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dred to chase the Midianites, yet he neglects not wise stratagems to effect it. To wait for God's performance in doing nothing, is to abuse that divine Providence, which will so work, that will not allow us idle.

Now, when we would look that Gideon should give charge of whetting their swords, and sharpening their spears, and fitting their armour, he only gives order for empty pitchers, and lights, and trumpets. The cracking of these pitchers shall break in pieces, this Midianitish clay: the kindling of these lights shall extinguish the light of Midian: these trumpets sound no other than a soul-peal to all the host of Midian: there shall need nothing but noise and light, to confound this innumerable army.

And if the pitchers, and brands, and trumpets of Gideon, did so daunt and dismay the proud troops of Midian and Amalek, who can we think shall be able to stand before the last terror, wherein the trumpet of the archangel shall sound, and the heavens shall pass away with a noise, and the elements shall be on a flame about our ears?

Any of the weakest Israelites would have served to have broken an empty pitcher, to have carried a light, and to have sounded a trumpet, and to strike a flying adversary. Not to the basest use will God employ an unworthy agent: he will not allow so much as a cowardly torch-bearer.

Those two and twenty thousand Israelites, that slipped away for fear, when the fearful Midianites fled, can pursue and kill them; and can follow them at the heels, whom they durst not look in the face. Our flight gives advantage to the feeblest adversary, whereas our resistance foileth the greatest: how much more, if we have once turned our backs upon a temptation, shall our spiritual ene-mies, which are ever strong, trample us in the dust! Resist, and they shall flee: stand still, and we shall see the salvation of the Lord. Judges vii.

THE REVENGE OF SUCCOTH AND PENUEL. GIDEON was of Manasseh: Ephraim and he were brothers, sons of Joseph: none of all the tribes of Israel fall out with their victorious leader, but he. The agreement of brothers is rare: by how much nature hath more endeared them, by so much are their quarrels more frequent and dangerous.

I did not hear the Ephraimites offering themselves into the front of the army, before they fight; and now they are ready to fight with Gideon, because they were not called to fight with Midian: I hear them expostulating after it; after the exploit done, cowards are valiant. Their quarrel was, that they were not called it had been a greater praise of their valour, to have gone unbidden. What need was there to call them, when God complained of multitude, and sent away those which were called? None speak so big in the end of the fray, as the fearfullest.

Ephraim flies upon Gideon, whilst the Midianites fly from him. When Gideon should be pursuing his enemies, he is pursued by

brethren; and now is glad to spend that wind in pacifying of his own, which should have been bestowed in the slaughter of a common adversary. It is a wonder, if Satan suffer us to be quiet at home, while we are exercised with wars abroad. Had not Gideon learned to speak fair, as well as to smite, he had found work enough from the swords of Joseph's sons: his good words are as victorious as his sword; his pacification of friends, better than his execution of enemies.

For ought I see, the envy of Israelites was not more troublesome to Gideon, than the opposition of Midian. He hath left the envy of Ephraim behind him; before him, he finds the envy of Succoth and Penuel. The one envies that he should overcome without them; the other, that he should say, he had overcome. His pursuit leads him to Succoth; there he craves relief, and is repelled. Had he said, "Come forth and draw your sword with me against Zeba and Zalmunna," the motion had been but equal: a common interest challenges an universal aid: now he says but, Give morsels of bread to my followers, he is turned off with a scorn; he asks bread and they give him a stone. Could he ask a more slender recompence of their deliverance, or a less reward of his victory? Give morsels of bread. Before this act, all their substance had been too small a hire for their freedom from Midian; now, when it is done, a morsel of bread is too much: well might he challenge bread, where he gave liberty and life. It is hard, if those which fight the wars of God may not have necessary relief; that while the enemy dies by them, they should die by famine. If they had laboured for God at home in peace, they had been worthy of maintenance; how much more now, that danger is added to their toil? Even very executioners look for fees; but here were not malefactors, but adversaries to be slain: the sword of power and revenge was now to be wielded, not of quiet justice. Those, that fight for our souls against spiritual powers, may challenge bread from us; and it is shameless unthankfulness to deny it. When Abraham had vanquished the five kings, and delivered Lot and his family, the king of Salem met him with bread and wine; and now these sons of Abraham, after an equal victory, ask dry bread, and are denied by their brethren: craftily yet, and under pretence of a false title; had they acknowledged the victory of Gideon, with what forehead could they have denied him bread?

Now, I know not whether their faithlessness or envy lie in their way. Are the bands of Zeba and Zalmunna, in thy hands? There were none of these princes of Succoth and Penuel, but thought themselves better inen than Gideon: that he therefore alone should do that, which all the princes of Israel durst not attempt, they hated and scorned to hear. It is never safe to measure events by the power of the instrument; nor, in the causes of God, whose calling makes the difference, to measure others by themselves: there is nothing more dangerous, than in holy businesses to stand upon comparisons and our own reputation; since it is reason, God should both chuse and bless where he lists,

To have questioned so sudden a victory, had been pardonable; but to deny it scornfully, was unworthy of Israelites. Carnal men think that impossible to others, which themselves cannot do; from hence are their censures, hence their exclamations.

Gideon hath vowed a fearful revenge, and now performs it. The taunts of his brethren may not stay him from the pursuit of the Midianites: common enmities must first be opposed; domestical, at more leisure. The princes of Succoth feared the tyranny of the Midianitish kings, but they more feared Gideon's victory. What a condition hath their envy drawn them into! That they are sorry to see God's enemies captive; that Israel's freedom must be their death; that the Midianites and they must tremble at one and the same revenger! To see themselves prisoners to Zeba and Zalmunna, had not been so fearful, as to see Zeba and Zalmunna prisoners to Gideon. Nothing is more terrible to evil minds, than to read their own condemnation in the happy success of others. Hell itself would want one piece of his torment, if the wicked did not know those whom they contemned, glorious.

I know not whether more to commend Gideon's wisdom and moderation in the proceedings, than his resolution and justice in the execution of this business. I do not see him run furiously into the city, and kill the next: his sword had not been so drunken with blood, that it should know no difference: but he writes down the names of the princes, and singles them forth for revenge.

When the leaders of God came to Jericho or Ai, their slaughter was impartial: not a woman or child might live to tell news: but now that Gideon comes to a Succoth, a city of Israelites, the rulers are called forth to death; the people are frighted with the example, not hurt with the judgment. To enwrap the innocent in any vengeance, is a murderous injustice; indeed where all join in the sin, all are worthy to meet in the punishment. It is like, the citizens of Succoth could have been glad to succour Gideon, if their rulers had not forbidden; they must therefore escape, while their princes perish.

I cannot think of Gideon's revenge without horror; that the rulers of Succoth should have their flesh torn from their backs with thorns and briers; that they should be at once beaten and scratched to death: what a spectacle it was to see their bare bones looking somewhere through the bloody rags of their flesh and skin, and every stroke worse than the last; death multiplied by torment! Justice is sometimes so severe, that a tender beholder can scarce discern it from cruelty.

I see the Midianites fare less ill: the edge of the sword makes a speedy and easy passage for their lives, while these rebellious Israelites die lingering under thorns and briers; envying those in their death, whom their life abhorred. Howsoever men live or die without the pale of the Church, a wicked Israelite shall be sure of plagues. How many shall unwish themselves Christians, when God's revenges have found them out!

The place (Peniel) where Jacob wrestled with God and prevail

ed, now hath wrestled against God and takes a fall: they see God avenged, which would not believe him delivering.

It was now time for Zeba and Zalmunna, to follow those their troops to the grave, whom they had led in the field. Those, which the day before were attended with a hundred and thirty five thousand followers, have not so much as a page now left to weep for their death; and have lived only to see all their friends, and some enemies die for their sakes.

Who can regard earthly greatness, that sees one night change two of the greatest kings of the world into captives? It had been both pity and sin, that the heads of that Midianitish tyranny, into which they had drawn so many thousands, should have escaped that death. And yet, if private revenge had not made Gideon just, I doubt whether they had died. The blood of his brothers calls for theirs, and awakes his sword to their execution. He both knew and complained of the Midianitish oppression, under which Israel groaned; yet the cruelty offered to all the thousands of his father's sons, had not drawn the blood of Zeba and Zalmunna, if his own mother's sons had not bled by their hands,

He, that slew the rulers of Succoth and Penuel and spared the people, now hath slain the people of Midian and would have spared their rulers; but that God, which will find occasions to wind wicked men into judgment, will have them slain in a private quarrel, which had more deserved it for the public; if we may not rather say, that Gideon revonged these as a magistrate, not as a brother. For governors to respect their own ends in public actions, and to wear the sword of justice in their own sheath, it is a wrongful abuse of authority. The slaughter of Gideon's brethren was not the greatest sin of the Midianitish kings: this alone shall kill them, when the rest expected an unjust reinission.

How many lewd men hath God paid with some one sin for all the rest! Some, that have gone away with unnatural filthiness and capital thefts, have clipped off their own days with their coin; others, whose bloody murders have been punished in a mutinous word; others, whose suspected felony hath paid the price of their unknown rape. O God, thy judgments are just, even when men's are unjust!

Gideon's young son is bidden to revenge the death of his uncles, His sword had not yet learned the way to blood, especially of kings, though in irons. Deadly executions require strength both of heart and face. How are those aged in evil, that can draw their swords upon the lawfully anointed of God!

These tyrants plead not now for continuance of life, but for the haste of their death; Fall thou upon us. Death is ever accompanied with pain, which it is no marvel if we wish short. We do not more affect protraction of an easeful life, than speed in our dissolution; for here every pang that tends towards death, renews it. To lie a hour under death, is tedious; but to be dying a whole day, we think above the strength of human patience. Oh, what shall we then conceive of that death, which knows no end? As

this life is no less frail than the body which it animates, so that death is no less eternal than the soul which must endure it.

For us to be dying so long as we now have leave to live, is intolerable; and yet one only minute of that other tormenting death, is worse than an age of this. Oh the desperate infidelity of careless men, that shrink at the thought of a momentary death, and fear not eternal! This is but a killing of the body; that is a destruction of body and soul.

Who is so worthy to wear the crown of Israel, as he that won the crown from Midian? Their usurpers were gone; now they are headless. It is a doubt whether they were better to have had no kings, or tyrants. They suc to Gideon to accept of the kingdom, and are repulsed: there is no greater example of modesty than Gideon. When the angel spake to him, he abased himself below all Israel; when the Ephraimites contended with him, he prefers their gleanings to his vintage, and casts his honour at their feet; and now, when Israel proffers him that kingdom which he had merited, he refuses it. He, that in overcoming would allow them to cry, The sword of the Lord and of Gideon, in governing, will have none but the sword of the Lord.

That which others plot, and sue, and swear, and bribe for, Dignity and Superiority, he seriously rejects; whether it were, for that he knew God had not yet called them to a monarchy; or rather, for that he saw the crown among thorns. What do we ambitiously affect the command of these mole-hills of earth, when wise men have refused the proffers of kingdoms? Why do not we rather la bour for that kingdom, which is free from all cares, from all uncertainty ?

Yet he, that refuses their crown, calls for their ear-rings; although not to enrich himself, but religion. So long had God been a stranger to Israel, that now superstition goes current for devout worship. It were pity that good intentions should make any man wicked; here they did so. Never man meant better than Gideon in his rich ephod; yet this very act set all Israel on whoring: God had chosen a place and a service of his own. When the wit of man will be overpleasing God with better devices than his own, it turns to madness, and ends in mischief. Judges vii.

ABIMELECH'S USURPATION.

GIDEON refused the kingdom of Israel when it was offered. His seventy sons offered not to obtain that sceptre, which their father's victory had deserved to make hereditary: only Abimelech, the concubine's son, sues and ambitiously plots for it. What could Abi

melech see in himself, that he should overlook all his brethren? If he look to his father, they were his equals; if to his mother, they were his betters. Those, that are most unworthy of honour, are hottest in the chase of it; whilst the conscience of better deserts bids men sit still, and stay to be either importuned or neglected.

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