number of the captives 55, 56. never fince in the poffeffion of the Jews, 57. first subject to the Romans, afterwards to others, ibid. the defolation of it complete, 57, 58. its condition under Adrian, 58, 59. the attempt of Julian to rebuild it miracu- loufly defeated, 60, 61. ftate of Jerufalem under the fucceed- ing emperors, 61, 62. taken and plundered by the Perfians, 63. furrendered to the Saracens, 63, 64. paffes from the Sara- racens to the Turks, then to the Franks, and afterwards to the Egyptians and others, 64, 65. at prefent in the hands of the Turks of the Othman race, 68, 69. the prophecies of what was to follow upon its deftruction, 71. fome paffages relating to its deftruction in the gofpel explained 71-75. particularly about the angels and even the Son not knowing the time, 73-75. its deftruction typical of the end of the world, 76. the exact completion of these prophecies a ftrong proof of reve- lation, 76, 77. See Jews.
Jerufalem, a defcription of the new Jerufalem, II. 367, 368. a continuation of the defcription, 368. the particulars con- firmed by the angel, 369.
Jews and Árabs, refemble each other, I. 36. the Jews at present very numerous, 38, 39. the xxviiith of Deuteronomy a picture of their prefent ftate, 101. a prophecy of their enemies com- ing from far, how fulfilled, 102, 103. and of the cruelty of their enemies, how fulfilled, 103, 104. the fieges of their cities, 104. their diftrefs and famine in their fieges, 104, 105. the women eating their own children, 105-107. their great calamities and flaughters, 107. their being carried into Egypt, and fold for flaves at a low price, 107, 108. their being plucked from off their own land, 108, 109. their being dif perfed into all nations, 109, 110. their ftill fubfifting as a diftinct people, 110. their finding no reft, 110, 111. their being oppreffed and fpoiled, 111. their children taken from them, 112. their madness and defperation, 112. their ferving other gods, 113, 114. their becoming a proverb and by- word, 114. the long continuance of their plagues, 114, 115. the fulfillment of thefe ancient prophecies very affecting and convincing, 115. prophecies relative to their prefent ftate, 115. and about the restoration of the two tribes, and the diffolution of the ten, 115-124. the time of the restoration of the two tribes foretold, 116. fulfilled at three periods, 117. the prophecy about the ten tribes, how fulfilled, 117— 120. where they are at prefent, 120. vain conjectures of the Jews thereupon, 121. not all returned with the two tribes, 122, nor fwallowed up among the heathen nations, 122, 123. the reason of the diftinction between the two tribes and the ten tribes, 123, 124. the prophecy of the Jews wonderful pre- fervation, and the deftruction of their enemies, 124-127. their prefervation one of the moft illuftrious acts of divine Providence,
Providence, 124, 125. providence no lefs fignal in the de struction of their enemies, 125, 126. and that not only of na- tions, but of fingle perfons, 125. the defolation of Judea ano- ther inftance of the truth of divine prophecy, 127-132. foretold by the prophets, 127, 128. the prefent ftate of Judea anfwerable to the prophecies, 128, 129. no objection from hence of its being a land flowing with milk and honey, 128. the ancients, heathens as well as Jews, teftify it to have been a good land, 129. an account of it by two modern travellers, 129-132. the prophecies of the infidelity and reprobation of the Jews, how fulfilled, 133, 134. the prophecies concerning the Jews and Gentiles, have not had their entire completion, 137. what hath been accomplished, a fufficient pledge of what is to come, 138. a diffuafive from the perfecution of the Jews, and humanity and charity recommended, 139, 140. prophe- cies relating to other nations in connection with the Jews,
Jews, their calamities and miferies without a parallel, II. 35. the cause of their heavy judgments, 80, 81. fome correfpon- dence between their crime and their punishment, ibid. on this occafion a ferious application made to Chriftians, 81, 82. are fuccefsful in taking their city from the Romans, 58, 59. are afterwards fubdued with most terrible flaughter, 59. are fold like horfes, ibid. a ftanding monument of the truth of Chrift's predictions, 69. their great fin and their punishment, 80, 81. many prophecies of their converfion and restoration, II. 394, 395. See Jerufalem.
Impoftors and false Chrifts, at the fiege of Jerufalem, II. 37-40. an argument of a true Chrift, 41. the difference between those deceivers and Jefus Chrift, 44. they were of debauched lives and vicious principles, 44. thofe deluded by impoftors a melan- choly inftance of the weakness of mankind, 45.
Infidelity, its patrons only pretenders to learning, II. 413, 414. modern, worfe than than that of the Jews, 414, 415.
Infidels, their objections that prophecies were written after the events, groundless and abfurd, 1. 3. muft either renounce their fenfes, or admit the truth of revelation, 4.
Joachim, abbat of Calabria, in the twelfth century difcourfes of Antichrift, II. 251.
Jonah preaches repentance to Nineveh, I. 147. the king and people repent at his preaching, ibid. the most ancient of all prophets, ibid. at what time he prophecied, ibid.
Jortin (Dr.) his comparison of Mofes and Chrift, I. 96-99. his remark upon the prodigies preceding the deftruction of Jerufa- lem, II. 18.
Jofephus, his account of the great flaughter at the siege of Jerufa- lem, I. 107. his relation of the figns and prodigies before its
deftruction, II. 16-18. wonderfully preferved for the illuftra- tion of the completion of the prophecies, 78. the great use and advantage of his hiftory in this respect, 79, 80.
Irenæus, his notion of Antichrift, I. 269. II. 114. his explication of the number of the beaft, II. 299, 300.
Ifaac, more promises concerniug his pofterity than of Ishmael, I. 37. the promise of the bleffed feed fulfilled in Ifaac's family, 37, 38.
Ifaiah, his prophecy against the Affyrians, I. 143. against Baby-
lon, 160, &c. against Tyre, 180, &c. against Egypt, 204, &c. Ifhmael, his pofterity very numerous, I. 22, 23. the promises about him, how fulfilled, 23, &c.
Ifhmaelites. See Arabians.
Ifraelites, their poffeffion of Canaan according to the promise,
Judah, Jacob's prophecies in bleffing this tribe, I. 53, 54. the scepter fhall not depart from Judah, that prophecy explained, 55 -60. its completion, 60-66. continued a tribe till the coming of the Meffiah and the deftruction of Jerufalem, 60-62. be- came the general name of the whole nation, 63. this prophecy invincible argument that Jefus is the Meffiah, 66. Julian, his hypocrify, I. 384. his attempt to rebuild the temple mi- raculously defeated, II. 61.
Jurieu (Peter) his notion of the refurrection of the witneffes, II. 237.
Juftin Martyr, his notion of the Man of Sin, II. 114. his account of the millennium, 353-355.
KEnnicot, his critical remark upon Noah's prophecy, I
Kingdom, the Babylonian, I. 234. 255, the Medo-Persian, 236, 257. the Macedonian or Grecian, 237, 258. the four king- doms into which this was divided, 259, 260. the Roman, 240, 260. the ten kingdoms into which this was divided, 264, &c.
Actantius, his notion of Antichrift, II. 114. of the millennium, 356, 357. and of the time fucceeding, 364, 365.
Laodice, wife of Ptolemy Philadelphus, put away, but afterwards recalled, I. 343. poifons her husband, and caufes Berenice to be murdered, ibid. fixes her eldest fon Seleucus Callinicus on the throne, ibid. her wickednefs did not pafs unpunished,
Laodicea, the terrible doom of that church, II. 173. now an ha- bitation for wild beafts, ibid. its condition a warning to all im- penitent and careless sinners, 174. its former splendid condition, ibid.
Laft times, what denoted thereby, II. 139, 140.
Lateinos, that word contains the number of the beast, II. 299, &c. how it agrees with the church of Rome, 299–301.
Latin church not reclaimed by the ruin of the Greek church, II. 225.
Lawgiver from between his feet, that expreffion explained, I.
Le Clerc, an able commentator, but apt to indulge strange fan- cies, I. 58, 59. his fingular interpretation of Jacob's prophecy rejected, ibid. his hypothefis of the Man of Sin, refuted,
Little book, the contents of it, II. 227, &c. defcribes the calami- ties of the western church, and their period, ibid. the contents to be published, 228. what meant by the measuring of the tem- ple, 230. fome true witneffes against the corruptions of religion, 231, 232.
Little horn, among the ten horns of the western Roman empire, I. 267, &c. among the four horns of the Grecian empire, 315. whether to be understood of Antiochus Epiphanes or of the Romans, 315-324. the reafon of its appellation, 316,
Lloyd, Bishop, his account of the ten kingdoms into which the Roman empire was divided, I. 266. a memorable thing of his about the Revelation, II. 152. his notion of the refurrection of the witneffes, 237, 238.
Locufts, the Arabians compared to them, II. 210-212. their commiflion, and how fulfilled, 210. not real, but figurative locufts, 212. likened unto horfes, ibid. a defcription of their heads, faces, and teeth, 213. like unto fcorpions, 214. their king called the deftroyer, ibid. their hurting men five months, how to be underflood, and how exactly fulfilled, 215-217. Lollards, preach against the fuperftitions of the church of Rome, II. 261. prefent a remonftrance to the parliament against the doctrins and practices of that church, 262.
Longinus reduces Rome to a poor dukedom, II. 207. Loretto, the great riches of the image, house and treasury,
Luther, preaches against the pope's indulgences, II. 268. that queftion anfwered, Where was your religion before Luther, 269. protests against the corruptions of the church of Rome,
Maccabees, their great fuccess against the enemies of the
Macedonian empire, why compared to a leopard, I. 258, 259. why described with four wings and four heads, and dominion given to it, 259. why likened to a goat, 303, 304.
Machiavel, his account of the ten kingdoms into which the Ro- man empire was divided, I. 265. points out the little horn, 274. fhows how the power of the church of Rome was raifed upon the ruins of the empire, 108-110.
Mahuzzim, what it means, I. 390, 391, 395. the prophecy ex- pounded, 396.
Mamalucs, Jerufalem long under their dominion, II. 67. all their dominions annexed to the Othman empire, 68.
Man of Sin, St. Paul's prophecy about him, II. 82. the fenfe and meaning of the paffage, 83. what meant by the coming of Chrift and the Day of Chrift, 83-85. who is the Man of Sin, 87. what by fitting in the temple of God, 88. what by he who letteth will let, 89, 110, 117. the deftruction of the Man of Sin foretold, 91. the opinions of fome learned men rejected, 92-101. other opinions about the Man of Sin, 101, 102. ap- plicable to the great apoftafy of the church of Rome, 102, 103. the pope the Man of Sin, 111-113. what the fathers fay of the Man of Sin, 114-117. the evidences that the pope is the Man of Sin, 120. the opinion of the ancient fathers about this point, 115, 116, 117. this prophecy an antidote to popery, 120, 121.
Marriage, an account of its being forbid to the clergy, II. 144— 147. the worshipping of demons and prohibition of marriage went together, 148.
Maundrell, his account of the state of Palestine, I. 129-131. his account of Tyre, 200.
Maximin the emperor, a barbarian in all refpects, II. 187. Mede, a most learned and excellent writer, I. 17. a mistake of that author's corrected, 18. his account of the ten kingdoms into which the Roman empire was divided, 265. of the three king- doms which the little horn fubverted, 274. his great pains in ex- plaining the prophecies, and fixing the true idea of Antichrift, II. 119. his excellent treatife of the apoftafy of the latter times, 123. One of the best interpreters of the Revelation, 154. his hard fate in the world, 119, 154. his conjectures concerning Gog and Magog, 360.
Melliah principally intended in Mofes's prophecy of a prophet like unto himself, I. 90-100. expected about the time of our Saviour, II. 41, 42. and foretold that he fhould work miracles,
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