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A13529 Christ revealed: or The Old Testament explained A treatise of the types and shadowes of our Saviour contained throughout the whole Scripture: all opened and made usefull for the benefit of Gods Church. By Thomas Tailor D.D. late preacher at Aldermanbury. Perfected by himselfe before his death. Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632.; Jemmat, William, 1596?-1678. 1635 (1635) STC 23821; ESTC S118150 249,193 358

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behaviours as the fame of your sweet savour goes forth in the Church of God to which I doubt not but this Treatise will be the more welcome because of your worthy name prefixed It is an Orphane and the Widow desires it should be your Ward who in your love can best tender it and by your authority defend it sufficiently The God of heaven increase all heavenly graces and comforts in your noble heart abundantly and adde unto your dayes honours and blessings of all sorts till these shadowes flie away and the true Day-starre arise upon you in glory the hearty prayer of one who is and desires to be reckoned among Isleworth Iune 20. 1635. Your Wo truest friends in every good service WILLIAM IEMMAT TO THE CHRISTIAN READER I Have heard of a demurre made as though something were put forth under this Authors name which it none of his I assure thee in the word of a Minister that for the workes that have my Epistle prefixed and I heare of no other published with his name there is not one note nor notion which is not the Authors owne according to his papers And the like I affirme concerning this Treatise of Types which now I publish The use of it is manifold To open divers places of Scripture To shew the meaning of legall shadows and ceremonies To declare the faith of the Elders who received a good report To manifest our faith one with theirs one faith one Lord one Baptisme one salvation To magnifie and commend Christ to every soule that it may be saved and he honoured To discerne and bewaile the blindnesse of Gods ancient people the Iewes and pray for their returne to the truth not catching at shadowes Of whom in present I may say with detestation of their madnesse as he said against the Philosophers Nos qui non habitu c. Wee Christians whose excellencie stands not in outward things but spirituall glorie that we have found what they with all their diligence have sought and could not finde Why are we unthank●full Why doe we stand in our owne light if the truth of the Deitie hath in this our age attained to maturitie Let us enjoy and make use of our owne good and follow the truth in truth avaunt superstition be packing all impietie let true religion be preserved and flourish Yet withall seeing there is a promise that all Israel shall be saved let us pray for the performance and that with all earnestnesse as that converted Iew gave exhortation to his sonne So long poure forth thy prayers for the remnant of Israel till God looke from his high habitation and see and have mercy on his people for the Lords sake his Anointed that in our daies Iudah may be saved and the children of Israel may dwell safely in their owne land and spend their daies in good the Lord making his good Spirit to rest upon them William Jemmat A Table of the Contents of this Treatise I. THe Introduction containing five Propositions of the Church salvation covenāt of grace Christ the anciēt ceremonies p. 1 Five reasons for those ceremonies 2 Grace in the New Testament specially how 3 Ceremonies called shadowes for foure reasons 4 Threefold use of them to the Iews 5 Gods wisedom in appointing them three wayes ibid. II. The Treatise shewing Christ prefigured by holy persons and things 5 I. Adam a type of Christ in creation office soveraignty conjugation propagation 6 The Ministery reverend for antiquitie 8 Antiquity of the doctrine of free grace ibid. Seeke life by Christs death ibid. Get into Christ the second Adam as thou art surely of the first Motives 9 II. Noah a type for salvation righteousnesse preaching Arke repairing the world sacrifice of rest and a dove sent out of the Arke 10 Preserve integrity in the worst times 14 Sinnes which are signes of judgement approaching 15 Comfort to bee had in Christ our Noah 16 III. Melchizedek a type in Etymologie office originall excellency of person and Priesthood 17 Christ greater than Abraham 20 Comfort by Christ our Melchizedek ibid. We are blessed by our Melchizedek 21 By our Melchizedek the Church abides for ever 22 Excellencie of Christs Priesthood above the Leviticall eight waies ibid. Sin not to be accounted slight whose sacrifice is so costly 24 IV. Isaac a type in birth suffering offering escape marriage 24 A patterne of obedience in 5. things 28. Two rules 29 A type of our resurrection 31 Matter of sweet consolation 32 Look for helpe though the case bee desperate ibid. V. Joseph a type in his person actions passions advancement 33 No newes for good men to be hated for their excellencie 37 All sufferings of the godly come of God ordained and ordered 37 Comfort by Christ our Ioseph foure wayes 38 Do to Christ as Iosephs brethren to him 39 VI. Moses a type in person estate office suffering sundry actions 40 Our doctrine is of God 45 Be faithfull in doing thy office 46 Shew faith in the fruit of it contrary to foure sorts of men 47 Assurance of our resurrection 47 VII Joshua a type in saving calling miracles valour actions 48 A fearfull thing to be an enemy of the Church 51 Comfort in our salvation accomplished 52 Duties wee owe to Christ our Joshua 53 Conditions to be observed in going to heaven 53. Six 54 VIII Sampson a type in person condition actions sufferings stratagems victories 55 Iudge none by outward calamities 58 Strange meanes used by God for the Churches good 59 Our victorie stands in patience and passion 60 Fourefold comfort to Gods people ibid. In Gods cause contemne greatest perill and prepare for death approching 62 IX David a type in person vocation warres kingdome office Propheticall and Priestly 62 Enter upon no office without assistance of the Spirit A note of it 70 Christ the true King of the Church Nine wayes more excellent than David 71 How God brings his servants to honour 74 Church ever pestered with home-bred enemies 75 Comfort to the Church in 3. things 76 X. Salomon a type in person condition peace-making wisedome glory temple justice 77 Duties to Christ our Salomon two 83 Fourefold comfort in our Salomon 84 XI Jonah a type in name office death buriall resurrection 85 Repent at the Ministery of Christs servants 87. Motives 88. Vocation of the Gentiles 89 Our resurrection assured to us 89 Power and wisedome of God to bee admired 90 Terror of sin euen in Gods own children and comfort 91 XII The First-borne types as Gods peculiar fathers of the family preferred before brethren double portion 92 Every mercy is the greater engagement unto God 95 Honour Christ as the first-borne of God and how 96 Threefold comfort in the birthright 97 Forfeit not the birthright by sin 98 Resemble Christ our elder brother 99 XIII Priests types in deputation to office and execution choice consecration apparell actions 100 A cover for us in Christ for all deformities of soule and body
caused So Christ was the cause of those Ceremonies and more excellent then they 2. As the shadow representeth the shape of the body with the actions and motions So those rites and Ceremonies resemble Christ in all his actions passions motions as after we are to heare 3. As the shadow is but an obscure resemblance in respect of the body So the Ministery of the old Testament in rites and Ceremonies is a darke representation of the body namely Christ and his spirituall worship 4. As the body is solid firme and of continuance even when the shadow is gone So the Ceremonies as shadowes are flowen away but Christ the body and his true worship lasteth for ever In all which Christ and his grace are advanced as the publisher and perfecter of our salvation without any shadowes whereas of the Law it is sad It made nothing perfect Heb. 7. 19. III. Those Ceremonies were not given to merit remission of sinnes by them nor to appease Gods anger nor to bee an acceptable worship by the worth of the worke done nor to justifie the observer but to shew justification by Iesus Christ the truth and substance of them to bee types of him pointing at him in whom the Father is pleased to bee Allegories and resemblances of the benefits of Christ exhibited in the new Testament to bee testimonies of the promise and Covenant on Gods part to be Sacraments and seales of faith on the part of the beleeving Iew exciting and confirming his faith in the Messiah IV. God would have this heape of Ceremonies 1. As bonds and sinewes of the ministery and publike meetings in which the voice of the promised seed and the sound of wholsome and saving doctrine might bee preserued in the Church and propagated to posterity 2. To be externall signes of their profession by which God would have his Church distinct from all nations of the earth 3. To be to the unbeleeving Jewes an externall discipline to bridle them and an exercise to frame them at least in externall conversation to the Policy and Commonwealth of Moses for else they must be cut off and excluded V. Gods wisedome in appointing these Ceremonies 1. Appointed a certaine observation of the line and tribe whence the Messiah should come according to the promise 2. Enjoined a certaine provision for the Ministery which had no certaine part of the land allotted to them 3. That the poore might be so provided for as that there might not be a beggar in Israel The former propositions and reasons being delivered by way of Preface wee now come to shew that which our Text properly calleth for that is wherein or how Christ is the truth of those figures and the body of those shadowes of the Ceremoniall Law Christ was figured in the old Testament by holy Persons and by holy Things Of the most holy and eminent Persons who were figures of Christ I wil propound some instances CHAP. II. 1. Adam a type of Christ. THe first of them is the first Adam who was so lively a representation of Christ as that Christ is often called the second Adam Rom. 5. 14. Adam was a figure of him that was to come Wee will gather the resemblances betweene them into foure generall heads I. In respect of Creation 1. Both of them were Sons of God the one by eternall generation the other by grace of Creation 2. Both were Men Adams redde earth the first in his matter the second not in his matter only but also in his bloody passion 3. Both were Sons of one Father and both men but of no man their father neither of them having any other father but God 4. Both created in the Image of God the former Gen. 1. 27. the latter the ingraven forme of his Fathers person Heb. 1. 3. 5. Both endowed with perfect wisdome and knowledge the first Adam so wise as that he gave fit names to all Creatures according to their natures in the second Adam dwelt treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2. 3. 6. Both possessed of a most happy and innocent estate in which the one had power to persever but not will the other had both power and will 7. The first Adam was made in the sixth day of the weeke to the Image of God the second Adam towards the sixth age of the world appearing to restore that Image which the first Adam quickly lost II. In respect of office and soveraignty 1. The first Adam was owner of Paradise the heire of the world soveraigne Lord of all the Creatures to whom they came for their names the second Adam is Lord of heaven as well as earth heire of the outmost bounds of the earth Psal. 2. 8. Commander of all Creatures whom the windes and seas obey whose word the divels tremble at and he keepes his soveraignty which the first Adam lost 2. Adam was appoynted to keepe the Garden and dresse it Gen. 2. 15. Christ the second Adam was set apart to sanctifie and save his Church the Garden and Paradise of God Eph. 5. 26. 3. Adam was King Priest and Prophet in his family so is Christ in the Church the family and houshold of faith Rev. 1. 5. As Adam was the first Minister of the word in the Church delivering the promise of the blessed seed with certaine rites Ceremonies to his children and they to their posterity So the second Adam is the chiefe Prophet and Doctor of his Church who alwaies prescribed the pure worship of God for matter and manner in the Churches of all ages III. In respect of Conjugation 1. Adam sleeping Eve is formed Christ dying the Church is framed Eve is taken out of Adams side while he sleepes out of the second Adams side while he was in the sleepe of death issueth the Church 2. Eve was no sooner framed but as a pure and innocent spouse she was delivered by God to Adam yet in innocency so God the Father delivered the Church as a chaste innocent spouse to be married to the second Adam for ever to be bone of his hone and flesh of his flesh 3. Of Eve marryed to Adam he receives both a Cain and an Abel into his house so the second Adam hath in his visible Church both elect and reprobates sound and hypocrites as by many Parables is signified as of the field the net c. IIII. In respect of propagation 1. Both of them are rootes both have a posterity and seed Isa. 53. 10. 2. Both of them convey that they have unto their posterity Rom. 5. 12. 14. As by the first Adam sinne and by sinne death came over all men so by the second Adam came righteousnesse and by righteousnesse life on all beleevers and herein especially was the first Adam a figure of him that was to come 3. As the first Adam merited death for all his posterity so the second Adam life for all his Application followes I. To note the honour and antiquity of
the Ministery which not the first Adam onely but the second also exercised Dispise at thy perill what they so honoured thinke it too base for thy selfe to attend for thy sonnes to intend Neither the first Adam Lord of the earth nor the second Adam Lord of Heaven and earth did so II. To note the antiquity and authority of the doctrine of free grace by the merit of the Messiah which both the first and second Adam taught neither of them ever dreamed of the doctrine of workes and humane merits What Adam learned of God in Paradise hee taught to his posterity what his posterity heard of him the same they delivered and left to their children but they never heard nor taught any other way to salvation but by the promised seed so also what the Disciples heard of the second Adam that they taught to the Churches but they heard the same of him Act. 4. 12. And our doctrine being the same with theirs is not new but more ancient then any other For as this is the honour of all truth to be before error and falshood so of this truth to have precedency of all truths It truely pleadeth antiquity therefore verity III. In that the Church comes out of Christs side being in the sleepe of death as Eve out of Adams hee sleeping wee learne to seeke our life in Christs death That death should be propagated by the sinne of the first Adam was no marvaile but that life by the death of the second is an admired mystery Here is the greatest work of Gods power fetched out of his contrary of ranke poyson a soveraigne remedy by the most skilfull Physitian of hearts Let the Jewes scorne a crucified God and refuse the life offered by a dead man they know not the Scriptures nor the power of God who can and doth command light out of darknesse life out of death all things out of nothing How easily can ●e repayre all things out of any thing who can fetch and frame all things out of nothing He is of power to make of clay and spittle fit to put out the sight a remedy to restore sight He can as easily save a world by the death of his Son as multiply a world by the sleepe of Adam IV. Labour to bee ingrafted into the second Adam that as thou hast borne the image of the earthly so thou maist beare the image of the heavenly 1. Cor. 15. 49. 1. Because the second Adam repayres whatsoever we lost in the first By the first wee are enemies to God by the second wee are reconciled to him By the first wee all dye by the second wee are all made alive 1. Cor. 15. 22. By the first we are left to Sathans power by the second wee are guided by the Spirit of God By the first we lost all the Creatures by the second we are restored to the holy use of thē all By the first a necessity of death is brought in Heb. 9. 27. it is appoynted for all men once to dye and then commeth judgement but by the second wee have a recovery of the blessing of immortality and life Whatsoever the first Adam brings into the world by sinne the second carryes out by his righteousnesse 2. Because by Christ the truth wee recover more then we lost or ever should have had by the Type For so the Apostle Rom. 5. 16. the gift by the second Adam hath exceeded the offence of the first That as the first Adam by eating the forbidden fruit hath powred all evill into the soules and bodies of all men though they eate not of the forbidden tree So the second Adam by regeneration is made righteousnesse to those who had wrought no righteousnesse and powred all good things into the soules and bodies of his members The first Adam by sinne helps us into misery but the second Adam not onely helps us out of misery but advanceth us to the highest dignity to be of sonnes of wrath sons of God brethren of Christ members of his body heires of the kingdome of heaven By Adams sinne we are all driven out of Paradise an earthly pleasure in which wee should have enjoyed an inconstant happinesse but by Christ we are brought into the heavenly Paradise our Fathers house By Adams sinne we become unjust but by Christs holinesse we are not just onely but sanctified graced confirmed glorified into whom by faith we come to be ingrafted CHAP. III. 2. Noah a type of Christ 7. waies THe second instance is Noah a manifest type of the true Noah and that in seven respects I. Both were fore-prophesied of to be Saviours Gen. 5. 29. Lamech begat a son and called his name Noah saying This shall comfort us concerning our workes and sorrow and curse of the earth therefore he called him by a name signifying ceasing or rest So of Christ Mat. 1. 21. thou shalt call his name Iesus for he shall save his people He shall be the true Noah that shall cause Gods wrath to cease and bring the afflicted soule to true rest and tranquillity II. Both are said to be just and perfect both said to walke with God and both to find grace and favour with God 1. Noah was just in his generation So was Christ have nothing to do with that just man saith Pilates Wife Mat. 27. 19. But with difference Noahs righteousnesse was imputed being righteousnesse of faith Heb. 11. 7. Christs was inherent a righteousnesse of nature person and heart 2. Noah was a perfect and upright man Gen. 6. 9. that is not defiled with Idolatry false religion opinions or externall crimes but Christ was perfect simply and absolutely Noah but comparatively Noah was perfect but in part Christ perfectly perfect Christ Legally Noah Evangelically Noah perfect by the perfection of another Christ by his owne Noah perfect because without open crime Christ being without sinne 3. Both walking with God found grace with God Noah Gen. 6. 8. Christ Luke 2. 40. 52. But Noah found grace by acceptation and imputation Christ by compleat merit and satisfaction Christ found grace by his owne perfection and justice but Noah cloathed with Christs III. Both of them were Preachers of righteousnesse But Christ preached his owne doctrine Noah Christs Both invited unto repentance Both called men to avoid the Judgement to come Both lived and preached in a most corrupt age when there was a generall defection both in doctrine and manners Both their Ministeries were despised and that despight of both fearefully revenged the one by water the other by fire and sword both by utter desolation as the like never heard of before IV. Both of them makers of an Arke and Masters of it But Noah of a materiall Christ of a spirituall the Church Noah to save sinners from the deluge of waters temporall Christ to save sinners from the deluge of Gods wrath eternall In the making of their Arkes they are very like 1.
the same commandement to the young man and to the disciples of leaving all and following him it is an impossible taske to the one yet in his naturall estate but an easie yoke to the other who with the commandement receive some secret power to draw them to obedience Let the word command an angry furious naturall man to forgive his neighbour that wrongs him and blesse him that curseth him and doe good for evill and recompence love for hatred Oh this is an impossible commandement and flesh and blood cannot possibly brooke it and indeed he must be more then flesh and blood that can heare it hee must have a spirit subduing his will unto the will of God Let God speake as hee did to Abraham to a man unconverted Offer me up now not thy sonne but thy sin thy deare lusts thy Usury thy revenge swearing lying thy Herodias thy Dalilah thy darling thy pride take the knife into thy hand and with thine owne hands kill it sacrifice it let out the life blood of it Oh what grutching gainsaying rising up against the word and him by whom God commandeth Every naturall mans sin is his Isaac his childe his best beloved his joy and laughter hee cannot spare him hee cannot part with him Though the Lord bee in never so great haste and earnest they bee not so hasty as to rise up with Abraham early in the morning to offer up their sinnes a plaine evidence that as yet their nature was never changed but they are in their sinnes Rule II. In dangerous and difficult or costly commandements propp up thy faith with consideration of Gods power and truth So did Abraham in this difficult commandement when hee might have considered of a thousand strong hinderances he strengthened his faith by this Heb. 11. 19. hee considered that God was able to raise him up even from the dead whence after a sort hee received him Thus he supported his faith in that word of promise Rom. 4. 20 21. hee considered not Sarahs dead body but was fully assured that God whom hee beleeved who quickeneth the dead verse 17. who had promised was also able to doe it These two props upheld him even the full assurance of Gods truth in promises and power in performing them In duties of apparant danger the casting an eye on Gods truth and power will bring them forward else they never come on Dan. 3. 17. Our God is able to deliver us and hee will but if not c. So in the time of danger and deepe distresse cast thy selfe on the might and truth of God who quickneth the dead who can say to the dead live and they shall live In duties chargeable if thy obedience must cost thee some part or the whole of thy estate looke on Gods power and goodnesse So the Prophet to Amaziah 2. Chron. 25. 9. what shall we doe for the hundreth talents The Lord is able to give thee more then this Object But I know not whether he will Sol. Faith assures it selfe there is never any losse in obeying God It knows the way to keepe Isaac is to give up Isaac It hath a promise whosoever forsaketh house lands c. for Christ hee shall have an hundreth fold II. In both we have a notable type of our resurrection Isaac was raised the third day as from the dead but Christ indeed raised not as Isaac for himselfe but as an head for his body and members Which assureth us 1. That wee shall rise out of all pety deaths and dangers for our head is aboue water Though the billowes of afflictions inward and outward may rinse us and run over us yet they shall not drowne us because our head is aloft They may threaten and affright us but shall not drowne and destroy us we shall wade out well enough because they can never goe over our head any more 2. That we shall at the last day rise from all the death of mortality and corruption in which argument the Apostle is large to proove that because Christ the head is risen the members must also rise againe 1. Cor. 15. 12. For 1. Can or will a living and powerfull head be alwayes dismembred and sundred from the body 2. Because Christ rose not as a private person as Isaac did but as the first fruits of them that slept verse 20. 3. Because Christ in his resurrection is opposed to the first Adam verse 21 For as by the first Adam comes death on all so by the second Adam resurrection from the dead This is a sure propp and stay against all the miseries and occurrences of this life and against the bitternesse of death and horrour of the grave that we are assured of a better resurrection else were wee of all men most miserable verse 19. III. A sweet consolation God watched every motion in both these Isaacs offering how farre Abraham should goe how long to the lifting up of the knife and where he should stay and when was fit to say doe the boy no hurt So hee watched the executioners the crucifiers how farre they should proceed with Christ but stayed them from breaking his bones and kept him from seeing corruption So when Gods time and terme is come the affliction and afflicter shall goe no farther a voice at length shall come and say Stay thy hand doe him no hurt IV. Both were delivered but not till the third day the one when the knife was up the other being dead and hopelesse at least in the account of men as appeared by the words of the disciples which were going to Emmaus Hence wee learne to make this use for the strengthening of our faith Then to looke for helpe and deliverance when the case is desperate and in humane sence we are gone There is life in this comfort which assureth us of life even in death as Hos. 6. 2. After two dayes he will revive us and in the third day he will raise us up and wee shall live in his sight In all wants and extremities let Abrahams voice to Isaac comfort thee God will provide If Isaac see Abrahams sword in the one hand and fire in the other ready to deuoure him yet a little while and the sword shall bee put up and the fire shall take another object So the faithfull sonnes of Abraham seeing God the Fathers sword of justice drawne against them and the fire of his fury ready to consume them yet at length shall see by Christ the sword put up and the fire of wrath turned againe into a flame of love and grace Faith hath a cheerefull voice God will prouide Unbeleefe is full of repinings and murmurings Oh how should I be prouided for in this or that I see no meanes c. Here the difference holds which was betweene the ten spies and the two Num. 13. If thou see not the meanes for thy deliverance goe to the Mountaine there is a Ramme for Isaac hasten thy obedience and God
have seene expresse types of Christ The second generall head ensueth which is to speake of holy things All which in the old Testament and Jewish policy did especially aime at and point out Christ after a farre clearer manner then did the former And therefore for the confirming of our faith in the new Covenant we must goe on to shew the correspondence and agreement of the Scriptures in both Testaments And that Christ is the same in both and the faith of beleevers the same in substance onely differing in the maner of exhibition and publication A man that superficially lookes over the bookes of Moses and sees so great an heape of ceremonies and ordinances would wonder what the Lord meant to enjoine so many and as reason would judge so needlesse institutions to his owne people of which they can make nothing by cursory scarse by considerate reading And hence whereas the Jews were so superstitiously observant of the bookes of Moses as that they had at their fingers ends a great number not of the precepts onely but of the letters and pricks of every booke and chapter Christians unlesse it be in point of history almost reject the books of Moses not for their credit and truth but for their utility and use as not touching them But to him that readeth and considereth will appeare 1. How truely our Saviour affirmeth Ioh. 5. 46. that Moses wrot● of him partly by promises and prophecies and partly describing him in figures and shadows so as had the Jews beleeved Moses they had also beleeved in him But rejecting Moses not in the generall for generally they beleeved him and magnified him as their greatest Prophet but in the speciall prophecies and promises concerning the individuall person of Christ therefore they could not beleeve in Jesus Christ. 2. How aptly and wisely the most wise God did accommodate himselfe to this people in loding them with so many burdensome ceremoniall constitutions and yet not one of them in vaine For 1 Consider the nature of the people it was rude and dull and needed corporall and externall elements and rudimen●s to helpe them Besides it was not onely naturally superstitious and addicted to idolatry but had lived some Centuries of yeares in Egypt and was infected with Egyptian rites And further they were now to goe into the land of the Canaanites and were in danger to learne their fashions Deut. 4. 16 And therefore the Lord would prescribe to their whole life both in sacred and civill things abundance of Ceremonies whereby their senses should be exercised their faith excited their obedience preserved and themselves restrained from devising on their owne heads or appointing to themselves any other worship or forme of service then that of the Lords owne prescribing which should find them worke enough and take up their minds sufficiently 2. If we looke on the many kinds of rites and ordinances and compare them with the many ends which the Lord had in ordaining them we shall conclude none of them were idle or superfluous For 1. God would haue the glory of Christs Kingdome shadowed and his owne religion gloriously propounded and reverently received not exposed to any contempt and therefore appoints the erection and sanctification of a stately Tabernacle with all the costly vessells and holy persons garments 2. He would traine up that people in piety and stirre up in their hearts an earnest sence of sinne and hunger after mercy and this hee will doe by appointing so many kinds of sacrifices and rites about them 3. He would frame them to purity and sanctimony of heart and life and will helpe them hereto by the many lavers purifications cleansings and sanctifications of which wee have heard in part 4. Hee would nourish naturall love among his people and for this end appoints many feasts meat and drinke offerings and many solennities to appeare and rejoice before God 5. Hee would have them testifie their thankfulnesse for his great bounty and acknowledge themselves homagers as was fit And therefore ordaines a number of oblations first fruits tithes vowes first-borne and many moe institutions to testifie their gratitude 6. Many of Gods great works must bee held in their eyes and must not bee suffered to slip out of memory And for this purpose served many of those institutions as Deut. 6. 20. when thy sonne shall aske thee in time to come c. For this end the Passeover must bee yearely celebrated Exo. 12. 14. Ch. 13. 14. So also the feast of Tabernacles Levit. 23. 42 43. 7. The Lord so ordered as the Jewes could not cast their eyes any way within doores or without but some shadow or other should meet them and preach unto them either Christ or some grace by Christ or some duty unto Christ. In the fields they had first fruits first borne of cattell In their houses the lintels must have the Law written In their bodies Circumcision was a teacher on their cloathes fringes If at their tables choyce of meats If on their children the first borne a type of Christ. So for times places and the rest But that wee may propound to our selves some good order and familiar method in which we must bound our discourse We must know that all the holy things in the old Testament poynting at Christ were 1. Substantiall 2. Circumstantiall Substantiall are such as concerne the parts and substance of Gods worship Circumstantial are such as concern some inferior things about that worship The former may be referred to two heads 1. Sacraments 2. Sacrifices The difference In Sacramēts we see God giving us all good things in Jesus Christ In Sacrifices we present all our duty to God by Jesus Christ. Now for the Sacramēts of the old new Testamēt in general we must in one word know that they are outward signes seales and confirmations of Gods word and promise of grace For the Lord knowing and tendring the weaknesse of man would informe him of his good will and pleasure two waies 1. He would speake to his minde and understanding by his word and promise 2. to his outward sences by externall signes and Sacraments called by some of the Fathers visible words He is not contented by his word to declare his will but also by Sacraments to witnesse and signe that word for our more full instruction If before the fall he covenanteth by his word life upon condition of works hee addeth a twofold signe to the sences of Adam the tree of life and the tree of knowledge If after the fall he give a promise of the blessed seed Gen. 3. 15. he enjoyneth to Adam outward sacrifices and signes of that his word If to antient beleevers before Christ he promise deliverance from sinne death and hell on condition of faith in the Messiah to come he sealeth up this promise by two standing Sacraments Circumcision and the Passeover If to beleevers of the new Testament he accomplish in his Sonne all
the blood of this red cow he leads us to the blood of Christ saying If the blood of bulls and goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling them that are uncleane sanctifieth as touching the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ purge your conscience from dead workes wherein he not onely compareth but infinitely advanceth the truth above the type For 1. that was symbolicall and figurative this spirituall and substantiall 2. that was externall and temporary this internall and eternall 3. that onely a purifying of the flesh this of the Spirit and conscience 4. that cleansed from legall and bodily pollution this from morall called dead works 1. because they proceed from death of sinne 2. because they lead to eternall death For the explaining of this ordinance consider foure things 1. whence the Cow must be 2. the properties or qualities 3. the actions about her 4. the use and end of it I. All the congregation must bring an heifer to Moses out of the heard 1. All the congregation for not one in the congregation but needs a meanes of purging 2. This meanes must be a Cow not an Oxe or Bull. The imbecillity of the sexe noteth the great humility of our Lord Jesus who being the mighty Lion of the tribe of Judah would so abase and weaken himselfe for our sakes 3. They must take her from the heard so our cleanser must be taken from among our selves being true and perfect man taking our nature and our flesh yea our infirmities as the weak sexe importeth in all things save sinne like unto us II. The properties required in this Cow are foure 1. She must be an heifer in her youth and strength Christ offers himselfe and must be taken for a sacrifice in the flower of his strength at three and thirty yeares He offers his best gifts and dyes in his strength and so his offering was more free and acceptable And wee also should offer up our youth strength best times and gifts to Jesus Christ who offered himselfe in his best strength to death for us 2. The Cow must be red Signifying 1. the truth of Christs humane nature being of the same red earth that the first Adams body was 2. the grievousnesse of sinne which he was to undertake and the scarlet staine of it 3. the bitter and bloody passion of Christ and his cruell death The red skin of the Cow resembled the red garments of Christ all besprinkled 1. With his owne blood 2. with the blood of his conquered enemies 3. presented unto his father like the coat of Ioseph all stained with blood 3. The Cow must be without spot or blemish to signifie the purity of our Lord Iesus in whom was never any spot or staine of sinne Though he was contented to be counted a sinner yet he was no sinner And though he had sinne on himselfe he had none in himselfe as the Cow was slain for sin not being sinfull Christ was ruddy through his passion yet most white and spotlesse by his most perfect and absolute righteousnesse She must be without yoke on which never yoke came signifying 1. that Christ not necessarily but voluntarily tooke our nature that he might free us from our yoke 2. his absolute freedome from all the yoke of sinne farther then he voluntarily undertooke the burthen of it 3. that he was never subject to the yoke of humane precepts and commandement being the Law-giver to prescribe Lawes to all not to receive Lawes from any 4. that none could compell him to suffer for sinne but his whole obedience active and passive was a freewill offering hee having power to lay downe his life and to take it up againe 5. he was more free from the yoke then any red heifer could be She indeed must be free in her selfe he not onely free in himselfe but he must free all beleevers from the yoke whom the sonne sets free they are free indeed III. The actions about the Cow were five ver 5. 1. Action 1. The congregation must deliver the Cow to be slaine so was Christ delivered to be slaine by the whole body of the Iews 2. She must not be delivered to Aaron but to Eleazer his successor signifying that the death of Christ serveth all the successions and ages of the Church and must be taught by the ministers of all ages 2. Action She must be led out of the Camp and there burnt whole to ashes her skin flesh blood and dung ver 5. Signifying 1. that Christ must be led out of the gate of Ierusalem to suffer Heb. 13. and there 2. must be crucified by which he was made a whole burnt offering 3. that whole Christ is our comfort his flesh our meate his blood our drinke yea the very base dung of those contumelies cast upon him were a part of his sacrifice offered up in the fire of his passion for us to sweeten and sanctifie ours 3. Action Eleazer must take of the blood with his finger and sprinkle towards the foreside of the Tabernacle of the assembly seven times ver 4. Signifying 1. the purging of us by the blood of Christ sprinkled on the conscience 2. that Christs death profits none to whom it is not specially applyed for the Cowes blood must be not shed onely but sprinkled 3. that onely the people and congregation of God have benefit of the death and blood of Christ for it was sprinkled directly before the Tabernacle 4. the seven times sprinkling noteth 1. that that one oblation hath vertue and merit enough 2. the perfection of justification 3. the need of often application of Christs death 4. the duration of it to all ages 4. Action She must bee burnt with Cedar wood scarlet lace and hysope all which must be cast into the fire with her ver 6. signifying 1. three things in Christ. 1. the Cedar of uncorrupt life 2. the scarlet of fervent love to mankinde 3. the hysope of savoury obedience in all things to his father all which were in all his sufferings and fire of his passion sweetning it 2. they noted three things arising from Christs sufferings 1. immortality signified by the Cedar which is not subject to putrefaction 2. the scarlet the merit of his blood applyed to justification 3. the hysope of mortification healing our corruptions as hysope hath an healing quality All these three properly arise from the passion of Christ. 5. Action A cleane person must gather the ashes of the heifer and lay them without the Campe in a clean place ver 9. signifying 1. the buriall of Christ in a cleane and new tombe wherein never man lay a cleane place never used before 2. that the merit of Christs death is ever laid before God in the highest and holiest heavens 3. the Christians account of Christs merit and passion who layeth them up as his chiefe treasure in the cleane place of a pure heart and conscience an onely fit closet to keep the mystery
beasts for sacrifice to offer to the Lord. Plainly signifying that Christ was to bee an Israelite and within the fold of Gods owne people for he was to be of the seed of Abraham and salvation was of the Jewes Ioh. 4. 22. Yea and the Lords owne Law requires that the King should bee taken from among his brethren Deut. 17. 15 and much more the King of the Church being King of all Kings Sect. VII II. Iesus Christ was as evidently expressed in the preparation of the Paschall Lamb wherin the Iews were tyed to sixe observations I. Observation The Lambe must be severed from the flocke ver 6 to signify Iesus Christ seperated by God the Father to the office of Mediator and that two waies 1. by Gods eternall decree hee was a chosen servant of God to the most excellent service in heaven and earth Isa. 42. 1 My elect servant And thus is called a lambe seperated from before the foundation of the world 1. Pet. 1. 20. 2. In due time actually seperated from all the rest of the flocke by 1. a supernaturall conception by the holy Ghost whereby he became an high Priest seperated from sinners all the rest of mankinde remaining sinners 2. by a miraculous birth of a Virgin being the seed of the woman 3. by an unconceivable union of the two natures divine and humane in one person by which he became our Immanuell God with us 4. by a solemne and heavenly inauguration into his office at the brinke of ●ordaine by which he was openly proclaimed the chiefe Doctor and Prophet of his Church Thus it became this lambe of God to be actually seperated from all the rest of the flock because for all the rest he was to pay a greater ransome and price then any other that could be found amongst all mankinde II. Observation The lambe thus seperated must be reserved and kept alive foure daies even from the tenth day of the first month till the fourteenth day of the same month ver 6 Wherein was signified the very particles of time of Christs both Ministery and passion 1. for his Ministery Christ must not bee sacrificed presently so soone as he is borne nor so soone as he is baptised and seperated but after that seperation must live about foure yeares to preach the kingdome of God and then be offered up that his death might not be as a seale to a blancke but might confirme all that holy doctrine delivered by his owne mouth and Ministery to the world 2. For his passion The time of it depended not on the will of man for his enemies sought many a time before to slay him as Herod in his infancy Mat. 2. 16. the Jewes tooke up stones to stone him Ioh. 8. 59 the Nazarites would breake his necke from an hill Luk. 4. 29. And many other attempts were made against his life but his time was not then come the lambe must be reserved foure daies And this very moment of time was determined and registred in Gods most certaine and unchangeable computation Act 2. 23. being delivered by the determinate counsell and foreknowledge of God Whose wisdome so ordered that 1. as the lambe was taken in the tenth day of the first month so Christ came into Ierusalem about the tenth day of the same month to suffer as appeares Ioh. 12. For upon the sixth day before his passion he came to Bethany ver 1. and the next day he went to Ierusalem which was the fifth day before his passion ver 12. 2. as the lambe must be slaine the fourteenth day of the first month which answereth to our March and at the full of the Moone So that no man might be deceived in our Paschall lambe he must be sacrificed at the Passeover the same day that the lambe must be slaine In the full Moone to note the fulnesse of time now come which was so long before appointed and in such a month as when light prevailes against darkenesse and every thing revives and springs to signifie that Christ by his suffering chaseth away our darkenesse and death and brings in light and life and a blessed spring of grace and glory III. Observation The Lambe must be slaine ver 6 signifying that Jesus Christ being as that Lambe of a yeare old in his vigour and strength who by reason of his age and strength might have lived longer must not onely dye but by a violent death and that by Israell Noting 1. that Christ must be put to death by the Jews 2. that the benefit and merit of his death redounds to his Church onely The Redeemer must come unto Zion Isa. 59. 20. Object How was hee then a lambe slaine from the beginning of the World before the Iewes were in beeing Sol. Two waies 1. in regard of Gods decree whereof a promulgation was made in promises and types and an acceptation as if it had beene already done 2. in regard of man He was slaine onely one time as to the act but in all times as to the fruit because the perpetuall power and efficacy of Christs sacrifice was begunne with the world and extended to all beleevers of all ages who onely diversly apprehend it IV. Observ. The lamb must be slain between two evenings 1. to put them in remembrance of their deliverance in Aegypt which was in the evening 2. to note that our Paschall lambe should be slaine towards the evening of the world that is in the last times Heb. 9. 26. 3. that Christs sacrifice was to succeed in the same time of their evening sacrifices which were daily to be offered Exod. 29. 41. and so to put end to them Dan. 12. 4. to note the very houre as well as the day of Christs suffering on the Crosse. To understand which we must know that the Jewes distinguished their artificiall day into foure parts From sixe to nine from nine to twelve from twelve to three from three to sixe This last part was counted the evening of the day and the next three houres the evening of the night In this fourth part of the day used the Paschall lamb to be slaine and the rest of and all their heaviest burthens 3. All that sprinkling of blood in their houses so long as they despise the blood of Jesus Christ shall never get them protection from the revenging Angel We must pray that God would please at length to remove their vaile from their hearts that they may submit themselves to the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10. 3 that so all Israel may bee saved by acknowledging the deliverer out of Zion of whom was prophecied Isai. 59. 20 That he shall turne away the ungodlinesse from Iacob Sect. III. III. The Paschall lamb directly aimed at Christ our true Passeover in respect of the blood and actions about it which were three 1. The blood of the lamb must be saved in a basen verse 22. It must not bee shed upon the ground to
night but this carefull eye of God shall watch to supply thee As in three instances 1. The godly passing through this wildernesse of this world although they be in Covenant with God as Israel was yet often are cast into the night of sinne and in this night they often nod and slip into a sounder sleepe of sinne sometimes then they thinke off but then this eye watcheth them that they sleepe not in death and so fall into extreame ruine For they being written on the palme of the Lords hand being as a signet upon his finger as a jewell on his heart and which is neerer as the apple of his eye he watcheth a season to waken them to raise them and erect them in faith to watchfulnesse and salvation 2. Many times the godly fall into the night of affliction and are cast into the darke of many deadly dangers which they should never by themselves be wound out off Now while they are thus surprised with a dead and dangerous sleep the Lord watcheth to prepare some meanes of evasion which they never dreame off How did the Lord watch over Jonah while he slept under hatches not dreaming of so present a danger Nay when he seemes dead and buried in the Whales belly as in a grave of silence how miraculously did the Lord watch to bring him to dry land as sound and safe as if he had beene kept in a strong castle How did the Lord watch Mordecai while he slept Hest. 6. 1. he slept but the King shall not sleepe till he have advanced Mordecai How did he watch over Peter Act. 12. 7. whilst he slept so fast in the night as scarce an Angell could waken him and brought him through the sleepie watch Our experience can tell us every morning how the Lord keepes our houses our selves without feare against robbers fires dangers in the night he makes us sleepe in safety and while we are helplesse naked sencelesse becomes a wall of protection round about us 3. In the night of death he gives not over his watch but watcheth the very bones of the Saints that in the morning of the resurrection they may mory fully enjoy Christ the true Manna and attaine a full measure and gomer and a perfect satiety and fulnesse of this sweet bread of life Psa. 17. 15. David calls it a satisfying with Gods Image when he shall awake Sect. V. III. See in this gift Gods bountifulnesse and freenesse to his Church in three things 1. He offers Israel Mannah without the asking seeking or buying it costs them nothing but gathering even so he offers us salvation by Jesus Christ while wee aske not after him He is found of them that seeke him not The first Adam runs away from Gods presence the second Adam runnes after him to seeke and recall him out of his bushes Now what desert or merit could there bee in the first Adam to be followed with grace in his flying from it And if there be none in him how come wee his posterity to more possibility to merit any thing but death more then he No here is no merit no buying of Mannah but onely a faithfull and thankfull acceptance of it 2. He raines it downe in abundance his hand is not short he opened the windowes of heaven and rained downe manna to eate Psal. 78. 24. For 1. It is for the honour of God to be bountifull and rich in mercies and to powre down his blessings upon his people 2. Israel needed daily abundance and store of mannah which need he is carefull to supply But oh what great goodnesse hath God stored for them that love him In his Sonne Jesus Christ he hath rayned downe bread of life the greatest arme and streame that ever flowed from that Ocean A mercy covering all the tents of beleevers A mercy that lets the true Mannah fall enough for a whole world of beleevers not on one Nation of Israel onely but on all the Nations of the world For he did not so then to any other Nation but now to all Nay in this mannah is a mercy not only covering the earth but a mountaine of mercy reaching to heaven 3. His hand is not weary but every morning le ts fall enough to feed and fill so many hundred thousands of mouths and bellies so the grace of God in Christ is an unweariable grace At he gave more mannah then all the Israelites were able to gather so he is more infinitely able to give then all beleevers are able to receive Hence wee may with David stirre up our selves to blesse the Lord that lodeth us with blessings daily IV. The wisdome of God in administring his mercy to his Church 1. In that he gives them Manna from heaven not from earth they cannot now expect an annuall harvest of corne from the earth but must expect every day an heavenly showre to bee fed by because the Lord will not have them fixe their eyes and sēces on earth but know they were now to live of Gods allowance and for their whole meanes depend on his hand Let it teach us Christians to lift up our eyes and sences from earth and earthly desires and affect that manna which is from heaven every day desire to be fed with some heavenly shower for the nourishment of the soule and preserving the life of grace in it Let it teach us to acknowledge the hand of our heavenly father in the gathering of the mannah and good things for our temporall life Hee is the father of lights from whom descendeth every good and perfect gift The Israelite must looke to heaven for every morsell of bread that hee puts in his mouth and shall the Christian as the swine eate up the mast and never looke up to the tree whence it falls II. In that hee gives them manna every day Hee might have given them an harvest of it once a yeere or hee might have rained it once a month but hee gives it daily To shew 1. that hee had undertaken for their daily maintenance whose continuall supplyes challenged the continuall dependance upon his providence 2. that they must bee content with daily bread 3. that it should bee a part of their calling and exercise in the wildernesse where other temporall businesse had they none Let us hence learn 1. to acknowledge Gods wisdome if he give us earthly manna and meanes but from hand to mouth he knows to supply it with true manna He allowes us to pray but for daily bread and if we have food and rayment we must be content 1 Tim. 6. 8. 2. to confine our cares within the day not so solicitous to lay up for many yeeres as the rich glutton Care not for to morrow that is inordinatly distrustfully 3. to take notice of our daily need of the true mannah whereof seeing God hath given us daily meanes wee must not erosse Gods wisdome to thinke the reading of Gods word once in a yeare or month or weeke