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Wherefore served the large tributes of foreign nations? How did he make silver to be in Jerusalem as stones, if the exactions were so pressive? The multitude is ever prone to pick quarrels with their governors; and whom they feared alive, to censure dead. The benefits of so quiet and happy a reign are passed over in silence; the grievances are recounted with clamour. Who can hope that merit or greatness can shield him from obloquy, when Solomon is traduced to his own loins?

The proposition of Israel puts Rehoboam to a deliberation; "Depart ye for three days, then come again to me." I hear no other word of his that argued wisdom: not to give sudden resolutions in cases of importance was a point might well beseem the son of Solomon. I wonder that he, who had so much wit as to call for leisure in his answer, should show so little wit in the improving of that leisure, in the return of that answer. Who cannot but hope well, to see the grey heads of Solomon's secret council called to Rehoboam's cabinet? As counsellors, as ancient as Solomon's, they cannot choose but see the best, the safest course for their new sovereign: they had learned of their old master, that "A soft answer appeaseth wrath;" wisely therefore do they advise him, "If thou wilt be a servant to this people this day, and speak good words to them, they will be thy servants for ever." It was an easy condition, with one mouthful of breath to purchase an everlasting homage; with one gentle motion of his tongue, to bind all people's hearts to his allegiance for ever. Yet, as if the motion had been unfit, a new council table is called. Well might this people say, What will not Rehoboam grudge us, if he think much to give good words for a kingdom? There is not more wisdom in taking variety of advice, where the matter is doubtful, than folly when it is plain. The young heads are consulted; this very change argues weakness; some reason might be pleaded for passing from

the younger council to the aged; none for the contrary. Age brings experience; and it is a shame, if with the ancient be not wisdom. Youth is commonly rash, heady, insolent, ungoverned, wedded to will, led by humour, a rebel to reason, a subject to passion, fitter to execute than to advise. Green wood is ever shrinking and warping, whereas the well-seasoned holds a constant firmness. Many a life, many a soul, many a flourishing state hath been ruined by undisciplined monitors; such were these of Rehoboam, whose great stomach tells them, that this conditionating of subjects was no other than an affront to their new master, and suggest to them, how unfit it is for majesty to brook so saucy a treaty; how requisite and princely to crush this presumption in the egg. As scorning therefore to be braved by the base vulgar, they put words of greatness and terror in their new prince; "My little finger shall be thicker than my father's loins; my father made your yoke heavy, I will add to your yoke. My father hath chastised you with whips, I will chastise you with scorpions." The very words have stings: now must Israel needs think, How cruel will this man's hands be, when he thus draws blood with his tongue! Men are not wont to speak out their worst. Who can endure the hopes of him that promiseth tyranny? There can be no good use of an indefinite profession of rigour and severity; fear, is an unsafe guardian of any state, much less of an unsettled: which was yet worse, not the sins of Israel were threatened, nor their purses, but their persons; neither had they desired a remission of justice, but of exactions; and now they hear of nothing but burdens, and scourges, and scorpions.

Here was a prince and people well met: I do not find them sensible of aught, save their own profit ; they do not say, religion was corrupted in the shutting up of thy father's days; idolatry found the free favour of priests, and temples, and sacrifices. Begin thy reign with God; purge the church, demolish

those piles of abomination, abandon those idol-mongers, restore devotion to her purity. They are all for their penny, for their ease. He, on the other side, is all for his will, for an imperious sovereignty, without any regard either of their reformation or satisfaction: they were worthy of load, that cared for nothing but their backs; and he worthy of such subjects, who professed to affect their misery and torment.

Who would not but have looked any whither for the cause of this evil, rather than to heaven? Yet the holy God challenges it to himself; the cause was from the Lord, that he might perform his saying by Ahijah the Shilonite to Jeroboam. As sin is a punishment of sin, it is a part of justice: the Holy One of Israel doth not abhor to use even the grossest sins to his own just purposes. While our wills are free to our own choice, his decrees are as necessary as just; Israel had forsaken the Lord, and worshipped Astaroth the goddess of the Sidonians, and Chemosh, and Milcom: God owes them and Solomon a whipping; the forwardness of Rehoboam shall pay it them. I see Jeroboam's plot, the people's insolence, the young men's misadvice, the prince's unreasonable austerity meeting together, through the wise providence of the Almighty, unwittingly to accomplish his most just decree. All these might have done otherwise, for any force that was offered to their will; all would no more do otherwise, than if there had been no predetermination in heaven; that God may be magnified in his wisdom and justice, while man wittingly perisheth in his folly.

That three days' expectation had warmed these smoking Israelites, and made them ready for a combustion; upon so peremptory a resolution of rigour, the flame bursts out, which all the waters of the well of Bethlehem could never quench. The furious multitude flies out into a desperate revolt; "What portion have we in David? Neither have we inheritance

in the son of Jesse. To your tents, O Israel; now, see to thine own house, David."

How durst these seditious mouths mention David in defiance? One would have thought that very name had been able to have tempered their fury, and to have contained them within the limits of obedience. It was the father of Rehoboam, and the son of David, that had led Israel into idolatry; Solomon hath drawn contempt upon his father, and upon his son. If Israel have cast off their God, is it marvel that they shake off his anointed? Irreligion is the way to disobedience; there can be no true subjection, but out of conscience; they cannot make conscience of civil duties, who make none of divine.

In vain shall Rehoboam hope to prevail by his officer, when himself is rejected. The persons of princes carry in them characters of majesty; when their presence works not, how should their message? If Adoram solicit the people too late with good words, they answer him with stones. Nothing is more untractable and violent than an enraged multitude. It was time for Rehoboam to betake himself to his chariot; he saw those stones were thrown at him in his Adoram. As the messenger suffers for his master, so the master suffers in his messenger. Had Rehoboam been in Adoram's clothes, this death had been his; only flight can deliver him from those that might have been subjects; Jerusalem must be his refuge against the conspiracy of Shechem.

Blessed be God for lawful government: even a mutinous body cannot want a head. If the rebellious Israelites have cast off their true sovereign, they must choose a false: Jeroboam, the son of Nebat, must be the man. He had need be skilful, and sit sure, that shall back the horse which hath cast his rider. Israel could not have anywhere met with more craft and courage than they found in this leader.

Rehoboam returns to Jerusalem lighter by a crown.

than he went forth; Judah and Benjamin stick still fast to their loyalty: the example of a general rebellion cannot make them unfaithful to the house of David: God will ever reserve a remnant free from the common contagion. Those tribes, to approve their valour no less than their fidelity, will fight against their brethren for their prince, and will hazard their lives to reduce the crown to the son of Solomon. A hundred and fourscore thousand of them are up in arms, ready to force Israel to their denied subjection. No noise sounded on both parts but military; no man thought of anything but blood; when suddenly God sends his prophet to forbid the battle, Shemaiah comes with a message of cessation: "Ye shall not go up, nor fight against your brethren the children of Israel: return every man to his house; for this thing is from me, saith the Lord." The word of one silly prophet dismisses these mighty armies: he that would not lay down the threats of his rigour, upon the advice of his ancient counsellors, will lay down his sword upon the word of a seer. Shall we envy

or shame to see how much the prophets of the Old Testament could do: how little those of the New? If our commission be no less from the same God, the difference of success cannot go away unrevenged.

There was yet some grace in Rehoboam, that he would not spurn against that which God challenged as his own work. Some godless ruffian would have said, Whosoever is the author, I will be revenged on the instruments. Rehoboam hath learned this lesson of his grandfather, "I held my peace, because thou, Lord, hast done it." If he might strive with the multitude, he knew it was no striving with his Maker: quietly therefore doth he lay down his arms, not daring, after that prohibition, to seek the recovery of his kingdom by blood.

Where God's purposes are hid from us, we must take the fairest ways of all lawful remedies; but where God hath revealed his determinations, we

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