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A37035 A commentarie upon the book of the Revelation Wherein the text is explained, the series of the several prophecies contained in that book, deduced according to their order and dependance on each other; the periods and succession of times, at, or about which, these prophecies, that are already fulfilled, began to be, and were more fully accomplished, fixed and applied according to history; and those that are yet to be fulfilled, modestly, and so far as is warrantable, enquired into. Together with some practical observations, and several digressions, necessary for vindicating, clearing, and confirming many weighty and important truths. Delivered in several lectures, by that learned, laborious, and faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, James Durham, late Minister of the Gospel in Glasgow. To which is affixed a brief summary of the whole book, with a twofold index, one of the several digressions, another of the chief and principall purposes and words contained in this treatise. Durham, James, 1622-1658. 1658 (1658) Wing D2805; ESTC R216058 1,353,392 814

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saw a great white throne and him that sat on it from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away and there was found no place for them 12. And I saw the dead small and great stand before God and the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works 13. And the sea gave up the dead which were in it and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them and they were judged every man according to their works 14. And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire this is the second death 15. And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire WE have hitherto had a view of the state of the visible Church to the close of its warfare so long as it shall be militant till her great and last enemy the devil shall be taken and shut up in his everlasting prison which was hinted at in the former verse Now unto the end followeth a most plain description of the day of judgment when all good and bad that ever lived shall be raised and brought to appear before their great Judge to receive sentence every one according to their works The state of the wicked because it is most shortly insisted on ●● in the first place set down in this Chapter Then the state of the godly and their happinesse is more fully insisted on in the two Chapters following So in short the state of the Church seemeth to be 1. spreading under the first seal as to the thriving of the Gospel 2. Persecuted under the second third fourth and fifth feals 3. Delivered temporally by the sixth All this is Chap. 6. This is the first period 2. Then beginneth Satan to work under-hand till he bring Antichrist to an height and by the Turks overrun a great part of these that carry the name of Christians that is under the first six trumpets with the prophesies contemporary with these 3. By the seventh trumpet and first vial judgement beginneth on Antichrist the case turneth and is carried on during the vials and the thousand years wherein Babylon is destroyed to wit Rome by the fifth vial the Pope fleeing from it to new help and the Turks are destroyed by the sixth Gog and Magog are letten loose and stirred up by the devil under the seventh whereby they temporally and after some little intervall he eternally and all the wicked are judged by the judgement of the great day which was as to him hinted before that the storie of his ruine might be together but here more fully set down That this describeth the last judgement is almost past controversie even amongst these who apply the Chapters following to a state of the militant Church and it is clear not only by the native context and series which is not to be interrupted especially where the things do so well agree for having spoken of the devils last judgement which by Iude is called the judgement of the great day it is consentaneous therefore to understand this of such a judgement whereby he is so judged Beside being now at the close of the seventh vial which bringeth the end and the expressions and judgement both in the verse before and following jumping with these of the seventh vial such a judgement as closeth that vial must be understood which can be no other but the last But the expressions are full and the matter and circumstances so convincing that they leave no place of doubting being so like Dan. 12.1 and other places where the day of judgment is spoken of for at what other judgement are all the dead judged all the reprobate sent to hell the Elect delivered death and hell cast in the lake c. which are all expressed here to what other judgment can they agree but to the last whereof they are particular properties as in the explication it will appear This judgement is notably described in these four 1. In the preparation for it 2. The parties 3. The manner of accurate proceeding and the sentence 4. The execution thereof as to the wicked here and as to the godly Chap. 21. and 22. Let your ears hear of and your eyes behold this judgement as that before which every one of you will before long appear and so frame your selves to be suitable to it as if with Iohn you saw this great court fenced this judgement set and the sentence pronounced the like whereof never was nor shall be There are four things in the preparation 1. A great white throne and one sat on it This maketh way for what followeth that we may know that it is a great thing that is meaned here it alludeth to Dan. 7. There is a throne to signifie majesty glory and statelinesse as well as Authority for when this Judge cometh He shall come in power and great glory as in the glory of His Father and with all the holy Angels with the found of the Arch-angel in the clouds c. all sheweth that never was there such a glorious Parliament holden nor ridden or so royal a throne set It is called Secondly white as He was on a white horse because of purity and holinesse judgement and justice are the habitation of His throne Psal. 89. and righteousnesse goeth before His face there is no wrong nor injustice there as also for its shining gloriousnesse its power and majesty is infinitely pure spotlesse and incomprehensibly glorious It is called a great white throne for the same reasons The thrones of the Kings of the earth even Solomons golden throne are but petty not to be accounted footstools to this when this is set these will evanish He that sitteth on this is a great King and a great God above all gods The second thing in the preparation is that one sat on this throne he saw him that sat on it it was not empty but one was on it whom he saw he nameth Him not possibly because he had no name every way suitable to Him for His name is Chap. 19. such as none knoweth but Himself or because it is without all controversie who this Judge is an article of Faith to Believers the Son of man who shall come in power and great glory from the Fathers right hand to judge both the quick and the dead He is called ver 12. God before whom they stand to shew that this Judge is so and then will appear to be so Howbeit as man visibly He will here proceed and shall be seen by all even by these who peirced Him they shall behold Him coming in this glory See Mat. 25.1 Thess. 4. Rev. 1.7 The third thing preparatory or going before is before or from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away and there was found no place for them This is the great consummation and the universal change that shall be on all
is sutable and meet it should be so that these that difference themselves in keeping clean from the sins of others should be by me brought to a condition where they shall have eternal and absolute whitenesse And at the first view it is clear that the promise is conceived in these terms so as it may carry in it a sutablnesse to their present honest condition And the Lord often useth this expression both in His promises and threatnings when He intendeth not to shew what is due in strict justice but only that there is and will be a sute ablnesse and poportionablnesse between mens carriage and His deal●ng with them as we will after find chap. 16. vers 15 16. And this we rest in as the meaning of the place and as most clear from the scope thereof The Conclusion followeth Wherein 1. there are some encouragements given to the overcomer vers 5. and then the common advertisement vers 6. which is in all the other Epistles There are three promises made to the overcomer The first is the same shall be cloathed in white raiment which is upon the matter that same which was promised to these few sincere Members that were in Sardis And is here proposed to shew that not only these in Sardis but all that shall faithfully wrestle and overcome shall be made partakers of that excellent priviledge formerly mentioned And yet I suppose none can say that all that shall be cloathed in white and admitted to heaven are in strict and proper Justice worthy of the same yet upon the former Popish principles this will follow if so be the proper worthinesse of these in Sardis had been the thing that procured this priviledge unto them to wit to walk in white The second promise is And I will not blot out his name out of the book of life The Book of Life is frequently mentioned in this Prophecie and God-willing we may take occasion to speak somewhat of it chap. 20. Only now we say there are four Books figuratively attributed to God to mention no more for God hath neither need nor use of Books but after the manner of men for helping us to take up His mind He thus expresseth Himself First There is a Book that is more generall and comprehendeth His decrees which in His ordinary providence He executeth in the World from time to time In this respect all His works are said to be known to Him from the beginning as if He had had a particular roll of them all and it is with respect to this that David Psal. 139. vers 16. saith Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect and in thy Book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them A second Book is of Gods Omniscience which taketh in all things past present and to come as if He had keeped a Diarie of every event and had written up ev●●y word and action of men In reference to this the Books are said to be opened in the day of Judgement Rev. 20.12 A third Book is of Gods speciall care of His Church whereby as it were He hath set forth Himself to have a peculiar care and oversight of her and what concerneth her This is mentioned Chap. 5. vers 1 c. A fourth Book is called the Book of Life which relateth only to the names of such as our Lord hath ordained to Glory and doth import that they are as definitely and distinctly determined and known by Him as if they were by name and surname particularly recorded in a Book It is this Book that is here called the book of life Because 1. The end thereof is to ordain so many to Life And 2. because there is a immutable connexion betwixt being written in this Book of Life and obtaining eternall life and so being the first and sure door that maketh enterance unto life possible and feasable and gives the right to and is the foundation of all that followeth therefore deservedly it getteth this name to be called the book of life It rests then to consider what it is not to blot out his name out of the book of life It is not to be understood as if there were a scraping out and putting in into that Book posterior to Gods eternall and immutable decree because First in that respect it could not be called the Book of Life for so many might die who once were in it Secondly It is contrary also expresly to the end and use thereof in the day of Judgement where Chap. 20.12 expresse mention is made of the opening of this Book for this end that whoever were found from the beginning written therein might be keeped from the lake that burneth with fire and brimston as is said in the 15. verse of that Chapter And if the connexion of being written in this Book and the obtaining of life were not peremptory there could be no such reason of openning this Book in the day of Judgement Thirdly What ever this be it is something to be performed after this life and seing it cannot be imagined that one can die with his name in this Book and afterward have it blotted out Therefore such a glosse cannot be put upon this place And who would have further confirmation of this may have it in the Learned Gomarus his digression on this very Text. The words then are to be understood thus as importing more than they expresse to wit that in the day of Judgement Christ will own the overcomer and present him before God as one that was inrolled in the Book of Life and given to Him in the bargain of Redemption for this very end that He might raise him up in the last day and give unto him eternall life as it is Ioh. 6.39 40. That this is the meaning will appear by considering the third promise But I will confesse his name before my Father and before his Angels which doth expresly hold forth what we assert of Christ solemn and honourable owning of them as His and given to Him in the great Day when all the holy Angels shall be present We shall say nothing of the other part of the Conclusion which is so often but never needlesly repeated Now we may take some few Observations from the several parts of the Epistle besides these that are already hinted Observe 1. To have a name without reality is an exceeding great evil yet an evil incident both to Ministers and People 2. These that have had once something may through unwatchfulnesse be brought to a very low posture as it were to be ready instantly to expire 3. Folks may have some extraordinary motions at sometimes and yet afterwards fall from these and forget them as if they had never had such purposes and resolutions 4. There may be some honest where there is much deadnesse even in the publick Ordinances and God may keep some lively even in such a place as Sardis when the generality are dead and
secret and not rest upon the revealed offer of God as the sufficient ground and object of their Faith And if only by actuall believing and no otherwise they may be assured that Faith is purchased unto them by the same ground also may they be cleared that they are redeemed by Christ yea and Elected also because there is an equal peremptory connexion betwixt Faith and all these Fifthly Neither doth this way and the grounds thereof give Ministers any more solid ground to make the offer of the Gospel indefinitely in their publick Preaching for by the truth formerly laid down we can assure Hearers that whosoever believeth shall partake of life and of the benefits of Christs Redemption and by vertue of the generall Call and Warrand which we have in the Gospel we may invite them to believe in Christ require Faith of them and upon condition thereof assure them of pardon c. because the nature of the administration of the Covenant of Redemption is such in plain terms to wit that whosoever believeth shall be saved Also the nature of our Commission to preach this Gospel doth fully import the same as it is summed Mark 16.15 16. for Ministers warrand to Preach and offer Salvation is not to Preach and offer the same to the Elect only whom the Lord hath kept secret from them but it is to Preach and make offer of this Gospel to these unto whom the Lord shall send them and whom He shall gather into a visible Church-state Yet this is done for the Elects sake among such whom God hath thought fit to gather out among others by this Preaching of the Gospel without signifiing to the Minister who is Elect and whom He hath designed to believe therefore it is suitable to this manner of administration that the Gospel be preached indefinitly in respect of its call and that indifferently as to these who Preach that so while the call doth reach all particularly the Elect may withall be gripped with the same And upon the grounds of this conditionall Redemption others can do no more but publish the offer of the Gospel indefinitly and assure any who shall believe in Christ that they shall thereby obtain life and pardon It is true● we cannot say that Christ hath died and satisfied for them all to whom we Preach yet that doth not lessen our warrand to call Hearers indifferently on the terms of believing because though Christs Redemption be the ground which hath procured this Gospel to be Preached even in these terms as from that forecited place Ioh. 3.16 may be gathered and though it be that which boundeth the Lords making of Preaching effectual yet our Commission is bounded according to the express terms in which it hath pleased the Lord to draw up the same unto us because the transaction of Redemption as it relateth to the names of the redeemed is a secret betwixt God and the Mediator Therefore the Book of Life is never opened untill the day of Judgement Rev. 20. But a Ministers Commission in his Treating with sinners in the visible Church is a thing which He hath thought good to reveal and therefore hath done it so as the former secret may not be revealed and yet the end be made effectuall to wit the effectuall calling and in-gathering of so many Elect. And upon the other side these who may require Faith of all and plead it of them upon this ground that they are conditionally redeemed yet they cannot say to their Hearers that Christ hath by His death procured Faith to them all and so they leave them still at a losse except they betake them to the externall indefinit call which doth warrand Ministers to require Faith of all Hearers indifferently and that without disputing whether Christ hath redeemed all or not or whether by His Redemption He hath procured Faith to them all or not because Faith is a duty and is called-for warrantably by vertue of that call as is said and this we do in so far acknowledge And so in sum their warrand to Preach the Gospel in definitely and ours is found to be of the same extent and to be founded upon the same general call Therefore there needeth not be much contending for a different Doctrine or as some call it a different method to derive this warrand from which doth so natively flow from the received truth And though the Scripture doth sometimes use this motive indifferently to the members of the visible Church to stir them up to glorifie God to wit that they are bought with a price as 1 Cor. 6.20 Yet will not that infer an universall or conditionall Redemption of them all more than these places immediately going before vers 15 and 19 where it is said that they are members of Christ and temples of the holy Ghost will infer an universall or conditionall regeneration of them all the first whereof is false the second is absurd for so it would be upon the matter that they were renewed sanctified and had the Spirit dwelling in them upon condition that it were so seing Regeneration the Spirit and Faith which is a fruit of the Spirit cannot be separated The like phrases also are Chap. 3. of the same Epistle vers 16.17 c. Beside will any think that when the Apostle saith ye are bought with a price c. that he doth only intend that conditionall Redemption which can never be effectuall but he must be unde●stood as having respect to that great mercy in its most peculiar respect because he doth speak of it to the Elect as well as others and that as having with it the greatest obligation that can be Lastly It cannot be thought that this mould of a conditionall Redemption so qualified can be more acceptable to these who plead for an indifferent or equal universall Redemption because this doth not any whit remove their objections whereby they plead for nature against the soveraignity of God nor answer their cavills whereby they reflect upon the Justice of God for condemning men who cannot possibly according to the case they are in be saved Therefore there is still ground for them to plead mans excusablenesse seing his salvation even according to these grounds is still impossible as hath been formerly cleared Neither I suppose will it be instanced that any holding the Socinian Arminian or Lutheran principles in these things have been brought to judge more favourably of that way than of the other But on the contrary may be strengthned or rather stumbled by this to continue in their former errours as finding many orthodox Divines in part to yeeld because of the supposed strength of their Arguments and from such concessions they have some ground given to make their conclusions the more strong for this conditionall Redemption doth alleage that there is need to vindicate Gods Justice and to declare mans inexcusablenesse and to have clearer grounds of dealing with men for bringing them to Faith c. than can be consistent with
things when the fashion of this world shall be changed and it shall depart like a scrol and the elements melt with fervent heat What this is may be spoken to Chap. 21. vers 1. But certainly here is such a change as was not before this time even that spoken of under the seventh vial Chap. 16. that heaven and earth shall flee away as not to be found that is not so as formerly they were there being now a change on them They are said to flee before his face to shew with what facility and ease that change shall be wrought 2. Of what glorious majesty and power this great Judge shall be that these creatures cannot abide His presence but do flee 3. To shew that it is the end because this consummation and great change on the Creation is instantly before the Judgement when the living Elect shall be changed in the twinkling of an eye as 1 Cor. 15. and 1 Thess. 4. now time and place as we make use of them are gone The fourth step of this preparation is the raising of all parties to be judged which includeth the Resurrection in two steps 1. that all are again brought to a bodily life where ever their bodies were buryed or destroyed And here we take in the change that shall befall these who shall be living instead of their dying The second step is their appearing before the Judgement for where the carcase is there will the Eagles be gathered together Hence it is said that the Son will send out His Angels to gather them from the four winds and Jesus the Judge shall have them personally presented before Him which also in part belongeth to the procedour This is the order of the matter though this of the resurrection be subjoyned after the procedour in judgement ver 13. The second thing cleared in this judgement is the parties who is the Judge and 2. who are judged The Judge certainly is Jesus Christ the Mediator who hath the keys of hell and death Chap. 1.18 and is appointed Judge of quick and dead Act. 17.30 31. called God ver 12. before whom all do appear for He is personally to be understood having these divine Attributes of power to execute omniscience to take up and justice to proceed He hath divine Authority and Commission for this He hath divine glory and will appear to be God in our nature in that day going about this last and solemn act of His Mediatory service and Kingdom The parties judged who stand before the throne are 1. generally the dead all who ever lived as after ver 12. Under which are comprehended these who then shall be alive as also Enoch and Elias 1. because their change shall be as death to them in changing their bodies to an immortall condition 2. Because they are few and comprehended under the greatest number for if the dead appear much more these who shall be living More particularly they are distributed in small and great which taketh in all sorts 1. Kings and mean ones none shall escape 2. Rich and poor 3. Mighty powerfull strong and weak 4. Old at the greatest age and statu●e and young who have not attained to their perfection In a word all that ever breathed and had life none are exempted but all are made to appear If any ask what young ones have to be judged for Answ. They are under one of the Covenants either of Works or Grace if of Works then have they the breach of that Covenant to count for they being the serpentine brood of a transgressing stock 2. If they are Elect they are to be judged by the Book of life For that question agitated in what pitch every one appeareth whether of a lower or taler stature old or young according as they died we insist not on it The Schoolmen decide all to be raised about the age of thirty years that being the prime of mans strength and about the age that Christ was at when He suffered which will be found to be thirty three years and some more having entred to His publick Ministrie in the thirty but this derogateth from the mysterie of the resurrection 1 Cor. 15. for though the same body be raised ye it will be another kind of body than ever formerly it was at any age We may say of the Elect they shall be perfect in what ever condition they died all that which is imperfect being done away their person stature judgement c. being perfected And we think that that perfection which consisteth in conforming them to Christs glorious Body is of another kind than to respect either age stature or the like We may see from this also the absurdity of that Popish conceit whereby the judged are distinguished in four sorts by the Schoolmen one whereof doth judge and is not judged being of a degree of perfection beyond coming into judgement here none that hath life whether Elect or Reprobate are secluded but all being in these Books all that are written in them must appear and none there are but they are written in them and no need there were of this Book of life if the Elect in it were not also to be judged It is true Believers none of them shall come to judgement as judgement importeth condemnation according to the Word Ioh. 3.18 so no Elect cometh into judgement yet for absolution they come It is truth also that the Saints shall then judge even Angels 1 Corinth 6. and possibly the Apostles and some others may be more eminent in that judgement Matth. 19.28 yet that doth not exclude them from being judged themselves they being among the dead now standing before the throne but includeth an affe●●ory a●sent to the great Judge His sentences and is a speciall prerogative put on all Believers that day who shall be caught up on the bench with the Judge when the reprobate like fellous and pannelled malefactor● shall be standing at the bar while they sit as it were on the steps of the sides of His throne being caught up to Him when others are left 1 Thess. 4. which also may admit of degrees Followeth now the proceeding when God is on His throne and all the world standing before Him It hath three steps 1. generally Books are opened for all 2. A speciall Book for the Elect The book of life is opened 3. Sentence is passed and pronounced upon all according as was found in these books and according to their works In all which there is an allusion to mens proceeding where when men are guilty and brought to judgment 1. there libels are red called by the Hebrews books Iob 31.35 2. The witnesses depone or their depositions already on record are made known 3. The Law is consulted concerning the matters that are found what sentence is due to them So it is here which is not as if Jesus Christ were literally so to proceed for nothing escapeth Him but to shew that the judgement shall be as accurate and particular in the
triall and just in the close as if all were registrated and put on record nothing shall be missed or mistaken in its circumstances but things shall be so just in themselves and so manifested and put beyond all doubt to others as if an exact register of them had been keeped and now published In all which allusion is to Dan. 7. though this Book of life is not mentioned there because it is but a temporall judgement that is principally intended in that place Let us enquire 1. what these books are 2. What this is to open them they are certainly expressed so with respect to mens Courts And therefore we take the first to hold out 1. That there is a book of challenges and accusations wherein and whereby all that ever men did is manifested and brought to their mind so Iob 31.35 This may be a record of events in the Lords omniscience and in the memory and consciences of men wherein every thing past is made fresh to them so is there a book of remembrance a book containing as it were a diary of all their lives Mal. 3.16 2. There is a witnesse a book of the creatures without who have been abused and from within the conscience according as it now seeth it excuseth or accuseth Rom. 2.14 and so is a law and evidence sufficient to the man Thus the matter of fact is made out Ye did thus and thus with such and such aggravations the conscience cannot refuse it 3. The book of the Law is produced whereby actions are examined whether conform or disconform unto it And so Christ saith Iob. 12. the word that He speaketh shall judge them in the great day These are the books for these books in generall are in the plurall number because they are moe than one whereas there is but one book of life the reason is 1. because Grace arising and flowing from free election hath but one way to all comprehended in it but justice in its dealing with others taketh notice of their severall actions and guilt 2. Election considereth men without any thing in themselves or respect to the Law and is no act of justice but of soveraign Grace Again justice considereth men as such and therefore enquireth in their carriage looketh to proofs and compareth all with the Law which maketh that judiciall processe to be more exactly set out by severall books These books are opened in comparison of what they were before to wit sealed neither was it known what was in them Now 1. all actions and events mercies or rods lesse and more are made manifest even that which was most secret idle words Mat. 12. every secret thing good or bad Eccles. 12. last ver 2. As nothing is forgotten so every thing is known as it is the spirituall meaning of the Law and so the deserving of sin and all the aggravations of it are better known many truths and threatnings believed then that were dallied-with before The 1. is necessary to perfect the challenge and libell the second is necessary to make all assent to Gods justice and know their own deserving which could not be if they understood not the Law By the one many sins will occur whereof they never dreamed by the other the least sins will have huge aggravations beyond what they appeared 3. The conscience-book will be opened when blindnesse is taken away from the sight and judgement and hardnesse and deadnesse from the conscience so that these who looked but on sin before are now affected and pricked with it and the conscience becometh restlesse and sensible not only bearing witnesse to the truth of such things convincingly but also with inward pangs accusing such things now and sentencing for them whereas it formerly sleeped under them as Psal. 51. They are now ever before them yea within them Thus all is cleared By which we may see 1. that nothing will be missed in that day Gods Register is so exact 2. That what is secret now will be revealed then not only to the parties own conscience for which end every one will have their own distinct books but even to others because they also must know and assent to Gods justice in generall why such a one is condemned c. which cannot so well be without the knowledge of their guilt Beside this is aimed at by this day to make Gods justice manifest therefore is it called the revelation of Gods righteous judgement Rom. 2. Hence it is said that nothing is hid which shall not be discovered even as to others before Men and Angels yea in that place Matth. 25. the reason of the sentence respectively is given Neither doth the manifestation of these deeds prove derogatory to the Elects joy nor that capacity of knowledge usefull to the Reprobate For 1. that manifestation glorifieth God it being manifested a● the ground upon which grace is glorified and so wrongeth them no more than these known sins of Solomon Saul or Paul c. which are not for their infamy remembered then 2. Their Repentance and Faith in Christ with the pardon and glory that Christ pu●teth on th●m is also manifested so that this is furthered by the other and not lessened by it and that knowledge in Reprobates rendeth more to the aggreaging of their horrour and pain when they see others possibly alike in some things guilty admitted to glory and themselves shut out when they see the causes of Gods proceeding the more knowledge they have they have the moe challenges and aggravations of grief so that glad would they be to forget many things which they cannot then be rid of 2. When these generall books or records of all mens deeds are produced there is a peculiar book added like as a Commander or Judge who having produced generally what such a mutinous Army and such a rebellious people deserved yet after taketh out a peculiar paper whereby grace and mercy is designed for some particular persons that they suffer not with the rest So here before sentence passe the book of life is looked because Iob. 6.39 40. all these Elect that were given to Him are to be accounted for now and as it were the roll is taken out to see that the event answer His Commission This sheweth also that it is not by the former books of their own reckoning but by grace that even the Elect are absolved By this book of life is understood 1. Gods peculiar purpose of and Election to glory of some beside and distinct from others It is ordinarily thus expressed because 1. He hath them designed by name and s●rname as in a particular record 2. Called book of life because that is the end of it why He hath written such and such in it and not others the effect following to them is life So it is often expressed by a writing or book Exod. 32.33 Isa. 4.3 3. By this book of life we would not understand Election strictly as it respecteth the end only but as it comprehendeth all conducing to that
never end ver 25. there is no fear from Antichrist nor Gog or Magog here A fifth aggravation is ver 26. that not only what is glorious to Kings but what in all the world is glorious shall be brought there as if all glory and riches made their rendevouze here it shall be so glorious as if no glory at all were out of it B●side it may well take in that all the Saints which only are the glory of Nations are all brought in to it In a word it shall exceed all as it were they will cast their caps at it The sixth is from its indwellers who are expressed two wayes 1. negatively No unclean thing or what defileth c shall enter ver 27. that is no wicked person 2. no wicked thing or no wicked deed 3. no filthy creature that is loathsome 4. no corruption in Believers they are now without spot In a word 1. no sin 2. no curse 3. no devil tempter or tentation and no corruption for all these defile and this is more than that only no wicked person should enter Thus it is expresly distinguished from the militant Church that is hereby supponed to have in it what defileth to wit scandalous persons and hypocrites here expressed in these two who work abomination and make a lie and it is said of all these that in no wayes they enter by a twofold negation in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to shew the absolute exclusion of all these and that in the least degree Then positively it is told who enters None but th●se who are written in the Lambs book of life i.e. true Elect and not appearing so only yea regenerated perfected Elect as was cleared in the scope of this Chapter otherwise the Elect have corruption that defileth but here now it is done away for 1. that phrase writing in his book through this prophesie is never so understood to wit for these that appear so but for such who are so inde●d 2. Seeming Elect who yet are not so do make a lie and defile therefore are here secluded 3. These written are opposed ut supra to these not written Chap. 20.15 and therefore it must be understood of true Elect seing the others are really reprobates 4. The Lambs book of life is never opened till the last day and this admission supponeth the opening of it as that which only giveth the rule to make this difference supponing that till this Book be opened no such decerning should be pretended unto therefore it is not here-away 5. He hath keeped that Book to Himself and hath given it to none to rule their sentence by 6. Do not some hypocrits look liker Elect than some of them do and shall this rule exclude the one and take-in the other and seing the mentioning of the book of life here relateth to its opening Chap. 20. whereby it is made known who was in it and that is at the last sentence This must therefore be at the execution thereof and posterior to it These reasons do evince that the book of life is to be taken properly for Gods election in opposition to what was said Chap. 20. ver last and therefore these who enter now must be really and only Elect indeed opposit to the former and no other interpretation crossing that can be admitted either of secluding profane men and such who are not Elect doctrinally from heaven it self or such who appear not so from the Church for 1. thus to be written here in the bok of life is to be really elected in opposition to the state of the reprobate who are not written for all men are distributed in these two written or not written and a third there is not but to expound this either of the former wayes will not make it to speak of the real Elect and these only Therefore it cannot be admitted here 2. Whatever this here intendeth it is something that both de jure and de facto is peculiar to this state of the Church that is it is such a thing as neither ever was in deed or event nor was ever called-for before this for this is a thing peculiarly differencing this state of the Church from all that ever preceeded in this respect and for that end as a peculiar property thereof is subjoyned here But neither can it be said that the key of Doctrine de jure becometh straiter then nor now or that de facto it will ever be stricter than it was in the first Primitive and Apostolick times Nor can it be applied to any more strict exercise of Discipline in reference to Church-membership for then 1. it would follow that there were a different rule for gathering of Churches then which we have not now and that so much strictnesse were not required now which some will not find consonant to the purpose for which they alleage this now And 2. it would follow that the Apostolick Church was not so exact in their practice if de facto that succeeding Church shall go beyond them It must therefore belong to the Church-triumphant as is said LECTURE I. CHAP. XXII Vers. 1. ANd he shewed me a pure river of water of life clear as chrystall proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. 2 In the midst of the street of it and of either side of the river was there the tree of life which bare twelve manner of fruits and yeelded her fruit every moneth and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the Nations 3. And there shall be no more curse but the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it and his servants shall serve him 4. And they shall see his face and his name shall be in their foreheads 5. And there shall be no night there and they need no candle neither light of the sun for the Lord God giveth them light and they shall reign for ever and ever THis first part of the Chapter to vers 6. continueth some further aggravations of the happinesse which the glorified in heaven enjoy The first is from the excellency of a river that runneth through that city rivers are plesant and profitable to run through cities This city hath an excellent river whereof we may say as Psal. 46. The streams thereof make glad the city of God It is commended 1. that it is a river not a brook but such as may convey commodities to it and be usefull for cleansing of it which sheweth in the scope that this city is perfectly accommodated and cleansed exceedingly beyond what any river can do to any city on earth 2. It is a pure river that is free from all muddinesse and corruption every thing is excellent here the finest that can be imagined 3. It is a river of water of life not only as from a living fountain but as of a lively efficacy and vertue to all who drink of it life is in abundance here where both the fountains and river are such 4. It is clear
of a harvest and vintage and to what time this judgement doth relate 597 598 The person executing the judgement against Antichrist the incitment he hath to do so and the execution it self 598 599 600 The last plagues upon Antichrist and the instruments by whom he is plagued 601 602 The Song of the people of God at the over-throw of Antichrist a description of the singers the song it self and the matter thereof Antichrists last expedition for his support set forth in the principal authors thereof its speciall agents their work and the successe of all 621.622 623 That Antichrist is come and that the Pope is Antichrist proven and that he is not a single person who is to continue onely three years and an half 652 653 654 Bellarmin's arguments whereby he endeavoureth to prove that the Pope is not yet come answered 654 655 Concerning the continuing of Antichrist or the defection of the Church under him and its close 671 672 That the antichristian defection is presently in being and that it is to be found in Rome further cleared and proven 674 675 676 That it was not Christ really in His humanity who appeared to Iohn in vision proven 37 Directions to Ministers in applying their Doctrine 260 to 266 Armageddon what it is and why expresly set down in the Hebrew tongue 623 624 The preparations upon the Lambs side to the battell of Armageddon the Captain described and the event of the battell 700 701 702 The Arian heresie held forth by the first trumpet 420 421 422 That the Church under heathen Magistrates had not a like authority in Civil things as Ecclesiastick 91 B BAbylons judgement denounced what the judgement is the manner of expressing it with the cause why she is judged 58 Babylons judgement the denouncer the denounciation it self and the justice of this judgement 677 678 679 What Balaam's doctrine was and how that of the Nicolaitans agreed with it 155 What is meaned by the four Beasts Rev. 4. 275 276 Why the Beast under the Dragon Chap. 12. hath the crowns on his head and on his horns and that Beast Chap. 13.1 hath crowns on his horns not on his heads 524 Who that Beast is which is said to rise out of the sea and whether one with the following Beast 542 543 544 545 What we are to understand by that image which is made to the Beast 546 Antichrist set out and described in his power glory and cruelty by the Beast and the severall parts of that description 546 547 What is meaned by wounding and what by healing one of the heads of the Beast by whom he was wounded by whom healed the time of both with the effects which followed thereupon 548 549 550 What worship was given to the Beast and the description of his dominion in its continuance 551 552 The blasphemy persecution and enlargement of the Beasts dominion 553 554 The Antichrist described under the type of a Beast with two horns like a lamb and why he is called another Beast with the severall parts of the description 555 556 557 The power the Beast exerciseth who looketh like a lamb 558 What is meaned by the image made to the Beast and by its being made to live 560 The mark of the Beast and who are marked 561 The number of the Beast how to be understood 565 The mark and name of the Beast or the number of the Beast considered 567 568 The number of the Beasts name exponed and the reasons of the interpretation 568 569 Mahomet is not the Beast 572 The Beast taken up in a fourfold consideration how the woman sitteth thereon with a description of the Beast 632 633 The Beast described particularly in a threefold respect 635 636 637 How it is true that the Beast is not and yet is ibid. Whom we are to understand by the eighth Beast 641 The ground and warrand that all have to believe 305 When men are called to believe they are not called instantly to beleive that Christ died for them in particular 306 Believers happinesse in heaven set forth and what use they are to make of it for the present 401 402 Bishop Angel and Presbyter proven to be one in Scripture and that there is no difference between Bishop and Pastor with the answer of Doctor Hammonds Arguments to the contrary that there were ordinary Pastors in the Apostles dayes proven 223 224 225 226 to 234 Saving blessings far otherwayes the effect of Christs death than any common mercy that followeth thereupon to Reprobates 310 God hath a fourfold Book figuratively attributed to Him 18● What the Book of life is and what the not blotting out of that Book meaneth ibid. What is the Book with the seven seals 243 That the little Book mentioned chap. 10.2 is the same with that spoken of chap. 5. cleared and confirmed 465 What is understood by taking and eating this little Book 468 What these Books are which are opened in the day of judgement and how they are said to be opened 743 Why the Book of life is produced and not Gods decree of reprobation also 744 The Book of life opened and what we are to understand by it ibid. How Christs feet are like unto Brasse 39 C Concerning a call to the Ministery and clearnesse therein 52 A necessity of clearnesse in a mans call to the Ministery and how it may be cleared where of the impulse of the Spirit that may be in one to the work of the Ministery and how to try if it be of the Lord 52 53 54 55 Churches why called Candles●●●●● 51 The nature of the judgement pointed at by the Censers being filled with fire taken off the Altar 414 415 That they who pretend to highest titles in the Church even to that of Apostles may lawfully be tried and censured by the Church 69 The censuring of such most acceptable service 70 71 Censures have a threefold weight when they are rightly drawn forth 163 164 Considerations to be had in censuring 165 That children are to be baptized proven 515. Why Christ is called the faithfull witnesse why the first begotten of the dead and why the Prince of the Kings of the earth 5 The way of Christs coming set forth and made use of 24 The extent of the merit of Christs death 299 How Christs death is of an infinite value ibid. Christs death not a satisfaction for all but only for the chosen proven 299 300 301 Christs death and suffering not intended as a price to redeem any but such as were proposed to the Mediator in the Covenant of Redemption 301 All and every one no● proposed to Christ in the Covenant of Redemption to be redeemed ibid. Whether Christ hath redeemed all men conditionally Neg. 312 Christs Intercession and satisfaction of equal extent 315 316 Christ hath a care of the Elect to see to their safety in the greatest of judgement 388 The enlargement of Christs Church a most beautifull thing 394 The most righteous persons
holding forth of this consolation is Christ expressed by this name in this promise In the 29. vers the Epistle closeth with the common advertisement He that hath an ear to hear c. which is not done for the fashion but is the Lords commending of what hath been said unto the consciences of the Hearers because what is said is said by the Spirit to the Churches and it becometh well these who have ears to hear to hear what is said by Him LECTURE I. CHAP. III. Vers. 1. ANd unto the Angel of the Church in Sardis write These things saith he that hath the seven Spirits of God and the seven Stars I kn●w thy w●rks that thou hast a name that thou livest and art dead 2. Be watchful and strengthen the things which remain that are ready to die for I have not found thy works perfe●t before God 3. Remember therefore how thou hast received and heard and hold fast and repent If therefore thou shalt not watch I will come on thee as a thief and thou shalt not know what hour I will come upon thee 4. Thou hast a few names even in Sardis which have not defiled their garments and they shall walk with me in white for they are worthy 5. He that overcometh the same shall be cloathed in white raiment and I will not bl●t out his name out of the book of life but I will confesse his name before my Father and before his Angels 6. He that hath an ear let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches THis is the fifth Epistle directed to the Church in Sardis It hath the division that is common to the rest to wit there is First an Inscription vers 1. Secondly the Body of the Epistle vers 2 3 and 4. And Thirdly A Conclusion vers 5 and 6. The party unto whom it is directed is the Angel of the Church of Sardis this was spoken of Chap. 1. vers 11. It was once the seat of the rich King Cresus abounding in much wealth and also in much sin and profanity yet Christ by His Gospel begetteth a Church in this place Although it be directed in common to Ministers and People and for that end doth contain what respecteth the Church in common yet we conceive it doth especially and principally relate to the case of the Minister and to the People as joyned and agreeing with him in that dead condition as the Exposition thereof will clear The person from whom the Epistle is sent is set forth by two titles First He hath the seven Spirits of God this was expounded Chap. 1. vers 4. and it is again repeated Chap. 4. vers 5 and 6. By these seven Spirits are understood the holy Ghost in His severall Gifts Graces and Operations Christ is said to have these because He hath committed unto him the dispensing of these Gifts and Graces of the Spirit to the Church and doth joyntly with the Father send the holy Ghost the Comforter for the good of His People as is clear from Ioh. 14. vers 16 17. and Chap. 16. vers 7 8 c. and many other places He taketh this title in this place because having to do with a dead Minister and People He would both make them know what must quicken them to wit the Spirit and how they may attain the same to wit by Him It is no little part of Christs glory nor of the Believers consolation that Christ hath the dispensing of life and livelinesse unto His People The second title is which hath the seven Stars this is in part taken out of Chap. 1. vers 16. where Christ is described as having in His hand seven Stars By Stars are here understood Ministers as Chap. 1. vers 20. is clear Christ is here said to have them as He hath the seven Spirits which doth import 1. His speciall interest in and title to Ministers He hath a peculiar right to the Church beside what He hath to the world yet hath He a more peculiar right to the Ministers as having their Commission from Him and dependance on Him in a more special manner Therefore Psal. 68. vers 18. He is said after His Ascension peculiarly to have received gifts for men or in the man And yet these gifts are no other but the gifts of Apostles Pastors and Teachers c. which He again giveth to His Church as is clear from Ephes. 4. vers 8. and 11. Secondly This title importeth Christs absolute Soveraignity over His Ministers in a special manner for he hath them And so they being His He may dispose of them at His pleasure for f●rthering of them in His work if they be faithfull and for blasting of them if it be otherwise Thirdly It points at Christs care of His Ministers who doth in a special manner keep and preserve these Stars as something that is much esteemed of by Him Christ taketh this title unto Himself in this Epistle 1. That He may provoke this lifeless Angel to seek life in Him seing He who had the seven Stars had also the seven Spirits and so especially they to wit His Ministers might expect to be made lively by Him if He were improven by them and so this title doth back the directions that follow 2. It is also to let them know that are Ministers that though they be in an eminent place yet are they subject to Christ who is their Soveraign and so ought to be dependent on Him otherwise they are liable to His triall and censure who can dispose of them as He will and so this title addeth weight to the threatning which is contained vers 3. The Body of the Epistle followeth in the close of the first verse with the 2 3 and 4. We may take it up in these four First The Lord discovereth the hypocrisie and deadnesse of this Minister and Church vers 1. Secondly He proposeth many directions as remedies fit for their recovery Thirdly He presseth the practice of these directions by several weighty reasons and threatnings and these two are intermixed vers 2 3. Fourthly There is a qualification of this charge and a consolation in reference to some Members that were free from this challenge aud this is held forth vers 4. The case of this Minister and Church is in two expressions 1. Setting out what they were thought-of by others 2. Expressing what indeed they were before God Before others they had a name that they were living that is they were thought to be in some good and lively condition more than ordinary and were thought by others about them to be a Church in better condition than other Churches for to have a name doth import the esteem of somewhat in her which was not ordinary yet saith the Lord notwithstanding of that name they were dead that is very unsurable to that they were esteemed to be and in respect thereof indeed but spiritually dead By this deadnesse we understand First A simple deadnesse in hypocrisie and so it is
with the selfishnesse carnalnesse vanity c. that are in him it 's too like these have too much sway with them Now to the second to wit What a Minister ought to do in such a case for recovering of himself Answ. The reading of this Epistle seriously will indeed satisfie this which we may draw out in these directions 1. It 's necessary that a Minister observe his own condition and take notice of the sinfulnesse and hazard thereof this is implied in the word remember vers 3. and indeed who cometh to ponder and consider rightly their own condition are in a fair way of recoverie 2. There will be a putting of every thing right that belongeth to a Christian oftentimes decaying in Christianity bringeth on this deadnesse in the Minister and therefore there can be no better mean of recoverie than once to put the soul in a right posture in this respect 3. It will furder this much that he begin with the serious exercise of Repentance of what is past and that as to the defects that cleave to him both as a Christian and as a Minister this maketh the beginning of a recovery to be solid Therefore it is commanded vers 3. 4. There would be special care had in the doing of ministeriall duties that not only they be done but that they be done in a right manner that so every thing be done as in the sight of God with an eye to this that it may be found perfect before him This is in the word be watchfull and implyed under this Angels charge of not having his works perfect before God 5. There would be zeal and carefulnesse in the begetting and keeping of life and livelinesse among the people as in himself and for that cause a doing of every thing with respect to that end This was the Angels fault in his deadnesse to wit the neglecting of this and it is commanded to him to strengthen what was ready to die as a thing befitting his recovery This is in a condescending way to seek to feed the people with what is profitable though thereby a Minister should seem to some to lose of his name and reputation 6. There is need in all things to be denied and to exercise faith in Him that hath the seven Spirits of God and the seven Stars also without which there is no attaining to livelinesse and for this end doth the Lord so describe Himself in the Inscription of this Epistle Much dependence on Him walking with Him standing in His counsel c. and that in the meanest particular steps of any ministeriall dutie as not daring to undertake any thing without Him and so an acknowledging of Him in His grace as to the fruit of every thing This is a very fountain of the life of a Minister LECTURE II. Vers. 7. And unto the Angel of the Church in Philadelphia write These things saith he that is holy he that is true he that hath the key of David he that openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth 8. I know thy works behold I have set before thee an open door and no man can shut it for thou hast a litle strength and hast kept my word and hast not denied my name 9. Behold I will make them of the synagogue of Satan which say they are Iews and are not but do lie behold I will make them to come and worship before thy feet and to know that I have loved thee 10. Because thou hast kept the word of my patience I also will keep thee from the hour of tentation which shall come upon all the world to try them that dwell upon the earth 11. Behold I come quickly hold that fast which thou hast that no man take thy crown 12. Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the temple of my God and he shall go no more out and I will write upon him the name of my God and the name of the city of my God which is the new Ierusalem which cometh down out of heaven from my God and I will write upon him my new name 13. He that hath an ear let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches THis sixth Epistle directed to Philadelphia hath the same Division with the rest to wit the Inscription vers 7. the Body of the Epistle vers 8 9 10 11. and the Conclusion vers 13. In the Inscription the Lord the directer of this Epistle doth set forth Himself in these three 1. He that is holy 2. He that is true these are two essential Attributes of the God-head and shew that our Lord Jesus is God And He taketh these stiles to Himself in this place that 1. He may shew unto this honest Church that their honestie could not but be approven of Him who was holinesse it self And 2. to strengthen their Faith in the expectation of the performance of His promises however they looked improbable-like because He who made them is true and truth it self The third Title is He that hath the key of David he that openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth This respecteth His Office and holdeth Him forth as the great Steward of the House of God who is intrusted with the mannagement of what concerneth the same and is invested with Power and Authority sutable thereunto It alludeth to Isa. 22.20 21 22 c. where the Lord speaking of His preferring Eliakim unto the government of Ierusalem and Iudah doth expresse it thus And the key of the house of David will I lay upon his shoulder So He shall open and none shall shut and He shall shut and none shall open Now this as attributed here to Christ is not to be understood principally of His essential and absolute Dominion as God for that cannot be called the key of the house of David but it 's to be understood of His Mediatorie Kingdom whereby He as Mediator is invested with Power and Authority for ordering the affairs of the house of God And as it standeth in this verse it doth hold forth 1. That Christ Jesus as Mediator hath a peculiar oversight and Government of the Church 2. That in this Dominion of Christs is fulfilled the promise of perpetuating the power of the house of David therefore it 's called the key of the house of David which is committed to Him 3. Here is held forth the Soveraignity and absolutenesse of Christs Dominion therefore He shutteth and no man openeth and openeth and no man shutteth there is no marring of any of His orders for He having obtained this Name above every Name by Gods exalting of Him thereunto Philip. 2.9 there can be no imaginable competition with Him in the exercise of this Power 4. This being compared with the former two titles doth show that He who is intrusted with the supream Government of the Church is God He is holy and true and therefore can do no wrong to any nor fail in the performance of what He promiseth
their continuance under suffering for a time and therefore must relate to the sufferings mentioned under the former seals as is said 3. That the matter contained here must be understood rather Spiritually as it pointeth at the scope than literally a● the words bear for properly souls can neither be seen nor heard and so also in other circumstances but the Spirit maketh use of such expressions for setting forth the reality and certainty of the thing intended More particularly to come to the words in what Iohn saw vers 9. These three are to be considered 1. What he saw the souls of them that were slain to wit of Martyres 2. Where he saw them to wit under the altar 3. We have the properties whereby he describeth these Martyrs and differenceth them from others They were slain for the Word of God and for the testimonie which they held 1. By soul here which elswhere is called Spirit Acts 7.59 Luke 23.46 Eccles. 12.7 is understood that immortall substance which God breathed in mans body when it was made whereby man became a living soul 1 Corinth 15.45 The soul thus understood is contrad●stinguished from the body as that which cannot be killed when the body is killed Mat. 10.28 In this sense it is taken here where there is a proof given of that which Christ asserteth in that place of Matthew cited and though the soul be not the object of the eye yet are they thus expressed as represented to Iohn to shew the reality of their existence and being even when separated from the body 2. The place where they are seen it is said he saw them under the altar There was then no materiall Temple that of Ierusalem being destroyed So neither by the altar can be understood any materiall altar for in heaven where we must conceive these souls to be there is neither materiall altar nor Temple and to say these souls were under any altar on earth suppose such were were to contradict the scope and overturn the consolation that is intended and would involve many absurdities concerning the nature of the soul its speaking and being under an altar which were also literally to be understood if that concerning the altar were both then must be figuratively understood to set out one or all of these three 1. The happinesse of these souls which not only have a being but exist in a notable safe and comfortable condition in a speciall nearnesse to God as under His altar which was so much delighted in and longed after by the Saints in their life It is like alluding to these places Psal. 31.20.84.3.91 1. For as the Tabernacle was a special signe of Gods presence so the altar was a special part of the furniture of the Tabernacle and it would seem that He looketh on the Martyrs as so many sacrifices offered unto God as Paul speaketh Philip. 2.17 2 Tim. 4.6 thereby to hold out a speciall respect that God putteth upon them 2. More especially this expression pointeth out these souls to be in Heaven the most Holy was a type of Heaven as it is expounded Heb. 9.10 And Heb. 9.12 it is said when Christ entered into Heaven He entered into the most holy The altar was before the most Holy and therefore we conceive this must be understood of the glory of Heaven Heaven being that where Christ is and Christs presence Philip. 1.21 is the company that the souls of Martyrs are to enjoy and therefore it must be where He is which Christ on the Crosse L●k 23. calleth Paradise unto the Thief 3. Most especially by the altar must be understood Christ Jesus by whom we have accesse to God of whom the Tabernacle and all its furniture was typicall and who is called our altar Heb. 13.10 by whom we and all our services yea even the deaths of Martyrs are sanctified and made acceptable to God This we conceive must be understood because other Scriptures hold forth Him and nearnesse with Him to be the happinesse of souls departed and because it is that which made Martyrs so despise suffering that they might be with Christ Philip. 1.21 and because it agreeth best with their own prayers and desires under suffering as in Stephen Act. 7.59 All cometh to this to shew that they enjoyed a most happy condition and Communion with God but is set forth under an expression belonging to the service of the Tabernacle of the Old Testament as many other things of prophesie are The third thing to be considered is the description of these Martyrs which is especially drawn from the cause of their suffering it being an old maxime Non est mors sed causa mortis qua facit Martyrom which is laid down in two expressions the first is for the word of God that is the first character to be adhering to the faith of the Gospel revealed in the Word and to be a conscientious practiser of Righteousnesse according to that same rule and not shunning to suffer any thing rather than to depart from these In this they were led not as to follow their own humours or to propagate their own inventions or any way to seek themselves but out of respect unto God and His will revealed in His Word The second is for the testimony which they held this looketh to the outward profession and confession of that truth which in their heart they believed Christ calleth it Mat. 10. a confessing Him before men And Rom. 10. the Apostle distinguisheth confession with the mouth from believing with the heart which two being put together hold forth a well ordered conversation both in Faith and Practice In Faith that they beleeved right concerning Christ in Practice that they were answereable to it and held forth that word of life by a good example as a witnesse to others and when called unto it they did not shun the testifying of both upon any perill In sum all cometh to this by opening the fifth seal was represented to me the happy condition of the souls of the Martyrs in Heaven who were accounted by God to have lost their lives not for the calumnies and slanders imputed to them by men but for testifying unto His truth This being clearly the meaning of the words the contrary whereof to wit the miserable condition after death of these who seem happy in the world and are not happy in God is joyned with this in the parable of the rich glutton and Lazarus Luk. 16. there is no ground here either of approving of altars under the Gospel or of sanctifying them by burying of the reliques of Martyrs under them which are amongst the superstitions of the Papists It is a poor altar that is sanctified and doth not sanctifie its offerings Beside neither was there Churches or altars in this time neither could the Martyrs who were so numerous be buried under them but they were decently buried together in places called Coemeteria as is plain from the story of these times From this Verse we may Observe 1.
Antichrists tyranny and domination hath brought the Church low but especially is to be fulfilled in Heaven where these things which in a propheticall manner are spoken of and applied unto the Church here will more properly be fulfilled For clearing of this scope and better understanding of this Chapter let us consider these three 1. What these winds do signifie 2. What is meaned by this sealing 3. Unto what time or state of the Church they do relate By winds three things are especially understood in Scripture which make the holding of these winds three wayes to be interpreted 1. By winds in Scripture are understood temporall judgements on civil States Ier. 49. 36 c. and so the holding of winds supposeth a restraint on temporall troubles keeping them for a time from breaking loose upon the Church though they were ready even then to blow The event is thus applied The Church had outward peace for a little time under Constantine and after but immediately the Empire was overrun by Goths and Vandals Saracens and other barbarous Nations who had been a little time restrained that the Church might have some breathing 2. By winds sometimes in Scripture are understood the blowings of the Spirit especially accompanying the Ordinances in keeping them clean and making them effectuall These Gospel-ordinances and breathings of the Spirit with them being as necessary for keeping 〈◊〉 Church uncorrupted as winds are to the air which we breath in See Act. 2.12 Cant. 4.16 Ezek. 37.4 According to this acception of winds the holding of them doth signifie the restraining of the pure Doctrine of the Gospel whereby followed the spreading of heresie and the rising of Antichrist who say they was working even in Constantin's time 3. By winds the Scripture sometimes holdeth forth spirituall judgements as heresie in Doctrine Schisms Divisions Contentions c. which have upon the Church an impetuous force and violence like winds driving unstable souls from their stedfastnesse as the word is Eph. 4.14 That we be not children tossed to and fro by every wind of Doctrine by the sleight of men c. It is so taken also Iud. 12. in respect of these who verse 11. had followed the gain-saying of Core they are said to be carried about of winds c. Thus the holding of these winds is to be conceived I saw saith Iohn immediately after the Churches freedom from persecution a new storm of heresie and schism ready to set upon the Church and to carry all away before it but it was bounded and restrained by Gods power till He had established His Elect against it so as it shall have no force to overturn them We conceive the last to be especially aimed at here and that these winds do hold forth the growing and encreasing of false Doctrine and Schism in the Church rather than any of the former two 1. Because this agreeth best to the scope which is to guard the Elect from these evils Now in the strain of this Book we will not find the Elect saved from temporall evils more than others it must therefore be understood of spiritual judgements and that in a high degree from which only they to wit the Elect have a peculiar exemption Mat. 24.24 2. This exemption doth specially relate unto these evils of Antichrist whereof the world partaketh and from which only the Elect are keeped clean as will appear from Chap. 13.8 and Chap. 14. vers 1 4. These sealed ones are said not to be defiled by which we may gather what is the judgements they are to be keeped from to wit spiritual defilement seing purity from these is peculiar to the sealed ones as a fruit of their sealing Again we understand the form of this spiritual judgement to speak so to consist rather in the actuall blowings of errour than in the privative restraint of pure Doctrine because the effects mentioned of hurting Trees Earth Sea c. are the effects of winds actually blowing and bringing hurt unto these things Beside the holding of these winds being for that end till the Elect should be marked evidenceth that the judgement is in letting loose these winds the holding whereof is a restraint upon them To the second question to wit What is to be understood by this seal or sealing mentioned We say 1. That it is not any visible or discernable character as to men which is intended But 2. some separating and differencing thing whereby as to the effect these who are sealed are distinguished from others that are not separated In a word the scope is to shew that every one of Gods own shall be as certainly keeped free from the hurt of that storm as if there were a visible mark put upon every one of them This manner of speech is borrowed 1. From Kings that seal with their own Seal what they would not have touched 2. From the story Exod. 12.13 where God being to separate Israe● from the Egyptians in respect of the plague of smitting the first-born did first separate them by a mark as it were upon the posts of their doors whereby His care of them was signified and their faith of immunity from that plague strengthned and accordingly the effect followed none that were marked were hurt so shall it be here 3. It may look unto Ezek. 9. where a story of sealing some not unlike to this is recorded In sum it is to show the security of the Elect under that storm Which we conceive especially to flow from these two 1. From Gods decree of Election 2. Gods care and providence in the executing of His decree of Election so as the saddest triall is limitted in its commission in respect of the Elect and they are looked unto and sustained under it This agreeth well with Mat. 24.24 where preservation from errour is derived from Gods Election and that which is called sealing here we take it to be the same which is expressed Chap. 13. and 8. by writing in the Lambs book of life mentioned there for the same scope as this is here It agreeth also with 2 Tim. 2.19 where the Lords foundation which is His Election is said to be sealed because of the surenesse and unalterablnesse thereof The third thing to be cleared is what time or state of the Church this relateth unto Answ. Although doctrinally the words do in generall hold forth Christs care of His Church and People in reference unto these trials which are common to them with others and so this may be applied to all times Christ had a care of His Church under the seals and a peculiar care of His own under every trial this is a truth but considering the words as they point at some particular time and for that end are set down in this prophesie We conceive that they hold forth Gods peculiar oversight of His Elect in keeping them from the storm which is threatened by the trumpets and not from the temporall stroaks contained under the same and so doth belong to the following
forth to wit one of a mixed nature such as came by the Saracens for that would not be so far greater than the former woes of that kind as is said 2. These locusts are but called as horses or like horses vers 7. not horses themselves 〈◊〉 is expre●ly said of these under the sixth trumpet thereby giving us to know that there is something of their nature signified rather than what is literally expressed 3. Their power is not to kill as in the sixth trumpet but to hurt men and torment them spiritually and not to kill them bodily as vers 3. 4. These are secluded and exempted from this plague that were sealed and marked to wit the Elect Gods servants but these were not excluded from temporall plagues as appeareth Chap. 11. nor from that of the Saracens often they share most under these and these marked ones are all such as were written in the Lambs Book Chap. 13.8 who yet did partake deeply of outward afflictions 5. These troubles Chap. 11. belong expresly to this trumpet though continuing under ●he sixth and contemporary with it yet they belong not to it but to this for these troubles are upon the Saints by way of persecution the sixth hath judgement on ungodly professours by way of justice 6. All the circumstances will clear this further as the mean by whom a Star his opening the bottomlesse pit the darkening of the Sun c. as after will appear for these locusts do darken light and obscure truth which sheweth it is a spirituall evil on Religious things springing up from within the Church which also answereth the scope of these trumpets best as is said 2. We say further the rising and discovering of Antichrist and the fall of the Roman Bishops from Heaven to Earth though not at first at their height is the very thing foretold here and must be so 1. Because it is clear that the beasts mentioned Chap. 13. are to be understood of him and speak of the rise of Antichrist particularly as may then be made out but this agreeth to that and is the very same War and event though in different expressions For 1. The very same persons are overcome by both to wit these that are not sealed 2. The same persons are exempted from both to wit these sealed ones Chap. 9.4 Chap. 13.8 and 14.1 c. 3. The same mark keepeth both free the same seal of God And 4. The number is the same comparing Chap. 7. in that number and Chap. 14.2 2. That the 11. Chapter and these troubles do belong to the Antichrist it is clear vers 7. the witnesses are to be killed by the beast and what beast but that Chap. 13. which ascendeth out of the bottomlesse pit as the locusts do here and that Chap. 11. belongeth to this trumpet appeareth from vers 14. where it is said the second wo is past and the third wo cometh quickly Then all preceeding that belongeth to the first or the second wo But not to the second as hath been said Therefore to the first which indeed in this event is contemporary with the second to wit the sixth trumpet It may be also further cleared from the circumstances considering the time rise and progresse and by comparing it with the fifth vial which is poured out Chap. 16. on the beasts seat and this order is observed in all what is builded of Antichrists Kingdom by the trumpets is overturned by the vials and in that same order It would then appear that seing the fifth vial overturneth his throne that it was setled by the fifth trumpet A third reason is if that storm against which the one hundred fourty and four thousand Chap. 7. are sealed be the spiritual defection of the Church under Antichrist Then that which is holden forth by this trumpet is so also for both relate to the same storm but that Chap. 7. is to be understood of Antichrists reigne as the greatest evil the Church was to meet with after Heathenish persecution Therefore this must be so also What was said upon Chap. 7. for clearing the scope of that place will confirm both these propositions 4. This spiritual Kingdom described here must either be applyed to the Kingdom of Antichrist and that Hierarchy or it must be applicable to some other seing it is some spiritual plague arising within the Church But there can be no other thought of to whom this description can agree and in whom this spirituall wo exceedingly beyond any mentioned by the former trumpets can be fulfilled but the Kingdom of Antichrist Therefore that must be understood here Again it being clear that it is one and the same world or Church which is ovērturned by the first six trumpets and it being clear that the sixth trumpet following findeth Idolatry in the visible Church which is the world plagued by it It must therefore follow that this defection to Idolatry which is a character of the Antichrists defection must have increased under this fifth trumpet immediately preceding seing it was not during the former four Lastly It may be confirmed further by comparing this Chapter with 2 Thess. 2. by which we will find that this plague mentioned here is the same spirituall Antichristian delusion prophesied of there for in every materiall thing they agree As 1. the instrument there is one sitting in the Temple of God as having place in the Church of Christ here is a Star falling from Heaven intimating the same thing 2. There he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as opposit to Christ and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the son of perdition here he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the destroyer as opposed to Christ who is called a Saviour as also Chap. 17. of this prophesie he is said to go 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or to destruction himself for Antichrist as Chrysostome observeth in that a Thess. is called the son of perdition because he shall occasion the destruction of many and shall himself be destroyed 3. They agree in respect of these whom they plague 2 Thess. 2.10 it is also these that shall be damned whom that delusion carrieth away here vers 4. it is only these who are not marked that is to say Chap. 13.8 who are not written in the Lambs Book of life and so also it seaseth only finally upon the Reprobate 4. There they are given up to strong delusion to believe lies here they are carried away with fornications idolatries and other errors and are so hardened therein that although they be plagued for these by the sixth trumpet yet they repent not 5. That delusion 2 Thess. 2. hath its rise from the devil vers 9. and is carried on with mighty signes and wonders here it cometh from the bottomlesse pit and is carried on by the devils speciall minister who therefore is said to have the key thereof and is not without mighty signes and lying wonders as is clear from Chap. 13. following where the same Kingdom is under another
the worship is not his but Christs even as if wholly he were removed the Church and Temple would still be the Lords for Baptism is not antichristian nor doth of it self initiate any in his Church but as men by their after carriage devote themselves to him and take on his name or mark and therefore when one disclaimeth what is antichristian his Baptism is to be accounted the Lords Ordinance so ordination and appointment of some for the Ministrie is the Lords Ordinance the restriction of ordination to such persons exclusively and the adding of many ceremonies with rules for them to teach but so and so that is Antichrists addition and may be removed from the former so that one may have been ordained by them and yet become a Preacher of pure Doctrine even as they might be baptized by them and yet become Professors of it And therefore no doubt many in all that time were called to the Ministrie by the Lord through these wayes of theirs who did prove faithfull witnesses for Christ against Antichrist even unto death they cannot therefore be accounted antichristian Ministers who do not own that hierarchie but are to be accounted Ministers of Christ for ordination simply doth not flow from Antichrist but as it standeth in a subo●dination to him and is a step of that Hierarchie and not in a subordination to Christ now these not being in subordination but to Christ are to be accounted his Indeed it may be in respect of the ordination it self not discernable for the time whether such a person be a Minister of Christs or Antichrists and it may be for some space one may mistake his master and continue in Antichrists camp not knowing what his commission leadeth him unto yet when in effect it is discovered and he made to take up his task and to walk according to it and the Lord evidently sealing his call to him he is then to be accounted a Minister of Christ when all accessory dependence on Antichrist is cast off We do therefore say that it is not the ordination of that time simply that was sufficient to make one a Minister of Christ but ordination going alongst with Christs call and dispensed according to His allowance though it may be the dispensers intended no such thing and having an after carriage suitable to a Minister of Christ and therefore it will not follow from this that all that were so ordained as to the outward ceremonies and manner are to be accounted Ministers of Christ except they have Christs call concurring and evidenced in their fitnesse for it and conscientious discharge of it now this being certain that for the most part in Popery such were ordained whom the Lord never called to it and who in their carriage never walked by His commission or owned Him as Master Therefore are not these to be acknowledged as Ministers of His but of Antichrist whose design they drive and whose orders they obey and therefore as on the one side that ordination alone cannot constitute and evidence one to be a Minister of Christs if he walk not accordingly so cannot their additions that are mixed in therewith prejudge the Ordinance it self when in so far as it is from Christ it is owned and when what in it is from Antichrist is disclaimed even as it will not prove one of their members to be a true Christian that he is baptized if his way be antichristian yet where a Christian conversation as to faith and manners doth concur it will be sufficient and the additionals that are amongst them in the administration of Baptism cannot in that case prejudge that Ordinance So is it here If it be asked why they are not only called the two olive trees vers 4. but the two Candlesticks also which Chap. 1.20 are expounded to be the Churches and not Ministers Ans. We conceive they are so to be understood here also and it is done not to confound Ministers and Churches which in Chap. 1. are distinguished but to shew the sibnesse that is between these two and the likenesse that is in their case so that we may gather the implied case of the Church from what is expressed of the Ministers which is the scope here to wit that the Church should be few in number and low in her outward estate as these two Prophets are and they are two Candlesticks to shew that proportionablnesse which is between the encreasing and decreasing of the number of Professors with the number of Ministers By some this is taken to be an hebraism as if it were to be rendered these are the two olive trees wish or beside the two Candlesticks the copulative in the Hebrew being sometimes to be so rendered But the scope is clear to wit that under that type of two Prophets prophesying in sackcloth is holden forth both the low condition of Minsters and Churches and this sheweth the absurdity of both the former misapplications And the Churches estate is rather described by her Ministers than by her Professors because in that time the continuance of Truth is more discernable in the Preachers than in the Professors thereof who may be very obscure in respect of any combined profession and because also the violence of Antichrist will be especially bent against Ministers yet the Lords continuing of these two olive trees doth infer the being also of two Candlesticks whom they are to furnish with their oyl and to give light unto Hence Observe 1. As our Lord Jesus hath a Church so hath He witnesses in it these two are ever inseparable the Church and Witnesses He may have Saints where He hath no Ministers but He hath never a politick body of a Church without Ministers There is in this Book a strange connexion between a Church and Ministers the Churches are the Candlesticks and the Ministers the Candles they are the olive trees that entertain oyl in the lamp They have a speciall influence in keeping life in the Church as the one is up so is the other and when the one is down so is the other It is a strange Religion that speaketh of doing for Saints and to promove their interest and yet hath little respect to Ministers 2. As Ministers meet with opposition so doth the Church and as the Church meeteth with opposition so do her Ministers 3. Ministers ought by their place especially to witnesse for Christ against corruptions 4. When Ministers have most to do and meet with most opposition God often furnisheth them accordingly with more boldnesse gifts and assistance than ordinary 5. Christs witnesses are a terrible party for as few as these witnesses are none of their opposits do gain at their hand who ever hurteth them shall in this manner be killed Though they be despicable in sackcloth yet better oppose a King in his strength and giving orders from his Throne covered in cloath of state than them though they may burn some and imprison others yet their opposers will pay sickerly for it This is
almost like to a widow before this now received a Court Popes Cardinals and her solitarinesse was helped and she looketh out again as majestically and commander-like by this head as by any other That this is the healing here understood appeareth by the effects 1. The admiration that then followed in the world● and the thanks they in effect gave the devil for this service as generally better content with this than with any other head that ever was before The particular effect in this verse is All the world wondered after the beast It is more to wonder after than at the beast Here beginneth the effects of his enchantment on the world after this healing which was not before 2. This admiration after the beast is more particularly set forth afterward It implieth 1. an unexpected amazement as at the seeing of something they had not seen or thought to see so soon and certainly the wicked world could not have expected again an Idolatrous head so soon 2. It importeth a sort of Divine or Religious reverence or doting on the beast superstitiously for it is after the beast which is clear afterward as holding out an estimation of some Religious thing in this head who is called Christs vicar more than in any which went before which cannot agree to a civil state 3. It importeth a willingnesse or gladsomnesse in the doing of this as affected or delighted with it It is otherwayes expressed by enchanting the inhabitants of the earth mens wicked nature that loveth whoring from God now welcometh exceedingly this corrupt beast and submitteth to him and drinketh-in in a deluded way his fornications willingly where we have an emblame of mans nature 2. The parties admiring are all the world that is as large dominion and possibly more under this head healed than ever any head had before him It is all who are not elected whereby it is clear again that this beast wondered-after is Antichrist and this admiration or worship is more than civil he hath exceeding many yea Emperours Kings and great men giving their power to him and that willingly Chap. 17. which they never did to any other In a word saith he when this head came up this beast got moe followers and other sort of respect than ever before For clearing this exposition of the wound and healing Consider this wound must be at the time of the Churches begun flight which was contemporary with the fall of Idolatrous Emperours for this healed head is contemporary with the womans flight therefore this wound must be before which can be no other but that though this healing immediately appeared not as is said 2. Consider that at that time five heads were past the seventh to come which riseth after the healing of this wounded head and is the seventh or papacy it is not wounded here nor was it in being before these fourty two moneths began and during that time it hath power and is not wounded It must be then the sixth of the Emperours that suffered at that time when the woman began to flee Now there was then no wound in the temporall grandour glory and state of the Empire it was as great under Constantine as ever Therefore he is known by that name Constantine the great it must then be the change we expounded it to be 3. Add if the papacyes rising to be the seventh head be the healing of this wound Then must the wound be such a want or change as papacy supplieth But papacy healeth this and is the seventh head This beast which endureth fourty two moneths and hath power from the Dragon healeth and recovereth this seat that was lost and sitteth again in Rome c. and this is papacy as is proven and will Chap. 17. more fully appear Now the thing which the devil aimeth at by the papacyes settling at Rome is the recovering of that worship which he lost and by the Popes means again by Idols and Images the devil is worshipped Chap. 9.20 and here v. 2. Ergo the removing this Idolatrous worship by publick Authority which was the Dragon's casting from Heaven Chap. 12. is the wound here Beside temporall over-running of the Empire by Goths Vandals and such like can neither be called one wound because it was frequent nor attributed to this seventh head because out of it the Popes reaped still advantage as also they suit not this time nor was the Emperours healed after these incursions so as to have more following than before and the Emperours not being heads after they became Christian as will be clear Chap. 17. and it not being they who are wondered at as this head after its healing is It cannot therefore be applied to them but as is said LECTURE II. Vers. 4. And they worshipped the dragon which gave power unto the beast and they worshipped the beast saying Who is like unto the beast who is able to make war with him 5. And there was given unto him a mouth speaking great things and blasphemies and power was given unto him to continue fourty and two moneths 6. And he opened his mouth in blasphemie against God to blaspheme his name and his tabernacle and them that dwell in heaven 7. And it was given unto him to make war with the Saints and to overcome them and power was given him over all kindreds and tongues and nations 8. And all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world THe first part of this Chapter describeth Antichrist under a secular notion of civil power It setteth him out first in his rise vers 1 2 3. In three things 1. To what state he belongeth to wit that of seven heads and ten horns that is the Roman vers 1. 2. Of what nature he is he is compounded of monstrous qualities vers 2. 3. To what time or revolution of that Roman state he belongeth to wit that which after the wounded head was healed and the horns had gotten Crowns that is to say after the civil Empire is weakened and divided in sundry Kingdoms and the Pope steppeth up to act them all 2. His reign or the effects of his rise after this head is sealed are set down from vers 4. forward in four steps or effects first toward the gracelesse world he obtaineth much respect and applause from them even in the highest degree so that he ruleth amongst them at his pleasure vers 4. The second is the time of his continuance vers 5. The third containeth his blasphemy or doctrine towards God vers 6. The fourth and last his persecution against the Saints or his practice towards them vers 7. and 8. The universality of the subjection he getteth or of the power he hath is restrained to the Reprobate world as the proper object of his Kingdom as it is of the Dragons who giveth him that power The first effect after his rising vers 4. is set out in three steps
take orders from him and be as slaves to him It is a sort of submission from some apprehension of some deity peculiar to this beast and this state of it beyond all others as is said 3. Lest it should be thought that all went wrong and there were no Church the Elect are excepted and this universality is restrained by this implied exception All such as were written in the Lambs book of life are preserved These are the little Temple set by Chap. 11. and the same who were sealed Chap. 7. and excepted from the hurt of the fifth trumpet Chap. 9.4 and the one hundred fourty and four thousand which Chap. 14. are standing as conquerours over the beast with the Lamb upon mount Sion Whereby it appeareth 1. There will be some excepted in the greatest tyranny of Antichrist 2. That they are the same with the one hundred fourty and four thousand that were sealed and consequently then this beast is Antichrist and this worship antichristianism for these Saints or Elect are not keeped or exempted from giving civil worship to temporall powers or from being overcome with this beast as to temporall hurt but from worshipping of him which is the sinfulnesse of this plague Therefore after it is said they got the victory over him Chap. 14. and 15. this also is to be understood of full and finall yeelding to the Popes blasphemies for otherwayes Elect souls have sometimes been ensnared In which respect here it is implied to be impossible that an Elect can worship him whence plainly it followeth that no native Pope-worshipper owning him and the compleat body of his doctrine and dying so can be saved except we would say one not elected may be saved for clearly this is pointed at as inconsistent with election and proper to the Reprobate Matt. 24.24 2 Thess. 2.10 It is true this assertion is not rigidly to be extended to all who in part shall be guilty of Popery Nor 2. as is said to these who shall repent but where there is a full and finall whoring with wondering after this beast this standeth as a peremptory truth because in the Spirits account this worshipping of the beast is blasphemy and derogatory in a high degree to God And 2. his manner of worship in its compleat body is Idolatry And 3. his intermixing of Traditions Satisfactions merit of Works in Justification c. in his doctrine is a perverting of the right wayes of the Lord and a corrupting of the pure waters that who drinketh thereof must die Therefore we may confidently assert it and indeed seing the Lord distinguisheth His true Church from Antichrist and calleth them Gentiles Chap. 11.2 and such as are not elected Chap. 13.8 but are to be damned 2 Thess. 2.10 and to drink of the wine of the wrath of God without mixture for ever Chap. 14.9 10 11. there is no place left for disputing this which is set down as a dread full sentence for scaring all from worshipping of that beast or receiving of his mark Popery will be found no little crime before God and to bring no little guilt and hazard upon souls what ever men think of it LECTURE III. Vers. 9. If any man have an ear let him hear 10. He that leadeth into captivity shall go into captivity He that killeth with the sword must be killed with the sword Here is the patience and the faith of the Saints 11. And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth and he had two horns like a lamb and he spake as a dragon THe Spirit having given a dark description of Antichrist before He proceed to enlarge it in the following type He doth in these two verses to wit 9. and 10. set down in plain words something necessary for the consolation of the Saints 1. He layeth down that common and often repeated advertisement He that hath ears let him hear by which in this place he setteth out 1. the concernment of the knowledge of this mystery to Believers and therefore we would not think it unworthy the pains to search in it 2. It holdeth out an impossibility save to these who have ears to take it up and understand it Therefore it will need the more diligence to search it 3. It importeth a deafnesse in many who want ears for such Truths and therefore it is not to be wondered although many Papists continue blind and do not discern this Truth Having premitted this generall He subjoyneth vers 10. a speciall consolation which may be a reason why people in the flourishing estate of the wicked would be the more observant because there was retribution coming on the greatest and cruellest enemies of the Church they being to be dealt with as they dealt with others He that leadeth into captivity he that killeth shall be so met with which judgement holdeth out 1. the singular observing of justice meeting them in their own measure Psal. 137. ult Isa. 33. 1 2. 2. A great change coming on the highest power and so that there can be no stability in greatnesse when this admired beast is captivated as if he said think not this beasts standing will be eternall he that leadeth captive some banisheth and killeth others the day cometh when he shall be led in captivity for if the generall be true that all that lead captive shall be led captive then this beast also shall be so dealt with beside that it peculiarly relateth to him The consolation is expresly in these words Here is the patience and the faith of the Saints Here that is in this thing and on this promise there is a good ground for founding of both the patience and faith of the Saints So that here saith this much that from this word they may patiently abide a whiles suffering and by Faith expect an end to it and an overthrow and turn upon this powerfull enemy that carrieth all now before him Or here that is in this triall of Antichrists before the end come is exercised the patience and faith of the Saints now they will have to do with faith and patience now is the time of their acting of it till this word spoken to give them an encouragement come to passe to wit that the two evils they suffered killing and captivity shall be returned on their enemies heads Gods promise is that which keepeth life in faith and patience and strengtheneth them but still a time interveeneth between the promise and the outgate for the exercise of both these and this is the end of continuing straits else there should be little use for these Graces which are well put together From the 11. vers followeth the second part of Antichrists description under a different type because his way end and pretexts are such as cannot altogether by one beast be set out It being no strange thing to set out our Lord differently sometimes as a Lyon and sometimes as a Lamb as in the fifth Chapter So is his ape Antichrist under a twofold consideration described
heads he would shew two things in the antichristian Church 1. Great impudency in owning and maintaining these things which are indeed great abominations their publick Images and bowing to them their disputes for and defences of their grossest superstitions so that her whoredoms need not be sought out by secret search they do it before the Sun 2. Great evidence of guilt so that by trying her and comparing her way with the Word it will be found clearly that she is Babylon c. as if these titles and superscriptions were written on her as her name which name is to be gathered not out of letters and words as neither that of Chap. 13. ult but out of doctrines practices and others her properties by spirituall wisdom making the application of these descriptions both Chap. 13.18 and here vers 9. for none owning the Revelation to be Gods Word will willingly take that name which will make them passe for Antichrist or his Church and if this name be not literally taken why should the number be Chap. 13 The name is in three 1. MYSTERY which sheweth there is both great iniquity here and that it is so put together that it looketh like a mystery either to conceive it or to discover by it such a party to be the whore For which it is called 2 Thess. 2. the mystery of iniquity in opposition to the mystery of godlinesse In all which Antichrist imitateth Christ lest he should be discovered Or it may be mystically Babylon as spiritually Sodom Chap. 11. Babylon not really which none can plead but in a mysterie The second part of the name is BABYLON THE GREAT of which we have spoken and applied it to Rome It is called BABYLON first for its headship during the fourth Empire as Babylon was in the second And secondly for its idolatry in it self and in its cruelty in bringing and keeping at under Gods people And thirdly because Babylons curse followeth it for Babylons sin Of this more was said Chap. 14. The third word is MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE EARTH which setteth out a superiority and precedency in this Rome in polluting the world actively with her pollutions and that the superstitious way of the rest of the world is derived from her she is as the mother and fountain that bringeth forth all superstitions 2. A sort of precedency and priority of a Mother-Church as she calleth her self she shall claim not only to be the first Church but to be over all as the rule and example to them And indeed in respect of the corrupt part of the Church as it is antichristian she is so It holdeth forth eminently high defection which must have its birth from Rome and over which Rome shall especially preside Which titles cannot agree to heathenish Rome that never propagated error to others but rather civilly and left still an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Laws and Religion to the Nations they conquered But they agree well to Rome now in its splendid titles as Peters Chaire the infallible Church that cannot err the Church that cannot be obscured or ruined Catholick supream Judge of all c. and so hath given the rise to all the idolatries and superstitions that have come into the Church from it and like a kindly mother hath alway taken the defence of these and fostered them as her own brood through all the world The last two properties of this whores description to wit the fourth and fifth we put together as holding out her practice whereby her inclination and guilt appeareth in these 1. An entising of others to that sin of fornication spiritually by that cup which she holdeth forth to them with her abominations that she may entise them with these vers 4. he alludeth to what is written of the filthiest whores to which he compareth this harlor 2. An humour and inclination to persecution vers 6. which is three wayes set out 1. In respect of the parties persecuted they are 1. Saints for alleaged crimes persecuted and wrongs falsly imputed to them 2. Martyrs such are not only Saints unjustly wronged but persecuted on the account of Christs Truth or for opposing her way and witnessing against it 2. This persecution is set forth by her contented manner of going about that work she thirsted for their bloud and drinketh it as with delight and satisfaction 3. In the degree it came to so much that she was drunk with bloud having thus drunk so much that she was loathsome under it senselesse of it and overflowing with the guilt of it as drunkards are with drink beyond measure How well this agreeth to Rome look Chap. 13. That by blasphemy is holden forth Idolatry and by whoredom defection to Idolatry appeareth also 1. It is one sort of blasphemy which is common to this seventh head with all the rest of the heads and theirs was Idolatry 2. By the common phrase of Scripture that when Israel is charged with whordom or breaking wedlock Ezek. 16. and blaspheming God Chap. 20.27 It is expounded in the verse following to be their Idolatry and whoring after Idol-worship on every high hill See Ezek. 23.7 and 30. LECTURE III. Vers. 6. And when I saw her I wondered with great admiration 7. And the Angel said unto me Wherefore didst thou marvell I will tell thee the mysterie of the woman and of the beast that carrieth her which hath the seven heads and ten horns 8. The beast that thou sawest was and is not and shall ascend out of the bottomlesse pit and go into perdition and they that dwell on the earth shall wonder whose names were not written in the book of life from the foundation of the world when they behold the beast that was and is not and yet is THe third part of the Chapter to wit the interpretation of the former vision followeth and before we come to it there is the occasion of it set down and the undertaking of the Angel vers 6 7. The occasion is the effect which that vision had on Iohn he wondered with great admiration This wondering is not as the world wondereth vers 8. which of such a one as Iohn was cannot be said but he wondered to see that beast and the woman so linked together and desidered in himself to know the meaning of it as the Angels words imply vers 7. a wondering what it might mean such a type of a beast he saw formerly Chap. 13. yet the exposition of some parts of the description is left till now that it might hence appear that the knowledge of this mysterie should not altogether but piece and piece be manifested and that the revealing of Antichrist is especially reserved to the last dayes of his begun ruine and therefore it is no marvell that many of the Fathers speak obscurely and wildely concerning him The Angel vers 7. propoundeth to clear four things 1. the woman 2. the beast that carrieth her 3. the seven heads 4. the ten horns which agree to
state that then was It may also mean an active perdition in respect of destroying others in which respect Chap. 9. he is called Apollyon and 2 Thess. 2. the son of perdition for this describeth him best in his nature and is like one who cometh from that fountain from which he hath his rise 3. He is described by the welcome he should have in the world when he arose or the effect he should have on the world They that dwell on the earth shall wonder whose names are not written in the Lambs book This setteth out the absolutenesse of his reception or the obedience that should be given him in four 1. in extent the whole world almost all the Roman Empire except some Elect ones by God keeped from that impurity as also Chap. 13. it is as broad as ever it was in any form before 2. There is the kind of subjection expressed by wondering a superstitious subjection to him as to some Deity and not meerly as to a civill Governour as in the former heads for such subjection many Elect children gave but this is an Idolatrous adoration such as Papists give to their Popes 3. It setteth out the degree of subjection this of admiration is more nor ordinary and is to be wholly at the beck and command of this beast under this consideration it is a superstitious devotednesse to him 4. There is the motive of all this it is willingly they admire him not by constraint of arms but by a mistaken devotion they of themselves give up and enslave themselves to him as is said of the Kings vers 13. they shall give their power to the beast and vers 17. they agree to do it They were now out of temporall subjection the Empire having become weak and they upon that had got their Kingdom yet this admiration had such influence on them as to make them universally yeeld to this beast upon this account more willingly than Armies had made them do to the former The exception put in a parenthesis whose names were not written in the book of life from the foundation of the world not only holdeth forth that compliance to be an exceeding sinfull defection even such as the Elect should not yea to the end cannot continue in it But 1. It sheweth there is a difference made by Jesus Christ of Elect and Reprobate as if by name they were written in distinct Books 2. It sheweth it is eternall and so without dependance on our free wills it is before the world 3. It sheweth that our standing and being keeped clean is a fruit of Election and not our Election a fruit of our foreseen faith or works It is they admire not because they are written in the Lambs book and not they are written because they admire not 4. It sheweth a suitablenesse in the end and midses these Elected to glory are brought to it by Holinesse Eph. 1.4 and Sanctification 2 Thess. 2. vers 13. in being keeped from such filthinesse as others fall in and which otherwise they would have fallen in and on the contrary they go to destruction falling in sins which are the causes of their damnation though not of their reprobation yet the decrees in respect of their ends are not without respect to these midses although not grounded on them 4. And lastly he is in this last consideration described by the ground of this admiration which pointeth at the state it agreeth unto This is proposed by way of ridle When they behold the beast that was and is not and yet is This is to be understood with respect to the time of the beasts actuall existing under the last consideration wherein he is admired and seen by the inhabitants of the earth and so not only was and is not as in the former part of the Verse when this state was to come but now it is so it differeth in the notion of timing it from what it was formerly and is thus to be understood They see now an Empire which being before that time was exceeding different from this 1. in form 2. in nature or kind ut supra the heads then were crowned Chap. 12. now the horns 2. It is not that is it is a Dominion but it is not the former which was it is spirituall and so admired 2. It lordeth and ruleth over ten Crowned Kings the former did over ten Legats Proconsuls or Governours of Provinces 3. It useth not arms directly but Excommunications Censures c. 4. It was openly heathenish and idolatrous now it is secret under pretext of Christs Vicar so that old forme is away For this beast may be two wayes conceived 1. in its generall complex consideration 2. more particularly in its heads and horns In the generall consideration he compareth the whole beast in its Ecclesiastick nature complexly with the whole beast considered as a temporall Empire considered also complexly as under any of its first six heads so this last beast which supporteth the whore upon an Ecclesiastick account is opposed to its civil consideration as a civill power which went before In this sense there are but two states of this beast one that was present and to passe when this last succeeded another to come But when he considereth again the beast more particularly in respect of its heads and horns and compareth the Governments among themselves vers 10 11. there are seven forms whereof five were past one present and one to come Hence it is that he calleth this Ecclesiastick state of this beast the eighth looking to its distinct nature from the former and also the seventh as it is upon the matter the same power continuing the Dominion of Rome in one series with the former forms even as the two beasts were distinguished Chap. 13. upon that diverse account though upon the matter one So this first was and is not is no contradiction for the beast i. e. the Empire then was yet was not this power come as the supporter of the whore but was to come in which respect he is looked upon as distinct from all the other heads The third step is and yet is that is though it now differ much from what it was yet it is really that same Dominion upon the matter by other spirituall weapons 1. ruling as amply as ever their predecessors did 2. having as full and absolute rule as ever it had See for this two sayings of Bellar. lib. 3. de Pontif. cap. 21. pag. 301. cited Chap. 13. 3. It ruleth as tyrannously as any of the former encroaching on others liberties till it bring them under and when it hath done that it exerciseth its power also cruelly especially against the Saints as vers 14. and Chap. 13. 4. It keepeth the former throne and seat though under another form it getteth the Dragons seat and Authority Chap. 13. and these people Nations and Languages and Kings that formerly had the former beast for their temporall lord they have Papacy for their spirituall 5. in respect
answer to the second if there shall then be any of Gods people de facto in Rome ● or quo jure may they be there till then Ans. In these Conclusions having distinguished Gods people 1. In elected regenerated and called and elected but un-called 1. Many un-called have been and may be in Rome yea even of it and these are called to separate for experience telleth us God hath called many who have been members of her and may do so still 2. Many of Gods called people have been in Rome locally but not of it and have continued long so in her bosome There are true worshippers in the Temple Chap. 11. even when the outter court is trod on by heathenish Papists then the Prophets prophesie even in the great city and God hath a Temple and Church even where Antichrist sitteth though His Congregation be not that Church even as the Lord had His Word Prophets and People at old Babylon captive when the face of Worship was overturned in Iudah so in this Babylon He keepeth still His Word Baptism as in the former He did Circumcision and a Ministery that was never lost but all the fourty two moneths of Antichrists reign the Prophets prophesie though in sackcloth Hence in all the Universall expressions of Antichrists dominion still they are excepted Chap. 13. and 17. whose names are written in the Book of life and Chap. 7. an hundred fourty and four thousand are sealed who Chap. 14. are found on mount Zion even before light in Luthers time brake forth And it may possibly be that some sinfully as some of the people in Babylon did have not made a secession from Rome and these parts though they have formerly separated from her communion or otherwayes by their callings as Obadiah was engaged with Ahab being intangled to live still This voice putteth them to it not to lodge a night in it for they know not when Gods judgement may seize upon it yet she is Babel and these in her are Gods people even then but now when the Gospel breaketh out and her judgement approacheth they are called not only to separate from her but to remove out of her and expect her judgement For the third the necessity or warrant of separating it is grounded on these 1. She is Babel and ye are My People and there is no communion between light and darknesse Christ and Antichrist this giveth the great ground she is but your oppressor Babylon not your Mother the Church 2. Ye cannot shun her sins if ye stay not only should ye own Me in separating your selves when ye are called which belongeth to the first ground that is to confesse with the mouth by profession as well as to believe with the heart but if ye stay ye are still in danger of snares yea sometimes in lesse or more are partaking of them as Ioseph did in swearing by Pharaoh's life at the Court of Egypt And by this it may also appear that many living in such places are engaged and ensnared in many things that at a greater distance they would be liberated of If any ask May not one abide in Rome now and not be a partaker of her sins more than before Answ. The hazard is greater now 1. They have a retiring place and a standard for Truth set up that they should now follow 2. They have Gods call and invitation to come out and though He was a Sanctuary to them in their wildernesse-state while the set time of their captivity lasted yet when He openeth the door that is not to be expected so confidently from Him 3. Babel groweth still more corrupt and never more than since Trent added to all her former abominations 4. Because Romes judgement hasteneth and though they keep themselves free of many of her sins yet they may share of her temporall wrath as Lot's family was in hazard had not the Lord removed it from Sodom A third reason of secession is the coming great plague so that God who had long spared was by judging her to make it appear He had forgotten nothing and now her sins being come to an height her judgment shall delay no longer and this presseth a locall secession Hence it followeth 1. That it is no schism to quit fellowship with Rome she being no wife to the Lamb is therefore no mother to His Children she giveth them poyson for sincere milk by corrupting the truth of the Gospel and not suffering them to feed upon the Truth She hath been condemning persecuting and destroying the true worshippers for many generations together and would have no fellowship with any without the beast's character therefore is there a necessity of separating as was said to the Witnesses Chap. 11. Come up hither and here Come out of her 2. It followeth also that folks not only may quit Rome but of duty they should do it in obedience to Christ's call and they would try their warrant that go there for curiosity seing here is a command to quit it Who are they that know what night or day this horrible judgement will be executed it were dreadfull curiosity to be found there then 3. It followeth that where God warranteth separation it is from a company that is no Church and must be supposed a Babel and therefore there is no separation allowed by Him from a true Church seing this is a proof of His disclaiming her to be a Church to command them to separate from her Therefore here is Babylon contradistinguished from His People who are called to come out of her which supposeth that He calleth none of His to separate from such as are His. It 's one thing to withdraw from civil conversing with particular wicked men another thing to separate from Gods Church for its defects There is therefore this observable in separating and withdrawing that we are to keep lesse fellowship in civill things with a Brother that is a Church member and is grosse than with one that is without and not a member as the Apostle writeth 2 Cor. 5.10 But we may and should on the other side keep Church-fellowship with a true Church though in many things faulty and corrupt whereas we may not at all with an idolatrous company in their worship Hence in that same Epistle to the Corinthians going to and eating in Idols temples or at their feasts was so much condemned yet communicating with the Church of Corinth or living as a member of it though corrupt both in doctrine and practice was never found fault-with as to worship for it is clear that that of not eating with an offending Brother looketh only to civil fellowship because it is such a fellowship that is condemned with them as is allowed to Heathens which certainly is such If our Churches therefore be Christs Churches as sometimes the favourers of separation grant There can be no separation from them without turning to a schism The second exhortation may be read by way of prophesie or because the former is by way
not they Beside this reigning agreeth to such as it can be interrupted in and be at one time and not at another which cannot be said of Martyrs glory which is alway alike Therefore cannot this be applyed to Martyrs in glory nor yet on earth in their own persons and therfore it must be in their successors Fourthly Neither can it be said as Forbes doth that this reign of Martyrs is in respect of their good account in the Church after their martyrdome in which respect some apply their receiving white garments under the fifth seal saying that they that were reproached before in their deaths are afterward honoured in their memories which they begin at Constantine's time when the publick profession of Religion became honourable This I say cannot be said as intended here for 1. This is not peculiar to a thousand years or definit time for in the Church that was alway honourable 2. Those who reign here are Saints on earth and all Saints and Martyrs under Antichrists tyranny which was not begun then this application maketh it peculiar to some 3. Beside Martyrs under Antichrist after that were as much liable to reproach as these formerly were under heathens and therefore that cannot be applyed here 4. Add that these who reign here are the same who afterward are encompassed and straitned by Gog and Magog But that cannot be the fame and good name of Saints departed but living Saints themselves in their persons Therefore it is not that which is intended here These being on the negative part then laid by we come to the affirmative and seing it must be living Saints who at the time here designed shall be members of the militant Church It is first questioned whether all the Saints then living are to partake of this good condition or some only that is if it be a special priviledge of Martyrs or sufferers only who shall suffer during this time Or if it be common to all Answ. This good condition whatever it be is in some degree and in its kind common to all the Saints who then shall be living not so much distributively to all and every one of every kind as generally to Saints of every kind as collectively making up one body of whatever sort and degree they be if they be Saints and Believers even as the low condition of the Churches suffering will not prove that every individual Saint suffereth but that in common the Church hath a suffering estate so it s good condition will not prove that all have it alike so but that generally they have a flourishing condition in common And that it is thus to be understood appeareth 1. In that these who live here c. are contradistinguished from the dead now all living Saints they must either thus reign or they must be comprehended under these who continue dead seing all the world is distinguished in these two But none of them can be amongst the dead Therefore all of them must partake of this good condition 2. It is for this end that not only Martyrs but such as have not received the mark of the beast nor worshipped his image are mentioned and by these no other can be understood but such as in following the Lamb have keeped themselves free as virgins Chap. 14 from the common snares and sins that others are taken with and given unto Hence Chap. 13. these are given as the properties only of those who are written in the Lambs book of life and so mentioned here as the properties of all the elect Saints to whom this belongeth 3. The priviledges here mentioned are common to all as to reign with Christ to be blessed and holy freed from the second death to be Priests to God c. These are common to all Saints Therefore so is that good condition also that hath these in it From which we may see how unwarrantable it is from this to apply any singular felicity to some few Martyrs or others which is common to all The second thing to be enquired in the positive is Whether these living Saints that are raised to reign be the same individual persons that did suffer and so now reign for a thousand years Or if it be to be understood of the Saints in their succession as the Catholick Church in its continuance from the begining unto the end This will answer an objection where it is said That those who were set on the thrones were those formerly beheaded for the testimony of Jesus Now those beheaded we say are not in their own persons raised again and set on the throne but in their successors in the same faith and profession the generation preceeding reigning in the generation succeeding as the generation succeeding suffered in the generation preceeding even as in common speech we say The Babylonians Romans c. governed the world for so many years though the same individual persons lived not so long Or as it is said in Dan. 7.18 the Saints shall take the kingdom which shall never have an end importeth not that in the dayes of the Gospel of which time that speaketh no Saints shall die but that the Saints spiritual reign shall never be interrupted and that there shall be a continual succession of a Church and of Saints so here we take not the same individuals to continue but their race as one kind or stock to speak so the Church being one body as the Babylonians Romans c. are one Empire Saints therefore here are not personally or individually to be understood but successively and in their general acception as one body so that during this time they shall have a visible profession and there shall alway continue a visible Church-state in the world So it is neither therefore Martyrs raised again nor Saints living still all that time but generally in their successors This being the scope to shew the estate of the Church in general and not of individual Saints This may be confirmed 1. from what is said If they be the same then Martyrs dead must live again this being a good condition to the Church on earth and this is contrary to what hath been proven 2. Then these Saints so raised again must only be the Saints on earth at that time for all partake of this 3. Then these Saints must again in their own persons be encompassed by Gog and Magog for it is these Saints that are encompassed who did reign vers 9. and therefore so must they that reign be expounded to be the former sufferers as they are accounted afterward the besieged But that cannot be personally understood Therefore neither the former for then were they not to continue only a thousand years on earth and to live so long only but much longer both which have many absurdities with them as that whoever died during that time would be known not to be an Elect and whoever lived that long would be certainly known to be so then also these who were born after the beginning of these
end there being but one Election or book written concerning the end life and all midses leading thereto as Redemption and the executing of that Covenant Psal. 40.7 as Repentance Faith c. which book containeth Gods purpose and the severall means and steps whereby He hath made it effectuall Again these are compared to a book 1. for exactnesse there is no change or misse can be here all is on record 2. To shew Christs faithfulnesse in His Trust who got the Elect to save Ioh. 6.40 and now produceth them all by name 3. It is produced to shew the rise of the Elects Salvation and what put the difference between them and others and from whom all their Salvation dependeth it is nothing in them but in Gods Electing grace This book is also opened 1. because now it is known to all who are Elect and who not and never till now and therefore ought it never to be enquired into as to others it being never opened till then 2. Because then Gods good reason of proceeding in this soveraign work of Election in having mercy on whom He will which till this time hath been and shall be a mystery shall then satisfyingly be clear why He choosed so many and no moe why such and not others this man living in such a time and not this at another time Here reason cannot see Therefore faith and fear would submit and forbear searching in some of these things seeking rather to have the priviledges and qualifications of these here inrolled and waiting for satisfaction unto many questions at this day when we shall see Him as He is It is an other book different from the former books which are common to the Reprobates this is peculiar to the Elect that of justice and judgement this of soveraign grace If any ask why the book of life is produced here and not Gods decree of Reprobation also Answ. Condemnation is an act of Justice God condemneth but according to and for their works Therefore there is no need of that decree For He judgeth impenitent sinners But absolution is an act of grace not going on our deservings Therefore there is need of this rule or book to proceed by as distinct from our deservings Beside now God will have Reprobates acknowledging justice and none shall blame Him for their condemnation or Reprobation when their own guilt and Gods decree shall be manifested together what ever man cavill now no weight is laid on that decree in this sentence as a cause of it but upon their own sins On the contrary He shall have all the Redeemed knowing that the weight of all their salvation lieth on His grace and in His purpose before any thing was done by them Now both these being cleared 1. what men did 2. who amongst men are appointed to life the third thing to wit the sentence that is passed on these dead followeth They were judged that is received their last doom But because it is a day of justice and sundry sorts both sheep and goats are judged Therefore there is not one sentence to all but two qualifications of the sentence are added 1. They were judged out of those things that were written in the Books who wanted the written Law have the Law of nature in their hearts for a Law Rom. 2.12 who lived under it are judged by it who heareth the Gospel are judged according to it mens receipts come in to this reckoning In short it is Those written in the Book of life are entred in possession of it according to the Word Come ye blessed inherit the Kingdom prepared for you Mat. 25. Others are charged with their guilt and have this sentence Depart from me c. The second qualification sheweth the justice thereof more that is according to their works not for their works Works here are to the Elect the rule not the cause of proceeding and it importeth these things 1. generally that there shall be justice in the sentence or rather it shall be a just sentence not passed on any by guesse or contrary to their deservings but justly shall it be past by a vindicative justice on the reprobate wicked and by a faithfull righteous sentence of grace on the godly elect Which is also just 1. because Christ hath payed for them their debt is discharged by the cautioner 2. Because God hath promised and engaged to pardon them in that book of redemption or life and now He performeth and keepeth it Hence it is said God the righteous Iudge will give the Crown at this day 2 Tim. 4.8 2. It is suitable to folks works He doth in that day good to these who are good and to the froward and wicked he pronounceth evil as it is cleared Rom. 2.6 7 8 9. when it is said He shall give to every one according to their works it is then thus distributed Thus justice hath our works not as the ground or cause of it but as the evidences whereby the Elect are differenced from others 3. It is proportionable that is to say not only glory to those that do well but to those that abound in well-doing great glory and so it is not wrath only to the soul that doth much ill but great wrath Therefore it is said Gal. 6. he that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly for as a man soweth so he shall reap not only as to the kind corruption from the flesh or life from the Spirit but even as to the degree lesse or more according to their sowing as in the parables of talents and pounds is clear Matth. 25. and Luke 19.4 It importeth a necessary connexion betwixt good works and glory for without holinesse none shall see the face of God What is meaned by according Christ holdeth it out Mat. 25.29 in that necessary connexion that he that hath shall get more but not because he hath but in order certainly it followeth contra yet it is freely given If any retort that according to works in the wicked importeth merit Therefore so also in the Godly I say it importeth not of it self merit to say according to works as appeareth by the like phrases according to your faith be it unto you and in distributing the talents Mat. 25.15 He gave according to their several abilities Their abilities may imply fitnesse in them and proportionablenesse in distributing of them yet none can say according 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 implyeth merit in these places and that it can import no merit properly taken here though there be justice in the sentence and it be just yet our works are not the ground of it appeareth 1. because grace and the book of life is here mentioned as the ground of proceeding in reference to the Elect. Now if in as strict justice their works deserved life as the wicked deserve death there were no need of mentioning this Book so oft Yea 2. If according to works were to be taken strictly then it were inconsistent with this Book which maketh all to be of
grace and of a like nature with its rise even as it is grace here grace and works are opposed if of grace then not of works yea according to works so understood as causal is opposed to this purpose of God or His election as 2 Tim. 1.8 who hath saved and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to His purpose and grace in Christ Iesus Where 1. he joyneth saving which taketh in all and Gods purpose together and maketh the one grace as the other is 2. In both he opposeth works to grace which cannot be understood simply but as they look to merit otherwise both take-in works and what reason can there be given here why this Book is so often mentioned in this judgement but to shew that this last step of salvation is of the same nature with the first which certainly as to election can be called no other than of grace 3. Consider that when Christ speaketh more fully to this sentence Matth. 25. He mentioneth some works as visiting clothing c. which certainly as to the condignity of merit can have no proportionablenesse to heaven and glory And if any say he so accounteth them though they be not worthy Answ. 1. Then that is improperly merit whereas the other properly deserveth hell Therefore the expression is not alike on both sides 2. Then it followeth it is grace that maketh the sentence passe on them and not strict justice as on the other 4. Consider here that all small and great are judged infants possibly never breathing out of their mothers belly and can any say that such cannot be written in the Lamb's book of life or that they have done any thing to deserve this last absolving sentence It must therefore not be understood to infer merit to them To say by Baptism their sin is taken away Answ. 1. That is contrary to Graces way and the nature of Gods Covenant to Believers and their seed baptized or not for it condemneth all unbaptized or the argument will hold in them 2. In Baptism children are passive it is not their deed if childrens Baptism deserve any thing it must be here accounted on their score who performed it not on the childrens who must be judged according to their own works and not to the works either of Parent or Minister yet if it be considered that the judgement passeth according to the Book of life there is clear ground to lay it on grace and not on themselves or others and the rule is one to all the Elect. 5. Consider that these works and books take-in all the Elect many of whom have many sinfull actions and few good and even those few are much corrupted and imperfect Now it must either be said 1. that no Elect cometh here to be judged but he hath more good at least to deserve heaven than evil to deserve hell which will seem hard to be said of profane men converted possibly an hour before death or we must say there are different rules to proceed by in judging the Elect some by grace and some by works which is contrary to the text that maketh one rule for all and certainly any that is well versed in these books will see no cause to plead thus and all others shall see it when these books shall be opened It is the ignorance of these that maketh men so plead So this according then importeth a suitablenesse and connexion as is said but no merit Inst. But it is deserving to the wicked therefore to the righteous Answ. 1. This word here may import no deserving that being as to the wicked elsewhere clear but a connexion with and suitablenesse of one of these to the other to wit wicked living and impenitent dying with damnation This is enough to vindicate justice that he thus proceedeth 2. Although it do imply merit in them yet it will not follow that it doth so in the Elect not only for the former reasons but 1. because the sins of wicked men are perfectly sins the good actions of the Godly are not so 2. Because with the one God proccedeth according to the Covenant of works punishing for want of perfect holinesse aggravated also in some by their unbelief who heard the Gospel but God proceedeth not by that Covenant with the Elect but by the book of like that hath the Covenant of grace depending on it 3. Because any sin deserveth wrath even the least being a transgression of the Law but many good works will not deserve heaven because they are debts and cannot plead the performance of that Covenant except they be alwayes and in every thing perfect for life dependeth not on living well this year or two years or for this good work or that but on a perfect righteousnesse which is marred by one sin even original sin though there be never more for bonum non est nisi ex omnibus malum ab unoquoque defectu If any ask why works are mentioned here and not faith Answ. 1. Faith and repentance are certainly included not as works deserving but as fruits of the Spirit in the Regenerate and the want of them is sinfull in the reprobate who heard and believed not And certainly according to this they who heard are more severely judged and therefore works here must be understood generally as it setteth out ones condition good or evil according to which the judgement proceedeth especially as they believed or not 2. Faith is not expressly mentioned because it is implyed in Gods purpose of grace under the book of life which taketh-in faith as a midse that it may be of grace Rom. 4.16 3. Because it is not justification from sin before God that is here recorded that is past but the manifestation of that before men and it is one thing to justifie before God and another to save one that is justified and declare them to be so and works contribute most directly to this 4. Works are especially mentioned in opposition to the wicked who are condemned for their sins and want of good works this stoppeth their mouth and sheweth the justice of the difference even before men yet upon the matter Chap. 21.8 unbelieving is reckoned to the wicked even as murder and adultery is and so among the works of the Elect must be comprehended their fleeing to Christ by faith whereby merit is overturned Vers. 13. By clearing an objection he openeth further what was said which may be many are rotten in the grave called here hell are drowned in the sea eaten with fishes c. under which are comprehended all desperate-like deaths as burning sowing in ashes rotten heaps of dead bodies together it may be said how can these dead be said to be raised and judged It is shown that even these same bodies by Gods power are judged with these that live in the flesh by which that which looketh most impossible●like is brought about even as if willingly the sea and the grave had given up these
which from God they had only in keeping till this day By hell here may be understood as ordinarily the grave there being one word for both in the Originall or these bodies if any be that are in hell such as Korah Dathan and Abiram and others But generally this is sure that by these places sea ●●ll and death are meaned all places where dead bodies are ordinarily buried or extraordinarily crushed and destroyed they shall all compear wherever they be They are said to give up their dead that is not by any faculty in these creatures but it is easily speedily and simply as if in boxes they had been keeped all distinct and now they lay them out which is done by Gods power as He made the fish only by a word cast out Ionah on the dry land whole It is called their dead or the dead which was in them to shew 1. an account as it were every one maketh of their dead as if they were answerable for them ● it is so accurate none is missed or keeped back 2. To shew it is the same dead that are judged and in the same bodies that died and were buried or perished It is as Iob saith Chap. 19. he and none other for him So it is they and none other for them the same body as it is the same soul compearteh to get judgment according as they did in the flesh it being suitable that the same body should share with the soul in its eternall condition Here is a wonder a thousand bodies are rotten together possibly men feeding on others and living on others dead bodies yet now all are put to their own masters none are wrong marrowed in the least pickle of dust It is added and they were judged this sheweth that this resurrection goeth before their sentencing and that as every one arose and none were missed so every one is judged and none misseth a just sentence there is one rule as there is one judgement for sin taketh impenitent sinners to hell and none but the holy though not for their holinesse are admitted to life Concerning this judgement I would only add 1. That it is not unlike that as our Lord the Judge shall visibly as man appear so shall He vocally and audibly pronounce the sentence to the hearing of all at least as to the main of the sentence Come ye and depart ye c. This the Scripture seemeth to speak and it is not inconsistent with the order of proceeding and the intimating publickly of the sentence before men and Angels agreeing to that day but very suitable to it I say as to the generall sentence on the body of the Elect and of the wicked respectively And therefore secondly it is not necessary to astrict this judgment to such a long time as some do as if every ones account and particular sentence were distinctly and successively to be handled He saith at once to these on His right hand and again one sentence to these on His left together Matth. 25. Particulars indeed are manifested which are the grounds of every ones sentence but that may be done at an instant by our blessed Lord Jesus by opening the books much more than the devil could at the twinkling of an eye Matth. 4. and Luk. 4. shew Christ the world and the glory of it The execution of this dreadfull sentence followeth in the last two verses as it concerneth the wicked 1. Consider the parties condemned Then secondly the judgment or death they are adjudged unto The parties sentenced are ver 14. death and hell that is the last enemies of Christ who are to be subdued and now generally all His enemies as may be gathered from 1 Corinth 15.16 they are all in hell now none in heaven the earth is removed and death and the grave have no power on the Elect Therefore there is no service for them in time which now is gone the wicked are in hell and death goeth with them as having no more to do here By this then death and hell were cast in the lake is not meant any proper judgment on death and hell or the grave but it holdeth out first that now all effects of sin and of the curse as to the godly are removed and now all these go together to the pit with the Reprobate and the company of the now-glorified Elect is fully freed from them all as Chap. 22. vers 3. which relateth to this Secondly That Christs victory is compleated when death and the grave that are amongst the last enemies are subdued and have accesse no longer to trouble or detain any of His people being now confined within the lake signifying thereby both the absolute freedom of the Elect from them and the full dominion to say so which they shall have over the Reprobate 2. All who are not written in the Lambs Book of life they are casten in this lake all that are not elected In a word all the Reprobate all that are not pardoned through Christ and by grace not exempted from the deserving of their works whether great or small rich or poor noble or ignoble old or young more civil or prophane c. The sentence is seen and may be known in the excution They are cast into the lake wherein the devil was cast ver 10. This is expounded to be the second death that proveth this to be the general judgement when all the reprobates put together are sent thither In a word all these share with the devill and his angles in hells fire where we may again see 1. that the book of life or way of grace is that only which keepeth the Elect from this damnation Yet 2. that others get no wrong for they deserved it only God pardoned them not which He was not obliged to do 3. That there is a good agreeance and connexion between election and holinesse therefore they are judged according to their works and none can say let me live as I will If I be elected I will be saved God putteth Works and this Book together as the rule 1. To stop their mouths that perish and to vindicate even His election in its execution from respect of persons 2. To shew that it is yet Grace that saveth let not therefore these two be separated LECTURE I. CHAP. XXI Vers. 1. ANd I saw a new heaven and a new earth for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away and there was no more sea THe last sentence being past in the former Chapter and the execution of it as to the wicked and reprobate shortly pointed at Followeth now the execution of the sentence as to the Elect in this Chapter and Chap. 22. In the lake were casten all not written in the book of life unto this holy City are admitted none but such as are written in it whereby it appeareth that they are two estates and conditions that are opposed eternall life to eternall death of two opposit parties the one including all the reprobate
not written the other taking-in all these who are written in the book of life and no other And so this is to be looked on as the continuance of the former narration concerning the execution of the last sentence which he now prosecuteth as to the Elects happinesse whereof nothing was spoken in the preceeding Chapter This happinesse is set out first more generally in some antecedent circumstances concerning it to vers 9. Then secondly more particularly by vision the new Ierusalem is manifested to Iohn in a full view to vers 6. of Chap. 22. Then thirdly by word the Angel addeth some explication to Iohn till ver 16. where Jesus cometh-in Himself which continueth till the close Whether this vision belongeth to the Church militant or triumphant is disputed by many and by some sober and learned Interpreters is applied to the Church militant Some making it to hold out a state of the Church contemporary with the seventh trumpet and the thousand years Others making it belong to the state of the Church after the vials when the fulnesse of the Gentiles and Iews shall become worshippers of our Lord Jesus and so to them the former description of the day of Judgement is but by anticipation set down and here Iohn returneth again to point out the militant Church in her most glorious posture It will be needfull therefore to confirm this order and series laid down for clearing of the scope of these Chapters 1. Then the debate here is not simply if a more flourishing estate of the militant Church be prophesied of in this book for on Chap. 16.19 and 20. we have seen much of that to be spoken of but only whether this vision doth further explicate these former prophesies or prosecute the description of the triumphant Church after them We acknowledge many expressions here to be borrowed from the Prophets by which in some holy hyperbolick manner they did set out the spirituall estate of the Church in the dayes of the Gospel 3. We grant that the same expressions in themselves may in part be applied to the gracious estate of Gods Church here and her glorious estate hereafter yet this we assert that what is intended by the Spirit here as the scope of this vision is principally and chiefly if not only to be applied to the state of the Elect after the general Judgement and can be properly applied to no state of the Church militant which we do thus clear and confirm 1. From the native series and order laid down if the judgement preceeding be generall to Reprobate and Elect and the sentence in its execution be set down in reference to the Reprobate before Then it will follow that natively the scope of this vision is to set out the good condition of the Elect in opposition to the former the execution of the Reprobates sentence is first set down because more shortly the wickeds condition is past by and the good condition of the Elect is more fully insisted on as making most for their consolation And though the matter and order of words do not alway agree in this prophesie yet certainly it were unwarrantably rejected where it suiteth well with the scope as here when natively a good condition is set down opposit to the evil condition going before and that orderly to supply what was formerly wanting to wit what became of these that were written in the Lambs book of life while all others are cast into the lake This Chapter supplieth that shewing that they entered into an excellent Ierusalem out of which ver 27. all others were excluded which sheweth clearly that the scope here is to continue that part of the execution of the sentence as to the Elect which was until now defective Beside it is not like that the spirit would insist so much in shewing what came of the Reprobate and what effect the sentence had on them and would nowhere shew what effect the sentence or book of life had on the Elect which is nowhere else in this prophesie if not here And this would not suit with the scope of this prophesie to neglect a thing of so much consolation and concernment unto the Church at all times as this of the eternall good condition of all the Elect which is the happy result of all their former wrestlings This argument from the series and acoluthia of the prophesie will bind the more strongly If we consider that there will hardly be found any such hysterosis or hysterologia in one and the same explicatory prophesie such as this is for though an explicatory prophesie may go back over events contained in a principall prophesie yet that in one and the same explicatory prophesie there is such retrogessing over one event to set down some other wholly antecedaneous to it and having no connexion with any thing successive unto it as this would be if it did belong to a state of the Church before the finall sentencing of the wicked mentioned in the close of the former Chapter will not be easily found 2. If it were any such good condition of the Church militant it behoved to be either before the thousand years which none asserteth or after it and so after the seventh vial which is impossible because that bringeth the end with it or it must be contemporary with it which cannot be for 1. that thousand years good condition is not absolute Satan is bound but not cast in the lake and that for a time only Gog and Magog are afterward loosed but here Satan is laid fast in his prison and death and the curse are no more among any of this company 2. Their reign here is not for a thousand years or a long time but un-interrupted for ever Chap. 22.5 And certainly by these and the like expressions it is contradistinguished from the best and longest peace that the Church at any time hath had on the earth and particularly from that of the thousand years Again that reign of the thousand years followeth but the first resurrection this followeth the second that is particular this is general Add that good condition of the thousand years was applicable only to Saints of that time as there was cleared but this agreeth to all the Elect living in whatsoever time and none are secluded from it but such as are not written in the Lambs Book of life 3. This new earth spoken of here vers 1. is certainly in opposition to the former mentioned Chap. 20.11 which passed away but that passing or fleeing away of heaven and earth being antecedent and preparatory unto the last judgment it must certainly be the last consummation of all things and so this new heaven and earth and this Ierusalem that contemporateth with it which succeed and are opposed to the former earth and heaven must be after the day of judgment and therefore inconsistent with any estate of the Church militant 4. This new Ierusalem coming down from heaven is the same spoken of Chap. 3.12 in the
promise made to Philadelphia but that is heaven Therefore it is so here And that all these promises in the Epistles Chap. 2. and 3. do look to eternity the scope which is to provoke wrestlers to overcome at all times maketh it clear and none will think that that can be any peculiar condition belonging to a particular state and time of the Church here which all overcomers have ever partaked of at all times It must then be heaven 5. That which is spoken of this holy city will not in sundry things agree to the Church on earth as particularly 1. that there was no Temple there ver 22. Now by Temple here is understood conform to this prophesie one of two 1. either some midse or ordinance leading to Christ which was typified by the old Temple and so the Church militant though called sometimes heaven yet never wanteth a Temple and under the seventh trumpet particularly Chap. 11. verse last it is marked that then the Temple was opened in heaven and light and Religion in the Ordinances flourished and that seventh trumpet is contemporary with the thousand years as all acknowledge Or 2. by Temple is understood heaven it self improperly as Chap. 3.12 I will make him a pillar in the Temple of my God c. because the Temple held out more eminent and glorious enjoying of God in which respect ver 22. God and the Lamb are called the Temple here because by immediate enjoying of them all Ordinances are supplied and the use of them and all light Chap. 22.5 is taken away Now by Temple here is not understood any excellency of immediate enjoying of God for that is in this city It must be therefore understood of mediate means such as the Temple was the taking away whereof is a part of the perfection of that blessed state whereas the enjoying of these Ordinances fully is a part of the Churches happiest condition here on earth seing therefore this city hath no Ordinances and it is a part of its perfection to want them It can be applicable to no state of the Church militant but only triumphant wherein the Churches happinesse exceedeth her happiest condition on earth more than the opening of the Temple exceeded its shutting and it is set forth in this expression to shew that this is not that state of the Church mentioned Chap. 11.15 but one succeeding to and exceeding it as it did what was before it Again These who plead for Christs personall presence during the thousand years on earth do argue the same consequent from this place and say that Ordinances cease then for what need is there of a glasse to behold Christ when Himself is present so Tylli●gast c. Ans. 1. This argument will indeed conclude against these who disclaim that opinion in that part But 2. even this place will conclude against that presence also for here not only is there an immediate enjoying of Christ the Lamb but of the Lord God Almighty also ver 22. and Chap. 22. ver 4. they see His face and in Scripture there is no immediate enjoying of God spoken of but as in heaven vision being the form of our blessednesse in our Countrey Hence this is a second instance that this cannot agree to the Church on earth but in heaven thus Immediate enjoying of God belongeth not to the Church on earth but in heaven But the Church in this new Ierusalem hath that ut supra Ergo 3. If we consider also the parties admitted to this city we will find that it will agree to no state of the Church on earth they are Elect and only Elect vers 27. and this must be understood of Elect not only who are so in appearance but who are such indeed ex veri●ate rei for they are here so written who are admitted as they were not written who were mentioned Chap. 20. ult and are not admitted the writing of the one being directly opposed to the not writing of the other but there they mentioned who were casten in the lake are not only these who seemed or outwardly appeared not to be written but these who really were not written whatever shew they had for they were cast in the lake The difference betwixt them is not put here in shew but in reality and verity of deed Beside where is writing in the Lambs book taken in this prophesie or in the Scripture for appearing to be so for so one might be said to be written in the Lambs book of life and yet cast into the lake of fire and so not to be written into it at the same time which were absurd But we shall weigh this argument more on the words 6. If all without this city or if to be without it be all one as to be in the lake Then this must be heaven or the Saints eternall happinesse opposed to the eternall misery of the wicked But all without this city are in hell and to be without it and in hell are one The first is clear the city mentioned wherein all mens happinesse consisteth Chap. 22.14 15. is this city described here that hath such excellent gates and the tree of Life growing in it See ibid. ver 3. But to be without this is hell compare ver 15. Chap. 22. dogs c. are without and not thus happy what that condition of these dogs and sorcerers is is set down Chap. 21. vers 8. It is to be cast into the lake that is the second death This then must be eternal life which the Elect are admitted unto that being the life only which is opposed to the second death 7. Add to be a partaker of this City and to eat of the fruit of the tree of life that groweth in the Paradise of God is a priviledge promised to all Believers and is performed to all overcomers at all times as Chap. 22. compare ver 2. with 14. 1. He is blessed that cometh to this happinesse 2. It is they that do His commandments So it is a happinesse that followeth holinesse and by holinesse men come to enter to it 3. Beside this to eat of the tree of life is promised to all that ever shall come to heaven See Chap. 2. vers 7. and all the scope here See Chap. 21. ver 7. and 22. ver 12 14 15. holdeth forth the last good condition and great encouragement and promise which is made to all wrestlers which certainly sheweth that heaven is intended here that being only the last great and common encouragement for if this set out the estate of the militant Church it must either set out what is alway common to her at all times as such this none will assert or it must describe some peculiar condition applicable to some time only but that is not either for if it were so then the priviledges spoken of this state of the Church could not be applied at all times to Believers but they are applied at all times to Believers under any crosse for their encouragement
her husband 3. And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying Behold the tabernacle of God is with men and he will dwell with them and they shall be his people and God himself shall be with them and be their God 4. And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes and there shall be no more death neither sorrow nor crying neither shall there be any more pain for the former things are passed away 5. And he that sat upon the throne said Behold I make all things new And he said unto me Write for these words are true and faith●ull 6. And he said unto me It is done I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely 7. He that overcometh shall inherit all things and I will be his God and he shall be my son 8. But the fearfull and unbelieving and the abominable and murderers and wh●remongers and sorcerers and idolaters and all liars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death THis is the first thing Iohn saw as an antecedent to the discourse following of the glory of the Elect for if all the earth be new and glorious much more they Now followeth more particularly the change that is made on the Church of the Elect when they are gathered together and the world now is new and another thing than it was so is the glorified Church new and an other thing as to her qualities and glory than before After I had seen the new earth saith he I saw also the new Church exceeding beautifull no city no Bride so adorned on her marriage-day as she is she is so glorious when He getteth but a little view of her Concerning the glorious description we would premit 1. That it is almost all one whomsoever or whatsoever we understand as the party described 1. Whether it be heaven the place of blessednesse or 2. the glorified Elect who are blessed and adorned in this place or 3. the happinesse and blessedness of the enjoyment of God by these elect Saints in this place of glory Certainly none of these can be excluded this being clearly the scope to shew the good condition of all those who are written in the Lambs Book of life opposit to the misery of those who are not written all must be taken in both who are thus adorned where and with what they are made thus happy We shall not therefore be curious to distinguish them the scope being to shew that the Elect are in a most happy condition 2. That this happinesse is figuratively set out two wayes 1. By such things as are most precious unto men and of greatest value as of gold precious stones and excellent building a bride c. though the things themselves infinitly exceed any thing they can be represented by 2. By these things that are most precious even to the people of God as the tabernacle outward ordinances Gods presence with them c. which being to them of more worth than the former do serve notably to illustrate and to commend this happinesse unto them 3. That the manner also is figurative holding forth these things in such a manner and by such expressions as may make them most intelligible unto men who here are strangers to these mysteries and therefore we are to conceive of the expressions as they conduce to this scope 4. Hence it is not needfull to enquire in every particular part of the allegory or similitude as if it did set forth some different thing it is enough they all concur to set out one generall to wit the excellency of this good condition therefore are we not to understand one thing by this stone another thing by that one thing by the City another thing by the Bride though in a good sense it may be it is enough that they together shew that it is glorious so that this city cometh down from heaven that it hath twelve gates and that the tree of life hath twelve manner of fruits c. They are but expressions accommodated to our uptaking of them and so discovered to Iohn in the vision that they may be known to be more than a common city tree c. that are here They are heavenly even as the taking of Iohn to a great high mountain ver 10. is set down to make our the coherence of the allegory It is marked that the City came down and he was taken up whereby the more conveniently he might see it which yet is not locally done but in vision Particularly there is here a City 1. named 2. described 3. commended Iohn putteth to his name here I Iohn saw it to confirm it by such a witnesse whose testimony is true Ioh. 21. and to make it passe with credit he feigned it not but saw it in vision though far short of the thing it self 1. The City is named the new Ierusalem That by Ierusalem is signified the Church is clear in Scripture for the special priviledges Ierusalem had in her There is a threefold Ierusalem in the Scripture 1. Legall Ierusalem which long since in destroyed and as to its ceremonies is in bondage Gal. 4. 2. A Ierusalem that now in i.e. the Gospel-church called the mother of us all Gal. 4. 3. It is taken for the heavenly Ierusalem or the glorified triumphant Church where God immediately dwe●●et● with His people whereof that earthly Ierusalem was but a type Heb. 12 22. so we understand Ierusalem there as including heaven where Angels and just men made perfect are and the Church militant as it is the first step to this and by which we have right to it through the Covenant of Grace in the Church It taketh in the Elect glorified and militant for there is but one family Eph. 3.15 This is called Ierusalem 1. Because typified by the first Ierusalem 2. Because it is the same Church glorified that was before even as it is the same world now which shall be then Only it is called new Ierusalem not only to distinguish it from the Jewish Ierusalem but even from the evangelick which is called the holy City before Chap. 11. but not the new City It is new Ierusalem as the earth is new in the words before that is fully freed from all corruption and by its qualifications another thing than it was though as to the persons the same yet now perfectly glorified and glorious another sort of Church then nor now though the same Church yet now presented without spot or wrinkle or any such thing Eph. 5.27 The second part is its description It is said to be coming down from heaven This supponeth no locall mutation of the place described but the excellent nature and quality of it whether place or person that such a City was never on the earth it was a thing that was of a heavenly original therefore Heb. 12.22 called heavenly ● for
of them which are saved shall walk in the light of it and the kings of the earth do bring their glory and honour into it 25. And the gates of it shall not be shut at all by day for there shall be no night there 26. And they shall bring the glory and honour of the nations into it 27. And there shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth neither whatsoever worketh abomination or maketh a lie but they which are written in the Lambs book of life WE have heard the more general description of the Saints eternal happinesse Followeth to vers 6. of Chap. 22. a particular description thereof to Iohn by vision Wherein 1. some preparatory circumstances are mentioned Then 2. in it self it is described to vers 21. Then 3. some aggravations or commendations of that happinesse whereby it is illustrated are set down The first preparatory circumstance is That one of the Angels came to Iohn whereby the instrument revealing is set down It is like that same mentioned Chap. 17.1 yet it followeth not from this as was said that therefore it belongeth to the militant Church for an Angel generally is made use of to shew this revelation to Iohn Chap. 1. and Chap. 22.6 and so the revealing of this part of it will but agree to that mediate manner of Christs revealing to Iohn the state of the triumphant as of the militant Church but no more And if it be the last of the Angels of the vials it will but shew that this glorified state of the Church doth succeed that whereunto that last vial did make way The Angel cometh it is like by Gods immediate speaking there hath been some diversion in the former words or otherwise The second circumstance is ver 9. to wit his call to Iohn to come see the Bride as he had made him see the whore Chap. 17. Come hither I will shew thee the bride the Lambs wife Here Bride Sponsa and Wife Vxor are put together ● she being now brought as Queen together to the King Psal. 45. whereas Chap. 19. ●he was but Bride and though the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both there and here be rendred Wise yet here being contra-distinguished from Bride it necessarily is interpreted so where●● there Chap. 19. it is spoken of as a marriage to be but solemnized Iohn saw a glance vers 2. but here more particularly he is called to it to shew that heaven and happinesse are not seen at a short view and that men would dwell on the sight of them That she is the Lambs wife is not the least part of her commendation when all the Elect are gathered th●● is the Queen Psal. 45. and the Church Ioh. 3.29 Eph. 5. ●9 which really is so for it is more improperly that visible Churches are called His Bride seing that the marriage is founded on an invisible relation and tye of union with Christ. The third circumstance is the manner how Iohn saw He carried me in the Spirit whereof we heard Chap. ● 17 It is not really but in ecstasie 4. The place where he saw is on an high mountain borrowed from this that men see more and further there than in valleys but in vision it is not so It sheweth only this that there needeth an ascending and that in the Spirit before heaven can well be discerned or conceived A fifth is that generally he shewed him the great City the holy Ierusalem descending out of heaven from God There is some difference made between a city and a town urbs a town looketh especially to the walls buildings or habitations civitas respecteth the indwellers and their priviledges in a common way we take in both here The town for that particular description to ver 22. agreeth well to this the inhabitants also for by beholding this town or city Iohn seeth the Bride the Lambs wife who are the inhabitants and that both are comprehended the one as the place and the other as these that dwell in it it is clear from ver 27. where they are distinguished as also ver 14. Chap. 22. where the Elect are distinguished from the City wherein they enter and also from the happinesse they enjoy in it when entered Neither is that inconsistent that one ty●● should have a twofold or composed meaning especially tending to one scope as Chap. 17. the seven heads signifie both Hills and Kings This is a great City for 1. it hath many inhabitants and a large circuit all the first born are in it 2. For dignity it is the City of the great King Again it is called the holy Ierusalem as different from what it was before its gloriousnesse and greatnesse is much in holinesse It s descending is spoken of before its like that in vision it was represented as descending for Paul was taken up to see it 2 Corinth 12. it is letten down to Iohn It is clear from the following words ver 11 having the glory of God I take it for a generall commendation before he enter on particulars that is it had most excellent glory even glory whereof God is the author He having prepared this glory for His Bride and provided this adorning for her by which the reason appeareth wherefore it is said to come down from Him In the particular description we conceive it not so edifying to speak of the nature and properties of these stones or of the number of twelve used for and spoken of the gates foundations and fruits of the tree Chap. 22. neither can we reach any thing solid or certain from these mysteriously considered we take the scope to aim together to set out the glory of the Elect in heaven which under figurative tearms is set out from many things because no one thing doth reach the scope and not as if one thing were understood by this stone another by that but all together shew that it is most glorious and rich as if made up of the most costly rare stones and that in the greatest abundance This happinesse agreeing to this heavenly City is set out several wayes with all these things in an eminent measure and manner whereby men account a city adorned as 1. for light which is not that which enlighteneth her or whereby possibly she is enlightened for that is not the Sun but God c. as afterward appeareth but her shining actively whereby she holdeth forth light as Matth. 5. Let your light shine c. her splendor and beauty and the glance of her glory often compared to light and agreeing well with that word the glory of God going before which Chap. 4. was compared to this same jasper This expresseth her general luster as one newly entring a stately town Fi●st the whole neatnesse and splendour of it representeth it self to him before he come particularly to take notice of the parts of it That word clear as chrystal is added to shew its nature It is glorious and pure as shining chrystal yet precious and firm as
the jasper which was a most excellent gemme and used in Aarons breast-plate Exod. 28. This splendour in generall resulteth from all the ornaments thereof put together In the more particular commendation we may consider 1. The principall parts commended which are usually most eminent in a stately city as 1. its walls 2. its gates 3. its foundations 4. its streets how they are paved Consider 2. the proportionable disposing of its parts in an excellent and suitable mould and quantity 3. Consider the several commendations which these parts get Here indeed eminently the walls are salvation and the gates praise Isa. 60. ●● Vers. 12 13. The first part commended is the wall great and high Walls are for security Difference is put betwixt Murus an house-wall and Maenia fortifications This by its greatness and height doth set forth the last to wit the strength and security of this city no army nor enemy can make incursion on it so that the inhabitants may not only be securi secure as Laish was secure but tuti safe which two words in that respect do differ here entereth no enemy but all are friends It is a Kingdom that cannot be shaken 2. There is the gates or ports which are in number twelve and have the names of the tribes of Israel written on them which is to signifie that though there be no accesse over the walls to enemies yet there are ports sufficient to let-in all friends such as only true Israelites are Therefore they are twelve to shew they are sufficient And the writing of the names of the tribes saith they are appointed only for Israelites and that for all Israelites which are ver 27. all that are written in the book of life of whatsoever stock but no Iebusite nor Canaanite entreth this strong hold This ●●rusalem or fight of peace is only for the children of the promise born to Abrahams ●●lch and partakers of his blessing and for this end are twelve Angels at the gates as porters or guards keeping watch that none passe to trouble these within There is such excellent order and safety in heaven there is no garison town like it which as other things may be alluded unto here There are twelve gates and three of them on each quarter which we conceive belong to the proportionable mould of it as it suiteth with the end to let-in all alike easily on all quarters as the Tabernacle marched in the midst of the Tribes on all quarters so there is accesse unto heaven from all airths alike and we seek no further mystery in it but it is proportionable that such a large city should have many gates and that there should be three to each wind seing it is foursquare So it denoteth the regular exactnesse and Architectory of this city whose builder and maker is God in a singular way Followeth ver 14. the foundations more excellent than that of Solomons Temple of cedar-wood and stone It hath twelve foundations this signifieth the durablnesse and eternity of that city that no time can make it decay more than any enemy can storm it it is well founded not having one foundation only but twelve for its security A word is added to the foundations as formerly to the gates the names of the Lambs twelve Apostles are written on them By twelve is understood all in a word here their Doctrine which they preached is meaned as Eph. 2.20 where the Church is built on the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles which Word endureth for ever 1 Pet. 1.25 and so Gods faithfulnesse su●taineth heaven that it is never moved but endureth to all eternity according to that Word and Gospel which was preached through the world by all the Apostles yea the Prophets and Ministers of Christ But the Apostles for honours sake are mentioned for all And this is not inconsi●tent with heaven to have their names on the foundation seing they are not the foundations themselves but the faithfulnesse of God in the preached Gospel shall be more manifest then nor now and His Ministers in that Ierusalem shall have a speciall dignity as founders or builders use to have their names graven on the walls for their honour He descendeth more particularly ver 15. to shew the proportionablnesse and exactnesse of this city which every way is exceeding regular as the engine of a most excellent Contriver or Plotter can invent or Artificer can form 1. The purpose of measuring the city wall and gates is intimated 2. The measurer described He that talked with him 3. The instrument wherewith he measured A golden reed all is borrowed in generall from that type of Ezek. when he is measuring out a Gospel-church and from Gods care Chap. 11. of His little Church then But here this exceedeth these It is a golden reed for all is excellent here It is but a simple reed in Ezek. and this city when it is measured exceedeth that far in quantity and quality and so are not one way to be applied What is found by measuring The city ver 16. lieth foursquare just alwayes alike so proportionable and strong as forts royall use yet to be built that is most fit to receive in on all quarters 2. It is found that the city is twelve thousand furlongs either all square as it seemeth by putting breadth and length and height that is the height of its towers in one certain measure which can be none other but that measuring immediately preceeding Or it is so much in circuit however it is a great city and hereby its capacity in bounds and multitude of inhabitants is holden forth with its excellent frame Vers. 17. The wall is found to be one hundred fourty and four cubits that is its height and breadth is even above that of old Babylon or Niniveh the particular cubit is set down for there were diverse one of the Sanctu●ry which was large one common which is that of a man from the elbow down the Angel appearing as a man and so went about this with such a measure or cubit as men use to make up a reckoning known to them and by this we may expound the number of a man Chap. 13. It is as if Iohn said the Angel measured by the same measure and according to the same rule used among men By all which that excellent skill in framing heaven and that regularity and wisdom which was shewn by God when He made it above any other piece of His work is holden forth that though there be exactnesse in the Church here much more there In a word no fault can be found with any part of it all is well ordered and contrived and can abide most exact trial This is the scope and further we descend not Followeth thirdly from ver 18. the particular commendations of these parts 1. The wall i.e. the out-wall circuiting all is of jasper most precious and beautifull See Chap. 4. and all the city that is the town or walls within they are all of pure gold
as Peter saith of lesse obscure Scriptures 2 Pet. 3. They pervert them to their own destruction much more it seemeth it may be said of this which is so dark and so would the objection conclude better seal it than no seal it This is prevented by an answer usual in the Prophets keep it not up whatever come of it like Ezek. 2.7 whether they will hear or forbear And this is followed with a twofold qualification 1. If it be dark or an offence to any it will be but to the profane and vile or filthy who abuse the best things it will make none profane but filthy persons who may from their corruption abuse it as they do the plain truths But 2. these who are single and sincere it will not hinder but strengthen them in the way of holinesse and confirm them in the faith of Christ and so it will be to the one the favour of life unto life and to the other the favour of death unto death a Corinth 2.16 and that is no strange thing and cannot be attributed to the unsealing of this prophesie for if it were sealed that would follow as we see in Dan. 12.9 10 c. This is the simple scope of this Verse we may read it in the future time as it is common to the Hebrews to which stile Iohn cometh neer here and so it telleth what will be the effect some 〈◊〉 offend at it some will get good of it or in the imperative let them be filthy still It is no dispensation but an holy regardlesnesse that God hath of such filthy persons as will not be made clean but maketh a snare of their table let it be so saith he as Rom. 11. and Hos. 4. Ephraim is joyned to idols let him alone he will not part with them that is his sin and let it be his plague so here If any should question the meaning of that he that is just let him be just still or it being the word in the Original that signifieth justified he that is justified let him be so still Answ. The Word may and we think doth keep its proper signification here as it is distinguished from sanctification and inherent holinesse The simple meaning is they who are in Christ shall not be shaken out of that estate but shall still so continue whatever come of others Thus still signifieth not an increase of degrees which may also be in this as to our sense and that well agreeth to the scope but a continuance of that estate as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sundry times rendered supra vers 3. And that it must be so appeareth by this that holinesse or sanctification is expresly distinguished from this of being just as denotating a different thing Therefore Bellar hath no ground from this which is the only place alleaged from the New Testament to say that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sometimes signifieth to make just by inherent holinesse This is a simple declaring of the effects that should follow severally on hearers some perverse spirits shall offend but all the godly both as to their justification and sanctification shall be preserved Therefore there needeth no scarring to bring forth this prophesie A second qualification is ver 12. And behold I come quickly c. that is be doing for that negative seal not the sayings ver 10. includeth the contrary affirmative reveal them for though it be abused for a time I am coming quickly and will call every one to an account of their carriage and reward them accordingly even in reference to their usemaking of this prophesie This is added to strengthen the former reason One might think it sad that men should so abuse Pearls and such a precious Word it will not be long so saith the Lord but I my self will come to execute justice on all which shall be suitable and proportionable to mens carriage that is vengeance on these that continue filthy and glory and honour to such as continue holy Rom. 2.8 And this word is an advertisement to all to take heed how they live under means for so must they answer and be judged according to their works And the Lord cometh in abruptly as it were to continue the same matter for the title which He afterward assumeth sheweth it to be Himself thereby declaring that it was His Word and by His Authority which the messenger spoke mediately as when He speaketh immediately Himself By occasion of this judgement there is a word of great concernment set down till ver 16. for we take this 13. ver which beareth plainly out Christs name to be His own words coming in here to confirm what the Angel had said in His name before and so ver 14. and 15. are to be read in a Parenthesis as the Angels words set down for advertisement and vers 16. Christ is again brought in proceeding in His speaking The like may be seen in these words Chap. 16. ver 15. Blessed is he that watcheth c. where the writer upon the occasion of judgement formerly mentioned breaketh forth into that advertisement However though these words here ver 14. be the Angels words in that he saith His Commandments yet the scope and matter is the same and it is certain ver 16. Jesus Christ Himself taketh it on Him and therefore telleth it is He now and no Angel but He who sendeth Angels that speaketh This saying of His I come quickly v. 12. is for confirming what He said of the happinesse of these that keeped this word and this name of His vers 13. is repeated for confirming that of His coming quickly to reward every one because He is God who as He gave a being to all for His own glory so He will exact an account thereof LECTURE III. Vers. 13. I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the end the first and the last 14. Blessed are they that do his commandments that they may have right to the tree of life and may enter in through the gates into the city 15. For without are dogs and sorcerers and whoremongers and murderers and idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie 16. I Iesus have sent mine Angel to testifie unto you these things in the Churches I am the root and the off-spring of David and the bright and morning star 17. And the Spirit and the Bride say Come And let him that heareth say Come And let him that is athirst come And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely 18. For I testifie unto every man that heareth the words of the prophesie of this book If any man shall adde unto these things God shall adde unto him the plagues that are witten in this book 19. And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophesie God shall take away his part out of the book of life and out of the holy city and from the things which are written in this book 20. He which testifieth these
and spread what is unsound as Philip. 3.2 Beware of dogs c. speaking of these teachers that did mix the righteousnesse of the Law with the righteousnesse of Christ in justification These also are without that is are in the second death Chap. 21.8 From Vers. 16. and forward followeth the Lord Jesus His own close to the same purpose to confirm and commend the truth of the words of this Prophesie In the 16. verse it is commended from the fountain it cometh from I Iesus have sent mine Angel to testifie these things in the Churches These are not Iohns inventions nor the sayings of an Angel out of his own head but they are from Me I own them all I Iesiu taking His proper name to Himself have sent mine Angel in more than an ordinary way to reveal these things to My servant Iohn and by him to the Churches to the end of the world And that this may have the more weight He taketh to Himself such stiles as He took to Himself before Chap. 2 and 3. I am the root and off-spring of David the bright and morning star to bring souls in love with Him He setteth out Himself as the very Messiah come of David as Chap. 5.5 The Lion of the tribe of Iudah and the root of David and the off-spring of David as man because as man He came of David and so is the promised Messiah as Isa. 11.1 There shall come a rod out of the stem of Iesse and a branch shall grow out of his roots c. Or take the words differently I am the ro●t of David that is David God and David is as a branch and I gave him a being And I am the off-spring of David that is as man I am a branch come of David And thus he answereth the question the Pharisees could not understand Matth. 22.43 If David call Him Lord how is He then his son He is Davids Lord as God and Davids son as man so is He his root and off-spring 2. He calleth Himself the bright and morning-star He is called a star by Balaam Numb 24.17 There shall a star come out of Iacob and this relateth to that but to shew that He is not a common star but a singular one He is called the bright and morning star or day-star that bringeth the light of the day with it holding Himself out as the fountain of all light and consolation as Ioh. 1.9 He is that true light that lighteneth every one that cometh into the world This is He that sendeth this message to the Churches and that now we read of He that brought life and immortality to light c. These titles are foolishly applied to say no more to the Virgin Marie as many others are by Bernardine de Busco De denominationibus Mariae The second commendation is in a twofold Come ver 17. the Spirit and the Bride say Come And let him that heareth say Come This is such a word so excellent and true a word and so comfortable a saying that all that have the Spirit in them when they hear it will say Come and wish a performance of it and the Bride the Lambs wife all the Glorified in heaven and all the Regenerate on earth concur in it And not only the Church universal for that time but all that shall hear this word and have the faith of it in their heart shall say Come We conceive the scope is 1. to commend this word from the desirablenesse of it to all Believers especially that word vers 12. Behold I come quickly 2. To let the Church know that He is to send no more new Scripture or Messages of this sort and that they have no more to expect but the coming of the Lord on the back of the fulfilling of this Prophesie And so as Malachy in his last Chapter closes the Canon of the old Testament with a promise of Christs first coming and putteth the People of God to the Law of Moses and the Prophets till then so Christ here closeth the Canon of the New Testament with a promise of His second coming to which He knitteth the longing desires of His Church The second Come that commendeth the excellency of this Book Let him that is athirst come And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely Is there yet any body that is not clear in their interest let them come and take this word before Christ come for he will not get another word as if He said I have made many fair and free offers and now I close My last offer with a good word Who ever will take Christ and life through Him freely on the terms of free grace let him come and take Him without money and without price Isa. 55.1 This is our Lords farewell that He may presse the offer of the Gospel and leave that impression as it were upon record amongst the last words of the Scripture and His scope is to commend this Book and the offers He hath made in it as most free and on the tearms of grace wherein Christ aimeth much to draw souls to accept it And teacheth us that all that would expect comfort of His coming and pray for it with a well-grounded confidence they would first come to Him and close with Him and make use of His offer This maketh a comfortable meeting with Him and who cannot say the first come to Christ that he may come let themselves come to Him and hear and answer His call to them that so they may turn over their request to Him The third way how He commendeth this word is by putting a testimony to the perfection of it ver 18. telling that nothing can be added to it and nothing can be diminished from it as superfluous and both these are set down by way of commination and it is given as a reason why folks should expect no more Scripture after this 1. Let any man beware of adding to these things Adding may be considered formally as denoting the enjoyning of any thing for Scripture or to be accounted as such which is not contained in this Book or declared by God immediatly to be such as this is Or 2. as adding upon the matter by putting or imposing a meaning on that which is written that God never intended or which the words will not bear Therefore deceivers and wresters of the Word are called Impostours as imposing the curse that is threatned on them that add any of thir wayes is God shall add to him the plagues that are writen in this Book that is He shall bring upon him all the curses threatned to come on the openly profane and secret hypocrites or Antichrists followers And that it may be known that it is no lesse fault to diminish than to add he telleth ver 19. If any shall take away from the words of this Prophesie that is either by taking away something that is canonick and derogating from the authority of the Scripture or by hyding or detracting
from the meaning of it for both these wayes the Word is diminished when the weight of Gods authority in the truth is diminished or when folks receive not the Truth and walk not in the obedience of it The threatning that is added to this God shall take away his part out of the Book of life c. that is that man shall never come into glory it shall be declared he was never written in the Book of life and he shall be shut out of heaven for never a promise of happinesse in all the Word belongeth to that man And so as Moses when he gave the Law Deut. 4.2 and 12.32 commandeth neither to add nor diminish And Prov. 30.6 Add thou not unto His words lest He reprove thee So also our Lord Jesus sealeth the New Testament but with a more severe threatning and that word Deut. 4.2 That ye may keep the Commandments of the Lord sheweth that the keeping he meaneth of consisteth not in the letter but in the practice and conversation by making the Word our rule in our walk In which words as all diminishing from Scripture so all addition under whatsoever pretext is condemned by which the bulk of Popish traditions is justly rejected If it be objected that this threatning is only in reference to this book but hindereth not but that something by tradition may be added to others or to the Scripture in general Answ. 1. Yet this book is looked on here as the close of all Scripture and therefore there can be no other reason given for adding this certification but to restrain men from looking for more and that they may now accept the Canon closed 2. This is simply against mans adding to Gods Word and putteth marches betwixt Gods word and mans of whatsoever nature for the Scriptures are Gods Word but traditions are mans and either they are for their matter grounded on the Word and so are contained in it or not grounded on it or contained in it If they be of the first sort they are no more Gods Word but as other consequents drawn from it If of the second sort then they are manifest additions and so in this opposed to the Word 3. Adding must be so understood as diminishing or taking away must be But taking away is so to be understood as to make that no Scripture which God hath appointed to be so whatever the matter of it be and therefore to adde must be to account any thing Scripture or as Scripture which God hath not so appointed to be Hence as it were by this condemnable to suppresse any book that were canonick because the matter of it were in an other Book even so on the contrary must it be here reproved to adde any book unto or to equal it with Scripture in Authority which is not contained in the Canon 4. Do not the same reasons that condemn adding to this book in particular condemn adding to the Word in general or to any other book thereof so that as we cannot adde some prophesies to this book out of traditions and call them or account them a part of the revelation or of equal authority with it so neither may we from tradition joyn any thing to any other book or to the Word in general for the reason is one God will reserve this piece of Soveraignity to Himself to decide what shall be accounted His revelation and will have no other medling with it so also with His Word in general 2. He will keep men from encroaching on what He hath reserved to Himself and indeed it seemeth by this commination that He esteemeth it highest arrogancy and lese-majesty to alter in any thing His word which is the most sacred and soveraign thing which He hath left with His Church and wherein His name and supremacy doth especially consist The close of all is Christs speaking a word as His drawing to an end ver 20. He that testifieth these things saith Surely I come quickly It is He that speaketh ver 16.18 that testifieth these things and that which He saith is a promise or prophesie of Christs coming and of the certainty and suddenty of His coming to Judgement 2. And the last words of the verse are an hearty and warm welcome that Iohn in the name of all Believers or the Bride giveth to this truth promise or prophesie of the coming of the Lord Amen not only let it be so but I wish and long and pray that it may be so Even so or So be it Come Lord Iesus as Thou hast promised There is here then a promise made which Iohn turneth up to God in a most fervent supplication not only for himself but for the whole Church of Christ also upon the hearing and consideration of this that Christ is to come again and receive Believers to Himself that where He is there they may be also such ejaculations of the soul will often interrupt the thoughts and discourses of these who are in the faith of being found of Him in peace at His appearance the lively apprehension of what they do expect at that day when they shall see Him as He is produceth such a sweet complacency in it and stirring of heart to be possessed of it that there must needs follow such ardent desires after it as will almost prevent all deliberation for excellent objects have such an amiable aspect upon the soul and attractive power over the heart that it most willingly yeeldeth up it self and as if it were all composed of desires it breatheth forth nothing but earnest wishes after a neernesse and inseparable conjunction with that object Now what can be proposed to the immortall soul like this to hear Christ say Behold I come quickly truly the apprehension is at a stand in unfolding that blessednesse which is included in this one sentence it goeth beyond the reach of a created understanding to search it out unto perfection for eye hath not seen nor ear heard nor hath it entered into the heart of man to conceive what is here imported And therefore no wonder to see it draw such a holy heart forcibly out after it breathing out all the way such a desire Even so Come Lord Iesus Come quickly as if his heart intended by this wish to anticipat that day But because he knew the Bride was not yet made ready and that there was a long tract of time to interveen betwixt the giving of this promise and that day wherein the marriage of the Lamb shall be solemnized when He shall bring her unto the King all glorious within in cloathing of wrought gold and raiment of needle work with the virgins her companions that follow her that they may enter the Kings Palace to be with Him there for ever and because he knew that before this there were many sad emergents and searching dispensations to be met with such winds to blow as should overblow every one who was not ballasted with the grace of God such false Doctrines to
connexion may be called occasionall that is when the light of the Gospel with power cometh into the world where sin hath had the dominion and by it mens corruptions begin to be restrained and their liberty in sinning marred corruption and malice in men take occasion thereby to rage as being the more provoked and therefore leaveth no mean unessayed to have that Gospel out of the world which disturbeth their sinfull peace This doth not properly flow from the Gospel but from the devils malice and mens corruptions which are imbittered thereby and now rageth to be disturbed in that dominion and possession which for a long time he hath possessed like a strong man keeping all in peace within his bounds till this stronger come to cast him out This maketh many who lived quietly before light came amongst them to appear quite another thing More particularly we will find these Primitive persecutions to have been raised upon these occasions which went along with the Gospel 1. The Gospel drew men from the old Heathenish way of serving Idols and by force of reason did evidence the nothingnesse of Idolatry and vanity of that worship which was used by these Emperours and almost all the world Upon this Satan took occasion to charge Christians with singularity in taking up a Religion of their own and with pride in counting themselves wiser then their Predecessors and to be insufferable as untractable men who would not follow the rest of the world nay not their own Emperors nor Predecessors in the matter of their Religion but took them to a new way of their own all which was exceedingly heightened by the devil to make Christians and Christianity odious This pretext is frequent 2. A second was The devil striving to make Christianity suspected unto the great men of the world as inconsistent with civil Authority and tending to the ecclipsing and diminishing of temporall greatnesse dominion and power of Kings which was confirmed by these things 1. Ministers freedom in reproving the faults of all and their not sparing nor flattering of any often occasioned the enimity of great men who thought that derogatory to their honour and unbecoming inferiours Therefore to suppresse that often the most faithfull men were persecuted as we see in that instance of Herod in Iohn the Baptist Matth. 14. 2. This suspicion was confirmed by the multiplying of Christians and the mistake of the nature of Christs Kingdom as if His Kingdom had been inconsistent with theirs therefore fearing lest the multiplying of Christians should have tended to the setting up of Christs power and the overturning of theirs they endeavoured to bear them down This made Domitian in a speciall manner to search for and put to death all the naturall kindred of our Lord Jesus lest any of them in the abounding of Christians should have pleaded title to his Kingdom 3. The many slanders that were vented against Christians especially by Magicians Idolatrous Priests Iews Apostate Christians and such like who crying out on them as enemies to mankind and guilty of the vilest sins as of Adultery Incest Drunkeness c. at their meetings and so to be the causes of all the plagues that came upon the world which calumnies are fully refuted by Iustin Martyr Tertullian and Cyprian in their Apologies Wherein these two things are asserted 1. That Christians were innocent of these scandals 2. That it was not the Gospel but the worlds rejecting of the Gospel that brought these judgements on 4. This occasion rose from Christians strictnesse who would not flatter their Emperours by worshipping of them and calling them gods as others did 5. Nothing more was mistaken than Church-men in their exercising of Discipline and censuring of others without dependence on civil Power especially when they exceeded in any particular as that law of Euaristus ordaining that no accusation of a Lay●man or laick against a Pastor should be admitted This is recorded to have provoked Trajan to persecute all the Christians 3. The failings and practices of some Christians and their unwarrantable carriage made Christians odious in the world especially these 1. The many differences and divisions that were amongst themselves and the many sects contrary to truth and one to another that sprung up with the Gospel and the great bitternesse wherewith these differences were followed 2. Outbreakings of Professors in any grosse sin made all others to be so accounted yea practices of the Saturnians Nicolaitans and other grosse Hereticks though disclaimed by true Christians yet were imputed to them 3. Unfaithfulnesse in some few of them in reference to their trust provoked persecution against all It is particularly recorded that Philip who was the first Christian Emperour his killing of the Emperour Gordianus by which deed he came to the Empire did not only stir up Decius afterward to kill him but also to raise a most hard persecution against all Christians as become odious by that fact Obs. 6. The persecutions of the Church of God are particularly ordered as well as the preaching of the Gospel and the thriving and flourishing of the Church This horse hath a rider that hath his armour and a sword given to him and it is told what he shall do he shall take peace from the earth go so far and no further yea there is a more particular commissionating of this nor the former to point out that there is a particular hand guiding the sufferings of the Church and People of God See it in Ioh how in all the commissions Satan getteth he is straitly bounded and limited If the world rage at Christ and His followers and persecute yet that horse is not without a rider and a bridle and the sword he carrieth is limited it cannot hurt a hair of the head of any but as it is commissionated Mat. 10. The hairs of your head are all numbred Persecution cometh not without a particular Commission more than one is converted without the influence of His Spirit He that guideth the one guideth the other and our Lord Jesus reigneth now as before 7. The restraint mentioned here to take peace from the Earth sheweth that no persecution can marre spiritual and eternall peace they reach but the outward condition as to hurt the name to plunder the goods and to kill the body but can reach no further Ioh. 14.27 Christs peace is given not as the world giveth it uncertainly but surely which should make us esteem the more of it 8. An earthly condition or peace is never settled any trouble may quickly disturbe that 9. The world is much in Gods reverence for their outward peace at one word He can take peace from the earth and turn order into confusion and imbitter the spirits of most familiar friends and near relations one against another Did not He prevent it our life would be soon miserable It is He that we should depend on and acknowledge even in outward things for when He giveth quietnesse who then can make trouble and when He
hideth Himself who can behold Him Iob 34.29 LECTURE IIII. Vers. 5. And when he had opened the third seal I heard the third beast say Come and see And I beheld and so a black horse and he that sat on him had a pair of balances in his hand 6. And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say A measure of wheat for a peny and three measures of barley for a peny and see thou hurt not the oyl and the wine THese Verses continue the history of the opening of the seals or rather the prophesie revealed by them The third seal holdeth forth a sad condition of the Church in some things agreeing with the former type and preparation thereunto but in many circumstances differing As first the voice that calleth Come and see is the voice of the third beast which Chap. 4. and 7. had the face of a man whereby is signified 1. Prudence and reason in the Ministers of the Gospel as we said there 2. It signifieth such a condition of the Church to be typified by this type as should have need of prudence reason and wisdom in the Ministers of the Gospel even as the former two called respectively for boldnesse and patience as meet for them 3. It holdeth forth that the Church under this dispensation should be well furnished with Ministers accordingly qualified as suitable to such a dispensation 2. The colour of this horse differeth from the former this is black the former was red 3. The weapons of the rider differ As also 4. The word added for explanation differeth as we will see more particularly in the opening of them That this type may be understood it will be necessary to insist a little both in the explication and application of it At the first view it seemeth to hold forth some terrible famine by all the circumstances of it More particularly this horse is said to be black which in generall holdeth forth a sad strait Iob Chap. 30.30 giveth it as one of the symptomes of his lamentable condition And so Zech. 6.2 the black horses do represent a sad dispensation coming Most ordinarily it setteth forth the plague of famine which turneth the most beautifull colour to blacknesse as from Lament 4.8 and 5.10 is clear 2. The pair of balances in the hand of the rider import a strait wherein men should not have meat at their pleasure but weighed and measured out to them which ordinarily is used to set forth famine Ezek. 4.16 Levit. 26.26 famine is threatned under these words ye shall eat your bread by weight c. In sum This type importeth these three 1. A great scarcity and restraint 2. Not an utter want 3. A sort of justice or equity in the mannaging of this want or accompanying this strait wherein it differeth from the great confusion and violence without any shew of justice as was under the former 3. The word of explication added vers 6. hath two things to be considered in it 1. Whence this voice came it is said to be from the midst of the four beasts that is from God or from the Lamb as He is placed Chap. 5.6 to shew Christs particular ordering of this most sad dispensation in the object and extent of it and therefore He is to be considered not as the rider but as He who giveth orders unto him 2. The words uttered are to be considered in which there are 1. A proclamation and 2. A limitation The proclamation is A measure of wheat for a peny and three measures of barley for a peny wheat and barley are the two grains most commonly made use of for the entertaining of life The word rendered measure is in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What the particular quantity of it is needeth not to be enquired this is commonly acknowledged that it was the ordinary measure allowed to a working man for his meat in the day so as it came to be understood ordinarily for a dayes meat according to the proverb Nou sedondum est super Chaenicom meaning that none who had but a dayes meat beside them ought carelesly to sit down but had need to provide more The price of this measure is a peny which is likewise the ordinary wages of a workman for his service in the day as appeareth from the parable Matth. 20. The sum cometh to this that men by their labour and toi● should hardly buy so much wheat which was the best grain or so much barlie which was more course and so taking a greater measure as was meet to entertain them The limitation added is See that thou hurt not the oyl and the wine Wine and oyl are more for chearing and refreshing men Psal. 104.15 The scope is to shew according to the letter that though there was much hardship to befall the Church in things that necessarily pertain to their life yet all should not be destroyed but a reservation should be of the best things usefull for their refreshment This type then holdeth forth a hard condition the Church should be under and a sad dispensation she should meet with which though moderated in a more orderly way than the former yet should exceedingly mar the beauty of the Church and bring her low so that she who before was white and lively and afterward red and wounded should now as it were drawing near expiring fainting and swouning as one who hath shed much bloud turn black and pale which in generall holdeth forth a growing strait of the Church drawing nearer unto death than the former That we may consider the meaning of this type more particularly we would lay down these conclusions touching it 1. We conceive it doth not hold forth an abounding or reigning of justice in the world simply for that is of it self no plague but a great good and so doth not agree with the scope which is to set forth the trials of the Church though we think it may point at a sort of seeming justice in the way and persons of these who should be instrumentall in these afflictions in which respect this rider differeth from the former as is said 2. Neither can it only literally be understood of bodily famine but figuratively for the plague of famine is no peculiar exercise of the Church but is common to the rest of the world Again this famine here is such a crosse as maketh them in the fifth seal to cry for vengeance on these who were instruments of it which cannot agree to famine properly which ordinarly floweth from Gods immediat hand Beside that there is little in story to evidence the fulfilling of it in that sense save what is mentioned by Tertullian and Cyprian to have been in Africk Neither is it likely that any famine hath been or could be in the ordinary way that famines come and wine and oyl be spared which yet necessarily according to the letter must be Add that there is alway some suitablenesse between the qualifications of the beast