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A15991 Three partes of Salomon his Song of Songs, expounded The first part printed before: but now re-printed and enlarged. The second and third partes neuer printed before. All which parts are here expounded and applied for the readers good. By Henoch Clapham.; Bible. O.T. Song of Solomon. English. Clapham. Clapham, Henoch. 1603 (1603) STC 2772; ESTC S116334 255,503 332

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Daniel 7.8.20 c. ●ermed Rógni háae●l my vaine shepheard a fugitiue from th● flocke vpon whose right hand and eie the sword of Gods iudgement is By reason whereof neither can his hand hold the sheep-crooke nor his eie discerne the true sheepefold This briefely of the Pectorall The fourth and last differencing tyre is a Plate made of pure golde put vppon a blew silke tape wherewithall it was tied to the fore front of the Miter in which was curiously engrauen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Holines to Iehouah And this was Aaron to beare on his head for taking away such sins of the people as were mingled with the sacrifices that so God might be well pleased with sacrificer and sacrifice All which shadoweth a necessitie of Messiah ●uen in our best actions First Our Aaron and Aarons head is Christ Iesus Coloss. 1.18 and That Sauiour is the head of his church who hath for signe of his regall empery Pileus capiti impositus that Bonet on his head Secondly for the s●cred Superscription it plainely preacheth that all Sanctitie is to be ascribed to the Lord. And that Isaiahs Seraphim in chap. 6. do testifie when as out of fierie flames th●y cry holy holy holy Lord God of hostes All holy art thou O sacred trinitie and vnitie and with thee dwells nothing but holinesse Thi●dly and whereas Aaron must by intercession remooue the Israelites staines in sacrifice it teacheth first that in all our spirituall obl●tions prayers pre●chings almes c. there be blots and imperfections Not that such blots or staines be the works of ●aith or effects of God his grace in vs for that were to blaspheme God and his grace whose ●ffects are all holy as be their Cause but they be cankered blossomes of the vnregenerate part who neuer can be but filthy like th' old Adam they flow from In which respect so long as the old Adam is our crooked neighbour which will be all our life-time here we all are euer to pray for the remission of our trespasses Secondly it teacheth vs to offer no word nor worke to God but by his sonne our Mediatour and Hie-priest Christ. And this is by vision signified to S. Iohn in Reuel 8 where the prayers of the Saints are offered vp in the golden censor of the great Angell of Couenant that is Christ Iesus And S. Peter in his 1. ep 2. chap. expresseth it plainely when hee termes the faithfull an holy priesthood for offering vp spirituall sacrifices acceptable to God by Christ ●esus a doctrine right frequent in scripture For this is the Maleác habbèrith the Angel of that couenant who shall sit downe to try and fine the siluer he shall euen fine the sonnes of Leui and purifie them as gold and siluer that they may bring to the Lord in Righteousn●sse Thus Christ our Aaron hath perfectly put vpon him all the Iudgement iustice truth and holinesse that was shadowed in Aaron and euerie of Israels hie-priests It remaineth that we by truth of faith doe put on the Lord Iesus Christ as a garment for our able standing before God in his glorious day of iudgement Lect. XXIIII THE Instalments and Garments thus spoken of it now resteth I say something of Arons Action in respect of his sacrificehood and yet thereof but a little It consisteth first in Oblation secondly in Benediction or blessing Oblation is the offering vp of some ceremoniall creature vnto God in the behoofe of the church And this is to be considered first in his offerings presented in the Holy-place or Sanctum secondly in the things which he presented in the most holy or Sanctum Sanctorum The thing● offred vp in the Sanctum for the Tabernacle was diuided into the Court Sanctum and Sanctum-sanctorum this Hie-priest had in common with the Minor priests but the Hie-priest still superior in such oblations And these kind of off●ings were Daily But an other kind of oblation peculiar to the hie-priest appertained to the sanctum-sanctorum or Most-holy into the which none might enter but the Arch-sacrificer and this only once in the yeare namely in the tenth day of their seauenth month Tishri answering to the most part of our September termed the feast of expiation Leuit. 16. In his daily sacrifice was shadowed forth that Lambe which with God was slain frō the beginning of the world euen Christ Iesus shadowed in the sacrifices of Adam Abel Sheth and so forward to the time of the lawe And from that time shadowed as in other things so specially in the Legall lambe offered euery morning and night first in the Tabernacle then afterwards in the Temple So that it may well be said of him that hee was killed all the day long yea all the worlds yeares along The Minor-priests that is the Heads of faithful families did ply the shadowing Altare with such types but Christ our Aaron he was the Head-priest and Gouernour of his holy Family who being better then the figure did not offer for his owne sinnes in that he was sinlesse but for the sinnes of his people And this in mysterie he did and doth euer for which he is termed as afore a priest according to the Order of Mel●hi-tsedek that is an Eternall priest more perfect than that of Aaron But for offering vp himselfe Actually in that our Nature which Really is to satisfie for transgression it was to fall out in the end of the world hebrews 9.26 that is in the last Age or mysticall Day Which oblation as it was himselfe so but One and Once represented by that one day of Expiation wherein the hie-priest was to enter the Most-holy Then the which what can be saide more fully for abolishment of Romish Reall flesh-sacrifice which daily their blasphemous Priests would be thought to offer vp after that by muttering charming breathing they haue made to them the body of a false Christ begotten of Bake●s bread In the generation of which false Christ the Bread is Patient in roome of the Virgin and their vnholy breath is Agent insteade of the Holy-Ghost ouer-shadowing The very repetition of which Stage-play is a sufficient conf●tation So much briefely of Aarons oblation Aarons Benediction or Blessing it is eyther that which hee powred out vpon inferiour officers or else vpon all the people The inferiour officers were first Minorit-priests secondly Seruiceable Leuites for every Priest vnder the Law was a Leuite but not euery Leuite a priest For these officers ecclesias●●ke they were blessed of the Hie-priest in their entrance into such function together with other peculiar ceremonies For blessing the people that specially was done at the time of their publike worship as in Leuit. 9.22.23 Numb 6.22 c. the equitie of both lying in that Antient Canon Without all Contradiction the Lesser is to be blessed of the Greater By all which is liuely shadowed that Christ our high-priest is onely hee by whom Minister and people become blessed The heauenly father
in respect of God called the rod of his mouth wherewithall Christ Iesus is pierced and cannot but open to the meaning of his owne Sprite euen as in the Gospel our Sauiour could not but awake and satisfie his disciples thirst when as they cryed Saue vs or we perish Moses representing the law doth leade the Israel of God to Christ for water of refreshment All s●biects to the Law must come to him and there with the spirit of prayer smite If our infidelitie cause that no refreshment come from his presence vpon the first call smite we must againe and the windes stormes and b●llowes of tentation shall giue place We oft aske and receiue not because we aske amisse namely to satisfie our owne lusts But asked w●e in faith without wauering we could not but receiue for in so knocking he himself hath promised to open But because wee beginne with Moses to halt in the beginning of prayer shall we not therefore persist and renew our petition God forbid for as an Ancient could well say melius est in via claudicare quam prater viam fortiter ambulare it is better to halt in the way than to walke vprightly out of the way so I conclude it farre better to persist in prayer with imperfection than desperately to leaue off prayer which is flat defection If Moses his weakenesse hindred that effect which should haue followed the first stroke a signe of a strong rising faith it was in Moses to repeate the stroke And thus this Rocke the waters rod and strokes do leade vs vnto Christ the things of Christ. So much for this shadow Lect. XXXVI Brazen Serpent THe last Sacramentall shadow which I obserue to be giuen vnto Israel for signe exhibiting Messiah to the true Beleuer it is that Brazen Serp●nt lift vp in the wildernes of Moses at the Lords commaundement for the sauing of Israel from th● stinging of Serpents Numb 21. Which Serpent so lift vp our Sauiour himselfe in Ioh. 3.14.15 12.32 doth expounde of himselfe For the better vnderstanding whereof let vs consider first Israels disease secondly the Curation of that disease Israels Disease was a mortall sting or poison smit into their bodies by f●ry Serpents stirred vp of God for punishing their murmuring against the Lorde This murmuring was their rebellious speach vttered against the Lords magistrate and Minister Moses and Aaron for that they lacked ordinary bread and were fed only with Manna Of which sacramentall bread they speake despitefully first when they say Our Souls lothes it secondly when they lightly terme it light bread Which dealing of theirs the Apostle calleth a tempting of Christ when by way of vse he saith to euery Christian Neither let vs tempt Christ as some of them also tempted him and wer● destroyed of Serpentes Their Soules thus tempting Christ yea murmuring against Christ first in respect of their lewd language against the Personall figures of Christ Moses and Aaron secondly against the Sacramentall shadowe of Christ that is against Manna the Lord punisheth this disease of the Soule with that of the Body effected by the firy dartes of Serpents like as in 1. Cor. 11.30 he punished many Christians with bodily greiuances for abusing the Lords sacramentall supper All which teacheth vs as we would preserue the Body from temporall plagues and th● Soule from being stung with the fiery Serpents of hell to fly all murmuring against the good guifts of God be they Personall or Sacramentall It is said of the serpent termed Aspis that he giueth a wound to the body puncto acus simile not bigger then the pricke of a nedle But marke the effect A little blood therewith disti●leth and that right blacke A sodaine darknes ouer-spreadeth the eyes The whole body falles to labour thereon non sine quodam voluptatis sensu but not without a certaine tickling pleasure In a word the whole man is quickly ouerthrowne The Aspe and these fiery serpents is satan and the damned spirits who of God are stirred vp in iustice to punish our abuse of holy thinges The serpents sting is Sin 1. Cor. 15.56 and these sinnes are the fiery darts of the hellish wicked Ephese 6.56 The stroke of sin semeth so small as a pinnes point which causeth fooles to tush thereat as being a thing of nothing but heed it wel and thou shalt see blacke blood stand in it a signe of death the least sinne of his owne nature being mortall And watch the effects of this Sinne further and behold the eie of the soule darkneth more and more and when the eye is darkenesse howe great is that darkenesse The whole soule therewith falls of trauelling with sinne but with a certaine itching pleasure the fruit of which labour is a l●e in the right hand when so the soule awaketh This is the Aspe this is the fiery serpent that stingeth that old serpent and dragon that stung man and murthered mankinde from the beginning And this is his sting Sinne euen the peruersion of our nature that tickling foolerie wherewith we delight our selues to death and destruction This for the disease The Curation of Israels disease litterally was thus A brasen Serpent called also Sháraph and plurally Sheráphim Num. 21.9 compared with verse 6. from their fierie appearance such a serpent vpon Gods commandement was artificially made of pure sparkeling brasse and lift vp on some pole Whereto if the stung Israelite cast vp his eye loe hee was immediately cured Now vnto what mysterie did this lead Israel Namely to lift vp the eye of the soule vnto Iesus Christ who vppon the crosse was lifted vp for sauing the true belieuer This our Sauiour teacheth when he saith And as Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the Sonne of man be lift vp that whosoeuer beleeueth in HIM should not perish but haue eternall life Iohn 3.14 15. The lifting vp of the bodies eye vnto that led them to the lifting vp of their bodies eye a belieuing minde vnto this The fal●ing of the body there led them to the soules saluation here Tempor●ll life in the former did preach to them eternall life in the latter Thus that sinne which was committed by eating of the forbidd tree is here salued by the Lord of life hanged vpon the t●ee The S●rpent with sting is here ouercome by a Serpent without sting O th●t in our Douish innocencie we could for auoyding ●uill be so wise as Serpents Hath Satan by the fi●ry darts of sin s●it vs Hold out the shield of faith Ephe. 6.16 and they are quenched For the faithfull are deliu●red from these empoysonments of sinne cùm Chr●●tum in cruce eleuatum interioribus abtutibus semper aspiciunt whenas they shall continually with the inward sight behold Christ lifted vp on the crosse Et illi qui per fidem appropinquauer●nt saluifiunt for all such as approach to him by faith are saued Sursum corda here I may call
to whom these mysteries are vttered That the faithfull are not to sit downe vpon the enioy of meaner gifts but thus pray and practise after the best they are not only taught of the worldlings but also of the Apostle 1. Cor. 12.31 chap. 14.1 c. Yea all are by the Queene of Sheba stirred vp to spare neither labor nor charges for seeing and hearing the wisedome of Him that is greater then Salomon 2. Chron. 9.1 Math. 12.42 For if they were happy that stood before Salomon the shadow ten thousand times more happy must they be that stand in the presence of Messiah the Substance And if we desire to enter into this Rest to stand in the chambers of this great King let vs with Moses and Ioshuah loose and put off our shooes I meane carnall and beastly sense and affection thereby figured Exod. 3.5 Iosh. 5.15 If with * Bathsheba the daughter of seauen wee will in the seauen ages of the Church haue assurance to sitte on our Salomons right hand on the seate of his appointment then let vs spiritually trauaile of Him and bring him forth absolute in all our workes If with the Leuites we would lodge with Aaron our high-priest in the chambers of the Temple then let vs mount by Ezekiels seauen and eight steps singing our seauen and eight Psalmes of degrees as stepping vp from Babylon for ascending to Ierushalem the seate of the great King In a world let vs pray draw vs and draw vs from the Diuel World and Flesh after thee that so wee may togither with thee enter into the Bride-chamber there to heare and see these things that naturall eare and eie can neither heare nor see So much of the fruite ensuing her feruent prayer Touching her protestation lying in these words We will exult and be glad in thee we wil remember thy Loues more then wine Righteousnesses do loue thee or haue louéd thee It● containeth an enumeration of hir Faculties disposition towards her beloued And this is done first by setting downe particulars then secondly by putting downe the whole The particulars are two lying in the first two branches the first expressing her Will or affections We will reioyce and be glad in thee the second marking out the sincerity of her Mind or Senses one Sense namely the Memorie put for all We will remember c. The Whole where-vnder the partes are contained it lieth in the last words Righteousnesses that is ● whatsoeuer is right or rectified in vs it hath and doth loue thee for so thy Loue constraineth vs. For the better vnderstanding hereof it is to be remembred that the soule of Man is distinguished into three faculties which for learning sake otherwise a simple essence or substance admits no parts may be termed 3. partes The first is termed Minde vnder which are contained all the interiour senses as Imagination Memorie c. and this is seated properly in the bodies head The second is termed Will vnder the which is contained the affections single and mixt as Loue Hatred Zeale c. And this is seated properly in the hart From both these proceed an actiue power or working property which we terme mind wils Agent or Factor The Church in this her protestation beginneth with the second Facultie namely Will when as she saith Wee will reioyce c. euen as the holy-ghost in the Prophets as also the Apostle in bidding the Ephesians put on Righteousnes true Holines do place the duties of the second Table before them of the first As it is an easier thing to find Religion without fruits of righteousnes faith without works so is it an easier thing to find the mind illuminated then the wil sanctified to Do according to the minds light For this cause she begins with the wil and signifies how her affections stand deuoted to her beloued saying Wee will exult and reioyce in thee hereby teaching vs first to preferre sanctification before illumination because illumination may be without sanctification as in Balaam Iudas Iscariot c but Sanctification not without illumination seing none are realy sanctified for we must distinguish betwixt holines real and that which is but by imputation but so soone at least their mindes are lightned with the Gospel of Christ Iesus secondly we are hereby taught to dedicate all our affections Loue Hatred Zeale c. vnto the glorie of our Beloued euen vnto him that bringeth vs to his House-threshold yea into his Cellers Galleries and chambers of secret presence And as other affections so specially our mery and reioycing affections This the Apostle remembreth saying Reioice in the Lord alway and againe I say reioice Philip 4.4 And the Psalmist protests in this elegant phrase All my springs are in thee as if he should say what speake I of singers and players of instruments in a word all the affections that flow from me manifested in pronunciation and action they are all in thee and for thee Such were the affections of Dauid causing him to spring before the Arke but comming home and such were affections springing vpon the gospels comming home by the ministerie of our Elisha But as it befell Israel after the continuance of Manna so vs after the Gospe's coutinuaunce the multitude lothe wish them in the Romish Aegypt by their flesh-pots againe stinking onions and garlike relice better with them than milke and hony of Canaan The trumperies of Iebusiticall and Secular poperie the iugling tricks alias Aequiuocations of the two frogges Iannes and Iambres Secular-priest and Iesuite are vnto a number of base Atheists of fa●re more excellent repute then the naked sinceritie of the Gospel Wel If we turne our reioycements from Messiah his Euangell and sweete word will turne from vs. If wee will reioice and be glad in him he will neuer loathe vs. But seeing our reioycement in euill encreaseth and our exultation in the wayes of Messiah decreaseth I know not what to expect but that the Lord by some notable iudgement should declare to all nations he loathes vs as much as euer he loued vs. Touching the next clause we wil remember thy Loues more than wine the faithfull of the Church declare therein that as the affections so the Senses are consecrated to Iesus yea more consecrate to his loue then vnto wine that delighter of Nature as if shee should say Looke how the Mind of a wordling is ready to remember wine or any delight of this body euen so and much more then so will we remember thy loues From whence we are taught first to dedicate all our senses more specially the memorie for excogitating and recordating the Loue of Christ Iesus His Loue yea his Loues that is his particular Loues not committing any of them vnto Obliuion As for example we should remember that he hath First giuen vs Being of no being Secondly created vs reasonable creatures Thirdly giuen vs to be borne vnder the light of the Gospel Fourthly giuen vs many giftes of Nature
a sufficient rule but then we must haue in vs the inward oyntment as Iohn termeth it 1. Ep. 2.27 that is his Spirit for leading vs into all truth or else in seeing we perceiue not and hearing wee vnderstand not To this purpose excellent is that saying of Barnard With what spirit the scriptures were writ they couet to be read and with the same spirit to be vnderstood For thou shalt neuer enter the sense of Paul till by vse of good intention in reading of him and by study of continuall meditation thou haue drunke in his spirit Thou shalt neuer vnderstand Dauid till by experience it selfe thou haue put vpon thee the very affections of the Psalmes Whereto I will adde that of Chrysostomes Riuall As all men see this corporall heauen but yet beholde not God inhabiting therein so al men reade the scriptures diuine but notwithstanding all vnderstand not that the God of truth is placed in the scriptures but onely such a one as hath beene baptized to the receiuing of the holy-ghost Nor doth this condemne but commend the scriptures heauenlinesse who will not be vnderstood but of such as haue receiued the spirit that is of heauen nor any vision had from thence till the Lambe Christ Iesus haue vnsealed it Reu. 5. for no other is worthy so much as to touch the letter ceremony or outside Naturall Wit will serue for naturall Writ but the diuine writings of God will not stoope to the naturall spirit of Man The naturall man saith Paul perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spirituall discerneth all things Thus from scripture and ancient Churches consent it plainely appeareth that for seeing the Old way the Good-way wherein the Patriarches Prophets Apostles haue walked it is absolutely necessarie that euery soule doe vnto the scriptures bring the spirit of the scriptures that is for vnderstanding the word of God they are to bring the holy spirit of God For wisdome will be iustified of her children None of the wicked shall haue vnderstanding but the wise shall vnderstand Lect. XI And feede thy Kids aboue the tents of the Shepheards THe Direction so giuen vnto her for the way she is to walke in now followeth the Direction shee hath for feeding of her yong-ones The yong-ones are here termed Gedijoth of Gedj vsually turned a Kidde or a yong Goat Rabbj Dauid Kimchi saith as Pagnine noteth in the roote Gádáh that it signifieth also a Lambe I take it to be indifferently any yong-one of the flockes as Pullus in Latine is any yong one of Beasts or Birds So I conceiue from the adiunct it hath in Genes 28.20 where it is Gedj Hàgnizijm a Kid of the goates that is a yong one of the goates the distinction so made by Gniz a Goate left any should doubt what kinde of yong one it was And this distinction is also well obserued of Ábben-ezra hereon Euen as the Latines ioyne the word sheepe or Goate c. with pullus when they would haue vs to vnderstand the particular kinde they speake of Now in this place it must be considered what flocke he speaks of and then it may be knowne whether Lambs or Kids be entended The word flockes Gnèderéi in the sixt verse it is a generall word The word flocke Tsòn in this verse it is also a generall word for Cattle and so neither of them particulate any one kinde Afterwards in this Song the Church hath once some assimilation with sheepe but sundry times with goates I see not so how to tie it in this place to the one rather then the other but if it may I would rather take the word Kidde Yet seeing it seemeth indifferent we will make vse of both First wee may hence obserue the Lord his tender care ouer yong-ones who would not onely haue the Parents to come but also would haue the yoong tender sucklings to be brought vnto him The Catabaptists herein are hard-hearted debarring Infants a place in the Church denying them the entring-sacrament of the Church why because they are Kiddes because they are vncleane till they be cleansed by actuall faith in the sight of the Church True if they be considered in themselues they are yong Goates conceiued and borne in sinne and so were all the Male-children circumcised vnder the law but what then therefore not to be baptized It followeth as well therefore Abrahams Males not to be circumcised Obiection There was a commandement for that so not for this Answere It being once commaunded that they should be sealed that seale remaineth theirs t●ll a commandement be giuen to the contrary If once they had that mercy then alwayes that mercie except Christ came to lessen former mercy which to affirme were blasphemie Obiection But Circumcision that seale is abolished Answere It is abolished for the outward signe the foreskinnes cutting but the matter of that sacrament Christs blood purging vs from sinne mortifying the old man liuing in the new man that is still abiding hauing an easier signe namely Water adioyned thereto euen as the Paschall supper hath the Lords supper come in his place the signe changed but the matter our foode and strength in Christ continued We can shew that children are once receiued in let them shewe when they can that children were cast out Obiection Baptisme is the seale of that righteousnes that is by faith therefore child●en vnpossessed of actuall faith not to be baptized Answere So Circumcision Rom. 4.11 was the seale of that righteousnesse which was by faith doth it also follow Children therefore not to be circumcised Foolish spirits Children had circumcision not in respect of actuall faith in them but in respect of actuall faith in the Church of whom they were borne or for some were strangers in respect they were vnder the Churches gouernement as Abrahams males freeborne and strangers in his house vnder him were circumcised not by vertue of their actuall faith in the promise but rather for that they were counted branches of his tree for he belieued God and it was counted to him for Righteousnesse Which equitie once established it continueth much more vnder the Gospel And to put it out of all doubt our Sauiour in Marke 10.14 affirmeth of Infants that such were of the kingdome of God and therefore an errour in his Disciples to keep them backe from the blessing which appertaineth to the seede of the Church seeing all such to vs are borne within the Couenant of grace for so the Lord said I am thy God and the God of thy seede If as the Apostle speaketh in Rom. 11.16 the first fruits be holy so is the lumpe if the roote be holy so are the branches that is to vs holy in respect of the Couenant as also in 1. Cor. 7.14 Where the Childe of the Belieuer be Father or Mother the belieuer is
the middle ages But heere I will content my selfe with that ancient distinction because thereto I may adde their application of the 6. ages to the sixe dayes and the rather for brideling such as thinke such kinde of doctrine to be but of yesterday nothing at all white headed In the first age of the world say they man was made and was in Paradise tanquam lux shining as the Light In which age God diuided the Sonnes of God vnder the name of light from the Sonnes of men as from darkenesse itselfe and the euening of this day was the flood In the second age fell out as it were a firmament betweene water and water when as the Arke did swimme betweene the Raine and the Seas and the euening of this age was the confusion of tongs The third age fell out when God separated his people from the Gentiles by Abraham seuering them like as hee did the drie land from the inferiour waters And heerewith was brought forth the branch or budde of herbs and trees that is this age brought forth the Saints and the fruite of holy Scriptures The euening of this age was the sinne of wicked Saul setled in eui●l The fourth age begunne with Dauid whenas God established lights in the firmament of heauen that is the splendor of his Kingdome as the Sunnes excellencie the Synagogue and his Princes as Moone and Starres obaying therto The euening of this age consisted in the sinnes of the king whereby that people deserued to be carried captiue into Babilon In the fift age that is in the captiuitie of Babilon there appeare as it were animalia in aquis volatilia c●li fishes in the waters and birds in the ayre because the Iewes then begun to liue amongst the Gentiles as in a Sea nor had they any stable or set place more than flickering birds The euening of this day was the multiplication of sinnes in the Iewish people who became so blinde as they could not know the Lord Iesus Now the sixt age begunne with the Aduent of our Lord Iesus Christ. For as in the sixt day the first man Adam was of the slime of the earth formed vnto the image of God so in the sixt age of the world the second Adam that is Christ in the flesh is borne of the Virgine Mary he in a liuing soule this in a quickening spirit And as in that day a liuing soule was made so in this age they desire eternall life And as in that sixt day the earth brought forth the kinds of creeping creatures and beasts so in this sixt age of the world the Church brought forth the Gentiles appetiting eternall life The which in sense was manifested to Peter in Act. 10. by a sheete of creatures And as in that day man and woman were created so in this age of the world Christ and his Church is manifested And as Man in that day was set ouer the Beastes creeping creatures and birds of the aire so Christ in this age was set ouer the Gentiles people and Nations that they might be gouerned of him who were as Beastes giuen to carnall concupiscence or as serpents obscured with earthly curiositie or as birds lift vp with pride And as in that day man and beasts with him are fedde with the herbe that seedeth and the wood that bringeth fruite and greene grasse so in this age the spirituall man which is the good minister of Iesus Christ hee with the people are fedde with the nourishment of the holy scriptures and with the diuine Law as with seeding herbs for conceiuing reason and speach fertily partly for the vtilitie of maners and conuersation beseeming mankind as resemblanced by trees bearing fruit partly for the vigor of faith hope and charitie vnto eternall life as it were with greene hearbs which wither not with any heat of tribulation c. And I could wish that the Lord might not finde vs as it were in the euening of this age The euening of this age is thus spoken of by our Lord Thinkest thou that when the Sonne of man shall come he shall finde faith on the earth After this euening shal be a morning namely when our Lord shall come in his glorie Then the Saints shall rest from all their works or businesses with Christ. As the workes of the sixe dayes were thus sealed vp with a seauenth dayes rest so the Ancients not to touch any moderne writers could apply all to the worlds sixe distinct ages finishing them with the glorious Sabaoth of Sabaoths the rest of rests And this was clearely insinuated by the Holy-ghost to the Hebrewes writ to this effect If Ioshuah had giuen Israel rest then would not Dauid after that day haue spoken of another Rest But Dauid hath spoken of another Rest Therefore there remaineth another rest to the people of God for he that is entred into His rest hath also ceased from his owne works as God did from his From which scripture as also from others of like validitie hath analogically beene well concluded how the sixe dayes did resemble typically the sixe ages of the world aswel as the seauenth day did represent eternitie hereafter wherein the sonnes and daughters of God should rest from all their labours no more troubled with worlds garboyles contrarie to the Chiliasts assertion who dreamed from a misvnderstanding of Reuel 20.7 c. that after the Saints had rested a thousand yeares Satan should anew assaile and trouble them And besides that the number of Sixe is made sacred sundry wayes in the old Testament we shall finde the new testaments Reuelation to make it a number of perfection to the Churches workes when as Reuel 10.7 the mightie Angel sweareth That in the dayes of the Seauenth Angel when he shall beginne to found the trumpet the mystery of God shall be finished as if he should say the sixe trumpets referred to the new testaments six ages shall found to the end of the Churches businesse for when the Seauenth beginneth to found euen then the mystery is at an end and finished But I will spare to speake more of this number here as also what I further thinke of the distinction of ages That which is spoken according to the Ancients their obseruance may serue to stop the mouths of such as crie for antiquity Which summarily I shut vp with that of Isidore Senarius namque qui partibus suis perfectus est perfectionem mundi quadam numeri sui significatione declarat Etymol l. 3. cap. 4. Lect. XIII Sabaoth of Dayes THe next chronologicall shadow shall be Seauen a number of Rest sanctified by God himselfe as was the number of Sixe The number Seauen in regard of his Rest is termed Sabbaticall and because in the great Sabaot of God they shal neither giue nor take in marriage Clemens Alexandrine saith Merito ergo numerum ●ep●enarium existimant esse sine matre sine prole They worthily therefore doe thinke the number
of that in Melchi-tsedek a Kingly priesthood And so our Lord and great priest came not of Leuies tribe as did all the legall priesthood but of King●y Iudah as is euident hebr 7.14 15. And as this legall priesthood was onely tied to Leuies type during their ceremoniall seruice so not euery Leuite offred this sacrifice but such sufficient-ones onely as were of Leuies sonne Kohath As for the two yonger houses Gershom and Merari they were shut from the Altar and employed in inferiour places and seruice● Numb 3. and 4. Wherein though darkely might be represented Christ the elder brother in whom the sacrifice satisfactory rested together with his two yonger brethren for we are all so called to be priests Reuel 16. Pet. 2.9 Rom. 22.1 namely Minister and Lay-man who are employed in inferiour seruices subordinate to Christ Iesus our hie-priest Which priesthood of ours consisting in offring vppe our selues a reasonable sacrifice is as farre differing from that of Christs as Gershoms and Meraris from that of Kohath Gershom and Merari with Israel were called a Kingdome of Priests as now all Christians are termed to the same God Kings and Priests but as he was To die the death whatsoeuer hee was that touched the arke with Vzzah though a Leuite but not of Kohath and Aaron so whatsoeuer he amongst Christians that shall vsurpe vpon Christs sacrifice or with Apostate Papisme encro●h on his office they stand condemned of high treason conspired against the Lord and his Annointed for M●ssiah is the Sacrificer absolute hauing trod the wine-presse alone They and wee are but S●crificers Respectiue so termed in respect of conforming our selues vnto him who hath beene so sufficient for vs as members not vn-naturall must needes conforme themselues to their head This generally of the Office shadowing and shadowed now to the three particulars before specified his Enstalment his Garments his Action For his Enstalment first Moses bearing the person of God he causeth Aaron and his Sonnes for he was to haue them ioyned therein to come from amongst the people assembled in whose presence he declareth Iehouahs wil touching Aaron and his sonnes for s●crifice-hood Secondly Moses w●sheth them with water Thirdly he putteth on them the prescribed ceremoniall garments Fourthly he filleth their hands with obl●tions frumentall and animall shaking them before the Lord and then offering them according to the ceremonie prescribed putting of the blood on their right eare on the thumbe of their right hand and on the great toe of their right foote annoynting them with the sacred oyle Fiftly they feasted at the Tabernacles dore with the consecrated bread and fl●sh Sixtly they were to watch seauen d●yes a●d seauen nights at the tabernacles dore for that was the time of their consecration as they would avoyde to haue sodaine death inflicted from heauen vpon them All his installment according to ceremoniall appearance it was passing glorious and notablie shadowed forth the super-excelling installment of Messiah to the worke of Redemption Did not Aaron take this office vnto him but was he caled of God thereto So neither did Christ take this honour to be made the hie-priest but he that said vnto him Thou art my Son this day I begot thee euen he gaue it him And being consecrated was made the Author of eternall saluation vnto all them that obay him and is called of God an high priest after the order of Melchi-tsedek Only where the Leuiticall priesthood had Co assistants in that sac●ifice Christ Iesus had no helpe for looking about as Isaiah●aith ●aith if there were any to helpe him loe there were none and so his owne at me sustained him Assistants he had in the Gospels publication namely his Apostles Euangelists and Prophets but in the worke of our absolute redemption he had no fellow which further was shadowed forth in the Hie-preist who only might enter into the Sanctum sanctorum for making attonement For Moses his washing them that shadowed the immaculate and vnspotted estate of Iesus For such an hie-priest it besemed vs to haue as is holy harmeles vndefiled seperate from sinners hebr 7.26 The annoynting them with such sauoury oile it shad●wed the Holy Spirit with his sauory operations by vertue whereof euery thing in him was to his fathers nos●thrills redolent The blood sprinkling oblations burning did fore-type the sufferings of our hie-priest for without his blood was no purgation That feasting at the Tabernacles dore it shadowed with what cheerfulnes our Messiah came to do his fathers wil. As for the seuen dayes and their nights they so continued it well resembleth our Sauiors consecration for this busines to the whole seuen ages of the world for he is the Lamb slaine from the beginning of the world Christ ' yesterday to day the same for euer This instalment was preached in Paradise belieued of Adam shadowed in his Abels sacrifice and so continued almost 4000 yeares what time he appeared in our nature for effecting of that amongst men which otherwise to his father was from the beginning in Act seeing with God there is no time past or to come but all things present This breifely of the installment into office Lect. XXII FOr the Garments of his office they are numbred Eight first A breast plate secondly An Ephod thirdly A Robe fourthly A broydered Coate fiftly A Miter sixtly A Girdle seauenthly A plate of pure Golde and lastly linnen Breeches With these eight was Aaron clothed what time he was to exercise his Arch-function Of the which erant quatuor vt annota●it Beda minoris ordinis sacerdo●ibus concessa foure of these eight were grant●d to Priestes of the lower order namely the breches the broidered coate vnworthily turned a strait linnen in the old latine as Arias and Pagnine haue obserued then the Girdle and Miter And if the M●tter and forme of this sacred attire be considered O howe truly Pontificall were they But thereof only a taste Their Coates their mitred ornaments and breeches were made of pure-fine linnen termed Bisse So were their girdles but perfected vp also with blew silke and purple scarlet and needle-worke But for the other garments wherin the Minor-priests had no interest there behold more The Robe called of the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a garment to the foot such a one as our Sauiour is repres●nted in Reuel 1.13 it was to be altogither of blew silke and the hole for the head of wouen worke strong as the coller of an Habergeon Vpon the skirts whereof were tached Golden-bells and Pomegranates The number of whch Bels and the Pomegran●ts must be no l●sse are of Clemens Alexandrine s●d to be 166 but Beda affirmes them to be but 72. from the testimonie of Iosephus the Priest in his Antiquities For my part I rest where the scripture resteth It affirmeth nothing of the number nor will I. The Ephod a shorter garment drawne ouer the Robe it was made of Golde and blew silke and
purple and scarlet and fine twined linnen of broyderie vpon the twoo shoulders whereof were couched two Onix stones hauing sixe of Israels sonnes names grauen in the one and sixe in the other The Breast-plate of iudgement couched vpon the Ephod and very short it had the same stuffe as had the Ephod but coupled to with gold chaines fastned in gold rings In whose Square were couched twelue precious stones euery of these gemmes hauing engrauen one of the names of the Tribes of Israel But within this Breast-plate was put the Vrim and Thummim two things not expressed in scripture what they be nor can any Iew affirme indeed what they were Nay as onely they were of God giuen to Moses so to be inserted so is it not probable that euer any but Moses did see or know them And which is more after they were once lost and in Esraes time the Priest had them not Esr. 2.63 it neuer appeareth they were had againe The Angel bid Manoah not enquire after his name which was Secret and the scriptures concealing what Vrim and Thummim was I leaue it as a Secret The Plate for the Hie-priests miter was of pure gold tied to with a blew silke lace euen to the front of the Miter wherein according to art was grauen HOLINES TO IEHOVAH Thus was Aarons body adorned and so was his head decked all these tirings by reason of their mysterie precisely of the Lord called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bigedé K●dèsh Garments of holinesse Exod. 28.2.4 garments for his consecration and yet all but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a shadow of good things to come namely in Christ Iesus the Hie-priest of our profession For the foure tyrings of Aaron which hee had in common with the minor-p●iesthood wee may behold in them the pure innocencie of Iesus more white than linnen more spiritually fine than B●sse Which Righteousnesse of his imputed to his church is called Reuel 19.8 pure fine linnen and shining euen the Righteousnesse of the Saints If Salomon cast his eyes to this no maruell though he saide At all times let thy garments be white for no such occasion of triumph as to wa●ke purely hauing the bright shining puritie of Iesus put vpon vs for that is to be cloathed with Christ as the Woman in Reuel 12. is cloathed with the Sunne More particularly the Broydered coate may represent that Iustice which he puts on as an habergeon The breeches well represent his Puritie couering the shame of our nature The Girdle of his ●oynes and reines is expounded of the Euangelicall Prophet to be Iustice and faithfulnesse The Miter cloased about below but open aboue point-wise to heauen-ward it wel might shadow that saluation which he brought from heauen for mankinde below We the Body that is saued he the Head that saueth vs. And hitherto the Apostle leadeth vs when hee wills vs to take to our selues the helmet of Saluation which is no other than our head Christ as Simeon well vrgeth when he saith Mine eyes haue seene my saluation The inferiour Priest did thus in his garments represent Christ with his graces whereby we stand and are saued But to take a little view of the other foure garnishings which were proper to the Hie-priest it shal be to survay a more plenarie shadow of all things The foure tyrings absolute to Aaron and the Great●sacrificer in succession vnto him be these first the side Robe secondly the Ephod thirdly the Brestplate lastly the Golden plate For the Robe consider his heauen-blewe or hyacinth colour and what can one behold therein but glory or heauenly maiestie such as is represented to Iohn in Reuel 1.13 where our great Hie-priest standeth amidst the Churches clothed with Maiestie as with a state-garment As Iohn see him we should all see him in the spirit of our Minde namely to be clothed with Maiestie and renowne no more knowing Christ according to the flesh but according to his glorious immortalitie from the abolishment of corruption in all his mysticall members for to them it is finally appointed that dishonour corruption and immortalitie shal be put off that so they may be inuested with mortalitie vncorruption and glory For as we haue borne the image of the earthly Adam so shal we beare the image of the heauenly 1. Corinthians 15 49. In the Bels and Pomegranats circuiting the skirts of this garment much may thereof be spoken and all according to the analogie of faith Whereof now onely this In the golden bells making a golden sound as Aaron went in and out not onely is represented Prayer which powerfully was offered vp of Iesus but also and that more properly Sonitus verbi the sound of the word Messiah himselfe was the Word of the Father by which Word the worlds were made But the Bels here shadow not that vncreate word but that Creature-word which our great Messiah hath sounded in the eares of his people Which word should be deare vnto vs euen as the fringe of our garment placed about our seete for directing str●ight steps accordingly Yea it shadow-wise preacheth that we must sound well to others for their direction also in holy duety Specially the Ministers of God must v●ter this golden sound Iram bene inquit Beda contra se occultiiudicis exigit si sine praeaicationis sonitu inced●t hee p●ouoketh the anger of God against him who insisteth not in the sound of preaching Nor is it s●fficient to pray or preach except it may be vnde●stood of Gods people for if the trumpet giue an vncertaine sound who shall prepare hims●l●e vnto battel● except ●aith the Apostle ye v●ter words that haue signification how shall it be vnderstood what is spoken for yee shall speake in the ayre As Christ rung this bell before vs so wee are to ring it vnto others specially that peale whereby people may take knowledge of Messiah gone into the Holy of holies euen into the very heauens to appeare now in the sight of God for vs. For the Pome●granets consider their composition they were made of blew silke and purple scarlet Not to meddle with I●sephus no not with some christians their elementall conceits grounded here vpon colours it is certaine that by these pomegranats a most excellent fruite is shadowed forth good workes and by these dainty colours is intimat●d the Beautie and comelin●sse of good workes It is a frequent vse of scripture to compare Mankinde to a tree and his actions to tree-fruites and as such fruit●s are commaunded so a●e they of the Holy-ghost commended for beauteous Instance it but with one particular That loue which causeth brethren to dwell together in vnitie is it not commended for Tób and Nágnim comely and amiable p●al 133.1 Yea good workes are the beautie of mankind Which as they abounded in Messiah so neither can be lacking in his members Was it the Leuiticall posie A Bell and a Pome●granat A Bel and a Pome-granat Let it also be
blesseth but by his Sonne our Mysticall Aaron This dooth the Apostle remember when to the Ephesians chap. 1.3 hee thus prayeth Blessed be God euen the father of our Lord Iesus Christ which hath blessed vs with all spirituall Blessing in heauenly thing●s through Christ. And of him it can be onely essentially said that hee the Greater blesseth vs the Lesser Who as before he was shadowed in Isaac so he can only say Such I haue blessed and they shal be blessed Which action of blessing is in the Gospel very frequent whereas not onely he blesseth Ministers and people but also meate and drinke a more inferiour creature To him let minister and people repaire for a blessing Ministers for speaking effectually People for hearing effectually If he blesse their water is turned strait to wine but if he curse their thigh rottes and their figtree will neuer become fruitefull Let this here suffice for Aaron Lect. XXV Iosua THe next personall Shadow shal be that great successor of Moses the Leader and Planter of Israel in Canaan who primordially was termed Hoshea but secondarily IEHOSHVA Num. 13.9.17 The Rabbines doe prettily search out from whence this Iod commeth for so Hebrews do terme the letter I which here is preponed to Hoshea by which it commeth in hebrew forme to be Iehoshua Who therein obserue how it was that IOD which was taken from Abrahams wife when of Sarai she was called Sarah Genes 17.15 Which letter IOD of Greekes called Iota wandred as without a resting place till such time as it found a place in Hoshea Whereto that ancient prouerbe might wel allude in Math. 5.18 One Iote or one title shall not scape till all things be fulfilled If the Iewish Cabalists were not here blinde Sarah should not more easily leade them to Iosuah then the blessed Virgin might leade them to IESVS Nor were not a vaile ouer their eyes could th●y rest in this that Hoshea assumed Iod from Sarah but rather Cabalike-wise be led thereby to Iesus who assumed the Womans seede the seed of a Virgin that so what woman had lost it might be found in Iesus Did Moses the great Law-giuer afford that IOD to the Arch-duke of Israel But Iehouah greater than Moses he that gaue the law primordia●ly to Moses euen he gaue a Iote of womans seed to our captaine Christ. Nor what the Father hath giuen him can any man or Diuell pull out of his hands This to the Cabalists But for our more particular information let vs consider this shadow first in his Name secondly in his Office The name Hoshea or Iehoshua or Iosua they are in hebrew forme the verie same that Iesus is in greeke forme Which causeth the Author to the Hebrewes chap. 4.8 writing in Greeke not to say If Ioshuah had giuen them rest c. but If Iesus had giuen them rest for euery of them are deriued of one and the same Roote Iásh● not sounding Gnaijn and in english is a Sauiour according to the interpretation of that verie Ang●ll Gabriel in Math. 1.21 where the promised seede is termed Iesus why Because he shall saue his people from their sinnes euen as the Iudges after Ioshua were termed Sauiours for God stirred them vp temporarily to saue Israel from the yoke of the enemies So that Hoshea and Iesus haue one and the same name of Sauiour the first of them tempora●ly sauing Israel according to the proportion of a shadow the second sauing all his people eternally according to the proportion of a substance For his Office it hath generally beene noted in his Names signification which more particularly I will obserue first in his Conducting of Israel secondly in his Circumcising of Israel thirdly in his Dispossessing of Cananites and Possessing Israel of Canaan In conducting of Israel he shadowed our Sauiour Iesus who vnto Ioshua in chap. 5.14 doth terme himselfe Sar-tsebá-Iehouah The captaine of Iehouahs Armie that is the Leader of his people In which respect also euery Iudiciall and Regall Annointed-ones were figures And blessed are that people who haue Christ Iesus for their Iosua for their Gedeon for their Dauid for their Captaine All Baptized-ones do professe that By God his grace they will march vnder his Banner a red-crosse in the white-field of an vnspott●d Conscience fighting against the Diuell the World and Flesh. As they would not be arraigned of periurie yea of capitall hie treason in conspiring with the enemy let all such looke to that sacramentall oth and at least now at last become more faithfull Followers 2 Ioshua receiuing commandement of God to Circumcise Israel now the Second time chap 5.2 it will shadow forth that Circumcision which is made without hands Coloss 2.11 and the very same repres●nted by Baptisme which is an inward circumcision made by the Spirit This the Apostle in Rom. 2.29 doth call Circumcision of the heart in the spirit because in such an heart was that mortification which was represented by the outward signe But for the first circumcision he saith it is in the letter that is onely according to outward obseruance and this he saith doth make a true Iewe that is a true Christian to God-ward As that second circumcision did well represent Regeneration so Ioshua herein did well r●present our Iesus by whose spirit and word we are inwardly circumcised and Baptized for though Iohn powre on the water yet Christ must minister the Spirit It is Christ that hath giuen vs the second circumcision by Baptisme of New-birth it is he that hath purged our soules Nor without the second Circumcision is the shame of our mysticall Aegypt remooued 3 Ioshua Dispossessing Canaan of the vncircumcised he therein may well shadow forth Christ Iesus two wayes first in dispossessing the earth of the reprobate that so the meeke-ones may possesse it Math. 5.5.2 Pet. 3.13 For as it was created for the sonnes of God so onely they shall finally possesse it and haue a glorious vse of it Secondly it may well shadow also the dispossessing our bodi●y earthly Canaan of spirituall Cananites of vncircumcised sense and affection and this was Origens meditation when he thus writ Within vs are these Nations of vices For within vs are Cananites within vs are Perezites within vs are Iebusites Yea I say more that the seauen accursed Nations of Cananites Hittites Hiuites Perizzites Girgashites Amorites and Iebusites are naturally within vs who onely can bee cast forth by that stronger-man Iesus as sometimes the former nations were cast forth by Ioshua and as after that seauen diuells were cast out of Mary Magdalene by Christ Iesus But the dispossessing of euill is here but in part for still there is some Canaanite in our land and so we be taken vp for better vse but in part But when our Iesus shall come from Paran mysticall Habak 3.3 as Ioshua did from Paran literall Numb 13.1 he shall not onely beginne but also liue to perfect such purgation So much for Ioshua Lect. XXVI
Iudea All the commaundements comming forth from Princes for furthering the Churches worke they must receiue their Authori●●e and haue their due reference to the word of our Cyrus the substantial Annointed For of his word much more than that of Medes and Persians it may be said It admitteth no alteration As Princes would not be thought to alter the word of our great Monarch let them bridle the enemies beyond the Riuer that so the foundation of Religion and Church long since laide and by Idolatrers staid it may goe forward be built vpon and rise vp towards perfection Yet when we haue done what we can the Temple will come short of the first the state of the Church in this age nothing comparable to that of the first age Cyrus the vncircumcised must giue place to Salomon the Circumcised and the one worke to the other euen as Salomon was of Christ Iesus a more perfect Shadowe and the first Temple more excellent than the second Though yong-heads will admire the latter while more Ancient spirited weepe at the remembrance of the former 2. Did Cyrus subdue Nations purchase their riches set Captiues at libertie O our great Monarch receiued of his father All authoritie in heauen and in earth for arming his spirituall captaines whereby their ministerie became so effectuall as hie and strong imaginations were brought downe the Nations were subdued to his word Kings of the Nations offer to him their hid treasure as sometimes the Easterne Sophies did to his owne person offer Gold Mirrh● and Frankensence For setting such at libertie as before were captiued of satan and chained vnder the power of darkenesse he therein hath beene no lesse glorious O it remaineth that as he hath set vs free so we doe no more entangle ourselues but that setting our faces towards Heauens Zion we labour to be as He-goates before the Flocke drawers of others by our holy example And this we see Quod Cyrus Rex Dominum Saluatorem Nomine designanit factis that King Cyrus both in his Name and Acts doth shadow forth our Lord and Sauiour So much shall suffice for a taste of Personall shadows Lect. XXX Tree of Life Shadowes Sacramentall HAuing thus giuen a taste of shadowes Arithmetical and Personal it now remaineth that I speake something of Sacramentall shadowes The word Sacrament is of right large vse in Ecclesiasticall writings Insomuch as whatsoeuer the Greekes call Mysterion a Mysterie the Latines often terme Sacramentum a Sacrament Which more particularly may appeare in the Olde Latine translation of the new Testament who in Ephes. 5.32 Reuel 17.1 turneth Mysterion by Sacramentum for that in such large sense euery Ecclesiastike secret is a sacrament But after-age hath called it to straiter sence defining that to be onely a sacrament which is Sacri rei signum a Signe of some holy thing Which externall signe is of God appointed for he alone can institute such a signe who can giue the grace thereby signified for assuring his church of some necessarie grace In a word Sacraments as some haue noted are of two sorts the first onely Representatiue the second also Exhibitiue Representatiue sacraments are such-signes as onely represent some grace and that is commonly some common grace And so the Raigne-bow was and is a signe of God his grace or fauor touching the no more destroying of the world by water Paradise and Canaan Representatours of Heauen Noahs Arke the Tabernacle and Temple shadowers of the church Exhibitiue Sacraments are such signes as not onely represent but also doe exhibite vnto the Belieuer the very grace signified and such be the signes of Bread and Wine in the Lords supper of water in Christian Baptisme Of which kinde of sacrament I meane here to insist giuing vnto you an assay thereof first from such sacramentall exhibitiue shadowes as went before the Lawe secondly vnder the Law Before the Law I will propound fi●st somewhat of Paradise in the state of Mans innocencie secondly some such shadow as fell out of Paradise in the time of mans nocencie In the Garden I note a certaine peculiar tree placed in the midst therof called The tree of life vnto which tree there is due allusion in Reuel 22.2 which was Simbolum Sacramentum vitae a pledge and Sacrament of life termed of Rabanus sacramentum visibile invisibilis sapientiae a visible sacrament of inuisible wisedome The tree termed The knowledge of good and euil excepted it was permitted Adam to eate of all the other trees therefore also to eat of this sacramentall shadowing tree And hereto it is the Holighost alludeth in Reuelation 2.7 when he saith To h●m that ouercommeth I will giue to eate of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God Yet betweene the eating of this and the common trees there was great difference For on the common fruites he was to eate for bodies sustentation but on this peculiar tree for his soules instruction Which caused an Ancient well say in eo erat sacramentum in caeteris lignis ●●●●entum in the tree of life there was a sacrament but in the other trees nourishment And what was this internall sacrament or grace signified Rabanus shall answere Sanctus Sanctorum v●ique est Christus it is no other than Christ the Holy of Holies So Haymo on Apoc. 22. Lignum quippe vitae Christus est sapientia dei patris de qua Salomon in Pro. 3.18 dicit Lignum vitae est bis qui apprehenderint ●am qui tenuerit eam beatus He is the Churches life for without feeding on him by faith we with Adam fall vnder the power of Death He indeede is the tree of life planted by the riuers of waters which bringeth forth his fruite in due season whose leafe fadeth not and whatsoeuer hee dooth it shall prosper The best tree he is in the Churches Garden and in the midst of the Court of Conscience he is to be planted But if we flie him for tasting of Antichrists tree a tree of knowledge for good and euill the good of that religion being a cloke of the euill then we deserue to be driuen from the Lord of life euen as Adam was forced from the sacramentall shadow Was Adam then taught that life was the free guift of God How much more now hauing sinned is it the gift of God freely without all demerit Stood Adam then in neede of a sacrament for sustaining his faith How cursed are they then with the Suenkfeldians that pretend such a perfection in this life as needeth no preaching no sacrament When Adam had by reason of his sin cut himselfe voluntarily from the Lord of life was he therevpon driuen from the externall signe of life Yea for teaching the gouernors of the Church to seclude such from sacramentall signes as first haue openly and impenitently cast behind them the thing signified And thus in Paradise vnder shadowes the Gospel was
defect of drinke and Moses complaining thereof to God behold the Lord commaundeth Moses to take his rodde and therewith smite a certaine Rocke promising therewith the issue of waters for quenching Israels thirst Moses herevpon tak●th his rodde doth chide the people smites the rock twise and waters issue out aboundantly Numb 20.10 11. But because Moses and Aaron belieued not rightly that promise God denieth to them the bringing of Israel into the land of promise Ibidem 12. That this Rocke-water signified yea to the belieuer exhibited Christ and the things of Christ is plaine in 1. Cor. 10.4 Where the Apostle teacheth that the fathers did all drinke the same spirituall drinke for they dranke of the spiritual Rocke that followed them and the Rocke was Christ. Was that Rocke the verie Christ No no more than the spirituall bread and wine in the Lords supper is the very Body and blood of Christ but so called because together with the signe the thing signified was exhibited Fide manente signa sunt mutata Ibi Petra Christus nobis Christus quod in Altari penitur The same faith saith Austin abideth still but the signes are changed There the Rocke was Christ but that which now is placed on the Altare or communion table namely the bread and wine euen that is Christ vnto vs. But for the clearer vnderstanding of this sacramentall shadow let vs consider more particularly 1. why Christ is termed Rocke 2. what is meant by the waters issuing thence 3. by the stroke wherevpon the waters issued 1. Christ is termed Rocke because as the Psalmist termes him he is the Rocke of our saluation that is euen He vpon whome if we build let the raine fall the floodes come the winds blow and beate vpon our house it yet falls not because it is founded vpon that Rocke Euen he is that Rocke vpon whom the Church the house of God is builded whereby it comes to passe that the infernall powers cannot preuaile against it Math. 16.18 Thus to the whole church he is the same that he is to Peter and euery particular Belieuer and to euerie particular member the same as to the whole Shaken they may be as was Peter but not finally remooued no more than was Peter Which caused an Antient well say The Rocke is in heauen in the same is stedfastnes and assurance And indeede where else can it be but in our Sauiour The world roareth the flesh oppresseth me the world followes and hangs vpon me And yet notwithstanding I fall not For I am founded vpon a sure Rocke 2. What is meant by the waters issuing thence Origen makes this answer Percussus enim Christus in crucem actus Noui testamenti fontes produxit Christ being smitten and hangd on the crosse out of him issued the fountaines of the New-Testament By which fountaines hee should meane nothing else but Mysteria the secrets of the Gospel as somewhat before hee had spoken Rabanus hereon hath Percussus enim Christus sitientibus lauacri gratiam donum spiritus sancti ●ffudit Christ being smitten he powred forth to the thirstie the grace of our washing and the gift of the Holy Ghost And true it is that what we draw from Christ it is to the world a Mysterie and so are all the things sealed vp in Christ Iesus reuealed onely to his members And as true it is that our new births washing and euerie gift of the spirit it floweth out of him as from the Head-fountaine As they be mysteries so our Sauiour thanketh the heauenly f●ther for hiding them from the world but reuealing them to his children And as they flowe from him not onely as a fountaine for washing away sinne and vncleanenesse Zechar. 13.1 but also to become in vs an eternall spring flowing vp vnto heauens Paradise so himselfe teacheth the woman of Samaria Iohn 4.14 that he was to giue these waters and soone after informeth his Disciples that none could drinke them but by Faith when as he thus saith He that beleeueth in me shall neuer thirst Iohn 6.35 Iesus Messiah is thus The fountaine of the gardens for watering the churches the well of liuing-waters springing vp in the true belieuer vnto Eternal life Open thy filthy he●rt and these waters will cleanse thee Set thy mouth of faith to his mysticall side and quench thy spirituall thirst yea cease not to draw vntill thou haue drunke vppe eternall life Be n●t drunke with wine wherein is excesse but ●e fille● with the spirite Ephes. 5 18. These waters haue to Gods praise ●loted ●long through the midd●st of Englands Paradise God graunt th●t our sinnes become not as coardes for bringing in Romes Philistims for stopping and fil●ing vp our wells with Grauell In Queene Maries daies they had dammed them vp but our Isaac digged them ●new and gaue to them ancient names Sweet heauenly father for thy Sonnes sake continue them still open euen to our posteritie for euer that so thy poore Israel may neuer haue occasion to murmure 3. The strokes which Moses gaue were two Therevpon he is of God charged with infidelitie which causeth diuines to conclude the signe thereof in his smiting Some haue taken it that hee ought onely haue spoken to the Rocke and therefore his smiting though it had beene but once to be a signe of diffidence as if God would not by the word alone haue fetched out waters But such comparing to this purpose Num. 20. and vers 8. with 11. should therewithall haue remembred Exod. 17.6 where it is plain●ly commaunded that hee shoulde also smite the Rocke Others more generally haue deemed th●t his diffidence was declared in his smiting the second time whereas the Lord onely bidde him speake and smite not smite twise And indeede this is somewhat though it may be not all For to what p●rpose would so wise a man smite the second time but because the waters issued not vpon the first stroke How fell it out then that waters came not vpon the first blow Because he distrusted the Lords word Yea Aaron that smit not is accused of diffidence also And indeed a right hard thing it was to belieue that a rocke should send forth aboundance of water Besides which circumstance obserue also the speach of Moses to the people Heare now ye Rebels shall we bring you water out of this Rocke He saith not that they would fetch water out but asks the question shal we as if they would saue their honestie though water came not out se●ing they made no promise of bringing it out The not issuing of waters vpon the first stroke it taught Moses and Aaron the fruite of diffidence in Gods promise but issuing forth vppon the second blowe it taught them that God is faithfull who hath promised though his children many times be faithlesse But what doth this rod and the stroke therewithall shadowe The rodde I know not what it may better resemble than Prayer the spirit of prayer
people to lift vp their hearts and then with Saint Stephen they shall see Christ not onely crucified but also on the right hand of his father glorified there making intercession for euerie of the faithful there being no other name vnto vs vnder heauen by the which wee are to be saued Thus the fierie and furnace-like affl●ctions of Iesus doe expell the fiery sting of the wicked this fire expelling the former And thus all Shadowes before the Law and vnder the Law do leade the Church to Christ Iesus crucified and now glorified Hee being the substance the shadow ceaseth The day-breake of the Gospell hath put an end to the Lawes night and darkenesse So much briefly of shadowes Arithmeticall Personall and Sacramentall Lect. XXXVII Vntill the day breake and the shadowes flie away Retire my welbeloued and be like a Roe or yoong Heart vppon the mountaines of Bether WEe haue before at large examined the sorts of shadowes types and figures which were to giue place and breake vp with the time of the Gospels bright appearance In the second place as at first I obserued it remaineth that something be said of the shadowes vnder the Gospel which are not to flie away vntill the second comming of Christ Iesus for so it may be that the Church here designeth not onely the First but also the Second comming of Messiah With which appearance the Sabbaticall morning shall beginne a day without darkenesse and euening as is his shadow Genes 2.23 for then we shal see Christ Iesus as he is and no longer be vnder shadowes 1. Iohn 3.2 The shadowes peculiar to the time of the Gospel for imposition of hands is in common to both Testaments they be two Baptisme and the Lords supper And vnto these two it was that Ancients had relation whenas they say aper●it latus vt illic quodammodo ostium vitae panderetur vnde Sacramenta Ecclesiae mana●erunt The side of Christ was pierced that so the doore of life there might be set open from whence the Churches sacraments haue issued vnderstanding so by water Baptisme and by blood synecdochically the Lord his last supper Herevpon it was that Augustine balancing the old and new sacraments hee saith in one place that Christ hath giuen to vs Pauca pro multis a few for many and in another place hee saith that Christ hath ioyned his people together sacramentis numero paucissimis by sacraments fewest in number Now the fewest in number is Two for vnita● non est numerus one is no number As for the Romanists numbring vp to the Gospel seauen Sacraments it is quite besides booke proceeding onely from sup●rstition as was that in their elder brother Balaam calling for seauen Altares seauen Bullock● and seauen Rammes Numb 23.1 To discourse here of these two sacraments it is not my purpose fi●st for that such doctrine is often vppon occasion deliuered amongst vs secondly for th●t the doctrine of these two sacraments it hath often beene vrged before in our discourse of the old Testaments shadowes Mutantur signa Res autem signata manet the signes are changed but the th●ng signified rem●ineth For vnto Baptisme thou maist referre all the shadow-washings with purifications and vnto the Lords supper thou maist referre all the mysticall eatings and drinkings in and without Paradise before and after the flood before the Law and vnder it And this is the new Testaments perfection and glory that in one speach twoo things are spoken that in twoo sacraments two hun●●●d are sealed vp to the faithfull Which two sacraments as they leade ●nto Christ so when Christ our life app●areth in glory these sh●dowes must vanish also Appar●n●● v●ritate figura cess●t sic●● 〈◊〉 abse●●● Imp●r●tore im●g●●iu● hab●t authoritatem pr●sente ●on habet the truth it selfe appearing the figure ceaseth euen as an Emperours image hath authoritie in his ●bsence but being present no such matter Till that day therefore breake and these two shadowes also flie away let vs with all truth of faith and thankefulnesse set forth the precious passion and bloodshed of our Sauiour Christ Iesus Thus much touch●ng th● time of Messiahs decreed absence It remaineth in the second place that the maner of his absence be considered namely as a Roe or yong hart vpon the Mountaines of Bether And herein obseruable first the Creature whereto he is resembled namely a Roe or yong Hart secondly the place of his abode and that is the mountaines of Bether Of the Roe and Hinde I haue before spoken in verse 7. and 9. and that somewhat amply here therefore I passe by such particulars as toucheth that resemblance Touching the Mountaines of Bether something is to be spoken wherewith the whole is to be concluded Bether is here taken of some for the Proper name of a place so termed of othersome it is taken Appellatiuely and so is englished mountaines of diuision If the proper name of a place then it is not yet obs●rued what place that should be excep● that which in 2. Sam. 2.29 is t●rmed Bithron in the land of Gilead As for the old latine that readeth Bethel belikes Lamed wanted the head and so he tooke it for Resh followed of Pope Sixtus in his edition I set not onely all H●brew coppies against that but also Pope Clement his edition If the Hebr●e word Bether be not a proper name but a Noune Common and so it is to be termed Mountaines of Diuision then it is a question what mountaines these be who according to the Letter are pointed at As I knowe no Writer that hath determined that so I can not gesse wh●t mountaines except they should be either the Mountaines that enuironed Ierushalem or suppo●ted Zion which neither I see how litterally they may b● so termed or else the two Mountaines Gerizim and G●ebal Deut. 11. ●0 27. c. Iosh. 8.33 where the twelue tribes were Diuided Simeon Leui Iudah Issacar Ioseph and Beniamin vttering the blessing from mount Gerizim and Reuben Gad Asher Zebulun Dan and Naphtali vttering the Legall curse from the other mountaine And betwee●e what could there greater Diuision be then betweene Blessing Cursing Let the Mountaines be what they shall be I doubt not but thereby we are mystically led first to the partition wall which diuided betweene Iew and Gentile vntill the comming of Christ who then of two were made one no people then standing of as accursed but all called into one Sheepe folde for communicating with the Gospel of blessing Secondly as we respect Christ now returned into the heauens the mountaines of Gods holinesse so it further in mysterie leadeth vs to these mountaines of notable diuision by which we yet are parted from the full fruition of Iesus So that the church of the Gentiles figuratiuely introduced before Christs incarnation doth but subsc●ibe to Messiahs mysticall feeding in Israel to whom the Oracles were committed and they so lift vp aboue the Nations till the Day wherein the Gentiles
●hould be visited the wall of ceremonies pulled downe and the shadowes vanished But the two people once made One by the Gospel the Church so here may be introduced subscribing to Messiahs continuance in the high Heauens vntil the great Sabbaticall day begin to breake what time not only the Churches sacramental shadowes shall vanish but also the Night of sin the workes of darkenesse the shadow of death shall flie away and be no more seene As a Roe and Hynde he sometimes fed in the height of Iuda but now resteth in the height of Heauen solacing at the right hand of glorie There O thou whom my soule loueth be as a Roe or yong-Hart lately chased and bloodily entreated in our valley of death there rest and solace thy selfe maugre the Dragons gaping Antichrists warring the Atheists yealping against the Moone Thou didst promise being once lift vp to draw all thy members vnto thee O my soules Ioy thou was first lifted vp betweene earth and heauen for thy Churches redemption and now thou art exalted hier then the heauens for thy peoples glorification Draw vs O sweete Hynde of the Morning drawe vs after thee that howsoeuer the body conuerse here awhile below yet our soules conuersation may be aloft with thee So be it And so an end of the third Part. Faults to be corrected IN the last line of the ●pistle to the Ministers reade vnlearned p. 3. last line reade he was not onely ● Prophet p. 17. in the margine reade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 23. l. 3. re●de threats pa. 24. line 25. reade Blessednesses pag. 35. line 10. blot o●t in pag. 42. l. 37. reade strai●d p. 63. line 29 30. in some bookes blot out where vision world line 33. reade arke p. 66. line 27. reade s●ndry Images p● ●8 in the marg reade Bim●sibbo p. 73. l. 9. reade pl●a p. 76. li. 1. reade the word Monch l. 17. reade medicin● pa. 84. l. 7. reade it signifieth p. 113. for lines reade letters pa. 116. last line but one reade sick●n●s pa. 120. last line for co●mitted reade receiued pag. 127. l. 11. reade sunctions pa. 131. last line reade testament p. 132. l. 1. reade giuen p. 137. l. 26. re●de sufficiencie p. 156. l. 10. for lute reade but. pag. 173. lin 28. reade great and small pag. 203. l. 17. put out of p●g 208. l. 18. reade many halfe hundr pa. 215. l. 9. reade which is to the Hebr. 10.5 parap●rased thus pa. 252. l. 23. reade s●ut out pa. 257 l. 8. reade other than the Sonne l. 19. reade mediation pag. 283. l. 22. reade spirituall pag. 285. l. 30 reade th●ist Other faults I desire the gentle Reader to correct as hee finde● them Bibles Briefe Sommon to Domes day Sinners sleepe Resurrectiō Tables of Houshold gouernment Bern. serm 30. in Cantic Ambr. offic lib. 1. cap. 1 By my Lord Andersons suite to his Grace of Canterbury Aug. de grammatica libr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Speaking of Kornelius S●lla Korne●ius Cinna and Kornelius Lentulus Pomponius Laetus de legib Iude 10. Iohn 1.1 and hebr 1.3 Their Talmud l●ckes no such stu●fe Rom. 15.4 Hebr. 6.1 c. As their spirituall lan● of peace Enterlude of Mindes doe shew For this see somewhat in Lect. xv Vbi ma●è ne●o peius G●l●t 4 24. Eccles 12.9 Hebr. 11 40. The argument of this Song * R. Sal. Iarchi hereon * R. Abr. Abben-ezra on this chapter The time when this Song was penned * Bellarm. de verbo Dei lib. 1. cap. 5. 2. Sa. 7.14 15. 2. Chro. 11. ●17 Ioh. 20 15. c. Isidor de eccles lib. 1. ea 6. 7 Bruno in Eph. 5 Ephes. 5.19 Tho. Aquin. on Ephes. 5. * So doth Tremelius turne it the hebrew is Cj tobim dodejca mijaijn Galat. 4.4 Iohn 1.18 compared with cha 17.5 Heb. 11.40 * Heb. rúach Gr. pneuma Lat. Spiritus Matth. 1.20 Ephes. 3.14 15 16 17.18 Psal. 19.10 * Ler●iach Aelôhim Aeloh●ka Procul à phano * Shemen is indifferently Oyle or Oyntment * The heb Vr is in English Fire Dod●ica as before * Meishárim Iohn 15.5 Gal 2 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Actcs 17.28 Prou. 21.27 * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 7.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * L●mb dist 25 lib. 2. Q. Libertas ergo à peccato ● miseria per gratiam est libertas vera à ●ecessita●e per naturam * Adiutorium in bonum non infirmitas in malum * Lomb. lib. 2. distinct 25. G. * Synergói 1. cor 3.9 Synergóuntes 2. cor 6.1 Prosper in sentent 172. Nemo inuitus bonum facit c. * Hammelec 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Ashrês Adam m●phachéd támidh Hebianj of Bo● * It is in Hithpagnel Greg. in ●antic 1. Quid per huius sponsi qui Rex est cellari● intellegimus nisi sanct scriptur archana quae rimamur nisi sanctae contemplationis mysteriaiquorum delicijs●i refic mur m.x conualescimur In illa proculdubio quisque introducitur omnia temporalia mox con●emnit quia aeternis ditatur * Ah●bûk● * Omnes fontes mei in te Psal. 87.7 * Gen. 1● 20 * V●nauah * Reu. 11.8 14.8 * See this at large in part 3 Lect. 19. * Actes 13.45.50 and 14.2 and 17.5.13 c. * Ro. 11.25 26. * In my Antidoton and new Ierushalem * Abbenezra in his Dramatique expos * Sol. Polyh in cap. 46. * They write that this bird is euer but one and onlie resiant in Arabia And that in her fulnesse of yeeres she ●lickers in her drie neast against the sun and so is fired into ashes that out of these ashes ariseth a little worme which afterwards becommeth the Phoenix * Saepe est sub palliolo sordido sapientia * Whereof in cap. 3.7 * Ambros. on Coloss. 2. Imperatore absente Imago habet authoritatem absente autem Non. * So do●h Ra● Selomeh and Abben-ezra but then apply it to their own churches estate spoken of in Ezech. 20.5 c. * Nicharû * Barn serm 30 in Cantic * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Tarebits * Cegnótjah so expounded of Rab. Selom Iarchi * It is in the coniugation Hiphil which signifieth a double action * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Chamudoth and Machomed of Chamad * Im doth so signifie when the matter requir●th it * Prou. 30.1 2 * Ezech. 16 6. c. * Eph. 5.25 c * Gnàl * The old Latine others but our Tremelius and the Romists Arrias Montanus do reade it singular * Antidoton prooueth that at large * Ephes. 2.10 ● Cor. 11.1 Ierem. 6.16 Prou. 14.12 Ibid. 15. 1 Kings 3. * The word Zó●óth signifieth women setting to sale But whether victualles or their bodies or both it is a question In Latine therefore it is well turned Meritoriae * Matth. 1.5 * Occlamant illi attendite ad vias videte interrogate c. * Called Index librorum prohibitorum cum regulis