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A37483 Tropologia, or, A key to open Scripture metaphors the first book containing sacred philology, or the tropes in Scripture, reduc'd under their proper heads, with a brief explication of each / partly translated and partly compil'd from the works of the learned by T.D. The second and third books containing a practical improvement (parallel-wise) of several of the most frequent and useful metaphors, allegories, and express similitudes of the Old and New Testament / by B.K. De Laune, Thomas, d. 1685.; Keach, Benjamin, 1640-1704. 1681 (1681) Wing D895; ESTC R24884 855,682 1,006

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taken for the Restauration and Renovation of men whether in this Life by the Word and Faith or in the future by a clear and beatifical vision of God Psal. 51.10 Create in me a clean Heart the explication and renew a right spirit within me 'T is as well the work of God to create a pure heart that is to convert and regenerate a man cleanse him from sin justifie and save him as 't is to create him The impurity therefore of our hearts can with no humane strength or art be purged away but we have need of the Creators work and the Redeemers vertue and power to make us New Creatures John 1.12 But to as many as received him to them gave he power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name Psal. 102.18 And the People that shall be created shall praise the Lord that is the Church that shall be restored and gathered by Christ. For this Psalm treats of that and his Kingdom of grace as is alleaged Heb. 1.10 11 12. Esa. 65.18 Be you glad and rejoyce for ever in that which I create For behold I create Jerusalem a rejoyceing and her people a joy That he speaks of the Glory of Christs Kingdom and Church here is evident by the following verses for its restitution and the whole celestial Administration is expressed by the Word Creation to indicate the Omnipotency and most powerful operation of Christ ver 17. There is mention of the Creation of a New Heaven and a New Earth in the same sence which promise shall be most perfectly fulfilled in Eternal Life as Esa. 66.22 and 2 Pet. 3.13 Eph. 2.10 For we are his Workmanship Created in Christ Jesus unto Good works c. that is regenerated and renewed in the Image of God See Psal. 100.3 Esa. 29.23 c. This is that New Creature of whom it is said 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a New Creature that is he is renewed by the Holy Spirit to lead a new and Holy Life in the Faith of Christ What is corrupt in man by sin is restor'd and reform'd by Regeneration and Renovation and so the Image in which man was at first created but lost it because of his sin begins to be restored very fitly therefore is the Regeneration and Renovation of a man expressed by the term Creation for God alone is the Author and Cause of both Of Metaphors taken from Angels THE Creatures of God are divided into invisible and visible The invisible are Spirits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 asomatoi without bodies and by them we understand Angels because being in their own nature incorporeal they cannot be seen by humane Eyes The visible are whatsoever things have an existence in this whole universe whether they be simple or mixt bodies There are Good and Bad Angels and from both some though not many metaphors are taken 1. From the good Angels some think that the Ministers of the Gospel are by a metaphor called Angels Judg. 2.1 Hag. 1.13 Mal. 2.7 3.1 Matth. 11.10 Mark 1.2 Luk. 7.27 1 Cor. 11.10 Rev. 1.20 and 2.1 8 12 18. and 3.1 7 14. and hence not improperly imply an analogy from the Holy Angels of God to the Prophets and other Preachers of the Word But the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Maleac and the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angelos being an indifferent and common noun denoting any Messenger or Legate it is better to understand that term properly because Ministers of the Gospel are really and not metaphorically Gods Ministers Exod. 28.14 The King of Tyrus is called by a metaphor the annointed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cherub by which term Angels are called Gen. 3.24 and Ezek. 28.14 The covering cherub As if God had said as Angels amongst created things are by Nature and Ministry Commissioned by me for the protection of men so thou King of Tyrus didst in thine own conceit and fancy Judge thy self This metaphor alludes to Gen. 3.24 As Junius and Tremellius in their notes say This is a most elegant description of that Royal Majesty by comparing it to that Cherub which was placed by God in the Garden of Eden Gen. 3.24 For as an Angel was appointed to keep that Garden and arm'd with that flaming Sword which turned every way it was a terror to all so thou King of Tyrus since the Kingdom became thine didst fancy thy self to equal the Angels of God in Glory Some think it has respect to those Angelical figures placed in the Sanctuary Exod. 25.20 covering the Mercy Seat Riding upon a cherub is attributed to God Psal. 18.10 2 Sam. 22.11 When the speech is of Winds Storms Clouds and Tempests to which this name is ascribed by reason of their vehement swiftness and dreadful effects The Chald. renders it And he is revealed in his Magnificence upon most swift Cherubs and he is led in strength upon the Wings of the Wind. 2. As to what respects evil Angels or Devils Christ calls Peter Satan when he would disswade him from suffering Matth. 16.23 Mark 8.33 Get thee behind me Satan Some take this as a Noun appellative and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Satan signifies any adversary as if Christ had said Give over to contradict the Will of my Father 't is thy part to follow not to go before Now thou gainsayest studying to hinder what will save mankind what the Father will have done and what becomes me to do Thou desirest to be a partaker of the Kingdom and yet thou hinderest me that am hastning willingly to the Cross whereby it is to be purchased where you see me go viz. the Kingdom of Heaven there you ought also to bend your course Thou dost not yet savour of God but led by humane affections resist the Divine Will Hinder me not therefore thou unprofitable monitor but follow behind me and rather act the part of a Disciple then a Master But because our Saviour uses not the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 antikeimenos or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 antidikos which signifies an adversary or opposer but the Hebrew or Syriack Satan by which always the Devil is understood in the New Testament and Christ uses the same phrase to the Devil Luke 4.8 it is more rightly said that Christ calls Peter Satan by a metaphor because in his opposition he acted the Devils part in giving Satanical Counsel directly contrary to the Will of God From whence Luther fairly infers this maxime that whatsoever Peter with the universal Colledge of Apostles speaks from his own sence in Divine matters and not by Divine Authority and Revelation as ver 16.17 18. is to be accounted Diabolical and Opposite to Christ See 1 Cor. 3.11 16.22 Gal. 1.8 9. 2 Pet. 1.19 20. c. And then he adds That Christ in this passage with Peter and his Apostles prefigured the future History of his whole Church to wit that there should be some true confessors of Christ viz.
Good Bishops and Martyrs who should confess and Preach Christ the Son of the Living God purely by the example of Peter speaking from the Revelation of the Father But because the same Peter and the Apostles a little after savour of the Flesh yea and as Christ says become Satans it signifies that after the Successors of the Apostles and good Bishops there would come Devilish Bishops And that at length he that would usurp the title of Peters sole and only Successor should follow Satan as his Father for Revelation and would seek not the Kingdom of God but of the World Which Prophesie we see most palpably and horribly fulfilled so far Luther John 6.70 Christ calls Judas Iscariot a Devil because he was like him in Lies and Treachery and so signally malicious that the Scripture says he was of the Devil John 8.44 1 John 3.8 And the Son of the Devil Act. 13.10 Metaphors taken from Heaven COrporeal or Bodily Creatures according to their Physical distinction are either simple or mixt and compounded The simple are Heaven and the Elements or the Ethereal and Elementary Region of the World Heaven properly signifies that outermost celestial body that incloses or compasses the Elements and is the receptacle of the Stars and Constellations Gen. 1.8 14 c. Gen. 15.5 Psal. 8.3 and 19.1.5 Esa. 14.13 Also the Airy Region which is above us and this either in conjunction with the Ethereal or Starry Heaven Gen. 1.6 7 8 9. where by the mention of the waters being gathered together in one place under the Heavens is intimated that also to be a Heaven which is next and immediately above them which is the lower Region of the Air or separately from it and so only the Air Lev. 26.19 Deut. 28.23 1 King 8.35 2 Chron. 7.13 Job 1.16 2.12 Psal. 8 8. Matth. 6.26 Luke 9.54 12.56 But metaphorically Heaven is taken 1. For Divine Glory and infinite Majesty which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 phos aprositon light inaccessible or which none can approach to 1 Tim. 6.16 By reason of similitude from the greatness splendor beauty and elegancy of Heaven to which we may refer the words of Bonaventure Corpus quod est sursum dicitur Caelum c. The Body which is above is called Heaven because it is capacious secret and quiet and because this threefold propriety is found in the celsitude of the Divinity it is therefore called Heaven it is capacious in the immensity of Power secret in the depth of knowledge and quiet in the tranquility of delight This is superior to all Heavens not by situation but dignity and greater than every Heaven not by extension but from his own immensity by which he is beyond all but not excluded c. So it is taken when God is said to dwell in Heaven Psal. 2.4 1 King 8.39.43 c. So Deut. 26.15 Look down from thy Holy Habitation from Heaven and bless thy people c. So it is said of Christ that he came down from Heaven John 3.13 6.33 50 51. 1 Cor. 15.47 That is he went forth from that inaccessible Light of Divine Majesty and manifested himself in the Flesh. And the same Throne of Majesty is in the Heavens Heb. 8.1 and 1.3 to which Christ as God-man in his state of exaltation went See John 17.5 Heb. 7.26 Made higher then the Heavens Eph. 4.10 Ascended up far above all Heavens that he might fill all things See Psal. 8.1 2. and 108.5 c. By which places not so much the hight of the place as the sublimity of the Divine Majesty is expressed 2. Heaven is metaphorically taken for the spiritual Kingdom of God and that state of happiness wherein he manifests and communicates himself to Angels and Men And that is 1. Of Grace viz. The gathering and gracious Government of the Church Militant in this Life to which belongs the appellation of the Kingdom of Heaven oftentimes attributed to the Church Matth. 13.11 24 31 33. and 20.1 and 22.1 c. So when it is said to plant a Heaven Esa. 51.16 and to create a New Heaven Esa. 65.17 By which phrases the Restauration of the Church by Christ is noted which is begun in this Life and compleated in Eternity 2. Pet. 3.13 The Reason of the Comparison is because as the natural Heaven is very far distant from the Earth so the ways of God in ruling his Church and giving blessedness to believers do exceedingly surpass the manner of Earthly Administrations Esa. 55.9 And as in the natural Heaven all things are in the exactest order full of Light and radiance So God in his Church is the God of order and peace 1 Cor. 14.33 Leading Teaching and saving his people by a most convenient order of mediums and that by the Light of his saving Word 2. Of Glory viz. The Eternal and unspeakable felicity of Angels and Holy men in the beholding and perfect fruition of the glorious God To which belong those phrases Matth. 18.10 Their Angels in Heaven behold the face of my Father the speech is of the Angels appointed as keepers of the little ones By which it appears that the Angels though acting on Earth for the good of Christians are nevertheless really in Heaven that is in a celestial state of blessedness Matth. 6.20 Treasures are said to be laid up in Heaven Luke 8.22 To have treasures in Heaven Phil. 3.20 To have our Conversation in Heaven By which phrases Faith and Christian Hope aspiring and tending to Eternal blessedness is to be understood From this Heaven Satan is said to fall like Lightning Luke 10.18 Satan says Illyricus fell not from a place but from his degrees of dignity to wit from the favour of God and spiritual Blessedness into the greatest wickedness punishments and eternal and spiritual calamities Of the scope of these words of Christ Erasmus says thus Jesus that he might fortifie their Mines against that disease of vain glory which even the Saints are sometimes tainted with proposes the example of Lucifer to them who for his pride was suddenly cast down from so great felicity I saw says he Satan falling from Heaven like Lightning His dignity in Heaven was very eminent and yet for the swelling pride of his mind is flung from the highest glory to the lowest wretchedness how much more ought you to beware of pride who carry a mortal body about you obnoxious to all perils But others understand this of the power and efficacy of Christ which by the Preaching of the Apostles he put forth to which Satan against his Will was forced to give way and was as it were cast down from the height of that power which he exercised over men In Heaven we are also to consider the Ornaments of it as the luminaries as they are called Gen. 1.14 The Sun Moon and Stars which are the Organs of Light The Sun and Moon constantly shining do metaphorically denote eternal blessedness in Heaven Thy Sun shall no more go down
their good things here IV. The Lord does not expect that Heathens and Infidels who are like dry and barren ground should bring forth or yield him so much increase and fruit of grace and holiness as those people and nations to whom he hath afforded his blessed Gospel and those Churches that he hath planted and bestowed much cost and pains upon Where much is given a suitable improvement is required and where but little the improvement of a little V. God separates his people from all the people of the world to be a peculiar inheritance unto himself There they have bounds set them viz. Holy laws and institutions within which they ought always to keep that they mix not themselves with the world to pass which bounds is a high and provoking evil VI. God Almighty takes special care of his Church and of every branch and member thereof And for their preservation hath made a hedge a fence yea a glorious Wall round about them This the Devil knows and nothing troubles him more hast thou not made a hedge about him and about all that he hath See more in the Metaphors of a Garden and Vineyard VII The Lord doth by his word plow up the fallow ground of our hearts When he threatned spiritual Judgments upon Israel his ancient Vineyard he says by the Prophet it shall not be digged but there shall come up briars and thorns Before our hearts are digged up they lie fallow Break up your fallow ground And sow not among thorns VIII The Lord finds all our hearts naturally very hard yet some more hard and obdurate than others And that he may effectually break them into pieces he uses divers Instruments some of his Ministers come with the smooth plow of the Gospel Others with the Ma●●tock of the law from Mount Sinai Some denounce the threatnings in Gods word like a hammer to break the Rock in pieces IX The Lord shews us in his word that no Persons whatsoever can bring forth good and acceptable fruit till by the word and spirit of grace they are wrought upon and planted or sowen by him X. When God hath through his word and holy spirit broken up the sinners heart by powerful convictions so that the inside of the soul is to it s own sight as it were turned outward as in the case of the woman of Samaria who cried out Come see a man which told me all things that ever I did and as 't was with the Jews Peter preached to who cried out what shall we do Then the filthiness of the soul and its horrid pollution appears and the poor man cries out I did not think there had been so much abomination in my heart that I had been such a Rebel against God O the pride the lust the blasphemy hard heartedness vanity folly and unbelief I find there who could think I had such a prodigie of wickedness XI The Lord takes great pains uses many ways and bestowes great cost to make his People bring forth fruit unto him he sends his word his spirit his Ministers sets Conscience on work and if all will not do but that weeds of Corruption still spring and roots of bitterness remain he sends afflictions to humble and cleanse them and destroy the power of sin XII Though the blessed God sees his people do not Answer his unwearied pains but that abundance of earthliness barrenness and unprofitableness still remains in them yet be gives them not over but with much patience waits year after year not sparing continual labour in order to their Reformation that so they may bring forth more fruit unto him XIII The Lord bestows his choicest mercies upon his heritage with the greatest chearfulness I will rejoice over them to do them good and I will plant them in this land assuredly with my whole heart c. 't is freely given and without grudging he has done as much as could be done to his Vineyard XIV The Lord God knows that though the Church his spiritual Vineyard be sowed with good seed and planted with choice plants yet they cannot grow nor prosper unless watered from heaven with Divine showers and refreshing dew And therefore God opens the sluices or windows of heaven and makes the Fruits of the earth flourish and wonderfully increase the rain c. watereth the earth and maketh it bring forth and bud that it may give seed to the sower and bread to the eater c. XV. The Lord declares in h●●s word that the lowly and humble soul is the most fruitful Christ says he went down to see the fruits of the Valley his chief expectation is from them that lie low in their own sight Trees planted by the water-courses thrive best and bring moist fruit The rain glides off from Hills and Mountains and the Valleys receive it The lofty proud self-conceited person is barren and fruitless the savour of Gods grace abides not on their hearts To this man will I look that is poor and of a contrite spirit he that sees its own emptiness and has no confidence in the flesh but whose trust and dependency is upon Christ is the thriving and fruitful person that like the tree by the waterside spreading his roots by the River shall not see when heat cometh but his leaf shall be green and he shall not be careful in the year of Drought XVI The Heavenly husbandman bestows much pains that he may destroy the weeds of indwelling sin and corruption in his people He uses various means as his word and holy spirit trials afflictions c. in order to that end by these he digs up those weeds by the roots as worldly mindedness unbelief and sensual lusts which else would choak the good seed though some remains of them are left behind to keep us humble and watchful such ill weeds grow apace and are ready to spring up when the least liberty is given By these also this blessed husbandman prunes and pares of suckers or superfluous branches which ●●eed upon that sap which should nourish his tender plants such are carnal divisions strife and unnecessary contention among Saints busying themselves about idle and unprofitable notions or matters of slender consequence neglecting in the mean time those serious and practical parts of Christianity which are of absolute and undoubte●● nec●●ssity these are the spiritual suckers of our time and are the cause that so many lean and barren souls are found in this spiritual Vineyard XVII The Heavenly husbandman waits for the fruit of his fields also He looked that it viz. his ancient vineyard should bring forth grapes Isa. 5.2 Went three years seeking fruit on the fig tree c. And wh●●n the time of fruit drew near he sent his servants to the husbandmen that they might receive the fruits of it c. Where God sows plentifully he expects a sutable crop where much is given much is required where
are to be performed and done through Christ's Name and all our Prayers which are our Spiritual Incense are to be made through his Mediation all must be done which God hath appointed upon his own Altar or 't will be abhorr'd IV. The Saints spiritual Altar Jesus Christ is but one who only once and in one place offered up a sufficient Sacrifice for Sin V. The Lord Jesus our spiritual Altar doth sanctify all our Duties and Prayers which are in themselves impure VI. Jesus Christ is a Believers only Refuge it is through him and by flying to him God comes to be intreated and is kind and merciful unto us VII Christ was not only sprinkled with his own Blood but we may thereby learn that all our Prayers and Duties are not only accepted through his Intercession but also by the Means of his shedding and sprinkling of his Blood VIII These four Horns signified the Power and Glory of Christ's Priest-hood for the Salvation of his Elect from the four Corners of the Earth Type I. THe Altar and Sacrifice the Altar and Incense were two things II. Other Altars only sanctifyed the Gift ceremonianlly or figuratively and could not otherways III. Other Altars were to stand but for a time 't is a Sin now to erect such Altars because the Antitype or Substance of them is come IV. Other Altars were made of corruptible Matter viz. Shittim Wood. Disparity I. CHRIST alone is both the Sacrifice and Sacrificer II. Christ sanctifies all the Prayers and Duties of the Godly really by reason of that intrinsecal Worth Vertue and Excellency there is in him and in his Death c. III. Christ our Altar and High-Priest abides for ever Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Heb. 5.6 IV. Christ is incoruptible that was of a perishing Nature but this Altar perisheth not Inferences I. THis reproves those that erect Altars in their Churches as the Papists and others do Saints own no Altar but Christ. II. We may infer from hence that those that serve at the Jewish Tabernacles have no Right to eat of this Altar for they thereby deny him to be their Altar III. This shews the Gospel Church and Worship is far more glorious than the Legal Church and Worship was Christ Heir of all things Heb. 1.2 Whom he hath appointed Heir of all things THe term Heir in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sors or a Lot and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lex the Law is one that inherits an Estate Lot or Portion by Law and therefore God the Father being the Soveraign Owner and Proprietor of all things devolves the Inheritance upon his only begotten Son Jesus Christ. And so though he is really and properly an Heir yet the Term is by a Metaphor borrowed from worldly Heirs This word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is appropriated by Custom to the ●●lergy or Eccl●●siastical Persons but it really signifies God's Lot or Inheritance 〈◊〉 is all ●●he Faithful and therefore 1 Pet. 5.3 should not be translated God's Clergy but God's Inheritance Weemes Divin Exercit. The most probable Derivation of the wo●●d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Goral which by a Transposition of Letters and the letter Gimel changed into the Greek Kappa will be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coral which is of near Affinity in sound and signification to the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence as was said comes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Heir Now the universal Body of Believers is the Inheritance or Clergy if we must so call it of God Isa. 19.25 which Universal Church is distributed into particular Churches as it were by Lots or Parts neither ●●s the Term any where in Scripture pecul●●arly attributed to the Pastors of the Churches as Laurentius and Gerhard upon 1 Pet. 5.2 demonstrate Metaphor I. AN Heir is the First-born usually though it holds not universally so for all Right to Estates Kingdoms and Possessions are not Hereditary II. An Heir is the Head of a Family the chief and Supream of all his Father's House III. Sometimes a Person is made Heir and hath both Title and Possession by virtue of a Grant and Surrender made by another that is allied or bears good will to him IV. An Heir is the Support and Stay of a Family all depend and rely upon him the whole Estate and Inheritance being his V. An Heir is Lord of all he hath Headship Dominion and Power over all whatsoever he is the Heir of whether Persons or Things one or more Kingdoms See Gal. 4.1 VI. An Heir distributes Portions to others he enricheth all his younger Brethren and Sisters and gives Gifts if a kingly and mighty Heir to all his Friends and Favourites VII A Princely Heir or one that is an Heir to a Crown and Kingdom is proclaimed and his Right asserted VIII An Heir at a certain time comes to the Inheritance or takes actual Possession of that which he is Heir of Parallel I. CHRIST the Heir of all Things is the Fathers First-born I will make him my First-born higher than or high above the Kings of the Earth Psal. 89.27 II. Christ is the Head of the heavenly Family He hath put all things under his Feet And gave him to be Head over all things to the Church Eph. 1.21 22. III. Christ as he hath absolute Right or is Heir of all things As he is the First-born among many Brethren he hath also a delegated Right he hath his Title and Possession by Grant from the Father hence 't is said He is appointed Heir of all things God the Father in the pursuit of the Soveraign Purpose of his Will hath granted unto the Son as Incarnate and Mediatour of the New Covenant according to the eternal Counsel between them both a Sovereign Right or Heirship the Possession of an absolute Proprietor to dispose of all things at his pleasure IV. Christ is the only Support and Bearer-up of the whole Church by whom the whole Family in Heaven and Earth are named so all the Faithful depend and rely upon him for all things In whom are hid all the Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledg It pleased the Father that in him all Fulness should dwell V. Christ who is the true and undoubted Heir is Lord of all That in all things he might have the Pre-eminence All Power in Heaven and Earth is given to me the Father hath subjected all things unto him And 't is reasonable that Christ should have this Soveraign Power and Headship sith all things were made by him and for him it was meet he should be Lord of all Besides this made good the Promise made to Abraham which was that his Seed should be Heir of the World Moreover hereby is the grant of that Request of Christ to the Father He shall have the whole World for his Inheritance the ends of the Earth for his Possession
Smoak perfumed with Myrrh and Frankincense with all the Powders of the Merchant We read of the sweet Scent of the Church but how comes she to smell so rarely but from the Communication of the sweet Graces of Christ to her Sinners are very unsavoury until this Myrrh-Tree has dropp'd upon them II. Christ is the richest and purest Perfume Heaven and Earth can afford none so sweet How fragrant is he in the Nostrils of God the Father He even ravishes the Senses of Angels and Saints makes us and all our Duties as sweet Odours unto the Father III. Christ hath in him a preserving Quality or Power were it not for that Life he has communicated to us and the rest of Mortals how soon would our Bodies rot But in a special manner he preserves our Souls Sin is of a rotting stinking and putrifying Nature compared to a Leprosy and filthy Sores now if Christ did not drop daily a little of his Myrrh I mean the Grace of his Spirit into our Souls how loathsom should we soon become IV. Jesus Christ makes every Believer beautiful they have no Comeliness but what he has put upon them 'T is he that makes their Faces to shine who takes away every Spot and Wrinkle and presents them a perfect Beauty in the Father's sight by imputing and imparting of Righteousness unto them through Faith V. Christ the true Christ of God is not easily known to the ignorant many take a false Christ for the true Christ. Some are so blind that they think the Light which is in every Man the Light of natural Conscience is the Christ of God and Saviour of the World VI. Jesus Christ hath many medicinal Virtues By his Stripes we are healed He dries up all evil and offensive Rheums makes Prayer the Breath or Breathings of the Soul savoury clears the ●●oice and helps our Infirmities by which ●●eans we pray more elegantly and ferven●●y in the Spirit takes away all Impediments so that our Prayers are heard and accepted by the Father VII The Spirit of Christ and Graces thereof are compared to Oil He is the Myrrh-Tree from whence the Divine Oil flows wherewith the Ministers and Saints of God are more or less anointed See Oil of Gladness 1. In Christ is abundance of Divine Sweetness not a Sprig or two but a great Bundle not two or three Grains but a Bag filled with it or a Bundle of heavenly Myrrh 2. Whatever is good in Christ is laid up safe Believers may waste or lose much of the Grace of Christ in them but none of that which is bound up in this sacred Bundle can be lost METAPHOR I. MYrrh has some Dregs in it tho never so purely refined II. Other Myrrh may be bought for Money III. Other Myrrh will lose its Virtue if kept over-long IV. The Myrrh-Tree doth not always drop this Gum distills but at certain Seasons of the Year Disparity I. IN Christ is no Dregs no Sin nothing but what is invaluably precious II. All the Riches of both the Indies can't purchase one drain of this Divine Myrrh III. Christ's Virtue is ever the same IV. Christ the spiritual Myrrh-Tree is always dropping Application 1. CHrist is a precious Jesus and saving Grace worth the prizing 't is like to sweet-smelling Myrrh 2. What a Mercy is it to have our spiritual Senses so exercised as to discern between things that differ 3. What Eyes do they see with that despise and slight Jesus Christ This Bundle of Myrrh this Rose of Sharon this Lilly of the Vallies is not so much regarded by the most of Men as a Bundle of Thorns and Briars 4. You that love a sweet Smell here is a precious Perfume for your unsavoury Souls Notwithstanding all your rare Gums Odors and fragrant Flowers Spices and choice Powders you will smell ranck and unsavoury in the Nostrils of God if you have not this Bundle of Myrrh to perfume your Souls and Services 5. If Believers receive all their Graces and Sweetness from Christ let them make grateful Acknowledgments thereof to Him Christ the Saints Wedding-Garment Mat. 22.11 12. And he said unto him Friend how camest thou hither not having a Wedding-Garment c. THIS Text is part of the Parable of the Marriage Mat. 22. And the Word Parable is thus expounded by Jerome Tom. 3. Epist. 51. ad Algasiam q. 6. p. 359. Parabola hoe est Similitudo quae ab eo vocatur quod alteri 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est assimilatur quasi umbra praevia Veritatis est A Parable that is a Similitude so called because it is like another thing and is as it were a previous shadow of Truth The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to compare or liken it answers to the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mashal In the New Testament it signifies an Enigmatical or Allegorical Comparison c. For further account the Reader is referred to the Place where we treat of Parables The Phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Wedding-Garment is borrowed from a custom among the Ancients where every Guest at that Solemnity was arrayed in a Habit peculiar only to such Feasts and such as wanted it were accounted Intruders viz. such as without any Right thrust themselves in Now in this Parable all Orthodox Expositors affirm that by the King ver 2. we are to understand JEHOVAH by his Son the Messiah by his Servants the Ministers of the Gospel by such that found pretences of Absence worldly-minded Persons that prefer their temporal Pleasures before Grace and true Religion by the Invitation of the Guests the calling of the Gentiles c. by him that wanted the Wedding-Garment Hypocrites or such as have not put on Christ spiritually that is are not clothed with his Righteousness by Faith whose doom is damnation ver 13. All the best Expositors agree by the Wedding-Garment is intended Christ's Righteousness or Imputed Righteousness which is put on the Soul by Faith for Justification For the further demonstration hereof see the following Parallel METAPHOR I. THe use and necessity of Garments came in by the Fall Adam in Innocency had no need of them II. Garments are to cover Nakedness that Shame and Deformity may not appear to others for this reason did our first Parents sew Fig-leaves together to cover themselves and from hence God afterwards made them Coats of Skins c. III. Garments differ much in Worth and Excellency we read in Scripture of filthy Garments and likewise of glorious Apparel IV. Garments are for Ornament they set off natural Excellency making Men and Women appear very lovely and amiable in the eyes of others V. Garments are of great Utility in respect of Defence they secure us from many Hurts and Dangers which naked ones are exposed to they are Munimenta Corporis they are as light Armor to the Body in the Winter they save the Body from peircing Cold
Feet Hissing is attributed to God by which a Divine Call or summons of God for men to gather together and appear in a certain place is noted as Esa. 5.26 and 7.18 For 't is customary with men oftentimes to call certain Beasts to them that way This Hissing of God is used in a good sence Zach. 10.8 I will hiss for them and gather them for I have redeemed them and they shall increase as they have increased which is understood of the gathering of the Church by the voice of the Gospel Breathing is ascribed to God Gen. 2.7 And he Breathed into his Face the breath of Life that is he endued the Body he had formed with a living soul in the Image of God Sometimes it denotes Gods Anger the Metaphor being taken from Angry men who then puff and blow strongly as Evek 21.31 I will pour out mine indignation upon thee I will blow or breath against thee c. See Act. 9.1 Laughing and Deriding are attributed to God Psal. 2.4 He that sitteth in the Heavens shall Laugh the Lord shall have them in Derision Psal. 37 12. The wicked plotteth against the Just and gnasheth upon him with his Teeth Verse 13. The Lord shall laugh at him for he seeth that his day is coming This is spoken by an Anthropopathy the Metaphor being taken from a wise and prudent man who when he sees some heady and inconsiderate undertaker rush on towards his fancied exploits without deliberation or a solid foundation laid and bragging of extraordinary matters has him in contempt and as it were laughing in his sleeve expects an unhappy event that is to say when this Mountain shall bring forth a Mouse as it is vulgarly spoken So men deride an Enemy that threatens when he has no strength or power to execute his menaces But this phrase notes the most wise Providence of God which slights the folly of his Enemies whom he tolerates for a time and to whose malice he hath appointed bounds and at the appointed season confounds tramples on and destroys them As it is said of wicked and stubborn men Prov. 1.26 I will also laugh at your calamity I will mock when your fear cometh By which is to be understood the neglect and rejection of the Wicked in their Adversity As if he had said Even as you neglect and despise my wholesome admonitions so will I despise and neglect your applications and reject you when your Calamities comes c. Kissing is ascribed to God when the speech is of the Son of God incarnate as Cant. 1.2 Where the optative words of the Mystical spouse viz. the Church are had let him kiss me with the kisses of his Mouth upon which place the Chaldee says that it is allusive to Gods speaking face to face to the Israelites as a man does to his Friend and kisses him for love But more truly it is to be understood or expounded of the promulgation or publishing of the Gospel by the Son of God made man John 1 17 18. 1 Tim. 1.10 Heb. 1.1 c. Solomon says Prov. 24.26 That every man shall kiss his lips that giveth a right answer which by way of eminency is applicable to him of whom it is said Esa 40.4 The Lord hath given him the Tongue of the learned that he should know how to speak a word in season to him that is weary and Psal. 45.2 Into whose lips grace is poured Jehova kissed that is shewed intimate tokens of his love to his people in the Old Testament times by many appearances and by Moses Prophets and Angels employed to make discoveries of him but this came short of this Kiss which the Church under the term of Spouse here desires Let him Kiss me with the Kisses of his Mouth that is let him comfort me with a manifestation more eminent then the former viz. of Christs coming into the Flesh and compleating the work of redemption The paraphrase of Origen upon this Text is How long will my Spouse send me Kisses by Moses and the Prophets Now I long to have them personally of himself let him assume my natural shape and Kiss me in the Flesh according to the Prophesies Esa. 7.14 Behold a Virgin shall Conceive and bear a Son and shall call his name Emmanuel so that this is a Prayer for the Incarnation of Christ the Blessed Spouse and Bridegroom of our Souls Heb. 1.1 To this Divine Kiss by a mutual relation of Faith answers Cant. 8.1 O that thou wert as my Brother that sucked the brest of my Mother when I should find thee without I would Kiss thee By which the sincere Love of the Church and the unblemished obedience of Faith is understood Psal. 2.12 Kiss the Son lest he be Angry by which the Kings of the Earth and the potents in the World are instructed to yield homage and obedience to the King of Glroy Christ the Son of God being exhibited in the World For in former times subjection was signified by a Kiss as Gen. 41.40 1 Sam. 10.1 1 King 19.18 Hosea 13.2 A Military Clamor or the crying of a Travailing Woman is attributed to God Esa. 42.13 14. By which is noted that his Lenity Patience and Long Forbearance are changed into a severe vengeance Junius and Tremellius do remark from Vegelius that the Roman Souldiers were wont in the beginning of Battle to fall on with a horrible Clamor to daunt the Enemy Also a Travailing Woman though in great pain yet patiently endures it to the utmost extremities of her throws and then being overcome by the violence of her greif Orphans breaks out into Cryes and Vociferation which most elegantly expresses the Patience and Forbearance of God and the extremity of his Wrath when provokt See Psal. 78.65 66. Rom. 2.4 5. Speaking and Speech is attributed to God Where we must note that those places of Scripture wherein God is said to speak or utter certain Words that he might manifest his Divine pleasure to men that way do not belong to this place God sometimes thus spake immediately as to our first Parents Gen. 2.16 and 3.9 To Noah Gen. 6.13 To Abraham Gen. 12.1 chap. 16. and 17. and 18. To Moses Exod. 3.4 5. and the following verses and to Patriarchs Prophets c. in the Old Testament 2. Sometimes God spake mediately by divinely inspired men in whom a mind enlightned by the Spirit of God was formed into words an account of such is found every where in Scripture as also of Angels who are his Ministring spirits now God does not speak thus by way of Anthropopathy or Metaphor but truly and properly although in a far different and excellent manner then men do or can think But that speaking of God which belongs to this figure is 1. When the effectual or efficacious decree of the Divine Will about the Creature and the executions thereof is revealed or expressed after the manner of humane speech as Gen. 1.3
neither shall thy Moon withdraw it self Esa. 60.20 the explication follows For the Lord shall be thine Everlasting Lights and the days of thy Mourning shall be ended See Rev. 22.5 Such things as concern the state of the Church in this Life and Heaven are mixt in this chapter of Esaiah as an accurate inspection into it will shew The Chald. in Translating these words of the Sun and Moon does not unelegantly expound them thy Kingdom shall no longer be abolished nor thy Glory transferred The Light of the Sun denotes prosperity as shall be shewed hereafter therefore on the contrary the setting or darkness of the Sun metaphorically denotes calamity sorrow and misery Jer. 15.9 Her Sun is gone down while it was yet day Chald. their glory is translated in their Life time that unexpected and most heavy calamities are treated of here the foregoing and following verses shew Amos 8.9 I will cause the Sun to go down at Noon and I will darken the Earth in a clear day that is I will suddenly overwhelm you with heavy strokes and calamities So Micah 3.6 Joel 2.10 and 3.4 Esa. 13.10 On the other side an Increase of the Sun and Moons Light metaphorically signifies great spiritual happiness Esa. 30.26 The light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun and the light of the Sun shall be seven-fold as the light of seven days c. As if he had said the help which I will afford you shall be so great and illustrious that in that time the two luminaries of the World the Sun and Moon as if they would congratulate the Deliverance of the People will be more chearful and more shining then they were wont to be Some refer this to an Hyperbole By the Name of Stars illustrious and principal men are understood Dan. 8.10 And it viz. that little horn by which Antiochus is understood waxed great even to the Host of Heaven and it cast down some of the Host and of the Stars to the ground and stamped upon them By the Host of Heaven the People of God or the Church sometimes circumscribed in Judea is understood but by Stars the Princes or chief men who by their administration in the Church or Commonwealth were of more eminency then others are noted hence in ver 24. it is so expounded he shall destroy the mighty and the holy people that is he shall destroy the highest and the lowest See 1 Macchab. 1.25 2. By the Name of Stars the Teachers of the Word of God and Church Rulers are figured Rev. 1.15 20. and 2.1 Which consideration fairly leads us to know 1. Their Lord and Master whose Countenance is said to shine as the Sun in its strength Rev. 1.16 1. As the Sun communicates his light to the Stars in Heaven So Christ the Sun of Righteousness Mal. 4.2 imparts the light of saving knowledge to his faithful Servants 2 Cor. 4.6 2. The Lord brings forth the Host of the Stars by number and calleth them all by Names Esa. 40.26 So Christ leads forth his Ministers in his Church as a sacred Host against Satan and the World and calleth them also by Name Ps. 68.11 2. Their Office God placed the Stars in the Firmament to enlighten the Earth Gen. 1.17 3. The light of Doctrine which the Ministers bring to the Church is from heaven and taken out of the heavenly and divine Word alone 2 Pet. 1.16.19 which is sweeter then honey to the souls of such as are taught of God Psal. 19.10 Psal. 119 103. but to others as Wormwood Rev. 8.11 Because they tast nothing but bitterness and a denunciation of damnation in it 4. A Star led the wise men to Christ Matth. 2.9 Ministers propose only that end in Preaching 1 Cor. 2.2 5. It is said that at the Commandment of the Holy One they viz. the Stars will stand in their order and never faint in their Watches Of the Ministers of the Word it is said Heb. 13.17 That they watch for the Souls of men Nor ought they to be discouraged in their Watches nor faint because of the Worlds ingratitude but both by doctrine and good example to keep the same order constantly and so they shall be quite different from these wandring Stars to whom is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever Jude ver 13. They are to take care that all things be done decently and in order in the Church 1 Cor. 14.40 6. It is said of the Stars that they fought from Heaven against the Enemies of the People of God Judge 5.20 So a most grievous fight against Devils is proposed to the Ministers of the word Eph. 6.12 Let them look to it therefore that they manage their warfare rightly 2 Cor. 10.3 4 5. That they may be able to Glory in the Lord for the heavenly reward that will follow 2 Tim. 4.7 8. 7. It is said of the Stars that together with the Sun and Moon they divide between the day and between the night and are for Signs and for seasons and for days and for years Gen. 1.14 So it is the duty of Gospel Ministers to divide between the day and night light and darkness that is to inculcate and diligently shew the difference between good and evil piety and wickedness Esa. 5.20 Jer. 15.19 Rom. 13.12 13. 2 Cor. 6.14 15. c. Also to give signs and seasons that is to provide so as that the publick worship of God be kept up timely and seasonably and in their Ministerial function to impart their gifts suitable to the wants of the flock in the respective seasons that so there may be no disorder or confusion to shew also days and nights that is to proclaim the acceptable year of our Lord Esa. 61.2 and earnestly to inculcate the appointed day in which the Lord will Judge the World in Righteousness Acts 17.31 8. It is said of the Stars that they differ from one another in Glory So there is a great diversity of the gifts of the spirit in the Ministers of the Word 1 Cor. 12 4. c. 9. All the Stars of light are commanded to praise God Psal. 148.3 with Job 38.7 So all the Ministers of the word what measure of Grace soever they have received or whatsoever gift they exercise in the Church ought with ardency of spirit to praise the Lord to serve him heartily and without selfishness or envy to preserve mutual Peace and Concord among themselves and their reward shall be certain if they behave themselves faithfully and not only in this world but also in Eternity 10. Stars were seen by John worn in the Right hand of Christ Rev. 1.20 So let the faithful Labourers in the Gospel be certain of a most gracious protection by the omnipotent hand of Christ Esa. 51.16 c. and in the Life to come they that turn many unto Righteousness shall shine as the Stars for ever and ever Dan. 12.3 So much for Ecclesiastical Stars The Stars being obscured sometimes denote
with respect to his inward or efficacious decree of Creating things Psal. 104.7 compared with verses 5 6. Gen. 1.9 As also with respect to the Gospel of Christ Psal 68.34 by the term voice respect is had to the voice of Thunder Psal. 29. peruse ver 12.19 Eph. 4.10.11 To this belongs the Sirnames which Christ gave John and James 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sons of Thunder because they were principal and powerful Preachers of his Word Lightning by a metaphor signifies the bright or furbisht blade of a Lance or Sword which shines and terrifies like lightning Ezek. 21.10 Nahum 3.3 To denote the Anger of God a glittering Sword is attributed to him by an Anthropopathy Deut. 32.41 So is a glittering Spear Hab. 3.11 So it is said Job 20.25 The Lightning cometh so the Hebrew that is as our translation gives it a glistering Sword or as Pagninus render Iron or a Sword like Lightning Hail likewise as Thunder and Storms do carries the notion of Anger Vengeance and most heavy punishments and hence in that description of God in his great Majesty and manifestation of his power and Wrath Psal. 18.12 13 14. Hail is joyned with Lightnings and Thunder Esa. 28.17 And the Hail shall sweep away the Refuge of lies and the waters shall overflow the hiding place that is the vengeance to come shall overthrow the Refuge in which you vainly hope Just as if a storm of Hail and overflowing of Waters should overthrow and overwhelm the Tents you inhabit in in the Fields Esa. 32.19 And it shall Hail in the descent or steep part of the wood and the City shall be utterly abased This has a coherence with the foregoing description of the celestial happiness of the Godly by an Antithesis As if he had said although the whole World which the Prophet expresses Synecdochically by a wood and City that is unmanured and habitable places should be terrifyed for their wickedness or should threaten yet the Godly shall be preserved safely from all the impending or menacing mischiefs See Psal. 46.2 3. and the following verses Rain because it brings great profit to the Earth and yet if it be immoderate or unseasonable becomes hurtful is therefore metaphorically used in a twofold manner viz. in a good and bad sence Examples of the former are to be seen Ezek. 22.24 Thou art the Land which is not cleansed nor Rained upon in the Day of Indignation that is thou shalt not feel any case or relaxation of the pains or punishments which shall be inflicted on thee from on high Ezek. 34.26 The spiritual blessing in the Kingdom of Christ is set down in the similitude of a Shower or rain in season as the fruitfulness of the Earth is ver 2●● Hosea 10.12 It is time to seek the Lord till he come and Rain Righteousness upon you Or as the Hebrew is wet you with the rain of Righteousness viz Of Christ the Redeemer and Saviour the sence and application of whom in the hearts of men refresh●● rejoyces and makes them fruitful in good works as Rain refreshes the Earth and renders it fruitful The Word is emphatical and signifies both Raining and Teaching and therefore some translate it that he may teach you Righteousness to intimate that true saving Righteousness cannot be obtained but through the Word of God which is a shower of Rain in season to refresh contrite sinners and hence it is compared to Rain because of the Rains usefulness Esa. 55.10 11. But that it signifies Rain in the place cited the foregoing Allegory of Raining deriv'd from fertilizing the Earth is very clear See Hos. 6.3 Zach. 14.7 2. Examples of the latter are to be read Job 20.23 VVhen he is about to fill his Belly God shall cast the fury of his wrath upon him and shall Rain it upon him while he is eating By this and the following metaphors the plenty of punishments inflicted on the wicked as the effects of Gods Anger are denoted Psal. 11.6 Vpon the wicked he shall Rain snares Fire and Brimstone that is he shall copiously exercise dreadful Judgments upon them See Eccl. 12.2 Psal. 42.7 Deep calleth unto Deep at the noise of thy water-spouts By the Conduits or water conveyances for so the Word signifies are understood Clouds which pour down much Rain the meaning is that one trouble brings on another and whilst the former is scarce over another stands at the door as if invited or called by the first And as the Clouds send down great showers upon the Earth with much fierceness and noise causing hurtful floods and sometimes dangerous deluges So one Calamity ushers another upon me so that I am afflicted and terrified with great perils Snow is put for Glory Prosperity and Pleasantness of Canaan when delivered from Enemies Psal. 68.14 and Psal. 51.7 For cleansing from sin Esa. 1.18 And the eternal felicity of believers Dew which falls from the Air moistning and fertilizing the Earth in two places denotes the state of Believers 1. In this World as Psal. 110.3 The Dew of Christs youth is mentioned that is the Church of Believers adopted by the Spirit of Christ which like Dew is born again by the VVord and Gospel Ministrations and may be fitly compared to Dew because a faithful confession and pious conversation are edifying to others and win them for Christ rendring the Church fruitful as the Dew does the Earth as also with respect to the mutual commiseration love and benefits with which Christians comfort each other as Dew sweetly refreshes and as it were cheers the Earth when scorched and dried up by the Suns intemperate heat See Micah 5.7 Hos. 14.5 Psal. 33.3 2. In the world to come and Resurrection from the Dead Esa. 26.19 Thy Dew is as the Dew of herbs This is an acclamation to God whose gracious power and most powerful Grace which he exercises in the Resurrection of Believers is called Dew and compared to the Dew that falls upon herbs As if he had said as the Dew of Heaven refreshes and raises up those herbs which were as it were Dead and withered because of the Suns heat So thy power O God shall raise up and make thy Dead to Live c. For the connexion of the whole verse and propriety of the words shew that the Resurrection of the Dead is here treated of The Chaldee interprets it the Dew of Light which gives the light of eternal blessedness The paraphrase upon the whole verse is thus Thou art he which quickens the Dead thou raisest the bones of their Carkasses they shall live and praise thee before all who were before converted into dust because the Dew of light is thy Dew to such as observe thy Law but the wicked to whom thou gavest power and yet transgressed thy Law thou wilt cast in to Hell Metaphors taken from Water THese metaphors may be thus distinguished 1. Such things as concern the Name or Appellation of Waters 2. The Subjects or Things containing Water 3.
received that name from the great perturbation of the people of Israel Josh. 7.24 25 26. It was in that valley which borders upon Jericho that they had the first hope of possessing the Land of Canaan So they believing in the valley of Achor that is being full of trouble and d●●sturbance they are raised up by a gracious consolation out of Gods word and are comforted by the hope of eternal Life The Valley of Jehosaphat is put for the Church Joel 3.2 The valley of Gehinnon or Hinnon from whence Gehenna put for Hell comes afford no other Metaphors A Desert which is a part of the Earth little inhabited and manured wanting pleasant Rivers elegant Trees Fruits c. is often put for the Gentiles who are strangers to the Kingdom of God and are destitute of the means of eternal Life Hence Fountains of Living Waters and good Trees are promised to the Desert by which the Calling of the Gentiles to the Kingdom of Christ is intimated Esa. 35.1 2. and 41.18 19. and 43.19 20. And by those Fountains the saving Doctrine of Christ but by Trees the Teachers of the Word and true Believers are to be understood The lower parts of the Earth Psal. 139.15 signifie the Mothers Womb and so the Chaldee translates it By this phrase we are fairly inform'd what our original is viz. the Earth Some say that the phrase Eph. 4.9 He also descended into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the lowest parts of the Earth is to be taken in this sence But this is most properly to be understood of the state of his deep and most profound humiliation as his ascending on high is to be understood of the state of his most super-eminent exaltation Brentius upon Act. 1. pag. 19. says See the miseries and calamities which man must of necessity endure for his sin and you will find him as it were in the lowest part of the Earth what is lower than the pit of Death What 's deeper than Hell When David said Out of the depths have I cryed to thee O Lord surely he cries from no other place than from the sence of Death and Hell in which for his sins he was comprehended c. The Deep of the Earth and the terms that are analogical to it as a Pit an Abyss or swallowing deep metaphorically denote 1. The Grievousness of Evils Miseries and Calamities Psal. 55.23 and 71.20 and 88.6 Prov. 22.14 Esa. 24.17 22. Lam. 4.20 and 3.47 53. Zach. 9.11 Hence the phrase to dig a pit for another that is to conspire mischief and to fall into the pit he digged for another that is to be overwhelmed with the same evil he provided for another See Psal. 7.15 16. and 9.15 16. Prov. 26.28 Jer. 18.20 Psal. 94.12 13. 2 Thes. 1.5 c. By Sepulchres which are under the Earth great Calamities are likewise signified Psal. 86.13 and 88.3 4. c. 2. That which is Abstruse hid or inscrutable as an abyss or bottomless pit cannot be seen or known through Psal. 36.6 and 92.5 Rom. 11.33 1 Cor. 2.10 Rev. 2.24 See Esa. 29.15 and 31.6 Hos. 5..2 and 9.6 1 Tim. 6.9 c. From Mud Dirt Dust and Dung also Metaphors are taken which denote 1. Men in a Vile and Contemptible condition 1 Sam. 2.8 Psal. 113.7 Hither may we refer where the Apostle calls himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 4.13 Made as the filth of the World and the off-scouring of all things because of the ignominy and contempt which he suffered Erasmus in paraphrase Others are much honoured by you but we for your sake to this day are accounted as the trash of this World than which nothing can be more abject or trampled upon See Lam. 3.45 To which place a great many say the Apostle had respect 2. Evils and Adversities Psal. 69.2 14. Jer. 38.22 Lam. 4.5 3. Death or a most ignominious casting away Psal. 83.10 Which is called the burial of an Ass Jer. 22.19 See 2 Kings 9.37 Jer. 16.4 c. 4. A thing had in great esteem among men but is really vile sordid and noxious Hab. 2.6 That ladeth himself with thick Clay or Mud by this is to be understood a vast power of Riches which do not profit but rather prove grand snares and hurtful impediments to the wicked possessors as if they had been immerg'd in thick Mud or should take it along as their burthen As Mud is an impediment to a Traveller by how little he can go forward And by how often he endeavours to dispatch by so much is he involved in a more dangerous intricacy So great Wealth in the way of Godliness are a hinderance to him that sets his heart upon it Mar. 10.23.24 Luk. 8.14 See Esa. 24.20 Phil. 3.8 I count all things but loss and Dung that I may win Christ He speaks of those things which before his Conversion he magnifi'd and put his confidence for Salvation in But now being converted to Christ he despises them as the most sordid and vilest things being not only unprofitable for Salvation but most pernicious if confided in Others expound 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if he had said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is thrown to dogs So Suidas takes it And it is to be noted that in the second verse false Apostles are called Dogs whose corrupt works the Apostle cautions against By Mud Dirt and other Filth the Members and Apparel of a man are polluted and contaminated which contamination is brought frequently to denote the Filthy nature of sin Esa. 64.6 2 Cor. 7.1 Eph. 5.27 Tit. 1.15 2 Pet. 2.10 20. with ver 13 22. Jud. ver 23. Jam. 1.21 Rev. 3.4 To this Washing and Cleansing are Contrary by which the taking away of sin is noted The Dust of the Earth likewise signifies contempt abjection misery and mourning 1 Sam. 2.8 Job 16.15 Ps. 7.5 6. Ps. 22.15 16 29 30. and 44.25 26. and 113.6 7. Psal. 119.25 Esa. 47.1 and 52.2 Lam. 3.16 29. Ashes In a metaphorical signification and by allusion of the Name agrees with Dust with which it is sometimes joyned sometimes not For the Dust is indeed Ashes only that is a grosser matter into which a thing burnt is reduced By this is signifi'd frailty and vileness Gen. 18.27 Eccles. 10.9 where nevertheless there is respect had to mans first original which was Dust and Ashes Sometims it signifies great Calamity and the sadness and mourning that ensues Esa. 61.3 Ezek. 28.18 Mal. 4.3 Lam. 3.16 For Mourners were formerly wont to throw Ashes upon their Heads yea to lye in it as appears 2 Sam. 13.19 Job 2.8 and 42.6 Esa. 58 5. Jer. 6.25 Ezek. 27.30 Jon. 3.6 Matth. 11.21 c. The same metaphorical signification is in the phrase to feed on Ashes Psal. 102.9 I have eaten Ashes like Bread that is I am in very great grief or trouble Esa. 44.20 He feedeth of Ashes a deceived heart hath turned him aside He speaks of the Idol which can bring nothing
their Disciples are understood Matth. 23.9 1 Cor. 1.15 Acts 18.8 9 10.11 3. Because he governs his Children he is put for a Prince or superior 1 Sam. 24.11 2 Kings 5.13 Isa. 22.21 Hence Deborah is call'd a Mother Judg. 5.7 4. Because of his Conversation with his Children he is put for any thing most conjunct Job 17.14 5. Because of his love he is put for any thing loving or benevolent Gen. 45.8 Job 29.16 6. He is put for an Example or Exemplar rather proposed for imitation Rom. 4.11 12 16 18. Of the word Mother See chap. 9. Sect. 5. § 4. Babylon or the Antichristian Church is called the Mother of fornications and abominations of the Earth that is that Invented confirm'd propagated and defended the Idolatries damnable Doctrines Errors Nefarious wickednesses of all sorts of Men which are mystical whoredom and the greatest abomination in the sight of God By Allusion to the Mans words that said to Christ Matth. 12.47 Thy Mother and thy Brethren stand without desiring to speak with thee Christ calls his Disciples and all Believers his Mother Brothers and Sisters that is they were as Dear to him as such and denotes that Spiritual Relation is of higher value than Earthly The Parting of two wayes is call'd a Mother Ezek. 21.21 because two wayes as if they were two Daughters proceed from it A Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ben what significations this is of may be read Chap. 7. All Believers are call'd the Sons of God Joh. 1.12 13. Rom. 8.14 16 17 19 21. Gal. 3.26 and 4.5 6. 1 Pet. 1.14.23 1 Joh. 3.1 2. c. Because of the Mystery of Regeneration And because this is effected by Preaching of the word Paul calls his Converts his Sons 1 Cor. 4.14 17. Philemon ver 10. Thus such as Believe as Abraham did and only such are call'd his seed or Children and he their Father Rom. 4.16 See Rom. 9.7 8 9. and Gal. 4.22 c. The Impious and unbelieving on the Contrary are call'd the Children of the Devil Acts 13.10 1 John 3.10 See ver 8. and 1 John 8.44 because they imitate him in Wickedness Princes and Magistrates are called Sons of the most high Psal. 82.6 Not with respect to their Faith but 1 Because they are on Earth as it were Gods heirs succeeding in a certain part of Judiciary Authority 2 Because they are of such Authority on Earth that God tenders and loves them and commands Reverence and Obedience to them Rom. 13.1 c. First begotten Son in a Metaphor obtains the Notion of Excellence and Prerogative and is put for one very dear and precious as the eldest Son is to the Parent Exod. 4.22 Jer. 31.9 20. c. An Orphan denotes a forlorn and helpless condition Psal. 10.14.18 Lam. 5.3 Hence John 14.18 Christ promises his Disciples that he would not leave them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Orphans that is destitute of help A Brother is put for that which is like a thing Job 30.29 Prov. 18.9 A man and his Brother denote society or mutual ingagement Gen. 26.31 and 37.19 and 42.21 28. Exod. 16.15 Num. 14.4 Jer. 23.35 and 25.26 Mal. 2.10 See Exod 25.20 Job 4.8 Joel 2.8 A w●●man and her sister Exod. 26.3 5 6 17. Ezek. 1.9 23. and 3.13 c. See also Jer. 23.35 and 31.34 Isa. 34.15 16. A Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baal the Metaphorical significations hereof are at large given elsewhere The Principal Species of Lordship is Royalty which to figure the eminency of heavenly glory is attributed to Believers who are called Kings Rev. 1.6 and 5.10 See Matth. 25.34 Dan. 7.22.27 1 Pet. 2.9 Hence is the mention of Thrones Rev. 3.21 and 4.4 Matth. 19.28 and 22.30 Of Royal Government Rev. 2.26 27. And a Crown ver 11. and elsewhere frequently A Servant to serve and servitude have very many Metaphorical acceptations denoting sometimes good sometimes evil 1. Good as the service of God of which there is frequent mention in Scripture by which his sincere worship in Faith and Obedience is noted So a man is said to be the servant of Righteousness when he serves God in Faith Holiness and Righteousness Rom. 6.16 18 19. Luk. 1.75 To serve other men Matth. 20.27 Mark 10.43 44. Gal. 5.13 denotes an officious Humility and Beneficence the fruit of Faith So Paul was the servant of Christians 2 Cor. 4.5 See 1 Cor. 9.19 Paul says that he brought his body into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 servitude 1 Cor. 9.27 which denotes mortification 2. It denotes Evil when it respects sin and what relates to it To serve sin denotes impenitence John 8.34 Rom. 6.6 17 19 20. Tit. 3.3 2 Pet. 2.19 To serve Mammon denotes worldly-mindedness and a greedy desire after ill got riches Matth. 6.24 To serve the Belly denotes an indulging ones self in Carnal pleasures Rom. 16.18 See Phil. 3.19 Tit. 3.3 To serve much wine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denotes Drunkenness Tit. 2.3 To serve men denotes an obedience to their prescriptions in opposition to the Commands of God 1 Cor. 7.23.25 Gal. 5.1 and 4.9 with Acts 15.10 which two last Texts respect the legal Ceremonies and hence that Phrase is taken Rom. 8.15 Spirit of Bondage to which is opposed the Spirit of Adoption the One denotes legal strictness and terror the other Evangelical Grace See Heb. 12.18 c. See also Heb. 2.15 The Law is call'd a Schoolmaster because it taught the way to Christ Gal. 3.24 There is a very fair Metaphor taken from a Schoolmasters Instruction Isa. 28.10 For Precept must be or hath been upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little was added As Rules and Precepts are given and inculcated into the minds of Children and their hands guided to write as in the old Verse Adde parum parvo parvo superadde pusillum i. e. Add little to little and to little superadd very little that at length they may acquire the whole treasure of Learning so God by his Prophets 2 Chron. 36.15 and Ministers instructs his People in Divine learning c. 4. The Metaphors from a Country or Family are these A Canaanite is put for a stranger or impure Person Zach. 14. last verse Isa. 35.8 Joel 3.22 For a Merchant because their Country was near the Sea Prov. 31.24 Isa. 2●● 8 Jer. 10.17 Hos. 12.8 Zeph. 1.11 An Arabian is put for a Thief or Robber because they were infamous that way Jer. 3.2 Isa. 13.20 the Edomites and Moabites are put for the Churches Enemies because they were such to the Jews Psal. 137.7 Lam. 4.21 Amos 1.11 Obadiah ver 10. Ezek. 25.12 Isa. 34.5 6. and 63.1 and 25.10 Chaldeans are put for Mathematicians or Fortune-tellers because that Nation was given to it Dan. 2.2 c. The Names of Sodom and Gomorrah are attributed to the Rebellious and stubborn Jews Isa. 1.10 See Isa. 3.9 Ezek. 16.48 49
Doctrine 1 Cor. 8.10 c. To War Fight c. is put for the spiritual fight of Believers against the Devil the World and the Flesh Esa. 40.2 2 Cor. 10.4 Eph. 6.12 1 Tim. 1.18 2 Tim. 2.3 4. and 4.7 Phil. 1.27 T is said of such things as disagree amongst themselves as Flesh and Spirit Rom. 7.23 Jam. 4.1 1 Pet. 2.21 Prayers are spiritual weapons Rom. 15.30 Col. 4.12 c. To Commit Adultery or play the Whore is put for Idolatry and Impiety of which there are abundance of examples in Scripture Exod. 34.15 16. Deut. 31.16 Jude 2.17 and 8.27.33 2 Kings 9.22 1 Chron. 5.25 Esa. 1.21 and 57.3 4. Jer. 2.20 and 3.1 6 8 9. and 13.27 and 23.14 Ezek. 16.15 2. and 23.3 Hos. 1.2 and 4.12 and 5.3 and 6.10 Nahum 3.4 Rev. 2.20.21 22. and 14.8 and 17.2 and 18.3 c. The Reason of the Metaphor is because God hath joyned and as it were espoused his Church to himself in a spiritual Contract or Covenant that thereby he may beget spiritual Children to be eternally saved If the Church therefore will basely forsake him and run to Idols without any respect to the violation of that Conjugal engagement it is spiritual Adultery and the Scripture so stiles it c. To Bewitch it put for to Seduce by wicked Doctrine Gal. 3.1 Apostates and such as persecute the Saints are said Heb. 6.6 To Crucifie the Son of God afresh In which sence Rome the seat of Antichrist is thus described Rev. 11.8 The great City which spiritually is called Sodom and Egypt where also our Lord was Crucified Which Periphrasis denotes the cruel persecution of true Christians with all the oppression and Massacres perpetrated by Rome and its Instruments where ever they have power to act For whatsoever injuries are offered to Believers are by the Holy Spirit said to be offered to Christ himself because none of the Members can be hurt but the head sympathizes and suffers with it as was said before Origen says By every Martyrs condemnation Jesus is condemned For if a Christian be condemned for this alone that he is a Christian it is Christ then that is condemned and so Crucifyed Metaphors taken from the Containing Subjects TO this belongs 1 Generally Place and its Dimensions 2. Particularly the Habitations of Men. To the Dimensions or differences of place belongs Altitude or height which when referred to the mind and understanding of man metaphorically denotes an abstruse thing or that which is difficult to be understood Prov. 24.7 Wisdom is too high for a fool that is he cannot attain it See Prov. 14.6 A Word that has affinity with this denotes the distraction of an irresolute mind by reason of divers cares and doubts Luke 12.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be ye not lifted up on high we translate it be ye not of a doubtful mind this metaphor is taken from Meteors and denotes a mind as it were hung up in the Air apt to be blown hither by every blast the meaning is be not distracted with various cares for your sustentation but acquiesce in the hope of Divine help Gen. 43.18 We are brought in that he may Roll himself upon us and fall upon us and take us for bondmen This is an elegant metaphor taken from the fall of a Body from an high place or precipice upon which Junius says Metaphora duplex a corporibus magnae ponderosae molis c. A double metaphor taken from bodies of a great and weighty bulk which by wheeling as it were are tumbled down from on high and the higher they are by so much the more violence do they fall As if he had said whereas he has no lawful cause of quarrel against us he will make us Captives or Bondmen by this pretext of money c. To go Backward denotes Apostacy Jer. 7.14 To turn their Hearts back again signifies Repentance and their abhorring Baal whom they thought to be a God 1 King 18.37 See Esa. 50.5 To turn to the Right Hand or Left Hand Gen. 24.49 signifies a desire what to do or not to do the metaphor being taken from such as are doubtful when they come to a parting way which to take and are wont to be directed by that phrase turn to the right or left hand This phrase is used with respect to Divine Obedience when men are commanded to walk neither to the Right nor Left hand that is to keep exactly to that rule and order with respect to Gods Worship which he hath set down in his Word Deut. 5.32 17.11 20. 28.14 Josh. 1.7 23.6 Prov. 4.27 Esa. 30.21 c. The Right side is a symbol of prudence circumspection and honesty and the Left of imprudence temerity and incogitancy Eccl. 10.2 c. Latitude or Largeness gives some metaphors 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dilatare to inlarge signifies a deliverance and help from Calamity Psal. 4.1 Psal. 18.19 and 31.8 9. Prov. 18.16 So Narrowness betokens Trouble and Affliction Psal. 25.16.17 31.9 138.6 7. Prov. 11.8 24.10 The Metaphor being taken from narrow places or men shut up besieg'd or surrounded by an enemy in a narrow Compass which exposes them to much distress and difficulties of deliverance A heart enlarged signifies Joy Psal. 119.32 Isa. 60.5 See 2 Cor. 6.11 12 13. c. This enlarging of heart denotes sometimes great wisdom and vertue 1 Kings 4.29 Sometimes Pride and Audacity Psal. 101.4 5. Prov. 21.4 and 28.25 See 1 Sam. 2.1 2 Cor. 6.11 Eph. 6.19 Psal. 81.10 11. 119.131 c. Of Places where men Dwell we will shew 1 Their parts 2 Their species or kinds The Parts from which Metaphors are taken are 1. Foundation in which we are to consider 1 Its Dignity being the principal part of the Edifice which supports the whole weight of the building Hence Christ is call'd a Foundation of the Church which is his spiritual house Isa. 28.16 1 Cor. 3.10.11 Eph. 2.20 See Matth. 16.16 18. 1 Pet. 2.4 5. Jude ver 20. Rev. 21.14 because from him and by him and in him are all things which are needful for the gathering preserving and saving of his Church 2 Its stedfastness stability and firmness which makes the whole building strong and durable Hence it is said of the Creation of the Earth that solid and immoveable body together with its parts Exod. 9.18 Job 38.4 Psal. 24.1 2. 104.5 Prov. 3.19 8.29 Heb. 1.10 Hence 't is put for the ground which we tread upon Hab. 3.13 by making naked the foundation so the Hebrew that is by clearing your land of its Enemies who so covered it as if they had taken a perpetual Root in it ver 6. More Metaphors you may find Prov. 10.25 2 Tim. 2.19 Joh. 6.27 Isa. 14.32 Eph. 3.18 Col. 1.23 'T is put for to Consult or Deliberate because every Design must have a beginning Psal. 2.2 31.13 14. and to appoint decree or ordain so as that a thing should be firm and certain 1 Chron. 9.21
Esther 1.8 Psal. 8.2 Out of the mouths of Babes and Sucklings hast thou founded so the Hebrew strength c. 3. It s Order because it is the first thing in a building and the last in the destroying of an House Hence it is put for beginning with respect to time Isa. 7.9 and for the very extreme or end in the destruction or utter rooting out of the People Psal. 137.7 A Wall is transferr'd to a humane Body Jer. 4.19 I am pained at the walls of my heart so the Hebrew that is my Bowels and sides which environ or encompass my heart in which places such as are troubled with an hypocondriach disease are much pained c. Acts 23.3 Paul calls the Chief Priest whited wall that is an Hypocrite and vain speaker who bragg'd of the Dignity and title of his Office whose outward Appearance was gaudy and splendid bespeaking much sanctity whereas within he was full of Impiety and Uncleanness See Matth. 23.27 It seems this kind of wall which he alludes to was made of Mud that is a slight wall of untempered Mortar as Ezek. 13.10 which had no solid or durable substance in the inside but were curiously whited with Lime on the outside Eph. 2.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intergerinus paries the middle wall of partition denotes the Mosaical Law which like a Partition divided the Jews from the Gentiles which being now taken away they are all one in Christ. A Wall in a Metaphor is a Symbol of strength and defence 1 Sam. 25.16 Psal. 18.29 Isa. 26.1 Jer. 1.18 and 15.20 A hedge denotes also Defence Ezek. 13.5.22.30 Jer. 5.1 Psal. 106.23 30. A Step or Stair or degree 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for increase of spiritual gifts 1 Tim. 3.13 See Matth. 13.12 a Pillar Metaphorically signifies things like it whether with respect to figure and shape Exod. 13.21 22. Judg. 20.40 Rev. 10.1 or use for it is firm and bears great Weight and therefore denotes firmness constancy and lastingness Prov. 9.1 Jer. 1.18 Job 9.6 and 26.11 1 Tim. 3.5 Rev. 3.12 dignity and preheminence in the Church Gal. 2.9 the Common-wealth Psal. 75.4 A Corner denotes extremity because it is the extreme part of the Building as 1. The extremes of the earth Exod. 27.9 Num. 34.3 Neh. 9.22 Jer. 9.26 Deut. 32.26 2. Of a field and Country Lev. 19.19 Num. 24.17 where the Chaldee and Septuagint understand Princes 3. Of the head as the Forehead and Temples Lev. 13.41 and 19.27 The outward Corner of a house signifies a Prince or Grandee Judges 20.2 1 Sam. 14.38 Isa 19.13 Hence Christ is called a Corner-stone Psal. 118.22 Expounded Eph. 2.15 16 17 20. A Nail signifies one fixt for common good Isa. 22.23 the Chaldee renders it faithful governor and the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Prince A Gate or Door is put for a populous City through which the passage of traffick or Commerce is wont to be Ezek. 26.2 For the entrance into a Country Micah 5.5 For the Lips Job 41.5 See Psal. 141.3 Psal. 78.22 23. Job 3.10 What a door of hope denotes is shewn before in the mention of the Valley of Achor Hos. 2.15 the opening of a door denotes preaching the Gospel Isa. 26.2 and 60.11 Acts 14.27 1 Cor. 16.9 2 Cor. 2.12 Col. 4.3 Rev. 3.8 The door of heaven denotes the means of arriving to blessedness Gen. 28.17 Matth. 7.14 Luk. 13.24 Christ calls himself a door John 10.1 2 7 9. because none can get into heaven or rightly into the Church but through him See Metaphor Door in the second Book Matth. 23.14 The Pharisees are said to shut the Kingdom of heaven and prohibit entrance therein because they hindered men from looking after the saving Graces of the Messiah who is the only door of Salvation and because they depraved his holy word To be at the door denotes nearness of time Matth. 24.33 Jam. 5.9 The Gates of Death denote extreme peril Job 38. Psal. 9.13 and 107.18 Isa. 38.10 The Gates of Hell Matth. 16.18 denote the Stratagems Machinations Plots and power of the Devil and his Ministers c. Believers are said to knock at the door when they pray earnestly Matth. 7.7 8. Luk. 11.9 God is said to knock at the Door of our heart when he earnestly invites men to Repentance Rev. 3.20 c. Bars which strengthen gates 1 Sam. 23.7 are Metaphorically put for any kind of Fortification or Strength Job 38.10 Psal. 147.13 Ezek. 30.18 Amos 1.5 Isa. 15.5 and 43.14 A Key denotes Authority and Power Isa. 22.22 'T is attributed to Christ with respect to Hell and Death Rev. 1.18 and the Church and Heaven Rev. 3.7 which denotes Chief Dominion The Keys of the Kingdom of heaven Matth. 16.19 denote the Ministry and Office of the Apostles Joh. 20.23 in retaining sins viz. excommunicating Scandalous sinners and remitting sins that is receiving the penitent set forth by the Metaphors of a Key which shuts or opens the door The Species of Buildings are 1. A City which Metaphorically denotes the Church Militant Isa. 26.1 Heb. 12.22 See Matth 5.14 The Church Triumphant Heb. 11.10 and 13.14 Rev. 2.2 c. See Phil. 3.20 and 1.27 where heavenly conversation is exprest by a word derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a City as Civility is from Civis a Citizen because their Conversation should be civil in opposition to the rudeness and barbarity of such as live in the Country It is said of a Fool Eccl. 10.15 that he knows not how to go to the City that is he cannot perfect what he undertook Strong Holds or Munitions are elegantly used by the Apostle 2 Cor. 10.4 for all that which the Churches Enemies put their Confidence in as Carnal Wisdom Learning Eloquence c. Which those Divine Weapons pull down c. Towers sometimes denote Proud Tyrants and worldly Grandees Isa. 2.15 and 30.25 Other significations of these see before chap. 8. and in the Metaphorical Parallels Book 2. A House denotes the Church Militant Psa. 27.3 4. 69.9 John 2.17 84.4 92.13 Isa. 56.5 7. Eph. 2.19 22. 1 Tim. 3.15 Heb. 3.6 and 10.21 1 Pet. 25. and 4.17 Hence the Apostles are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the house-servants or Stewards of God 1 Cor. 4.1 The Temple of Jerusalem is frequently called the house of God 2 Sam. 7.5 6. Psal 26.7 8. 12.2 1 Jer. 7.11 Math. 21.13 c. The Church Triumphant and Eternal Life is called a House Psal. 36.8 John 14.2 2 Cor. 5.1 2. The Reason is because 1. God lives there with the Blessed as the Master of a Family with his Domesticks 2. Because it is a most quiet and secure habitation 3. Because of the perfect and clear vision of God 4. With respect to the glorious Ornaments of his family for the Grandees of the World maintain their Families as splendidly as they can 5. Because all the spiritual sons of God are gathered into this house where there is
Heaven Tho Angels fall out and go to War tho Men differ the Heavens shake the Mountains remove the Winds bluster the Waves of the Sea roar and rage yet the Lord is in Heaven and he beholds all Disorders of Men and still keeps his Place in perfect Tranquillity and moves not for the Good of his whole Houshold depends upon it for if it were possible for the immoveable God to leave his Place all would become a Piece of Confusion IX God the wise Housholder hath set out the Church for a Vineyard and Garden digg'd a Wine-Press and built a Tower the World for a plowed Field the wise and best Men both Divines Philosophers Naturalists and Historians to yield a fruitful Crop of Teaching and Instruction to supply his great Houshold X. God the most wise and good Housholder hath contrived the Scituation of his Family near adjoining to th●●se great Conveniencies of still and stan●●●g Pools pleasant and gliding Streams co●●stant rising and issuing Springs for e●●crease of Knowledg and standing 〈◊〉 and Government establishing the 〈◊〉 of Religion and Piety as pleasant Stre●●● and issuing Springs for encrease o●● Knowledg XI God the great and wise Housholder teacheth instructeth gives forth his Law shews them what is good and required of them charges his Family to walk by the Examples of the Best to walk in Wisdom to give no Offence to hold fast that which is good God is troubled as it were and angry at great Miscarriages and unseemly Actions grieved if I may with Reverence so speak at his very Heart with particular Instruments angry with not only some but even the whole Houshold when the Offenders will not reform XII God loved all his Creation when he looked upon it and saw all to be good he could do no otherwise Angels Men Beasts creeping Things Fowls and all inanimate Things The Church he loves on new Terms The Father himself loves you because you have loved me and believed that I came forth from God XIII God sent Moses to Israel when sick of Oppression in Egypt when corrupted with Sin in the Wilderness about the Calf and had need of Purgation Abigail and Nathan to David on the same account Hezekiah to Israel and Ahab as well as he had before sent Samuel to David Peter's Advice is to cleanse from all Filthiness of Flesh and Spirit He takes care for their Security and manifesteth this Care diversly gives Cautions to take heed puts their Enemies in fear sometimes restrains in time of Pursuit of seeming Advantages orders Doors to be shut till the Enemies disappear and the Indignation be overpast XIV God hath to Admiration shew'd his Patience and Long-suffering to his Church to the whole World to the whole Families of the Earth He gave the old World one hundred and twenty Years bore long with the Murmurers of Israel in the Wilderness was forty Years grieved suffered Jerusalem long before the first Captivity longer before the last by the Romans gives Jezebel and Mystery Babylon Time and Space spared a sinful World in general above five thousand Years XV. God will not be always wroth lest the Object of his Wrath should fail before him retains not Anger for ever takes immediate Notice of Returns and forthwith proclaims Peace and Reconciliation XVI God is plenarily qualified with Bowels of Compassion and Tenderness towards his People I have seen the Affliction of my People and am come down to deliver In all their Afflictions he was afflicted My Bowels are afflicted for him He pities them that fear him c. XVII God loads as it were with Benefits speaks comfortably bids others speak comfortably as from him Speak comfortably to Jerusalem Let us reason together Smiles invisibly by Providence invisibly by Grace and Spirit hears Prayer in an accepted Time helps up his Church and People when they fall Aaron rose up by his help God raised holy David when he fell Peter in like manner Which confirms the Word of his Servant c. XVIII God demonstrates the great Danger of Disobedience with all plainness by Words at length If thou doest Evil Sin lieth at the Door All the Curses of the Book light on the Children of Disobedience who are separated to Evil and destroyed if they do wickedly He that sins shall die If you remain disobedient he will not prevent your Ruin He will not hear when you call but laugh at your Calamities and rejoyce when your Fear comes Prov. 1. XIX God suffers none to labour in vain nor spend their Strength for nought in his Service He doth good unto all his tender Mercies are over all his Works He makes one Day in his Courts better than a thousand elsewhere And the Church said it was better with her when she abode unde●● his Conduct than when she left it He will give Grace and Glory and no good thing will be with-hold from them that walk uprightly XX. God in Love and Faithfulness doth correct rebuke chasten and afflict his People for their Profit In very Faithfulness hast thou afflicted me Whom he loves he rebukes and chastens to make Partakers of his Holiness The Fruits whereof David expresseth It was good for me that I was afflicted Thus when Men are i●● Heaviness through many Temptations the Rod drives out ill Dispositions and is a good Remedy to cure Folly c. XXI God renders not to any Man more than is right that he should enter into Judgment with God He layeth Judgment to the Line and Righteousness to the Plummet extenuates to Offenders rather gives less than more In the midst of Judgment he remembers Mercy He debates in measure and as to the Justice of the Cause provoking or measure of Punishments he appeals to the Justice of their own Minds Are not my Ways equal and yours unequal XXII This hath been the common way of God's dealing with Men as well large Congregations as particular Persons I will hide my Face from this Generation c. Thou art a God that hidest thy self c. God left Saul when obstinate and would not be found of him in distress When God leaves a People or Person they lose their Strength and come to Shame and Misery Wo to him that is alone XXIII God hath maintained the Lot of the Righteous throughout all Generations kept up his Church from falling contriv'd a Seed to serve him He will not suffer the Gates of Hell to prevail nor overthrow his Family XXIV God brake the Head of Leviathan gave it to be Meat to his People in the Wilderness cut Rahab wounded the Dragon overthrew great Kingdoms and Armies c. gained Victory over mighty Kings and brought the ●●ruits of all his Works into his Church there are his worthy Acts Doctrine and Book of the Acts and Examples of all his Servants XXV God shut Angels out of Heaven to preserve Peace sent Cain unto the Land of Nod shut the Old World out of the Ark put Saul out of
and Defence it defends them that are within and offends them that are without V. A Wall of Fire is most amazing dreadful and terrible to an Enemy VI. A Wall of Fire is dangerous to attack or approach unto no devouring and cruel Beasts dare come near it the Lions tremble at the Sight thereof VII Those that are environ'd round about with a Wall of Fire are very safe in the midst of the greatest Multitudes of evil Beasts VIII Nothing will keep off as Naturalists observe cruel and devouring Beasts but a Wall of Fire IX Those that are environ'd round by a Wall of Fire are not only safe from Enemies but are also thereby kept warm from piercing Cold. X. Those that see they are compassed about with a Wall of Fire are made very fearless and couragious thereby Parallel I. GOD is the Defence and Security of his People from the Devil that roaring Lion and old red Dragon and from wicked Men who for their cruel brutish devouring and merciless Dispositions are compared to Lions Bears c. II. God is a Wall of Fire or such a Defence and Security to his People whilst they remain in the howling Wilderness of this World where their Danger is very great there being Multitudes of brutish and devouring Men or rather Beasts nay Monsters Devils in the shape of Men ready to destroy them III. God is a Wall of Fire and Defence unto his People there being no other Security for them I looked and there was none to help therefore my own Arm brought Salvation and my Fury it upheld me IV. God is a Defence to his Church and 't is He who offends and discomfits their Enemies I will undo them that afflict thee c. V. God in being a Defence or Wall of Fire to his People greatly amazeth and terrifieth the ungodly and brutish Persecutors how terrible was God to Pharaoh when he was a Wall of Fire to Israel VI. It is a very dangerous thing for any to make Attempts upon God Who is able to stand before such a Wall of flaming and devouring Fire Wicked Men are compared to Briars and Thorns and who would set them saith God against me in Battel The Devils themselves tremble before his Sacred Majesty VII Those that are surrounded about on every side by the Power Wisdom and merciful Providences of the Almighty God this great Wall of Fire need not fear Devils nor brutish Men tho never so cruel and bloody VIII Nothing can keep off cruel and merciless Men from making a Spoil of God's Church but God himself Conscience cannot the Cry of the Widow and fatherless Children no nor the Fear of Hell Therefore God walls his People round about in a wonderful manner that Men cannot find nor come at them IX Those that have God for a Wall of Fire are secured from all the cold Blasts of Sin and Temptation are sweetly refreshed and comforted for such is the property of this Wall of Fire also unto them X. Those that see they have God as a Wall of Fire round about them are thereby made very valiant and couragious saying I will not fear what Man can do unto me c. Metaphor I. A Wall of Fire is made of outward Materials viz. Wood or such like Fuel II. A Wall of Fire properly is to secure the Body from ravenous wild and devouring Beasts III. A Wall of Fire may be quenched or for want of Fuel go out and so those that were secured by it may be exposed and laid open to the Rage of cruel and merciless Beasts Disparity I. GOD who is said to be a Wall of Fire for defence of his People is the Maker of all things By him all things were made c. II. God is a Wall or Defence to keep safe and secure both Body and Soul not only from wild Beasts but also from cursed Men and Devils III. This Wall of Fire can never be quenched nor go out whilst there be any wild Beasts and devouring and bloody Persecutors in the World This Fire will burn and be a Wall to the Godly let the Devil and Rome do what they can the Church of Christ shall never be left to the Rage of Papal Fury Inferences 1. FRom hence we may note an Use of Terror to wicked Men Their cruel Attempts upon the Church of God will prove their Ruin they will get nothing thereby but a feared and wounded Conscience this Fire will devour them 2. We may see how God is pleased to represent wicked Men doth he not intimate to us by this Metaphor that they are no better than ravenous Beasts 3. What great Folly doth this demonstrate to be in the Hearts of the Adversaries Will they who are but Briars and Thorns set themselves against the Great God who is a consuming Fire 4. It also shews the infinite Love and Care of God to his Saints 5. In what Safety do the Godly dwell Let the Beasts roar and tear and goar one another whilst God's People are thus defended and preserved from their Rage and Cruelty But some may object and say How is God said to be a Wall of Fire to the Church c. It may have respect to his Divine Attributes as Wisdom Power Goodness Truth Faithfulness Justice by which he preserves his Church and People through his glorious Providences in this World as thereby he defeats their Enemies God a Iudg. Gen. 18.10 25. Shall not the Judg of all the Earth do Right Psal. 58.11 Verily he is a God that judgeth in the Earth Psal. 82.1 God standeth in the Congregation of the Righteous he judgeth among the Gods GOD is really and properly a Judg for he is the Judg of all the World and therefore he is not brought here under the Notion of a Metaphorical Judg But in regard this Term seems to be allusive to Earthly Judges we think it may not be unprofitable to draw a Parallel for the Edification of the Reader As there is nothing more frequently attributed to Almighty God in the Holy Scriptures than the Title of Judg so there is scarce any Attribute or Action of the Most High grounded upon more Reason Of which take this following Account 1. There is in the World viz. on the whole Earth a great and mighty People for Number like to the Stars of Heaven or Sands by the Sea-Shore 2. There this numerous People are almost as various in their Humors as they are in their Numbers Ages Sizes and Complections 'T is very rare if not impossible to find two that in all Points do exactly accord 3. That this numberless Multitude are all addicted to run byass to a particular thing call'd Self-love and this too from an indissoluble Principle or Impression of Nature 'T is natural for all Men to love themselves 4. That after they are grown up to some degree of Ripeness and Maturity they have ready prepared to their Eyes the bad Examples of ill-living Souls which too often have
a Signet The Son in himself is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the likeness of God II. Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Image of God representing him unto Men he manifesteth God unto us He is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Image of the Invisible God because partaking of the Nature of the Father the Goodness Power Holiness Grace and all other glorious Properties of God do shine forth or are represented declared and expressed to us III. Christ represents God the Father to Believers in his true Form Character or Likeness whom we see not as he is in himself nor can see he dwelling in inaccessible Light at an infinite distance of Divine Nature and manner of Being from our Apprehensions and Conceptions No Man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the Bosom of the Father he hath declared him IV. Christ respecting his Essence is the same God with the Father but the Subsistences or Persons of the Father and Son are different and so not the same V. Christ being the express Image of the Father brings into our Minds what kind or manner of God the Almighty is his Excellencies and glorious Perfections are hereby presented as it were to our view By which means we are taken up into holy Meditations and Contemplations of him whom by reason of Sin we had forgotten and lost the true knowledg of VI. Christ being the express Image of God the Father who is the blessed and only Potentate and the glorious King of Heaven and Earth who hath dear and tender Love to us his poor Creatures who is our Friend Husband Father gracious and chief Benefactor causes all true Believers greatly to prize love and esteem the Lord Jesus not only for his own sake but for the sake of him whom he doth resemble and represent VII Christ God-Man in one Person or God manifested in the Flesh the glorious Representation of the Father to Sinners is the Admiration of Saints and Angels 't is a great Mystery and comprehends the Depths of God That the Glory of God should shine forth in the Nature of Man is and will be the Wonder of both Worlds t is judg'd by all the Godly to be the Master-piece of Divine Wisdom Metaphor I. AMong Men the Substance of a Thing hath the precedency or is before the Sign or Image of it the Person and then the Picture or Emblem of it II. An Image Figure or Character among Men cannot fully and perfectly in every thing express or represent the Person 't is made for it differs in Matter Life and Motion c. III. 'T is gross Idolatry to worship Images or the Likeness of any Thing in Heaven above or the Earth beneath IV. Other Images are soon marr'd and pass away Disparity I. THat which is said of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being or existing and subsisting in the Form of God that is being so essentially for there is no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Form in the Deity but what is essential unto it This Christ was absolutely antecedently to his Incarnation the whole Nature of God being in him and consequently he being in the Son of God II. Christ is a lively perfect and compleat Image Character and Representation of all the glorious Attributes Excellencies and Perfections of the Father the Fulness of the Godhead dwelling bodily in him Were it not so he could not gloriously represent unto us the Person of the Father nor could we by contemplation of him be led to an Acquaintance with the Person of the Father 1. The Father is from Everlasting so is the Son 2. The Father is a perfect Divine Person or Subsistence so is the Son 3. The Father hath Life in himself so hath the Son Life in himself 4. The Father created the World so did the Son 5. The Father upholds all things by the Word of his Power so doth the Son 6. All things were made for the Father so all things were made for the Son 7. The Father is to be worshipped so is the Son 8. The Father knows all things and searches the Heart so doth the Son 9. The Father is in the Son so is the Son in the Father The Father is in me and I in him The Father being thus in the Son and the Son in the Father all the glorious Properties of the one shine forth in the other The Order and Oeconomy of the Blessed Trinity in Subsistence and Operation requires that the Manifestation and Communication of the Father to us be through the Son 10. All other Perfections of the Father shine forth in Christ 't is he that makes them manifest to us according to that of the Apostle For God who commanded the Light to shine out of Darkness hath shined in our Hearts to give the Light of the Knowledg of the Glory of God in the Face of Jesus Christ. The Wisdom of the Father is great and infinite many ways but wherein doth it shine more gloriously than in the Son 's working about our Redemption in reconciling Justice and Mercy in punishing Sin and pardoning the Sinner To the intent that now unto the Principalities and Powers in heavenly Places might be made known by the Church the manifold Wisdom of God 11. The Father is still of Goodness and Love to Man this appears in his making of him Supreme over all Creatures on Earth But what is this Favour and Goodness to that which is manifested in and by Christ in raising him up when a Rebel and vile Traitor to the Honour and Dignity of a Son and to accomplish this to give his only begotten Son to die in his stead He made him to be Sin for us who knew no Sin that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us There was much Favour and Love in the Blessings and Privileges of Creation but in Redemption Mercy is magnified likewise to admiration and shines in equal Glory 12. God the Father is infinitely holy just and righteous His Holiness and Justice appeared in casting off the fallen Angels and by executing his Severity upon our first Parents and by destroying Sodom and Gomorrah and the Cities about them and in several other respects Yet how much more abundantly doth his Holiness and Justice shine forth in the Son the Image of the Father when he came forth to redeem Mankind in that he made his Soul an Offering for Sin God letting out his Wrath upon him sparing him not when he stood in the place of the Sinner For the Transgressions of my People was he stricken As Mr. Burroughs observes there is nothing sets out God's Justice Holiness and infinite Hatred of Sin like this c. Our Nature is united to the Divine Nature of God that so by that mystical Union Grace and Holiness might be communicated in a
what I should speak As I have kept my Fathers Commandments c. VI. Jesus Christ to do the Work of God as Mediator was sent on a long Journey as far as 't is from Heaven to Earth and was thereby exposed to much Difficulty and great Hardships from Men and Devils He was persecuted from place to place his Life being often in jeopardy he had no-where to lay his Head and was at last most basely betrayed and put to Death VII The Lord Christ was most faithful Tho he was a Son yet learned he Obedience by the things he suffered My Meat is to do the Will of him that sent me and to finish his Work I delight to do thy Will O God Wist ye not that I must be about my Father's Business VIII The Lord Christ was faithful in doing all things which God required of him he went not beyond his Commission nor did he neglect any part of his Work He that God sent speaketh the Words of God and I know that his Commandment is Life everlasting Whatsoever I speak therefore even as the Father said unto me so speak I. Who was faithful to him that appointed him as Moses was faithful in all his House IX The Lord Jesus Christ hath an absolute Right to a Reward for his Work 's sake Tho there is no Merit or Desert for the Works which Believers do being unprofitable Servants when they have done all yet there is very great Merit and Worth in what Christ did And the Father will give him his Wages he shall have his Wife his Church for whom he served above fourteen Years nay He shall have the Heathen for his Inheritance and the uttermost Parts of the Earth for his Possession Behold my Servant shall deal prudently he shall be exalted and extolled and be very high I will divide him a Portion with the Great and he shall divide the Spoil with the Strong because he hath poured out his Soul unto Death But we see Jesus who for suffering Death is crown'd with Glory and Honour c. X. The Lord Jesus Christ having in his eye that eternal Advantage his Elect should receive and what Glory He as Man should be raised unto as the Reward of his Undertaking went through all his Sorrows with much cheerfulness Who for the Joy that was set before him endured the Cross despised the Shame and is set down at the right-hand of the Throne of God XI The Lord Jesus Christ was subject whilst he was here in our Nature in the Form of a Servant at some time unto Fear He was made under the Law 'T is said He was troubled in Spirit and was heard in that he feared Metaphor I. A Servant and the Master are not essentially and inseparably one II. A Servant amongst Men hath not an inseparable Interest in his Master's Goods and Estate III. Servants among Men many times through Temptation prove unfaithful and deceive either Father or Master yea the best Servants of good Men have in something or other miscarried IV. A Servant may be turn'd out of his Master's Service and lose his Honour V. The Servant abides not in his Master's House for ever VI. A Servant differs from the Heir in Place Dignity and Privilege VII Too many are oftentimes forced to become Servants because they cannot otherwise tell how to live Disparity I. JEsus Christ altho a Servant is essentially one with the Father the Father Son and Spirit are but the one everlasting and eternal God I and my Father are one There are three that bear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Spirit and these three are inseparably one II. Christ hath a full a clear and inseparable Interest in all that the Father hath All mine are thine and thine are mine and I am glorified in them III. It was impossible for Christ to be unfaithful or disobey God his Father because he was without Sin and Satan had nothing in him to fasten a Temptation upon IV. The Lord Jesus Christ did not could not displease his Father and therefore did not nor could lose his Honour I do always the things that please him V. Jesus Christ abideth in the House of God for ever VI. Jesus Christ tho he be called the Servant of God yet is he his own beloved Son and Heir of all things by whom he made the World There is none in Heaven or Earth that hath greater Glory Place or Privilege conferred upon upon him than the Lord Jesus Christ. VII Christ had no necessity of Nature laid upon him to accept of the low Place and Office of a Servant He was not forced to it because he could not tell how to live without serving he being infinitely happy in himself from Eternity but the Glory of his Father and the dear Love he bore to the Creature even to poor lost Man moved him to become a Servant he did it freely for our sakes that we might be Lords Inferences I. WE may note from hence the wonderful Condescension of Jesus Christ there is nothing which sets forth his great Abasement for our sakes more than this what Grace is this Doth the Son of God who is the Lord of Heaven and Earth become a Servant He that thought it no Robbery to be equal with God made himself of no reputation and took upon him the Form of a Servant The Son of Man came not to be ministred to but to minister Quest. But some may enquire Whose Servant is Christ c. 1. He is God's Servant Behold my Servant c. 2. He is his Peoples Servant The Son of Man came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his Life for many II. Let us learn from him hence-forward to humble our selves Let the same Mind be in you that was also in Christ Jesus Shall the Lord become a Servant and shall the Servant swell in Pride and Arrogancy and nothing content him but to be called Lord nay and lord it over God's Heritage whose Servants they ought to be if they would be Gospel-Ministers Surely Christ abhors him who calls himself the Servant of Servants whilst at the same time he exalts himself above All that are called Gods III. If the Lord Christ became a willing humble laborious and faithful Servant for us let us labour to be humble faithful and sincere Servants to him He hath done all the hardest Work and if any remain too hard for us he sticks not to set his hand to it Thou hast wrought all our Works in us and for us IV. Let this teach us to follow his Example and be Servants one to another I have given you an Example that you should do as I have done to you for this is acceptable to him V. Remember 't is an honourable pleasant and gainful thing to be Christ's Servant Paul seems to glory more in it than
only endued with natural Wisdom and that far beyond Solomon A greater than Solomon is here but hath had the Advantage also of such Education that none ever had being brought up with God himself He hath all the Treasures of Wisdom in him is skill'd in all Politicks hath knowledg in all Laws nothing passeth his Skill Thou knowest all things He is called the Wisdom of God Christ the Power of God and the Wisdom of God III. Jesus Christ was chosen to be King by God the Father as 't is said I have exalted one chosen out of the People And tho the Fathers or Elders amongst the Jews refused him yet the Children gave their Vote for him crying H●●sannah to the Son of David IV. Jesus Christ was anointed with the Oil of Gladness above his Fellows He was by the Holy Spirit consecrated King for ever The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because the Lord hath anointed me c. V. Jesus Christ was likewise proclaimed first by the Angels To you is born in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord Afterwards by the Wise Men at Jerusalem and at Herod ●●s Court by a Star and by the Shepherds at Bethlehem VI. This did Jesus Christ in three eminent Cases 1. In speaking comfortably to all his Loyal Subjects as you may see in Mat. 5. at large 2. In giving Laws and expounding Difficulties as you may see in Mat. 6. at large 3. In bestowing his Bounty upon the Poor releasing Prisoners that were bound and in appointing an Hospital for the Sick VII Jesus Christ hath a Right to the highest Palaces in this World as he was born Heir to the Universal Emperor by whom he was at last advanced to the great Palace of the highest Heavens called the holy Palace VIII Jesus Christ our great King had the Attendance of Angels who shewed their Allegiance and paid their Homage and Service at sundry times as there appeared Occasion for them 1. They proclaimed him 2. They attended his Person to assist him in his Straits 3. They assisted his other Servants 4. They declared his Resurrection from the Dead 5. They assured his coming in Glory after his Ascension 6. They are appointed to bear him company and to attend him at his coming from Heaven the second time The Son of Man shall come and all the holy Angels with him IX Jesus Christ is invested with Power All Power is given to me in Heaven and Earth tho at the first entrance upon his Kingdom in the days of his Flesh his Power did not appear so splendent and glorious as it will hereafter X. Jesus Christ hath many Subjects assigned him by God which subscribe to his Power Some voluntarily as the Angels others by force as the Devils and by virtue of his commanding Power as the Winds and Seas which obeyed him XI Jesus Christ received Commandment from the Father from which he would never swerve and also published and established Laws to be observed as Rules of Government to the end of the World XII Jesus Christ rules and governs so well that his worst Enemies could not cannot charge him with Evil yet they did not do not love and honour him but the Sons of Wickedness rose up and still do rise up in Rebellion against him I honour my Father but you dishonour me a Man which hath told you the Truth this did not Abraham Bring out those mine Enemies c. XIII Jesus Christ hath great and large Dominions all Power in Heaven Earth and Hell He is the Head of all Principalities and Powers in Heaven he is the Head of every Man on Earth and hath the Command of all the infernal Spirits in Hell XIV Jesus Christ hath this great and high Prerogative to make Peace or to proclaim Peace to all the Sons of Men upon Submission and to send a Sword where his just Prerogative is resisted In whatsoever House ye enter first say Peace if the Son of Peace be there c. I came not to send Peace but a Sword XV. Jesus Christ that was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of Death is crown'd with Glory and Honour c. The Scepter of thy Kingdom is a right Scepter As I have overcome and sate down with my Father upon his Throne XVI Jesus Christ hath the Father and Holy Spirit without whose Counsel he acteth nothing either in the Affairs of Heaven Earth or Hell There are three that bear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Spirit and these three are one Of this Council Offenders are in danger and to this Council grand Criminals are delivered up for Punishment XVII Jesus Christ hath the peculiar Prerogative to send Embassadors He sent the twelve Apostles to the World who said We are Embassadors for Christ. And He sent his Angel to the Churches to treat with them about their present and eternal Welfare I Jesus have sent mine Angel c. XVIII Jesus Christ makes Substitutes to this end By him Kings reign and Princes decree Justice By him Princes rule and Nobles even all the Judges of the Earth these for the World And when he ascended up on high he gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers for his Church by this shewing that He is supreme Head in all Causes Ecclesiastical as well as Civil XIX Jesus Christ saved the Gospel-Church before the Destruction of Jerusalem by giving them counsel to flie upon the sight of Signs and the Legal Church in the Wilderness by the convenient Providences of a Pillar of Fire by Night and a Pillar of a Cloud by Day He was the Angel of God's Presence that saved them and marvellously hath he and doth he now save and preserve his Church from Popish Rage and Cruelty in this and other Nations XX. Jesus Christ hath a high Court of Judicature in Heaven where he judgeth Emperors and Kings that are out of the power and reach of a human Hand from whence he sends Angels who are higher than they to punish them for Pride and Oppression as in the Case of Nebuchadnezzar who was by the holy Ones cast from his Throne and Herod who was smitten by an Angel for his Pride And a lower Court where his Church for him and in his Name judgeth Delinquents of a lower Rank XXI Jesus Christ hath many great Prerogatives Rights Privileges and Excellencies pertaining to him 1. He receives Petitions Lord Jesus receive my Spirit 2. He pardons Offenders The Son of Man hath Power to forgive Sins 3. He confers Honour I thank Christ Jesus who hath put me into the Ministry 4. He gives Commissions Go ye into all the World 5. He receives Tribute The honourable Women ministred unto him not without reason for he was Lord of all 6. He keeps an Exchequer called the
was to have hands laid upon the Head this was a Sign of Death XII The Head is the Subject of Humility When Men have been much affected with some great Thing they put Earth upon their Heads XIII But notwithstanding all the Head is the Glory of the Man XIV The Head sheweth the greatest Signs of Pity and Sympathy to the poor distressed and afflicted Members XV. The Head is the governing Part of the whole Man the Eyes the Ears the Hands the Feet are all governed by the Head XVI The Head loves the Body that belongs to it and is concerned night and day for its Prosperity XVII The Head receiveth Reverence and Respect Love and Honour from the Body and the Members Parallel I. THe Son of God as he was higher by Birth than Men yea than the greatest of Men Kings and mighty Potentates of the Earth c. so is he by Place and Office God hath anointed him with the Oil of Gladness above all his Fellows and set him over the Works of his Hands II. The Son of God the mystical or spiritual Head is the Seat of the spiritual Senses There is the clear seeing Eye the perfect hearing Ear the pure true and infallible Taste by which Things are distinguished aright the good from the bad for the benefit of the whole Body the Church III. Jesus Christ as a publick Person and Head of his Church is Receiver-General and common Treasury of the whole Body Whatsoever came originally from God for the Good and Benefit of the Church is lodged in Christ as Mediator and Head of his Church As David said All my Springs are in thee so may the Church say of Christ We beheld his Glory as the Glory of the only begotten Son of God full of Grace and Truth It pleased the Father that in him should all Fulness dwell IV. The Son of God doth transmit or cause to be transmitted by way of communication all the Supplies of the Mystical Body whether it be Peace of Conscience Ease for Soul-pains by an Application of his Blood and Spirit to comfort 'T is by Him that the whole Body by Joints and Bonds have Nourishment administred one to another as knit together in all parts and increasing with the Increase of God Of his Fulness we all receive and Grace for Grace V. The Son of God is the Fountain of Strength to his Church 't is said All Power is given to him I can do all things through Christ that strengthens me VI. Jesus Christ was a Man of Labour that carried our Burthens for us in Divine respects The Burthen of Temptations from Satan and the World fell upon him the Burthen of Persecution even to Death it self The Lord laid on him the Iniquities of us all VII The Lord Jesus was a Man of Sorrows and acquainted with Grief There was no Sorrow like his it was heaped upon him even to perfection VIII The Lord Jesus is the Man of God's Right-hand made strong for Himself upon whom the Blessing is conferred by the Father as a Token of Good to the whole Church In Him all the Families of the Earth are blessed IX Christ the holy and spiritual Head received the Consecration of God for he was filled with the Holy-Ghost from the Womb and as a perfect Nazarite continued separate till his Baptism at which time the holy Anointing being upon him in a visible manner did furnish him for his Ministry and fit him to be a Priest unto God this holy Unction descended on him as it did on the Head of Aaron not only drenching his Beard but all the parts of his Body also even to the Skirts of his Garment Say ye of him whom the Father sanctifieth and sendeth into the World c. Who through the eternal Spirit offered himself to God X. The Son of God not only beareth the Glory of Priesthood but the highest Glory of his Father's House which consists of Kingship c. Thou art a Priest for ever c. We see Jesus made a little lower than the Angels c. crowned with Glory and Honour XI Christ was the principal Object of Envy and Hatred The Devil envied him the Jews hated him without cause Herod threatned him One while they waited to kill him at another time they led him to the Brow of the Hill that they might cast him down headlong to destroy him At last they came and laid their hands upon him in the Garden where he received the Sign of Death after his most bitter Agony and was soon after offered up on the Cross as a publick Sacrifice He died for our Sins according to the Scriptures Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us XII The Lord Jesus was a Subject of great Humility much affected with God's Providences and Mens Wickednesses He wept when Lazarus died Christ wept when the Jews rejected him to their own Destruction and as Publius Lettius saith of him he was never seen to laugh but often to weep The Devil Herod Pontius Pilate with the Jews were not content to persecute and drive the Son of God to Corners but after they had agreed with Judas to betray him they endeavoured as much as lay in them to take this blessed Head off from his Mystical Body nothing would satisfy them till they had slain the Lord of Life and Glory XIII And so is Jesus Christ the Glory of God the Glory of the Church She glories in Him His Head is as the most fine Gold He is altogether lovely This is my Beloved and this is my Friend O Daughters of Jerusalem XIV Christ being in all things like unto us Sin only excepted hath shewed no small Signs of Pity and Sympathy as one touched with our Infirmities as appears both before he left the World and since 1. He comforts them by good Words and Promises he will not leave them comfortless but will come to them 2. He assureth that he would send another Comforter the holy Spirit 3. He prays the Father to take them into his Care and Protection 4. He cries out from Heaven when Violence is offered to them Saul Saul why persecutest thou me c. XV. The Son of God as Head of the Church hath the Government on his Shoulders his Members hear his Voice and keep his Commandments and his Commandments are not grievous unto them XVI Jesus Christ loves his Church yea all his Members He died to save and redeem them he shed his Blood to wash and sprinkle them and went to Heaven to prepare a Place for them and is concerned both night and day for their Prosperity and Welfare he will come again from thence to solemnize the glorious Marriage and receive them unto himself that where he is there they may be also I love them that love me He gave himself that he might redeem us from all Iniquity He hath loved us and washed us from our Sins with his own Blood
still begetting a sharper Appetite for more IV. All the Believers in the World may partake plentifully of the Fruit of the Spiritual Vine the Lord Jesus every day yea every moment there 's enough for Millions and to be taken freely yet the Store is never the less How many have been nourished thereby since the beginning yet 't is as full as ever and so will ever be V. This Fruit is good for the Soul it comforts and revives the Inward Man VI. Christ the Spiritual Vine is of excellent Strength and Ability to support his spiritual Branches the Saints and needs no help from any another Corollaries I. FRom this Metaphor we may learn what an infinite Blessing and unspeakable Mercy the Lord Jesus Christ is to his Church and all true Believers how helpless Saints are of themselves for the Branches cannot stand without his Divine Support nor bear Fruit unless this blessed Root communicates Sap and Nourishment to them II. It shews what a sweet and blessed Union there is between Christ and Believers such a Relation as is betwixt the Root and Branches 't is a Mystical yet the nearest and most real Union III. It shews That our whole Dependence ought to be on Christ for he only can uphold us as the Root does the Branches Without him we can do nothing we can neither grow bear Fruit nor stand firm in a boysterous and tempestuous Season nor suffer for his Name but with his help we can do all IV. It shews That Christ is very sensible of all the Wrongs Injuries and Outrages that are done to his Saints They that lay hold on and offer Violence to the Branches come very near the Tree such touch the Apple of his Eye And let Believers be sweetly comforted from hence That under all their Decays and want of more Grace there is abundance of more Sap and Spiritual Nourishment in the Root and Body of this Blessed Vine which according to the nature of the Metaphor shall in due time be communicated to all the Branches that are truly grafted in him which shall revive them and make them flourish both with Leaves and Fruit to the Glory of God and their own Eternal Happiness This Humble Plant calls for our Imitation This Noble Plant deserves our Adoration It s early Fruit provides us early Food Its Plenty stores us with what 's rich and good Its pleasing Sweetness gratifies our Taste Its Profit fills us without fear of Waste Its Shadow shelters from Extreams of Heat Circling the Church His choicest Cabinet A Tender Plant How can we then abuse him An Eye-Salve healing all the Blind that use him Christ the Lilly of the Vallies Cant. 2.1 I am the Rose of Sharon and the Lilly of the Vallies MOst Expositors agree that these fore-going Words are the Words of our blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ I am the Rose of Sharon and the Lilly of the Vallies Wherein he expresseth his own Excellencies to draw allure and enamour the Souls of those that love and long after him how fitly he may be compared to a Rose we have shewed in this Book in some other Place to which we refer you And as there is great and lovely Beauty and Amiableness set forth by a Rose so here I shall by his Assistance endeavour to set forth his Delicious Qualifications by a Lilly the Lilly of the Vallies Metaphor I. A Lilly is a sweet and a fragrant Flower yea of such a strong and odoriferous Scent that a Mans Senses Naturalists say will be easily over-turn'd with the sweet Savour thereof II. A Lilly is white and very beautiful within it are seven Grains or Seeds of the colour of Gold so amiable that our Saviour saith Solomon in all his Glory was not adorn'd like one of these for Whiteness it exceeds all Flowers III. It is observed that the Lilly is exceeding fruitful Vna Radice quinquagenos saepe emittente bubbos one Root puts forth fifty Bubbs or Colours IV. Pliny saith The Lilly is the tallest of Flowers yet hangs down its Head V. The Lilly is a Flower that hath many medicinal Virtues the distilled Water of a Lilly is good to restore a lost Voice it helps Faintness good for the Liver helps the Dropsie and the Oil of it is good for divers Maladies Inquit Galen Parallel I. THe Lord Jesus Christ may very fitly be compared to the Lilly whose Savour and spiritual Sweetness very much excels and transcends the Sweetest of any Odours that can be mentioned the Hony and the Hony-Comb are sweet to the smell and sweeter to the taste O then how sweet is the precious Savour of our blessed Saviour See Rose of Sharon II. Whiteness denotes Holiness 't is said of the Bride the Lamb's Wife to her was granted that she should be cloathed in White And of those few Names in Sardis which had not defiled their Garments these saith Christ shall walk with me in white for they are worthy Purity is essential originally perfectly and absolutely inherent in Christ he is Holiness it self his Glory is infinite within and without every way glorious the Perfection of Beauty III. Jesus Christ is exceeding fruitful from this Root for so is he call'd how many Lillies or holy and heavenly Churches have there sprung yea from this Blessed Lilly many thousands of holy and sanctified Christians See the Metaphor of the Vine IV. Jesus Christ is higher than the Mighty Princes Kings and Emperours of the Earth higher than Heaven or Angels and yet humble and lowly in Heart Therefore he is compared to the Lilly of the Valley in his Exaltations as God very high but in his Humiliation he seems to hang down his Head V. The great and incomparable Virtue that is in the Lord Jesus Christ is excellently good to cure all the Diseases and Maladies of the Soul it cures Spiritual Blindness it softens an hard Heart it cures Stubbornness and Obstinacy by his blessed Infusion of Grace in a word there is no Malady too hard for this Spiritual Physician See Physician and Heart And for other Properties of the Lilly see more where the Church is compared to it For the Disparity See Rose of Sharon Application FRom hence we may seasonably learn to be humble seeing the Lilly which is said to be of a tall growth yet hangeth down its Head As Christ is humble so Holiness and Humility are the glorious Ornaments of a Christian. That Christian that hath most Holiness hath most Humility The Ear of Wheat which is well kern'd and fullest hangs down its Head most Christ under the Similitude of an Apple-Tree Cant. 2.3 As the Apple-Tree amongst the Trees of the Wood so is my beloved amongst the Sons I sate down under his Shadow with great Delight and his Fruit was sweet unto my Taste AS Christ sets forth the Praise of his Church in the second Verse She excelling all the Daughters as the Lilly did Thorns so the Church sets
Believer's All and he esteems him so to be Not to exclude the Persons of the Father and of the Holy-Ghost for what Christ is as God they all are being but one and the same eternal Being So that he that honoureth the one honoureth the other also he that honoureth the Son honoureth the Father and the Holy-Ghost I. Christ is All in All in the First Creation though this I do not say is directly intended in this place 1. He was before all things 2. He is the Original of all Creatures the Founder or to use the Scripture-Phrase the Beginning of the Creation of God Rev. 3.14 He made all things all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made 3. He upholdeth all things by the Word of his Power c. And by him all things do consist 4. As he was before all the Original and first Former of all things and as he upholdeth them so likewise for him all things are and were created 5. He hath the disposing of all things By him Kings reign and Princes decree Judgment All Power is given to him in Heaven and Earth He hath the Keys of Hell and Death He sets up and pulls down kills and makes alive at his Pleasure 6. He is Heir of all things He hath universal Lordship over Angels Saints wicked Men and Devils See Christ the Heir II. But more directly Christ is All in All in the second Creation 1. He is the Substance of all Shadows Which are Shadows of good things to come but the Body is of Christ. 2. He is the Anti-type of all Types the All which Moses and the Prophets pointed to 3. He is all in all in Pacification and Reconciliation of God to Man and of Man to God He hath abolished in his Flesh the Law of Commandments contained in Ordinances for to make in himself of twain one new Man so making Peace 4. Christ is all in all in Satisfaction and Payment of our Debts He was made Sin for us that knew no Sin that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him The Lord hath laid on him the Iniquities of us all 5. Christ is all in all in Justification He is the Lord our Righteousness It is in him all the Families of the Earth and every believing Soul is justified In the Lord shall one say have I Righteousness and Strength 6. Christ is all in all in Election he is the Root of it the first of Election the Sum of our Election we are chosen in him for him and given to him None shall be saved but such as are elected but had it not been for Christ none had been elected had not Christ been found as the Fruit of the Wisdom of God what would have signified Election the Fruit of the Grace of God 7. Christ is all in all in Vocation He it is that hath called us and that makes that Calling effectual to us Who hath saved us and called us not according to our Works but according to his Purpose and Grace 8. Christ is all in all in Sanctification But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us Wisdom and Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption He hath loved us and washed us from our Sins in his own Blood 9. Christ is all in all in Acceptation He hath made us accepted in the Beloved 10. Christ is all in all in respect of Salvation he is the Author of Salvation I looked and there was none to uphold therefore mine own Arm brought Salvation He hath no Partner or Competitor His Name shall be called JESVS because he shall save his People from their Sins Neither is there Salvation in any other 11. He is all in all in Conversion 1. It is he that shews the Soul the Need and Necessity of it 2. He it is that quickneth us You hath he quickned who were dead in Trespasses and Sins 3. He it is that hath begotten us by his Word and Spirit and hath given a new Heart to us and hath planted a new Principle of Life in us 12. He is all in all in the Pardon of Sin 1. He purchased Pardon for us 2. He gives us a broken Heart in order to it and a Heart to ask it and a Hand to receive it 3. Pardon is given for his Name 's sake 13. Christ is all in all in every Grace 1. He gives Faith To you it is given in the behalf of Christ not only to believe on him but also to suffer for his sake 2. 'T is he that hath shed abroad the Love of God in our Hearts by the Holy-Ghost All Grace is treasured up in him Of his Fulness have we all received and Grace for Grace He is the Author Increaser and Finisher of our Faith and all other Graces in us 14. Christ is all in all in the Ministry of the Word 1. 'T is Christ that is preached We preach Christ crucified 2. 'T is Christ that gives Grace and Gifts to preach To me is this Grace given that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable Riches of Christ. 3. 'T is he that ordains and appoints Men to this Work and puts all true Preachers into the Ministry 4. 'T is he that opens the Mouth to speak and the Ear and Heart to hear and receive the Word Take Christ away and what Gospel can be preached c. What is Paul and what is Apollo I am nothing Gospel-Ministry and Ministers are nothing without Christ. So then neither is he that planteth any thing neither he that watereth but God that giveth the Increase 15. He is all in all in every Ordinance First In Baptism 1. This Ordinance shews forth Christ's Death 2. It holds forth his Burial We are buried with Christ in Baptism 3. It holds forth his Resurrection take Christ away and what signifies Baptism Secondly In the Lord's-Supper Christ is all in all 1. It holds forth that his Body was broken and his Blood was shed 2. It shews his Love to us and his Suffering for us Thirdly In Prayer Christ is all in all 1. We must ask in his Name 2. By the help of his Spirit 3. 'T is he that presents and makes our Prayers acceptable to God 4. What is Prayer or any Duty Saints can perform if they meet not with him in it and if it be not done to his Glory An Ordinance without Christ is but as a Cabinet without a Jewel or a Shell without the Kernel 16. Again Christ is as one saith all from the Father all to the Father and all with the Father 1. All from the Father I am come that ye might have Life Life here and Life hereafter and that ye might have it more abundantly The Life of Grace and of Glory they are by Christ. 2. Christ is all to the Father I am the Way the Truth and the Life Every Word here hath
are fitted as Vessels of Wrath for Destruction Metaphor I. THe Sun is a Creature and had a beginning and when Time is swallowed up of Eternity it will set and rise no more II. The Sun gives Light but cannot give Sight the Sun-Beams tho never so powerful cannot make a blind Man see III. The Sun shines but in one Hemisphere at once when it rises to us it sets to our Antipodes IV. The Sun hath endamaging as well as healing Qualities defaces Beauty maketh Men faint Fruits are sometimes withered to nothing by it V. The Sun is inanimate hath neither rational sensitive nor vegetative Life tho in some sence called the Fountain of Life VI. The Sun is the Servant of Men from the Root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to minister 'T is Idolatry to worship it Disparity I. JEsus Christ is God in his Essence uncreated and without beginning Christ endureth for ever he is Alpha and Omega the Beginning and the Ending the First and the Last II. Christ gives Sight as well as Light he made the Blind to see He also cures spiritual Blindness as Saul's by Ananias Acts 9.17 III. Christ is able to shine over the whole World at once It may properly be said of him as of the King of Assyria The Stretching out of his Wings are able to cover the World at one moment IV. Christ hath no hurtful quality he quickens the Soul never makes it faint He makes Deformity beautiful and lovely ripens but never withers the Fruits off Grace His Beams are destructive to none but such as have no root such indeed he withers V. Christ has Life Light and Heat and is often in Scripture called our Life for he gives and maintains both natural and spiritual Life VI. Christ is our Lord whom Men and Angels must worship all the Host of Heaven adore him 'T is gross Impiety not to worship him Inferences I. HEnce we may learn to know the Worth and Excellency of Christ as also the indispensible and absolute Necessity every Soul lies under of receiving Divine Illuminations from this everlasting Sun for as natural Bodies perish without the Influence of the natural Sun so will Souls if the Sun of Righteousness give not his Life-cherishing Efficacy II. Hence we may also see how greatly we are concerned to pray earnestly to God that our Hemisphere may never be deprived of this Sun of Righteousness nor overspread with the Clouds of superstitious Popery nor other Heretical Errors and Darkness III. This may shew the Folly and Madness of such as would drive the Light of the Gospel out of the World 1. In respect of the Wrong and Injury they would do the World thereby if they could effect it 2. Their Inability to accomplish it IV. Hence we may infer the Necessity of labouring whilst it is day we know not how soon our Sun may set and we are not sure of another The Lord thus threatens the Prophets that cause the People to err I will cause the Sun to go down at Noon c. Which Judgment the Lord God in Mercy deliver England from Christ the Root of David Rev. 22.16 I am the Root and Off-spring of David c. THere is a great and glorious Mystery in these Words many understand not how Jesus Christ should be the Root and yet the Off-spring of David This Text agrees with those Words of our Saviour If David called him Lord how then is he said to be his Son They understood him not Christ as he is God is David's Lord and the Root of David but as he is Man he is his Off-spring and hence elsewere called the Branch Christ is and may fitly be called and compared to a Root The Root of 1. Grace 2. Glory Metaphor I. A Root is that from whence the Tree and Branches do proceed II. A Root is a thing hidden in the Earth and not obvious or visible to the Eye III. A Root hath Life nay 't is the Center of Life the Life of any Tree or Plant is principally in the Root IV. The Root beareth the Body of the Tree and all the Branches thereof V. The Root communicates Sap and Nourishment unto the Body and all the Branches thereof VI. The Body and Branches have a necessary dependance on the Root VII There is much Life and Sap in the Root when the Tree and Branches seem dead dry and sapless VIII As is the Soundness and Firmness of the Root of a Tree the more sound firm and stable is the Tree it self with the Branches thereof these being likely to endure when those that have no Root fall away IX The Root is best secured of any part of the Tree being excellently fortified by Nature in the Earth X. Those that would utterly destroy the Tree strike at the Root XI The Root communicates of the same Life and natural Virtue to the Tree and Branches Parallel I. FRom the Lord Jesus Christ the Root of David all Believers do proceed I am the Vine ye are the Branches See Christ the true Vine II. The Deity or Divine Nature of Jesus Christ is a hidden thing cannot be seen with mortal Eyes Christ's Glory was vailed under Afflictions Reproaches Poverty c. as a Root is under the Earth III. In the Lord Jesus Christ is Life He is called the Way the Truth and the Life As the Father hath Life in himself the Son also hath Life in himself Life is in Christ as Sap is in the Root of a Tree IV. The Lord Jesus Christ this Root bears up his Church and every Member thereof V. The Lord Jesus Christ conveys Sap and Nourishment to all his Church and every particular Believer or Branch thereof hence he is called our Life VI. The Saints and Church of God have the like dependance on the Lord Jesus Christ Without thee we can do nothing VII There is much Sap and Life in Jesus Christ for the Godly when oft-times they seem like withered and dry Branches VIII The Goodness Firmness and Soundness of this Divine Root the Lord Jesus Christ shews us the very happy stedfast and secure State of the Church This Root cannot fail nor decay and consequently the Church and People of God shall endure and stand against all the Storms and Blasts of the Devil Antichrist and all wicked Enemies IX The Lord Jesus Christ is secured from Hurt and Danger whilst his Church is daily exposed thereunto being hid in God as it were You are dead and your Life is hid with Christ in God X. The Devil 's grand Design being utterly to destroy all the Godly struck most furiously at Jesus Christ the blessed Root XI Christ communicates of his Spirit and Divine Nature to his Church If the Root be holy even so are the Branches Be ye holy even as I am holy He that hath this Hope in him purifieth himself even as he is pure Metaphor I. NAtural Roots
of Trees and Plants are in the Earth II. Natural Roots as well as the Body and Branches decay grow old and die Tho the Root thereof wax old c. saith Job III. A natural Root usually bears but one Tree if it bears as some Roots do many Bodies yet not all of one species or kind there may be many thousands of Roots IV. Natural Roots are subject to the Wills Humors and Pleasures of Men. Disparity I. BUt this blessed Root the Lord Jesus Christ is in Heaven II. This Root of Believers the Lord Jesus Christ never grows old decays nor dies Jesus Christ is the same yesterday to day and for ever III. Christ is a Root that gives consolation and satisfaction to all He was the Root of the Church both before and since his Incarnation both Triumphant and Militant the Root of Abraham Job David c. and of all the Prophets and Saints that ever had spiritual Life in them IV. The Lord Jesus Christ is a Root which neither Men nor Devils can touch destroy or dig up for he is God Application Object HEre we may enquire If Jesus Christ be the Root of David how is he said to be the Stem or Branch out of the Root of Jesse Is Jesse Christ's Root and yet is Christ the Root of Jesse Ans. Jesse is the Root of Christ according to his human Nature and Christ is the Root of Jesse according to his Divine Nature as he is 〈◊〉 God and Man in one Person he is both these viz. the Root and Branch 〈…〉 Doct. From hence note That Christ is God 1. He is called God the mighty God the true God the only wise God and God blessed for ever 2. He made the World all things in Heaven and Earth 〈…〉 of the Earth and the Heavens are the Work of his Hands 3. He 〈…〉 was before all things and by him all things consist 4. He is omniscient knows all things c. 5. He searcheth the Heart 6. He is the first and the last Alpha and Omega 7. He ought to be prayed unto all Divine Worship and Spiritual Adoration belongs to him 8. He hath Power to forgive Sins 9. He thought it no Robbery to be equal with God 10. He had Power to raise himself and others from the Dead Ergo He is the eternal God Jesus Christ is the Root of Nature as well as of Grace and Glory tho we run the Metaphor under that Notion Infer I. If Christ be the Root of all the Grace that the Saints and the Church receive then from hence we may justly infer That all the Divine Goodness any Person or Persons have in them they derive from Christ 't is He that makes one Man to differ from another Who made thee to differ c. What hast thou that thou hast not received II. From hence we infer That as Christ is God so he ought to have all the Glory All should honour the Son as they honour the Father III. Then let us fear to offend him and let all our dependence be upon him c. IV. What is thy State and condition Sinner Thou hast heard Christ is the Foundation and common Root of all Believers art thou taken out of the dead and corrupt Root of Mankind viz. the first Adam and engrafted into Christ Dost thou grow upon this living Root does thy Fruit flow from spiritual Union with him V. If thou art not taken out of that evil fruitless and sapless Root labour now to be transplanted get an Interest in the Lord Jesus Christ the Root of David VI. This shews the happy State and blessed Condition of the Church and People of God Because I live saith our Divine Root ye my Branches shall live also Altho the Graces of his Saints may sometimes seem to fail and their Greenness decay yet out of this full and blessed Root shall they have sufficient Supplies For in him all Fulness dwells Christ the true Vine Joh. 15.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am the true Vine And Verse 5. I am the Vine IN this Text the Lord Jesus Christ is pleased to express what he is to his Church and People by the elegant Metaphor of a Vine the Nature and Properties of which with the Parallels and Disparities follow Metaphor I. THe Vine seems not so lovely stately and amiable to look upon as some other Trees 't is not so high and lofty as the Cedar nor to be compared for strength to the Oak nor for Beauty to the Palm or Firr-Tree II. The Vine nevertheless hath a more honourable Name given to it than other Trees The Lord's choicest Plantation the Church is exprest by it and therefore 't is dignified with the Title of Goodly and Noble III. The Vine gives large Shoots grows much in its young and tender Age and brings forth Fruit in a short time after it is planted IV. The Vine wonderfully abounds with Sap and inward Virtue bearing and nourishing many large Branches which spread exceedingly yet all partake of its Root and Fatness as it is said of the Olive-Tree where there is enough to feed all and make them flourish and bear Fruit abundantly V. The Vine is a most fruitful Plant. A great Naturalist tells us of one Stock one single Vine planted by the Empress Livia that yielded 12 Amphoras that is 108 Gallons of our measure of good Wine yearly There are sometimes found hundreds of Grapes upon one Cluster several Clusters upon one Branch and abundance of Branches upon one Stock The Scripture when it would express Plenty borrows a Term from the Vine which denotes Increase Thy Wife shall be as a fruitful Vine upon the Walls of thy House VI. The Vine brings forth pleasant Fruit sweet and delightful beyond others 't is said to make glad the heart of Man Give Wine to those that are of heavy heart let them drink and forget their Poverty and remember their Misery no more When the new Wine languisheth the merry-hearted do sigh all Joy is darkned the Mirth of the Land is gone VII The Vine yields profitable Fruit The Blood of the Grape as 't is called Deut. 32.14 is a great Strengthener and Supporter of Nature Paul advises Timothy to drink a little Wine for his Stomacks sake and often-infirmity The good Samaritan is said to pour in Oil and Wine into the Wounds of the Man that fell among Thieves VIII The Vine is a shadowy Plant its spreading Branches and large Leaves afford a delightful and refreshing Shade and is therefore used for covering of pleasant Arbors IX 'T is a very soft and tender Plant so that if it be cut bruised or any way wronged it will abundantly weep and bleed out its Sap and Moisture as Naturalists report X. An eminent Writer saith That the Tears of the Vine like Gum congealed in the Stock of it dropt into dim Eyes remove the little Clouds that begin to