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The case seems to be this: Zacharias, under the immediate influence and direction of the Holy Spirit, transfers the language of the old dispensation to the affairs of the new one; he celebrates the redemption of the world, by Christ, from sin and death, in words which literally describe the redemption of Israel from Egypt by Moses; to teach us, that we should regard one as a sacramental pledge and figure of the other; that there is another bondage, in which the people of God are held; another Moses, who is to deliver them ; another land of promise and of rest, where they are to be settled. This the Hebrews might have known, as St. Paul tells them, Heb. iv., from a passage in the ninety-fifth Psalm, where, long after they had been in possession of Canaan, David speaks of another "day" of probation, and another "rest." The Jews have since had a melancholy proof of the same thing, by being dispossessed of that earthly inheritance, which they falsely deemed to have been perpetual, and vainly regarded as the end of all the promises, made to a "thousand generations," that is (a definite number being put for an indefinite), to them, and to us, and to as many as the Lord our God shall call," while the world shall last.

12. When they were but a few men in number; yea, very few, and strangers in it. 13. When they went from one nation to another, from one kingdom to another people.

How wonderful was the display of God's wisdom and power, in his choosing a single family, and that a small one, the members of which were literally "strangers and pilgrims upon earth;" in his promising to that family, in those circumstances, a large and fertile country, where the thrones of many princes were then firmly established; and,

lastly, in his putting them into actual possession of it, at the time appointed! Thus the family of the holy Jesus was, at first, but small; "the members of it were a few, yea, a very few;" they were sojourners in a land not theirs; "they went from one nation to another;" nay, they were accounted the "refuse of the world, and the offscouring of all things." But "Fear not, little flock," saith He unto them, "for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom :" Luke xii. 32. Let us view Israel brought into Canaan, nor doubt but that believers shall inherit the kingdom of heaven, and succeed to the thrones of apostate angels.

14. He suffered no man to do them wrong: yea, he reproved kings for their sakes; 15. Saying, Touch not mine anointed, and do my prophets no harm.

The patriarchs, during their peregrinations, were often in imminent danger; as Abraham on account of Sarah, Gen. xx. ; Isaac, in a similar case, Gen. xxvi.; Jacob from Laban, Gen. xxxi.; and from his brother Esau, Gen. xxxiii. Yet, destitute as they were of earthly help, the mightiest kings could not hurt them. Their "ways pleased the Lord, and he made even their enemies to be at peace with them." Prov. xvi. 7. They were the typical "prophets, and Messiahs, or Christs'," of Jehovah and kings were forbidden to lift up a hand against them. How doth the same kind

1 Ideo autem Christi sive Uncti dicuntur, quod essent et sacerdotes et reges: summâ quippe potestate præditi, nullique obnoxii. Hinc foedera æquo jure pacta cum regibus: hinc bella suscepta, et quidem nutu suo, auspiciis, ut aiunt, suis. Gen. xiv. 21. Hinc Hethæi ad Abrahamum: "Audi nos, Domine: Princeps Dei es apud nos." Ibid. xxiii. 6. nemini obnoxius, nisi Deo. Quo jure Isaacus et Jacobus usi sunt. Gen. xxvi. &c. Ad hæc prophetæ erant; ut hic, et Gen. xx. 7. Quos omnes titulos unum Christi nomen complectitur. Christi autem dicuntur, in typo Christi ipsius ab eis orituri.-Bossuet.

Providence watch over the body and the members of the true CHRIST; how often hath it interposed to protect and preserve them from the powers of the world!

16. Moreover he called for a famine upon the land; he brake the whole staff of bread.

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When Jacob had escaped other perils, we find him and his family likely to perish with hunger. Gen. xlii. "Famine" is here finely represented as a servant, ready to come and go, at the "call" and command of God; for calamities, whether public or private, are the messengers of Divine justice. Bread" is the "staff" which supports life; when that staff is "broken," the body fails, and sinks to the earth. The word of God is the staff of spiritual life, the food and support of the soul; and the sorest of Heaven's judgments is that mentioned by the prophet Amos, ch. viii. 11. "Behold, the days come, saith the Lord God, that I will send a famine in the land; not a famine of bread, nor a thirst of water, but of hearing the words of the LORD." Such a famine was sore in all lands, when Christ made his appearance in the flesh; whose advent, with the blessed effects of it, is wonderfully shadowed forth in the prophetical history of the patriarch Joseph.

17. He sent a man before them, even Joseph, who was sold for a servant; 18. Whose feet they hurt with fetters; he was laid in iron.

Joseph and Jesus were both envied, hated, and sold by their brethren; both suffered by a false accusation; the former was laid in irons, the latter crucified, and confined in the prison of the grave, fast bound with the bands of death. The wickedness of man, in working its own will, did unwittingly accomplish the counsels of God. "As for

you," saith Joseph to his brethren, Gen. 1. 20. “ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good, to bring to pass, as it is this day, to save much people alive." And how doth St. Peter address the brethren of that other Joseph? "Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain-And now, brethren, I wot that through ignorance ye did it-But those things which God before had showed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled." Acts ii. 23, and iii. 17.

19. Until the time that his word came: the word of the LORD tried him.

Joseph continued in prison, "until the time that his word, or cause, 77, came" before the king, and was "known," according to our old translation; or, "until his word," or prediction concerning the chief butler's promotion "came to pass;" for this was the means of Joseph's enlargement and justification; since a person, guilty of the crime with which he stood charged, would not have been inspired to foretel future events. "Can we find," said Pharaoh, "such an one as this is, a man in whom the Spirit of God is ?" Gen. xli. 38. In the mean time, the "word," commandment, or decree, ns, "of the LORD tried him" in the furnace of affliction, there refining and preparing him for his approaching exaltation to glory and honour. Thus was there a time appointed for the abode of Jesus in the grave, at the expiration of which, all his promises and predictions were fulfilled: He came forth, "made perfect through sufferings," and ready to "enter into his glory."

10. The king sent and loosed him; even the ruler of the people, and let him go free. 21. He made

him lord of his house, and ruler of all his substance; 22. To bind his princes at his pleasure, and teach his senators wisdom.

The circumstances of Joseph's advancement, here alluded to, are related, Gen. xli. &c. Those of our Lord's resurrection and glorification afford a marvellous parallel. At the determined hour, "The king" of heaven "sent" his angel, "and loosed him" from the bands of death; "the Ruler of the world let him go free" from the penalty which He had undertaken to pay, and had now fully paid. "He made him lord of his house," the church, "and ruler of all his substance" in heaven and in earth, that He might, by his holy discipline, bind princes at his pleasure," and by his Gospel "teach" true "wisdom" to the "senators" and politicians of the world; He was clothed with the robes of majesty, He was adorned with all the ensigns of royalty, and to Him it was ordained that every knee should bow." The storehouses of grace and salvation were opened; the nations came to be supplied by Him with the bread of life; and we look for that happy day when the Jews shall do the same, and "Joseph shall be made known to his brethren."

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23. Israel also came into Egypt; and Jacob sojourned in the land of Ham. 24. And he increased his people greatly; and made them stronger than their enemies.

25. He turned their heart to hate his people, to deal subtilely with his servants.

The Psalmist now exhibiteth to our view a fresh scene of tribulation and affliction, which occasioned repeated mercies, and a new deliverance. Israel, by means of Joseph, obtained an establishment in Egypt. But in process of time, the increase and prosperity of Israel excited the envy and jealousy of Egypt, and brought on a persecution. The kind

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