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A42016 The exposition continued upon the nineteen last chapters of the prophet Ezekiel with many useful observations thereupon delivered in several lectures in London / by William Greenhil. Greenhill, William, 1591-1671. 1662 (1662) Wing G1857; ESTC R30318 513,585 860

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can weep shed tears in abundance for losse of Relations Estates Favours of great Ones yet never wept for sin these have a natural tenderness not a spirituall Besides what may be gathered from what is said I shall give some Characters of a tender heart First It s sensible of the Churches and Saints afflictions it mourns for and with them a tender heart bleeds when it goes ill with Sion and the people of God When the men of Ai smote but thirty six Israelites how was Joshua affected with it He rent his clothes and fell to the earth upon his face before the Ark of the Lord untill the even tide Josh 7.6 You may read Ps 79. 80. how greatly David or Asaph were affected with the desolation of Jerusalem and miseries befell the Church These were men of tender hearts and sensible of evils at a distance Such was Paul 2 Cor 14.29 and Jeremy whose eyes ran down with tears because the Lords flock was carryed away captive Jer 13.17 Secondly Where an heart hath a gracious and spiritual tenderness it s affected with the perishing condition of others it grieves to see men impenitent unbelieving going on in the broad way to be in a state of irregeneracy and pityes them Rom 9.2 3. Paul had great heaviness and continual sorrow in his heart and why for his brethren and kinsmen according to the flesh they rejected Christ and his Gospel through unbelief and hardnesse of heart they were in the broad way to destruction Christ seeing Jerusalem insensible of her own good he wept over her Luke 19.41 And in former times Jeremy had manifested the tenderness of his heart toward the Jews when he said unto them thus Hear ye and g●ve ear be not proud for the Lord hath spoken Give glory to the Lord your God before he cause darknesse and before your feet stumble upon the dark mountains and while ye look for light he turn it into the shadow of death and make it grosse darknesse but if ye will not hear it my soul shall weep in secret places for your pride Jer 13.15 16 17. Thirdly A tender heart dare not go out from God in any case but commits it self and way to him it consults with God and leans upon him for counsel and direction Josiah when the Law was found and he understood from it what wrath was due to the breach of it presently sends men to enquire of the Lord for himself and others what to do he took counsel of God and not of man 2 Chron 34.21 So Jehoshaphat he sought not to Baalim but to the Lord God of his fathers and David made Gods Testimonyes his Counsellers Psal 119.24 Hard hearts dare presume and venture to go out from God and into wayes he hath not warranted so did Gehazi Judas and Demas they followed the imaginations of their own hearts and declared that their hearts were Brasse Those that have hearts of flesh say with them in Isa 2.3 Come let us go up to the mountain of the Lord to the house of the God of Jacob and he will teach us of his wayes and we will walk in his paths not in our own Fourthly It s affected presently at the frowns and chidings of God at the appearance and shaking of the Rod. A child of a tender nature will melt when the Parent begins to manifest displeasure as to chide or take the Rod into his hand but it s not so with a stubborn nature that will hear bitter words and endure many stroaks before it will melt Jer 5.3 Thou hast stricken them but they have not grieved thou hast consumed them but they have refused to receive correction they have made their faces harder then a rock they have refused to return These had no tender hearts in them When Absolom had driven David out of Jerusalem he went up mount Olivet weeping He was presently affected with the hand of God 2 Sam 15.30 Moses was presently affected with the wrath that went out from God against the people Numb 16.46 Fifthly A tender heart feels much stoninesse in it self and complains of it O what a stony rocky Adamantine heart have I saith a tender hearted man its tendernesse discovers and feels hardnesse Eph 4.19 They were hardned in sin were past feeling Where hearts are all stone there is no sensibleness of the stonyness those have the tenderest hearts that feel most Brass and Iron in them David cryed oft to God for quickning Psal 119.154 156 159. Quicken me according to thy Word Quicken me according to thy judgements Quicken me according to thy loving kindnesse And why did he cry so for quickning because he felt much deadness and hardness in his heart A dead heart is an hard heart A man when dead is cold stiff and hard so a mans heart if dead within him is cold stiff and stony How may the heart be kept tender First By taking heed of every sin for its only sin that hardens the heart as the foot by treading hardens the earth so when sin walks up and down in the heart it hardens and obdurates the same Dan 5.20 Nebuchadnezzars mind was hardned in pride and the Apostle tells you Heb 3.13 That mens hearts come to be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sin Men think little sins can do them little harm but they harden their hearts and is that no harm is that little harm its the greatest harm can be done you Secondly By searching and examining of your hearts frequently that is a special means to keep them tender it s like digging of the Garden and ploughing of the Earth which keeps it from hardning the more digging and ploughing the more tender and crumbly is the earth that is the chiefest way to preserve it so and they who are ever searching their hearts examining them daily have them in a tender frame David communed oft with his own heart and his spirit made diligent search Psal 77.6 That kept his heart in a tender frame Thirdly By studying the word much and minding it there is great virtue in the word it 's like fire and will not only thaw the icyness of their hearts but keep them unfrozen the hardest mettals while they are in the Fire are soft and whilest mens hearts are in the Divine fire of the Scriptures they will be soft The Word is like Water and Oyl which moisten and supple the heart so that the tendernesse of it is preserved Fourthly By meditating seriously on Gods love the heigths depths lengths and breadths of his love When a soul is taken up with thoughts of the freeness greatness strength sweetness everlastingness and fruits of Gods love it will be in a melting frame that fire works kindly upon the heart love apprehended makes the heart tender Fifthly Look much to Christ crucified Zech 12.10 When we consider what Christ hath suffered for our sakes it will make and keep our hearts tender First Observe A tender heart is a choice mercy As a stony
there was little light or lustre There But when Christ came the Oracles of the Heathen ceas'd and the Jewish shadows vanished and the earth shined with the glory of the Gospel Mat. 4.16 The people which sate in darkness saw great light and to them which sate in the region and shadow of death light hath sprung up When the Jews were under clouds and darkness then Christ came and brought the glorious Gospel to them When Christ was born Luk. 2.9 there was glory shone round about the shephards signifying that the glory of the Lord would fill the earth yea all the world Or this may refer to the destruction of Mystical Babylon and coming down of the New Jerusalem from Heaven for of the one it 's said Rev. 18.1 2. An Angel came down from heaven having great power and the earth was lightened with his glory And he cryed mightily with a strong voice Babylon is fallen c. And Chap. 21. of New Jerusalem it 's said v. 23. The glory of God did lighten it and the Lamb is the light thereof When these things be the earth will be fill'd and shine with glory 2. Ezekiel fell upon his face The lustre of Divine glory sense of his own frailty and weakness caused him to fall upon his face here I might inlarge but of this falling on his face was spoken Chap. 1.28 and the Observations rising thence are there to be seen The 4. thing concerning this glory is the resemblance of it vers 3. And it was according to the appearance of the Vision which I saw even according to the Vision that I saw when I came to destroy the City c. The Prophet being sent of God to prophesie the destruction of Jerusalem saith here when I came to destroy the City The Chaldee is when I prophesied then had he such a vision as this was Chap. 1. That which he declared to be done he saith he d●d The Prophet was in Babylon when the City was destroyed he did not put forth a finger towards destruction of it he onely prophesied against it So Jeremie was set over Nations and Kingdomes to root out to pull down and to destroy this he did by prophesying against them not otherwise The same Vision which at first appeared to the Prophet in a way of judgment appears now to him in a way of merit before it prefigured the destruction here the restauration of the Temple City and Land The Vision for outward appearance was like what he saw in the 1 8 9 10. Chapters but in the end and use totally differing from yea contrary unto the same There he saw God angry the glory departing from the Temple and going out at the East-gate Here he sees God smiling and the glory returning the same way it went out Here he beholds sweet reconciliation between God and the Church made up by Christ The 5. thing is the Receptacle of this glory and that was the Temple or House which had been measured vers 4. And the glory of the Lord came into the House This House or Temple as hath been shew'd before signified both the Body and Church of Christ for his Body-natural that was the Receptacle of glory Col. 2.9 Joh. 1.14 1 Tim. 3.16 For the Church his Mystical body that is a Receptacle of Glory also Isa 60.1 The glory of the Lord is risen upon thee And vers 19. The Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light and thy God thy glory There is an estate of the Church to come wherein it shall be very glorious In Solomon's Temple there was glory but glory in a cloud 1 King 8.10 11. But in Ezekiel's Temple there was glory without a cloud a greater glory even such a glory as made the earth to shine This is the glory which the Saints look for and shall see in due time Rev. 21.3 Behold the Tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and God himself shall be with them and be their God What is said of the Church is to be understood also of every believer who is a Receptacle of glory a Temple of the spirit of Christ and God 1 Cor. 6.19 1 Cor. 3.16 2 Cor. 13.5 Who ever Christ hath measured out to be a Temple shall receive glory 2 Cor. 4.6 God who commanded the light to shine ●ut of darkness hath shined in our hearts saith Paul to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. The Gospel is a Glass in it we see the face of Christ and in his face the glory of the Lord and are changed into the same image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3.18 It 's observable here that when the glory of God departs from a Church or people it 's not for perpetuity but for a season The glory went out of the Temple and City at the beginning of Ezek. prophesie but he saw the same returning before the end of his prophesie The Arke when taken by the Philistines caused Phinehas wife to name her Son Ichabod saying The glory of departed from Israel 1 Sam. 4.21 But after seven Moneths the glory return'd again to Israel Chap. 6. The Arke was sent home God caus'd it to return again Long have the Jews now been without an Arke and without glory but in due time the glory of the God of Israel will return unto them for Rom. 11.26 There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob. And when the scaling of the 144000. out of all the Tribes shall be Rev. 7. then shall they stand on Mount Sion with the Lamb and so the glory will be in the midst of them Rev. 14.1 The consequents of this Vision or Glory returning come next to be considered and the first is the Prophets raising vers 5. So the spirit took me up He was fallen upon his face as not able to behold the brightness of that glory appeared and being in that posture the spirit took him up In Chap 2.1 2. the Spirit spake to Ezekiel being down upon his face entred into him and set him upon his feet But here he took him up he dealt with him as a man doth with his friend fallen Hence springs this consideration that those are humbled and humble with sense of their own vileness and weakness through apprehension of glory and greatness shall soon be raised and comforted Sight of glory is an humbling thing Ezek. Chap. 1.28 And here again he was humbled upon that account he saw so much lustre in that glory so much greatness in the Lord that convinc'd of his own vileness and nothingness he falls down upon his face as being wholly unworthy to behold such a sight to partake of such mercy but presently the spirit being full of love bowels and compassion steps to him and takes him up He suffers him not to lye affrighted with glory or affected with misery but is a speedy comforter
gather thee Berachamim gedolim When God gathers his out of Babylon a state of confusion that is mercy and when he brings them into Sion to behold the order beauty and glory thereof that is great mercy and God will not leave them there but go on with them and heap great mercies still upon them see Isa 49.18 19 20 21 22 23. Jer. 32.37 38 39 40 41. Secondly Observe Justification is a gracious act of God upon a sinner I will sprinkle clean water upon you It s Gods prerogative to forgive and blot out sins Mark 2.7 Isa 43.25 and this he doth freely it s an act of grace and mercy Rom 3.24 Being justified freely by his grace Now in this act nothing is done in a sinner there is no grace infused no change made in the heart by it there be no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therein it s upon a sinner justifying grace is subjectively in God objectively on man for its a judicial act of God which puts nothing into the creature Rom 3.22 It s upon all them that do believe Thirdly Observe The bloud of Christ applyed by the Spirit of God is efficatious to free sinners from the guilt of their sins and of all their sins of what bind soever they be I will sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean Their sins were great very great they were guilty of bloud oppressing the widow and fatherless of idolatry of despising and profaning holy things Ezek 22.8.26 They were under the guilt of all crying and notorious sins Ezek 16.47 worse then Sodom or Samaria then the Nations Ezek 5.7 yet the Lord would cleanse them by the bloud of Christ there was virtue in that to cleanse them from their old spots from their deep guilt yea from all their guilt they should be clean from all their filthinesses As water washeth all the filth out of a cloath so doth the bloud of Christ all sin out of the soul 1 Joh 1.7 The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin the guilt of our thoughts words acts neglects there is no sin defiles the conscience so but the bloud of Christ will purge it away Heb 9.14 Chap 1.3 Christs bloud is of great virtue it purges away all sin and procures peace Coloss 1.20 So that being justified by his bloud we shall be saved from wrath as it is Rom 5.9 Fourthly Observe All sin defiles and makes guilty before God yet some sins defile more then others and make more deeply guilty God would cleanse them from all their filthinesse from every sin that had poluted them and made them guilty and from their idols which had made them more deeply guilty Idolatry hath more guilt adhering to it then many other sins that 's a sin breaks Covenant with God deposes God and sets up an Idoll in his stead Verse 26. A new heart also will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and I will give you an heart of flesh THis is another great promise even a promise of Regeneration and in it there is considerable 1. The party promising I I I I. 2. The things promised 1. A new heart 2. A new spirit 3. Removall of the stony heart 4. An heart of flesh 3. The parties to whom the Lord will do these things You You You. 4. The manner of Gods doing these things which is by giving putting and taking away A new heart also will I give you By heart in Scripture is signified the judgement and understanding Eph 4.18 The will and affections Prov 23.26 and the conscience 1 John 3.20 all which are here comprehended in the word heart New notes sometimes that which is for substance new totally new as new ropes Judges 16.11 12. A new wife Deut 24.5 New gods Deut 32.17 And sometimes that which is only for quality new as the new Moon Isa 66.23 From one new Moon to another The Moon is not new for substance but renewed with light new in regard of quality so New tongues Mark 16.17 They had not their old Tongues plucked or cut out of their mouths and other new ones put in but these Tongues they had before had new Languages put into them new gifts and graces Here then by A new heart is not intended one new for substance or nature of it but the same heart altered for the qualities of it renewed and indued with other qualities then it had before such qualities are wrought in the heart that a man thereupon is said to be regenerate or born again John 3.3 5 6 7. and to be a new creature Gal 6.15 This new heart lyeth not in those common gifts which many have yet without alteration in their hearts Judas had a covetous an earthly an old heart notwithstanding those great gifts he had He could cast out Devils and heal all manner of sicknesses Matth 10.1 4. And those Matth 7.22 23. Who had the gift of prophesie of casting out Devils and working wonders had no new hearts for Christ sends them going for workers of iniquity but it lyeth in grace infused which is a principle of light and life supernatural and permanent Man since the fall of Adam is in a state of darknesse and death Ephes 5.8 Chap 2.5 and when grace is infused that brings light and life unto the heart John 8. ●2 it s call'd The light of life and when a blind heart sees a dead heart lives there is a great and glorious alteration so that it is become a new heart it hath a new principle which is supernatural and permanent call'd The Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Divine to shew the supernaturalnesse of it and Nature to shew the permanency of it And a new spirit will I put within you These very words we had Ezek 11.19 where they were largely opened New spirit there was interpreted to be those excellent qualities and graces God put into the soul and shewed upon what account they were call'd Spirit and New Here I conceive a new spirit is added Exegetically being the same with a new heart This new heart or new spirit causeth the partie in whom it is to look at God as a Father and so to honour him Mal. 1.6 To love him 1 John 5.1 To fear him 1 Pet. 1.17 To yield obedience to him Rom 6.17 1 Pet 1.14 15. Patiently to bear his chastisements Heb 12.6 7 8 9. To eschew sin and work righteousnesse 1 John 5.18 Chap 3.9 10. To acknowledge how he hath offended him Luke 15.18 To pray fervently unto him Rom 8.15 To be like unto him in mercifullnesse and doing of good Luke 6.36 To delight in his wayes and to have communion with him and his Son Christ 1 John 1.3 To worship him in spirit and truth John 4.23 To be thankfull alwayes unto him for all things Ephes 5.20 To live nobly and spiritually minding the things of Heaven Rom 8.5 1 Pet 1.14 John 3.6 2 Cor
whereas the Rock did only signifie Christ So Gen. 41.26 The seven good kine are seven years and the seven blasted ears are seven years none of these were years but all of them signifie so many years So Dan. 4.22 The tree which Nebuchadnezzar saw whose top reached to heaven and branches to the ends of the earth is said to be Nebuchadnezzar himself It is thou O King that is it signified him it was not him himself The Papists trouble the world with their absurd sense of those words Mat. 26.26 28. This is my body and this is my bloud they will have them to be taken literally and make us lose our senses that we may believe the Bread and Wine are the very flesh and bloud of Christ but we neither see nor tast any such thing only we believe that they represent the same unto us and are to convey the fruit and benefit of Christs death unto us Thirdly Observe Gods people are sometimes brought into great streights and exigents they know not what to do they are heartless and hopeless Our bones are dryed our hope is lost we are cut off for our parts They saw nothing but destruction before them they saw no possibility of escaping they thought their condition desperate Such was Josephs condition when his Brethren cast him into a pit Gen. 37.24 Such was the Israelites condition at the Red-sea when the Egyptians were behind them the Sea before them and no door of hope left unto them Exod. 14. their hope was gone and nothing but death presented it self unto them ver 11. when the Anchor of hope is broken men are in a Sea of troubles tossed up and down ready to sink every moment Job himself was somtime in this case Chap. 7.6 My dayes are swifter then a Weavers shuttle and are spent without hope he had neither hope of restauration to his former condition nor of continuance of his life he looked only to make the grave his house and darkness his bed Chap. 17.13 14 15. His hope was gone and he thought he must go to corruption and the worms Fourthly Observe When men are in great Afflictions they manifest great weakness These Jews being in such an afflicted condition they forgot what Promises God had made to them of Returning after 70 years Jer. 25.12 13. Chap. 29.10 They minded not Gods Power or Faithfulness but said We are cut off for our part God hath cut us off from our Land and cast us into this Furnace of Babylon where we shall be consumed When Saul hunted David like a Partridge upon the Mountains and his life was in Jeopardy Did he not say in his heart I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul 1 Sam. 27 1. Here he manifested his weakness greatly God had told him he should be King and sent Samuel to annoint him Chap. 16. but he forgot this and gave way to the reasonings of flesh Jeremiah being in a suffering condition scorn'd and defam'd by the People he resolves to cast aside his Commission and speak no more in the name of the Lord he curses the day of his Nativity and the man brought tidings of his Birth wishes He had slain him from the womb or that the womb had been his grave c. thus did he declare his infirmities Chap. 20.8 9 15 16 17. not considering what God had promised him Chap. 1.5 8 9 17 18 19. The like did Job Fifthly Observe There be states of men in this life which do resemble the dead and they are two especially both which are here held forth 1. The state of great and long Afflictions These Jews in their Captivity are likened unto dry bones men in their graves This made Jeremiah say Lament 3.6 He hath set me in dark places as they that be dead of old The state of Death is a state of Darkness and so is the state of Affliction Isa 59.10 We grope for the wall like the blind and we grope as if we had no eyes we stumble at noon day as in the night we are in desolate places as dead men They were in deep Affliction and destitute of all Counsel they saw no way or means how to get out of the same David being under great Calamities goes further and shews you that such a state is not only a state of Darkness but of Consumption of being Forgotten and Broken Psal 31.9 12. I am in trouble mine eye is consumed with grief yea my soul and my belly I am forgotten as a dead man out of mind I am like a broken vessel So Psal 44.19 Thou hast sore broken us in the place of Dragons and covered us with the shadow of death He calls great Afflictions the place of Dragons because they sting bite and indanger a mans life the shadow of death death is very near and overshadows the man is in them his grace is designing and he is ready to be put thereinto This consideration made Heman say his soul being full of troubles My life draweth nigh unto the grave I am counted with them that go down into the pit I am as a man that hath no strength free among the dead like the slain that lie in the grave whom thou remembrest no more and they are cut off from thy hand thou hast laid me in the lowest pit in darkness in the deeps He shews you clearly that great Afflictions especially Soul●●fflictions are a state of Death 2. The state of Sin which these Jews were in for it 's said I will put my Spirit into you and ye shall live At that time they were dead being in an unregenerate estate Men being in their sins are no better then in a state of death They are in Darkness ignorant of Christ the Gospel and Mysteries thereof Ephes 5.8 They are in bondage to their Lusts and to Satan 2 Pet. 2.19 Rom. 6.16 2 Tim. 2.26 Joh. 8.44 They are senseless eyes they have and see not ears and hear not hearts and understand not Matth. 13.14 15. They have hearts of stone and are past feeling Ephes 4.18 19. They are corrupt and unsavory Ephes 4.22 Rom. 3.13 This is the condition of sinners which the Gospel accounts and calls A state of Death Mat. 8.22 Joh 5.25 Ephes 2.5 Col. 2.13 Sixthly Observe God is afflicted with the afflictions and sufferings of his people O my people you are in your graves here in Babylon you are afflicted reproached oppressed but I am sensible thereof and do sympathize with you in that condition not a word is spoken against you not an unjust act done unto you but I hear I feel the same The words are twice mentioned O my people O my people in the 12. and 13. verses to shew the Lord was much affected with their calamities and languishing condition When the Jews were in Egypt that house of Bondage and in the Wilderness they were like men in their graves oft covered with the shadow of death and Did not God pity them Psal 106.44 He regarded th ir
9.24 And lives for ever to make intercession for us Heb. 7.25 He doth that always which the Priests did in the Feasts New-moons Sabbaths and Solemnities the virtue of this sacrifice is ever useful Vers 18 19 20. 18. Thus saith the Lord God In the first month the fi●st day of the month thou shalt take a young Bullock without blemish and cleanse the Sanctuary 19. And the Priest shall take of the blood of the Sin-offering and put it upon the posts of the house and upon the four corners of the settle of the Altar and upon the posts of the gate of the inner Court 20. And so thou shalt do the seventh day of the month for every one that erreth and for him that is simple so shall ye reconcile the house HEre we have an ordinance for cleansing the Sanctuary much like that ordinance in the 43. Chap. for cleansing the Altar of Burnt-offerings There was no su●h ●rdinance among the Mosaicals as Jerome Sanctius and others observe This was a new ordinance which the Levitical-law knew not and speaks out the newness of all under the Gospel the cleansing of the Church by the bloud of Christ who in due season being without sin was made sin for us 2 Cor. 5 21. And by his bloud wash'd away the sins of his Rev. 1.5 Heb. 13.11 and 〈◊〉 it made way for entring into the Holiest Heb. 10 19. And whereas the posts of the house and posts of the gate and four corners of the settle of the Altar were all sprinkled with bloud It tells us that all great or small whencesoever they come from East West North or South cannot be cleansed or saved but by bloud even the bloud of Christ Heb. 9.22 23. It 's nothing in man or from man himself not his righteousness free-will or sufferings which doth cleanse him from his sin that onely is from the virtue of Christ's bloud 1 Joh. 1.7 The 20. verse leads to speak of sins of ignorance Under the law there was a sacrifice for the men sin'd ignorantly Levit. 5.17 18. He was to bring a ram to the Priest and by the sacrificing of that his sin was forgiven him and peace made Here the ordinance differs from that In stead of a Ram must be a young Bullock sacrificed signifying that the bloud of Christ is for the erroneous simple ignorant as well as others When men sin wilfu●ly it 's dangerous Heb. 10.26 27. But for those are simple and through ignorance do erre there is a remedy provided 1 Joh. 2.7 My little Children I write unto you that ye sin not that 's impossible they might have replyed For in many things we sin all James 3.2 And if any man do sin that is through weakness ignorance simpleness strength of corruption or temptation we have an advocate with the father Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sins This remedy Christ holds out in the Gospel to such sinners and would have his Ministers do the like Gal. 6.1 If a man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual restore such an one bring him to Christ cause him to look upon H●m crucified and expiating his sin with His own bloud and then he will weep for his error his simplicity and so he is restor'd Vers 21 22 23 24. 21. In the first month in the fourteenth day of the month ye shall have the passeover a feast of seven days uncleavened bread shall be eaten 22. And upon that day ●hall the Prince prepare for himself and for all the people of the land a bullock for a Sin-offering 23. And seven days of the feast he shall prepare a Burnt-offering to the Lord seven Bullocks and seven Rams without blemish daily the seven days and a Kid of the Goats daily for a Sin-offering 24. And he shall prepare a Meat-offering of an Ephah for a Bullock and an Ephah for a Ram and an Hin of Oyle for an Ephah IN these verses are ordinances for keeping the Passover c. Of the Mosaical you may see Exod. 12. and Levit. 23. from which this diffe●s in many things as Polanus notes and presents unto us Christ our Passover who was sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5.7 The Passover was In the first Month the fourteenth day when the Moon was at the Full and the Sun ascending all things began to revive which shew'd that Christ was not to be sacrificed presently after his birth but when the fullness of ceremonial light was come and that by his death Jewish shadowes being abolished true light life and reviving came into the world The feast of unleavened-bread shew'd how we are to keep the feast of the Christian-Passover viz. not with old leaven that is our old corrupt hearts neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness but with the unleavened-bread of sincerity and truth Men should not come to his Ordinance with old malitious or wicked hearts but with hearts sincere and true all corrvution of nature doctrine and manners should be purg'd out And Christians should live their whole life noted by the seven dayes here free from hypocrisie lying malice and unrighteousness they should study and endeavour to be holy as God is holy It 's said vers 22. that the Prince must prepare for himself and for all the people a Bullock for a Sin-offering This Prince therefore seems not to be Christ but the High-priest who was sinful and offered first for himself and then for the people Heb. 7.27 Christ had no sin and so could not offer Sacrifice for himself For answer hereunto know that Christ considered in himself was an immaculate Lamb without blemish 1 Pet. 1.19 An High-priest holy harmless undefiled Heb. 7.26 But consider him as our surety as head of the body so he had sin His own self did bear our sins in his own body 1 Pet. 2.24 He was made sin for us 2 Cor. 5.21 He was offered to bear the sins of many Heb. 9.28 The Lord laid upon him the iniquities of us all Isa 53.6 And was numbred with transgressors vers 12. Our sins were imputed to him so that he stood as a sinner and malefactour in our stead and offered up himself a Sacrifice for himself that is for his body the Church Thus nothing hinders but by Prince here we may understand Christ The Burnt-offering and Sin-offering which were to be daily set out the virtue of Christ's death and intercession which is not for a day or a few years but for ever or they may acquaint us with the Saints their total and constant dedication of themselves unto God and his service An Hin of oyle Of the Ephah Bath Homer and Cor was spoken in the former part of the Chapter An Hin was for liquid things and contain'd as much as twelve Logs and each Log contain'd six Eggs so that an Hin held as much Wine or Oyle as seventy two Eggs and according to some is three quarts of our English-measure Vers 25. In the seventh month
Jer 25.34 35 36. Howl ye shepherds cry and wallow your selves in the ashes ye principal of the Flock for the dayes of your slaughter and of your dispersions are accomplished and ye shall fall like a pleasant vessel They should have no way to flee or escape cry and howl they might their Pastures should be spoiled and themselves destroyed The shepherds had been preserved like a pleasant vessel in the hand of God he esteem'd them but now being so vile they should fall be broken and not esteemed at all See Jer. 23.1 2. Zech 11.17 This hath been made good in our dayes against the Political and Ecclesiastical shepherds have not our Princes Nobles Prelates and their Officers for their feeding themselves not feeding the Flock for their ruling them by force and cruelty have they not had God against them been deprived of their fat and sweet morsels have they not been turn'd out of their places and suffered justly for their demerits The oppressions in State and Church were such that the Flock had perished had not God appeared for it against those Lyons and Wolves their sins were provoking and drew the fury of God upon them Thirdly Observe Those sheep that are under oppressing and devouring shepherds God will relieve and set at liberty I will deliver my flock from their mouth that they may not be meat for them Many years had his Flock been molested by wicked Princes Priests and Prophets they had eaten up many of his Flock and the rest were in danger of devouring but the Lord had a care of them and pull'd them out of their jawes the poor sheep could not withstand their violence They were like young Lyons among the flocks which go through tread down and tear them in pieces and none can deliver Micah 5.8 But though the sheep had no man able to deliver them from these Lyon-like shepherds yet God was able to do it and did it he was a Lyon to these Lyons and tore them in pieces rescuing his Flock It s not long since we were under such shepherds who made us meat to their teeth eating up our Estates Liberties and Lives they oppressed and devoured us and who durst appear for us if any did they felt the jaws and claws of these Lyons but God at last arose for us and hath driven away those shepherds and delivered us from being meat to their mouths Verses 11 12 13 14 15 16. For thus saith the Lord God behold I even I will both search my sheep and seek them out As a shepherd seeketh out his flock in the day that he is among his sheep that are scattered so will I seek out my sheep and will deliver them out of all places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day And I will bring them out from the people and gather them from the Countreys and will bring them to their own land and feed them upon the mountains of Israel by the rivers and in all the inhabited places of the Countrey I will feed them in a good Pasture and upon the high mountains of Israel shall their fold be there shall they lye in a good fold and in a fat Pasture shall they feed upon the mountains of Israel I will feed my flock and I will cause them to lye down saith the Lord God I will seek that which was lost and bring again that which was driven away and will bind up that which was broken and will strengthen that which was sick but I will destroy the fat and the strong I will feed them with judgement THese verses set before us Gods care and comfortable provision for his Flock which is the second generall part of this Chapter and they have in them First Gracious promises 1. A promise of seeking out the sheep vers 11 12 16. 2. A promise of reducing them vers 13 16. 3. A promise of feeding them being reduced vers 13 14 15. 4. A promise of healing the broken and the sick ver 16. Secondly A Declaration how God will deal with the fat and strong ones vers 16. Vers 11. Behold I even I will both search my sheep and seek them out You think much to look after my sheep but Behold I even I that am the great shepherd the great God infinitely distanced from you will both search and seek them out The word for search is Bikker which the Septuagint renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will require it notes searching out what they had done with them and requiring them at their hand Junius hath it Reposcam and the French ie redemanderay mes brebis I will earnestly ask again my sheep and seek them out with understanding and judgement so Darash signifies Vers 12. As a shepherd seeketh out his flock in the day that he is among his sheep that are scattered so will I seek c. When some great storms by wind rain thunder lightning or wilde Beasts have been in the field among the flock and they are scattered here and there then the shepherd hastens to them sees whether any be wanting and if so seeks up and down till he finds them and so brings them together again which is a great mercy to the scattered sheep and as great a comfort to the shepherd so would God seek out his sheep that were scattered into severall places and would deliver them They had met with storms and wilde Beasts which had devided and scattered them and God like a choice shepherd would seek them out and have a special care of them In the cloudy and dark day The Hebrew is Beiom gnanan vagnaraphel In the day of a cloud and of darkness thick darknesse so the word signifies It was a day of a cloud or a cloudy day when the Chaldaean army besieged Jerusalem then many were scattered and driven into neighbour Nations and it was a day of thick darknesse when the City was broken up the Temple burnt Zedekiah's eyes put out the Princes and Nobles put to death many carried captive into Babylon and the rest dispersed into woods caves mountains and other places Vers 13. And I will bring them out from the people and gather them from the Countreys God finding his sheep scattered into several Nations where they met with hardships he graciously promises to bring them out of those Nations they should not alwayes be amongst their enemies who were no better then wilde Beasts unto them This hath an aspect to Gods gathering his Elect out of the several quarters of the world And will bring them to their own land and feed them upon the mountains of Israel by the rivers Being gathered out of forraign Lands God would bring them into their own Land viz into Canaan a Type of the Church they should both possess their Land and be put into a Church condition again and he would feed them with his Word Ordinances and put them into a better State then ever This refers to the times of Christ and the Gospel then
5.16 And to love those that are regenerate 1 John 5.1 and these doing so God their Father hath a special care of them and love unto them Matth. 6.26.32 Luke 11.13 Chap 12.32 Will I give you will I put within you The new heart and new spirit comes from God he that to the Authour of every good and perfect gift is the Author of the same Now in the working of this new heart and new spirit there be several Attributes of God set on work As First His infinite mercy That he should mind sinners who have old rotten filthy hard dead hearts within them so at enmity with God that they would pull him out of Heaven had they power to do it for God to mind such hearts and spirits and make them new so as to affect him and his wayes argues unspeakable mercy loving kindness superabundant It was a time of love when God saw Jerusalem in her bloud and said unto her live Ezek 10. It was infinite love infinite mercy for him to pity Jerusalem in such a case and to say so unto her the same it is when God makes of an old heart a new heart of an old spirit a new spirit Secondly Gods infinite power is imployed in this work The making of a dead heart to live a blind heart to see an old heart and spirit to become new requires an omnipotent arm By the preaching of the word men have great convictions strong resolutions and are perswaded almost to be Christians but those convictions and resolutions dye away and they never come altogether to be Christians altogether to be new hearted and new spirited till the Lord put forth his allmighty power and create new hearts and spirits in them it s a work of creation Psal 51.10 2 Cor. 4.6 Eph. 2.10 And such hearts and spirits are call'd new creatures Gal 6.15 2 Cor 5.17 Thirdly Infinite wisdome The heart of man is deceitfull above all things and desperately wicked who can know it Jer 17.9 It s beyond the knowledge of man it hath so many windings turnings pretences shifts arguments wiles depths methods as that none but God knows it he being infinitely wise can answer all the objections arguments and subtle distinctions of the heart so that it shall be silent Mans heart whilest its old hath the cunning of the old Serpent in it and pleads hard to keep its old principles its old ungodly lusts its old ignorance its old darkness its old formal wayes of worship its old fleshly confidences its old delights and pleasures its old company its old customes its old aims and ends which were selfe it musters up many arguments to defend these and who can convince the heart of the evill of these and take it off from them but God by his infinite wisdome To make an heart or spirit which hath so many oldnesses in it new argues more skill and wisdome then dwels in any creature Fourthly His Infinite holinesse and purity When God takes an old heart which is as dark as hell as stinking as any Sepulchre Math 23.27 an old spirit which is as unclean and loathsome as the Devils are when he takes these and makes them new he scatters darkness abolisheth death separating filthinesse and instead thereof brings in marveilous light 1 Pet. 2.9 A glorious life Ephes 4.18 And true holinesse vers 24. which import that God is light without darknesse life without possibility of dying holinesse without any spot or imperfection When the wind cleanseth the aire infected pestilential and stinking it argues the wind is pure when a vessel or house is noysome and one cleanses and sweetens them as not enduring them in that condition it argues their cleanlinesse and if they could make them new it would argue it much more so here God makes them new He puts them into the fire that they may be refined and partake of his holinesse Heb 12.10 Its Gods holy arme which makes an unholy heart to become holy and glorious in holinesse The dignity and excellency of this new heart and new spirit is worthy the notice First It s that doth discriminate and difference a man from all others They that have old hearts old spirits and new hearts new spirits differ as much from them as light from darknesse life from death holinesse from filthinesse a man with a new heart a new spirit is a living man whereas others be dead Ephes 2.1 He is a seeing man whereas others be blind 1 Jok 5.20 1 Cor 2.14 He is pure whereas others are filthy 1 Pet. 2.9 Tit 1.15 Hereby a man is differenced from all profane civill and moral men from all gifted men from all hypocrites what specious forms of religion and holinesse soever they have whoever hath a new spirit is distinguished from all other spirits yea from the Devils who are but unclean spirits Secondly It doth ennoble a man A new heart and new spirit doth not only distinguish from others but makes more excellent then others Prov 12.26 The righteous is more excellent then his neighbour Righteousnesse is one of the qualities in the new heart in the new spirit Eph 4.23 24. and that Nobilitates a man such a one is born not of blood that is not of the Princes and Nobles of the world who stand upon their blood and greatnesse nor of the will of the flesh that is not in the ordinary way nor of the will of man viz not by education and School principles but of God John 1.13 He is descended from the highest the King of Kings he is of the most Royal blood even the blood of God Acts 20.28 Others are vile but he is precious Jerem 15.19 2 Pet. 1.1 He is partaker of the Divine Nature and lives the life of God 2 Pet. 1.4 Ephes 4.18 Thirdly It fills them where it is with new joyes New things affect much when the Apostles had new tongues given them they were greatly affected therewith and when men have new hearts new spirits they abound in joy the greater the mercy the more full the joy If when a sinner is converted there be joy in Heaven what joy is in the sinners heart then When Christ came to Zacheus and gave him a new heart a new spirit he was fill'd with joy Luke 19. and new joyes Before his joy was to get money by any means and treasure it up now his joy was to disperse make satisfaction and to give away vers 8 9. His new heart begat in him new joyes and inabled him to joy in that he could not do not think of before without sadness So Paul when he had a new heart and spirit he had new joyes fullnesse of them in those things he could not rejoyce in before 2 Cor. 7.4 I am filled with comfort I am exceeding joyfull in all our tribulations Chap 12.10 He took pleasure in infirmities in reproaches in necessities in persecutions in distresses Here 's the excellency of a new heart and a new spirit it fills with
Christ The Corrinthians were called out of the world to be Saints 1 Cor. 1.2 And the Macedonian Churches gave up themselves to the Lord 2 Cor. 8.5 So that all the Churches of God are a chosen generation an holy nation 1 Pet. 2.9 Cant. 4.7 Unholy ones who are without in the profane world should not enter into the Church God hath set a wall of discipline to keep them out that the Church may not be defiled by them It 's said of the New Jerusalem That there shall in no wise any thing enter into it that defileth the Angels will keep them out for at the twelve Gates thereof will be twelve Angels Rev. 21.12 who will let none in but Saints so that all her people shall be righteous Isa 60.21 The EXPOSITION continued upon the Remaining Chapters of EZEKIEL CHAP. XLIII Vers 1 2 3 4 5 6. 1. Afterwards he brought me to the Gate even the Gate that looketh toward the East 2. And behold the glory of the God of Israel came from the way of the East and his voice was like a noise of many waters and the earth shined with his glory 3. And it was according to the appearance of the vision which I saw even according to the vision that I saw when I came to destroy the City and the visions were like the vision that I saw by the river Chebar and I fell upon my face 4. And the glory of the Lord came into the house by the way of the Gate whose prospect is towards the East 5. So the spirit took me up and brought me into the inner Court and behold the glory of the Lord filled the house 6. And I heard him speaking unto me out of the house and the man stood by me THIS Chapter and the next in general speaks of the Ministery and Sacred Worship of the new Temple more particularly in this 43. Chapter we have 1. A New Vision in the first 6. verses 2. The speech of the Lord unto the Prophet from the 7. vers to the end of the Chapter Concerning the New Vision things considerable are 1. The time when it was 2. The place where it was 3. The object of this Vision where we are to note 1. The place whence it came 2. The sign of it 3. The effects of it 4. The resemblance of it 5. The receptacle of it 4. The Consequents of it which are 1. The Spirit 's raising up the Prophet 2. His leading him into the inner Court 3. The filling of the Temple with glory 4. The Lord 's speaking to the Prophet 5. The presence of Christ with the Prophet For the 1. When it was that Ezekiel had this Vision Not at his first coming to the Temple but after he had been led from place to place seen the several Gates Courts Chambers Parts Appurtenances Ornaments of the Temple and all exactly measured within and without after those things he had this Vision Which insinuates thus much that after men have waited upon Christ followed him and learned the nature and condition of the Church invisible and visible then the Lord affords Visions of himself and his glory when men come first to Sion enter into Church-fellowship they must not think to see the glory of God till they are acquainted with the inward glory and outward beauty of the Church till they understand the measuring of Christ therein Those that are in the Church in due time see glory It 's good to be there and to wait being there 2. The place was at the East-gate He was brought from the West-side of the Temple to the East-gate where he had this Vision coming out of the East Christ is Sol justitiae the Sun of righteousness and the Sun's motion is from the East Westward So here this glorious Vision came out of the East and entred by the East-gate which led directly to the Sanctum Sanctorum It 's the Lord Christ brings us out of darkness to light and shews us the way into the Temple and Most Holy place 3. The object Glory Behold the glory of the God of Israel That was some figure image or manifestation representing the glory of God In Chap. 1.26 27. Ezek. saw the likeness of a Throne of a man of fire And Chap. 8.4 Chap. 10.18 There were visions where he beheld the glory of the God of Israel and the glory departing that is some representation of his glories which was leaving the Temple and them signifying that God was wroth with them and departing from them But here the glory was coming to them importing that God's wrath was laid down their sins pardoned and he gratiously reconciled unto them It was sin caus'd the glory to depart mans wickedness draws the glory away but nothing in or of man caus'd the glory to return It 's said the glory came it came freely un-deservedly un-expectedly there was cause of great mourning when it departed and there was as great cause of rejoycing when it returned Whence came it from the way of the East Christ's star was seen in the East Mat. 2.2 His coming was from thence Zechar. 3.8 Chap. 6.12 Christ is call'd Tzemach which the Septuag render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vulg. Oriens that is the East Because Christ should come from heaven and inlighten the dark world as the Sun doth when it riseth in the East Luke in his 1. Chap. vers 78. calls Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we render the Day-spring and may be rendred the East for the day springs in the East first be it East or day-spring it 's from on High Christ came from heaven to bring light into the blind world Hence saith Christ Joh. 8.12 I am the light of the world the great light the Sun of it which r●sing in the East shines into the utmost parts of the West The next thing it the sign of the glory And that was a voice such a voice as was like the noise of many waters in the 1 Chap. vers 24. When the Cherubims went the noise of their wings was like the noise of great waters As the voice of the almighty waters use to roar and make a great noise Jer. 31.35 and 51.55 Such waters are strong and there is no resistance of them men cannot row or sail against them This voice minds us of the voice of Christ in the Gospel The sound whereof went into all the earth Rom. 10.18 Rev. 1.18 Christ's voice is said to be as the sound of many waters it was strong and irresistible He taught them with Majesty and Authority Mat. 7.29 They were not able to answer him Mat. 22.46 Joh. 8.9 not to withstand the wisdome and truths he put into his disciples Luk. 21.15 Act. 6.10 Rev. 11.5 Christ's voice in the Gospel is an efficacious voice The Effects of it were two First The earth shined with his glory Before the coming of Christ the world was full of Heathenish and Hellish darkness and Canaan was full of Types Ceremonies and Shadows