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A64249 Moses and Aaron, or, The types and shadovvs of our Saviour in the Old Testament opened and explained / by T. Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632.; Jemmat, William, 1596?-1678. 1653 (1653) Wing T567; ESTC R10533 252,302 330

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honoured think it too base for thy self to attend for thy sonnes to intend Neither the first Adam Lord of the earth nor the second Adam Lord of Heaven and earth did so II. To note the antiquity and authority of the doctrine of free grace by the merit of the Messiah which both the first and second Adam taught neither of them ever dreamed of the doctrine of workes and humane merits What Adam learned of God in Paradise he taught to his posterity what his posterity heard of him the same they delivered and left to their children but they never heard nor taught any other way to salvation but by the promised seed so also what the Disciples heard of the second Adam that they taught to the Churches but they heard the same of him Act. 4. 12. And our doctrine being the same with theirs is not new but more ancient then any other For as this is the honour of all truth to be before error and falshood so of this truth to have precedency of all truthes It truely pleadeth antiquity therefore verity III. In that the Church comes out of Christs side being in the sleep of death as Eve out of Adams he sleeping we learn to seek our life in Christs death That death should be propagated by the sinne of the first Adam was no marvell but that life by the death of the second is an admired mystery Here is the greatest work of Gods power fetched out of his contrary of ranke poyson a soveraigne remedy by the most skilfull Physitian of hearts Let the Jewes scorn a crucified God and refuse the life offered by a dead man they know not the Scriptures nor the power of God who can and doth command light out of darknesse life out of death all things out of nothing How easily can he repaire all things out of any thing who can fetch and frame all things out of nothing He is of power to make of clay and spittle fit to put out the sight a remedy to restore sight He can as easily save a world by the death of his Sonne as multiply a world by the sleep of Adam IV. Labour to be ingrafted into the second Adam that as thou hast born the image of the earthly so thou maist bear the image of the heavenly 1 Cor. 15. 49. 1. Because the second Adam repaires whatsoever we lost in the first By the first we are enemies to God by the second we are reconciled to him By the first we all dye by the second we are all made alive 1 Cor. 15. 22. By the first we are left to Sathans power by the second we are guided by the spirit of God By the first we lost all the Creatures by the second we are restored to the holy use of all By the first a necessity of death is brought in Heb. 9. 27. it is appointed for all men once to dye and then commeth judgement but by the second we have a recovery of the blessing of immortality and life Whatsoever the first Adam brings into the world by sinne the second carries out by his righteousnesse 2. Because by Christ the truth we recover more than we lost or ever should have by the Type For so the Apostle Rom. 5. 16. the gift by the second Adam hath exceeded the offence of the first That as the first Adam by eating the forbidden fruit hath powred all evill into the souls and bodies of all men though they eat not of the forbidden tree So the second Adam by regeneration is made righteousnesse to those who had wrought no righteousnesse and powred all good things into the souls and bodies of his members The first Adam by sinne helps us into misery but the second Adam not onely helps us out of misery but advanceth us to the highest dignity to be of sons of wrath sons of God brethren of Christ members of his body heires of the kingdome of heaven By Adams sinne we are all driven out of Paradise and earthly pleasure in which we should have enjoyed an inconstant happinesse but by Christ we are brought into the heavenly Paradise our Fathers house By Adams sinne we became unjust but by Christs holinesse we are not just onely but sanctified graced confirmed glorified into whom by faith we come to be ingrafted CHAP. III. 2. Noah a type of Christ 7. wayes THe second instance is Noah a manifest type of the true Noah and that in seven respects I. Both were fore-prophesied of to be Saviours Gen. 5. 29. Lam●ch begat a son and called his name Noah saying This shall comfort us concerning our workes and sorrow and curse of the earth therefore he called him by a name signifying ceasing or rest So of Christ Mat. 1. 21. thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people He shall be the true Noah that shall cause Gods wrath to cease and bring the afflicted soule to true rest and tranquility II. Both are said to be just and perfect both said to walk with God and both to finde grace and favour with God 1. Noah was just in his generation So was Christ have nothing to do with that just man saith Pilates Wife Mat. 27. 19. But with difference Noahs righteousnesse was imputed being righteousnesse of faith Heb. 11. 7. Christs was inherent a righteousnesse of nature person and heart 2. Noah was a perfect and upright man Gen. 6. 9. that is not defiled with Idolatry false religion opinions or externall crimes but Christ was perfect simply and absolutely Noah but comparatively Noah was perfect but in part Christ perfectly perfect Christ Legally Noah Evangelically Noah perfect by the perfection of another Christ by his own Noah perfect because without open crime Christ being without sinne 3. Both walking with God found grace with God Noah Gen. 6. 8. Christ Luke 2. 40. 52. But Noah found grace by acceptation and imputation Christ by compleat merit and satisfaction Christ found grace by his own perfection and justice but Noah cloathed with Christs III. Both of them were Preachers of righteousnesse But Christ preached his own doctrine Noah Christs Both invited unto repentance Both called men to avoid the Judgement to come Both lived and preached in a most corrupt age when there was a generall defection both in doctrine and manners Both their Ministeries were despised and that despight of both fearfully revenged the one by water the other by fire and sword both by utter desolation as the like never heard of before IV. Both of them makers of an Ark and Masters of it But Noah of a materiall Christ of a spirituall the Church Noah to save sinners from the deluge of waters temporall Christ to save sinners from the deluge of Gods wrath eternall In the making of their Arkes they are very like 1. Both doe all about their Arkes at Gods commandement For as the Lord did not hide from Noah his decree Gen. 6. 13. So he
even in that humanity now glorified he is set in the Holy of holies as the Manna in the golden pot before the Lord for ever Exod. 16. 33. and abides for ever in the heavens for all eternity not subject to corruption any more as that golden pot of Manna was Sect. III. II. Now let us see how Christ is infinitely preferred before this type or figure in six severall advancements 1. That Manna had no life in it self but this hath Joh 5. 26. As the Father hath life in himself so hath he given to the Sonne to have life in himself Joh. 6. 35. I am that bread of life 2. That Manna not having life in it self cannot give to others what it self hath not it could onely preserve life given of God But this can convey and give life to others John 6. 33. The bread of God is he which cometh down from heaven and giveth life unto the world 3. That Manna preserved onely natural and temporal life as other bread but this preserves spiritual and eternal life in the soul and inward man 4. That Manna could not preserve this temporal life for ever Joh. 6. 49. Your fathers did eat Manna in the wildernesse and are dead nay it could not keep them from hunger above one day to an end But this bread once tasted makes a man live for ever he shall not die ver 50. yea he shall never hunger more verse 35. 5. If a man were dead that Manna could not raise him again to life but this raiseth dead to life as Lazarus which all the food physick and meanes on earth cannot doe Joh. 11. 25. He that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live 6. That Manna did corrupt it melted daily when the Sun arose it lasted not beyond a day it continued not beyond the wildernesse and that small portion which the Lord reserved in the Holies of holies perished and was lost after the captivity But this Manna is not subject to corruption but abideth sweet and precious to every hungry heart nor subject to violence but abides in the Holy of holies without all change or fear of danger nor onely lasts in this journey through our wildernesse but is the sweetest and most delicious in our Canaan when he shall be food physick raiment delight and all in all to all the Saints and sonnes of God Sect. IV. Now to Application I. To note God in four things 1. Patience and love 2. Watchfulnesse and care 3. Bountifulnesse and beneficence 4. Wisedome and judgement And all these to his Church both Jewish and Christian and to all the Israel of God Legal and Evangelical Every one of these affordeth us special matter of instruction I. His grace and patience appears in the time of his giving both the typical and the true Manna from heaven Then he pleased to give the Manna to Israel 1. When Israel had great need of Gods help and had no power to help themselves when they were even ready to starve Even so when the Church was in extream need of Christ and altogether helplesse in her self it pleased God to give his Sonne from heaven to save and refresh her Which the Apostle notes Rom. 5. 6. For Christ when we were yet of no strength at his time died for the ungodly 2. Then God gave Israel Manna when Israel murmuring had deserved nothing but wrath and vengeance when they could look for nothing but fire from heaven he gives them food from heaven and such food as was Angels food sweet as honey Oh what a tender Nurse is the Lord become to a froward people he will still the frowardnesse of his first-born rather with the breast than with the rod Even so when by our hateful sinnes of many sorts we could neither deserve nor expect any thing but revenge from heaven God sent his Sonne from heaven the true Manna and bread of life who hath more sweetnesse in him than the honey comb which one gift sweetneth all blessings which else had been so many curses For what had the Israelites deliverance victory lives been worth in the wildernesse without food and Manna which kept them in life and strength Even so had all our outward blessings been to us without Jesus Christ onely a lingring death and misery Oh who would deal thus with his enemy but he that hath an Ocean of mercy Which the same Apostle in the same Chapter ver 8. leadeth us unto where he magnifieth and heightneth Gods love unto us that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us yea while we were yet enemies ver 10. he sent us this Manna by whom he reconciled himself unto us Let this consideration be of use 1. To stir up in us a fervent love of God who loved us with a pittifull love when we were in so pitifull a case as also with so seasonable love when our extream need urged us yea with such effectuall love as spared us the greatest gift of love and the richest mercy that heaven and earth can contain to relieve our want 2. To labour to love our enemies as God did us being his enemies For naturall men and hypocrites can love those that love them Mat. 5. 45. but if we love them that hate us we shall be the sonnes of our heavenly Father 3. To move us to cease from our sinnes for who would goe on to provoke so good a God that still prevents us with love and mercy And if he please to reserve love for us while we are yet in our sinnes and in love with them how sweet will his love be when we cease to love them How strong will it be and how constant For doth he not cast us off when we are enemies and deserve hatred and will he ever cast off those whom he thus loveth This love shall be stronger than death for that shall not quench it II. See the watchfulnesse and care of God over his Church The Manna fell with the dew and while the people of Israel slept the Lord watched to spread a table for them because 1. He that keepeth Israel slumbreth not nor sleepeth The eye of the Lord saith Basil is without all sleep ever watchfull 2. Because he is a tender father and Israel is his son and first born A carefull father is waking for his childes good while it sleeps and takes no care In like manner hath this watchful eye kept it self waking from the beginning of the world till this day How did it watch over Abraham and all his believing posterity whilest he and we were all in the night of sin and death And whilest we were in a dead sleep how carefully did he provide this heavenly Manna and spread it about the tents of the Church in all ages 1. In the promise of the blessed seed 2. In the types and shadowes signifying and exhibiting Jesus Christ. 3. In the holy Ministery of Prophets and Apostles in which it was plentifully showred 4.
Ioshua gives the land onely to him that overcommeth And he that perseveres to the end shall be saved CHAP. IX 8. Sampson a type of Christ. I. IN person and condition 1. His conception foretold by the Angel of God Judg. 13. 5. So was Christs His office foretold he must be a Saviour So Christ. Borne beyond strength of nature of a mother long before barren Iudg. 13. 3. So was Christ. His mother saluted by the Angel as Mary was that though she was barren she should conceive a sonne a saviour the one shall begin to save Israel out of the hand of the Philistims verse 5. the other must save his people from their sinnes And this promise confirmed by a signe to both the mothers Iudg. 13. 4. Luke 1. 30. 2. Both must be Nazarites Sampson by the Law of Nazarites Numb 6. 2. Christ by occasion of the place in which he was educated not by that law But as a Nazarite signified one that was separate and severed from the common course of men to a more holy profession of sanctity and to a stricter care to avoid all manner of impurity such a one the Prophets signified Christ should be not onely holy and seperate from sinners but the author of holinesse And as Sampson was sanctified from the womb So was Christ much more So the Angel The holy thing that is in thee is of the holy Ghost And herein beyond Sampson for in Christ are all sanctified 3. Sampson grew and the spirit waxed strong in him so as he became a Saviour of incomparable strength So Christ grew every way in stature in favour with God and man and the Spirit was so strong in him because it was not measured unto him as unto Sampson as he became a Saviour stronger than the strong armed man He was the true Sampson that overcame many enemies and slew heapes upon heapes And although Sampson the type was at last overcome by his enemies our true Sampson is invincible and hath gloriously triumphed over them all Both of them were great deliverers the one from great thraldome and temporall misery the other from a greater spirituall and eternall thraldome under sinne the Law Satan hell c. II. Sampson was a type of Christ in three especial actions 1. He found meat in the eater and from the strong sweetnesse and brought some of it to his parents Christ by his death which seemed to eat him up brings us meat the bread of life sweeter than honey and out of this dead Lyons mouth that is Christ dead comes sweetnesse Thence sprang whole flocks of Christians like so many swarmes of bees 2. Sampson loved strange women and went among the enemies of God for a wife which might seeme a sinne in him but that the text saith It came of God Iudg. 14 4. A type of Christs love to the Gentiles casting his love on her that was not beloved to make his despised and dispersed of the Gentiles his spouse and wife as Hosea 2. 23. I will have mercy on her c. Where the whole contract on both parties is set down at large 3. Sampson put forth his minde in parables and riddles So did Christ his doctrine to the Pharisees Matth. 13. 34. III. In passion and suffering they were very like in many passages 1. Both sold for money Sampson by Dalilah to the Princes of the Philistims Iudg. 16. 5 Christ for thirty pieces of silver unto the chiefe Priest Both betrayed by their most familiar the one to the Philistims the other to the Pharisees Both under pretence of love Sampson by Dalilah Iudg. 16. 15. Christ by Iudas with a kisse both apprehended by their enemies both led away both bound both brought forth at a great feast both blinded both scorned both fastened to a post the one of the house the other of the Crosse. 2. As Sampson offered himselfe freely unto death among wicked men as a most valiant Captaine being called to be a revenger of Gods enemies and therefore it it is said Heb. 11. he dyed not as a self-murtherer but in faith that is as a faithfull servant of God adventured his owne life for the destruction of the enemies of God and his Countrey as every good subject and souldier pressed to the field ought to do So Jesus Christ voluntarily offered himselfe to death and went out to meet the apprehendors and was content to dye among wicked men and to be hanged between two theeves that he might destroy and scatter the powers of the enemies of his Churches salvation IV. In victory and fortitude 1. His first stratagem which was as a praeludium to his calling in which he assayed his power was that he overcame a stout Lyon in the desert and slew him with his own hand Chap. 14. 6. and tare him as one should have rent a Kid So the first powerfull worke in which our Sampson shewed himselfe was the conquering of the devill that roaring Lyon hand to hand who assaulted him in the wildernesle by three horrible and hellish temptations 2. Sampson flew with his owne hand being alone above a thousand men at once having nothing but the jawbone of an Asse a weake base and insufficient weapon for so great a warre and victory and as it was unfit so it was an unclean weapon of an unclean beast by the Law which his strict profession of a Nazarite should not have touched had it been out of case of necessity So our true Sampson by as weake instruments and as contemptible in the eyes of flesh conquers thousands daily while by the foolishnesse of Preaching by the doctrine of the Crosse by weak earthen vessells he subdues whole countries and kingdomes unto him that the work may be knowne to be his own hand and power and not the instruments 3. Sampson slew more of Gods enemies at his death than in all his life Iudg. 16. 30. And this was the effect of the death of Christ when sinne Satan hell the grave and his enemies seemed to triumph over him and make themselves merry with the Philistims as having in their power their greatest enemy but suddenly he afflicted them more in his death than in all his life This death of Christ pulled Satans house over his head it was the death of death and squeasing of all enemies at once 4. Sampson being in the City Azzah and the Citizens nowlying in wait to kill him and to make an end of so furious an enemy whom they had sure within their gates he arose at midnight and tooke the doores of the gates of the City and the two posts and lift them away with the barres and layd them on his shoulders and departed Chap. 16. 3. So when satan and sinners had buried Christ laid a stone on him sealed it and watched him thinking they had him sure enough never to molest them more he like another mighty Sampson rose in his might carried away the gates and barres of death from
himself and all his members All the bonds of death and sinne with which he was bound in our steed he shooke off as Sampson did the seaven green cords and broke their power as towe is broken when it feeleth fire 5. Sampson never had help from any other in slaying the Lyon the enemies but with his own hands without any other second or weapon So Christ in the wildernesse alone in the garden at prayer alone before Pilate alone all the disciples fled on the Crosse alone No other must tread the winepresse none must share in the honour nor conquest with him 1. Not to judge of the piety or impiety of Gods children by their calamities Sampson hath many enemies many conslicts many dangers by the Lyon the Philistims the Azzhites and his own wife his life painfull his death violent Jesus Christ himselfe beset with enemies on all sides as the sunne with moats never free from conflicts with the Lyon the devill with his owne Jewes with Pharaoh Sadduces Herodians his person despised his miracles traduced his life painfull his death shamefull and accursed Yet may we not judge either of them forsaken of God who still assisted them with his own strength and was strongest in them when they seemed weakest Neither may we mis-judge the generation of Gods children in their conflicts with satan with temptations with sinners or with the terrors of their own hearts If they shall cry out My God why hast thou forsaken me waite a while and Gods strength shall do great things in their weaknesse II. God can and usually doth use strange weake and unexpected meanes to overthrow his enemies and the enemies of his Church his strength is most seen in weake things his wisedome working by the most foolish When a thousand enemies set upon Sampson at once without any weapon or meanes of defence he can use a jawbone to kill a thousand of them when they thinke him farre enough from any weapon and if Sampson wants a better and readier meanes against Gods enemies he can by two hundred Foxes a most unexpected meanes burne up their graine and fields at harvest time Our Lord by the foolishnesse of preaching can doth overcome his enemies nay God can and doth by contrary meanes wrack his foes Sampson shall marry a wife among the Philistims to be an occasion of warre and revenge and this came of God whereas marriages among Princes ordinarily are made to compose and make up differences not to make them Our Lord Jesus overcomes sinne death hell grave by suffering by death by descending into hell by lying in the grave most unlikely or contrary meanes Let Gods enemies fear revenge by every thing even where no fear is An enemy of God and his Church is never safe seeme he never so secure An Army of frogs shall drive Pharaoh out of his bed chamber in the middest of his greatnesse a fly shall choake Pope Adrian if other meanes be wanting and proud Herod shall be eaten up not by any army of men but of lice III. The greatest victory against the enemies of the Church is by passion and patience submitting our selves meekly unto God in obedience walking in our callings and doing the work of God Thus did these two mighty Sampsons most overcome their enemies when they seemed most overcome by them Our warre saith Isidore is contrary to the striving of the Olympicks There he gets the garland which striketh and overcommeth here he which is strooke and suffereth There he which being strooke striketh againe here he which offereth his cheeke to the striker And thus he concludeth Our victory consisteth not in revenging but in suffering Oh let the children of the Church lay aside worldly weapons clamour reviling revenging speeches or actions and betake themselves to the weapons of the Church prayers teares patience weapons mighty under God The power of a Christian is patience who must overcome evill with goodnesse IV. In that Christ is the true Sampson here is much consolation and many comforts to the Israel of God 1. Comfort As Sampson revenged the wrong offered him in his wife So will Christ Matth. 25. In that ye did it to one of these little ones ye did it to me And though Sampsons wife may be taken from him and given to another Christs cannot Ioh. 10. 28. none shall pluck them out of my hand 2. Comfort A mightier deliverer is here than Sampson for Israel For 1. Though Sampson was strong to overcome a Lyon our Sampson is stronger to overcome the Devill not in himselfe onely but for us in us and by us 2. Sampson was stronge but might abuse his strength as he did in whoring and wantonnesse which in prison he repented But Jesus Christ used all his strength for God against sinne and his enemies 3. Sampson abusing it might loose his strength for it was not the parting with his haire but his sinne grieving the Spirit that weakned him but Christ could not loose his strength because he could not loose his obedience 4. Sampson was so strong as the Philistims thought it bootlesse to assay him with power but by pollicy and indirect meanes they conquer him but our Sampson cannot be conquered neither by power nor by pollicy for he is stronger than all and in him are treasures of wisdome 5. Sampson overthrew the enemies but that was his owne overthrow but Christ not so his conquest was to his most glorious exaltation 6. Sampson as a type onely began the deliverance of the Church but hindered by death could not perfect it Our Sampson perfected the deliverance and salvation of the whole Church and did more after death than in his life or death and will most fully perfect it for all his members in the resurrection 3. Comfort The glory of Gods children appeares not yet but shall when he shall appeare 1 Ioh. 3. 2. Sampsons strength for a time lurked in the prison the glory of Christs Deity lay hid a while in the grave but both most powerfully brake forth So shall the glory of the despised Saints Psal. 37. 6. 4. Comfort We shall never doubt of meanes to comfort and supply us in want The same God that supplied Sampson a jawbone against his enemies supplied him out of the same jawbone a well of water to drinke when he was ready to faint Trust thy selfe with God in thy wants reserve to him all meanes instruments and wayes of bringing thee help If thou see no apparant or great meanes of thy comfort and supply he can use weak and unexpected meanes onely walk in thy calling and the rock shall yeeld thee water rather than thou shalt be destitute in Gods way or work V. In both learne to contemne the greatest and extreamest perill in Gods causes Sampson offered himselfe to death so did Christ he went out to meet his enemies so must thou learne not to love thy life to the death Revel 12. 11. and with Paul
not count thy life dear to finish thy course with joy For a man to thrust himselfe in hazard or venture his life without warrant from God or by his own private motion is rash but God calling in standing against the enemies of the Church it is honourable In both learn to prepare for death approaching by faithfull and fervent prayer So did both these Sampsons And the issue will be comfortable as theirs that all thy life and combate shall not give such an overthrow to thine enemies as such a death though enemies seem never so much to prevaile CHAP. X. 9. David a type of Christ in 5. respects AS all the Kings of Israel were expresse types of Jesus Christ the head of his Kingdome and of all the people of God as they in their times were So were there two of them that were more manifest figures of him than all the rest I meane David and Solomon Of both which we are to enquire wherein the resemblance consisteth David was so speciall a type of Christ as scarce is any thing noted of Christ but some shadow of it might be observed in David I. For his person David the son of Iesse Christ the true rod out of the stock of Iesse Isai. 11. 1. Both of obscure and low parentage Both out of dry and despicable roots Both Kings Both Kings of Israel Both their Kingdomes raised out of humility Both men after Gods own heart Both Davids for even this roote of Iesse was not onely commonly called by the name of the sonne of David but of the name of David himselfe Ezech. 34. 24. My servant David shall be the Prince among them which was long after David was dead Ieremiah 30. 9. They shall serve the Lord their God and David their King whom I will raise up unto them Hosea 3. 5. They shall seek the Lord their God and David their King that is not the typicall King David dead long before but the Messiah the true David to whom onely prayer and spirituall worship belongs II. For his vocation and calling 1. Both called to be the head of nations Psal. 18 43 thou hast made me the head of nations which was not literally true of David who was properly King of one little corner in Judea but of Christ the true David whose kingdome was from sea to sea and to the worlds end David of a shepherd of sheepe was raised to be a shepherd of men even of Gods people So was Christ raised of God to be the chiefe shepherd of the stock 1 Pet. 5. 4. And not of bodies as David but of soules 1 Pet. 2. verse 25. 2. The time when David was anointed about the thirtieth year of his life 2 Sam. 5. 4. and Christ was baptized at thirty yeares and invested into his Office 3. The place where David made choice of Jerusalem for his royall seat and Metropolis being anointed of God to the Kingdome of Israel So Christ being anointed the everlasting King of all the Israel of God made choice of Ierusalem there to rule and shew his power upon the Crosse his Chariot of triumph crowned with a crowne of thornes and after in his glorious resurrection and ascension sending the Spirit and the Gospel And as David added some of the borderers to the kingdome of Israel as himselfe saith strangers were subdued to him So the true David adds to the Church the whole body of the Gentiles and hath by the preaching of the Gospel the sword of his mouth subdued the world to himselfe 4. The gifts fitting him to this function As when David was anointed the Spiof God came upon him 1 Sam. 16. 13. and fitted him to the government of Gods people So our true David Jesus Christ anointed with oyl above all his fellowes had the Spirit of God descending upon himin a visible shape and by that anointing filled and furnished with the Spirit and all needfull graces for the administring of his Kingdome 5. As David was preferred above all his brethren in four speciall graces So was Jesus Christ above David himselfe 1. In wisedome and prudence 1 Sam. 16. 18. the servants of Saul observed David to be wise in matters and the Lord was with him and Ch. 18. verse 14 15. when Saul saw that David was very wise he was afraid of him Our true David had all treasures of wisedome and knowledge The Spirit of wisdome and understanding the Spirit of Counsel rested upon him Isai. 11. 2. who is therefore called the great Counseller Isai. 9. 6. whose counsels are farre beyond Ahitophels his were as the Oracles of God Christs were so And our true David gets beyond his type David in many things by his own confession did very foolishly Our true David never did any thing but the wisedome of God shined in it with whom not onely God was but because he was God 2. In fortitude and magnanimity without which counsell were bootlesse by which he was able to encounter with a Lyon a Beare with Goliah and all that rose up against him or his people A man fitted for peace or warre with counsell and strength Whose description in part is contained in the forecited place 1 Sam. 16. 18. strong valiant a man of warre and wise in matters A type of our true David who for fortitude is the invincible Lion of the tribe of Judah and not a valiant man onely but the strong God Isai. 9. 6. the mighty God See Tit. 2. 13. 3. In gifts of prophecy He was able to sing divine Psalmes and hymnes to the praise of God an holy pen-man of the Scripture A type of Christ the true Prophet of his Church not a pen-man but the Author of all the holy Scriptures David a Prophet Christ the Lord of all holy Prophets 4. In gifts of true sanctification and holinesse being a man after Gods own heart commended for his uprightnesse in all matters save that of Uriah A type of Jesus Christ who by the devils confession was the holy One of God 1. Himselfe being sanctified beyond all measure 2. Being the sanctifier of his people the author meritour and applier of all sanctifying graces to his members of whom himselfe is head 3. In his type were many foule spots● In him no spot nor staine Therefore the Church sings out his holinesse from toppe to toe Cant. 5 10. and concludes him wholly faire and delectable verse 16. III. David was a type of Christ in his warres First in respect of his followers secondly of his enemies thirdly of his victories 1. His followers David had a traine 1. Of poore men and received such to him as were in debt 1 Sam. 22. 2. The Sonne of David had a poor train and not receiveth onely but calleth all unto him that are heavy laden with the burthen of sinnes called debts promising he will ease them 2. Afterwards David had his thirty seaven Worthies that Valiantly fought his battels 2 Sam. 23. and
by their strength carried wonderfull victories So had the Sonne of David his twelve Apostles and seventy two disciples who as worthy and stout Champions fought the Lords spirituall battels and mightily subdued the world under the government of Jesus Christ in whose place are succeeded Pastors and Teachers to the end 2. His enemies 1. Open and manifest not onely Goliah that defied all Israel but Saul that casts a speare at him that hunts him as a Partridge that sends out for him to bring him to death and the house of Saul Shimei rayling on him and cursing him with an horrible curse besides Amalekites Philistims c. So our Lord Jesus had open hostility against the great Goliah of hell and encountered him hand to hand and conquers him in the wildernesse But Herod hunts his life every where the Pharisees revile him for a deceiver and Demoniack send out for him to take away his life and the people of the Jews pursuing him with all open hatred and hostility even to the death and all the wicked tyrants and enemies so many Amalekites and Philistima 2. Secret and underhand enemies that should have been loyall and loving to him even his own people that flattered him with their mouths but imagined mischief against him Ps. 41. 9. Such as Doeg Achitophel Nay he which eat bread with him at his table his familiar that went up to the house of God with him And more than all this he that came out of his own loynes his own son Absalom besides the sonnes of his Father 1 Sam. 17. 28. So our true David had not onely his own Jewes and brethren hating him with an horrible hatred and calling his bloud upon themselves but his own Disciple that had been so familiar with him that went to the house of God often with him that knew all his haunts and waies betraying him and delivering him to be crucified And thus Christ himselfe expounds that in Psalm 41. 9. of himselfe and Judas Euk. 22. 21. And therefore Interpretors expound such exectations as Psal. 59 13. Consume them that they be no more not so much litterally against Saul and other enemies of David as against the Jewes and enemies of Christ shadowed by them and so conceive them as they be Propheticall predictions of Jerusalem and the Jewes forty yeares after Christs ascension and o● the present wrath upon the hardned Jewes whose hatred against Christ liveth at this day as the cu●se liveth on them 3. His deliverances and victories with many of which the Lord honoured him As 1. Saul layes wait every where to take him and pursues him from place to place but Davids feet were made like Hinds feet in expedition to avoid his enemy whether Saul or Absalom who chased him as hunters the silly hare and he escapes them all though narrowly and strangely Christ Jesus was often sought after and layd for by his enemies no kind of snare was undevised to take him in his talke in his doctrine in his life and conversation no meanes unattempted to take his person but he escaped their hands strangely Sometimes he went through the middest of them all who having strong purpose yet had no power to take him till the time was come that he delivered himselfe 2. Saul having wearied himself in pursuit of David sent messengers to take him three severall times 1 Sam. 19 20. but they among a company of Prophets began to prophecy the spirit of the Lord comming upon them and they went without him So the Pharisees sent messengers to apprehend Christ and bring him before them but comming to him as Sauls messengers to David hearing his gracious words had no power to take him but went away preaching and proclalming as they prophecying never man spake like this man Joh. 7. 46. 3. In the comparison between Saul and David David having ssaine Goliah was sung Saul hath slaine his thousand but David his ten thousand 1. Sam 18. 10. But there is no comparison between the victories of David and the Son of this David who hath slaine the great Goliah the Devill who defied all the host of Israel and not destroyed the devill onely but overcame death hell the grave and chased before him all the armies of sinnes and bands of temptations which come out against the Israel of God 4. In that noble victory David cuts off Goliahs head with his own sword So in the wildernesse the devill the great Goliah used Scripture against Christ and Christ overthrowes him and cuts off his head by the fame sword of the Spirit the word of God And now daily he convinceth the wicked enemies by the testimony of their owne conscience Rom. 2. 15. He needeth no other sword or weapon against them than their own IV. David was a type of Christ in his kingdome first in respect of the entrance secondly of the administration thirdly of the continuance or eternity 1. David entered not without strong opposition much contempt and disdaine so our David For of both it was verified the stone which the builders refused is become the chiefe stone of the corner No man was more despised of Sauls Courtiers than David who was thought farre enough from the Kingdome So no man so much despised and rejected of the Scribes Pharisees chiefe Priests and People as Christ. Barrabas an honest man to him and yet was mightily and unexpectedly invested into his kingdome by his glorious rising from the dead 2. In his administration David will judge uprightly and sing mercy and judgement he will endure no hatefull person in his presence But our David is the just and righteous Judge of all the world and most sincerely dispenseth mercy to the penitent sinner but seedes the impenitent with judgement 3. In the continuance or eternity God promised mercy to David and his seed forever which promises are not to be extended to his carnall succession for the princely dignity is taken from them Their glory was eclipsed in the captivity and where be now any of Davids race according to the flesh But the everlasting seed of David is to be meant 1. Christ himselfe in whom his kingdome is perpetuated 2. The true Israel as well of Gentiles as of Jewes by faith ingrafted into the Messiah in respect of whom shall be no end of his Kingdome Thus in all those speeches wherein David professeth he will praise the Lord among the Gentiles David must be taken as a type of Christ who by his Spirit set forth the praise and true worship of God among the Nations to the end of the world And so Paul Rom. 15 9. interprets it of the calling of the Gentiles For David could not do this litterally and in person among whom he never dwelt nor came but onely in him whose type he was V. David was a type of Christ in respect of Christ his prophesticall and Priestly office 1. David by his sweet musick allayes Sauls madnesse 1
the sea so all beleevers by the death of Jesus Christ. 1. Let us not measure Gods works by carnall senses This made the two disciples going to Emaus Luk. 24. to make but a bad argument He is crucified and behold this is the third day therefore though we thought he should have redeemed Israel we are deceived Whereas faith would have made a clean contrary conclusion He is crucified and this is the third day therefore he is the Redeemer The Jewes not knowing the Scriptures and power of God are hardned against Jesus Christ expecting a great Emperour as Julius Caesar or some great Monarch not able to see that by so base a death life could be procured The carnall protestants are held off from the true embracing of Christ because they see the truth and sincerity of Christ every where so resisted and hated by great Rulers and Doctors as if it had not been so in Christs own person and Ministery or as if Christ was not set as a signe or butt of contradiction whereas therefore it must needs be he 2. Let us admire Gods power and wisedome and patiently with Jonah expect after darknesse light And seeing God can turne the greatest evill into the greatest good of his Church let us labour to make benefit of all evils hapning to our selves and others 1. Even of our sinnes themselves to make us more humble watchful for time to come 2. Of our sufferings as Jonah and Christ learned obedience by the things they suffered V. In the type and truth we have first terror on the one hand secondly comfort on the other 1. We see the weight of sinne committed pressed Jonah into the deepest sea of evills and sinne imputed thrust Christ into a deeper sea even the deepest hell Both seem left of God in the hands of death both cry out as left in the depth of hell 1. Do thou run from God and duty and though thou beest Gods childe thou maist find God pursuing thee as if he were an utter and irreconcileable enemy 2. Make as light a reckoning of sinne as thou canst the least of them shuts us or Christ out of heaven Doth Christ undertake thy sinne he sees not heaven till he die for it Sinne imputed will not let Christ enter into heaven but by his own bloud yea through hell Thy sinne repented of held Christ an innocent out of heaven till he died for it but where shall ungodly and impenitent sinners appear 2. This same collation affords us sundry grounds of comfort First both seem forsaken neither of them was so but both of them go to his God There is no time nor place wherein the child of God may not boldly goe to God and pray to his God and say My God my God Secondly no deepe is so deepe but Gods hand can reach helpe into it even into the Whales belly and heart of the earth Thirdly the extreamest misery and death it selfe work to good to the godly See it in Jonah Where was feared perdition there was found preservation The Whales belly was a prison indeed but to preserve him alive a deepe gulfe and a sea but to save him from drowning Can any man save a man from drowning by casting him into the Sea but God can Fourthly when the case seems most desperate then the Lord steps in to help When no helpe can be expected any other way after three dayes and three nights Jonah must be cast up and Christ raised up Never feare extreamities but then exercise thy faith most for then is God the nearest howsoever trust in him though he kill thee Job 13. 15. Fifthly the deepest sorrowes of Gods children end in greatest joy God hath a dry ground for Jonah after a sea of misery a glorious ascending for Christ after his lowest descent Whatsoever the sorrowful songs be that Gods people sing here in Egypt or Babel they shall end in songs of joy and victory and be changed into the songs of Moses and the Lambe Rev. 15. 3. CHAP. XIII The first-born Types of Christ 4. waies HAving spoken of holy types in sundry speciall persons now of personal types in some rankes and orders of men sanctified and specially separated to the Lord. Of whom 1. Some were sanctified by birth the first-borne 2. Some by office Priests especially the High-Priest 3. Some by vow as Nazarites 4. Some by ceremony as cleane persons legally cleansed from uncleanenesse Of these the first-borne were speciall types of Jesus Christ. 1. As they were Gods peculiar Exod. 13. 2. Sanctifie unto me all the first-born for it is mine Quest. How were they Gods Answ. 1. By common nature But so were all both first and last borne through the world For all the world and inhabitants of it are his Psal. 24. 1. 2. By common grace So all the people of the Jewes by reason of common grace were his with whom God had plighted his gratious covenant which was made to Abraham and all his seed wheresoever they were borne of whom he made choice as his peculiar though all the earth was his Exod. 4. 22. Israel is my first-borne that is not onely the first people and nation that first professed the true worship of God and had priority of the Gentiles who were younger brethren but the first-born by a special election and choice of that from all other people whom he would accept as his beloved in the Messiah the first-born of all creatures and among whom he would stablish his covenant and raise up his worship thus he dealt not with other nations 3. By a speciall right The first-born of Israel were Gods by a singular right as no other Children of any other family were namely by right of that singular deliverance of all the first-born when he destroyed all the first-born of Egypt And therefore presently after that destruction he makes challenge of them Exod. 13. 2. Thus is Jesus Christ the Lords first-born by a singular right not common to man or Angell whether we respect his nature or office 1. In his nature he is first-born as sonne of God the first begotten of all creatures Col. 1. 15. begot before all Creation And thus he is not onely the first begotten before whom there was none but the onely begotten after whom is none Joh. 1. 14. the onely begotten Sonne of the Father the first-born without a second or brother 2. In his office he was first-born by speciall prerogative 1. For the kind 2. For the undertaking 3. For the accomplishing 1. For the kind in that he was Mediator God and man in unity of person and the onely redeemer of his Church In this regard Rom. 8. 29. he is called the first-born among many brethren Which phrase noteth quality not equality with him some similitude but no parity between him and beleevers He holds his birth-right as the Sonne of God by nature and we by grace made the Sons of God he disdaines not to call us brethren
and office submitting himselfe to sorrow curse c. Besides what courage and fortitude did he express through his whole function and office in overcomming Sinne Death Satan the Crosse Hell and all adversaries Sampson the strongest of all Nazarites was but a weakling to him his adversaries flesh not spirit his power faint and failing yea changed into weaknesse IV. Nazrrites must not come near the dead to touch them nor defile themselves by them nor meddle with the funerall of father mother brother sister or any of their kindred though they might pretend never so much piety affection or good nature By which Law the Lord would teach them two things 1. That no changes of this life nor losses of their dearest friends should turne them aside from their duty or from the observation of the Law of their profession 2. To teach them constancy patience and magnanimity of spirit in the greatest outward afflictions and not to shew a weaknesse or passion in open and excessive lamentation Our Lord although he did touch the dead and was at funeralls and wept at the raising of Lazarus and so observed not the ceremony of Nazarites because he was no Legall Nazarite but was called a Nazarite as being the truth and substance of all the Legall Nazarites as in all other things so in this For he onely was the Master and had the true command of all his affections never exceeded measure in any thing never was defiled by any person dead in sinne never by any dead work never touched or came neare any such defilement which Legall Nazarites could not avoide V. The Nazarites must be absolved and released from their Vow by comming to the doore of the tabernacle of the Congregation with their offering Numb 6. 13. plainely by that figure leading us unto Christ the onely doore by which we enter and have liberty to come into the presence of God and obtaine freedome from the sinne and weakness of any duty we performe before him Now for Applycation I. Acknowledge Christ the true Nazarite Upon his head let his Crowne flourish As it was said of Joseph Gen. 49. 26 he was separate from his brethren so was Jesus Christ separated from all other men and Angels 1. In holinesse and purity being advanced in holinesse above all creatures He alone in propriety and perfection is a Nazarite purer than snow and whiter than milk yea his measure runs over to his Church Ephes. 5. 26. 2. In excellency and perfection of all virtues and graces he is that Netser Isai. 11. 1. the branch or flower which alwaies flourished in all kinds and perfections of virtue and graces and casts from him farre and near a most sweet smell sweet and acceptable to God and men 3. In power and authority The kingdome is his and power and glory all power is given him in heaven and in earth He hath power 1. To do us good 2. To withstand our evill 3. To tread down Satan sinne death 4. To rescue his Church to confound Antichrist and all enemies 5. To finish the grace and glory of his Saints Object Why must Christ be so pure a Nazarite Answ. 1. Because his passion could not have been acceptable if his person had not been as pure as the sunne 2. He was to be not onely righteousnesse in himselfe as other Nazarites or righteousnesse in part but he must be a perfect righteousnesse unto many Ob. But how could he be so pure comming of Adam as they did Sol. He came of Adam not by Adam as they did that is he came not by naturall propagation from Adam but was conceived by the holy Ghost and so all originall impurity was stopped in the very first moment of his holy conception Ob. But did not he take the same infirmities comming of Adam as they did Answ. No he tooke such infirmities as he pleased to fit him for a mercifull high Priest not to hinder him and therefore he took such infirmities from Adam as were miserable but not damnable and so remained a pure Nazarite without all sinfull frailty II. Christ the true Nazarite being come all shadowes must fly away and therefore this order of Nazarites gives no colour or approbation to any order of Popish votaries or monasticall persons now in the new Testament Besides that white is not more contrary to black than monasticall vowes to this For 1. The Nazarites were appointed by God himselfe their 's devised by themselves 2. Their vowes were of things possible in their power and temporary these are of things impossible without their power and during life be the party never so unable to endure it 3. Their vowes though appointed by God were not able to merit remission of sinne and eternall life but these say that they merit for themselves and others that their vowes are parts of Gods worship which never came in his mind or book and a state of great perfection Whereas a Nazarite was not more righteous than others but better fitted for his duty 4. Nazarites might not cut their haire their order stands in cutting and shaving that they may still look neate and effeminate 5. Nazarites drink no wine nor strong drink and they are very temperate in their diet these Belly gods eat up the fat and poure in the sweet till they be monsters that the very fasts of ●riers for the delicacy and abundance is become a proverbe 6. Nazarites might not come at funeralls these follow them as flyes do fat meat and suck out thence their greatest profit and sweetest morsels 7. Nazarites notwithstanding their vow lived in holy wedlock but Popish Votaries abhorre marriage not lust or whoredome Yet from this order they would establish their disordered orders as contrary as darknesse to light III. The shadow of the Law is vanished away and the truth of the Gospell is broken forth as the light saith the Canon Law Every Christian must be a Nazarite not by vow of separation but by imitation and resemblance of Christ the true Nazarite For I. He must be separate from others 1. He must see that ●e be separate from ungodly ones as one advanced to a happy estate in Christ. 2. That now his mind affections speeches and whole course be contrary to the course of the world and so as Joseph separate himselfe from the evill behaviour and manners of his brethren yea complaine of them to his father 3. He must be content if his brethren separate from him as did Josephs brethren when they sold him into Egypt This is to be a Christian Nazarite II. This Christian Nazarite must strictly keep the rules of his profession i. e. he must labour 1. To preserve the vow of holinesse made in Baptisme study and follow after sanctification This is the will of God even your sanctification 1 Thes. 4. 3. he must resigne himselfe wholy to God 2. Carefully to avoid the least defilement of sinne The Lord made a Law Numb 6. 9.
onely a purifying of the flesh this of the Spirit and conscience 4. That cleansed from legall and bodily pollution this from morall called dead works 1. Because they proceeded from death of sinne 2. Because they lead to eternall death For the explaining of this ordinance consider four things 1. Whence the Cow must be 2. The properties or qualities 3. The actions about her 4. The use and end of it I. All the congregation must bring an heifer to Moses out of the heard 1. All the congregation for not one in the congregation but needs a meanes of purging 2. This meanes must be a Cow not an Oxe or Bull. The imbecillity of the sexe noteth the great humillity of our Lord Jesus who being the mighty Lyon of the tribe of Judah would so abase and weaken himselfe for our sakes 3. They must take her from the heard so our cleanser must be taken from among our selves being true and perfect man taking our nature and our flesh yea our infirmities as the weak sexe importeth in all things save sinne like unto us II. The properties required in this Cow are four 1. She must be an heifer in her youth and strength Christ offers himself and must be taken for a sacrifice in the flower of his strength at three and thirty yeares He offers his best gifts and dies in his strength and so his offering was more free and acceptable And we also should offer up our youth strength best times and gifts to Jesus Christ who offered himselfe in his best strength to death for us 2. The Cow must be red Signifying 1. The truth of Christs humane nature being of the same red earth that the first Adams body was 2. The grievousnesse of sinne which he was to undertake and the scarlet staine of it 3. The bitter and bloudy passion of Christ and his cruell death The red skin of the Cow resembled the red garments of Christ all besprinkled 1. With his own bloud 2. With the bloud of his conquered enemies 3. Presented unto his father like the coat of Joseph all stained with bloud 3. The Cow must be without spot or blemish to signifie the purity of our Lord Jesus in whom was never any spot or staine of sinne Though he was contented to be counted a sinner yet he was no sinner And though he had sinne on himselfe he had none in himselfe as the Cow was slaine for sinne not being sinful Christ was ruddy through his passion yet most white and spotlesse by his most perfect and absolute righteousnesse 4. She must be without yoke on which never yoke came Signifying 1. That Christ not necessarily but voluntarily took our nature that he might free us from our yoke 2. His absolute freedome from all the yoke of sinne farther than he voluntarily undertook the burthen of it 3. That he was never subject to the yoke of humane precepts and commandements being the Law-giver to prescribe Lawes to all not to receive Lawes from any 4. That none could compell him to suffer for sinne but his whole obedience active and passive was a free-will offering he having power to lay down his life and to take it up againe 5. He was more free from the yoke than any red heifer could be She indeed must be free in her selfe He not onely free in himselfe but he must free all believers from the yoke whom the sonne sets free they are free indeed III. The actions about the Cow were five ver 5. 1. Action 1. The Congregation must deliver the Cow to be slaine so was Christ delivered to be slaine by the whole body of the Jewes 2. She must not be delivered to Aaron but to Eleazer his successor signifying that the death of Christ serveth all the successions and ages of the Church and must be taught by the Ministers of all ages 2. Action She must be led out of the Camp and there burnt whole to ashes her skin flesh bloud and dung ver 5. Signifying 1. That Christ must be led out of the gate of Jerusalem to suffer Heb. 13. and there 2. must be crucified by which he was made a whole burnt offering 3. That whole Christ is our comfort his flesh our meat his bloud our drink yea the very base dung of those contumelies cast upon him were a part of his sacrifice offered up in the fire of his passion for us to sweeten and sanctifie ours 3. Action Eleazer must take of the bloud with his finger and sprinkle towards the foreside of the Tabernacle of the assembly seven times vers 4. Signifying 1. The purging of us by the bloud of Christ sprinkled on the Conscience 2. That Christs death profits none to whom it is not specially applied for the Cowes bloud must be not shed onely but sprinkled 3. That onely the people and Congregation of God have benefit of the death and bloud of Christ for it was sprinkled directly before the tabernacle 4. The seven times sprinkling noteth 1. That that one oblation hath virtue and merit enough 2. The perfection of justification 3. The need of often application of Christs death 4. The duration of it to all ages 4. Action She must be burnt with Cedar wood scarlet lace and hysope all which must be cast into the fire with her vers 6. Signifying 1. Three things in Christ. 1. The Cedar of uncorrupt life 2. The scarlet of fervent love to mankind 3. The hysop of savoury obedience in all things to his father all which were in all his sufferings and fire of his passion sweetning it 2. They noted three things arising from Christs sufferings 1. Immortality signified by the Cedar which is not subject to putrefaction 2. The scarlet the merit of his bloud applyed to justification 3. The hysope of mortification healing our corruptions a● hysope hath a healing quality All these three properly arise from the passion of Christ. 5. Action A clean person must gather the ashes of the heifer and lay them without the Camp in a clean place vers 9. Signifying 1. The buriall of Christ in a cleane and new tombe wherein never man lay a clean place never used before 2. That the merit of Christs death is ever laid before God in the highest and holiest heavens 3. The Christians account of Christs merit and passion who layeth them up as his chiefe treasure in the clean place of a pure heart and conscience an onely fit closet to keep the mystery of faith in IV. The use and end of these ashes was twofold vers 9. 1. They must be kept for the Congregation Signifying that there shall never want supply of grace and merit from the death of Christ to any believer that sees his need of them 2. Of them was made a water of separation thus A clean person took of the ashes of the red Cow burnt and put pure water into a vessell and taking hysope dipped it and sprinkled it upon the tent the persons and vessels and
circumcision made with hands and were so farre unworthy of Abrahams seed as that they are called Witches children seed of the whore Isai. 57. 3. and Act. 7. 51. So art thou not circumcised which art onely outwardly Rom. 2. 28. A Jew without or outward is as good a worshiper as thou 2. If We cannot say truely that now not the Jewes but we are the circumcision Col. 2. 11. our persons are no better before God than an uncircumcised person in the Law Therefore if thou art not thus circumcised thou art 1. An exceeding hatefull person So David of Goliah by way of reproach and contempt This uncircumcised Philistime 2. Thou hast no part in the promised Messiah no more than he 3. No portion in Canaan not a foot in Heaven all thy portion is in Earth 4. No member of the true Churth but without the Communion of Saints 5. As he was in state of death and judgement Deut. 30. 6. Jer. 4. 4 14. so thou shalt be condemned as surely for want of a sanctified and circumcised heart as he for contemning circumcision of his flesh Col. 2. 13. Ye were dead in the circumcision of the flesh without the life of God in grace without hope of the life of glory CHAP. XIX The Passeover a type THe second ordinary Sacrament of the Jewes lively representing Jesus Christ was the Passeover instituted Exod. 12. to be a lively type of Christ. 1 Cor. 5. 7. Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us The name of this Sacrament hath in it the occasion for it was by God therefore instituted in memoriall of their great deliverance in Egypt when the destroying angell who slew all the first born in Egypt in one night passed over all the Israelites houses whose doors and posts were striked with the bloud of the Pascall Lamb slain and eaten in that house wherein the godly Jewes were not to fix their eyes in that externall signe or the temporary deliverance signified but to cast their eye of Faith upon the Messiah and true Paschal Lamb by means of whom the wrath and revenge of God passed over all those whose soules are sprinkled with his bloud and who by true faith feed upon him And therefore howsoever the word Passeover hath in Scripture many significations both proper and figurative I understand by it the whole institution of God concerning the Lamb called Paschall In which we shall see Jesus Christ most lively pourtrayed before us and that this one legall Sacrament preached not obscurely to the ancient Jews the whole doctrine of the Gospel and grace of salvation by the onely suffering of Jesus Christ. This will appear in five things 1. In the choice of the Sacrifice 2. In the preparing of it 3. In the effusion of bloud and actions about it 4. In the eating and conditions therein 5. In the fruits and use Sect. I. I. In the choice of the Sacrifice The Lord appointed it to be a Lamb or a Kidd notably signifying Jesus Christ whom John Baptist called the Lamb of God taking away the sinnes of the world Joh. 1. 29. Christ is a Lamb. 1. In name Revel 5. 6. In the midst of the Elders stood a Lamb. 2. In qualities in respect of innocency patience meekness humility obedience to the will of his Father to the death not opening his mouth Isai. 53. 7. in fruitfulnesse and profitablenesse to feed us with his flesh and cloath us with his fleece of righteousnesse 3. In shadows being figured in all those lambs slain especially in the Paschall Lamb. In which shadowes or figures he was not yearly onely but daily held before the eyes of beleevers and so here we consider him In this Lamb for his choice must be four conditions I. Condition It must be a Lamb without blemish ver 5 every way perfect without any spot or defect signifying the most absolute perfection of Jesus Christ who was both in respect of his person and actions without all spot and exception 1 Pet. 1. 19. as of a Lamb undefiled and without spot Heb. 7. 26 Such an high Priest it became us to have as is holy undefiled separate from sinners The reasons are two 1. Because else his ransome were insufficient 2. He must be perfectly righteous that must become a righteousnesse to many II. Condition It must be a male for three reasons 1. Reason To note the excellency strength and dignity of Christ proper to that sex For although he seemed a most weak man in the state of his humiliation yet must he be not effeminate but masculine strong stout and potent to destroy sinne and death and to foile all the enemies of mans salvation Christ indeed must be the seed of the woman but the woman must bring forth a man-child Rev. 12. 5. And though he must be borne of a Virgin yet the Virgin must bring forth a sonne Isa. 9. 6. For he must divide the spoile with the strong Isa. 5. 3. 12. 2. Reason Consider Christ in both his natures it was fit he should be a male as the Lambe was 1. As he was the Sonne of God it was meet he should be of the more worthy sex of men for it was unfit that the Sonne of God should be the daughter of man 2. As being man he was to be the Messiah the seed of Abraham the Sonne of David and so to be circumcised to be a fit Minister of Circumcision 3. Reason Consider him in his office He was to be a King a Priest and a Prophet of his Church all which necessarily require him to be a man a male a the Lamb was We conclude therefore hence that being the head of the whole Church he must be of as worthy sex as any of his members III. Condition The Lambe must be of a year old ver 5. to signifie that Christ dyed at a full and perfect age in his strength and therefore had experience also of our infirmities For a Lambe of a year old is at his state and growth and a Lamb of a year old is acquainted with many miseries Even so our Saviour living to the full strength of a man was a man full of sorrows and acquainted with infirmities See Heb. 4. 15. we have not an high Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted like us yet without sin IV. Condition He must be taken out of their own flocks and folds For so Moses to Pharaoh Exod. 10. 25. thou must allow us our beasts for sacrifice to offer to the Lord. Plainly signifying that Christ was to be an Israelite and within the fold of Gods own people for he was to be of the seed of Abraham and salvation was of the Jewes Joh. 4. 22. Yea and the Lords own Law requires that the King should be taken from among his brethren Deut. 17. 15. and much more the King of the Church being King of all Kings Sect. II. II. Jesus Christ was as
evidently expressed in the preparation of the Paschall Lamb wherein the Jewes were tyed to six observations I. Observation The Lamb must be severed from the flock v. 6. to signifie Jesus Christ separated by God the Father to the office of mediator and that two waies I. By Gods eternall decree he was a chosen servant of God to the most excellent service in heaven and earth Isai. 42. 1. My elect servant And thus is called a Lamb separarated from before the foundation of the world 1 Pet. 1. 20. 2. In due time actually separated from all the rest of the flock by 1. A supernaturall conception by the holy Ghost whereby he became an high Priest separated from sinners all the rest of Mankind remaining sinners 2. By a miraculous birth of a Virgin being the seed of the woman 3. By an unconceiveable union of the two natures divine and humane in one person by which he became our Immanuell God with us 4. By a solemne and heavenly inauguration into his office at the brinke of Jordan by which he was openly proclaimed the chiefe Doctor and Prophet of his Church Thus it became this Lamb of God to be actually separated from all the rest of the flock because for all the rest he was to pay a greater ransome and price than any other that could be found amongst all mankind II. Observation The Lamb thus separated must be reserved and kept alive four daies even from the tenth day of the first month till the fourteenth day of the same month vers 6. Wherein was signified the very particles of time of Christs both Ministery and passion 1. For his Ministery Christ must not be sacrificed presently so soon as he was born nor so soon as he is baptized and separated but after that separation must live about four years to preach the kingdome of God and then be offered up that his death might not be a seale to a blancke but might confirme all that holy doctrine delivered by his owne mouth and Ministery to the world 2. For his passion The time of it depended not on the will of man for his enemies sought many a time before to slay him as Herod in his infancy Matth 2. 16. the Jewes took up stones to stone him Joh. 8. 59. The Nazarites would break his neck from an hill Luk. 4. 29. And many other attempts were made against his life but his time was not then come the lamb must be reserved four daies And this very moment of time was determined and registred in Gods most certaine and unchangeable computation Act. 2. 23. being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God Whose wisdome so ordered that 1. As the lamb was taken in the tenth day of the first moneth so Christ came into Jerusalem about the tenth day of the same month to suffer as appeares Joh. 12. For upon the sixth day before his passion he came to Bethany vers 1. and the next day he went to Jerusalem which was the fifth day before his passion ver 12. 2. As the lamb must be slaine the fourteenth day of the first month which answereth to our March and at the full of the Moon So that no man might be deceived in our Paschall lamb he must be sacrificed at the Passeover the same day that the lamb must be slaine In the full Moon to note the fullnesse of time now come which was so long before appointed and in such a month as when light prevailes against darknesse and every thing revives and springs to signifie that Christ by his suffering chaseth away our darknesse and death and brings in light and life and a blessed spring of grace and glory III. Observation The Lamb must be slaine vers 6. signifying that Jesus Christ being as that Lamb of a year old in his vigour and strength who by reason of his age and strength might have lived longer must not onely die but by a violent death and that by Israel Noting 1. That Christ must be put to death by the Jewes 2. That the benefit aad merit of his death redounds to his Church onely The Redeemer must come unto Zion Isa. 59. 20. Objection How was he then a Lamb slaine from the beginning of the World before the Jewes were in being Sol. Two waies 1. In regard of Gods decree whereof a promulgation was made in promises and types and an acceptation as if it had been already done 2. In regard of man He was slaine onely one time as to the act but in all times as to the fruit because the perpetuall power and efficacie of Christs sacrifice was begun with the world and extended to all believers of all ages who onely diversly apprehend it IV. Observation The lamb must be slain between two evenings 1 To put them in remembrance of their deliverance in Egypt which was in the evening 2. To note that our Paschall lamb should be slain towards the evening of the world that is in the last times Heb. 9. 26. 3. that Christs sacrifice was to succeed in the same time of their evening sacrifices which were daily to be offered Exod 29. 41. and so to put an end to them Dan. 12. 4. to note the very houre as well as the day of Christs suffering on the Crosse. To understand which we must know that the Jewes distinguished their artificiall day into four parts From six to nine from nine to twelve from twelve to three from three to six This last part was counted the evening of the day and the next three houres the evening of the night In this fourth part of the day used the Paschal lamb to be slain and the rest of the time was little enough to dresse it whole for Supper even so the true Paschal lamb must be sacrificed the very same day and houre that the Mysticall lamb was For Christ at the third houre that is at three of the clock in afternoon between the evenings with a great voyce gave up the Ghost Matth 27. 50. V. Observation The lamb must be roasted with fire not raw not sod baked boyled or otherwise but all thoroughly roasted with fire vers 9. 1. Not eaten raw to signifie that we must not grossely conceive nor unpreparedly receive Christ in the Sacrament as the Capernaites did of the flesh of Christ Joh. 6. and the Papists of eating the raw flesh of Christ as it was born of a Virgine with their teeth 2. Roasted to Signifie two things 1 The manner of Christs death he was to be crucified and peirced As the lamb must be thrust through and fastened to a spit so must the lamb of God be peirced and fastened to the Crosse. As the brazen Serpent was fixed to a pole Joh. 3. 14. 2. That Jesus Christ was made fit food as that lamb for his people by enduring the fire of affliction but especially by suffering the hot burning fire of his Fathers wrath which had burnt up
safe and sound 4. When they did see themselves by the benefit of the Red Sea freed from Pharaohs servitude how easily might they gather that by the bloud of Christ every believer of Jewes and Gentiles are freed from the slavery of hellish Pharaoh and all his Armies of sinnes and corruptions And when they did see how the Egyptians once dead and slain could hurt them no more how could they but gather that all the armies of sin once remitted and buried in the death of Christ can no more rise up to condemnation than a drowned Egyptian to drown an Israelite I. To note the mighty power of God who can still and over-master the mighty raging of the Sea which we see here in that its water dry land sands and shoare observe the providence of God and serve for his peoples safety Israel saw the mighty power of God herein Exod. 14. 31. Let us also behold the glory of God herein and fear before him as they did Let not us be more senseless than the senselesse creatures but hear his voice runne out of our own nature to observe his voice sounding in the Scriptures and Ministry of the Gospel II. To see and consider the state of the Church and people of God Canaan whither they goe is a fine and fertile countrey but the way is asperous and dangerous They are still as it were in the bottome of the sea enemies implacable at their heeles in infinite numbers Seas of waters dreadful to behold on both hands yea rising over their heads as mountaines threatning to fall over them and after a deep sea a terrible wildernesse takes them in which is no meanes for meat drink nor cloath A man would think no man could deal so with his children and yet Gods wisdom sees this the fittest way to Canaan He sees how 1. Every small content glewes us to our Egypt 2 What sluggs we are in the way farther than we are chased out 3. How little we care for dependance on himself when we are full of naturall comforts 4. That Canaan is so rich a land as is worthy all our labour and suffering Apply this note to awake thee out of thy ease and carnall slumber If thy way be so easie and pleasing to flesh sure it leads not to Canaan suspect it The Israelites going into Egypt had no enemies nor troubles meeting them but going into Canaan they had nothing else Strait is the way that leads to life and all the way to heaven is strowed with crosses Apply it also to secure thee in thy troubles Art thou in a deep danger or sorrow like the bottome of the sea It is no worse with thee than with the rest of the people of God No affliction overtakes thee but the same hath befaln the Saints in the world Hold on to Canaan and all is safe Canaan is worth all Happy thou if thou canst get to Canaan though thy passage be through the bottome of the sea III. To observe what a many comforts this great work of God will load us withal that are willing to carry them away For. I. The Lord in strange and unwonted dangers can work new and unwonted remedies for his children As we heard before that fire shall not burn them so here the Sea at his word of restraint shall not drown them He can make a wall of water more strong for them than a wall of Adamant yea himself according to their need will be to them either a wall of fire or water II. What danger can prevail against the Church if all these dangers on all hands above them below them afore them behind them at once cannot sinke them No All the gates of hell cannot prevail against it Every main affliction is like a main Red Sea which threatens to swallow us up but it shall in the issue onely preserve the Church What we have most cause to fear the Lord maketh most helpful and soveraign The very raging Sea rather than they shall perish shall open her lap as a tender mother to recieve them from the rage of Pharaoh and his pursuing army Nay the land of Goshen shall not be half so bountiful to them as these waters which gave them freedome victory and the spoiles and riches remaining upon the dead bodies of their enemies III. How unweariably the Lord sets himself to overcome all difficulties for his servants What had it been to have passed the oppressours of Egypt and to have been swallowed up of the sea Therefore he makes a new way where never any way lay before in the bottome of the Sea Afterwards he makes a dry and barren wildernesse comfortable to them dryes up Jordan as strangely for their passage gives them a daily harvest of Manna from heaven breaks a Rock to give them water and happily in time finisheth their long and tedious journey Even so the godly going out of Egypt departing from the kingdome of the devill and hastning out of the world towards heaven come presently into a deep sea not pursued onely by the fury of tyrants and enemies but every where threatned with dangers wants and death it self yet the Lord breakes for them one toyle after another and happily guides them through a deep sea of miseries and never leaves them till they recover the shoare and arrive safely at the haven of salvation where their songs shall be louder than their cryes were and a mighty deliverance shall swallow up all their danger IV. Here is comfort against the fear of enemies 1. Spiritual enemies For here we have both a confirmation and resemblance of the eternal delivery of the Church from the tyranny of the hellish Pharaoh which in spight of him is led through a sea of tribulation every where ready to overwhelme it into the promised rest of everlasting life Again we see here our sinnes also cast into and drowned in the bottome of the Red Sea Mic. 7. 19. These are the strongest and fiercest enemies that pursued us to death but these our furious sinnes as so many Egyptians are drowned in the sea of Christs bloud and extinct in the waters of Baptisme Aug. Psal. 113. 2. Temporal enemies How can the Egyptians hope to stand before Israel to whom the waters give way so strangely The enemy shall find the same sea a wall and a well a safety and a death Let enemies look here as the heathen did and let their hearts faint as theirs to see God make the Sea a wall a lane yea a lap for his people Let them behold the ordinary work of God who commonly joynes the salvation of his Church with the destruction of the enemies So for Mordecaies advancement and the Churches deliverance Haman must be hanged and his posterity destroyed as in a ballance if one scoal goes up down goes the other IV. The godly to partake of these comforts must learn 1. To labour for increase of faith for by faith they passed thorough the Red Sea Heb. 11. 29.
could have imitated them But while he was in the world to shew that his kingdome had no similitude nor correspondency with the Pomps of earthly kingnomes in his progresse he gets on an asse and in'stead of a saddle of state he had poore mens clothes spread under him But when he shall shew his glory he shall ride upon the Clouds as on an horse with such attendants and majesty as all the Potentates on earth were never capable of nor shall be able to behold 6. In amplitude and absolutenesse They will be free Monarchs and Commanders their will and every word of theirs must be a Law but never was any kingdome absolutely Monarchicall but Christs all earthly kings ever held in fee of him By me Kings raigne Prov. 8. 15. Never any other included all kingdomes of the world in it and under it but this Never any to whom all Princes were subject but this Never was there any of them which shall not be broken to pieces by this little stone if it stand in opposition against him Dan. 2. 45. 7. In dispensing justice 1. They must judge by evidence and proofe by the sight of their eyes and hearing of their eares but he shall not do so Isai. 11. 3. For he shall try and discerne the reynes and secrets of all hearts and shall judge things as they be not as they seem David judged according to the hearing of his eare rashly against Mephibosheth Christ shall not do so 2. They can pronounce their subjects just and innocent but he can make them innocent and just communicating his own righteousnesse to them which no Prince can do 1 Cor. 1. 30. He is made to us righteousnesse 8. In meanes of upholding and maintaining 1. They must winne holds as David Sions for t and enlarge themselves by force of armes dint of sword multitude of souldiers But Christ sends but twelve unarmed poor men who wonne and subdued the whole world with the word onely in their mouthes such a word as was the greatest enemy to the world and corrupt fashions of it This is the weapon mighty under God to cast down holds 2. They if they want men money munition must despaire of attaining or retaining their rights But Christs kingdome being neither set up nor held up by military power shall be upheld by the invisible and secret power of the spirit If all worldly power be against it never despaire it thrives best in opposition 9. In things to be attained In them the best things are honour pleasure externall prosperity and this for a time But Christs Kingdome stands not in meat or drink but in righteousnesse peace of conscience joy in the holy Ghost in grace here and glory hereafter The wealth of Christs subjects is to be rich in grace rich in good works his honour to be of the stock and lineage of Christ his pleasure a patient and painfull expectation of the pleasures at Gods right hand And these being eternall the kingdome of Christ must needs be eternall now this being the glory of the kingdome of Christ we have need of faith to discerne it and a great measure of humility before we can resolve to become subjects of it The theefe on the Crosse asking Christ to remember him in his kingdome Augustine askes him What Royalty doest thou see Seest thou any other crown than that of thornes any other Scepter than Iron nayles any other purpl than bloud any other Throne than a wooden Crosse any other guard than executioners Was there now so great faith in Israel Let our faith touch the top of this Scepter let us submit our selves to his word for the present and cast our eye beyond the present upon his second comming when we shall see him ride upon a white horse not upon garments but upon the Clouds in power and great glory entring not Jerusalem but the stage of the whole world to render unto every man even Kings according as they have done in the flesh good or evill III. David was called and anoynted to be King but between that and the installing or enjoying of his kingdome he had many troubles doubts and feares that made him stagger and say I shall surely one day fall by the hand of Saul So was the true David Jesus Christ annoynted with the fulnesse of the Spirit and called to be King of his Church but before his installation into his Kingdome many afflictions persecutions feares yea death it self overtooke him for our sakes Isai. 5. 3. Wherein he said My God why hast thou forsaken me So must it be with us who must be content to suffer before we can raigne to be crowned first with thornes as Christ was and stand with Christ on Mount Golgotha before we come to Mount Olivet see Act. 14. 22. It is so ordained by God that we should make our way through a straite to state through thornes to Roses through troubles to rest through stormes to the haven through vertue to glory through conquest to triumph through warre to peace through the Crosse to Heaven And this processe God the father strictly observed with his beloved Sonne as was necessary Luk. 24. 26. Phil. 2. 8 9. he was humbled therefore God exalted him And this is the Lords honour to honour his servants raised from the dunghill that they may know the way to glory lies by humility IV. It was ever the lot of the Church to have in it secret and inbred enemies as David and Christ had even such as eat bread at his table and dipped in the dish and these have alwayes proved more mischievous than open and forraigne enemies The Church ever had hypocrites and false brethren Satans spies who professing the same Christ and religion eating bread at the same table of the Lord and making shew of friendship in the communion of Saints joyning in the hearing of the word and prayer yet watcht the haunts of Gods servants to spy their weaknesse and where they ly open to advantage Every one sees they advantage not themselves but by all meanes undermine the Gospell and professors so as the silly dove of Christ can find no rest for the soale of her foot And never was the Church so wounded as in the house of her friends Cant. 1. 5. The sonnes of my mother were angry against me This being the estate of the Church to be hunted as the silly hare from one Mush to another and no where safe it must make us 1. more wary 2. desire our rest 3. love that promise Come with me from Lebanon c. Cant 4. 8. V. Comfort the Church That Jesus Christ is the true David 1. We have a strong deliverer and deliverance David pulled the sheep out of the Lyons mouth and the Lamb out of the paw of the Beare 1 Sam. 17. Christ the true David hath delivered his chosen flock out of the power of Satan death and damnation 1 Cor. 15. 27. 2. Be
contented to be rejected of all sorts of men not enemies onely but of brethren So was David so Christ and the servant is not better than the Master It was ever the lot of truth to be rejected of the builders as was David as was Christ few nobles few wise nay many great Rabbies professing the key of knowledge were greatest enemies to the truth as the truth is in Christ that is to the sincere profession and practise of Christianity Nay the basest sort made mouthes and scorned them both And are there not now such as would scorne out the truth of grace were it possible 3. Though Christ the chiefe corner stone may be refused he cannot be removed David must be King against all the hearts of his enemies So Christ shall keep his place and headship against the gates of hell he is a king everlasting in his Church and of his kingdome shall be no end He is a King ever present in his Church Matth. 28. 20. and needs no Vicar nor hath put it off to his pretended Vicar who claimes to be King of Priests and Princes He is a King present in his Church not as Baal among his worshippers either a sleep or in his journey or otherwise taken up but ever intent for the safety of the Church watching ever to overturne the open power and private pollicy plotted and planted against his kingdome Let us with faith and hope ever lift our eyes up to his banner and stand close to our victorious Captaine For as Souldiers loosing the sight of their Ensigne are in extreame hazard of confusion so we if we suffer Christ to slippe out of our eyes and hearts hazard the losse of our salvation CHAP. XI 10. Salomon a type of Christ in 6. things I. IN person and condition Both Salomons both Jedidiahs that is beloved of God both Kings of Israel both Kings in Jerusalem both Preachers in Jerusalem both sonnes of David yea both sonnes of God To both agrees that 2 Sam. 7. 14. I will be his father and he shall be my son But with this difference Salomon was the sonne of God by adoption and grace the true Salomon by nature and eternall generation II. Salomon was a peace-maker full of peace 1 Chr. 22. 9. A sonne is borne to thee which shall be a man of peace and I will give him rest from his enemies therefore his name is Salomon and I will send peace and quietnesse on Israel in his dayes A notable type of our Salomon who himself is the Prince of peace whose Scepter is a Gospel of peace whose subjects are Sons of peace whose kingdome stands in righteousnesse joy peace c. at whose birth the Angels sang Peace on earth But with difference Salomon could preserve onely outward peace but Christ makes up our peace with God and all Creatures and brings sweet peace and upholds it in our consciences 1 Kings A. 25. Salomon procured that in his days all Israel and Iudah dwelt without fean every man under his Vine and fig-tree in respect of outward tranquility and security but our Salomon that every beleever is redeemed from enemies to serve God without fear of sin Satan hell damnation Salomon brought peace but could not establish it in his own dayes much lesse after him for presently after the kingdome was rent into pieces But our Salomon brings a peace which none shall take away III. Salomon excelled all other men in wisdome and knowledge 1 King 4. 29 30. But Christ is the wisdome of the father far excells Salomon as in whom are hid all the treasurs of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2. 3. For 1. Salomon had wisdome by donation and gift Christs was native and proper 2. Salomon by all his wisdome knew not mens thoughts but Christ knew what was in man Joh. 2. 25. 3. Salomon though very wise in himselfe could not infuse his wisedome into others to make them so But Jesus Christ is made of God our wisdome 1 Cor. 1 30. because he is not onely our head as King but as Mediator unto whom we as members are mistically united 4. Salomon was not so wise in the beginning of his raigne nor in the end but our true Salomon was never destitute of the wisdome of God 5. Salomons wise sayings have commended his wisdome in all the Church of God the fame of his wise speeches and actions spread through the world But much more hath the fame of Christs doctrine and miracles Matth. 4. 24. John 7. 46. And never man spake like our Salomon by his adversaries confession therefore not Salomon IV. Salomon was a type of Christ in that he was a King of greatest royalty wealth and glory that ever was He so inriched his subjects that silver and gold were as common to them as stones in the streets 1 King 3. 13. no King on earth was like Salomon but Salomon was no King to Christ. Cant. 3. 11. Come forth ye daughters of Sion looke upon King Salomon with the crowne wherewith his mother crowned him c. That was no doubt royall and glorious to behold but we shall see all Salomons glory nothing to Christs For 1. Salomon had but one Crown but Christ hath many Crownes on his head Rev. 19. 12. 2. The maids of Sion admire Salomon for his and reverence him but all the Saints in earth and heaven honour and worship Christ with divine honour which is given to none but God 3. Salomon without wealth and abundance cannot enrich his subjects but Christ out of poverty enricheth his He being rich became poor to enrich us 4. Salomon enricheth his people with silver gold and earthly wealth Christ the true Salomon doth his with heavenly and spirituall wealth as of wisedome the price of which is above silver of faith much more precious than gold and all other graces to which all worldly wealth is but as stones in the street yea dung and drosse 5 Salomons throne was set above all the thrones of the Kings of the earth but Christs farre above Salmons He is the great King of glory exalted unto the right hand of God and ruleth not a small corner of the earth but hath all power in heaven and earth Neither doth Christs humility and abasement hinder his glory for when he was lowest he shewed greater glory in the least of his many miracles than Salomon in all his royalty Nay more he was more triumphant upon the Crosse and rode in more magnificence than ever Salomon did in all his golden Chariots V. Salomon was a type of Christ in 1. building 2. dedicating 3. ordering the Temple First in the building 1. Salomon according to the wisedom and large heart which God gave him built God an house wherein he dwelt at Jerusalem for God kept house and fire in Sion Isai. 31. 9. and Salomon set him up a standing house Our true Salomon builds an house for God even for the blessed Trinity to dwell in Not