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

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head Not dropped but powred signifying the abundance of gifts and graces most plentifully conferred upon Christ our head For as it was proper to the high Priest to bee anointed on the head whereas the common Priests were anointed but in their hands not on their heads So was Christ as the head anointed with oile above all his fellowes and received the spirit beyond measure signified by powring on the head 3. The communication of this oile It stayed not on Aarons head but ranne downe his beard even to the skirts of his garments signifying that the Spirit of grace distills from the head unto all the members of his mysticall body the Catholike Church First the Spirit descends and sits on Christs head then on the Apostles in likenesse of fiery tongues running downe as it were by Aarons beard and from them upon other inferiour persons beleeving their word as unto the skirts of his garment Now a threefold Application hereof I. In the anointing of the high Priest the eminency of Jesus Christ above all creatures whose very Name carrieth in it a note of principality being called the high Priest of our profession And in that this whole consecration of the high Priest in most solemne and stately manner was but a darke shadow of his solemne inauguration into his Office And by this anointing Christ is differenced from the most excellent Priests and Prophets that ever were Aaron Moses Elias Some of them had a most glorious vocation as Moses and in the entry of their callings graced with most divine and powerfull miracles but never any had the spirit sitting on his head but hee None of them by their anointing had all graces nor any grace in perfection but onely begunne and in small degree Moses a beleever wanted faith sometime as when he smote the Rocke which he should have spoken to and the meekest man in the world was sometimes to seeke of his meeknesse Aaron though the oyle was powred on his head was weake as in murmuring against Moses and in making the calfe But in our high Priest all graces and vertues were not inchoate onely but perfect In him knowledge of God was most perfect holinesse most perfect and all kinde of graces in highest degrees Grace sits in his lips not only to move the mind but to change it None of them by anointing could receive graces for others but for themselves onely but hee receives such a measure as runnes over to the sanctifying of the lowest and meanest of his members Hence 1. Ioh. 2. 27. the anointing which wee have of him dwells in you and teacheth you all things And 2. Cor. 1. 21 22. It is God that anointeth us in Christ and sealeth and giveth us the earnest of the Spirit Thus our Lord Jesus is advanced above all his oile shines brightest and swims aloft above all others II. In Aarons and Christs anointing and furnishing to their Office Ministers must labour for a greater measure of this ointment then others to runne downe from them to their skirts They must pray by the Spirit watch by the Spirit walke by the Spirit An unconverted Minister may doe another good but hee hath no promise of blessing nor doth any good to himselfe As the holy ointment was kept in the Sanctuary So Christ is the Sanctuary whence this oile comes The pipes are the word preached Sacraments prayer societies of the Saints and Gods people And such Ministers as contemptuously contemne the conduit-pipes through which this oile drops and flowes scorne to come to Sermons and joyne in holy exercises how doth their oile drie away Instead of this oyle that should fall from them a deale of pitch and slime froth and filthinesse falls on their skirts III. In the communication of this ointment unto us the skirts we learne that Christ is not for himselfe but for us And therefore 1. Examine if thou beest anointed This is to bee a Christian to bee anointed as Christ was Scornest thou this holy oile in thy selfe or others Know thou shalt one day wish the mountaines to fall on thee on whom this oile falls not 2. Hence draw strength in temptation Remember If sollicited to sinne Oh I have the anointing I am taken up and set apart to Gods use I am for God and his glory Neh. 6. 11. 3. Use meanes to attaine a farther measure and be liker Christ. Thou missest a Sermon or the Sacrament thou knowest not what drops of oile thou hast missed 4. Have a care to walke as such as are anointed smelling sweet every where in holy lives speaches prayers in all things edifying thy selfe and others Leave a sweet smell every where behinde thee Let it drop downe from us to others round about us The third thing in the high Priests consecration was sacrificing Exod. 29. 1 2. In which 1. Observe in generall that the Priests must be consecrated by offering all sorts of sacrifices for them and therefore they must take a calfe two rammes unleavened bread cakes and oile vers 1 2. 1. Because of the speciall holinesse and honour of their calling who are to come so neere unto God who will bee specially sanctified in all that come neere him 2. Because sinne in them is more hatefull then in any other and in expiating their sinnes as much is required as for the sinnes of all the Congregation 3. Because they were to offer unto God all the gifts and sacrifices of all the people of all sorts and therefore for them must be offered all sorts to sanctifie them not onely in generall but to their speciall services betweene God and his people 2. In particular The first of these sacrifices must be a sinne offering verse 10. For which they must 1. Take a calfe and offer him for the expiation of sinne verse 14. This yong calfe was a type of Christ who onely by his owne oblation expiated our sinne which otherwise made our selves and duties most hatefull 2. This calfe must be presented before the Lord and his Congregation signifying the willingnesse of Christ to offer up himselfe for the sinnes of men Iohn 19. 11. 3. Aaron and his sonnes must put their hands on the head of the calfe verse 10 not onely to confesse they were worthy to die for their own sinnes but to professe also that the death which they deserved was by the death of the Messiah the high Priest of the new Testament removed off them and transferred upon the beast And not onely the imputation of our sinnes upon Christ but also is signified that wee must lay our hand by a true faith upon Christ our head if we expect any comfort from his death and passion 4. The calfe must be killed before the Lord at the doore of the Tabernacle ver 11 signifying both the death and crucifying of Christ as also the fruit of it by the place That by his death as by a doore an entry is made for us into the Church both
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 doe this literally 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 propheticall and Priestly office 1. David by his sweet musick allayes Sauls madnesse 1. Sam. 16. 23. Christ by the sweet voyce of the Gospell stills the evill spirits which molest and vexe men and gives them peace and quietnesse in mind and conscience And in the dayes of his flesh how he sought to cure and allay the spirituall madnesse of the wicked Scribes and Pharisees against him is plaine in the story 2. David brings back the Arke to his right place 2. Sam. 6. So did Christ the truth of Gods Law obscured by the false glosses of Scribes and Pharisees and reduced the true sense and meaning of it And freed his Church signified by the Arke from the spirituall thraldome and captivity of the Law 3. David builds an Altar in the grounds of a stranger 2. Sam. 24. 24 namely Araunah the Jebusite The true David builds up a Church among the Gentiles and sets up Gods worship among them that were strangers from the Covenant 4. David offers a sacrifice and the Lord accepts it sending fire from heaven to consume it 2. Sam. 24. 25. Christ offers the most acceptable sacrifice that every was in which both Davids and all ours must be accepted and in which alone the Lord smels a savour of rest I. As the spirit of God came on David after his anoynting 1. Sam. 16. 13 So did it on our true David after his baptizing to fit them to their waighty offices Learne 1. That he that is not fitted and furnished with gifts of the spirit in some measure and attempteth any office in the Church or commonwealth is not called by God whose wisdome will not send a blind man for a seer nor a dumb man on his message or errand Would a man know whether hee have received of this spirit for his office A note is when God stirres up his will in that office to performe all the desire of God Isa. 44. 28 he saith to Cyrus Thou art my shepheard thou shalt performe all my desire The Magistrate is a shepheard he must doe in judgement what God himselfe would doe in repressing vice and cherishing religion else the spirit who is not contrary to himselfe leads him not The Minister is a shepheard hee must speake nothing but what God would speake for the incouraging of grace and disgrace of sinne and sinners God speaks peace to his people and feeds the impenitent with judgement and he that in his ministery doth speake sweetly to wicked men and broacheth a vessell of gall and wormewood for godly men to drinke is not sent by God on that errand hee crosseth the spirit which hee pretendeth 2. Art thou a private Christian see that the same spirit rest on thee and that thou hast received of the same anoynting For 1. he that hath not the spirit is none of Christs and 2. what is it to us that the spirit rest and light upon Christ if he should determine all his fruits and graces upon him But in that the sweete oyntment and Balsame poured upon the head of our high Priest runnes downe to the skirt of his garment that is to the lowest member of his Church Psa 133. 2 hence are we sweetly and admirably refreshed Findest thou emptinesse or want of grace fly to this fulnesse but observe the diverse manner To the head is given the spirit in all fulnesse to us members of that fulnesse Ioh. 1. 16. To him beyond all measure to us according to measure II. That Jesus Christ is the right and undoubted King of his Church of whom David was but a shadow And it will be worth our labour to enquire how farre the truth exceeds the type 1. For originall Davids kingdome and all other Kings and kingdomes are mediately from men either from some meane family as Jshais or some greater house in some corner of the earth But the kingdome of Christ is immediatly and unchangeably from heaven Dan. 2. 44. the God of heaven shall raise up a kingdome that is immediately for mediatly all kingdomes Kings and power is from him 2. In respect of unction All they are annoynted 1. by men 2. with materiall oyle 3. to be temporary Saviours 4. from temporary dangers But Christs annoynting was by the Spirit of God with more divine and excellent oyle above all his fellowes Psal. 45. 7. that he might be a spirituall and eternall Saviour a Jesus saving his people from their sinnes and such spirituall evills as pertaine to the life to come 3. Their titles are stately and glorious David as an Angell of God as the woman of Tekoah said so Caesar Augustus Charles the great Constantine Alexander the great to set out their glory But all these are nothing to the true and undoubted title of Jesus Christ who is King of Kings and Lord of Lords Rev. 19. 16. And if this were too little he hath another for he is God and man in one Person our Immanuel a style too high for Pope or Potentate for men or Angels Isay 7. 14. 4. Their Scepters are of metal gold or silver which they hold in their hands and by them they save or slay innocent or nocent But his Scepter is but verball which he holds in his mouth the word and breath of his mouth more pure then the gold of Ophir more potent then all the Scepters of all Kings put together By this he slayes the wicked Hos. 6. 5. I slew them with the word of my mouth 2. Thes. 2. 8. he shall slay that wicked man of sinne with the breath of his mouth Other Kings by their Scepters can kill men but cannot make them alive againe when they have done but Christ by his word can quicken and make alive dead soules and bodies They by theirs can be dreadfull to men Christ by his drives backe devils diseases death and all adversary power 5. In port and state 1. Their banners and ensignes expresse their noble acts and the honourable exployts of them and their progenitors which are glorious in the eyes of men Christs banner for his kingdome of grace is his Crosse or rather the Gospell a doctrine of the Crosse to the world foolishnesse or basenesse but in his kingdome of glory the signe of the sonne of man that is such glory and power as agrees to none else 2. Their servants and attendants must be rich stately noble and the sonnes of great Princes must be nearest to attend them Christ Jesus in contempt of what the world admireth will have his servants poore meeke lowly not such lofty Lords as so farre excell the Emperour in worldly glory as the Sunne
shadowes give place Nay there is no private man that is godly but he must weare this white linnen garment having put it on in the laver of regeneration as Gal. 3. 27. whosoever are baptized into Christ have put on Christ. 2. A girdle vers 40. which signifies constancy and stability in the truth both in our high Priest Jesus Christ who was not a reed shaken but a firme rocke as also in his members who are commanded to stand fast their lines girt with verity Eph. 6. 14. Hence followes That the Ministers word must not be yea and nay his course must be constantly gracious and watchfull And for private Christians Heb. 13. 9. Be not carried about with divers and strange doctrines for it is a good thing that the heart bee stablished with grace 3. A bonnet vers 40. A symbole and signe to them of Gods protection still covering them in their faithfull service signifying to us the Lords cover and faithfull protection both over our head and over his members for his sake So as every faithfull Minister hath a bonnet Christ carries him as a starre in his right hand and covers him from the rage of Satan and the world else should he not stand a minute And every faithfull member of Christ is so covered as an haire cannot fal much lesse the head without the will of his heavenly father 4. The breeches ver 42. putting more comelinesse upon the uncomely parts Signifying to them and us 1. What reverence we ought to use in the service of God farre remooving thence every uncomely thing 2. Shadowing out the true and perfect holinesse with which Christs humanity was cloathed and not onely with that but with the Majesty of his deity which highly graced and honoured the despised and fraile humanity which had no forme nor beauty Isa. 53. 2. 3. Not darkely representing that care and respect which our Lord and Saviour Christ hath of his inferiour base and despised both Ministers and members through the world Isa. 41. 14 feare not worme Iacob I will helpe thee To the high Priest belonged sixe peculiar garments First the Ephod ver 4. In which 1. The matter it was not wooll or silke but linnen which riseth out of the earth Ezech. 44. 17. Signifying that holy flesh of Christ which vayled his deity as a garment and that it was taken not from heaven but from his mother on earth as the matter of that garment grew immediately out of earth 2. The forme it was a long white garment signifying the long white garment of Christs absolute righteousnesse white innocent and unspotted and long to cover all our nakednesse without eeking or patching of merits 3. The ornament of it In it were set two Onyx stones and in them the names of the twelve tribes of Israel ingraven which Aaron carryed upon his shoulders signifying 1. That the names of the godly are not lightly written but fast ingraven in the love and memory of Christ as those names were ingraven in very hard stones 2. That Christ doth still carry his Church on his shoulders lifting them up out of dust and misery and bearing them upon the shoulders of his power and providence as on Eagles wings Deut. 32. 11. Or as the good shepheard brings home the sheepe on his shoulders Luke 15. 5. According to his gracious promise Isa. 46. 4 I have made you I will also beare you and I will carry you and deliver you 4. The use of it The high Priest in this garment carryed on his shoulders the names of Israel into the Sanctuary before God so our high Priest in the garment of his righteousnesse presents his Church shadowed by the twelve tribes without spot or wrinckle or any such thing and carries into heaven on his shoulders even into the true Sanctuary not made with hands those whose names are written in the booke of life 5. Distinction As the high Priest carryed the names in severall precious stones and severally ingraven so our high Priest takes speciall notice of every particular member of the Church neglects not the meanest but knowes them by name as the head can name every member of the body and contemnes not the meanest Rev. 3. 4 the Church of Sardi had a few names that is godly persons so well knowne to Christ as men by their names 6. The propriety of it It was not lawfull for any but Aaron and the high Priest to use this garment nor might any imitate it for it was the fall of Gideons house Iudg. 8. 26 27 for making an Ephod like that of the Sanctuary It is true there were ordinary Ephods holy garments common to inferiour Priests as Saul put to the sword foure score and five Priests that wore an Ephod 1 Sam. 22. 18. And used by the Levits as Samuel very young ministred in an Ephod 1 Sam. 2. 18. And it may be there were some garments called Ephods which great men did weare and no holy garment as 2 Sam. 6. 14. David danced before the Arke girt with a linnen Ephod But this Ephod was peculiar to the high Priest and in no garment else might he present the names of the twelve tribes signifying that no garment of righteousnesse may be expected or imitated in which God can behold his Church but this of Jesus Christ. And whosoever seeke elsewhere are abolished from Christ to their destruction Gal. 5. 2. 4. Oh the fearefull case of Papists that seeke to have their names written in another Ephod of their owne weaving and making The second garment peculiar to the high Priest was called the brestplate of judgement ver 15 the most precious part of all his garments I. In respect of the twelve costly and glistering stones which were set in foure rowes according to the number of the tribes ver 17. to the 22. In which 1. The shining of these stones signified the shining purity and innocency of Jesus Christ both in himselfe and in his members If they be pure as the sun faire as the Moone what is he 2. Their price of great value and worth signifying what a price the Lord Jesus valued his Church at He accounteth not beleevers as common and base stones but more precious then his owne life How vile and despicable soever they seeme to men and troden under foot heere below as common pebles yet Jesus Christ sets another price on them 3. Their place or situation They are set in the pectorall and Aaron must carry them on his heart signifying that Christ hath as much care of his Church as if it were inclosed in his heart le ts out his blood to make roome in his heart for them 4. Their number Twelve according to all the tribes noting that there is a roome in the heart of Christ for every one of the elect None can anticipate or prevent other With him is plentifull redemption The former without the latter shall not
to see any challenge it but the high Priest our Lord Jesus And hence for ever detest the wicked and abominable Masse with those sacrilegious Priests who usurpe these garments of Iesus Christ and tell us they offer propitiatory sacrifices for the sinnes of the quick and dead The theeves that spoiled Christ of his garments and divided them among themselves did him no such despite as these theeves doe who rob him and disrobe him of all his glory II. Every Christian is made a priest unto God by participation Rev. 5. 10. But not legall and externall for they were dated by the priesthood of Christ but Evangelicall improper and spirituall Neither to offer reall and externall sensible sacrifices which all had end by Christs onely sacrifice upon the Crosse but spirituall sacrifices such as Calves of the lips Heb. 13. 15. The sacrifice of a broken heart Psal. 51. 17. Of almes with which God is well pleased Heb. 13. 16. Of mortification Rom. 12. 1. and of good works and duties of all sorts Of prayer Psal. 141. 2. Now before any of these sacrifices can finde acceptance we must all put on holy and spirituall garments Never was any priest or performance pleasing without his garments the use of which was to cover and adorne Quest. What garments must we put on Answ. Iacob before he could get his fathers blessing must put on his elder brothers garment Gen. 27. 15. so must we put on the Lord Iesus Christ. Rom. 13. 14. Quest. How Answ. Put on whole Christ as the Priest all his garments 1. By making him our owne we must weare our owne garments Speciall faith unites to Christ and marieth us to him that he is ours and we his 2. Cover thy selfe with the sacrifice of his death Adam having sinned covered his nakednesse with skins of dead beasts signifying that all his sinfull posterity must cover themselves with the sacrifice of Christ dead the righteousnesse and perfection of which is the linnen Ephod in which thou being wrapped must offer up thy sacrifice 3. Array thy selfe with his vertues to adorne and decke thee This is the broidered coat which thou must weare of manifold vertues and graces which as jewels and ornaments must shine in thy life as the many glistering stones did in the breastplate So the Apostle Ephes. 4. 24. Put on the new man created after God in righteousnesse and holinesse 4. Put on Christ by Christian profession Our apparell is seene and makes us knowne to others Servants make themselves knowne by their cloth they weare whose they are The Priest must put on the Plate on his forehead and we are commanded to cary the name of God and the Lambe in our foreheads Rev. 14. 1. that men may never see our faces but therein reade the holinesse and innocency of our conversation 5. Put on the girdle Have thy loines girded Luke 12. 35. Stand in a readinesse 1. To all duties of Christianity 2. To all acceptable sacrifices of faith repentance prayer praises obedience 3. To offer up our selves by life or death to the glory and praise of God We had need bee thus begitt that we may stand to the confession and profession of the truth not knowing when or what tryalls will come besides that the world nor pleasure nor lusts seldome finde us unprepared And can he be a good subject who is alwayes unprepared for his Princes service but ever ready to serve his enemy III. From the being arrayed with these garments the poore members of the Church have a ground of much comfort in respect 1. of their head so arrayed 2. of themselves and in respect of themselves considering those garments 1. in the generall 2. in the particulars First in respect of our high Priest Jesus Christ thus gloriously arrayed 1. In the Ephod we see his mighty power who caries his Church upon his shoulders of power and protection Alas I where should wee lie if our Lord did not lift us up and beare us up But now we never need to discourage our selves by casting what shall become of the Church or religion if such and such projects prevaile for so long as we are on Christs shoulders we are safe 2. In the Pectorall behold the ardent and surpassing love of Jesus Christ to his Church For as he caries us on his shoulders by his power so he caries our names on his heart by his love This our true high Priest cannot forget his Saints when he seemes to turne his backe on them but still hath their names before his eye And this is the happinesse of the Church in which she may well rest her selfe that according to her prayer Cant. 8. 6. Christ setteth her as a seale on his heart and as a signet on his arme How is it possible to forget that which is sealed on the heart How can the eye look off the signet on the arme For a signet because it is most precious is most carefully kept and being upon the arm of Christ what arme can pull us off from him Object Oh that I might know my happinesse to bee set on Christs heart Sol. If thou wouldst be set as a signet on the Lords arme become the Lords servant and be faithfull in this service See Hag. 2. 23. O Zerubbabel my servant I will set thee as a signet 3. In his Miter wee see our high Priest crowned with honour and glory above all men and Angels And all the Church must say as Psal. 132. 18. On him let his Crowne flourish And if the dignity of the head be the honour of the members and the power of the head the safety of the members then from hence we have no small consolation 4. In his Plate wee see holinesse ingraven on his forehead that all our senses and thoughts must be fixed in the forehead of our onely high Priest from whom all holinesse floweth to his Church Oh what matter of joy is it to see that we in our selves so foule every way in our nature in our course shut out of heaven where no unclean thing commeth have in him a fountaine of holinesse set open for us For he is made to us of God wisdome sanctification c. Secondly in respect of themselves by meanes of Jesus Christ the members of the Church thus arrayed enjoy sure and stable consolation For 1. In generall they all afford us this comfort that through Christ our high Priest we are beautifull and glorious yea our beauty is made perfect through his beauty Psal. 45. 9. The Queen stands in most royall and costly garments Never had Solomons Queen in all her royalty such sweet perfumed and precious garmēts as hath the spouse of our true Solomon For 1. Those were provided by Solomon Kings daughters in thy precious garments but these provided by Christ out of his wardrobe and will not endure any other garment or ornament brought or procured elsewhere 2. Those were materiall gold silver and precious
Father So the Jewes by Gods permission breake their sleepe and early in the morning proceed to the condemning of Christ who is called the Hinde of the morning Psa. 22. 1. compassed with dogges that hunted his life and Christ as another Isaac after his passion rose early in the morning to fulfill the worke of his Father 3. Neither of them must be offered every where or any where but both in a mountaine and such a mountaine as must typifie Christs humane nature Mount Moriah must beare the Temple built by Salomon a type of Christs body Ioh. 2. 19. Mount Calvary must beare the body it selfe and these two hills if they be not one and the same as Augustine thinkes and it is not unprobable but that Golgotha was the skirt of Moriah yet could they not be farre distant the one being within the gate of the City and the other not farre without the nearest to the City of all 4. The Father layes first the wood upon both and then both upon the wood both must feele the weight of the wood no small wood to burne a man a whole burnt offering as Isaac but the wood which Christ bore was farre heavier 1. For the greatnesse of the burthen 2. For the burthensomenesse of our sinnes Isay 53. 4. he bare all our diseases And then both by Gods appoyntment were bound on the wood fastened hand and foot not that either was unwilling but to retaine the manner appointed for sacrifice 5. Isaac must be offered alone the servants must stay at the foot of the hill a farre off little knowing the businesse and sorrow in hand So Christ must tread the Winepresse alone Isa. 63. 3. the Disciples feare and fly and little consider the agony of their Master 6. The Father carryes in his hand the sword and fire against his owne sonne the sword signifying the justice of God the fire his burning wrath against the sinnes of men Both bent against Christ both sustained by this Isaac in whom the justice of God is satisfied and the flame of his wrath extinct and quenched IV. In his scape and deliverance 1. The blow is a fetching but Abraham must hold his had Isaacs flesh must not be pierced or cut The souldiers ready to breake the legges of Christ as of the two theeves must stay their hands not a bone of him must be broken 2. Isaac offred and three dayes dead in his fathers purpose and minde yet dyed not but his Father received him as from the dead so Christ offered upon his Divinity dyed not and his humanity dead in the belly of the earth after three dayes he revived and raysed himselfe againe to die no more So both were delivered from death the third day wherein the Apostle plainely makes him a type Heb. 11. 19. from whence he received him as in a type or resemblance that is to be a type or resemblance of Christs resurrection from death 3. The Ramme that was offered for Isaac was caught by the head among the thornes and hanged in a bush Christ our sacrifice was hanged on a tree crowned with thornes and so hung on the Crosse to expiate our sinnes compared to thorns and bryers which would for ever have held us if they had not held him V. In his mariage 1. Rebekah was faire and beautifull so the Church is faire in the beauty of Christ and faire within 2. Shee was of his owne kinred and flesh Gen. 24. 4 so Christs spouse is of the same flesh which himselfe assumed 3. She was wooed by his fathers servants and brought forwards toward Isaac so the Church is wooed by pastors and Preachers the servants of Christ and so brought forwards by his friends towards the bridegroome 4. She resolved to forsake all her friends and comforts to come to Isaac so the Church forsakes all in affection and actually being called to enjoy her head and husband Jesus Christ. 5. She decks her self with jewels and trims her selfe before she comes to Isaac but covers all with a vaile so the Church prepares her selfe as a Bride for a Bridegroome trimms her selfe with faith and graces as Jewells but covers and vailes all with humility modesty shame facenesse as not worthy to be seene much lesse matched to such an husband 6. In her comming towards Isaac Isaac meets her so the Church comming towards Christ he meets her afarre off 1. by his grace of election 2. by his most entyre love and affection 3. by most gracious acceptation 4. In person and Incarnation 5. In glory and power at the last Judgement for her finall salvation I. In the type and truth note a patterne by which to frame our obedience Phil. 2. 8. Let the same minde bee in us that was in them 1. To bee humbly obedient unto our father as they 2. Having never so difficult a Commandement As Abraham rose early to obey God and Isaac as early to obey his Father and Christ was content early in the morning to bee prosecuted to death so let not us procrastinate but hasten to our duty especially to our sacrifices of prayer and prayses early in the morning Psal. 108. 2. 3. As Abraham in offering nor Isaac in obeying consulted not with flesh and blood acquainted neither Sarah nor the servants nor consulted with humane wisdome to hinder obedience no more must we in our obedience So Paul Gal. 1. 16. professeth of himselfe that he communicated not with flesh and blood after he had a calling If flesh and blood will object any thing against obedience and extoll it selfe against the knowledge of God bring it captive into the obedience of Christ 2. Corinth 10. 5. 4. Obey in suffering as well as in doing dayly take up our crosse as both they carried the wood of their offering and not repine nor reply We must not thinke that by carrying our crosse wee can performe the worke of our redemption for to that end it was carried by Christ onely yet we must carry it so farre forth as he is a patterne for our imitation yea that we may be conformable to the image of Christ Rom. 8. 29. 5. For the measure sticke not at heavy crosses and burthens they carried heavy loads of wood Wee must not love our lives to the death if God call us therto For both they were obedient unto the death Phil. 2. 8. Such a testimony is given of the Saints Revel 12. 11. they loved not their lives unto the death Now thus to frame our obedience are required two rules I. A change and renovation of our crooked and corrupt nature which is ever rebelling against the law of the minde Nothing wee say is hard to good will But this good will is not to bee found but in such as are regenerate by the Spirit of God who hath made it of an unwilling a willing will And till this change be made every commandement is impossible and an intolerable yoke Let Christ give
1. For the kinde 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 borne among many brethren Which phrase noteth quality not equality with him some similitude but no parity betweene him and beleevers He holds his birth-right as the Sonne of God by nature and wee by grace made the sonnes of God he disdaines not to call us brethren 2. For undertaking his office 1. In his incarnation he was the first borne of his Mother Mat. 1. 25. till she had brought forth her first borne Son not in respect of any that his mother had after him but because she had none before 2. For the strange maner He was the first borne of a virgine and so never had brother 3. He was the first borne without sinne 3. For accomplishing his office in his resurrection He is called the first begotten or first borne of the dead two wayes 1. In respect of his father who first begot him from the dead Whence his resurrection is called a begetting Act. 13. 33. thou art my sonne this day have I begotten thee the Apostle applying it to the resurrection of Christ. And had not the Father thus begotten his sonne from the dead we had never been raised from death 2. In regard of himselfe whose priviledge it was to raise up himselfe from the dead by his owne power Rom. 1. 4. As himselfe said I have power to take up my life againe And being risen he was the first that ascended in body and soule into heaven Thus consider Christ as God as Mediator as incarnate as raised and ascended he is the Lords first born and the birthright belongs to no other II. The first borne of Israel was the second and next to the father of the family yea after the father instead of the father So is Christ to his family the Church he performes all offices of a carefull and tender father and takes on him not the affection onely of a father but even 1. the name of a father Isa. 9. 6. Father of eternity 2 the office of a father 1. He supplies the meanes of spirituall life as they of naturall 2. Hee nurtures and teacheth his Church 3. Hee provides for the present and bestowes the inheritance of eternall life III. The first born had the preheminence among the brethren and were chiefe in office and authority rulers in the house after their fathers and Priests in the family before the Leviticall order was established Gen. 27. 29. when Isaac blessed Iacob for Esau supposing him the first borne one part of it was Be Lord over thy brethren and let all thy mothers children honour thee So all the sheaves must bowe to Iosephs And Gen. 49. 8. when Iacob blesseth Iudah this is added as his right Thy fathers sonnes shall bowe downe unto thee Here in they were speciall types of Christ who in all things must have the preheminence as first in time in order in precedency first in the excellency and dignity of his person Of whom comming into the world was said Let all the Angels of God worship him And for glory and authority he sits on his fathers throne the onely King of kings who hath a name above all names Phil. 2. 9. And Heb. 2. 9. we see Iesus crowned with glory and honour the head of the mysticall body the Prince and head of all his brethren And besides he is the high Priest of our profession by offering up himselfe a sacrifice for us Thus Christ is first in order in glory in Priesthood IV. The first borne had a double portion in goods Deut. 21 17. Signifying 1. The plenitude of the spirit grace in Christ who was anointed with oyle of gladnesse above all his fellowes 2. The preheminence of Christ in his glorious inheritance advanced in glory and majesty incomprehensible by all creatures I. Out of the occasion of the Law of the first borne learne that the more God doth for any man the more he ought to conceive himselfe to be the Lords and the more right and interest the Lord challengeth in him For therefore the first borne were his by a speciall right because he had not onely delivered them out of Aegypt as others but from the speciall plague of Aegypts first borne Speciall mercies call for speciall service More mercies are more bonds of obedience And new mercies are so many new cords to draw and fasten us to God and duty Is it not reason that the more it pleaseth the Lord to become ours the more we should become his Ought not great benefits become great binders And should not great love bee a great loadstone of love Should not strong cords of Gods love draw us strongly to love our God Examine the encrease of Gods mercies on thee in all kindes and whether they have had this fruit to make thee more dutifull Hath God multiplied blessing on thy head that thou shouldest blesse thy selfe in wickednesse Hath God continued mercy that thou shouldest continue sinne Art thou the Lords by Creation providence redemption stored with all personall kindnesses pertaining to life and godlinesse to continue a slave to sinne and Satan Remember good Iosephs conclusion Gen. 39. 8 9. My master hath dealt thus and thus with me advanced me from nothing to this estate committed all to my trust kept nothing from me but thee How then can I doe this great wickednesse and sinne against God 2. If Christ be the true first borne of whom all they are but types we must give him the honor of his birth-right The whole Church and all the sonnes of that mother must honour him all the sheaves of the brethren must vaile and bowe to his sheave Let not the basenesse of his birth the humility of his life the ignominy of his death the shame of his crosse the poverty of his professors the weaknesse and frailty of his followers draw our eyes aside from him as the Jews at this day but acknowledge him the first borne esteeming him as doth the Church the chiefe of ten thousand and with the Apostle esteeme to know nothing but Christ and him crucified Quest. How shall we honour Christ as the first born Sol. 1. If we honour him with the same honor that is due to the Father Iohn 5. 23. 2. Advance his estate above our owne or other mens confesse and professe his name though with losse and disfavour 3. Depend upon him and make him our chiefe refuge for all the family depended on the first borne for protection so doe members on the head 4. Greeve to offend him by sin How pitifully can men and women grieve for the death of their first borne So much more should we that our sins have pierced Gods first borne Zach. 12. 10. III. Here is a ground of much consolation 1. In that Christ being the truth of the first borne from him the birthright is
must not bee privately performed and figured our entrance by Christ the doore 3. One must bee made a sinne offering the other a burnt offering The sacrifices were types of that onely sacrifice of the Sonne of God our Redeemer performed upon the Altar of his Crosse for the expiating the sinnes and foule issues of the whole world In them both 1. what they were 2. what were the ceremonies about them 1. The sinne offering was a sacrifice in which the whole beast or bird was not consumed with fire as the burnt offering was but slaine for the expiation of sinne The use of which was to figure and seale up to the Jews the expiation of their sinnes in Christ. Now Christ is made manifest for the doing away of sinne by the slaine sacrifice of himselfe and see verse 28. The burnt offering was a sacrifice in which the whole beast or bird was consumed with fire offered up therein to God for a savour of rest namely to appease and pacifie Gods wrath for some sin or sinnes committed Which signified that Christ was to bee a whole burnt offering and to bee wholly consumed in soule and body with the fire of his Fathers wrath that hee might bee a sweet smelling savour for us Hee gave himselfe for us a sacrifice and oblation for a sweet smelling savour Neither did the beleeving Jews thinke that God was appeased by any vertue in the burnt offering but through the eternall sacrifice of Christ shadowed therein 2. What were the ceremonies about these fowles for they all pointed at Christ. 1. For the sinne offering of fowles the ceremonies are appointed Levit. 5. 8 9. and they bee three 1. Rite The Priest must wring the necke of the Dove asunder but not plucke it cleane off and the same rite in the burnt offering The necke must bee pincht with the naile of the Priest to let out the blood but the head must not bee pluckt off from the body Signifying 1. That although Christ was to die yet his divinity and humanity should not bee severed 2. That the death of this innocent Dove should not interrupt his head-ship of the Church Hee was to bee pinched to death but his head should not bee severed from his body and members which is his Church 3. That Christ should die indeed but no bone of him must be broken Ioh. 19. 36. shadowed also in the Passeover 2. Rite The Priest must sprinkle the blood of the sinne offering upon the side of the Altar vers 9. and the like in the burnt offering Chap. 1. 15 signifying that all the vertue and merit of Christs blood for the purging of sinne was drawen from the Altar of his Deity He must be God that must purchase the Church with his blood and 2. Cor. 5. 19. God was in Christ. 3. Rite All the rest of the blood must be powred out at the foot of the Altar signifying not onely the powring out of the blood of Jesus Christ our true sinne offering upon the Altar of the Crosse without which shedding of blood can bee no remission of sinnes but also the blood powred at the foot of the Altar that is those clots and drops of blood plentifully flowing from him in his agony before his passion Luke 22. 44. as hee was going up to the Crosse. 2. For the Dove appointed for the burnt offering besides the former rites some other are appointed 1. The Priest must plucke out the maw with his feathers and cast them besides the Altar on the East side in the place of the ashes For these were things uncleane and signified that Christ should bring no uncleane thing to his suffering but present a most spotlesse and holy oblation to the Lord for else had it not beene of sweet smell 2. The Priest must divide and cleave the bird with his wings but not asunder signifying Christ who seemed by his death to bee burnt extinct and perished for so he was in the esteeme of his owne disciples as they were going to Emmaus but yet hee was not quite sundred but rose againe by his owne power and ever liveth sittting at his Fathers right hand to make requests for us Yea his owne words might seeme to imply a sundring when he saith Why hast thou forsaken mee but that the ingemination of his former words my God my God doth strongly prove the contrary 3. This bird must bee throughly consumed to ashes to make it a sweet savour to the Lord Levit. 1. 17 signifying that never was any thing so gratefull and acceptable to the Lord as the whole burnt sacrifice of his Sonne in which hee smelled a savour of eternall rest To which the Psalmist alludeth Let him smell a savour of all thy oblations and turne thy burnt offerings into ashes 4. When all these rites were observed the party that was uncleane shall bee cleane Levit. 12. 8. and Chap. 15. 13 28 signifying that a party justified by Christs blood and exercising true repentance and the study of holinesse and new life is brought in againe into the right and fellowship of God and his people whatsoever his uncleannesse formerly hath beene And thus hath the legall cleansing of this person brought us to the Evangelicall in Jesus Christ. I. Sundry grounds of consolation to the Church and people of God 1 As Christ seemed cleane divided and sundred from his Father and from his Church but was not so his members often seeme quite sundred from God and all comfort but are not 2. Cor. 4. 8. and Chap. 6. 9. A godly man may bee in such a straight as David was when thus he brake forth to Ionathan As the Lord liveth and as thy soule liveth there is but one step betweene me and death and yet when hee can see no passage God makes a passage forth Hence may a Christian with Paul challenge all perills and dangers and contemne them as too weake to separate us from Christ Rom. 8. 39. yea in all things wee are not onely conquerours but more then conquerours So was Christ in death and from under the grave more then a conquerour Let a Christian be slaine it hinders him not from being a conquerour and what ever hee may lose he loseth not the love of God who loveth him to the end whom hee once loveth and therefore onely the sound Christian is in a sure estate If sorrow be for a night joy will returne in the morning after darkenesse as sure to see light As Jesus Christ keepes his headship and death cannot sever him quite so the members may bee pinched yet not quite off but abide members still 2. As the speciall providence of God watched his owne sonne that though hee was in wicked hands that wanted no will yet they were kept from breaking one bone of him soe doth the same prouidence watch over his members that howsoever the wicked of the world pinch and presse them yet the promise is made to them He keepes all their
true inward Circumcision Phil. 3. 3. The Motives are 1. All outward service and Ceremony without this is rejected as preaching hearing praying fasting weeping All thy service and labour is lost if by the Spirit of God thy mind bee not renewed and faith and conversion wrought in thy heart For as the Jews being circumcised were challenged to bee uncircumcised though they had the foreskinne of the flesh cut off and had the circumcision made with hands and were so farre unworthy of Abrahams●eede ●eede 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 worshipper as thou 2. If we cannot say truely that now not the Jews but we are the circumcision Col. 2. 11. our persons are no better before God then 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 reproch and contempt This uncircumcised Philistine 2. thou hast no part in the promised Messiah no more then he 3. no portion in Canaan not a foot in heaven all thy portion is in earth 4. no member of the true Church but without the Communion of Saints 5. as he was in state of death and judgement Deut. 30. 6. Ier. 4. 4 14 so thou shalt bee condemned as surely for want of a sanctified and circumcised heart as he for contemning circumcision of his flesh Col. 2. 13. Yee were dead in the uncircumcision 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 Jews 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 Aegypt when the destroying Angel who slew all the first borne in Aegypt in one night passed over all the Israelites houses whose doores and posts were striked with the blood of the Paschall Lamb slaine and eaten in that house Wherein the godly Iews were not to fixe their eyes in that externall signe or the temporary deliverance signified but to cast their eye of faith vpon the Messiah and true Paschall Lamb by means of whom the wrath and revenge of God passeth over all those whose soules are sprinkled with his blood 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 Iesus Christ most lively pourtrayed before vs and that this one legall Sacrament preached not obscurely to the ancient Iews the whole doctrine of the Gospel and grace of salvation by the onely suffering of Iesus Christ. This will appeare in five things 1. In the choice of the Sacrifice 2. In the preparing of it 3. In the effusion of blood 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 bee a lamb or a kidd notably signifying Jesus Christ whom Iohn Baptist called the Lamb of God taking away the sinnes of the world Ioh. 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 meeknesse 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 slaine especially in the Paschall lamb In which shadowes or figures hee was not yearely onely but daily held before the eyes of beleevers and so here we consider him In this Lamb for his choice must be foure conditions 1. Condition It must bee a lamb without blemish verse 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 2. Condition It must bee 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 hee 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 spoyle with the strong Isa. 53. 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 hee should bee of the more worthy sexe 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 Son of David and so to be circumcised to bee a fit Minister of Circumcision 3. reason Consider him in his office Hee was to be a King a Priest and a Prophet of his Church all which necessarily require him to be a man a male as the Lambe was We conclude therefore hence that being the head of the whole Church he must be of as worthy sexe as any of his members III. Condition The Lamb must be of a yeare 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 yeare old is at his state and growth and a Lambe of a yeare old is acquainted with many miseries Even so our Saviour living to the full strength of a man was a man full of sorrowes 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 sinne IV. Condition He must be taken out of their own flockes and folds For so Moses to Pharaoh Exod. 10. 25 thou must allow us our
this darke cloud in which wee see him as wee are able His Majesty hath attempered himselfe to our debility and weaknesse For such is our infirmity here below that unlesse the glory of God be vailed and covered wee can never bee able to behold it no more then the Priests could stand before the brightnesse of the cloud that filled the Temple 1. King 8. 11. nor the Disciples abide the brightnesse of Christ when a bright cloud shadowed them in his transfiguration For as no man can endure to see the Sunne in his brightnesse and strength but in and through a cloud hee may so no man can behold the glorious Majestie of God and live Hence hath hee pleased to let us behold him here not in his owne glory but in his Christ in whom his excellent Majesty is vailed and covered with our humanity This is his mercy that we see now as wee may as in a glasse or mirrour preparing us to a farther mercy then which no mercy goeth farther namely to see him as wee would and face to face when with our frailty and corruption all clouds and vailes shall be removed 2. His justice against sinners whose misery it is that there is alwayes a cloud betweene God and them A cloud of ignorance that hinders them from the knowledge of God and holy things they see no true light A cloud of darknesse and misery that suffers them not to enjoy one spark of sound comfort or consolation A thick cloud of lusts and sins which hinders the passage of their prayers They may truely use that speach of the Church Lam. 3. 44. Thou hast covered thy selfe with a cloud that our prayer should not passe through As this cloud was a meanes of greatest mercy to Israel so was it of extreme misery and destruction to the Aegyptians V. Is Christ this Pillar of Cloud and fire Then we must follow Christ our guide The Saints in earth are as Israel in their pilgrimage marching out of Aegypt into the promised land God of his mercie affords us as hee did them a comfortable cloud to lead us through to Canaan Wee must depend on this Pillar For light of instruction against the blindnesse of our minds For light of consolation in sorrows and terrours of heart that we may say with the Church Mic. 7. 8. When I shall sit in darknesse the Lord is my light For spirituall heat and warmth seeing this Pillar onely can kindle true love of God true zeale for God and his glory fervency in prayer and inflame us with all ardent desires after God Wee must follow this Pillar for safety security direction c. Quest. How may we follow this Pillar Sol. As the Israelites carefully followed the cloud in this manner 1. Because the clould was placed on high they must still looke upwards So must wee still looke upwards not fixing our eye on any other direction about us or beside us We must not walke by examples of men never so great never so wise never so rich never so neere us but onely so farre as they follow this Cloud The Sunne of the world and the Sonne of the Church herein agree that both of them are set infinitely above our heads that wee should expect our direction from above not from below from the heavens not from the earth 2. As the Israelites contented themselves with that Pillar as being sufficient So must wee with the light from Christ our Pillar They needed no artificiall lights of their owne devising the Pillar of fire was sufficient although at midnight to enlighten them The Sunne at noone day was not more usefull to them then this Pillar at midnight So Christ in the Scriptures is a most bright and shining light not as the Papists say obscure dark imperfect unlesse there bee an addition of traditions Fathers and mens devises As that cloud was no naturall direction so wee must not walke by direction of nature dictate of reason or command of our owne wills and senses Follow this Pillar onely and as Goshen was light when all Aegypt was darkenesse thou shalt have light when all the world else sits in darknesse Ioh. 8. 12. But as for such as kindle themselves a fire or set up a Pillar to themselves and walk in the light of it and in the sparks themselves have kindled the Lord threatens what they may expect from his hands They shall lie downe in sorrow Isai. 50. 10. 3. As Israel must watch this Pillar night and day and frame their whole course unto it for motion or station for action or for rest so must we to Christ our Pillar in the Scripture Blessed is the man that meditates in the Law of the Lord night and day And as they must give diligent heed both day and night to be ready for their journey whensoever the cloud should moove and therefore are said to keepe the Lords watch Num 9. 19. so must we alwaies watch and be in a readinesse because we know not when the Master of the house will come at even or at midnight at the cockcrowing or in the dawning Mar. 13. 35. Remember for conclusion that blessed shall that servant be and he onely whom his Master when he commeth findeth well doing CHAP. XXI The Red Sea a type THe second extraordinary Sacrament of the Old Testament poynting unto Jesus Christ was the Red Sea which being miraculously divided by God the Israelites pursued by the Aegyptians passed thorough the midst of it Exod. 14. 22. Now for our profitable and fruitfull beholding this great worke of God wee will consider it 1. as a miracle in it selfe 2. as a type and signification of Christ. 3. as applyable to our selves in some profitable observations I. In this great miracle are many miracles As 1. That so vast a sea should bee devided with the lifting up of a rod. For the breadth of that Sea where Israel went over was by computation of Ptolomy and other Geographers twelve or fifteene Germane miles at least thirty sixe of ours so Chytraeus upon this place 2. That the Lord should open a way and lead Israel through the deepe as in the wildernesse for their passage was not over the Sea but through it Neither did they walke upon the waters as upon the land which had not beene so much for in cold countries it is ordinary for men and cariages to passe upon the Ice and congealed water as upon firme land but they walked in the bottome of the Sea as on dry land Who could deny but it had beene a worke of omnipotency for the Lord to have made the sea on a sudden a pavement for Israell as hard as Christall to have walked firme upon but because every strong frost congeales the water according to nature that had beene lesse glorious more questionable But he provides for the clearnesse of his owne glory by effecting a worke above yea against the whole frame of nature 3. That the waters should stand as
and poyson so the devill casts out nothing but virulent words against God and his Saints and spewes out after the Church a flood of poyson to drowne her How hee blasphemed Iob how he is the accuser of the brethren how of the head Christ himselfe the Scripture declares Fiftly as a serpent is cursed above all beasts so is the devill The first cursed creature in the world was this serpent and hath ever since remained the cursed head of all cursed rebells and wicked ones to whose custody and condemnation they shall all be gathered in the last day Mat. 25. 41. goe ye cursed c. 2. Why called fiery serpents Answ. 1. From their colour Through abundance of poison they had a shining and glistring skinne and they seemed as if they had been made of fire A resemblance wee have in our snakes that seeme to shine and sparkle against the Sunne 2. From their effect For with their sting they infused such poison into the bodies of the Israelites as stirred up in them an outragious heat and fire Now these diseases are most painfull and so tormentfull as if a wild-fire were in the bowels feeding upon the bones marrow and members 3. From their end First because they were appointed by God and after a sort inflamed and kindled with desire of revenge of the Lords wrongs and they so fiercely assaulted the Israelites as if a raging and devouring fire had seased upon them which no way they could avoid Secondly that in their punishment they might bee admonished both what a fearefull fire of Gods wrath they had kindled by their sin against themselves as also that they had deserved a more fearefull fire in hell to seize upon their whole man everlastingly 3. Why stinging serpents Answ. To imply unto us First that sinne is the sting of this old serpent even a poisoned sting that hee hath thrust into all mankind But with this difference in that this poison is farre more generall and the wounds infinitely more mischievous then were those of the fiery serpents For 1. They stung a few Israelites but not all but this serpent hath stung all mankind none excepted 2. They stung the bodies onely but these soules and bodies also 3. They stung one part of the body this serpent all parts and whole man 4. They to a temporall death this to an eternall Secondly to imply that sinne is the sting of a fiery serpent 1. Set on fire with wrath and cruelty and desire to poison and destroy us Revel 12. 17. 2. Setting on us with fiery darts For so his temptations are called Ephes. 6. 16. for three reasons 1. From the manner and custome of souldiers in times past which cast poisoned darts the poison of which inflamed the wounded bodies and made the wounds incurable As now many out of desperate malice poison their weapons and bullets to make sure with their enemy So doth Satan by all meanes poison his darts to speed the Christians soule 2. Because as fiery darts they inflame and kindle in the heart all manner of burning lusts and sinnes one of them being but as a sparke or firebrand to kindle another 3. Because they leave for most part a cauterized and seared conscience behind them as if they were burnt with an hot iron which makes the sinner stung senslesse of his wound Whence is another miserable difference betweene the stung Israelite and the stung sinner The former was alwayes felt with griefe and paine but this often not felt and so more desperate Thirdly the effect of this stinging was death in many And so the effect of sinne is death in all The stung Israelite had death in his bosome and no other could be expected so the guilty sinner is stung to death In his nature is every man the sonne of death and can expect nothing but death every moment And as the stung person in the wildernesse had no meanes in himselfe nor from others to avoid either the serpent or death from it till God appointed them the brazen serpent So the poore sinner was destitute of all helpe in himselfe and others till the Lord appointed Jesus Christ the promised seed to breake the serpents head There is given no name else whereby we must be saved Act. 4. 12. First note hence how deceitfull are the pleasures of sinne It is as a sweet poison Iob 20. 12. sweet in the mouth but poison in the bowels What wise man would drink a draught of poison for the sweet taste of it Wicked men hold sinne as a sweet morsell but sower sauce followes it Secondly what little cause we have to love our sinnes for that is to love our owne bane Prov. 8. 35. Hee that sinneth against mee hurteth his owne soule and all that hate mee loue death No sinne but the more pleasing the more poisoning the more delicate the more deadly Sinne never so much disguised never the lesse deadly Thirdly that sinners are but dead men while they live 1. Tim. 5. 6. An Israelite stung was but a dead man So although the reasonable soule in a sinner makes him a man yet the want of the Spirit of grace makes him a dead man Death waits upon sinne as the wages on the worke and hell upon death that comes before repentance Fourthly A foole hee is that makes a mocke of sinne Who would play with a deadly serpent or make a jest of his owne death or drink up the poison of a serpent in merriment or cast darts firebrands about him to burne himselfe and others and say Am I not in sport See Prov. 26. 18. and 10. 23. and 14. 9. Oh that wee could discerne our wounds as sensibly as we are certainly stung It would make us runne to God and get Moses to goe to God for us and pray that these serpents and painfull wounds might be removed If wee saw death as present and as ghastly in our sins as Israel did in their stinging we would hasten our repentance and seeke after meanes of cure Sect. II. The remedy is First prescribed Num. 21. 8. Secondly applied vers 9. Thirdly in the same verse is the effect they recovered and lived So then in the remedy are I. ordination 2. application 3. sanation or cure 1. The appointing hath First the person appointing which was God himselfe who devised it and prescribed it to Moses for God will save onely in his owne meanes So God himselfe so loved the world that hee gave his onely begotten Sonne c. Ioh. 3. 16. This way of remedy and cure could bee no devise of man nor Angel For 1. The Angels stand still admiring and amazed at it 1. Pet. 1. 12. 2. Men without a superiour teacher cannot conceive it 1. Cor. 2. 14. much lesse invent it Secondly the thing appointed a serpent of brasse resembling Christ in the matter and the forme 1. The matter was of brasse not gold for five reasons 1. God ties not himselfe