation of the false? that they should bee so vaine, as to take thought for those gods, which they granted [Page 39] to be obnoxious vnto an hyer Deity? Oft-times euen one word bewrayeth a whole packe of falshood, and though superstition be a cleanly counterfet, yet some one slip of the tongue discouers it, as we say of Deuils, which though they put on faire formes, yet are they knowne by their clouen feete.
WHAT other warrant these superstitious Preists had for the maine substance of their aduise, I know not, sure I am, the probabilitie of the euent was faire; that two kine neuer vsed to any yoke, should runne from their calues (which were newly shut vp from them) to draw the Arke home in a contrary way, must [Page 40] needs argue an hand aboue nature; What else should ouer-rule brute creatures to prefer a forced cariage vnto a naturall burden? What should carry them from their owne home, towards the home of the Arke? What else should guide an vntamed and vntaught teame, in as right a path toward Israel, as their teachers could haue gone? What else could make very beasts more wise, then their masters? There is a speciall prouidence of God in the very motions of brute creatures; Neither Philistims nor Israelites saw ought that droue them, yet they saw them so runne, as those that were led by a diuine conduct. The [Page 41] reason-lesse creatures also do the the will of their Maker; euery act that is done either by them, or to them, makes vp the decree of the Almighty; and if in extraordinary actions and euents his hand is more visible, yet it is no lesse certainly present in the common.
LITLE did the Israelites of Bethshemesh looke for such a sight, whiles they were reaping their wheat in the valley, as to see the Arke of God come running to them, without a conuoy; neither can it be said, whether they were more affected with ioy, or with astonishment, with ioy at the presence of the Arke, with astonishment at the [Page 42] miracle of the transportation: Downe went their sickles, and now euery man runnes to reape the comfort of this better haruest, to meete that bread of Angels, to salute those Cherubims, to welcome that God, whose absence had bin their death: But, as it is hard not to ouer-ioy in a sudden prosperitie, and, to vse happinesse is no lesse difficult, then to forbeare it; These glad Israelites cannot see, but they must gaze; they cannot gaze on the glorious outside, but they must be (whether out of rude iollity, or curiositie, or suspition of the purloyning some of those sacred implements) prying into the secrets of Gods Arke: Nature [Page 43] is too subiect to extremities, and is euer either too dull in want, or wanton in fruition: It is no easie matter to keepe a meane, whether in good, or euill.
BETHSHEMESH was a Citie of Preists, they should haue knowne better, how to demeane themselues towards the Arke; this priuiledge doubled their offence: There was no malice in this curious inquisition, the same eyes that lookt into the Arke, lookt also vp to heauen in their offerings, and the same hands, that touched it, offered sacrifice to the God that brought it. Who could expect any thing now but acceptation? who [Page 44] would suspect any danger? It is not a following act of deuotion, that can make amends for a former sinne: There was a death owing them, immediately vpon their offence, God will take his owne time for the execution; In the meane while, they may sacrifice, but they cannot satisfie, they cannot escape. The kine are sacrificed, the cart burnes them that drew it: Here was an offering of praise, when they had more neede of a trespasse-offering; many an heart is lifted vp in a conceit of ioy, when it hath iust cause of humiliation: God lets them alone with their sacrifice, but when that is done, he comes ouer them [Page 45] with a backe reckning for their sinne: Fifty thousand & seuenty Israelites are stroke dead for this vnreuerence to the Arke: A wofull welcome for the Arke of God into the borders of Israel; It killd them for looking into it, who thought it their life to see it; It dealt blowes, and death on both hands; to Philistims, to Israelites; to both of them for prophaning it: The one with their Idoll, the other with their eyes. It is a fearefull thing to vse the holy ordinances of God with an vnreuerent boldnesse. Feare and trembling becomes vs in our accesse to the Maiestie of the Allmighty: Neither was there more state, then secrecy in [Page 46] Gods Arke; some things the wisdome of God desires to conceale: The vnreuerence of the Israelites was no more faulty, then their curiositie; secret things to God, things reuealed to vs, and to our children.
THE REMOVE of the Arke.
I HEARE of the Bethshemites lamentation, I hear not of their repentanc, they cō plaine of their smart, they complaine not of their sinne, and for ought I can perceiue, speake, as if God were curious, rather then they faulty: ( Who is able to stand before this holy Lord god, and to whom shall he goe from vs?) as if [Page 48] none could please that God, which misliked them: It is the fashion of naturall men to iustifie themselues in their own courses; If they cannot charge any earthly thing with the blame of their suffering, they will cast it vpon heauen: That a man pleads himselfe guilty of his owne wrong, is no common worke of Gods spirit. Bethshemesh bordred too neere vpon the Philistims; If these men thought the very presence of the Arke hurtfull, why do they send to their neighbours of Kiriathiearim, that they might make themselues miserable? Where there is a misconceit of God, it is no maruell, if there be a defect [Page 49] of charity: How cunningly do they send their message to their neighbours? They doe not say, the Arke of God is come to vs of it owne accord, lest the men of Kiriath-iearim should reply, It is come to you, let it stay with you; They say onely, the Philistims haue brought it; they tell of the presence of the Arke, they doe not tell of the successe, lest the example of their iudgement should haue discouraged the forwardnes of their releefe; and after all, the offer was plausible; Come yee downe and take it vp to you, as if the honor had bin too great for themselus; as if their modestie had beene such, that they would not forestall and engrosse [Page 50] happinesse from the rest of Israel.
IT is no boote to teach nature, how to tell her owne tale; smart and danger will make a man witty: He is rarely constant, that will not dissemble for ease. It is good to be suspicious of the euasions of those, which would put off miserie: Those of Bethshemesh were not more crafty, then these of Kiriathiearim (which was the ground of their boldnes) faithfull: So many thousand Bethshemites could not be dead, and no part of the rumor flie to them; they heard, how thicke, not onely the Philistims, but the bordring Israelites fell downe dead before [Page 51] the Arke; yet they durst aduenture to come, and fetch it, euen from amongst the carkasses of their brethren: They had bin formerly acquainted with the Arke, they knew it was holy, it could not be changeable, and therefore they well conceiued this slaughter to arise from the vnholinesse of men, not from the rigour of God, and therevpon can seeke comfort in that, which others found deadly: Gods children cannot by any meanes bee discouraged from their honor, and loue to his ordinances: If they see thousands strucke downe to Hell by the scepter of Gods kingdome, yet they will kisse it vpon their [Page 52] knees, and if their Sauiour be a rocke of offence, and the occasion of the fall of millions in Israel, they can loue him no lesse: They can warme them at the fire, wherewith they see others burned; they can feede temperately of that, whereof others haue surfeted to death &c.
BETHSHEMESH was a Citie of Preists, the Leuites: Kiriathiearim a Citie of Iuda, where we heare but of one Leuite, Abinadab; yet this Citie was more zealous for God, more reuerent, and conscionable in the entertainment of the Arke, then the other. We heard of the taking downe of the Arke by the Bethshemites, when it came miraculously [Page 53] to them, we do not heare of any man sanctified for the attendance of it, as was done in this second lodging of the Arke: Grace is not tyed either to number, or meanes. It is in spirituall matters, as in the estate: Small helps with good thrift enrich vs, when great patrimonies loose themselues in the neglect. Shiloh was wont to be the place, which was honored with the presence of the Arke; Euer since the wickednes of Elies sonnes, that was forlorne, and desolate, and now Kiriath-iearim succeeds into this priuiledge: It did not stand with the royall liberty of God, no not vnder the law, to tye himselfe vnto places [Page 54] and persons: Vnworthines was euer a sufficient cause of exchange. It was not yet his time to stirre from the Iewes, yet hee remoued from one Prouince to another: Lesse reason haue we to thinke, that so God will reside amongst vs, that none of our prouocations can driue him from vs &c.
ISRAEL, which had found the misery of Gods absence, is now resolued into teares of contrition, and thankfulnes, vpon his returne: There is no mention of their lamenting after the Lord, while he was gone, but when he was returned, and setled in Kiriath-iearim; The mercies of God draw more teares [Page 55] from his children, then his iudgments doe from his enemies: There is no better signe of good nature, or grace, then to be won to repentance with kindnesse: Not to thinke of God, except we be beaten vnto it, is seruile: Because God was come againe to Israel, therefore Israel is returned to God; If God had not come first, they had neuer come: If he, that came to them, had not made them come to him, they had bin euer parted. They were cloyed with God, while he was perpetually resident with them, now that his absence had made him dainty, they cleaue to him feruently, and penitently in his returne: This was it, that God [Page 56] meant in his departure, a better welcome at his comming backe.
I heard no newes of Samuel all this while, the Arke was gone: Now when the Arke is returned, and placed in Kiriath-iearim, I heare him treat with the people. It is not like, he was silent in this sad desertion of God; but now he takes full aduantage of the professed contrition of Israel, to deale with them effectually, for their perfect conversion vnto God, It is great wisdome in spirituall matters, to take occasion by the fore-locke, and to strike whiles the yron is hot: We may beat long enough at the dore, but till God haue [Page 57] opened, it is no going in, and when he hath opened, it is no delaying to enter: The tryall of sinceritie is the abandoning of our wonted sinnes: This Samuel vrgeth ( If yee be come againe vnto the Lord with all your heart, put away the strange gods from among you, and Ashtaroth): In vaine had it beene to professe repentance, whilst they continued in Idolatry; God will neuer acknowledge any convert, that stayes in a knowne sinne: Graces and vertues are so linckt together, that he, which hath one, hath all: The partiall conversion of men vnto God is but hatefull hypocrisie. How happily effectuall is a word spoken in season? [Page 58] Samuels exhortation wrought vpon the hearts of Israel, and fetcht water out of their eyes, suites, and confessions, & vowes out of their lips, and their false gods out of their hands; yet it was not meerely remorse, but feare also, that moued Israel to this humble submission.
THE Philistims stood ouer them still, and threatned them with new assaults, the memory of their late slaughter, & spoile, was yet fresh in their mindes, sorrow for the euils past, and feare of the future fetcht them downe vpon their knees: It is not more necessarie for men to be cheered with hopes, then to be awed with dangers; where [Page 59] God intends the humiliation of his seruants, there shall not want means of their deiection: It was happy for Israel that they had an enemie. Is it possible, that the Philistims after those deadly plagues, which they susteined from the God of Israel, should thinke of invading Israel? Those, that were so mated with the presence of the Arke, that they neuer thought themselues safe, till it was out of sight, doe they now dare to thrust themselues vpon the new reuenge of the Arke? It slew them, whiles they thought to honor it, and do they thinke to escape, whilest they resist it? It slew them in their owne coasts, and do they [Page 60] come to it to seeke death? yet behold no sooner do the Philistims heare, that the Israelites are gathered to Mizpeh, but the Princes of the Philistims gather themselues against them: No warnings will serue obdurate hearts, wicked men are euen ambitious of destruction; Iudgements neede not to goe finde them out, they runne to meete their bane.
THE Philistims come vp, and the Israelites feare; they that had not the wit to feare, whilst they were not frends with God, haue not now the grace of fearelesnes, when they were reconciled to God: Boldnes and feare are commonly misplaced in the best [Page 61] hearts; when we should tremble, we are confident, and when we should be assured, we tremble: Why should Israel haue feared, since they had made their peace with the God of hostes? Nothing should affright those, which are vpright with God. The peace, which Israel had made with God, was true, but tender; They durst not trust their owne innocencie so much, as the prayers of Samuel; Cease not to cry to the Lord our God for vs. In temporall things nothing hinders, but we may fare better for other mens faith, then for our owne: It is no small happinesse to be interessed in them, which are fauorites in the court [Page 62] of heauen; one faithfull man in these occasions is more worth then millions of the wauering and vncertaine.
A good heart is easily wonne to deuotion: Samuel cries, and sacrificeth to God; he had done so, though they had intreated his silence, yea his forbearance: Whiles he is offering, the Philistims fight with Israel, and God fights with the Philistims. ( The Lord thundred with a great thunder that day vpon the Philistims, and scattered them): Samuel fought more vpon his knees, then all Israel besides: The voice of God answered the voice of Samuel, and speakes confusion and death to the Philistims: How were the [Page 63] proud Philistims dead with feare, ere they died, to heare the fearefull thunder-claps of an angry God against them? to see, that heauen it self fought against them? Hee that slew them secretly in the reuenges of his Arke, now kills them with open horror in the fields: If presumption did not make wicked men madd, they would neuer lift their hand against the Allmighty; what are they in his hands, when he is disposed to vengance.
THE MEETING of Saul and Samuel.
SAMVEL began his acquaintance with God early, and continued it long: He began it in his long coates, and continued to his gray haires: (He iudged Israel all the daies of his life.) God doth not vse to cast off his old seruants; their age indeereth them to him the more; If we be not vnfaithfull to him, he can not be vnconstant to vs: [Page 65] At last his decayed age met witly ill partners, His sonnes for deputies, and Saul for a King; The wickednes of his sonnes gaue the occasion of a change: Perhaps Israel had neuer thought of a King, if Samuels sonnes had not beene vnlike their father; Who can promise himselfe holy children, when the loynes of a Samuel, and the education in the Temple, yeelded monsters? It is not likely; that good Samuel was faulty in that indulgence, for which his owne mouth had denounced Gods iudgement against Hely: yet this holy man succeeds Hely in his crosse, as well as his place, though not in his sinne, and is afflicted with a [Page 66] wicked succession: God will let vs finde, that grace is by gift, not by inheritance.
I feare Samuel was too partiall to nature in the surrogation of his sonnes, I do not heare of Gods allowance to this act: If this had beene Gods choice, as well as his, it had beene like to haue receiued more blessing. Now all Israel had cause to rue, that these were the sonnes of Samuel; For now the question was not of their vertues, but of their blood, not of their worthinesse, but their birth; euen the best heart may be blinded with affection. Who can maruell at these errors of parents loue, when the that so holily iudged [Page 67] Israel all his life, misiudged of his owne sonnes?
IT was Gods ancient purpose to raise vp a King to his people: How doth he take occasion to performe it, but by the vnruly desires of Israel? euen as we say of humane proceedings, that ill manners beget good lawes. That Monarchy is the best forme of gouernment, there is no question: Good things may be ill desired, so was this of Israel; If an itching desire of alteration had not possessed them, why did they not rather sue for a reformation of their gouernors, then for a change of gouernment? Were Samuels sonnes so desperately euill, that there was no [Page 68] possibilitie of amendment? Or if they were past hope, were there not some others to haue succeeded the iustice of Samuel, no lesse then these did his person? What needed Samuel to be thrust out of place? What needed the ancient forme of administration to be altred? He that raised vp their Iudges, would haue found time to raise them vp Kings: Their curious, and inconstant new-fanglenes, will not abide to stay it, but with an heady importunitie labours to ouer-hasten the pace of God. Where there is a setled course of good gouernment (howsoeuer blemished with some weaknesses) it is not safe to [Page 69] be ouer-forward to a change, though it should be to the better. He, by whom Kings raigne, saies, they haue cast him away, that he should not raigne ouer them, because they desire a King to raigne ouer them: Iudges were his own institutiō to his people, as yet Kings were not; after that Kings were setled, to desire the gouernment of Iudges, had bin a much more seditious inconstancy: God hath not appointed to euery time & place those formes, which are simply best in themselues, but those, which are best to them, vnto whom they are appointed; which we may neither alter, till he begin, nor recall, when he hath altred.
[Page 70] THIS busines seemed personally to concerne Samuel, yet he so deales in it, not as a party, not as a iudge of his owne case, but as a Prophet of God, as a freind of his opposite; He prayes to God for aduise, He fore-tells the state and courses of their future King: Wilfull men are blinde to all dangers, are deafe to all good counsells. Israel must haue a King, though they pay neuer so deare for their longing: The vaine affectation of conformitie to other Nations ouercomes all discouragements; there is no readier way to error, then to make others examples the rule of our desires, [...]nctions: If euery man haue [...]ot grounds of [Page 71] his owne, whereon to stand, there can be no stabilitie in his resolutions, or proceedings.
SINCE then they choose to haue a King, God will choose the King, which they shall haue. The kingdome shall begin in Beniamin, which was to indure in Iuda: It was no probabilitie, or reason, this first King should proue well, because he was abortiue; their humor of innovation deserued to bee punished with their owne choise: Kish the father of Saul was mighty in estate; Saul was mighty in person, ouer-looking the rest of the people in stature, no lesse then he should do in dignitie: The senses of the Israelites could not [Page 72] but be well pleased for the time, howsoeuer their hearts were afterwards; when men are carried with outward shews, it is a signe, that God means them a delusion.
How far God fetches his purposes about? The asses of Kish Sauls father, are strayed away: What is that to the newes of a kingdom? God layes these small accidents for the ground of greater designes: The asses must be lost, none but Saul must goe with his fathers seruant to seeke them: Samuel shall meet them in the search: Saul shall be premonished of his insuing royalty; Litle can we, by the beginning of any action, guesse at Gods intention in the conclusion.
[Page 73] OBEDIENCE was a fit entrance into soueraingty: The seruice was homely for the son of a great man, yet he refuseth not to goe, as a fellow to his fathers seruant, vpon so meane a search: The disobedient and scornefull are good for nothing, they are neither fit to be subiects nor gouernors: Kish was a great man in his country, yet he disdaineth not to send his son Saul vpon a thrifty errand, neither doth Saul plead his disparagement from a refusall. Pride and wantonnesse haue marred our times: Great parents count it a disreputation to imploy their sonnes in courses of frugalitie; & their pampred children think [Page 74] it a shame to do any thing; and so beare themselues as those, that hold it the onely glory to be either idle or wicked
NEITHER doth Saul goe fashionably to worke, but does this seruice hartily & painfully, as a man, that desires rather to effect the command, then please the commander: Hee passed from Ephraim to the land of Shalisha, from Shalisha to Salim, from Salim to Iemini, whence his house came; from Iemini to Zuph, not so much as staying with any of his kinred, so long as to vittaile himselfe: He that was afterward an ill King, approued himselfe a good sonne. As there are diuersitie of relations, [Page 75] and offices; so there is of dispositions; those, which are excellent in some, attaine not to a mediocritie in other: It is no arguing from priuate vertues to publique; from dexteritie in one station, to the rest: A seuerall grace belongs to the particular cariage of euery place, whereto we are called, which if we want, the place may well want vs.
THERE was more praise of his obedience in ceasing to seek, then in seeking; he takes care, lest his father should take care for him, that whilst hee should seeme officious in the lesse, he might not neglect the greatest. A blinde obedience in some cases doth well, but it doth farre [Page 76] better, when it is led with the eyes of discretion; otherwise we may more offend in pleasing, then in disobeying.
GREAT is the benefit of a wise and religious attendant, such a one puts vs into those duties and actions, which are most expedient, and least thought of. If Saul had not had a discreet seruant, he had returned but as wife as hee came; now hee is drawne in, to consult with the man of God, and heares more, then he hoped for. Saul was now a sufficient iourney from his fathers house, yet his religious seruant in this remotenesse, takes knowledge of the place, where the Prophet dwells, and [Page 77] how honorably doth hee mention him to his Master? Behold, in this Citie is a man of God, and he is an honorable man, all that he saith commeth to passe: Gods prophets are publique persons, as their function, so their notice concernes euery man: There is no reason God should abate any of the respect due to his Ministers vnder the Gospell: S t Pauls suite is both vniuersall and euerlasting; I beseech you, brethren, know them that labour amongst you.
THE cheife praise is to be able to giue good aduise; the next is to take it. Saul is easily induced to condiscend; He, whose curiositie led him voluntarily at last, to the witch of Endor, is [Page 78] now led at first by good counsell to the man of God; neither is his care in going, lesse commendable, then his will to goe. For as a man, that had bin catechised not to go vnto God empty-handed, he askes, What shall we bring vnto the man? What haue we? The case is well altred in our times: Euery man thinks, what may I keep backe? There is no gaine so sweet, as of a robbed altar; yet Gods charge is no lesse vnder the Gospell, Let him that is taught, make his teacher partaker of all. As this faithfull care of Saul was a iust presage of successe, more then he looked for, or could expect; so the sacrilegious vnthankfulnes of many, [Page 79] bodes that ruine to their soule and estate, which they could not haue grace to feare.
HE that knew the Prophets abode, knew also the honor of his place, hee could not but know, that Samuel was a mixt person: The Iudge of Israel, and the Seer; yet both Saul and his seruant purpose to present him with the fourth part of a shekell, to the value of about our fiue pence: They had learned, that thankfulnes was not to be measured, of good men, by the weight, but by the will of the retributor: How much more will God accept the small offerings of his weake seruants, [Page 80] when hee sees them proceede from great loue?
THE very maides of the City can giue direction to the Prophet, they had listned after the holy affaires, they had heard of the sacrifice, and could tell of the necessitie of Samuels presence: Those that liue within the sun shine of religion, cannot but be somewhat coloured with those beames: Where there is practise and example of piety in the better fort, there will be a reflexion of it vpon the meanest: It is no small benefit to liue in religious and holy places, wee shall be much to blame, if all goodnes fall beside vs: Yea so skilfull were these damzels in the fashions [Page 81] of their publike sacrifices, that they could instruct Saul and his seruant, vnasked, how the people would not eat, till Samuel came to blesse the sacrifice. This meeting was not more a sacrifice, then a feast: These two agree well, we haue neuer so much cause to reioyce in feasting, as when wee haue duely serued our God: The sacrifice was a feast to God, the other to men: The body may eat and drinke with contentment, when the soule hath bin first fed, and hath first feasted the maker of both: Goe eat thy bread with ioy, and drinke thy drinke with a merry heart, for God now accepteth thy works. [Page 82] The sacrifice was before consecrated, when it was offered to God, but it was not consecrated to them, till Samuel blessed it, his blessing made that meat holy to the guests, which was formerly hallowed to God: All creatures were made good, & tooke holinesse from him, which gaue them their being; Our sinne brought that curse vpon them (which vnlesse our prayers remoue it) cleaues to them still, so as we receiue them not without a curse: We are not our owne freinds, except our prayers helpe to take that away, which our sin hath brought, that so to the cleane all may be cleane: It is an vnmannerly godlessnes to [Page 83] take Gods creatures without the leaue of their maker, and well may God with-hold his blessing from them, which haue not the grace to aske it.
THOSE guests, which were so religious, that they would not eat their sacrifice vnblessed, might haue blessed it themselues: Euery man might pray, though euery man might not sacrifice; yet would they not either eat, or blesse, whiles they looked for the presence of a Prophet. Euery Christian may sanctifie his owne meat, but where those are present, that are peculiarly sanctified to God, this seruice is fittest for them: It is commendable to teach children [Page 84] the practise of thanksgiuing, but the best is euer most meere to blesse our tables, and those especially, whose office it is to offer our prayers to God.
LITLE did Saul thinke, that his comming, and his errand was so noted of God, as that it was fore-signified vnto the Prophet, and now, behold Samuel is told a day before of the man, the time, the place of his meeting. The eye of Gods prouidenc is no lesse ouer all our actions, all our motions: We cannot goe any whither without him, he tells all our steps; since it pleaseth God therefore to take notice of vs, much more should we take notice of him, & walke [Page 85] with him, in whom we moue? Saul came beside his expectation to the Prophet, he had no thought of any such purpose, till his seruant made this sudden motion vnto him of visiting Samuel, and yet God saies to his Prophet, I will send thee a man out of the land of Beniamin. The ouer ruling hand of the Allmighty workes vs insensibly, and all our affaires to his owne secret determinations; so as whiles wee thinke we doe our owne wills, we do his: Our owne intentions we may know, Gods purposes we know not; we must go the way that we are called, let him lead vs to what end he pleaseth; It is our dutie to resigne [Page 86] our selues, and our waies to the disposition of God, and patiently and thankfully to awaite the issue of his decrees. The same God, that fore-shewed Saul to Samuel, now points to him ( See this is the man), and commands the Prophet to annoint him gouernor ouer Israel: He, that told of Saul before he came, knew before he came into the world, what a man, what a King hee would be; yet he chooseth him out, and inioynes his invnction. It is one of the greatest praises of Gods wisdome, that hee can turne the euill of men to his own glory: Aduancement is not euer a signe of loue, either to the man, or to the place: It had bin [Page 87] better for Saul, that his head had bin euer dry, some God raiseth vp in iudgement, that they may fall the more vneasily; there are no men so miserable, as those, that are great and euill.
IT seemes that Samuel bore no great port in his outside, for that Saul not discerning him, either by his habit, or attendants, comes to him, and asks him for the Seer; yet was Samuel as yet the Iudge of Israel, the substitution of his sonnes had not displaced himselfe: There is an affable familiaritie, that becommeth greatnesse; It is not good for eminent persons to stand alwaies vpon the height of their state, but so to behaue themselues, [Page 88] that as their sociable cariage may not breed contempt, so their ouer-highnes may not breed a seruile fearefulnesse in their people.
How kindly doth Samuel intertaine, and invite Saul, yet it was he onely, that should receiue wrong by the future royalty of Saul? Who would not haue looked, that aged Samuel should haue emulated rather the glory of his yong riuall, and haue looked churlishly vpon the man, that should rob him of his authoritie? yet now, as if he came on purpose to gratifie him, hee bids him to the feast, he honors him with the cheife seat, he reserues a select morsell for him, [Page 89] hee tells him ingenuously the newes of his insuing soueraigntie ( On whom is set the desire of all Israel, is it not vpon thee, and thy fathers house?) Wise and holy men, as they are not ambitious of their owne burden, so they are not vnwilling to be eased, when God pleaseth to discharge them; neither can they enuie those whom God lifteth aboue their heads: They make an Idoll of honor, that are troubled with their owne freedome, or grudge at the promotion of others.
DOVBTLES Saul was much amased with the strange salutation, and newes of the Prophet, and how modestly doth he put it off, as that, which was neither [Page 90] fit, nor likely; disparaging his Tribe in respect of the rest of Israel, his fathers familie in respect of the Tribe, and himselfe in respect of his fathers familie; neither did his humilitie stoope below the truth: For, as Beniamin was the yongest sonne of Israel, so he was now by much the least Tribe of Israel; they had not yet recouered that vniuersall slaughter, which they had receiued from the hands of their brethren, whereby a Tribe was almost lost to Israel; yet euen out of the remainder of Beniamin doth God choose the man, that shall command Israel; out of the rubbish of Beniamin doth God raise the throne. That is [Page 91] not euer the best and fittest, which God chooseth, but that, which God chooseth is euer the fittest; the strength or weaknes of meanes is neither spurr, nor bridle to the determinate choices of God, yea rather he holds it the greatest proofe of his freedome, and omnipotencie to aduance the vnlikeliest. It was no hollow and fained excuse, that Saul makes to put of that, which hee would faine enioy, and to cause honor to follow him the more eagerly: It was the sincere truth of his humilitie, that so deiected him vnder the hand of Gods prophet. Faire beginnings are no found proofe of our proceedings and ending well: How [Page 92] often hath a bashfull childhood ended in an impudency of youth, a strict entrance in licentiousnes, early forwardnes in Atheisme? There might be a ciuill meeknes in Saul, true grace there was not in him; they that be good, beare more fruit in their age.
SAVL had but fiue pence in his purse to giue the Prophet: The Prophet after much good cheere giues him the kingdome, he bestowes the oyle of royall consecration on his head, the kisses of homage vpon his face, and sends him away rich in thoughts, and expectation; and now least his astonishment should end in distrust, he settles [Page 93] his assurance, by fore-warnings of those euents, which he should finde in his way: He tells him whom he shall meet, what they shall say, hovv himselfe shall be affected; that all these, and himselfe might be so many witnesses of his following coronation; euery word confirmed him. For well might he thinke, He that can foretell me the motions and words of others, cannot faile in mine; especially when (as Samuel had prophesied to him) he found himselfe to prophesie; His prophesying did enough foretell his kingdom. No sooner did Samuel turne his backe from Saul, but God gaue him another heart, lifting vp his [Page 94] thoughts and disposition to the pitch of a King: The calling of God neuer leaues a man vnchanged, neither did God euer imploy any man in his seruice, whom he did not inable to the worke hee set him; especially those, whom he raiseth vp to the supply of his owne place, and the representation of himselfe. It is no maruell, if Princes excell the vulgar in gifts, no lesse then in dignitie: Their crownes and their hearts are both in one and the same hand; If God did not adde to their powers, as well as their honors, there would be no equalitie.
The Inauguration of SAVL.
GOD hath secretly destined Saul to the kingdome; it could not content Israel, that Samuel knew this, the lots must so decide the choice, as if it had not beene predetermined; That God, which is euer constant to his owne decrees, makes the lots to finde him out, whom Samuel had annointed: If once wee haue notice of the will of [Page 96] God, we may be confident of the issue: There is no chance to the Almighty; euen casuall things are no lesse necessarie, in their first cause, then the naturall. So farre did Saul trust the prediction, and oyle of Samuel, that he hides him among the stuffe: He knew, where the lots would light, before they were cast: This was but a modest declination of that honor, which hee saw must come; His very withdrawing shewed some expectation, why else should hee haue hid himselfe, rather then the other Israelites? yet could he not hope his subducing himselfe, could disappoint the purpose of God: He well knew, that hee, [Page 97] which found out and designed his name amongst the thousands of Israel, would easily finde out his person in a tent: When once we know Gods decree, in vaine shall wee striue against it; Before we know it, it is indifferent for vs to worke to the likeliest.
I cannot blame Saul for hiding himselfe from a kingdome, especially of Israel: Honor is heauy, when it comes vpon the best termes: How should it be otherwise, when all mens cares are cast vpon one? but most of all in a troubled estate? No man can put to sea without danger, but he that launcheth out in a tempest, can expect nothing, [Page 98] but the hardest euent; such was the condition of Israel: Their old enemy the Philistims were stilled with that fearefull thunder of God, as finding what it was to warre against the Allmighty. There were aduersaries enow besides in their borders: It was but an hollow truce, that was betwixt Israel and their heathenish neighbours; and Nahash was now at their gates. Well did Saul know the difference betweene a peacefull gouernment, and the perilous and wearisome tumults of warre: The quietest throne is full of cares, but the perplexed of dangers. Cares & dangers droue Saul into this corner to hide his head from a [Page 99] crowne: These made him chuse rather to lye obscurely among the baggage of his tent, then to sit gloriously in the throne of State. This hiding could doe nothing but show, that both he suspected, lest he should be chosen, and desired he should not be chosen: That God, from whom the hills and the rocks could not conceale him, brings him forth to the light, so much more longed for, as he was more vnwilling to be seene, and more applauded, as he was more longed for.
Now then when SAVL is drawne forth in the midst of the eager expectation of Israel, modestie and goodlinesse shew'd [Page 100] themselues in his face: The prease cannot hide him, whom the stuffe had hid; As if he had bin made to be seene, he ouerlookes all Israel in height of stature, for presage of the eminence of his estate, ( from the shoulders vpward was he higher then any of the people.) Israel sees their lots are fallne vpon a noted man; one, whose person shewed, he was borne to be a King, and now all the people shout for ioy; they haue their longing, and applaud their owne happinesse, and their Kings honor: How easie is it for vs to mistake our owne estates? to reioyce in that, which we shall finde the iust cause of our humiliation? The end of a [Page 101] thing is better then the beginning; the safest way is to reserue our ioy, till wee haue good proofe of the worthines and fitnes of the obiect. What are we the better for hauing of a blessing, if we know not how to vse it? The office and obseruance of a King was vncowth to Israel: Samuel therefore informes the people of their mutuall duties, and writes them in a booke, and laies it vp before the Lord; otherwise, nouelty might haue beene a warrant for their ignorance, & ignorance for neglect: There are reciprocall respects of Princes and people, which if they be not obserued, gouernment languisheth into confusion; [Page 102] these Samuel faithfully teacheth them. Though he may not be their Iudge, yet he will be their Prophet; he will instruct, if he may not rule; yea he will instruct him that shall rule: There is no King absolute, but he, that is the King of all gods: Earthly Monarchs must walke by a rule, which if they transgresse, they shall be accountable to him, that is higher then the highest, who hath deputed them. Not out of care of ciuilitie, so much as conscience, must euery Samuel labour to keepe euen termes betwixt Kings and subiects, prescribing iust moderation to the one; to the other obedience and loyalty, which who euer indeuors [Page 103] to trouble, is none of the freinds of God, or his Church.
THE most and best applaud their new King, some wicked ones despised him, and said, How shall he saue vs? It was not the might of his parents, the goodlinesse of his person, the priuiledge of his lot, the same of his prophesying, the Panegyrick of Samuel, that could sheeld him from contempt, or winne him the hearts of all: There was neuer yet any man, to whom some tooke not exceptions; It is not possible either to please or displease all men, while some men are in loue with vice, as deeply, as others with vertue, and some (as ill) dislike vertue, if not for [Page 104] it selfe, yet for contradiction They well saw, Saul chose not himselfe, they saw him worthy to haue bin chosen, if the election should haue bin caried by voices, and those voices by their eyes; they saw him vnwilling to hold, or yeeld, when he was chosen; yet they will enuie him: What fault could they finde in him whom God had chosen? His parentage was equall, his person aboue them, his inward parts more aboue them, then the outward; Male-contents will rather deuise then want causes of flying out, and rather then faile, the vniuersall approbation of others is ground enough of their dislike. It is a vaine ambition [Page 105] of those, that would be loued of all: The spirit of God, when he inioynes vs peace with all, he adds (if it be possible,) and fauour is more then peace; A mans comfort must be in himselfe, the conscience of deseruing well.
THE neighbouring Ammonites could not but haue heard of Gods fearefull vengeance vpon the Philistims, and yet they will be taking vp the quarrell against Israel: Nahash comes vp against Iabesh Gilead: Nothing but grace can teach vs to make vse of others iudgements; wicked men are not moued with ought, that falls beside them; they trust nothing, but [Page 106] their owne smart: What fearefull iudgements doth God execute euery day? resolute sinners take no notice of them, and are growne so peremptory, as if God had neuer shewed dislike of their wayes.
THE Gileadites were not more base, then Naash the Ammonite was cruell: The Gileadites would buy their peace with seruilitie, Nahash would sell them a seruile peace for their right eyes. Iephtha the Gileadite did yet sticke in the stomach of Ammon, and now they thinke their reuenge cannot bee too bloody: It is a wonder, that he, which would offer so mercilesse a condition to Israel, would [Page 107] yeeld to the motion of any delay; Hee meant nothing, but shame and death to the Israelites, yet hee condiscends to a seuen dayes respite: Perhaps his confidence made him thus carelesse. Howsoeuer, it was the restraint of God that gaue this breath to Israel, and this opportunitie to Sauls courage and victory: The enemies of Gods Church can not be so malicious, as they would, cannot approue themselues so malicious, as they are; God so holds them in sometimes, that a stander-by would thinke them fauourable. The newes of Gileads distresse had [...]oone filled and afflicted Israel, [...]he people thinke of no remedy, [Page 108] but their pity and teares; Euills are easily greeued for, not easily redressed: Onely Saul is more stirred with indignation, then sorrow; That God, which put into him a spirit of prophesie, now puts into him a spirit of fortitude: Hee was before appointed to the throne, not setled in the throne, hee followed the beasts in the field, when hee should haue commanded men. Now as one, that would bee a King no lesse by merit, then election, he takes vpon him, and performes the rescue of Gilead; hee assembles Israel, hee leads them, he raiseth the siege, breaks the troopes, cuts the throats of the Ammonites: When God [Page 109] hath any exploit to performe, he raiseth vp the heart of some chosen instrument with heroicall motions for the atcheiuement: When all hearts are cold and dead, it is a signe of intended destruction.
THIS day hath made Saul a compleat King, and now the thankfull Israelites begin to inquire after those discontented mutiners, which had refused allegeance vnto so worthy a commander, ( Bring those men, that we may slay them:) This sedition had deserued death, though Saul had bin foyled at Gilead; but now his happy victory whets the people much more to a desire of this iust execution. Saul, [Page 110] to whom the iniurie was done, hinders the reuenge, ( There shall no man dye this day, for to day the Lord hath saued Israel) that his fortitude might not goe beyond his mercy. How noble were these beginnings of Saul? His prophesie shewed him miraculously wise, his battle and victory no lesse valiant, his pardon of his rebels, as mercifull: There was not more power shewed in ouercomming the Ammonites, then in ouercomming himselfe, and the impotent malice of these mutinous Israelites. Now Israel sees, they haue a King, that can both shed blood, and spare it; that can shed the Ammonites blood, and spare theirs: His [Page 111] mercy wins those hearts, whom his valour could not; As in God, so in his Deputies mercy and iustice should be inseparable; wheresoeuer these two goe asunder, gouernment followes them into distraction, and ends in ruine. If it had bin a wrong offred to Samuel, the forbearance of the reuenge had not bin so cōmendable, although vpon the day of so happy a deliuerance, perhaps it had not bin seasonable: A man hath reason to be most bold with himselfe; It is no praise of mercy (since it is a fault in iustice) to remit an other mans satisfaction, his own he may.
Samuels contestation.
EVERY one can be a frend to him that prospereth; By this victory hath Saul as welll conquered the obstinacie of his owne people: Now there is no Israelite, that reioyceth not in Sauls kingdome. No sooner haue they done obiecting to Saul, then Samuel begins to expostulate with them: The same day, wherein they began to be pleased, God shewes himselfe angry; All the passages of their proceedings offended him, hee [Page 113] deferd to let them know it till now, that the kingdom was setled, and their hearts lifted vp; Now doth God coole their courage and ioy, with a backe reckning for their forwardnes. God will not let his people run away with the arrerages of their sins, but when they least thinke of it, calls them to an account: All this while was God angry with their reiection of Samuel; yet (as fi there had beene nothing, but peace) hee giues them a victory ouer their enemies, hee giues way to their ioy in their election, now hee lets them know, that after their peace-offerings, hee hath a quarrell with them. God may be angry [Page 114] enough with vs, whiles we outwardly prosper: It is the wisdome of God to take his best aduantages; He suffers vs to go on, till we should come to enioy the fruit of our sinne, till wee seeme past the danger, either of conscience, or punishment; then (euen when we begin to be past the feeling of our sinne) we shall begin to feele his displeasure for our sinnes: This is onely where he loues, where he would both forgiue, and reclaime; He hath now to doe with his Israel: But where hee meanes vtter vengance, he lets men harden themselues to a reprobate senselessnes, and make vp their owne measure without contradiction, as [Page 115] purposing to reckon with them but once for euer.
SAMVEL had disswaded them before, he reproues them not, vntill now: If he had thus bent himselfe against them, ere the setling of the election, he had troubled Israel in that, which God tooke occasion by their sin to establish; His opposition would haue sauoured of respects to himselfe, whom the wrong of this innovation chiefly concerned: Now therefore, when they are sure of their King, and their King of them, when hee hath set euen termes betwixt them mutually, he lets them see, how they were at odds with God: We must euer dislike sins, [Page 116] we may not euer show it; Discretion in the choice of seasons for reprouing, is no lesse commendable and necessarie, then zeale and faithfulnes in reprouing: Good Physitians vse not to euacuate the body in extremities of heat or cold; wise mariners do not hoyse sailes in euery winde.
FIRST doth Samuel begin to cleare his owne innocence, ere he dare charge them with their sinne: He that will cast a stone at an offender must be free himselfe, otherwise he condemnes, and executes himselfe in another person: The conscience stops the mouth of the guilty man, and chokes him with that sinne, [Page 117] which lyes in his owne brest, and hauing not come forth by a penitent confession, cannot find the way out in a reproofe; or if he do reproue, he doth more shame himselfe, then reforme another. He that was the Iudge of Israel, would not now iudge himselfe, but would be iudged by Israel; Whose oxe haue I taken? whose asse haue I taken? or to whom haue I done wrong? No doubt Samuel found himselfe guilty before God of many priuate infirmities, but for his publike cariage, hee appeales to men: A mans heart can best iudge of himselfe; others can best iudge of his actions. As another mans conscience & approbation can [Page 118] not beare vs out before God; so cannot our owne before men: For oft-times that action is censured by the beholders, as wrong full, wherein wee applaud our own iustice. Happy is that man, that can be acquited by himself in priuate, in publike by others, by God in both; standers by may see more: It is very safe for a man to looke into himselfe by others eyes; In vaine shall a mans heart absolue him, that is condemned by his actions.
IT was not so much the tryall of his cariage, that Samuel appealed for, as his iustification, not for his owne comfort, so much as their conviction: His innocence hath not done him [Page 119] seruice enough, vnlesse it shame them, and make them confesse themselues faulty. In so many yeeres wherein Samuel iudged Israel, it cannot be, but many thousand causes passed his hands, wherein both parties could not possibly bee pleased; yet so cleare doth he finde his heart, and hands, that he dare make the greeued part iudges of his iudgment: A good conscience will make a man vndauntedly confident, and dare put him vpon any tryall; where his owne heart strikes him not, it bids him challeng all the world, and take vp all commers: How happy a thing is it for a man to be his owne frend, and patron? [Page 120] He needs not to feare forraine broiles, that is at peace at home: Contrarily, he that hath a false and foule heart, lyes at euery mans mercy; liues slauishly, and is faine to dawbe vp a rotten peace with the basest conditions. Truth is not afraid of any light, and therefore dare suffer her wares to be caried from a dim shop-bord vnto the street dore: Perfect gold will be but the purer with trying, whereas falshood being a worke of darknes, loues darknes, and therefore seeks, where it may worke closest.
THIS very appellation cleared Samuel, but the peoples attestation cleared him more: Innocency [Page 121] & vprightnes becomes euery man well, but most publique persons, who shall be else obnoxious to euery offender. The throne and the pulpit (of all places) call for holines, not more for example of good, then for liberty of controlling euill: All Magistrates sweare to doe that, which Samuel protesteth hee hath done; if their oath were so verified, as Samuels protestation, it were a shame for the State not to be happy: The sinnes of our Teachers are the teachers of sinne; the sins of gouernors do both command, and countenance euill This very acquiting of Samuel was the accusation of themselues: For how could it be [Page 122] but faulty to cast off a faultlesse gouernor? If he had not taken away an oxe, or an asse from them, why do they take away his authoritie? They could not haue thus cleared Saul at the end of his raigne, It was iust with God, since they were weary of a iust ruler, to punish them with an vniust.
HE that appealed to them for his owne vprightnes, durst not appeale to them for their owne wickednes, but appeales to heauen from them. Men are commonly flatterers of their owne cases: It must be a strong euidence, that will make a sinner convicted in himselfe; Nature hath so many shifts to cosen it [Page 123] selfe in this spirituall verdict, that vnlesse it be taken in the manner, it will hardly yeeld to a truth; either shee will denie the fact, or the fault, or the measure; And now in this case they might seeme to haue some faire pretences: For though Samuel was righteous, yet his sonnes were corrupt. To cut of all excuses therefore, Samuel appeales to God (the highest Iudge) for his sentence of their sin, and dares trust to a miraculous conviction. It was now their wheat haruest: The hot and dry ayre of that climate did not wont to afford in that season so much moist vapour, as might raise a cloud, either for raine, or thunder: [Page 124] He that knew God could, and would do both these, without the helpe of second causes, puts the tryall vpon this issue. Had not Samuel before consulted with his Maker, and receiued warrant for his act, it had bin presumption and tempting of God, which was now a noble improuement of faith: Rather then Israel shall go cleare away with a sinne, God will accuse and arraigne them from heauen. No sooner hath Samuels voice ceased, then Gods voice begins: Euery cracke of thunder spake iudgment against the rebellious Israelites, and euery drop of raine was a witnesse of their sin, and now they found they had displeased [Page 125] him, which ruleth in the heauen, by rejecting the man that ruled for him on earth: The thundring voice of God, that had lately in their sight confounded the Philistims, they now vnderstood to speake fearefull things against them. No maruell, if now they fell vpon their knees, not to Saul, whom they had chosen, but to Samuel, who being thus cast off by them, is thus countenanced in heauen.
Sauls sacrifice.
GOD neuer ment the kingdom should either stay long in the tribe of Beniamin, or remoue suddenly from the person of Saul; Many yeres did Saul reigne ouer Israel, yet God computes him but two yeeres a King: That is not accounted of God to bee done, which is not lawfully done; when God, which chose Saul, rejected him, he was no more a King, but a Tyrant: Israel obeyed [Page 127] him still, but God makes no reckoning of him, as his deputy, but as an vsurper.
SAVL was of good yeeres, when hee was aduanced to the kingdom: His sonne Ionathan, the first yeere of his fathers raigne, could lead a thousand Israelites into the field, and giue a foyle to the Philistims: And now Israel could not thinke themselues lesse happy in the [...]r Prince, then in their King; Ionathan is the heyre of his fathers victory, as well as of his valour, and his estate. The Philistims were quiet after those first thunder-claps, all the time of Samuels gouernment, now they begin to stirre vnder Saul. How vtterly [Page 128] is Israel disappointed in their hopes? That securitie and protection, which they promised themselues in the name of a King, they found in a Prophet, failed of in a warriour; They were more safe vnder the mantle, then vnder armes: both enmity and sauegard are from heauen, goodnes hath bin euer a stronger guard, then valour: It is the surest policie alwaies to haue peace with God.
WE finde by the spoiles, that the Philistims had some battels with Israel, which are not recorded; After the thunder had skared them into a peace, and restitution of all the bordring Cities, from Ekron to Gath, they had [Page 129] taken new heart, and so beslaued Israel, that they had neither weapon, nor Smith left amongst them, yet euen in this miserable nakednes of Israel, haue they both fought, and ouercome. Now might you haue seene the vnarmed Israelites marching with their slings, and ploughstaues, and hookes, and forkes, and other instruments of their husbandry against a mighty & well furnished enemie, and returning laded both with armes and victory. No armour is of proofe against the Almighty, neither is he vnweapned, that caries the reuenge of God: There is the same disaduantage in our spirituall conflicts, we are turned [Page 130] naked to principalities, and powers; whilst wee goe vnder the conduct of the Prince of our peace, we cannot but be bold & victorious.
VAINE men thinke to ouerpower God with munition, and multitude: The Philistims are not any way more strong, then in conceit; Thirty thousand chariots, six thousand horsemen, footmen like the sand for number, makes them scorne Israel no lesse, then Israel feares them. When I see the miraculous successe, which had blessed the Israelites, in all their late conflicts with these very Philistims, with the Ammonites, I cannot but wonder, how they could feare: [Page 131] They, which in the time of their sinne found God to raise such trophees ouer their enemies, run now into caues, and rocks, and pits, to hide them from the faces of men, when they found God reconciled, and themselues penitent. No Israelite but hath some cowardly blood in him: If we had no feare, faith would haue no maistery, yet these fearefull Israelites shall cut the throats of those confident Philistims; Doubt and resolution are not meet measures of our successe: A presumptuous confidence goes cōmonly bleeding [...]ome when an humble feare retu [...]nes in triumph. Feare driues those Israelites, which dare show their [Page 132] heads out of the caues vnto Saul, and makes them cling vnto their new King: How troublesome were the beginnings of Sauls honor? Surely, if that man had not exceeded Israel no lesse in courage, then in stature, he had now hid himselfe in a caue, which before hid himself among the stuffe: But now, though the Israelites ran away from him, yet he ran not away from them; It was not any doubt of Sauls valour, that put his people to their heeles, it was the absence of Samuel; If the Prophet had come vp, Israel would neuer haue run away from their King: Whiles they had a Samuel alone, they were neuer well, till they [Page 133] had a Saul, now they haue a Saul, they are as farre from contentment, because they want a Samuel; vnlesse both ioyne together, they thinke there can be no safetie. Where the temporall and spirituall state combine not together, there can follow nothing but distraction in the people: The Prophets receiue and deliuer the will of God, Kings execute it; The Prophets are directed by God, the people are directed by their Kings. Where men doe not see God before them in his ordinances, their hearts cannot but faile them, both in their respects to their superiors, and their courage in themselues. Piety is the mother [Page 134] of perfect subiection: As all authoritie is deriued from heauen, so is it thence established; Those gouernors that would command the hearts of men, must shew them God in their faces.
No Israelite can thinke himselfe safe without a Prophet: Saul had giuen them good proofe of his fortitude, in his late victory ouer the Ammonites, but then proclamation was made before the fight through all the country, that euery man should come vp after Saul, and Samuel: If Samuel had not bin with Saul, they would rather haue ventured the losse of their oxen, then the hazard [Page 135] of themselues: How much lesse should we presume of any safety in our spirituall combats, when we haue not a Prophet to lead vs? It is all one (sauing that it fauours of more contempt) not to haue Gods Seers, and not to vse them: He can be no true Israelite, that is not distressed with the want of a Samuel.
As one, that had learned to begin his rule in obedience, Saul staies seuen dayes in Gilgal, according to the Prophets direction, and still he lookes long for Samuel, which had promised his presence; six dayes he expects, and part of the seuenth, yet Samuel is not come: The Philistims draw neere, the Israelites [Page 136] runneaway, Samuel comes not, they must fight, God must be supplicated, what should Saul doe? rather then God should want a sacrifice, and the people satisfaction, Saul will command that, which hee knew Samuel would, if he were present, both command, and execute: It is not possible (thinks hee) that God should be displeased with a sacrifice, he cannot but be displeased with indeuotion: Why doe the people runne from mee, but for want of meanes to make God sure? What would Samuel rather wish, then that we should be godly? The act shall be the same, the onely differences shall be in the [...]: If Samuel be [Page 137] wanting to vs, we will not be wanting to God; It is but an holy preuention to be deuout vnbidden: Vpon this conceit, he commands a sacrifice; Sauls sinnes make no great show, yet are they still hainously taken, the impiety of them was more hidden, and inward from all eyes, but Gods. If Saul were among the Prophets before, will hee now be among the Preists? Can there be any deuotion in disobedience? O vaine man! What can it auaile thee to sacrifice to God against God? Hypocrites rest onely in formalities; If the outward act be done, it sufficeth them, though the ground be distrust, the manner vnreuerence, [Page 138] the cariage presumption.
WHAT then should Saul haue done? Vpon the trust of God & Samuel he should haue staied out the last houre, and haue secretly sacrificed himselfe, and his praiers vnto that God, which loues obedience aboue sacrifice. Our faith is most commendable in the last act; It is no praise to hold out, vntill we be hard driuen: Then, when we are forsaken of meanes, to liue by faith in our God, is worthy of a crowne: God will haue no worship of our deuising, wee may onely doe, what he bids vs, not bid, what he commands not. Neuer did any true piety arise out of the corrupt puddle [Page 139] of mans braine; If it flow not from heauen, it is odious to heauen: What was it, that did thus taint the valour of Saul with this weaknes, but distrust? He saw some Israelites goe, hee thought all would goe, he saw the Philistims come, he saw Samuel came not, his diffidence was guilty of his mis-deuotion: There is no sinne, that hath not his ground from vnbeleefe; This, as it was the first infection of our pure nature, so is the true source of all corruption, man could not sinne, if he distrusted not.
THE sacrifice is no sooner ended, then Samuel is come, and why came he no sooner? He [Page 140] could not be a Seer, and not know, how much he was lookt for, how troublesome and dangerous his absence must needs be; He, that could tell Saul, that he should prophesie, could tell, that he would sacrifice; yet he purposely forbeares to come, for the tryall of him, that must be the champion of God. Samuel durst not haue done thus, but by direction from his master: It is the ordinarie course of God to proue vs by delaies, and to driue vs to exigents, that we may shew what we are: He that annointed Saul, might lawfully from God controll him: There must be discretion, there may not be partiality in our censures of the [Page 141] greatest: God makes difference of sins, none of persons, if we make differences of sins according to persons, we are vnfaithfull both to God, and man. Scarce is Saul warme in his kingdome, when he hath euen now lost it: Samuels first words after the inauguration, are of Sauls rejection, and the choice and establishment of his successor: It was euer Gods purpose to settle the kingdom in Iudah; He that tooke occasion by the peoples sinne to raise vp Saul in Beniamin, takes occasion by Sauls sin to establish the crowne vpon Dauid. In humane probabilitie the kingdom was fixed vpon Saul, and his more worthy [Page 142] sonne: In Gods decree it did but passe through the hands of Beniamin to Iudah. Besides trouble, how fickle are these earthly glories? Saul doubtles lookt vpon Ionathan, as the inheritor of his crowne, and behold, ere his peaceable possession, he hath lost it from himselfe: Our sinnes strip vs not of our hopes in heauen onely, but of our earthly blessings; The way to entaile a comfortable prosperitie vpon our seed after vs, is our conscionable obedience vnto GOD.
JONATHANS victory and Sauls oath.
IT is no wonder if Saules courage were much cooled with the heauy newes of his reiection: After this he staies vnder the pomgranate tree in Gibeah, He stirs not toward the garrison of the Philistims: As hope is the mother of fortitude, so nothing doth more breede cowardlines, then despaire: Euery thing dismaies that heart, [Page 144] which God hath put out of protection: Worthy Ionathan (which sprung from Saul, as some sweet impe growes out of a crabstock) is therefore full of valour, because full of faith: He well knew, that hee should haue nothing, but discouragements from his fathers feare; as rather choosing therefore, to auoide all the blocks, that might lye in the way, then to leap ouer them, he departs secretly without the dimission of his father, or notice of the people; onely God leads him, and his armour-bearer followes him. O admirable faith of Ionathan, whom neither the steepnes of rocks, nor the multitude of enemies [Page 145] can disswade from so vnlikely an assault! Is it possible, that two men, whereof one was weaponles, should dare to thinke of incountring so many thousands? O diuine power of faith, that in all difficulties, and attempts, makes a man more then men, and regards no more armies of men, then swarmes of flies! There is no restraint to the Lord, (saith he) to saue with many, or by few: It was not so great newes, that Saul should be amongst the Prophets, as that such a word should come from the sonne of Saul.
IF his father had had but so much diuinitie, he had not sacrificed: The strength of his God [Page 146] is the ground of his strength in God; The question is not, what Ionathan can do, but what God can do, whose power is not in the meanes, but in himself: That mans faith is well vnder-layed, that vpholds it selfe by the omnipotencie of God; thus the father of the faithfull built his assurance vpon the power of the Almighty. But many things God can doe, which he will not doe; How knowest thou, Ionathan, that God will be as forward, as he is able, to giue thee victory? For this (saith hee) I haue a watchword from God, out of the mouths of the Philistims: If they say, Come vp, we will go vp; for God hath deliuered [Page 147] them into our hands: If they say, Tarie, till we come to you, we will stand still. Ionathan was too wise to trust vnto a casuall presage: There might be some farre fetcht coniectures of the euent from the word; We will come to you, was a threat of resolution; Come you to vs, was a challenge of feare; or perhaps, Come vp to vs was a word of insultation, from them, that trusted to the inaccessiblenes of the the place, & multitudes of men. Insultation is from pride, Pride argued a fall, but faith hath nothing to do with probabilities, as that, which acknowledgeth no argument, but demonstration; If there had not bin an [Page 148] instinct from God of this assured warrant of successe, Ionathan had presumed in steed of beleeuing, and had tempted that God, whom he professed to glorifie by his trust.
THERE can be no faith, where there is no promise, and where there is a promise, there can be no presumption: Words are voluntarie, The tongues of the Philistims were as free to say, Tary, as Come: That God, in whom our very tongues moue, ouer-ruled them so, as now they shall speake that word, which shall cut their owne throats: They knew no more harme in Come, then Tary, both were alike safe for the sound, for the sense; [Page 149] but he, that put a signification of their slaughter in the one, not in the other, did put that word into their mouth, whereby they might invite their owne destruction: The disposition of our words are from the prouidence of the Almighty, God and our hearts haue not alwaies the same meaning in our speeches: In those words, which we speake at random, or out of affectation, God hath a further drift of his owne glory, and perhaps our iudgment. If wicked men say, our tongues are our owne, they could not say so, but from him, whom they defie in saying so, and who makes their tongue their executioner.
[Page 150] No sooner doth Ionathan heare this invitation, then he answers it: He, whose hands had learned neuer to faile his heart, puts himselfe vpon his hands and knees to climbe vp into this danger, the exploit was not more difficult, then the way, the paine of the passage was equall to the perill of the enterprise; that his faith might equally triumph ouer both, he doth not say, how shall I get vp? much lesse, which way shall I get downe againe? but, as if the ground were leuell, and the action dangerles, he puts himselfe into the view of the Philistims: Faith is neuer so glorious, as when it hath most opposition, and will not [Page 151] see it: Reason lookes euer to the meanes, Faith to the end, and in steed of consulting, how to effect, resolues, what shall be effected. The way to heauen is more steepe, more painefull: O God! how perilous a passage hast thou appointed for thy labouring pilgrims? If difficulties will discourage vs, we shall but climbe to fall: When we are lifting vp our foot to the last step, there are the Philistims of death, of temptations, to grapple with; giue vs but faith, & turne vs loose to the spight either of earth, or hell.
IONATHAN is now on the top of the hill, and now, as if he had an Army at his heeles, he [Page 152] flies vpon the hoste of the Philistims, his hands that might haue bin weary with climbing, are immediately commanded to fight, and deale as many deaths, as blowes to the amased enemy: He needs not walke far for this execution; Himselfe, and his armour-bearer in one halfe acres space haue slaine 20 Philistims: It is not long since Ionathan smote their garrison in the hill of Geba, perhaps, from that time his name & presence caried terror in it, but sure if the Philistims had not seene, and felt more then a man in the face, and hands of Ionathan, they had not so easily groueled in death: The blowes and shrikes cannot [Page 153] but affect the next, who with a ghastly noise ran away from death, and affright their fellowes no lesse, then themselues are affrighted: The clamour & feare runs on like fire in a traine to the very formost ranks; Euery man would flie, and thinks there is so much more cause of flight, for that his eares apprehend all, his eyes nothing: Ech man thinks his fellow stands in his way, and therefore in steed of turning vpon him, which was the cause of their flight, they bend their swords vpon those, whom they imagine to be the hinderers of their flight; and now a miraculous astonishment hath made the Philistims, Ionathans champions [Page 154] and executioners; He followes, and kills those, which helped to kill others; and the more he killed, the more they feared, and fled, and the more they killed each other in the flight; and that feare it selfe might preuent Ionathan in killing them, the earth it self trembles vnder them. Thus doth God at once strike them with his owne hand, with Ionathans, with theirs, & makes them run away from life, whiles they would flie from an enemy: Where the Almighty purposes destruction to any people, hee needes not call in forreine powers, he needs not any hands or weapons, but their owne; He can make vaste bodies dye no [Page 155] other death, then their owne weight: Wee cannot be sure to be friends among our selues, whiles God is our enemy.
THE Philistims flie fast, but the newes of their flight ouerrunnes them euen vnto Sauls Pomgranate tree: The watchmen discerne a far of, a flight and execution; search is made, Ionathan is found missing, Saul will consult with the Arke: Hypocrites, while they haue leisure, will perhaps be holy; For some fitts of deuotion they cannot be bettered. But when the tumult increased, Sauls piety decreases: It is now no season to talke with a Priest; withdraw thine hand Ahaiah, the Ephod must giue [Page 156] place to armes: It is more time to fight, then to pray; what needs he Gods guidance, when he sees his way before him? He that before would needs sacrifice, ere he fought, will now in the other extreme, fight in a wilfull indeuotion: Worldly minds regard holy duties no further, then may stand with their own carnall purposes; Very easie occasions shall interrupt them in their religious intentions; like vnto children, which if a bird do but flie in their way, cast their eye from their booke.
BVT if Saul serue not God in one kinde, he will serue him in another, if he honor him not by attending on the Arke, he will [Page 157] honor him by a vow; His negligence in the one is recompenced with his zeale in the other. All Israel is adiured not to eat any food vntill the euening: Hypocrisie is euer masked with a blinde and thankles zeale: To waite vpon the Arke, and to consult with Gods Preist in all cases of importance was a direct commandment of God; To eat no food in the pursuit of their enemies was not commanded: Saul leaues that, which he was bidden, and does that, which he was not required: To eat no foode all day was more difficult, then to attend an howre vpon the Arke; The voluntary seruices of hypocrites are many times [Page 158] more painfull, then the duties inioyned by God.
In what awe did all Israel stand of the oath euen of Saul? It was not their owne vow, but Sauls for them; yet comming into the wood, where they saw the hony dropping, and found the meat as ready, as their appetite; they dare not touch that sustenance, and will rather indure famine, and fainting, then an indiscreet curse: Doubtlesse God had brought those bees thither on purpose to try the constancie of Israel; Israel could not but thinke (that, which Ionathan said) that the vow was vnaduised, and iniurious, yet they will rather dye, then violate it: How [Page 159] sacred should we hold the obligation of our owne vowes, in things iust and expedient, when the bonds of anothers rash vow is thus indissoluble?
THERE was a double mischeife followed vpon Sauls oth, an abatement of the victory, and eating with the blood: For, on the one side, the people were so faint, that they were more likely to dye, then kill, they could neither runne, nor strike in this emptinesse; Neither hands nor feet can doe their office, when the stomach is neglected: On the other, an vnmeet forbearance causes a rauenous repast: Hunger knowes neither choice, nor order, nor measure: The one of [Page 160] these was a wrong to Israel, the other was a wrong done by Israel to God: Sauls zeale was guilty of both: A rash vow is seldome euer free from inconuenience; The heart that hath vnnecessarily entangled it self, drawes mischeife either vpon it selfe, or others.
IONATHAN was ignorant of his fathers adiuration, he knew no reason, why hee should not refresh himselfe in so profitable a seruice, with a litle taste of hony vpon his speare: Full well had hee deserued this vnsought dainty; and behold this hony is turned into gall: If it were sweet in the mouth, it was bitter in the soule; if the eyes of his body [Page 161] were inlightned, the light of Gods countenance was clouded by this act. After he heard of the oath, he pleads iustly against it, the losse of so faire an opportunitie of reuenge, and the trouble of Israel; yet neither his reasons against the oath, nor his ignorance of the oath, can excuse him from a sinne of ignorance in violating that, which first he knew not, & then knew vnreasonable: Now Sauls leisure would serue him to aske counsell of God; As before Saul would not inquire, so now God will not answer: Well might Saul haue found sinnes enow of his owne, whereto to impute this silence: Hee hath grace [Page 162] enough to know that God was offended, and to guesse at the cause of his offence: Sooner will an hypocrite finde out another mans sinne, then his owne, and now he sweares more rashly to punish with death, the breach of that, which he had sworne rashly: The lots were cast, and Saul prayes for the decision, Ionathan is taken: Euen the prayers of wicked men are sometimes heard, although in iustice, not in mercy: Saul himselfe was punished not a litle, in the fall of this lot vpon Ionathan; Surely Saul sinned more in making this vow, then Ionathan in breaking it vnwittingly, and now the father smarts for the rashnes of his [Page 163] double vow, by the vniust sentence of death vpon so worthy a sonne: God had neuer singled out Ionathan by his lot, if he had not bin displeased with his act: Vowes rashly made may not be rashly broken; If the thing wee haue vowed be not euill in it selfe, or in the effect, wee cannot violate it without euill; Ignorance cannot acquite, if it can abate our sinne: It is like, if Ionathan had heard of his fathers adiuration, he had not transgressed; his absence at the time of that oath, cannot excuse him from displeasure: What shall become of those, which may know the charge of their heauenly father, and will [Page 164] not? which do know his charge, and will not keep it? Affectation of ignorance, and willing disobedience is desperate.
DEATH was too hard a censure for such an vnknowne offence: The cruell piety of Saul will reuenge the breach of his owne charge, so as he would be loath, God should auenge on himselfe the breach of his diuine command: If Ionathan had not found better frends then his father, so noble a victory had bin recompenced with death; He that saued Israel from the Philistims, is saued by Israel from the hand of his father: Saul hath sworne Ionathans death, the people contrarily sweare his preseruation; [Page 165] His kingdome was not yet so absolute, that he could runne away with so vnmercifull a iustice; their oath that sauoured of disobedience, preuailed against his oath, that sauoured too strong of cruelty: Neither doubt I, but Saul was secretly not displeased with this louing resistance: So long as his heart was not false to his oath, he could not be sorry that Ionathan should liue.