Chapter 14:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Haggai Malachi
Zechariah 14
Complete Concise
Divers things were foretold, in the two foregoing chapters,
which should come to pass "in that day;" this chapter speaks of a
"day of the Lord that cometh," a day of his judgment, and ten times in
the foregoing chapters, and seven times in this, it is repeated, "in that
day;" but what that day is that is here meant is uncertain, and perhaps
will be so (as the Jews speak) till Elias comes; whether it refer to the whole
period of time from the prophet's days to the days of the Messiah, or to some
particular events in that time, or to Christ's coming, and the setting up of
his kingdom upon the ruins of the Jewish polity, we cannot determine, but divers
passages here seem to look as far forward as gospel-times. Now the "day of
the Lord" brings with it both judgment and mercy, mercy to his church,
judgment to her enemies and persecutors. I. The gates of hell are here
threatening the church (v. 1, 2) and yet not prevailing. II. The power of Heaven
appears here for the church and against the enemies of it (v. 3, 5). III. The
events concerning the church are here represented as mixed (v. 6, 7), but
issuing well at last. IV. The spreading of the means of knowledge is here
foretold, and the setting up of the gospel-kingdom in the world (v. 8, 9), which
shall be the enlargement and establishment of another Jerusalem (v. 10, 11). V.
Those shall be reckoned with that fought against Jerusalem (v. 12-15) and
those that neglect his worship there (v. 17-19). VI. It is promised that there
shall be great resort to the church, and great purity and piety in it (v. 16,
20, 21).
Verses 1-7
God's providences concerning his church are here represented
as strangely changing and strangely mixed.
I. As strangely changing. Sometimes the tide runs high and
strong against them, but presently it turns, and comes to be in favour of them;
and God has, for wise and holy ends, set the one over against the other.
1. God here appears against Jerusalem; judgment begins at the
house of God. When the
day of the Lord comes (v. 1) Jerusalem must pass
through the fire to be refined. God himself
gathers all nations against
Jerusalem to battle (v. 2); he gives them a charge, as he did Sennacherib,
to
take the spoil and to
take the prey (Isa. 10:6), for the people
of Jerusalem have now become the
people of his wrath. And who can stand
before him or before nations gathered by him? Where he gives commission he will
give success. The
city shall be taken by the Romans, who have
nations
at command; the houses shall be rifled, and all the riches of them taken away,
by the enemy; and, to gratify an insatiable lust of uncleanness as well as
avarice,
the women shall
be ravished, as if victory were a license
to the worst of villanies,
jusque datum sceleriand crimes were sanctioned
by law. One-half of the city shall then be carried
into captivity, to
be sold or enslaved, and shall not be able to help itself, such is the
destruction that shall be made in the great and terrible
day of the Lord.
2. He presently changes his way, and appears for Jerusalem; for,
though judgment begin at the house of God, yet, as it shall not end there, so it
shall not make a full end there, Jer. 4:27; 30:11.
(1.) A remnant shall be spared, the same with that
third part
spoken of, ch. 13:8.
One-half shall go into captivity, whence they may
hereafter be fetched back,
and the residue of the people shall not be cut
off, as one would have feared,
from the city. Many of the Jews shall
receive the gospel, and so shall prevent their being cut off from the city of
God, his church upon earth.
In it shall be a tenth, Isa. 6:13; See Eze.
5:3.
(2.) Their cause shall be pleaded against their enemies (v. 3):
Then,
when God has made use of these nations as a scourge to his people, he shall
go
forth and
fight against them by his judgments,
as when he fought
against the enemies of his church formerly
in the day of battle, with the
Egyptians, Canaanites, and others. Note, The instruments of God's wrath will
themselves be made the objects of it; for it will come to their turn to drink of
the cup of trembling; and whom God fights against he will be sure to overcome
and be too hard for. And every former
day of battle, which God has made
to his people a
day of triumph, as it is an engagement to God to appear
for his people, because he is the same, so it is an encouragement to them to
trust in him. It is observable that the Roman empire never flourished, after the
destruction of Jerusalem as it had done before, but in many instances God fought
against it.
(3.) Though Jerusalem and the temple be destroyed, yet God will
have a church in the world, into which Gentiles shall be admitted, and with whom
the believing Jews shall be incorporated, v. 4, 5. These verses are dark and
hard to be understood; but divers good expositors take this to be the meaning of
them. [1.] God will carefully inspect Jerusalem, even then when the enemies of
it are laying it waste:
His feet shall stand in that day upon the mount of
Olives, whence he may take a full view of the city and temple, Mk. 13:3.
When the refiner puts his gold into the furnace he stands by it, and has his eye
upon it, to see that it receive no damage; so when Jerusalem, God's gold, is
to be refined, he will have the oversight of it. He will stand by
upon the
mount of Olives; this was literally fulfilled when our Lord Jesus was often
upon this mountain, especially when thence he
ascended up into heaven,
Acts 1:12. It was the last place on which his feet stood on this earth, the
place from which he took rise. [2.] The partition-wall between Jews and Gentiles
shall be taken away. The
mountains about Jerusalem, and particularly
this, signified it to be an enclosure, and that it stood in the way of those who
would approach to it. Between the Gentiles and Jerusalem this
mountain of
Bether, of
division, stood, Cant. 2:17. But by the destruction of
Jerusalem this mountain shall be made to
cleave in the midst, and so the
Jewish pale shall be taken down, and the church laid in common with the
Gentiles, who were made one with the Jews by the breaking down of this
middle
wall of partition, Eph. 2:14.
Who art thou, O great mountain? And a
great mountain the ceremonial law was in the way of the Jews' conversion,
which, one would think, could never have been got over; yet before Christ and
his gospel it was made plain. This
mountain departs, this
hill
removes, but the
covenant of peace cannot be
broken; for peace
is still
preached to him that is afar off and to those that are nigh.
[3.] A new and living way shall be opened to the new Jerusalem, both to see it
and to come into it. The mountain being divided, one-half
towards the north
and the other half
towards the south, there shall be
a very great
valley, that is, a broad way of communication opened between Jerusalem and
the Gentile world, by which the Gentiles shall have free admission into the
gospel-Jerusalem, and the word of the Lord, that
goes forth from Jerusalem,
shall have a
free course into the Gentile world. Thus the
way of the
Lord is prepared, for
every mountain and hill shall be brought low,
and plain and pleasant valleys shall come in the room of them, Isa. 40:4. [4.]
Those of the Jews that believe shall come in, and join themselves to the
Gentiles, and incorporate with them in the gospel-church:
You shall flee to
the valley of the mountains, that valley that is opened between the divided
halves of the mount of Olives; they shall hasten into the church with the
Gentiles, as formerly the Gentiles with them, ch. 8:23. The
valley of the
mountains is the gospel-church, to which there were added of the Jews daily
such
as should be saved, who fled to that valley as to their refuge. This
valley
of the mountains is said to
reach unto Azal, or
to the separate
place, that is, to all those whom God has
set apart for himself. When
God
makes his mountains a way (Isa. 49:11), by making them a valley, the
way shall be opened to all the
way-faring men (Isa. 35:8), and,
though
fools, they
shall not err therein. Or, to those that are now
separated from God this valley shall reach; for the Gentiles, who are afar off,
shall be made nigh, with the Jews, who are a
people near unto him, and
both have
an access, a mutual access to each other and a joint access to
God as a Father by one Spirit, Eph. 2:18. [5.] They shall flee to
the valley
of the mountains, to the gospel-church, under dreadful apprehensions of
their danger from the curse of the law. They shall
flee from the wrath to
come, from the avenger of blood, who is in pursuit of them, to the church as
to a
city of refuge, or
as doves to their windows, as they
fled
from before the earthquake in the days of Uzziah, Amos 1:1.
Therefore
the gospel reveals the wrath of God from heaven (Rom. 1:18) that we might be
awakened to
escape for our lives, to flee as from an earthquake, for we
feel the earth ready to sink under us, and we can find no firm footing in it,
and therefore must flee to Christ, in whom alone we can stand fast and be easy.
(4.) God shall appear in his glory for the accomplishing of all
this:
The Lord my God shall come, and all the saints with thee, which may
refer to his coming to destroy Jerusalem, or to destroy the enemies of
Jerusalem, or his coming to set up his kingdom in the world, which is called the
coming of the Son of man (Mt. 24:37), or to his last coming, at the end
of time; however, it teaches us, [1.] That the Lord will come; it has been the
faith of all the saints,
Behold, the Lord comes to fulfil every word that
he has spoken in its season. [2.] When he comes all his saints come with him;
they attend his motions and are ready to serve his interests. Christ will come
at the end of time with
ten thousands of his saints, as when he came to
give the law upon Mount Sinai. [3.] Every particular believer, being related to
God as his God, may triumph in the expectation of his coming and speak of it
with pleasure,
The Lord my God shall come, shall come to the comfort of
all that are his; for, "Blessed Lord,
all the saints shall be with thee,
and it shall be their everlasting happiness to dwell in thy presence; and
therefore
come, Lord Jesus." And some think that this may be read as
a prayer,
Yet, O Lord my God! come, and bring all the saints with thee.
II. God's providences appear here strangely mixed (v. 6, 7):
In
that day of the Lord the
light shall not be clear nor dark, not day
nor
night; but
at evening time it shall be light. Some refer this
to all the time from hence to the coming of the Messiah; the Jewish church had
neither perfect peace nor constant trouble, but a cloudy day, neither rain nor
sunshine. But it may be taken more generally, as designed to represent the
method God usually takes in the administration of the kingdom both of providence
and grace. Here is, 1. An idea of the usual course and tenour of God's
dispensations; the day of his grace and the day of his providence are
neither
clear nor dark, not day nor night. It is so with the church of God in this
world; where the Sun of righteousness has risen it cannot be dark night, and yet
short of heaven it will not be clear day. It is so with particular saints; they
are not darkness, but
light in the Lord, and yet, while there is so much
error and corruption remaining in them, it is not perfect day. So it is as to
the providences of God that relate to his church; in general the affairs of the
church are neither good nor bad in any extremity, but there is a mixture of
both; we are singing both of mercy and judgment, and are uncertain which will
prevail, whether it be an evening or a morning twilight. We are between hope and
fear, not knowing what to make of things. 2. An intimation of comfort with
reference hereunto:
It shall be one day which shall be known to the Lord.
This intimates, (1.) The beauty and harmony of such mixed events; there is one
and the same design and tendency in all; all the wheels make but one wheel, all
the revolutions but one day. (2.) The brevity of them; it is, as it were, but
for one day, for a little moment; the cloud that darkens the light will soon
blow over. (3.) The eye God has upon all these events, and the hand he has in
them all; they are
known to the Lord; he takes notice of them, and orders
and disposes of all for the best, according to the counsel of his will. 3. An
issue very joyful secured at last:
At evening-time it shall be light: it
shall be clear light, and no longer dark; we are sure of it in the other world,
and we hope for it in this worldat
evening-time, when our hopes are
quite spent with waiting all day to no purpose, nay, when we fear it will be
quite dark, when things are at the worst and the case of the church is most
deplorable. As to the church's enemies
the sun goes down at noon, so to
the church it rises at night; unto the upright springs
light out of darkness
(Ps. 112:4); deliverance comes when the tale of bricks is doubled, and when God's
people have done looking for it, and so it comes with a pleasing surprise.
Verses 8-15
Here are, I. Blessings promised to Jerusalem, the
gospel-Jerusalem, in the day of the Messiah, and to all the earth, by virtue of
the blessings poured out on Jerusalem, especially to the land of Israel.
1. Jerusalem shall be a spring of living waters to the world; it
was made so when there the Spirit was poured out upon the apostles, and thence
the word of the Lord diffused itself to the nations about (v. 8):
Living
waters shall go out from Jerusalem; for there they began, and thence those
set out who were to preach
repentance and
remission of sins
unto
all nations, Lu. 24:47. Note, Where the gospel goes, and the graces of God's
Spirit go along with it, there living waters go; those streams that
make glad
the city of our God make glad the country also, and make it like paradise,
like the
garden of the Lord, which was
well watered. It was the
honour of Jerusalem that
thence the word of the Lord went forth (Isa.
2:3); and thus far, even in its worst and most degenerate age, for old
acquaintance-sake, it was made a blessing, and to be so is to be blessed. Half
of these waters shall go
towards the former sea and
half towards the
hinder sea, as all rivers bend their course towards some sea or other, some
eastward, others westward. The gospel shall spread into all parts of the world,
into some that lie remote from Jerusalem one way and others that lie as far off
another way; for the dominion of the Redeemer, which was thereby to be set up,
must be
from sea to sea (Ps. 72:8), and the earth must be
full of the
knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea, and as the waters that
in various channels run to the sea. The knowledge of God shall diffuse itself,
(1.) Every way. These living waters shall produce both eastern churches and
western churches, that shall each of them in its turn be illustrious. (2.) Every
day: In
summer and in winter it shall be. Note, Those who are employed in
spreading the gospel may find themselves work both
winter and
summer,
and are to serve the Lord therein at all seasons, Acts 20:18. And such a divine
power goes along with these living waters that they shall not be dried up, nor
the course of them be obstructed, either by the droughts in summer or by the
frosts in winter.
2. The kingdom of God among men shall be a universal and united
kingdom, v. 9. (1.) It shall be a universal kingdom:
The Lord shall be King
over all the earth. He is, and ever was, so of right, and in the sovereign
disposals of his providence his kingdom does
rule over all and none are
exempt from his jurisdiction; but it is here promised that he shall be so by
actual possession of the hearts of his subjects; he shall be acknowledged King
by all in all places; his authority shall be owned and submitted to, and
allegiance sworn to him. This will have its accomplishment with that word (Rev.
11:15),
The kingdoms of this world have become the kingdoms of our Lord and
of his Christ. (2.) It shall be a united kingdom:
There shall be one
Lord, and his name one. All shall worship one God only, and not idols, and
shall be unanimous in the worship of him. All false gods shall be abandoned, and
all false ways of worship abolished; and as God shall be the centre of their
unity, in whom they shall all meet, so the scripture shall be the rule of their
unity, by which they shall all walk.
3. The land of Judea, and Jerusalem, its mother-city, shall be
repaired and replenished, and taken under the special protection of Heaven, v.
10, 11. Some think this denotes particular favour to the people of the Jews, and
points at their conversion and restoration in the latter days; but it is rather
to be understood figuratively of the gospel-church, typified by Judah and
Jerusalem, and it signifies the abundant graces with which the church shall be
crowned, and the fruitfulness of its members, and the vast numbers of them. (1.)
The church shall be like a fruitful country, abounding in all the rich products
of the soil. The whole land of Judea, which is naturally uneven and hilly, shall
be
turned as a plain; it shall become a smooth level valley, from Geba,
or Gibeah, its utmost border north, to Rimmon, which lay
south of Jerusalem
and was the utmost southern limit of Judea. The gospel of Christ, where it comes
in its power, levels the ground; mountains and hills are brought low by it, that
the Lord alone may be exalted. (2.) It shall be like a populous city. As the
holy land shall be levelled, so the holy city shall be peopled, shall be rebuilt
and replenished.
Jerusalem shall be lifted up out of its low estate,
shall be raised out of its ruins; when
the land is turned as a plain, and
not only the
mount of Olives removed (v. 4), but other mountains too,
then Jerusalem shall be
lifted up, that is, shall appear the more
conspicuous; she
shall be inhabited in her place, even
in Jerusalem,
ch. 12:6. The whole city shall be inhabited in the utmost extent of it, and no
part of it left to lie waste. The utmost limits of it are here mentioned,
between which there shall be no ground lost, but all built upon, from
Benjamin's-gate
north-east to the
corner-gate north-west, and
from the tower of
Hananeel in the south to the
king's wine-presses in the north; when
the churches of Christ in all places are replenished with great numbers of holy,
humble, serious Christians, and many such are daily added to it, then this
promise is fulfilled. (3.) This country and this city shall both be safe, both
the meat in the country and the mouths in the city:
Those that dwell in it
shall dwell securely, and there shall be none to make them afraid; there shall
be no more of that utter destruction that has laid both town and country waste,
no more anathema (as some read it), no more cutting off, no more curse, or
separation from God to evil, no more such desolating judgments as you have been
groaning under, but Jerusalem
shall be safely inhabited; there shall be
no danger, nor any apprehension of it; neither shall its friends be fearful to
disquiet themselves nor its enemies formidable to disquiet them. That promise of
Christ explains thisthat
the gates of hell shall not prevail against the
church; and so do the holy security and serenity of mind which believers
enjoy in relying on the divine protection.
II. Here are judgments threatened against the enemies of the
church, that
have fought, or do fight, against Jerusalem; and the
threatening
of these judgments is in order to the preservation of the church in safety.
Men that read and hear of these plagues will be afraid of fighting against
Jerusalem, much more when these threatenings are fulfilled in some will others
hear and fear. Those that fight against the city of God, and his people, will be
found fighting against God, against whom none ever hardened his heart and
prospered (v. 12):
This shall be the plague wherewith the Lord will smite all
the people that have fought against Jerusalem; whoever they are, God will
punish them for the affront done to him, and avenge Jerusalem upon them. 1. They
shall waste away under grievous and languishing diseases:
Their flesh shall
consume away, and they shall be miserably emaciated, even
while they
stand on their feet, so that they shall be walking skeletons; nothing shall
remain but skin and bones. The flesh which they pampered and indulged, and made
provision for, when they were fed to the full with the spoils of God's people,
shall now
consume away, that it cannot be seen, and the bones that were not
seen shall stick out, Job 33:21. They
keep their feet, and hope to
keep
their ground, crawling about as long as they can; but they must yield at
last. The organs of sight, the outlets of sin,
their eyes, shall consume away
in their holes, shall sink into their heads or perhaps start out of them;
their envious malicious, adulterous eyes, the eyes they had so often fed with
spectacles of misery, these shall consume, which shall make not only their
countenances ghastly, but their lives wretched. The organs of speech, the
outlets of sin,
their tongue, shall consume away in their mouth, whereby
God will reckon with them for all their blasphemies against himself and
invectives against his people. Thus
their own tongues shall fall upon them,
and their punishment shall be legible in their sin, as his was whose tongue was
tormented in hell-flames. Thus Antiochus and Herod consumed away. 2. They shall
be dashed in pieces one against another (v. 13):
A great tumult from the Lord
shall be among them. But are tumults from the Lord, who is the
God of
order, and not of confusion? As they are the sin of those that raise them
they are not from the Lord, but from the wicked one, and from men's own lusts;
but, as they are the punishment of those that suffer by them, they are from the
Lord, who serves his own purposes, and carries on his intentions, by the sins,
and follies, and restless spirits, of men. It is of themselves that they
bite
and devour one another, but it is of the Lord, the righteous Judge, that
thus they are
consumed one of another (Gal. 5:15); as Ahab was deceived
by a lying spirit from the Lord, so Abimelech and the men of Shechem were
divided,
and so
destroyed, by an
evil spirit from the Lord, Jdg. 9:23.
Note, Those that are confederate and combined against the church will justly be
separated, and set against one another; and their tumults raised against God
will be avenged in tumults among themselves. And they shall
lay hold every
one on the hand of his neighbour, to hold him from striking, or to bind him
as his prisoner; nay,
his hand shall rise up against the hand of his
neighbour, to strike and wound him. Note, Those that aim to destroy the
church are often made to destroy one another; and every man's sword is
sometimes set against his fellow, by him whose sword they all are. Some think
this was fulfilled in the factions and dissensions that were among the Jews,
when the Romans were destroying them all; for they had fought against the
spiritual Jerusalem, the gospel-church; and to that well enough agrees v. 14,
Thou
also, O Judah! shalt fight against Jerusalem; the Jewish nation shall be
ruined by itself, shall die by its own hands; the city and country shall be at
war with each other, and so both shall be destroyed.
Suis et ipsa Roma
viribus ruitRome was urged into ruin by its very strength. 3. The plunder
of their camp shall greatly enrich the people of God, or the spoils of their
country (v. 14):
Judah also shall eat at Jerusalem (so one learned
interpreter reads it); people shall come from all parts to share in the prey; as
when Sennacherib's army was routed before Jerusalem there was
the prey of a
great spoil divided (Isa. 33:23), so it shall be now; the
wealth of all
the heathen round about, that had spoiled
Jerusalem, shall be gathered
together, gold, and silver, and apparel, in great abundance, that an equal
dividend may be made among all the parties entitled to a share of the prize.
Note, The
wealth of the sinner is often
laid up for the just, and
the Israel of God enriched with the spoil of the Egyptians. 4. The very cattle
shall share in the plague with which the enemies of God's church shall be cut
off, as they did in divers of the plagues of Egypt (v. 15): All
the beasts
that
shall be in the tents of these wicked men, when God comes to contend
with them, shall perish with them, not only beasts used in war, as the horse,
but those used for travel, or in the plough, as the
mule, the
camel,
and the
ass. Note, The inferior creatures often suffer for the sin of man
and in his plagues. Thus God will show his indignation against sin, and will
make the creature that is thus
subject to vanity groan to be
delivered
into the glorious liberty of the children of God, Rom. 8:21, 22.
Verses 16-21
Three things are here foretold:
I. That a gospel-way of worship being set up in the church there
shall be a great resort to it and a general attendance upon it. Those that were
left of the enemies of religion shall be so sensible of the mercy of God to them
in their narrow escape that they shall apply themselves to the worship of the
God of Israel, and pay their homage to him, v. 16. Those that were not consumed
shall be converted, and this makes their deliverance a mercy indeed, a double
mercy. It is a great change that the grace of God makes upon them; those that
had
come against Jerusalem, finding their attempts vain and fruitless,
shall become as much her admirers as ever they had been her adversaries, and
shall
come to Jerusalem to worship there, and go in concurrence with
those whom they had gone contrary to. Note, As some of Christ's foes shall be
made his footstool, so others of them shall be made his friends; and, when the
principle of enmity is slain in them, their former acts of hostility are
pardoned to them, and their services are admitted and accepted, as though they
had never
fought against Jerusalem. They shall
go up to worship at
Jerusalem, because that was the place which God had chosen, and there the temple
was, which was a type of Christ and his mediation. Converting grace sets us
right, 1. In the object of our worship.
They shall no longer
worship
the Molochs and Baals, the
kings and
lords, that the Gentiles
worship, the creatures of their own imagination, but
the King, the
Lord
of hosts, the everlasting King, the King of kings, the sovereign Lord of
all. 2. In the ordinances of worship, those which God himself has appointed.
Gospel-worship is here represented by the
keeping of the feast of
tabernacles, for the sake of those two great graces which were in a special
manner
acted and
signified in that feast-contempt of the world,
and joy in God, Neh. 8:17. The life of a good Christian is a constant
feast
of tabernacles, and, in all acts of devotion, we must retire from the world
and rejoice in the Lord, must worship as in that feast. 3. In the
Mediator
of our worship; we must go to Christ our temple with all our offerings, for in
him only our
spiritual sacrifices are acceptable to God, 1 Pt. 2:5. If we
rest in ourselves, we come short of pleasing God; we must go up to him, and
mention his righteousness only. 4. In the time of it; we must be constant. They
shall go up
from year to year, at the times appointed for this solemn
feast. Every day of a Christian's life is a day of the
feast of
tabernacles, and every Lord's day especially (that is the
great day of
the feast); and therefore every day we must worship the Lord of hosts and
every Lord's day with a peculiar solemnity.
II. That those who neglect the duties of gospel-worship shall be
reckoned with for their neglect. God will compel them to come and worship before
him, by suspending his favours from those that keep not his ordinances:
Upon
them there shall be no rain, v. 17. Some understand it figuratively; the
rain of heavenly doctrine shall be withheld, and of the heavenly grace, which
should accompany that doctrine. God will
command the clouds that they rain no
rain upon them. Note, It is a righteous thing with God to withhold the
blessings of grace from those that do not attend the means of grace, to deny the
green pastures to those that attend not the
shepherd's tents. Or
we may take it literally:
On them there shall be no rain, to make their
ground fruitful. Note, The gifts of common providence are justly denied to those
that neglect and despise instituted ordinances. Those that neglected to build
the temple were punished with the want of rain (Hag. 2:17), and so were those
that neglected to attend there when it was built. If we be barren and unfruitful
towards God, justly is the earth made so to us. Many are crossed, and go
backward, in their affairs, and this is at the bottom of itthey do not keep
close to the worship of God as they should; they go off from God, and then he
walks contrary to them. If we omit or postpone the duties he expects from us, it
is just with him to deny the favours we expect from him. But what shall be done
to the defaulters of the land of Egypt, to whom the threatening of the want of
rain is no threatening, for they have no rain at any time; they need none; they
desire none; the river Nilus is to them instead of the clouds of heaven, waters
their land, and makes it fruitful, so that what is a punishment to others is
none to them? v. 18, 19. It is threatened that
if the family of Egypt go not
up, that have no rain, yet God will find out a way to meet with them, for
there shall be, in effect, the same plague wherewith other nations are smitten
for their neglect. God can, and often did, restrain the overflowing of the
river, which was equivalent to the shutting up of the clouds; or if the river
did its part, and rose as high as it used to do, God had other ways of bringing
famine upon them, and destroying the fruits of their ground, as he did by
several of the ten plagues of Egypt, so that
this (that is, the same)
shall be
the punishment of Egypt that is the punishment of other
nations
who come not up to
keep the feast of tabernacles. Note, Those who think
themselves least indebted to, and depending on, the mercy of heaven, cannot
therefore
think themselves guarded against the justice of Heaven. It does not follow that
those who can live without rain can therefore live without God; for not the
heavens only, but all other creatures, are that to us that God makes them to be,
and no more; nor can any man's way of living enable him to set light by the
judgments of God. This shall be the
punishmentmargin,
This shall be
the sin of Egypt, and the sin of all nations, that come not up to keep the feast
of tabernacles. The same word signifies both
sin and the
punishment
of sin, so close and inseparable is the connexion between them (as Gen. 4:7),
and sin is often its own punishment. Note, Omissions are sins, and we must come
into judgment for them; those contract guilt that
go not up to worship at
the times appointed, as they have opportunity; and it is a sin that is its own
punishment,
for those who forsake the duty forfeit the privilege of communion with God.
III. That those who perform the duties of gospel-worship shall
have grace to adorn their profession by the duties of a gospel-conversation too.
This is promised (v. 20, 21), and it is necessary to the completing of the
beauty and happiness of the church. In general, all shall be
holiness to the
Lord.
1. The name and character of holiness shall not be so confined
as formerly.
Holiness to the Lord had been written only upon the high
priest's forehead, but now it shall not be so appropriated. All Christians
shall be
living temples, and
spiritual priests, dedicated to the
honour of God and employed in his service.
2. Real holiness shall be more diffused than it had been,
because there shall be more powerful means of sanctification, more excellent
rules, more cogent arguments, and brighter patterns of holiness, and because
there shall be a more plentiful effusion of the Spirit of holiness and
sanctification, after Christ's ascension than ever before.
(1.) There shall be holiness introduced into common things; and
those things shall be devoted to God that seemed very foreign. [1.] The
furniture of their horses shall be consecrated to God.
"Upon the bells
of the horses shall be engraven
Holiness to the Lord, or upon the
bridles
of the horses (so the margin) or the
trappings. The horses used in war
shall no longer be used against God and his people, as they have been, but for
him and them. Even their wars shall be holy wars, their troopers serving under
God's banner. Their great men, who ride in state with a pompous retinue, shall
reckon it their greatest ornament to honour God with their honours.
Holiness
to the Lord shall be written on the harness of their chariot-horses, as
great men have sometimes their coat of arms with their motto painted on their
coaches; every gentleman shall take the high priest's motto for his, and glory
in it, and make it a memento to himself not to do any thing unworthy of it.
Travellers shall have it upon their bridles, with which they guide their horses,
as those who desire always to be put in mind of it, by having it continually
before them, and to guide themselves in all their motions by this rule. The
bells
of the horses, which are designed to quicken them in their journey and to
give notice of their approach, shall have
Holiness to the Lord upon them,"
to signify that this is that which we ought to be influenced by ourselves, and
make profession of to others, wherever we go. [2.] The furniture of their houses
too shall be consecrated to God, to be employed in his service.
First,
The furniture of the priests' houses, or apartments adjoining to the house of
the Lord. The common drinking cups they used shall be
like the bowls before
the altar, that were used either to receive the blood of the sacrifices or
to present the wine and oil in, which were for the
drink-offerings. The
vessels which they used for their own tables shall be used in such a religious
manner, with such sobriety and temperance, such devotedness to the glory of God,
and such a mixture of pious thoughts and expressions, that their meals shall
look like sacrifices; they shall eat and drink, not to themselves, but to him
that spreads their tables and fills their cups. And thus, in ministers'
families especially, should common actions be done after a godly sort, however
they are done in other families.
Secondly, The furniture of other houses,
those of the common people:
"Every pot in Jerusalem and in Judah shall
be holiness to the Lord. The pots in which they boil their meat, the cups
out of which they drink their wine (Jer. 35:5), in these God's good creatures
shall never be abused to excess, nor that made the food and fuel of lust which
should be oil to the wheels of obedience," as had formerly been, when
all
tables were full of vomit and filthiness, Isa. 28:8. "What they eat and
drink out of these shall nourish their bodies for the service of God; and out of
these they shall give liberally for the relief of the poor;" then are they
Holiness
to the Lord, as the merchandise and the hire of the converted Tyrians are
said to be (Isa. 23:18); for both in our gettings and in our spendings we must
have an eye to the will of God as our rule and the glory of God as our end.
Thirdly,
When there shall be such an abundance of real holiness people shall not be nice
and curious about ceremonial holiness:
"Those that sacrifice shall come
and take of these common vessels,
and seethe their sacrifices
therein,
making no distinction between them and the
bowls before the altar."
In gospel-times the true worshippers shall worship God
in spirit and in
truth, and
neither in this mountain nor yet at Jerusalem, Jn. 4:21.
One place shall be as acceptable to God as another
(I will that men pray
every where); and one vessel shall be as acceptable as another. Little
regard shall be had to the circumstance, provided there be nothing indecent or
disorderly, while the substance is religiously preserved and adhered to. Some
think it intimates that there should be greater numbers of sacrifices offered
than the vessels of the sanctuary would serve for; but, rather than any should
be turned back or deferred. they shall make no difficulty at all of using common
vessels, as the Levites in a case of necessity helped the priests to kill the
sacrifices, 2 Chr. 29:34.
(2.) There shall be no unholiness introduced into their sacred
things, to corrupt them:
In that day there shall be no more the Canaanite in
the house of the Lord of hosts. Some read it, There shall be no more
the
merchant, for so a Canaanite sometimes signifies; and they think it was
fulfilled when Christ once and again drove the buyers and sellers out of the
temple. Or though those that were Canaanites, strangers and foreigners, shall be
brought into the house of the Lord, yet they shall cease to be Canaanites; they
shall have nothing of the spirit or disposition of Canaanites in them. Or it
intimates that though in gospel-times people should grow indifferent as to holy
vessels, yet they should be very strict in church-discipline, and careful not to
admit the profane to special ordinances, but to separate between the precious
and the vile, between Israelites and Canaanites. Yet this will not have its full
accomplishment short of the heavenly Jerusalem, that
house of the Lord of
hosts, into which
no unclean thing shall enter; for at the end of
time, and not before, Christ shall gather out of his kingdom every thing that
offends, and the tares and wheat shall be perfectly and eternally separated.
Chapter 14:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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