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A49971 Orbis miraculum, or, The temple of Solomon pourtrayed by Scripture-light wherein all its famous buildings, the pompous worship of the Jewes, with its attending rites and ceremonies, the several officers employed in that work, with their ample revenues, and the spiritual mysteries of the Gospel vailed under all, are treated at large. Lee, Samuel, 1625-1691. 1659 (1659) Wing L903C; ESTC R41591 488,038 394

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carrying on of the Temple-Work were divided into 24 Courses by Lot according to this ensuing Table in the days of David by his Appointment But these Orders as to their Genealogicall Succession having been much confounded since that time especially under the Captivity possibly the Priests of Nehemiah's List might receive new Names according to a new Lot for their several Stations and therefore it is perhaps that we find the ancient Names somewaat varied and some of the new Courses not to be found Registred according to all the Names of David's Division Howsoever so far as they can be without many Transpositions of Letters clearly set down we may read as follows 1 Jehojarib 1 Chron. 24.7 called Jojarib in Nehem. 12.6 19. 2 Jedajah 1 Chron. 24.7 Neh. 12.7 19. 3 Harim 8 Neh. 10.5 12.15 Or Rehum Chap. 12.3 4 Seorim 8 Perhaps Serajah Nehem. 10.2.12.1.12 5 Malchijah 9 Nehem. 10.3 Or Malluch Neh. 12.2 Or Melicu v. 14. 6 Mijamin 9 Nehem. 10.7 Or Miamin Neh. 12.5 Or Minjamin Neh. 12.17 7 Hakkez 10 Perhaps Hatiush Neh. 10.4 12.2 8 Abijah 10 Neh. 10.8 12.4 17. Luke 1.5 9 Jeshuah 11. 10 Shecaniah 11 Neh. 12.3 Or Shebaniah Nehem. 10.4 12.14 11 Eliashib 12. 12 Jakim 12. 13 Huppak 1 Chron. 24.13 14 Jeshebeab 13. 15 Bilgah 14. Nehem. 12.5 18. Or Bilgai Neh. 10.8 16 Immer 14. Perhaps Merim●th Neh. 10.5 17 Hezir 15. Called Ezra Neh. 12.1 13. Or Azariah Nehem. 10.2 18. Aphses 15. 19. Pethahiah 16. 20. Jehezekel 16. 21. Jachin 17. 22. Gamul 17. 23. Delaiah 18. 24. Maaziah 18. Neh. 10. ● or Madiah Neh. 12 5. Moadiah ver 17. Of ●hese twenty four courses The first course entring upon the first Sabbath after the Temple's dedication continued so in the devolution of the work unto each succeeding course from Jehojarib the first untill the captivity and being afterwards fixed in the best order they could did so endure till the daies of our Lord's Incarnation Luk. 1.5 neer which time we read of Zachariah's Ministration at the Altar of Incense being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as we translate it Of the Course of Abiah which was originally the eighth in number it being called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as some think from this hebdomadicall or weekly entrance into the service Which word if critically insisted upon though it may not yield sufficient ground to build the assertion of this constant revolution of courses at such a set time as a week and if so yet is it not safe to lay stresse upon words the argument from Etymology being very sandy since the fall of the Tower of Babel upon the tongues of our Ancestors yet notwithstanding there are two places of Scripture that help us in this point that we may dismisse verball niceties to their tongues to whom they do movere Salivam The former place acquaints us of the Priests entring in upon the Sabbath and the latter 2 Chr. 23.4 2 Kin. 11.7 of their going forth upon the same day which is sufficient enough at present to our purpose especially Joseph Anti. l. 7. c. 11. p. 248. G. mihi since confirmed by Josephus being himself a Priest in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And he ordained speaking of David that one Family or course should minister unto God for eight daies together from Sabbath to Sabbath Of these twenty four Tribes or courses 1 Chr. 24.4 sixteen were of the line of Eleazar and eight of the race of Ithamar The work impendent upon their shoulders since the Tabernacle-Vessels were taken off after the settlement of the Ark in the fixed place of the Temple was various and excellent consisting principally in these following particulars 1 The work of sacrificing with all its rites did lye upon them in all Offerings on the Altar of burnt offering nay 1 Chr. 6.49 2 Ch. 29.22 the whole service of the most Holy place 2 The Government of the Sanctuary and of the House of God was impendent on their shoulders 1 Chr. 24.5 3 They set the new-prepared shewbread on the golden Tables within the Sanctuary every Sabbath and removed the old 4 They ordered the Lamps of the golden Candlesticks every Morning 5 They kindled the daily Incense to make a sweet perfume in the Temple at the time of the dressing of the Lamps 1 Chr. 6.49 that the stench of that work might not be offensive 6 They were rhe unappealeable Judges of Leprosy Lev. 13.2 3. and Jealousy betwixt man and wife 7 They blew the Trumpets to the solemn feasts Joel 2.15 1 Ch. 15.24 16.6 Num. 10.8 31.6 and also before the Ark at its solemn removals and also to accompany the Captains of the Battel in War with their silver Trumpets before the Battel as may be perspicuous●y evident out of severall places of the holy Scripture 2 Ch. 13.12 Lev. 6.12 13. Exo. 30.23 1 Chr. 9.30 Mal. 2.7 8 They were to looke to the burning of wood continually upon the brazen Altar that the fire once kindled from heaven might never be extinguished 9 They were to make the holy Ointment with the appointed Spices 10 They instructed the People in the Law of God Of the Levites The Levites distinctly so called were not Priests but such as came from the stemme or root of Levi excepting the Children of Aaron These persons were appointed to wait upon the Sons of Aaron in the Courts and in the Chambers 1 Chron. 23.28 29. c. in the purifying of all the holy things and the work of the service of the house of God Both for the Shew-bread and for the fine flower for Meat-Offerings and the unleavened Cakes and for things baked in Pans or fryed and for all manner of Measure and Cize a good president to learne us of what sacred estimation we should account and what diligent care we should take in the conservation of the standard Vessels for the administration of commutative Justice they were also to stand every Morning to thank and praise the Lord and likewise at Evening Yea and to offer all burnt sacrifices unto the Lord that is to assist the Priests in case of multitude of Offerings such as were extraordinary in the Sabbaths new Moons and Set-Feasts by number according to the order commanded them continually before the Lord. And that they should keep the charge of the Tabernacle of the Congregation and of the holy place and of the Sons of Aaron their brethren in the Service of the house of the Lord. For which end they were at first numbred at the age of thirty years 1 Chron. 23.26 27. 1 Chro. 23.3 c. but after the daies of David alwaies at twenty Because then they did no more carry the burden of the Tabernacle-implements and Vessels Their number in the latter end of King David's reign was computed at thirty eight thousand whereof twenty four thousand were set off for the work and businesse of the holy House Six
burning upon the Altar by addition of continual fuel and therefore all culinary fire is called strange and that which the Lord will not own in his Sacrifices This was the reason of the sore punishment of Nadab and Abihu the Sons of Aaron because they offered k Lev. 10.1 strange fire before the Lord which he commanded them not And therefore excellent is that place in the Psalmist according to the l Psal 20.4 Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let him remember all thine Offerings and thy burnt Sacrifice turn to ashes that is inflaming of it with his celestial fire in token of acceptation This may hint to us what special care we ought to adhibit that we draw not nigh to God with the culinary fire of our own corrupt passions we must not lift up hands to Heaven in m 1 Tim. 2.8 wrath If John the meekest of the Apostles shall desire of Christ to call for fire from Heaven to eonfume the wretched Gadarenes who loved their swine better then a Saviour even he shall meet with a rebuke together with the rest a Luk. 9.55 Ye knew not what manner of spirit ye are of It is observed by b V. ibid. p. 63. Concerning Cain Cloppenburg that Jerom's question is not rashly answered out of Theodotio's Translation in these words * Hieronym Tom. 3. qu. in Gen. p. 206. Vnde scrire potuit Cain quod Fatris ejus munera suscepisset Deus sua repudiasset nisi illa Interpretatio vera esset quam Theodotio posuit Et inflammavit Dominus super Abel super Sacrificium ejus super Cain vero super Sacrificium ejus non ● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inflammavit How could Cain know that God had accepted the Offerings of his Brother and rejected his own unless that Interpretation were true which Theodotion hath given And the Lord sent down fire upon Abel and his Sacrifice but not on Cain's The descent of fire from Heaven upon the Sacrifices of old d Id. p. 65. was a visible token of the presence of the holy Spirit who is in Scripture compared to fire and therefore in the day of Pentecost e Act. 2.3 the Spirit did sit upon the Apostles in the shape of fiery tongues And our Lord is said by f Mat. 3.11 John Baptist to baptize with the holy Ghost and fire Hence is that metaphorical expression in the Apostle Paul commanding the Saints of g 1 Thes 5.19 Thessalonica to take heed of quenching the Spirit whose warming and inflaming motions are necessary for the offering up of all our spiritual Sacrifices unto God even as the continual fire upon the Altar was for these of the Jewish Ordinances Of this Burnt-offering concerning which we are treating I shall at present observe but one thing more and that is that there was nothing of it reserved from the fire but the skin only and that was given to the h Lev. 7.8 Priests In like manner when the Heads of Families were Priests before the giving of the Law the Sacrificer had the skin As i Origen Ho. 6. in Levitic p. 145. Origen observed of old concerning Adam that the skins wherewith he was cloathed were of the Beasts which were offered in Sacrifice To signifie that by the clothing of Christs righteousness the great Sacrifice for sin our nakedness is hidden from the sight of God But why must the Priest in following times after the solemn introduction of the several Rites of the Mosaical Law have the skin of the Sacrifice To shew thereby that in the first place God would have the pains and labour of his servants in his worship to be alway rewarded We learn also hereby that every mans Offering is to have the outward skin of profession pulled off God looks to the heart and inwards of our duties what fat and flesh there is upon our services But the Priest he must have the skin he is to take care of and look to the very externals of worship that they be managed according to the prescript forme of Gods will and is to have recompence for such his service 'T is not the skin that will satisfie or please God in our Offerings He that searches the heart expects we should worship him in spirit and truth The performance of the solemnity of this Offering consisted in eight particulars as you may read pag. 116. of this Treatise whereupon I shall briefly gloss only by allusion craving a favourable and candid Interpretation for I press not my own apprehensions rigidly at any time and then shall retire to the second the Sin-offering 1. We are to confess our sins over the head of the Offering that God may lay them upon and impute them to Jesus Christ Prov. 28.13 Confession must go before pardon Confess and forsake and ye shall find mercy b Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins he is faithfull to forgive us and the c Verse 7. bloud of Christ his Son shall cleanse us from them 2. As the person did slay his Offering so 't is we that by our sins have crucified the Lord of life 3. As the Priest sprinkled the bloud round about the Altar so Christ who offered up himself sprinkles his meritorious bloud upon the Altar and makes his Sacrifice acceptable Nay all our Spiritual Sacrifices are only pleasing to God through the sprinkling of his precious blood This d Heb. 12.24 bloud of sprinkling speaks better things then that of Abel Abel's bloud cried for vengeance against his wicked Brother this bloud of our elder Brother cries for mercy atonement and pardoning grace for such as are elect according to the fore-knowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience and e 1 Pet. 1 2. sprinkling of the bloud of Jesus Christ 4. As the Priest flayed off the skin So our great Highpriest by the power of his Divinity did lay down his life he did exuere Tabernaculum lay aside the thin a 2 Cor. 5.1 4. 2 Pet. 1.13 14. Tabernacle of his body for a while when he gave up the Ghost to the Father and commended his Spirit to him b Heb. 10.20 The vail of his flesh was rent insunder in the day when he made his c Isa 53.10 Soul an Offering for sin 5. As the Sacrifice was cut in pieces Oh how was his blessed Body mangled by the nails and spear his head pierced with thorns d Psa 22.16 They pierced his hands and feet Oh how was his blessed soul under flaming agonies in that hour when he cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me 6. Fire was laid upon the Altar and fuell to preserve it The wrath of God was the fire and sin the fuel to keep it burning till this blessed Saviour had fully satisfied for all the sins of the elect 7. All the parts were laid in order upon the Altar even as Christ our Lord was stretched out upon
v. 10. 1 Kin. 6.23 v. 28. 2 Chron. 3.11 12 13. two other Cherubims standing on the Ground made as we read it of Image-work The material was of Olive-Tree and overlaid with Gold Each Wing of each Cherubim was five Cubits long All four Wings being extended to the length of Twenty Cubits viz. the whole breadth of the Oracle The two inward a Wings touched each other and the two ends of the outward Wings touched the Wall of the House The height of each of Solomon's was Ten Cubits a piece under whose two inward Wings stood Moses his Ark and Cherubims These four Cherubims are likened in Scripture to a Chariot of four Wheels whereon the Divine Majesty did sit and utter his infallible Oracles 1 Chron. 28.18 Psal 99.1 and are called therefore the Chariot of the Cherubims though some think each of these greater Cherubims stood upon a Chariot and therefore called so But the Text doth clearly speak out that they stood on their feet 2 Chron. 3.13 which is conceived to be meant not onely of their Erect Posture 2 Chron. 5.7 but also of their Situation upon the Golden-Floor whereas the other two stood on the Ark. Besides the Ark and these its Appurtenances there seems by the Epistle to the Hebrews that within this most Holy Place was laid the Pot of Manna and Aaron's Rod that budded Heb. 9.4 Numb 17.10 For so that there may be a clear Reconcilement of Scripture we must understand the Author of that Epistle by the Relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make a Reference to the Oracle or Holyest of all mentioned in the third Verse and not the Ark which relation of a Pronoun to a remote Antecedent is not altogether unusual amongst even some Learned Authors There be some that think possibly they were in the Ark till Solomon's time and then by Divine Appointment laid in some other place For why should Scripture say expresly in two places they were not in the Ark seeming thereby to imply some change 1 King 8.9 2 Chr. 5.10 as to this particular which if so then the Epistle to the Hebrews speaking of Moses's Tabernacle may consist more Grammatically with it self and other Scriptures if this may be the true mind of the Spirit The Golden Censer of Aaron also was laid up in some place near the Ark for which the fore-cited Text is as clear as for the other We read also of five Golden Emerods and five Golden Mice dedicated by the Lords of the Philistims unto God when they were smitten for their sin which were put up into a Coffer and sent with the Ark as a Memorial of God's Vengeance and of their Deliverance But whether they were conveyed into the Holyest Place with the Ark and reserved unto Solomon's Temple is one of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore we must leave it for a clearer Discovery In the time of Moses there was also the Book of the Law called by some the Deuteronomion laid on the side of the Ark But whether or no it was placed there in Solomon's dayes we do not read yet we find in Josiah's Reign when the Temple was purged the Book of the Law was found in the Temple by Hilkiah the Priest though no express mention be made of the Oracle Of the Vessels and Vtensils in the Sanctuary or Holy Place WE shall dispose these in the same order that the Scripture mentions them that is First the Altar of Incense Then the Tables and the Candlesticks as may be seen 1 King 7.48 49. and 2 Chron. 4.19 20. The Altar of Incense As to the Golden Altar of Incense it 's first requisite to clear it up that it was placed in the Sanctuary without the Oracle and its Vail In Moses his Tabernacle it 's clear that it had stood without the Vail For Moses having placed the Ark lets down the Vail and then places the Table Northward the Candlestick Southward and this Altar before the Vail Exod. 40 3 21 23 26. that is at the upper end of this Room just in the middle before the Vail But a clear Inference we have out of Leviticus where upon the Expiation Day the High-Priest was to take a Censer full of Burning-Coals of Fire from off the Altar before the Lord and his hands full of sweet Incense beaten small and bring it within the Vail Lev. 16.12 If the Altar stood within the Vail then it were absurd to say thus that Aaron took a Censer of Coals from off the Altar within the Vail and brought it within the Vail But when as its Position was without it 's properly said that with these prepared things he went from the Altar into the Oracle within the Vail to burn sweet Odours Again the Text says that after the High-Priest had done sprinkling the Mercy Seat with the blood of the Bullock and the Goat 7 times that he shall go out unto the Altar that is before the Lord and put blood upon its Horns and sprinkle it 7 times If so be then Aaron must go one of the most Holy Place before he can come to this Altar It 's evident Lev. 16.18 that the Altar did not stand within the Vail Thus much I desired to add to that common and urgent Argument of the daily burning of Incense by every inferiour Priest in his course upon this Altar who could not have admission within the Oracle being open onely once a year and to the High-Priest onely on the solemn day of Expiation For so we find the High-Priest and eighty inferiour Priests with King Uzziah at this Incense-Altar who durst not go into the Oracle 2 Chron. 26.17 Now that Solomon's Altar was placed also in the Holy Place appears by the Text alleadged which says it was situate by the Oracle implying that it was not within it 1 King 6.22 There is nothing worth answering that I know of which can be opposed but that foresaid place of the Apostle where it 's said Heb. 9.4 concerning the Golden Censer that it was in the most Holy Place To which I say either it is to be understood of that Censer that was thus brought into this Oracle within the Vail once a year by the High-Priest and so may be truly said to be in the Oracle though not constantly yet at solemn times or else we must think of some other Interpretation For whereas this may be conceived by some but an evasion because the Apostle seems by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not to note a Temporary but constant possession not onely ad usum but ad situm for that the very same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the same verse is spoken of the Pot of Manna which who knows not but continued many 100 years within the Pot. There be some therefore would expound the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the Altar of Incense it self But are forced to do violence to the word For in all the Septuagint Bible
out of the 17th verse 11 Azariel or Uzziel of Heman v. 4 18. 12 Hashabiah of Jeduthun v. 3 19. 13 Shubael or Shebuel of Heman v. 4 20. 14 Mattithiah of Jeduthun v. 3 21. 15 Jerimoth v. 4 22. Being all the Sons of Heman 16 Hananiah v. 4 23. Being all the Sons of Heman 17 Joshbekashah v. 4 24. Being all the Sons of Heman 18 Hanani v. 4 25. Being all the Sons of Heman 19 Mallothi v. 4.26 Being all the Sons of Heman 20 Eliathah v. 4 27. Being all the Sons of Heman 21 Hothir v. 4 28. Being all the Sons of Heman 22 Giddalti v. 4 29. Being all the Sons of Heman 23 Mahazioth v. 4 13. Being all the Sons of Heman 24 Romamti-Ezer v. 4 31. Being all the Sons of Heman These persons thus appointed to the Work of the Songs of Zion were freed from any other Service being employed in that Work onely 1 Chron. 9.33 Night and Day Now for the farther knowledge of the deduction of the Levites from the Loins of Levi together with the succession of Moses and Aaron the Children of the former viz. Moses being the Lord High Treasurers of the Temple of the other being High-Priests let us present this Genealogicall Stemme before your Eyes being deduced out of the 6th Chapter of the first of Chronicles and other places of Scripture Jacob or Israel Levi. 1 Gershon Exod. 6.17 2 Libni or Laadan 1 Chr. 23.7 3 Jahath 1 Chr. 6.20 23.10 4 Zimmah 1 Chr. 6.20 Or Zinah 1 Chro. 23.10 5 Ethan or Joah 6 Adajah or Iddo 1 Chr. 6.21 7 Zerah 8 Ethni 9 Melohiah 10 Baasiah 11 Michael 12 Shimea 13 Beraehiah 14 Asaph the chief Singer 2 Shimel or Shimi 3 1 Kohath who lived 133 y. Exod. 6.18 2 Amram Aaron 4 Ithamar 5 Eli 6 Phinees 7 Abiezer 8 Buzi 9 Ozi 10 Eli that brake his neck 11 Ahitub 12 Ahimelech 13 Ahijah 14 Abiathar Put from the High-Priesthood by Solomon 4 Eleazar 5 Phinehas 6 Abishua 7 Bukki 8 Vzzi 9 Zechariah 10 Merajoth 11 Amariah 12 Ahitub 13 Zadock who was High-Priest in the time of K. Solomon in the room of Abiathar 1 King 2.2.35 3 Moses Rehabiah Jeshajah Joram Zicheri Shelomith The great Lord Treasurer of the Temple 2 Chron. 26.25 26. 2 Izhar 3 Korah 4 Ebiasaph Exod. 6.24 Or Asaph 2 Chr. 26.1 5 Assir 6 Tahath 7 Zephaniah 8 Azariah 9 Joel 10 Elkanah 11 Amasai 12 Mahath 13 Eskanah 14 Zuph 15 Toah 16 Eliel 17 Jeroham 18 E●kanah 19 Shemuel or Samuel the Prophet 20 Joel 1 Sam. 8.2 21 Heman the Singer 1 Merari 2 Mahli Numb 3.20 Exod. 6.19 1 Chron. 24.26 Mushi 3 Mahli 1 Chron. 23.23 4 Shamer 1 Chron. 6.46 5 Bani 6 Anezi 7 Hilkiah 8 Amaziah 9 Hashabiah 10 Malluch 11 Abdi 12 Kishi or Kushajah 1 Chron. 15.17 Or Kish 2 Chron. 29.12 13 Ethan probably the same with Jeduthun one of three Masters of Song If we compare these places 1 Chron. 15.19 25.1 2 Chron. 5.12 Obed-Edom 1 Chron. 16.3.8 Hitherto sufficeth it to have discoursed of the melodious Singers of the Temple with the Scheme of their Contemporaries to illustrate the History Let us now walk forth out of the Priests Court toward the Gates and Treasuries and take notice of the great diligence adhibited by these sacred Porters in their several Wards and Watches Of the Porters THE next Officers to be spoken to are the Porters who did watch at the Gates of the Temple day and night The Psalmist calls upon them that stand by night in the House of the Lord to bless His Name and Psal 134.1 in a Psalm indited for the Sons of Korah to tune he tells them He had rather be a Door-Keeper in the House of God then to dwell in the Tents of Wickedness Psal 84.10 or the Curtains of Alienation from the presence of him that dwelt between the sacred Cherubims The number of these Porters in a gross and full summe 1 Chron. 23.6 are remembred to have been four thousand by the Appointment of King David and seem to have been divided into 24 Courses like as the Priests and Singers were For one Text relates 2 Chron. 8.14 that Solomon did appoint the Porters by their Courses at every Gate according to the Order of David his Father According to which if we examine the account so far as it is brought in by Holy Scripture we shall read of 24 chief persons whose Sons and Brethren seem to come by course after 7 days from time to time out of their Villages 1 Chron. 9.25 to that Service at the several Gates of the Temple To which they were designed by Lot as may appear more particularly by this Draught annexed taken out of 1 Chron. 26. THE GATES 1 On the East The keeping whereof by Lot fell to Shelemiah ver 14. called also Meshelemiah the son of Kore of the sons of Asaph that is Abiasaph the Great Grandchild of Kohath and under him of these Levitical Porters came in by course constantly 6 persons to watch there v. 17. probably the same person who is called Shallum the chief Porter because his Lot fell out to be at the chiefest Gate which appears by the very same account of His Lineage 1 Chron. 9.19 6. 2 On the North. The Lot hit upon Zechariah a wife Counsellor being the son of Shelemiah and under Him at the North-Gate there were appointed 4 to watch by course 4. 3 On the South The Lot came forth to Obed-Edom and those under his Rule Southward verse 17. 4. 4. On the West Toward Asuppim or the Treasury-House which stood at the South-End of the Western-Wall and had two little Gates at each end of the Treasury whereof we have spoken before They were committed to the custody of the Sons of Obed-Edom at each Gate two as it is exprest v. 17. two and two 2. 2. At Shallecheth or at the Causey of the King 4 Porters v. 16 18. 4. At Parbar-Gate two Porters v. 18. and both these Gates were under the custody of Shuppim and Hosah v. 16. 2.     24 So that hence we may observe that there were 24 Porters constantly fixed by their Courses in their stations for the Watch at the Gates of the Outward Court of the Temple They are recited to have been placed in the four Quarters of the House of God even towards the East West North and South and that they lodged round about the House that is in the Chambers of the Outward Court having the over-sight of the Gates and had the charge lay upon them of opening them every morning Their exact Genealogie in a direct Line from their Ancestors is not precisely and determinately recorded in a methodical manner that I have yet observed Onely the Scripture is pleased thus far to insinuate that the Porters were of the Line of Korah and Merari Of Korah the Grand-Son of Kohath descended Meshelemiah the principal Porter of the Temple being setled at
the Law Those antient Types were the silver pictures imbellished with the Golden Apples gathered in Gospel-Gardens They were the pleasant (c) Exod. 38.3 looking-glasses so termed made of pollished brasse wherein the beautiful face of Christ was darkly reflected They were the cloudy and fiery pillars directing the true Israëlites in their way to the holy Land to find out Jesus disputing in the Temple about those lively Indexes of his incarnation To proceed the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is by two learned verbalists Hesychius and Suidas gloss't upon by two termes much of the same straine viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The last of them conceives it to be nothing else but the dark representation of any species mentioning a person who for his fluent eloquence was saluted with a deep Complement as one who was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Type or Copy of Eloquent Mercury To this Papias in Martinius adds that a Type is a prophecy in things Lex Philol. and not in words meaning doubtlesse that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 winged fluid words cannot bear the weight of a Type upon their airy shoulders but persons and material things are to be counted the proper subjects of Types Having done with the name let 's speak to the nature and essence of a Type which may be comprehended in this Definition A Type is an Arbitrary sign representing future and spiritual matters by divine institution The Definitum or the Subject of the Definition is term'd a Type by a metaphor taken from Images Statues or Pictures which are the curious artificial resemblances of their proper Originals The Genus in the Definition is a Sign which being an Adjunct of substantial Beings falls under the Category of Relation and hath the Foundation of its relation in Quality Even such as all Similitudes and Analogies truly are according to the Opinion of the great Philosopher or who ever it was that compiled that Book of Metaphysicks that commonly goes under his Name which seems to limp but not on so learned a Leg Metaph. l. 4. c. 9. as Aristotle did whose words are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Things are said to be like each other whose quality is one and the same or which agree in quality The Difference of the thing defined is taken from its several constitutive parts which divide and separate it from all other Signes and are these following 1 One part of its difference is taken from the Efficient Cause the Divine Arbitrium or Free-Will of God Himself who instituted and ordained Types they receiving their Esse or Being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the fore-appointment of Heaven Whence may be deduced this ensuing Corollary That the proper and genuine Knowledge of Types together with the solid Explication annexed to them must be deduced out of Scripture onely which contains the Revelation of the Will of God in respect to their imposition 2 Another part is raised from the matter of a Type which is the thing signifying or representing or that Subject wherein the Type doth inhaere and from which the signification is raised in respect to the Antitype that answers to it As for Example The Ark the Brazen Altar the Mercy-Seat the Shew-Bread the Candlesticks or the like 3 Another from the form of a Type It 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 esse or the Formality of its Essence and Nature lying in its imposed and designed signification in some kind of Analogy or proportion to and with the Spiritual thing that is signified by it As for Example The Formality of the Type of the Oracle lies in this that it should signifie and represent the Glorious Heaven whereinto our High-Priest is entred according to the Doctrine of the Apostle in His Epistle to the Hebrews The Unction of Aaron typically signified the anointing of the Lord Jesus with the Oyl of Gladness above his Fellows 4 From the end of a Type which was appointed to shadow forth the excellent things of the Gospel which as to the Jewes in their severall Generations during their Legal Administrations were as yet future and appeared not upon the Stage of the World in full view until the Consummatum est till our Lord upon the Cross pronounced IT IS FINISHED declaring a full and final abrogation of all those ancient Jewish Ceremonies Though no doubt those Jews who by an Eye of Faith did look upon Christ as slain upon the Cross in the Types of their Bloody Sacrifices did suck some Gospel-sweetness from them during that Legal Dispensation From all these particulars it clearly follows that there are in every Type these three things mainly and principally to be considered 1. The matter of the Type or the thing signifying 2. The object of the Type or the thing signified 3. The Ratio or the signification interceding betwixt the Type and its respective Antitype Now because that in all Scriptural Types their true and native signification depends upon and flows from the Divine Will Therefore must we adhibite especial care and diligence in the management of Discourses upon these rare and excellent Subjects and proceed with the most precise caution that we attribute and ascribe nothing by way of prefiguration to any things or persons whatsoever but to such as Holy Scripture doth either directly or by strong and clear consequence hand forth to us So that although there may intercede some Moral Physical or Historical Analogy between some Legal Materials and Gospel-Truths yet must they not therefore presently be interpreted under the notion of Divine Types unless there be some fair and probable hint upon rational accounts deducible out of Scripture it self for such a construction Nevertheless it is most certain that the Natural Harmony and coincidencies of things one with another doth not cannot obstruct the interpretation and acceptation of such for Types if Scripture do but darkly insinuate them to be of that Kindred but rather exceedingly promotes advances and inlighten the Mind in the Conception and entertainment of them for such Yet neither on the other side doth any such Natural Harmony warrant them to be construed for Types unless God Himself hath stampt the Seal of Divine Institution upon their Harmony Who will undoubtedly issue forth the Writ of a Quo Warranto out of the Court of Heaven against all such bold Intruders into Divine Mysteries who dare presume to expound them without a Scripture-Guide We must always remember to take up Philip into the Chariot when we are reading Isaiah about the Typical (a) Act. 8.32 Lamb that was dumb before the Shearers and opened not his mouth But many of Old have forgotten to take heed to this Cynosure or Pole-star that shineth in the dark and shady Valleys of the antient Figures having not lookt back with Abraham at the Voyce of a Divine Angel to the Ram in the Thickets even Christ that was held in the Briars of our imputed
after our Lords birth till its dissolution by the Roman armies There be others who considering that the Temple was fully finisht in the 3000th year of the World according to Bishop Ushers Calculation and other nice Chronologers being just a 1000d years before our Lords incarnation and precisely in the middle point of the World 's apprehended-duration viz. of 6000d years according to the received tradition of the sons of the House of Eliah mentioned by the same (e) Ibid. pag. 36. Author in the very words of the Jewish Talmud would out of these Rabbinicall flints extract some choise Mystical Oyl to supple the Wheels of their fancy As if so be a glorious external visible Church must needs from thence be evinced to continue upon the Earth 3000 years even just as many as the world had before continued without it and that this admirable beauty of the Church-militant commenced with the Temple 's compleat erection Besides as the Temple did continue though not without some fatal concussions for the space of a 1000d years So in like manner a glorious Evangelical Church thereby typified should endure also for a 1000d years space after the 6000 years of the world in general shall be consummated and ended when the rage and power of her enemies shall be extinct when the Saints of the most High shall Live and Reign with Christ a (f) Rev. 20.4 1000d years And all this must be accomplished say they before the 2d and most glorious coming of our Lord in the Clouds to passe sentence of condemnation upon the World of the ungodly and to put an Ultimate period to its duration Now forasmuch as the Temple suffered many hard things during its long continuance we must not think according to them that the Saints Reign shall have any sad Chasm of affliction seeing the Antitype must alwayes out-vye and excel its prefiguration in glory and excellency But for my part holding it sufficient to have recounted these things to be left or entertained at pleasure seeing there is no solid basis or foundation for these superstructures of fancy revealed in holy Scripture I had rather resolve the Mystery of the Time of the first fixed state of the Temple if there be any couched under it into the good pleasure of God whose Majesty if he had intended any such rare signification in the time of its building would have delivered the meaning thereof more clearly to us had it seemed good in his holy eyes What is secret belongs to the Lord but things revealed to us and our Children Wherefore I shall proceed to a more material inquiry concerning the place of its situation Concerning the place where the holy Temple was built IN this Section I mean not to tell long stories of Gods choosing the people of Israel above all Nations to serve Him or of Canaan above all Lands for his people to dwell in or of Jerusalem above all Cities to place his name there seeing the Lord loved the (a) Psal 87.2 gates of Zion more then all the habitations of Jacob. But shall rather descend immediately to treat of the holy mountain Moriah it self So frequently called in the holy Books the mountain of the House of the Lord wherein he hath promised to make unto all people (b) Isai 25.6 a feast of fat things a feast of Wines on the Lees of fat things full of marrow of Wines on the Lees well refined whereby no doubt the holy Prophet in the name of the Lord doth insinuate the mountain of Moriah to be a most sublime Type of the Gospel-Church exalted even to heaven by the means of grace and salvation when he assures us in so many words that all Nations should be feasted in that blessed mountain which of it self was not sufficient to entertain within its circuit no not the one only Nation of the Jews at a set banquet whereof more in succeding lines In reference to our present work the denomination of this mountain may yield us some light and information in this matter seeing the very name of it probably was imposed by God himself when he commanded Abraham to get him into the Land of (c) Gen. 22.2 Moriah whose manner in the imposition of names is to read a Lecture worthy the attention of Men and Angels As to the signification whereof there are various Conjectures offered by Learned men and many of them are summed up by an Eminent (d) Nic. Fuller Miscell l. 2. c. 12. Critique of our own Nation Some it seems derive it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Myrrh as if this tract of ground had bin antiently famous in bringing forth that curious rarity conceiting withall that the mountain of Myrrh mentioned in the Book of (e) Cant. 4.6 Canticles is to be interpreted and understood of this fragrant place Others would fetch it from the Syriack word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mara which signified the Lord as if it noted out the Grand holinesse of that piece of ground as being by peculiar designation The Lords mountain Others deduce it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying fear hinting forth to us a place destinated to the fear of the Lord such as is exprest by his heavenly worshippers in their solemn attendance upon God according to the antient Mosaical injunctions Whereas in truth the most genuine derivation of the word seems rather to be taken from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to see declaring it to be the Land of vision Wherefore some translate the former text in Genesis Vade in terram excelsam get thee to the high or hilly Country Aquila turns it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is perspicuous shining or illustrious Symmachus by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Land of vision which is therefore interpreted illuminating and irradiating according as Learned (a) Edit Ludg. 1530. Vol. 3. p. 216. Jerom in his questions upon Genesis Others apprehend it to have bin so called from the Eminent conspicuousnesse of the place being by reason of its height seen by travellers at a very great distance from whence by such as stood upon it many rare and lovely prospects presented themselves to the covetous eyes of delighted spectators Whereby is shadowed the rare beauty and comelinesse of the Church the spouse of Christ when she is Enammelled with the (b) Ezek. 16.14 glory of her Lord and Husband and when presented to the view of others that passe by in so much that they have bin inamoured with her beauty and have turned in to her habitation to gain acquaintance with her or else in respect to the profound and deep Mysteries the delicious and pleasant prospects of mercy and grace which have bin presented to the view of such persons who have stood upon this holy mountain There be that apprehend it to have bin termed the Land of Vision from the apparition of that holy Angel who accoasted Abraham at the intended sacrifice of his onely son But the Learned man forecited
(i) Luk. 2.27 Simeon and (k) Ver. 38. Anna with Mary the Mother of our Lord according to the flesh where do they meet with Christ but in this holy place The two former having bin long expectants and waiters for the consolation of Israel at last found Him whom their souls loved when presented before the Lord in his Temple The Virgin Mary likewise having sorrowfully sought him in other places for three daies together at last met with him in the (l) Ver. 46. Temple doing his Father's businesse He that was the (m) Hag. 2.7 desire of all Nations through whom alone both Jews and Gentiles can expect restauration to the favour of God would then more fully performe the promises of the new Covenant of grace to his people when he should (n) Mal. 3.1 come into his Temple The Dove-like spouse finds her safest and sweetest repose in the (o) Cant. 2.14 Clefts of this rock in the secret places of the staires of the Temple-Tower Nay the Sparrows and Swallows of the Gentiles who formerly were (a) Eph. 2.12 without Christ and without God in the World have now found an house yea and nests for themselves where they may lay their (b) Psal 84.3 young even thine Altars O Lord of Hosts our God and our King The kingdome of heaven from a graine of mustard-seed is shott up into a (c) Luk. 13.19 great tree so that those birds which formerly lived according to the course of this World according to the (d) Eph. 2.2 Prince of the power of the aire do now lodge and sing in its branches But to retreat to the former Metaphor This is the noble stone of the corner unto which the Church and all its particular members are fastned by the cement of Faith and Love The union whereof is undiscernable by common and carnal eyes not unlike the stones of the Typical Temple which Josephus reports to have bin so admirably laid and fastned with such rare artifice that the junctures could not be perceived as if the whole building had bin made one intire stone and that not unlike to the Helio-Selenus a precious stone mentioned by (e) Art Mirab. l. 4. c. 45. p. 694. Gregory of Tholouze that shews the Synod or Conjunction of the two great luminaries the Sun and the Moon Christ the Sun of righteousnesse and the Church the Moon of the Gospel-heavens Whosoever then erres in respect of this (f) 1 Cor. 3.10.11 c. foundation stone must of necessity erre likewise most grossely in the whole super-structure We may observe then that the builders of this World who own an other Head laying aside this Corner-stone do consequently erre in the deep and profound doctrine of election seeing we are (g) Eph. 1.5 predestinated unto the adoption of Children by Jesus Christ The foundation of God remaineth sure having this seal (h) 2 Tim. 2.19 THE LORD KNOWETH who are his even that such who name the name of Christ should depart from iniquity Those will erre also in the doctrine of Baptism seeing we are to be (i) Act. 19.5 baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus They will erre further in the doctrine of holy and spiritual-good works which flow only from the principle of a new nature united unto Christ by Faith For (k) Joh. 15.5 without him we can do nothing They erre likewise in the doctrine of the Resurrection For this is the belief that we are to hold firmely and inviolably that if [l] Rom. 6.8 c. we be dead with Christ we shall also live with him who will [m] Joh. 6.40 54. raise us up at the last day Finally such will erre in the excellent doctrine of eternal salvation For it is [n] Act. 15.11 through the grace of the Lord Jesus that we shall be saved The Mysteries of the body of the Covered Building called The Temple in a strict sense HAving finished the inquiry about the Foundation in some measure in the foregoing discourse It is high time now to work upon the Body of the Temple it self or the covered building which was extant above ground endeavouring with all sobriety and submission to search out the mysteries contained within those famous walls Concerning which I shall crave leave to speak a few words in general and afterward descend to treat of the three particular parts included in it The immensity of the Divine Essence and the most radiant excellency of Gods glorious Majesty which no creature can behold in its full purity and live cannot be contained and immured within (a) Act. 17.24 Temples made with hands Wherefore it is observable that holy John relates that he saw (b) Rev. 21.22 no Temple in the new and heavenly Jerusalem that is above For the LORD GOD Almighty and the Lamb are the Temple of it Yet it was his own good and holy pleasure that (c) Act. 7.47 Solomon should build him an House wherein as to his manifestative presence he was resolved to dwell more especially among the Children of Israel his chosen people In these Gospel-dayes under which we live through divine goodnesse when the worship of God is farre more spiritual though his Majesty hath not appointed a peculiar City wherein to place his name yet is it not unlawful even in these times but very commendable and useful to erect material Temples wherein the solemnities of Gospel-Ordinances may be celebrated and the congregations of his faithful people may more commodiously meet together Without which persons you read the words of (d) Comment in Act. 17. part 2. p. 31. Streso being there assembled they have no more holinesse in them than a Court or Palace neither is the (e) Joh. 4.21 c. Prayer or the Congregation lesse holy though convented together in a field than in such a building if necessity should so require Of old indeed (f) Mat. 23.17 the gold was sanctified by the Temple and the (g) Ver. 19. gift by the Altar But now ' its the (h) 1 Pet. 1.7 gold of Faith and (i) Heb. 13.15 the Sacrifice of Praise which must sanctifie the Temple If so be there is any metaphorical or (k) Mede's holinesse of Churches p. 46. relative holinesse which may safely and without danger be ascribed to it Especially at such a time when the cloud of Gods gracious and evangelical presence shall fill the Tabernacle where his Saints and people are assembled in his name and fear But as to the antient Temple there is no scruple or doubt to be made of a degree of sanctity formerly attending it different from that of ours wherein we meet for the management of divine services Though for certain we ought to conceive so candidly and charitably of all men that bear the honourable name of Christians that there can scarce be a person found so stupid and senselesse as to think that there was any real inherent holinesse in those beautiful
appointment from God Oh did men but know and understand the weighty work of an Evangelical Minister how that their Rod ought to bud as did Aarons with a heavenly prognostick or sign of ministerial fruit and accordingly to prophesie of Gods mercy or judgement to a Nation How that it ought to blossom as did Aarons in doctrines of comfort joy and assurance to broken souls How that it ought to bear Nuts for the people to feed upon in spiritual knowledge surely they would not dare to venture on such holy things Shall Uzzah be smitten for toucning the Ark Shall the men of Bethshemech for prying too curiously into it be dismayed with so sore a slaughter Shall Dathan Abiram and the rest of his company be swallowed up alive for contemning the Ministry instituted of God Shall Vzziah the King be smitten with (a) 2 Chro. 26.19 Leprosie for daring to offer Incense because it did not appertain to him Nay shall Nadab and Abihu Priests by Call and Profession be slain upon the place for offering with strange fire (b) Mat. 4 20. and yet shall dry stumps to please their vain humours puft up with conceit and pride turn blossoming Rods let them take heed of Divine blasting We read the Apostles left their nets their particular callings when they were called to the Ministry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The counsel and command of Paul to Timothy and in him to every Gospel-Minister is (c) 1 Tim. 4,15 Meditate upon these things give thy self wholly to them that thy profiting may appear to all But as to the people Too delicate and nice are those ears that cannot bear the smiting of Aarons Rods they love to smell the Blossoms of Rhetorick only But such must remember that Aarons Rod was a Scepter of Rule and Discipline and btought forth Almonds also of knotty truths There are sons of Thunder as well as of Consolation Aarons Bells must sometimes ring the knell of the Law as well as the marriage peales of Gospel-grace and love to weary souls Some would fling all Aarons Rods without the Camp and wait upon Inspirations from Heaven in a more immediate way On how grievously do they tempt God and oppose Christ who when he ascended up to the Oracle of Heaven gave Apostles Teachers Pastors to the Church For what (a) Eph. 4.12 for the work of the Ministry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For how long till we all come in the unity of the faith to a perfect man Ministry is a plant of Gods own right-hand an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a semper-vive For such hath God (b) 1 Cor. 12.28 set 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 plac'd constituted and established in the Church as the Rod of Aaron alwayes to continue in all ages green and blossoming in the Oracle Whereas some ignorantly object those (c) John 6.45 Heb. 8.11 1 Joh. 2.27 places wherein 't is promised that we shall be all taught of God and that we need not that any man teach us nor for any to learn of his Neighbour They consider not of a mediate teaching wherewith God doth ●oncur Ministers are Instruments in the work only (d) Luke 2.17 and teach but the ear 't is God is the principal Efficient and reacheth the heart Why did John and others write their Epis●●●s else if this conceit had been the true meaning of the Apostles We shall observe therefore even under the new Testament whereunto those Promises did look that God was pleased still to use the mediate teaching of his Ministers but still reserving the grand prerogative of moving the heart to himself and that in a more copious manner than of ancient times therein fulfilling the promise more abundantly Wherefore its observable that though God himself could have revealed the birth of his Son to the Shepheards by immediate suggestion yet he uses the Ministry of Angels to them and of the Shepherds themselves to the people of Bethlehem God hath appointed Shepheards and Pastors in his Church to reveal his mind (e) Acts 8.29 Philip was sent by the Spirit to expound the Prophet Isaias to the Eunuch (f) Acts 9.11 Ananias was sent by God to Paul And the Angel bid (g) Acts 10.16 Cornelius send for Peter All to shew that God is pleased now to teach mediately and Instrumentally by his Ministers How happy then is such a people who have the true and genuine Rods of Aaron alwayes blossoming in their streets Happy are the people that are in such a case whose God is the Lord Thus much concerning the mysterious Things laid up in the Oracle I shall now descend to the Sanctuary and view the three famous Utensils therein contained The Mysterie of the Vtensils in the Sanctuary In the next place the stately Rarities of the Sanctuary or Holy place command from us a diligent and humble survey as to the excellent significations concluded in them There were in this place an Altar of Incense ten tables of Shew-bread and ten Golden Candlesticks whereof in their due order In general it is conceived of them that as the three Offices of Christ were exhibited in the Oracle which we have before-mentioned so also here in the Sanctuary we find the like viz. The bread on the Table noting Christs Kingly Office in sustaining his Church The Candlestick his Prophetick in illuminating and teaching of his people The Altar of Incense his Priestly in mediating for them As to the former I shall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suspend at present only as to the last it will appear very clear I hope by what may succeed in the particular handling of it Dr. Lightf p. 58.35 Temp. First I shall endeavour to speak to the golden Altar of Incense which challenges our first attendment as standing nearest to the holy Oracle The Altar of Incense This golden Utensil was famous in its generation a Vessel of Honour and Renown It stood a nearest of all to the Oracle and therefore comes first in order of dignity to be handled The Description of this golden Altar we have heard related before Two things more I would speak to a little before I descend to the Mysterie 1. The Censer 2. the Composition of the Incense As to the Censer it is thought to be a little pan made of Gold with a handle to it which as to the brazen Altar is called a fire-pan Exod. 27.3 and a censer Lev. 10.1 16 12. As for the Composition of the Incense we read according to our Translation that it was made of a like quantity of several ingredients and thereof they burnt (a) Ainsworth Exod. 30. v. 8. 50 drams in the morning and 50 at night i.e. one pound of incense every day What the Hebrew dram is may be seen page 2. of this Treatise The Composition was of sweet spices (b) Exod. 30.24 Stacte Onycha Galbanum and sweet Frankincense They are called in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arias Montanus turns them by Gutta
ΙΕΡΟΝ ΣΟΛΟΜΩΝΙΟΣ THE TEMPLE OF SOLOMON Pourtrayed by Scripture Light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act 7 47 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb 10.1 Lord I have loved the habitation of thine house and the place where thine honour dwelleth ps 26.8 London Printed by Io Streater Whither the Tribes goe up the Tribes of the Lord unto the testimony of Israel Psalm 122.4 PATMOS I saw the holy City the new Ierusalem cōming downe from God out of heaven SOLOMON ZADOK ORBIS MIRACULUM OR THE TEMPLE OF SOLOMON POURTRAYED BY Scripture-Light WHEREIN All its famous Buildings the pompous Worship of the Jewes with its attending Rites and Ceremonies the several Officers employed in that Work with their ample Revenues and the Spiritual Mysteries of the Gospel vailed under all are treated of at large Psal 27.4 One thing have I desired of the Lord that will I seek after that I may dwell in the House of the Lord all the dayes of my life To behold the beauty of the Lord and to enquire in his Temple Psal 43.3 O send out thy Light and thy Truth Let them lead me let them bring me to thy Holy Hill and to thy Tabernacles Psal 84.1.2 How amiable are thy Tabernacles O Lord of Hosts my Soul longeth yea even fainteth for the Courts of the Lord My heart and my flesh cryeth out for the Living-God LONDON Printed by John Streater for George Sawbridge at the Signe of the Bible on Ludgate-hill MDCLIX In this vacant side be pleased to take a view of the whole work in this following Scheme The History of the Temple of Solomon in 10 Chapters containeth the Proem treating concerning the preparations of Chap. 1. David p. 3. Solomon pag. 6. Dimensions Chap. 2. of the Foundation p. 19. Porch p. 21. Sanctuary p. 22. Oracle p. 25. Side-Chambers p. 29. Buildings about the Covered Temple wherein of the Chap. 3. quantities of the outward Court p. 45. Priests Court p. 48. Gates p. 51. Porches p. 55. Vessels Utensils and Ornaments Chap. 4. In the Oracle as the Cherubims and Palm-Trees on the Walls p. 58. Ark of the Covenant p. 59. Cherubims on and by the Ark. p. 60. Golden mercy-Sear p. 60. In the Sanctuary the Incense-Altar p. 62. Table of Shew-bread p. 65. Golden Candlestick p. 66. Porch the two Brazen Pillars p. 68. Priests Altar of Brasse p. 70. Court the Brazen Sea p. 73. Lavers 10. p. 77. The High Priests Vestments p. 87. Worship and service whereof in the Chap. 5. Officers High-Priest p. 91. Priests p. 92. Levites Singers p. 95. Porters p. 101. Judges p. 105. Nethinims p. 107. Things offered The Quantities and measures p. 109 Festivall times p. 111. Number of Sacrifices p. 112. Various Sacrifices as the Burnt offerings p. 114. Sin-offerings p. 116. Trespass-Offerings p. 118. Peace-Offerings p. 121. Meat-Offerings p. 122. Drink-Offerings p. 126. Revenues and Endowments arising from the Chap. 6. Land and Cities assigned p. 129. Offerings and Gifts p. 133. Dedication Chap. 7. p. 136. Duration Chap. 8. under Priests p. 145. Kings p. 152. Sacred Mysteries Chap. 9. relating to the Covered Temple p. 206. Courts p. 238. Utensils p. 247. Officers p. 285. Services p. 320. Endowments p. 354. Destruction Chap. 10. pag. 364. A Catalogue of the several Views cut in Copper 1. A general Draught of the Temple with its encompassing-Buildings Pag. 14 2. The covered Temple by itself Pag. 20 3. Ground-plot Pag. 34 4. Cherubims and Palm-Trees Pag. 58 5. Ark of the Covenant Pag. 59 6. Altar of Incense Pag. 62 7. Table of Shew-bread Pag. 65 8. Golden Candlesticks Pag. 66 9. Two Brazen Pillars Pag. 68 10. Altar of Brasse Pag. 70 11. Sea of Brasse Pag. 73 12. Brazen Laver. Pag. 78 13. High-Priest in his gorgeous Attire Pag. 87 Of the Temple built by King Solomon at Jerusalem THe glorious Fabrick of Solomon's Temple at Jerusalem was the first House in the whole World that was ever dedicated to the Honour and Service of the Sacred Majesty of the true and Living GOD which for stately Magnificence and the Antiquity of its foundation doth most justly challenge praecedency to all Buildings set apart for publick Worship in any Nation under the Sun For the delineation of this ancient and pompous Structure once beautifying the Land of Canaan that I may proceed in some clear method Let me lay the Scene of the ensuing Discourse in this following frame First of all I shall contrive the Porch or Proem of the Tract exposing to view the grand and famous preparations for the Building which being absolved in the first Chapter I shall then descend to the main body of the work in nine succeeding Chapters wherein may be treated P 20 1. In the 2d place concerning its Dimensions and Figure P 15. 3. The Courts and Buildings round about it P 35. 4. The Ornaments and Utensils P 57. 5. The Services and constant Worship therein managed P 91. 6. The Endowments and Revenues P 128. 7. The Solemn Dedication P 130. 8. The Continuance and Duration P 140. 9. The mystical Significations P 166. 10ly and lastly It s fatall Period and Dissolution Of all which when I shall by Divine permission have finished my Discourse in this its designed order a period shall be fixed to this Treatise P 364. To the Reverend and Learned The Warden Fellows and Students of Wadham Colledge in the Famous and Flourishing Vniversity of Oxford Reverend and Learned IT was not long since my happiness and honour through the gracious Providence of God to enjoy a Fellowship for several years in that your goodly Seminary of all polite Literature wherein I hope several hearts are under Divine hewing and squaring for the service of God in his Temple During my continuance there I received many favours from you in those Academical preferments which I then enjoyed Your great love therein I cannot but gratefully acknowledge and constantly bear in minde having been greatly animated and encouraged to the discharge of those Employments by your aid and assistance Since that time it hath pleased the All-wise Majesty of heaven to place me as a Labourer though most unworthy in his Vineyard Most stately and magnificent is the Fabrick of God's house therein scituate yeilding admirable delight to such whom Free-Grace is vouchsafed to give spiritual eyes to discern it far surpassing the splendour of its ancient Type The Temple of Solomon which was once the wonder of the world Some spare hours from my constantly returning services I have through mercy enjoyed wherein to take some solitary turns among the beds of Spices and there to refresh my thoughts with the view of the corresponding Parallels After several retirements having taken some small survey thereof I conceived it my duty which I owe to your Foundation to present the first Essay of this my impolished draught thereof to your view earnestly craving of you to undertake the Patronage of your Incumbent in this work I confess I should have accosted you in the language of
14. at which Gate there were to watch six Levites ver 17. This 6 Levites under the second Temple was called Shushan Gate Some think it was called the Kings Gate Not that the King went in that way but because King Solomon built it in a more sumptuous and extraordinary manner then the rest 1 Chron. 9.18 In some one of the Chambers in this Gate of old sate the Sanhedrim and sometimes also in the East-Gate of the inner or higher Court as may be learned out of Jeremy by comparing these places together Jerem. 35.4 36.10 2. The North Gate For the watching at which Gate the lot fell to Zechariah a wise Counsellour the Son of Shelemiah called also Meshelemaiah See 1 Chron. 26 v. 2. and v. 14. 4 Levites Here there were four Levites placed in the daily watch v. 17. 3 The South Gate For which the lot fell to Obed-Edom v. 15. 4 Levites Here there were four Levites in constant watch v. 17. Whether there were two Gates in the South Wall or not is disputable For though Josephus sayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the plural yet he speaks there of the second Temple From hence some hold there were two and probably so under the second The Rabbins also agreeing to it and calling them the Gates of Huldah But that there was but one under the first Temple I rather incline to think because there are but four Porters mentioned Southward There being at the four main and principall Gates four alwayes set to watch 4 The West Gate called Shallecheth from Casting up the word being derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to cast up as being denominated from that famous Causey which Solomon made here to passe on from his own house over the Vally into the Mountain of the Temple 1 Chron. 26.16 Esa 6.13 pag. 17. The Gate stood by the Causey of the going up as we render it whereof there is famous mention Each side of this Causey was planted with Oaks and Teyle trees as Dr. Lightfoot hath well observed There were also made stately Railes of Algum trees by transposition called also Almug trees which some take to be Corall Edit Gentij pag. 357. 2 Chron. 9.11 2 Chron. 2.8 2 Chron. 9.10 and to be fecht out of the Sea neer Tyre so a Rabbi But this is improbable because such a hard materiall was not proper or fit to make Harps and Psalteries which were made of the same Algum trees Besides they are expresly said to be fetcht from Lebanon and from the golden land of Ophir Others say they were the same wood that we now call by the name of Ebony others Brazil wood because they have fancied Ophir to be Peru. Others with the learned Buxtorf explain it of the best sort of Cedars to which we shall incline till better light being sure that Lebanon was very famous for Cedars Possibly this might be some more excellent sort then the ordinary which is commonly mentioned The 70 in Chron. render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wood of the Larch-tree as some interpret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which will not easily burn as Vitruvius sayes lib. 2. c. 9. concerning a Castle neer the Alps built of it which Caesar could not destroy by fire The vulgar Latine calls them Thyma ligua which Dodoneus expounds of the wild Cypresse Well what ever the Wood were it was a rare and choise sort whereof the King made stayes for the house of the Lord we render it in the Text Pillars in the Margin of our Bibles Railes or props The Word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Avenarius turns it thus 1 King 10.5 2 Chron. 911. Fultura quae scilicet utrâque parte gradus sustinet The Seventy two render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In another place the same thing is rendred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we read in the Text Terrises in the Margin Stayes and that which suits best of all High-wayes to the house of the Lord by the Seventy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the proper meaning of the word as may be found in many places of Scripture where it is so rendred and particularly Esai 33.8 and 49.11 This famous Causey planted with trees on both sides for shade and pleasure and railed with Railes of Cedar or some ocher choise and excellent wood for safety was that stately ascent to the house of the Lord which Solomon made for a passage from his own House into the Temple through the chief Western gate called Shallecheth from this admirable Causey which the Queen of Sheba did not without cause behold with pleasing wonder 2 Chron. 9.4 This Gate was called Coponius his Gate under the second Temple Where for the service of watching there were placed also as at the three other Cardinal Gates so so also here 1 Chron. 26.18 4 Levites four Levites The lot fell to Shuppim and Hosah v. 16. Now because this Gate was open onely to the King and his Family and because a great part of the City lay on the West side of the Temple we read of other Gates in this Western Wall As first of all the Gates of Asuppim which were two little ones being at the Southermost end of the Western Wall 1 Chron. 26.15 v. 18. 4 Levites together with a Treasury called the House of Assuppim lying betwixt them The lot for the watch at these two little Gates fell to the Sons of Obed-Edom To each Gate two v. 17. that's four Levites to these two Gates Whereby it seems they were but little ones For the famous great Gates that stood in the midst of their Walls had four a piece That here were two Gates the Text insinuates by the division of the number of Porters saying not four But toward Assuppim two and two that is two to each Gate Then lastly comes in Parbar-Gate which is expresly fixed Westward and two Levites placed in their watch at that Gate v. 18. 2 Levites We have then you see four Prime Gates to the four Winds and three lesser ones towards the West besides that 's seven in all And twenty four Levites in their constant order watching at every one of the Gates according to the lot of their Father's Houses and their several Divisions Of the Gates of the Inward Court BEfore we come into the Priests Court to view the Gates we must ascend by fifteen steps or degrees which for form were semicircular the whole were in height seven Cubits and a half each being half a Cubit in Rise Where by the way take notice if the Cubit were a whole yard as some would fix it it would prove Hic labor hoc opus to climb up those Staires The Ascent would be neither gracefull nor pleasant These were the steps whereon the Levites sang the fifteen Psalmes of degrees Which thing together with the Conformity of this Ascent to the second Temple is the onely motive why such a number is delivered Those Psalmes
as is delivered by many grave Expositors being assigned by David to be sung upon this Ascent Being entred we can find but five Gates in this higher Court of the Lord's House if Scripture be consulted 1 The East-Gate called the higher Gate of the Lord's House which was either new-built or repaired by King Jotham and is called 2 King 15.35 2 Chron. 27.3 as some think The High Gate of the House of the Lord. Though there is one place which seems to favour an apprehension that the high-Gate there mentioned was the same with Shallecheth or the West-Gate of the outward Court towards the King's house For if you observe 2 Chron. 23.20 The Scripture tells us that Jehojaedah with the rest brought young King Joash newly crowned in the Temple from the House of the Lord that is the inner Court where he was crowned and anointed neer his royal pillar as we have before observed and then being brought into the outward Court they came with him through the high-Gate into the Kings House where the immediate connexion of the Kings House seems to imply that the High-Gate so called of the Temple was that which was neerest to the Kings House There are two probabilities to strengthen this conceit First that it was called the high-Gate because situate on the highest ground of Moriah which was at the West end of the Temple so confessed by all Secondly the Eastern Gate though pompous yet it 's observed by Dr. Lightfoot that its Battlements were made low Temple service cap. 17. §. 2. that the Priest on the Expiation day on Mount Olivet might behold the Porch of the Temple Besides probably the Western Gate was built the more magnificently because of the royall entrance of the Kings But to proceed This Eastern Gate of the inner Court being thus as is conceived by most with whom we will not fall out magnificently rebuilt by Jotham had by reason of its new Erection the name of the New-Gate of the Lords House The Entry whereof was kept by the Fathers of the Levites who had there also a famous Chamber where of old time the High Court of Judicature Jer. 36.10 Ezek. 8.7 11. called the Jewish Sanhedrim did sit in counsell This Gate was called by the name of Nicanor under the second Temple Concerning which and the remaining Gates the diligent Reader may consult the forecited learned Author in his second Temple for a clear guide in these particulars In the South-Wall of this inward Court there were of old but two Gates that we yet find recorded in Scripture Jer. 20.2 1. The High-Gate of Benjamin because it stood on somewhat higher ground then the other and was called by the name of Benjamin because it stood in the Lot and Territory of that Tribe as the Temple with the Altar fully did This was called the Gate of Kindling under the second Temple 2. The lower Gate of Benjamin which stood in the South-Wall over against the Altar and was called the Water-Gate under the second Temple On the West-side of the Temple and in the Western-Wall of this Inner-Court De bello Jud. lib. 6. cap. 6. p. 916. F. there was no Gate at all So Josephus and all the Ancients speaking of the second Temple do fully agree Whence it clearly follows that the Western Gates must be placed as before in the wall of the Outward Court If the Supposition of the first Temple its being an example in its most considerable Buildings and Frame for the second to follow wherein most agree be built upon solid Foundations On the North there were two Gates in their Position exactly correspondent to the Southern 1. The Upper North-Gate opened upon the Body of the Temple and is called the Gate of the Lords House toward the North but tearmed the Gate Beth-Mokadh under the second Temple Ezek. 8.3 5 14. In which place the Women sate weeping for Tammuz as they are represented by the Prophet Ezekiel 2 The Gate of the Altar because it was right against the Altar and opposite to the lower Gate of Benjamin This is the lower North-Gate and under the second Temple was called Nitzotz Ezech. 8.5 or the Gate of the Song These are all the Gates of the Priests Court that are mentioned in Scripture under the first Temple which proves not that there were no more But onely gives us to conclude that no more are yet cleared up for our entrance into this Court. The Pavements The Pavement of both Courts with what stones it was laid is not clear That there was one in the great Court 2 Chron. 7.3 is very evident For the Text sayes All the People bowed themselves with their faces to the ground upon the Pavement and worshipped who were not admitted into the Inner-Court whereby it 's most probable that the Priests Court was also paved because of their various services that did require it It appears also very probable that the Priests Court was paved by that Relation of Ahaz his taking Sown the Brazen Sea from off the Oxen and setting it upon the Stone-Pavement Most probably in the same Court where it stood in its gallantry De bello Jud. lib. 6. c. 14. p. 916. C. 2 King 16.17 The second Temple had its Court laid with all manner of stones when as the Riches of the Nation was nothing comparable to what it was in the dayes of Solomon and therefore we may justly conceive that the first was far more transplendent in these Ornaments Each Court was made plain and even with ascents by steps out of the first into the second and out of that into the Temple Porch Under the second Temple there were 15 steps Id. l. 6. c. 14. pag. 917. B. as before is said out of the great Court at the East-Gate entring into the higher Court or that of the Priests Besides the advance out of that Court into the Porch was by 12 steps as is commonly conceived of the first in similitude and likeness to the second The Porches The Porches of each Court follow next to be spoken to For which purpose let 's see what may be the meaning of that place where it sayes 1 King 6.36 1 King 7.12 ver 10. that the Inner-Court was built with three Rowes of Hewen-stones and a Row of Cedar-Beams seeing that in the same manner also the outward Court was built according to the measure of Hewen-stones of ten Cubits and of eight Possibly ten long and 8 broad or some ten long some 8 long or else cubical Some understand that Text of Rowes of stones in the thicknss of the walls lying plain and even one with another parallel to the Horizon and Cedar-beames within the Stones for the inside of the Courts and Porches so Montanus Others understand it of three Rowes of Stones on upon another in height and Cedar beams at top So Ribera Some by this expression understand the Cloisters round about the Courts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
I think they cannot manifest one place where it is by them put for the Altar whose Greek it 's known that the New Testament Pen men chiefly follow Nay in its native sense it signifies Incense onely and by a Metonomy the Censer wherein it was put But to admit a double Trope to ride upon one word is as harsh as rare Wherefore to reconcile this place to the Old Testament I take it to signifie a Censer For so the Epithete Golden challenges it from its native signification of Incense And I humbly conceive that possibly we may understand by it the Censer of Aaron wherewith he burned Incense when two hundred and fifty men with their Censers were appointed by God to try with him Numb 16.17 who it was that God had appointed to that Office After the two hundred and fifty men were consumed by Fire Ver. 25. Ver. 38. their Censers were hallowed and Plates made of them for the Altar for a sign to the Children of Israel Now though the Text in Numbers does not tell us that Aaron's Censer was particularly laid up yet if we interpret this place in the Hebrews of that Censer it is no way repugnant to any Scripture nor to the Analogy of Faith But helps exceedingly to inlighten and reconcile that place I am the more induced to incline to it because it is joyned with two other things viz. the Pot of Manna and Aaron's Rod both which were laid up there as a token of their Murmuring and Rebellion against the Lord being two miraculous Effects which God produced presently upon their murmuring to demonstrate the Omnipotent Presence of the Divine Majesty against whom and His instituted Ministers they had so grievously murmured So then after this grand murmure of Korah there being two Miracles produced the one the swallowing up of many in the Earth the other the burning of two hundred and fifty by fire from Heaven for the remembrance of it this Censer possibly was added as another Token together with the Pot of Manna and Aaron's Rod to be laid up in the Oracle before the Lord. There is nothing to be objected against this sense but that because the Altar of Incense is omitted ver 2. therefore it 's brought in ver 4. and to be understood to be within the second Vail quoad usum onely To this I answer That the Altar standing without the Vail Aaron might take this Golden Censer that lay within the Vail and with it taking Fire-Coals off the Altar and Incense in his hands come and perfume the most Holy Place I dare not be peremptory in this point although that a certain Golden Censer lay in the Oracle constantly within the Vail according to the express terms of the Apostle is the mind of Learned Mr. Weemse in his Exposition of the Ceremonial Laws pag. 48. However it be I submit my Conjecture to all sober and learned persons having I hope before evinced the true Position of the Altar of Incense to be without but near the Vail which we now proceed briefly to describe Exod. 30 1-10 The Altar of Incense which Moses made was for matter of Shittim-Wood and over-laid with pure Gold round about For form four-square For quantity or measure two Cubits high And as for length and breadth one Cubit in each It had a Crown of Gold round about four Horns two Rings and two Staves There be some hold that Solomon cased the ancient one of Moses with Cedar and so made a larger over it A pretty fancy quickly vented Whereas we shall find expresly that Solomon made one compleat 1 Chron. 18.28 1 King 8.4 6. 2 Chron. 5.5 7. For first we read that David prepared refined Gold by weight on purpose for the Altar of Incense Besides when the Scripture says that the Priests brought up the Ark and all the Holy Vessels of the Tabernacle It mentions onely the carrying of the Ark into the Temple though Negative Authority is not absolutely Cogent yet when as Solomon is written to have made another and this is not mentioned to have been brought into the Temple but rather laid up in some of the Chambers I think we may safely shut Moses his Altar out of this pregnant Belly of Solomons That Solomon made one is expresly mentioned in two distinct places and in a 3d place 1 King 7.48 2 Chron. 4.19 1 King 6.20 22. that the inward material was of Cedar and over-laid with Gold How large it was we read not if we may double the quantity of Moses his Altar it may be we may not transcend the limits of Truth but it is best of all to be silent with Scripture The Tables of Shew-Bread IN the next place succeed the Golden Tables of Shew-Bread as to which 1 Chron. 48.16 1 King 7.48 2 Chro. 4.8 we find Gold prepared for them by King David as also Silver for the Tables of Silver whose use of situation we ye● read not In the Kings we read but of one Table But in the Chronicles we find expresly ten in number together with their Situation five on the right and five on the left side of the Sanctuary The Description of Moses his one Table may be seen at large in the Book of Exod. But the Dimensions of Solomon's we have not though possibly double to his Exod. 25 23-29 accordingly as the place wherein they were set was double to his in capacity Some think that Moses his Golden Table was one and the nine rest were according to that cize wherein we shall be utterly silent 2 Chron. 4.19 Dr. Lightfoot c. 14. §. 5. Lev. 24.7 Exod. 25.29 The use we read was to set the Shew-Bread upon them On each Table there were set twelve Cakes six in a Row one upon another They were square and not round as usually figured with a Golden Dish of Frankincense on the highest Cake with Spoons Covers and Bowls of Gold The Form of this Table exhibited in the Draught is according to Arias Montanus the difference therein being onely as to the length of the Cakes which lay overthwart exceeding the breadth of the Table as some conceive We have added a little Coronet onely to the Brim of the Table as we read Exod. 25.25 The Golden-Candlesticks ten in number the same with this in view The last things to be mentioned are the Candlesticks 1 King 7.49 Exod. 25.31 1 Chron. 28.15 2 Chron. 4.8 1 Chron. 8.15 Their matter was of pure Gold prepared by King David Their fashion probably like that of Moses Their number was expresly ten Their situation was five on the right side and five on the left side of the House that is of the Sanctuary even as in Moses Tabernacle the Lamps are said to shine without the Vail of the Testimony Lev. 24.3 In their height and the extension of their Branches Scripture is silent Besides these there is mention made of Silver Candlesticks designed by David but how large and where placed or
close to him with the curious Girdle of the Ephod Lev. 8.7 of Gold Blue and Purple of Scarlet and fine twined Linnen 6 The next thing is the Breast-Plate of Judgment made of cunning-Work just like the Ephod It was four-square being a span each side of the square and it was doubled that is the cunning-work of Gold and Blue and Purple and Scarlet and fine twined Linnen was double that it might be the stronger to bear the stones Exod. 39.9 In it were set four Rows of Stones In the first Row was a Sardius a Topaz and a Carbuncle In the second an Emerald a Saphire and a Diamond Exod. 39.13 In the third a Ligure an Agate and an Amethyst In the fourth a Beryl an Onyx and a Jasper 13 in all each engraven in order with the names of the 12 Tribes of Israel and each was inclosed in Ouches of Gold In the four Corners were Gold Rings The uppermost Corners had two Ouches of Gold two Gold Rings and in them fastned two Golden Chains of Wreathen-Work one at each end which Chains reached up to and were fastned in the two Golden Ouches of the Shoulder-pieces of the Ephod At the two lower corners were two Rings of Gold also which had a Lace of Blue running through them to fasten the Breast-Plate therewith to two other Rings that were set in the Ephod beneath 7 After this there was placed in this Breast-Plate of Judgment Exod. 28.30 the Vrim and Thummim that they might be upon the High Priests Heart when He went in before the Lord to bear the Judgment of the Children of Israel upon his Heart before the Lord continually Some think those words were written Some think there was either two other Stones or pieces of Gold and indeed they knew not what Others think there was nothing added onely it signified the meaning of the 12 Stones that when the Children of Israel or any particular Tribe or the King or any other should enquire the Mind of God then they should receive an Answer from the High Priest in the Name of God which Answer as to future things should be as Vrim that is as Light clear and perspicuous and either concerning past present or future should be Thummim that is perfect and full of all Integrity and Truth As to which it is conceived that when the Lord did answer Positively and Affirmatively the Stones did shine most radiantly but continued in their common hue upon the Negative There is this Reason urged by some Why they did not note any new material added to the Breast-Plate because when Moses relates the making of things according to the given Pattern we read of no such thing made Exod. 39.32 Lev. 8.8 though the Text says expresly that all was done that the Lord commanded Moses yet in Leviticus it says He did which I leave to mature consideration 8 The Mitre lastly was put upon his head and upon the Mitre a Holy Crown of Gold and on the Fore-front of the Crown a Plate of Gold which was fastned to the Mitre with a Blue Lace and on that Plate was engraven as on a Signet these words HOLYNESSE TO THE LORD The inferiour Priests in their order and the High Priest according to His Superiour Dignity being thus set forth in their goodly Array were afterwards anointed with Holy Oyl consecrated and sanctified by the blood of some Sacrifices and so were prepared for the Services of the Temple in the next Chapter CHAP. V. Concerning the Solemn Worship and Service of GOD in the Temple THis Chapter might be distinctly methodized and accordingly handled either as the Worship hath respect to the various Persons or Officers employed in several Sacred Functions Or secondly as to the different Solemn Times of Service and Worship in their Mysterious Solemnities Or thirdly as to the various Sacrifices and Offerings commanded by God to smoak upon His Holy Altar All which Particulars we shall crave leave in as brief a manner as possible to exhibite in their due order and method in three distinct Sections following SECT I. Of the Temple Officers their Names and Employments IN the first place we shall speak of the different sorts of Officers about the Temple which are particularized under five several Names in Scripture viz. Priests Levites Singers Porters Nethinims The Priests are distinguisht into the chief Priests and the other interiour Priests of the 24 Courses Of the chief Priests Ezra 7.24 The chief Priests were two the High Priest and his Second the High Priest was by the Appointment of God that Person who was the Lineall Heir in Aaron's Posterity the eldest living that descended in the most direct Line from his Loins His Office was mainly upon the Expiation Day being the 10th of the 7th Moneth to perform the Solemn Rites of that Service in entring the Holy of Holies not without blood and to persume the Oracle with fragrant Incense Exod. 30.10 Lev. 16.34 Heb. 9.7 Unto which Josephus adds that He assisted in the Work on every Sabbath De Bell. Judaic l. 6. c. 6. p. 9 18. F. in every New-Moon and every Solemn Festival as may appear out of the 1 Chron. 6.49 The second Priest was the most eminent among the rest who in case of Sickness Pollution or other Emergency befalling the High-Priest did supply that Office Therefore is it that some think Moses of old to have be●n a substitute to Aaron seeing Scripture doth expresly call both of them the Priests of the Lord Ps 99.6 We read moreover that Moses did officiate in the Priests office at the consecration of Aaron his Brother Levit. 8. Howexer it be wee find for cerain Eleazar and Ithamar c. usually put together in the Days of Moses Hophni and Phinehas in the old Age and blindness of Eli. Zadock and Ahimelech in the days of David 2 Sam. 8.17 Chap. 15.35 2 King 25.18 Luke 3.2 and afterwards Zadeck and Abiathar Serajah the chief Priest and expresly in so many terms Zephaniah the second Priest in the time of Judah's Captivation by Nebuchadnezzar And lastly in the days of our Saviour Annas and Caiphas are called the High Priests not that there were two in that great Office at once as some have conceited through the Jewish Corruption of the Commandements of God at that time but that the one was a present help and constant substitute to the other in case of necessary detention from his actuall service Of the Ordinary Priests The ordinary Priests were such as sprang from the Loins of Aaron and were in a Collateral Line of Kindred allied to the High Priest which were all Levites as flowing from Levi who was the Abavus or Great Grand-Father of Aaron But being separated from the rest of the Levites for some more immediate service unto God are generally termed Priests whereas the term of Levite is restrained to all others of the Posterity of Levi besides the Line of Aaron These Priests for the more easie
it seemes to have been an Instrument with ten strings On a Nebel with ten strings will I sing saies David yea it is called a ten-stringed Instrument by apposition distinctly from a Harp Psal 33.2 92.3 1 Ch. 15.21 3 Harps 3 Others are mentioned to have plaid 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is rendred by the 70 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with Harps on Sheminith to excell This Harp or Kinnor one of the ancient Fathers resembles to the Greek letter Λ being an Instrument of wood whose strings ran along from the Basis of the Triangle and from one of the sides also Gen. 4.21 to the other much like those of Wales or Ireland which we call Harps at this day That they were plaid upon with the band is implied by the story of Jubal before the flood Pro. 30.28 when he is called the Father of all that do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 handle the Harp which word is expresly joyned with the actions of the hands metaphorically ascribed to the Spider by Solomon Wherefore it pleases Avenarius well to derive the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by transmutation of ν into θ. It seems this Instrument whatever the form were was composed but with eight strings in David's time For it is termed in this place of the Chronicles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 super octochordis on the Kinnoroth Hasheminith on Sheminith as we translate it that is on Harps being eight stringed I know there be several who upon the citation of Josephus do conceive Antiq. l. 7. c. 10. p. 243. A. mihi that the Kinnors had ten Strings and were touched with a Plectrum or Bow and that the Nablia had twelve Strings and were plaid on with hands It is not for me to endeavour to put Josephus his words out of Tune in this his Lesson which others have learned from him by my scraping any longer upon these Instruments though sometimes the Ear of a stander-by may tolerably air the Lesson which is plaid as well as the Musician himself I do not suspect Josephus his Skill in Musick yet finding the strings of his Historical Harp crackt in many places and in some things dissonant to himself I am afraid his Copy is corrupt in this place upon the probabilities out of the Hebrew Texts before mentioned and confirmed by some Learned Authors as it is in many other places which might be evidenced at large But I shall herein submit my self to the Doctors in that Science and put a pause or stop to this particular and leaving our singing Levites in their Harmonious Consort let 's observe how the rest of the Levites Priests and Porters stood in their several Stations and Watches hearkning wondring at and praising their great Skill in that Coelestial and Spherical Mystery The Instruments which they used were some of them made of Firre 2 Sam. 6.5 1 King 10.12 others of Algum-Trees Of which Wood we have treated more largely in another place of this Temple-History The Times wherein this melodious Service was performed were in the Morning and Evening and generally in the time of sacrificing noting how acceptable their Sacrifices were to God and also that our prayers must be mixt with praises That it was done in time of Sacrifice appears by the Relation of the Work of Dedication in Solomon's days 2 Chron. 7.3 6. For when as Solomon offered the Levites waited with their Instruments of Musick and the time is expresly declared when they saw the fire come down from Heaven then they worshipped and praised the Lord saying For He is good for His Mercy endureth for ever Which Verse was the same that the Priests answered to by their Trumpets and the Levites arrayed in White Linnen 2 Chron. 5.12 13. having Cymbals Psalteries and Harps did sing unto most melodiously The place where they stood officiating in this Musical Employment was at the East-end of the Altar To which purpose 't is observable Ver. 13. that some of the Psalms are called Songs of Degrees upon the account of that place where they were sung and plaid to which some do think to be upon the 15 steps arising out of the great Court into the Priests Court at the Eastern Gate thereof But now as to the ancient Hebrew Songs we may even hang up our Harps upon the Willows not being able to tune them aright in a Land so strange and in an Age so remote from that of the flourishing state of the people of Israel in the Holy Country Onely give us leave to remember Zion while we do account their Antique yet no doubt excellent Songs as to the Metrical Composition among the Deperdita or things-lost as to our knowledge Although a Learned man Dr. Gomarus by name in his Lyra Davidis hath endeavoured in some measure to revive the knowledge of their Meters comparing David's Psalms with the Poems of Pindar and other Lyricks yet we must confess that what hath been yet spoken as to the composing part or fitting of their Songs to Instruments makes no more melody in the Ears of these latter Ages of the World then dumb Musick But as to their several Officers and Courses for this Solemn and excellent Service the Scripture hath left upon Record these following Intimations In the first place we read that they had three prime Officers Asaph Heman and Jeduthun for whom many of David's Psalms were penned probably for this end that they might skilfully fit them to the various Notes of their Vocal and Instrumental Musick and therefore are styled and directed some to the chief Musician some to the Sons of Korah some to Jeduthun and the like The Sons of these principal Musicians with their Brethren and near Kinsmen 1 Chron. 25.6 7. were disposed in a most exact and harmonious method containing 24 Courses in all of men that were cunning and well instructed in the Songs of the Lord. Each Course had 12 chief men and all the 24 Courses made up 288. and the whole number of all that belonged to the Song 1 Chron. 23.5 under the chief Masters of all the Courses set in order by David were 4000 2 Chron. 25.8 9. The 24 Courses had each their chief Officer and 11 more with him according to this Order by Lot Ward against Ward 1 Joseph the Son of Asaph 1 Chron. 25.2 9. 2 Gedaliah Son of Jeduthun v. 3 9. 3 Zaccur of Asaph v. 2 10. 4 Izri or Zeri of Jeduthun v. 3 11. 5 Nethaniah of Asaph v. 2 12. 6 Bukkiah of Heman v. 4 13. 7 Jesharelah or Asarelah of Asaph v. 2 14. 8 Jeshajah of Jeduthun v. 3 15. 9 Mattaniah of Heman v. 4 16. 10 Shimei v. 17. He was the Son of Jeduthun For though his name be omitted v. 3. where mention is made of Jeduthun's Sons yet that very verse tels us there were six of his Sons So that though but five Names are there recited yet his name is to be supplyed
and solemn work of Judgment among the people For they coming in and going out by set-numbers every week in 24 Courses did appear but once in 24 weeks at the Temple unless at the three grand Solemnities and so had leisure sufficient in their several Cities and Villages to teach the people the Laws of God to expound the Letter of the Moral Ceremonial and Judiciall Parts thereof and to judge finally in all matters of Controversie about those Laws and of their living according to or the disobeying of them Of the Izharites Chenaniah and his sons were for the outward business over Israel for Officers and Judges Ver. 29. saith the Text in the Book of Chronicles and moreover that Hashabiah and his Brethren Ver. 30. men of valour among the Hebronites 1700 were Officers among them of Israel on this side Jordan Westward in all businesses of the Lord and in the service of the King On the other side of Jordan Eastward was Jerijah chief among the Hebronites according to the Generation of his Fathers Ver. 31. in the 40th year of the Reign of King David who were found among the mighty men of Valour at Jazer of Gilead which was a City of the Levites in the Tribe of Gad. 1 Chron. 6.81 Of the Brethren of Jerijah men of valour there were 2700 chief Fathers whom King David made Rulers over the Reubenites Gadites and the half Tribe of Manasseh for every matter pertaining to God and affairs of the King So that we find by Record 1700 of the Linage of Hebron 1 Chron. 26.32 on the West of Jordan and 2700 on the East side of the same Line and Extraction whence may probably follow that the 1600 Judges yet remaining of the number of 6000 mentioned at first that they were of the Posterity of Izhar and were employed on the West side of Jordan which was the greatest part of the Land of Canaan and according to the proportion of nine Tribes a half in that Region had not so many as the two Tribes and half on the East of Jordan possibly because of its nearer vicinity to the Court and the Royal Residence and so needed not so many because of the conveniency of their Appeals unto Jerusalem it self As to their Office the comparing of two places of Scripture will manifest the great Dignity of their Employment and the large extent of their power In the first whereof God himself commands that in matters of difficulty if any strong Emergency did arise in Judgment between Blood and Blood Plea and Plea Stroke and Stroke being matters of controversie within their Gates they were appointed to go to the place which God should choose that is Jerusalem principally Deut. 17.8 c. and any of the Levitical Cities ordinarily where the Judges had their fixed residence and should come to the Priests the Levites who should determine in a Sentence of Judgment and the people were to stand to their Decisions which if any man presumptuously dared to decline that man was to be put to death and evil to be put away from Israel 2 Chron. 19.8 Ver. 10. Besides we read in the History of King Jehoshaphat that He did institute in Jerusalem Levites and Priests to hear and determine Causes for the Judgment of the Lord and for Controversies and charged them that what Cause soever did come before them between Blood and Blood Law and Commandement Statutes and Judgments that they should judicially admonish them not to trespass against the Lord. So that from these and other places it 's easie to collect that the Levites were Judges over Israel in the highest matters concerning Life or Estate or any other Controversie between man and man It being observed by sundry learned Writers that there was but one Court of Judicature among the Jews whereof the Levites were the Judges and the written Law of Moses was their Rule not according to the corrupt Innovations of the Church of Rome in erecting their Curia Christianitatis for the securing of Church-men in all their out-rages from secular power in this and in other Nations and digesting of those Dung-Carts full of Canonical Books distinct from the Civil Law or the Municipals of each Countrey enough by their burden to sink a thousand Asses into the River of Tyber But to proceed To these Levites did appertain the Records and Genealogies For of this Tribe were the Judges Lawyers Scribes Recorders Genealogists in all matters pertaining to the Administration of Justice Exposition of the Laws Writing out of the Copies of the Holy Books to be read in the Countrey-Synagogues the preservation of the Linage of their Tribes the determination of Cases and laying up the Rolls of the Records in relation to things Sacred and Civil either belonging to the King or any of the people Insomuch that the persons of the greatest rank and quality either for dignity of Office or Nobility of Person age excepting the Royal Race of the Tribe of Judah were of these For we find them to be High-Priests and chief Judges of the Land 1 Kin. 2.35 1 Chron. 27.5 1 Chron. 26.14 Generals of the Army such was Benajah the son of Jehojadah in the days of Solomon expresly called a chief Priest in the Book of Chronicles Lord High Treasurers of the Temple and Councellours of State to the King such was Zechariah one of the Porters of the Temple Nay to conclude they were the onely persons that preserved Learning and Knowledge in all the Arts and Sciences wherein those Ages were versed the Schools of the Prophets being under their Cognizance and Institution and particularly the Colledge at Jerusalem mentioned in the days of Josiah Insomuch that the wisdom of our Saxon and Norman Ancestors is highly to be honoured in that they first admitted the Bishops of the Province as skilled in the Laws of God to sit with the Earls of the Counties in their Tribunals to assist them in decision of Causes according to the Word especially such as were co-incident with the Laws of God even as Holy Ambrose in his 32d Epistle tells Valentinian the Emperour concerning Blessed Constantine Qui nullas leges ante pramisit sed liberum dedit Judicium Sacerdotibus which appears by Sir H. Spelman in his Glossary and his Treatise of Tithes and in the first Tome of his Counsels in Seldens Janus Anglorum and other his Pieces in Mr. Sadler's late notable piece of the Rights and Priviledges of the Kingdom and in many other both Antiquaries and Historians that touch the Saxon days The latter I mean the Norman Kings in giving the presidency of the Court of Chancery usually to a Bishop as being presumed to be a man of such Conscience and Knowledge in the Laws of God the Rules of Christian Piety and Policy the Laws of Nature and of Nations that matters appea●able from the ordinary Courts of Justice might find there a speedy safe and righteous Issue It being a Sanctuary to persons
of the precise Synod † Lang. de annis Christi l. 1. c. 10. Selden de anno Civili Judaeorum cap. 13. 27 hours and ½ for to give the Moon a visible Phasis according to which day of its first appearance the Jewish New Moons were vulgarly celebrated If I should perform this at present it would swell this Treatise too much for which it is not of any great moment to insist and therefore we shall proceed briefly to describe the pompous Solemnity of this Dedication In the first place we read that King Solomon for this rare Festival assembled the Elders the Heads of the Tribes 2 Chro. 5.2 1 Kin. 8.65 and the chief of the Fathers of Israel and a mighty Congregation of all the Nation from the entring in of Hamath to the River of Egypt 2 Chro. 7.7 After this Solomon hallowed the middle of the Court because the Brazen Altar would have proved insufficient to contain the multitudes of the intended Offerings The Elders of Israel being assembled waited upon the King at Mount Zion where the Ark of God's Covenant was yet resident which the Priests took up upon their shoulders 1 Kin. 8.3 4. The Levites mean while according to their several designed Ranks carryed the Tabernacle of Boards and Curtains wherein the Ark stood with all the Holy Vessels of Moses 2 Chro. 5.2 Thus in a pompous Holy Procession they walked leisurely from the City of David the Ark being brought up to the sacred Mountain the King and all the Congregation sacrificed before it Sheep and Oxen without number Ver. 6. Ver. 7. Then the Priests conveyed the Ark of the Covenant into the Oracle or most Holy Place and set it under the Wings of the Golden Cherubims which being done and the Priests returned out of that mysterious place one hundred and twenty of them with silver Trumpets for Moses his were of silver sounded in the Court and near to them the Singers Asaph 1 Chron. 6.33 Ver. 12. Hëman the Grand-son of Samuel the Prophet and Jeduthun with their Sons and Brethren being arrayed in White Linnen and accommodated with Cymbals Psalteries and Harps stood at the East End of the Altar lift up their Voices and sung this Verse For He is good For His Mercy endureth for ever While this admirable Consort of Vocal Pneumatical and Organical Musick 2 Chron. 5.13 made a joyful sound throughout the Temple its Courts and the Neighbouring City Behold a Cloud of Glory filled the House of God with such bright and shining Beams that the Priests could not stand to minister by reason of its Radiant Majesty Immediatly upon this King Solomon standing upon his Brazen Scaffold before the Altar and looking towards the Cloud of Glory thus bespake the Divine Majesty 2 Chron. 6.1 2. Ver. 3 4 c. The Lord hath said that He would dwell in the thick Darkness But I have built an House of Habitation for thee and a place for thy dwelling for ever Then the King turns his face to all the people as they stood makes a short but elegant and pithy Oration and gives them His Royal Blessing After this He turns His face West again to the Temple and the Altar directing His Eyes stedfastly towards that Divine Glory and falling down devoutly upon His Knees 2 Chron. 6.12 c. 2 Chron. 7.1 and spreading out His Hands toward Heaven He powrs out a large and Heavenly Prayer before the Majesty of God riding upon the Chariot of the Cherubims At the conclusion thereof miraculous Fire descends from Heaven consuming the Burnt-Offering and the Sacrifices while the Glory of the-Lord filled the House with such Orient Splendour that the Priests could by no means enter Now when all the Children of Israel saw the Fire from Heaven and the Glory of GOD upon the House they bowed themselves with their Faces to the Ground upon the Payement worshipped and praised the Lord with one Voyce saying For He is good for His Mercy endureth for ever Then the King offered His stately Sacrifice to the Lord of two and twenty thousand Oxen and a hundred and twenty thousand Sheep Thus the King and all the People dedicated the House of the Lord throughout seven days After which followed the seven days of the Feast of Tabernacles together with an eighth being the solemn Assembly the 22 day of the moneth The 23 followed which was the Sabbath and that being concluded on the Evening of the 23 day Solomon sent away the people to their Tents 2 Chron. 7.10 Lev. 23.40 42. which were made during this Feast according to the Law of Willows and Palms glad and merry in heart for the goodness which the Lord had shewed to David to Solomon His Son and to His People Israel After which night having slept sweetly on the first day of the Week every one takes up his Journey to his own Habitation according to their various distances from the Holy Temple CHAP. VIII The Temples Duration THis famous Building being thus famously hansell'd and house-warm'd with so many fat Burnt-Offerings we will account its continuance not from the Foundations first laying when it was yet an imperfect Embryo but from the 23 day of the moneth Ethanim in the Julian Year 3710. or of the World 3001. which day according to our Author being co-incident with the 14th day of the Julian Moneth Lev. 25.9 November and being the second Sabbath of the Year of Jubilee now begun For the first was one of the days of Tabernacles shall be the first standing day of the Temple and keeping house upon its own Revenues apart from these grand and solemn Festivals being united for the more August and noble Celebration of its Dedication From which day till the Year of the same Julian Period 4126. Aug. 27. being the Sabbath also it stood four hundred and fifteen years Vsser p. 131. two hundred and eighty five days according to the Julian Account which I shall briefly exhibit in this Laterculus or Scheme wherein the Names Reign number of the Kings may be observed at one view under which it stood Not but that it received many sore shakings by many Heathen Kings by the Idolatrous Neighbours of the Kingdom of Israel or the ten Tribes who many a time laid their Sacrilegious hands upon these Divine Materials Nay which is most to be lamented it was wounded in the house of its Friends that should have been even some of the Kings of Judah For all which I refer you to the sacred Annals of the Kings and Chronicles as to the larger view of those Transactions which I have linked in a more compendious Chain before the close of this Chapter Onely before I give in this ensuing Type remember that the Dedication being solemnized in the 11th of King Solomons Reign and that He holding the Scepter 40 years we must set down 29 for Him after this great Dedication   Years   1 Solomon 29
had kept him in his Infancy from ruine and was now inspired of God to rebuke his Idolatry yet permitted the People to stone him in the Court of the House between the Temple and the Altar Ver. 22. and forgetting the kindness of his Father contracted the sin of Murder upon his own head That this was the same man mentioned by our Lord in the Gospel-story Mat. 23.35 though the name of his Father be there styled Barachiah is most probable For that the place of his Murder there recited doth agree to this and that Hierom observes on the place that in the Gospell used by the Nazarenes he is termed the son of Jojada Besides it 's observable that the two Names of Barachiah and Jehojadah do little vary in signification the former signifying the blessing or praising of God the other the acknowledging or confessing of God i. e. in a way of praise To let this inquiry pass Did Joash goe unpunished No certainly but at the end of the year God's Judgments took up an expedition against this revolting and treacherous Prince 2 Kin. 12.17 and made Hazael King of Syria the General of his angry bands to execute his fierce wrath upon Judah These Syrian Troops though small in number yet re-inforced with the anger of God destroyed all the Princes of the People 2 Chr. 24.24 and conquered an huge Host of Joash and executed Judgment upon Him and his People for they had forsaken the Lord God of their Fathers The face of this Enemy being turned towards Jerusalem Ioash took away all the hallowed things that were given by Iehoshaphat Iehoram Ahaziah and himself 2 King 2.18 together with all the Gold in the Treasures of the Lord's House and of his own and sent them to Hazael Wherewith the Tyrant being pacified turned his face to Damascus But though Hazael was yet God was not gone from Ioash but marched towards him in the paths of anger For the Syrians left him under the hand of God in great diseases as the same Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that Text doth other-where clearly signifie 2 Chr. 24.25 as you may read in 2 Chron. 21.15 Prov. 18.14 Ierem. 15.4 c. Neither did God permit him to dy of such grievous Sickness but bloody violence must be compensated with a dysastrous death and accordingly we presently hear of his Servants conspiring against and slaying him upon his sick bed Ver. 25. That so a violent death might ride to his bed-side before a naturall death had dispacht him The Spirit of God reciting the reason of all to be for the blood of the Sons of Iehojadah Neither yet doth vengeance forsake him but carryes him from the Sepulchre of the Kings not suffering him to rest with his famous Predecessours From all whose Judgments we learn what a hatefull sin Apostacy from true Religion is in the sight of God for in him that draws back the Soul of God will take no pleasure Heb. 10.38 Prov. 14.14 but the Back-slider in heart shall be filled with his own waies Amaziah the Ninth King A.M. 3165 The former Section exhibited the downfal of an irreligious Apostate but herein we have the view of a notorious Hypocrite who did that which was right but his Heart was not perfect with God 2 Chro. 25.2 He had prosperous success against the Edomites of Mount Seir but being lifted up with pride would needs challenge the King of Israel to Battel wherein being overthrown and taken prisoner at Bethshemesh in the Tribe of Judah by Ioash the King of the Ten Tribes he was carryed as a Triumphal Captive to his chief City by the Conquerour who being arrived at Jerusalem brake down the Wall of the City for the space of four hundred Cubits lying between the Corner-Gate and the Gate of Ephraim on the North side of this famous Metropolis that he might enter the capital City with the greater pomp and magnificence After which stately admission 2 Chr. 25.24 2 Kin. 14.14 this King of Israel spoils the Temple of all the Gold and Silver and carryes away all the Vessels that were found in the House of God with Obed-Edom's sons who had the charge of the Treasury that lay in the house of Asuppim near a Gate of the same name in the West-side of the outward Court of the Temple 1 Chr. 26.15 2 Chr. 25.15 But this wicked King who had worshipped the gods of Seir that could not save their stupid Proselytes out of his own hands thus deeply provoked the Lord to such fierce wrath that it prosecuted him to a violent death for falling under the hands of his own servants at Lachish Ver. 28. he was brought much like Richard the Third from Bosworth Field upon horses in an ignominious manner to his Burial at Jerusalem Thus we see the discovery and downfal of Hypocrisie a sin greatly detested of God who uncloathed this Hypocritical Zealot of his Religious Cloak which he wore in his first days by the Warm Sun of Success in War against the Children of Edom. Whereby being encouraged to shew what he was and supposing he stood now strong upon his own legs he bows down to the Idumaean Idols but never rose up again into the pristine state and glory of his Kingdom for being pursu'd by thick Troops of Divine Vengeance at last he is constrained to resign up both Scepter and Life to the severe Avengers of God's broken Covenant Thus usually the Lord is pleased to deal with ambiguous Hypocrites first to discover and then to ruine them A.M. 3194 Azariah or Uzziah the tenth King I shall not meddle with any of his Civil or Warlike Actions that do not Historically relate to the Temple during his long and prosperous Reign 2 Chro. 26.5 Ver. 16. while he sought the Lord. But let 's observe onely that when he was strong his heart was lifted up to his fatal destruction for having fortified the City and repaired the ruines it suffered under his Predecessor and done many noble Exploits Ver. 9. at last unworthily usurping the Priests Office he entred into the Temple to burn Incense upon the Golden Altar Whereupon he was immediatly smitten with Leprosie by God thrust out of the Temple by the High-Priest and deposed from his Kingly Office his Son Jotham being admitted to the Execution of Judgment in his room yielding a notable document to the highest and most imperial persons in the World not to intermeddle with sacred Functions A.M. 3246 Jotham the 11th King His powerful Wars crowned with notable success against the Ammonites as the reward for the preparing of his ways before the Lord his God we shall omit 2 Chro. 27.6 and take notice onely of the stately high Gate which he built for the House of the Lord which is conceived to be the West-Gate leading to the Kings House and mentioned by an Historical Prolepsis in the days of Joash 2 Chr. 23.20
a former King But of this I have formerly treated Chap. 3. Pag. 53. do incline to think it to have been the great Eastern Gate of the Priests Court which being decaied he new built in a magnificent manner It being called the Upper-Gate in the Book of Kings and the New-Gate in the higher Court of the Lords House 2 Kin. 15.35 Ier. 36.10 by the Prophet Jeremy from this King 's new work about it who having walked religiously reigned victoriously he dyed peaceably and slept quietly in the Sepulchres of his famous Ancestors A.M. 3262 Ahaz the 12th King Now arises up into the Throne one of the most wicked Kings of Judah walking in the ways of the Kings of Israel He made his Son pass through the Fire and burnt Incense in the Valley of Hinnom he erected molten Images to Baalim 2 Kin. 16.3 2 Chr. 28.3 and sacrificed in the high places and on the Hills and under every green Tree Wherefore the Lord sent Rezin the King of Syria and his confederate Pekah King of Israel to besiege him in Jerusalem wherein though they prevailed not to take the City yet Rezin smote his Land and carryed a great multitude away Captive to Damascus and recovered Elath a strong Fortress from Judah 2 Chr. 26.2 which his Father Vzziah had fortified Pekah slew one hundred and twenty thousand valiant men in one day and carryed away captive two hundred thousand with much spoyl to Samaria This King being thus sorely distressed sends a Message to Tiglath-Pilezer King of Assyria with a Present of the Silver and Gold found in the House of the Lord. 2 Kin. 16.8 2 Chr. 28.21 For he was not onely desperately plunged by the two former Kings but sorely afflicted by the Edomites and the Philistins the former carrying some away captive and the latter seizing many of his Towns The Assyrian King upon this invitation falls in upon the Kingdom of Syria slew its King took Damascus the chief City and subdued it under him Whereupon Ahaz meets him at Damascus and takes there the pattern of an Idolatrous Altar and sends it to Vriah the Priest and being returned causes the Brazen Altar of the Lord to be removed and his new Altare Damascenum to be placed in the Court for his own Sacrifices New Inventions of men in God's Worship never thrive for his Confederated Friend out of Assyria falls now upon the King of Iudah himself 2 Chr. 28.19 20. Isai 10.28 For he came up saies Isaiah to Ajath he passed to Migron and laid up his carriages at Michmash mentioning with these other Cities of Iudah and saies he shal shake his hand against the Mount of the Daughter of Zion Ver. 32. 2 Chr. 28.23 In the time of this his great distress he did trespass yet more against the Lord for he sacrificed to the Gods of Damascus that smote him which was his ruine Now he plunders the House of God to purpose and makes mad work in the Temple He gathers together the Vessels of the House of God and cuts them in pieces He pulls away the borders of the Bases and removes the Laver takes the Sea of Brass off from the backs of the brazen Oxen and sets it on the stone-Pavements 2 Kin. 16.17 certainly he was troubled in conscience that they had so long served God in bearing that stately Vessel and pitied their weariness under their long burden out of a sacrilegious madness of Spirit mixt with his distress and necessity The Covert also for the Sabbath which probably was built to shelter the Priests in rainy and tempestuous weather he turns out of doores Nay Dr. Lightfoot harm p. 116. Mr. Fuller 's Pisgah pag. 283. Usher Annal p. 93. 2 Chr. 28.25 Ver. 22. Dr. Lightfoot that stately Passage or Entry of the King to the Temple called the Causey or Shallecheth on the West he either obstructs diverts or destroyes and that either out of fear of surprizal by the Assyrian or rather to manifest his utter rejection of the worship of God in favour to the Emperour's Idolatry Afterwards he put out the Lamps and leavs off burning Incense in the House of God he shuts up the doors and turnes High-Priest to the Devill For he made him Altars in every corner of Ierusalem and in every severall City of Iudah he made high places to burn Incense to other Gods and provoked to anger the Lord God of his Fathers This is that King Ahaz But what followes Most probably deposed for all this by his faut or the King of Assyriae and sees his own son lifted up to the royall Throne in his stead For if his son Hezekiah began to reigne in the third year of Hoshea King of Israël as you read expresly 2 King 18.1 2. Then did he begin in the fifteenth year of his Father Ahaz For Hoshea's beginning to reigne in the twelfth of Ahaz 2 King 17.1 doth determine the fifteenth of Ahaz to synchronize with the third of Hoshea the commencement of Hezekiah's Reigne who hereby must needs prove to be assumed into the Empire by his Father as the learned Bishop Usher would have have it or else introduced by the Assyrian as learned Dr. Lightfoot declares Besides it is distinctly noted in 2 King 18.9 10. that Samaria was taken in the sixth of Hezekiah which was the ninth of Hoshea Therefore the first of Hezekiah is the third of Hoshea and the fifteenth of Ahaz when Hezekiah began to reigne in his Father's life time who died after 16 years dominion whether compleat or current is not exprest 2 Chr. 28.27 But he died ingloriously and was not buried with honour in the Sepulchres of his famous Ancestors Thus this abominable Polluter and Prophaner of the Temple came to an untimely end not being able to tell the hour of God's wrath upon the Diall of his idolatrous Wickedness Though he erected a famous Materiall one in some place of his House or of the Temple much spoken of and contested about by learned Authors yielding a miraculous confirmation to the faith of his pious Successor Vol. 3. in his judicial Laws c. 25. p. 89. Pag. 246. Pag. 162. Concerning this Diall Mr. Weemse hath an exercitation but there speaks not of the place only conceives it to have been a polar one Mr. Gregory of Christ's-Church in Oxen in his posthumous Works seems to assent to Cornel. A lapide that it was placed on a wall of the King's Palace and that it was a South-verticall Diall Adrichomius places it in the Temple and saies it was made of the brazen Altar of the Lord which he removed from its situation but he proves nothing I shall onely leave to consideration as to the place that seeing some Altars are mentioned to be fixt on the top of the Upper-chamber of Ahaz 2 Kin. 23.12 that spoken of in the mids of a Relation concerning two Temple-pollutions whether this Diall might not be supposed to have been placed
of the brazen Altar of the true God and sacrificeth his Peace-and Thank-offerings thereon commanding Judah to serve the Lord God of Israël who having reigned fifty five years slept with his Fathers and was buried in his own House in the Garden of Uzzah 2 Kin. 21.18 A. M. 3361 Amon the 15th King At twenty two years of Age began Amon to reigne in Judah and walked in the wicked steps of the first years of his Father sacrificing to all the carved Images made by him 2 Kin. 21.21 2 Chr. 33.12 disgracing what in him lay the Temple-worship But following him not in Repentance and godly Sorrow For he trespassed yet more and more till he was slain by the conspiracy of his own Servants in his own house having reigned but two years only His life when young being preserved only as may seem for the sake of Iosiah in his Loines and his Dominion to that end that his godly Son might be fostered for a while who was after to succeed him God many times would thunder out his Iudgments against the Sons of Belial were it not for some of his elect that shall flow from them as far as we may with all humility and reverence give conjecture concerning the deeps of divine providence in his dispensations throughout the world A.M. 3363 Iosiah the 16th King Now enters at 8 years of Age into the Kingly Throne the holiest Reformer that ever wore the Crown of Judah The Greeness of his years set a verdant lustre upon his actions like a stately Emerald incircling his Temples For having attained but sixteen years of his life he began to seek after the God of his Father David and at twenty years old he becomes mighty in zeal for the House of his God 2 Chr. 34.3 the Groves he cut down the Altars of Baallm he brake in pieces the Images both carved and molten he stampt to dust and strowed the powder on the Sacrificers Graves he burnt the Bones of the idolatrous Priests upon their prophane Altars and knockt the Altars themselvs in pieces with Mattocks not only in Judah but in Ephraim and Manasseh also even to Naphthali round about In the eighteenth year of his Reign Ver. 7 8. when he had purged the land and returned to Ierusalem he commands some of his chief Officers to summe up the mony brought into the Temple 2 Kin. 23.3 4 5. c. 2 Chr. 35.3 causes Carpenters and Masons to be hired Timber and hewen Stone to be provided and places the Ark again in the most holy place which it seems was removed by Manasseh Meanwhile the Book of the Law being found by Hilkiah the Priest was brought to the King read by Shaphan wept over by Iosiah and a message by him sent to the Prophetess who answered him with a returne of peace because of the tender meltings of his Heart under the denunciation of judgment The Reparations of the House being finished and the Book being carried up into the Temple of the Lord the King himself read it in the ears of the Elders of Judah and all the People and standing by the royall Pillar in the wonted place entred into Covenant with God and caused them all to stand to it After this he commands the High-Priest and his inferior Ministers to bring forth out of the Temple all the Vessels of Baal of his Grove and the Host of Heaven to the Brook burning and stamping them to dust and laid the dust on the Graves of the Children of the People 2 Kin. ●3 7 He proceeds further to break down the Houses of the Sedomites neer the House of the Lord that is possibly of those who were the Officers of the shamefull and bestiall priapeian Ceremonies of Baalphegor not fit to be uttered For as common Idolatry is called Whoredome in Scripture so this abominable Idolatry is probably called by the name of Sodomy For the Text saies that Women did in those Houses weave Hangings for that Grove viz. of Baal that was cast out of the House of God being probably an artificiall imitation of the Idol-Temple of Baal Ver. 6. with a Grove of Trees about it in some solid mettal or stone placed within those sacred Walls He defiles also all the High-places where the Priests had burnt Incense from Gebah to Beersheba together with Tophet in the Valley of Hinnom where the Children were fried in that hellish fire to M●lech Whence it is Chietomaei Graecobarb N. T. p. 54. 2 Kin. 23.11 that the new Testament assumes the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to shadow forth the intolerable Torments of the bottomless lake of God's aeternal Judgment He took away the Horses of the Sun also and burnt their Chariots with fire which were dedicated by the Princes of Judah to the Prince amongst the Stars of Heaven which had been placed at the entring into the House of God The Altars likewise on the top of the Upper Chamber of Ahaz were dasht in pieces and those of Manasseh in both the Courts of the House were broken down and their dust cast into Kidron The High-places of Solomon together with their Altars and Groves built for Ashtoreth Chemosh and Milcom on the side of Mount Olivet Ver. 13. were utterly ruined and overthrown and their places defiled being filled with the Bones of men Neither did he forget the Altar and High-place at Bethel erected by Jeroboam that great sinner of Israël The Bones also taken out of the Sepulchres in that Mount whereon Bethel was built he burnt on those Altars and polluted their imagined sanctity Thus he did in the other Cities of Samaria slaying the Priests and burning their bones upon their Altars and returned to Jerusalem 2 Kin. 23.23 2 Ch. 34. c. At last he celebrates the Passover on the fourteenth day of the first Month in this eighteenth year of his Reign in most solemn and magnificent manner the like having not been performed since Samuel and the daies of the Judges nor in the time of any of the Kings of Judah or Israël To which purpose the King bestowed on the people thirty thousand Lambs and Kids and three thou and Bullocks out of his own substance the Princes also bestowed 2600 small Cattell and three hundred Oxen. The whole number of Sacrifices being 35900 for the service of the Temple Which was so punctually and strictly managed according to the Law of Moses that like him there was no King before him nor after him rose any King like him 2 Kin. 23.25 that turned to the Lord with all his H●art with all his Soul and with all his Might Yet nothwithstanding after all this saith the holy Spirit the Lord turned not from the fierceness of his great wrath kindled against Judah for the high provocations of Manasseh and his other Predecessours But Josiah was in this point happy that he saw not the ruine of his Kingdome but died in peace according to the Prophecy of Huldah of
As we read that all the stones of the Temple were wrought with Iron tools by the Art of Masonry before they were brought and laid in order and coemented together in the walls of that sacred House In like manner the stones of the spiritual building are hewn and squared by the Preaching of the Law which as the Apostle tells us is a (a) Gal. 3.24 School-master unto Christ to fit and prepare us for the heavenly (b) 2 King 22.14 Colledge at the Temple If we shall accept it for a Type of heaven as sometimes it is then may we learn that as the Stones and Timber were compleatly fitted to fall into their several places without noise of Tools and Instruments even so in this life doth the Gospel-Ministery fit and prepare the Saints for that Celestial place (c) Rev. 21.4 where sorrow and crying shall be heard no more If we shall understand by the Temple the worship of the Gospel as Scripture doth frequently insinuate this preparative work for the Temple-buildings may possibly shadow forth and allude to the Spirit of Bondage preceding the spirit of Adoption For our blessed Saviour hath sent forth not only hewers with rough garments like John Baptist Elijah to prepare but some workmen of the temper and strain of Barnabas also like so many sons of consolation to strengthen and joyn the stones together in the spiritual building with the coement of Faith Love and Joy So that as the word of God is compared to an hammer by the Prophet (d) Ier. 23.29 Jeremy to break in pieces rugged hearts So likewise we find workmen at a gentle peaceable and quiet businesse laying Judgment to the (e) Isai 28.17 line and righteousnesse to the Plummet that the stones of the Temple may be said in an erect in an even and regular forme since we hear of the (f) Psal 19.4 line of the Apostles doctrine which is gone out through the whole World Fourthly As King Solomon did solemnly appoint in a set frame and orderly method the 24 courses of the Priests for their several services together with the duties of the Levites in their various Charge for a most noble end even to praise God and to Minister before the Priests accordingly as the (g) 2 Chron. 8.14 work of every day required instituting likewise the Porters according to their Courses to watch at every Gate so hath our blessed Lord and Saviour ordered by divine institution the several spiritual Ordinances in his Church According to which every Saint is appointed in his station to worship the Father in spirit and in truth seeing he is faithful in all his house beyond Moses the Law-giver of the antient Israelites Fifthly As King Solomon did in most stately and pompous manner performe the various rites of the dedication of this most famous and splendid Structure at Jerusalem Even so the blessed Lord of life and Saviour of the world ascending up on high (h) Psal 68.81 gave gifts unto men sending down his most holy spirit in the form (i) Act. 2.1 2 3. of Cloven tongues noting the variety of Languages wherewith they should be miraculously indued and the various Nations to which they should be sent as likewise under the shape repreentation of fire noting the fervency of zeal and the illumination of knowledge wherewith they should shine throughout the World at that time sitting upon the Apostles and Disciples assembled together in one place at Jerusalem By which plenary manifestation of the Spirit they were consecrated anointed and initiated into the several glorious Evangelical Offices to be then undertaken by them and discharged in the Primitive Church Sixthly and Lastly This glorious King conversed in this Stately and Famous House for many years together taking great delight in the Sacrifices and solemn worship of his God So doth the Lord Jesus the Pramer and builder of the spiritual Temple take wonderful solace in his Gospel-Church continually walking in the midst of his (k) Reu. 2.1 seven Golden Candlesticks Yet herein we must observe that though King Solomon declined in his latter dayes to shew that he was but a man although a most glorious and admirable Type of Jesus Christ Yet herein our blessed Lord as he did farre out-bid all other prefigurations of himself so also this personal Type of King Solomon in this particular that he never forsaketh the assemblies of his Saints but is alwayes (a) Mat. 18.20 in the midst of them For whom he once loveth (b) Ioh. 13.1 he loveth unto the end or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as some expound it even to the death Nay continuing his love beyond the term and period of his meritorious passion he hath graciously promised to be (c) Mat. 28.20 with them alway even to the end of the World Hitherto let it suffice to have treated thus largely concerning the prefatory matters respecting the Time Place and Architect of the Temple Now I shall proceed to the main design in the 6 following Sections according to the method which I have before laid down not without most humble imploration of divine aid and assistance to be yeilded and afforded to me in the further prosecution of these abstruse and profound Mysteries craving moreover a gentle and favourable connivence and remission of my failings by all serene spirits who possibly may please to converse with these so rude and impolite discourses SECT I. Concerning the Mysteries af the Covered Temple and it s included Rooms AS to the management of this present Section I shall crave leave to treat in the first place of the Mystical significations of the Temple in general and afterward to descend to the most material particulars of the covered Building whereof it may be requisite to discourse more largely In general the holy Scriptures do frequently insinuate the Typification of three things by the Temple when taken in a more laxe and ample signification as for example Our blessed Lord himself personally considered Secondly the Church or body of Christ mystical And thirdly every Saint also in particular At least I hope it may be safely said that the sacred writings do in all these 3 respects frequently allude to the antient Temple of Solomon it being no unusual thing for the self same Type to hint at various Mysteries under the Gospel as may more amply and evidently appear out of the divine pages of Scripture by this ensuing discourse 1. Some would have the Temple in general to prefigure and Typifie the blessed body of our Lord and Saviour grounding their apprehension upon that famous place where our Lord speaking concerning the destruction of the Temple in three dayes is interpreted by the Evangelist John who was the beloved Disciple and lay in his bosome (d) Ioh. 2.19 21. to have meant it of his own body Upon which account Tertullian (e) Hieron in Script Ecclesiastic Edit Erasm Ludg. 1530. Tom. 1. p. 287. who lived under the
Emperous Severus and Antoninus Caracalla and is placed by Ierome in his Latine translation of Ensebius his Chronicles as flourishing (a) P. 172. Edit Scallig 1658. in the 208th year of our Lord expounding that noble place of the (b) Isa 2.2 Prophet Isaiah treating of the mountain of the Lords House whereunto all Nations should flow in the dayes of the Gospel reflects upon our blessed Lord in these following words (c) Contr. Marcion l. 3. p. 348. Ed. Par. 80. 1566. Utique Christus Catholicum Dei Templum in quo Deus colitur Christ is the Catholick Temple of God wherein he is worshiped Athanasius moreover citing this very place of holy John affirmes that our Lord Christ was the (d) Contr. Arianos Orat. 5. p. 323. Edit Commelin 1600. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that true house or building and that therefore Solomons structure being but the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the image or Type of this spiritual Temple was destroyed to manifest it to have bin but a meer Type when as this true Temple had once appeared In this point likewise doth holy learned Ierom concurre asserting as much in these words (e) Ad Marcellam Tom. 1. 126. ideò Templum Subrutum ut typica historiae tollerentur that therefore the antient Temple was ruined that so the typical Histories might be taken away Neither is Origen herein to be left our speaking somewhat to this very purpose in his 7th Book against Celsus (f) P. 349. quarto Edit Cantabr 1658. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He destroyed the City and the Temple the worship of God consisting in sacrifices and other constituted services in the Temple c. to that end that the Gospel its more divine services thereby signified might be more firmely established But to what purpose should I bring in a heap of Authors setting their seals to this antient truth Seeing 't is every where obvious in the writings of the Antients attended likewise generally with the suffrages of modern times especially of such who delight not in carping at the Fathers Wherefore according to the 6th Canon before laid down in this Chapter let the Temple be accomodated to our Saviour under the notion of an excellent Type For as our blessed Lord is declared by holy John (g) Ioh. 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to pitch his Tabernacle and dwell among us So the fulnesse of the Godhead is affirmed by the Apostle Paul (h) Col. 2.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to inhabite bodily in Jesus Christ as in a Temple The (i) John Gregory notes in Scrip. c. 31. Edit Oxen. Shecinah of the divine presence being unspeakably manifest in the Messiah Strange and uncouth is the fancy of Villalpandus (k) Templ Solom descrip ex Villalp per Cappell pag. 20. in proaem Bibl. Polyglott Walton stating the Temple's Typical similitude in proportion to and with the body of our blessed Lord upon the Crosse with his armes stretcht out and his legs conjoyned together in such a manner as that his head should possesse the Sanctuary his breast the Altar his feet the Eastern gate his two hands the two gates on the North and Southside of the Temple So that as the passage or way to the Altar and Sanctuary lay open through those three principal gates In like manner should the path to the true Sanctuary be madk plain and easie through the wounds of his feet and hands Whence it is that the brazen Sea which was situated on the Southside of the Temple near the Altar should prefigure the water and blood issuing out of the right side of our blessed Lord for the washing away of our sins and our spiritual sanctification But these things saith Lud. Cappellus though acutely and ingeniously invented by Villalpandus yet are not a little strained and forced favouring more of the sharpness and subtlety of humane wit then of the solid wisdome and teachings of the holy Spirit Wherefore I shall seek to accommodate some principal parts of the ancient Temple unto Christ personal by way of allusion rather then by direct assertion and afterwards remove to the next inquiry In as much then as the Temple is reported to have bin built with pure white marble thereby may be shadowed forth the unspotted purity and Candid innocency of our blessed Lord that well might the heavenly Angel say of him to the Virgin Mary (l) Luk. 1.35 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God So that when the Prince of this World came near to him in a way of temptation (a) John 14.30 he found nothing in him of impurity and unholinesse as any fit matter or foundation for his malicious design against him Who is declared by the Apostle Peter (b) 1 Pet. 2.22 to have committed no sin neither guile to have bin found in his mouth We read further concerning the Temple that it was adorned with Planks and Boards of Cedar Firre and Olive which by their unctuous and resinous matter do not easily yield to putrefaction In like manner the body of our Lord had such an aequilibrium or excellent poise of the humours in its temperament and constitution that he was never sick in all his life as generally is conceived from the silence of Scripture in that point But that his body was in the same habitude of freedome from sicknesse and death as the bodies of our parents in the primitive garden by the free donation of God and his manutenency or conservation of them in such a state of equality that the tetrachordon or the four strings of the humours being choisely and divinely touched by the hand of heaven should warble forth the most pleasant and melodious harmony of immortality Now although our blessed Lord did undergo the pain of death being (c) Isa 53.5 wounded for our transgressions not his own yet did not the Father of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ (d) Psal 16.10 Act. 2.27 leave his blessed body under the power of the grave nor suffer his holy one to see corruption Again as all those forementioned materials framed of the wood of choise trees and being most curiously carved were overlaid with the purest gold the most incorruptible and precious among metals So may we observe in holy Scripture many of the excellencies of Christ compared to Gold Wherefore the inamoured spouse describing her beloved to the Daughters of Jerusalem conferrs his head with (e) Cant. 5.11 the most fine gold which some referre to the divinity of Christ others to his headship over the Church especially since John in his Revelation-visions beheld the son of man sitting on a Cloud (f) Rev. 14.14 with a golden Crown upon his head as being King over his mystical body the Church In antient times Gods majesty was pleased to utter his divine Oracles from out of the most holy place within the Temple But
in these last dayes He hath (g) Heb. 1.2 spoken to us by his Son who is expresly called (h) Dan. 9.24 Rev. 19.13 the most holy by the Prophet Daniel and was the person through and by whom the Father hath opened his minde to the World For the onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father (i) Ioh. 1.18 he hath declared him He is Ioh. 1.1 called the word of God the Interpreter of the divine will in all ages neither (k) Mat. 11.27 knoweth any man the Father but the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him It was the (l) 1 Pet. 1.11 spirit of Christ in the Prophets of old testifying before hand of his sufferings and the glory that should follow By the same spirit (m) 1 Pet. 3.19 he went and preached to the spirits of the old World which are now in prison by which also he taught (n) 2 Cor. 13.3 the Apostle Paul and continues to inspire the hearts of his faithful Embassadours to the end of the World having upon his Ascension-day (o) Eph. 4.8 12 13. given gifts unto men for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministery and the edifying of his Body till we all come in the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Wherby is evidently declared that the Gospel-Ministery divinely taught by Christ the Supreme Prophet of his Church (p) 1 Pet. 2.25 the Shepheard and Bishop of our souls (q) Ioh. 7.46 who spake as never man spake must endure till all the Elect be gathered and built up into a holy Temple in the Lord which shall not be fully and compleatly finished till the end of the World Moreover As in the Temple of Solomon there was an Ark made of Shittim-wood containing the Tables of stone whereon the ten Commandements were engraven and preserving them as a lively memorial of Gods Covenant with the Children of Israel to protect and defend them in case they kept and obeyed those precepts of God So Jesus Christ our blessed Saviour is declared to have (a) Mat. 5.17 fulfilled the Law not only as it became a just and righteous person so to do but on the behalf of the elect that so by the (b) Rom. 5.19 obedience of one many might be made righteous Which he performed with so much alacrity and willingnesse of spirit that he speaks of himself that (c) Psal 40.8 he delighted to do the will of God yea the Law was within his heart as a more excellent Cabinet then that which lay of old within the Oracle To contract As the curious vaile in the Tabernacle or Temple kept off the overcomming Majesty of divine glory from the eyes of those persons who entred the Sanctuary so the (d) Heb. 10.20 vaile of Christs flesh was drawn over Him as a Curtain to obumbrate and shadow the radiant divinity of his Godhead that rested in him in the daies of his Incarnation As the Golden Altar of Incense was the seat of those fragrant Odours which perfumed the holy of holies So are the prayers of the Saints offered up by the Lord Jesus upon the heavenly (e) Rev. 8.3 Altar of his intercession which stands before the Throne where our High Priest perfumes them in the golden censer of his own merit and makes them acceptable to his Father As the Table of shew-bread did exhibite food to the Priests that ministred before the Lord after the Cakes had stood their limited time within the Sanctuary So the Lord Jesus (f) Iohn 6.32 descending from heaven is that true bread of Life whereupon Saints do feed who are consecrated for (g) Rev. 1.6 Priests under the Gospel unto God the Father As the Golden Candlestick did yield a beautiful light within the Temple continually before the Lord Accordingly doth our Lord Jesus term himself (h) Ioh. 8.12 the light of the World that whoever followeth him and worketh by that light shall not walk in darknesse but enjoy the light of eternal life The seven lamps likewise of that Candlestick did signifie the various and excellent graces (i) Rev. 4.5 of the holy Spirit wherewith our Lord was adorned above his fellows who took great delight in (k) Rev. 2.1 walking in the midst of those 7 golden branches As the brazen Altar received the sacrifices which were offered up for the people's sins to make an atonement on their behalf before God So upon the Altar of the Crosse did the Lord Jesus (l) Heb. 9.26 put away the sins of his people by the Sacrifice of Himself As the Gate of the Temple gave admission to the Priests into those mysterious places where they executed their offices and performed services acceptable unto God So the Lord Jesus is the door of the new Testament-worship through which we must enter with our Gospel-sacrifices to performe our spiritual homage to his divine Majesty In all our prayers we must have a special eye to Christ and his mediation Even as Daniel in the Land of his Captivity kneeling upon his knees prayed when the (m) Dan. 6.10 windows of his Chamber were open towards Jerusalem and as Jonah though (n) Ion. 2 4 7. cast out of sight his soul fainting within him yet looked towards the holy Temple so must we in our deepest exigencies and the most fainting fits of distresse look towards Christ our spiritual Temple and through him only expect audience at the throne of grace In these and many other particulars I might proceed to amplifie upon this point but shall reserve them to a more copious enlargement in the succeeding treatise 2. Let us go on in the next place to shew briefly how the Church also the mystical body of Christ was signified by that glorious building Wherein I shall but succinctly mention some few things recommending the more large explication to their more proper and convenient places As the Temple was the material house wherein God was worshipped under the Jewish administration So is the Church under the Gospel the spiritual (a) 1 Cor. 3.16 Temple of God wherein his holy spirit dwelleth Nos enim sumus Templa dei altaria luminaria vasa We are saith (b) Tertul. de Cor. mil. p. 753. Edit Par. 80. Tertullian the Temples of God the Altars Lamps and Vessels Every Christian Church (c) Dr. Ed. Reyn. on Hos Ser. 5. p. 131. quar as a most Reverend and Learned Dr. of our own Nation is the Israel of God and every Regenerate person born in Zion and every spiritual worshipper the Circumcision Now Christ is crucified in Galatia and a Passeover eaten in Corinth and Manna fed on in Pergamus and an Altar set up in Egypt and Gentiles sacrcified and stones made Children unto Abraham and Temples unto God The Ark of old
Religion Even as brain sick Monks since the Primitive times have endeavoured to corrupt the Christians worship with their lying wonders and revelations so often recited in their wodden Legends Wherefore to let them passe not without Solemn praise to God who hath conferred upon us more clear light in the face of his dear Son let us proceed while we enjoy that light to do the work that is required of us and by the benefit of those blessed raies to look more narrowly into the spiritual foundation of the Gospel-Temple To which purpose considering that the foundation of an house is properly that materia substrata or underground matter on which the building resteth and whereby it is sustained and upheld and furthermore that Gods building or house in the World is his Church which being constituted in our first Parents at the beginning upon the Primitive foundation of righteousnesse and true holinesse according to the Covenant of works was assaulted by the storms of the Devil's malice and power and falling from that excellent foundation which Gods Majesty had laid in paradise with his own hands hath ever since groaned most bitterly under the sad pressures of sin and temptation complaining in the Language of Cain that their deserved (a) Gen. 4.13 punishment is greater then can be born by humane shoulders and therefore earnestly beggs the divine support of some new and more firme and unshaken foundation whereupon to rest for ever without danger of inward mouldering or external storms Now for as much as the Foundation of every building is two-fold The first external and natural being no other then the Earth it self (b) Heb. 3.4 made and framed by God The other internal and artificial consisting of stones brick or timber according to the nature of the super-imposed building So hath the Church likewise a two-fold foundation One whereof may bear some resemblance with the natural earth accordingly as our Lord is pleased to speak of his Church under the notion of a similitude differing from this in hand that the (c) Mat. 13.38 field is the world wherein his Church and people are placed The other may be termed Artificial granting indulgence to the prosecution of the present Metaphor The (d) Heb. 11.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 builder maker or framer whereof is God in a more speciall manner Then which foundation (e) 1 Cor. 3.9 11. no man can lay any other than what is laid even Jesus Christ He is that precious corner-stone (g) Eph. 2.20 ●● by the Father in the heart of mount Zion (f) Isa 28.16 In whom all the building being fitly framed together groweth to a holy Temple in the Lord. (h) 1 Pet. 2.4 5. To whom comming as to a living stone the Saints are built up a spiritual house wherein to offer spiritual Sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ So that neither the pretended and usurping-head of the Church at Rome nor the Canons constitutions or traditions of that Apostate body nor humane reason though never so much concocted digested refined by the wit art or industry of man can be owned for this foundation 'T is Christ alone who must be received and acknowledged for this fundamental-rock the Basis of Apostolical confession whereon to build the Church (i) Mat. 16.18 against which the gates of Hell shall never prevail Our blessed Lord and Saviour then is the whole and only foundation for the Church to rest upon excluding Peter and all his imagined successors together with all the Apostles from being Corrivals with Christ in this great work of sustaining the spiritual building Now although the Pontificians plead hard for a Secundary and Ministerial foundation yet can we by no means admit any such distinction which is so farre from being grounded on Scripture that it doth directly oppose the very expresse terms of the holy word declaring that there can be (a) 1 Cor. 3 11. no other foundation laid than our blessed Lord. Besides it is repugnant to found reason to introduce any Secondary and ministerial foundation that performs not the true and native duty and cannot undergo the weight and burden of a proper and genuine foundation For either Christ is the only whole and sufficient foundation of his Church or not If he be as the Scripture holds it forth more evident then the Sun at noon then what 's the meaning of that other foundation which certainly if it be not the primary and main foundation then it cannot truly and properly be called a foundation at all that doth not sustain the building but must be a part onely of the building For if it be a true foundation it must subsist of it self and not be laid upon another as its basis or bottome But if not besides the flat denial of Scripture by these builders (b) Act. 4 11. who have set at nought the head-stone of the Corner wo must needs befall the Church if their faith and hope of salvation should leane upon such (c) Lev. 14.45 Leprous stones which God hath commanded to be carried out of the City into an unclean place But this point is most excellently and nervously handled by the famous (d) Tom. 2. de Rom. Pontif. Contr. 4. qu. 2. p. 551. fol. Dr. Whitaker most amply in his Controversies about the Pope of Rome to the terror of the dark Conclave Happy is the Church of Christ in having so glorious a person as the Son of God to sustain and bear the weight and pressure of their sins and to be the choise foundation of their faith to rest upon in respect to eternal life who is so termed by a Metaphor taken from material buildings wherein the foundation doth uphold all the Rooms and Stories built upon it In like manner all the members and parts of the sacred and Mystical structure laying the whole stresse of their happinesse upon Jesus Christ are carried on till the top-stone of glory shall be brought forth Which things are mentioned in many places of divine record and prosecuted by an Allegory or continued Metaphor Christ himself is by diverse of the holy pen-men called the corner-stone of the building that is of the foundation of the building In which expression the main and principal part of the foundation is taken for the whole by a Synecdoche Seeing the chief and most serviceable part of the foundation is that strong and large hewn-stone which the Architect layes at the bottom-corner of each square of the building Further as a building is compared by Scripture and other writers sometimes to an humane body the foundation in such a sense may very aptly be expressed by the denomination of a head To which purpose we may observe that our Lord (e) Col. 1.18 the head of his Church is often styled by the name of that prime stone which is laid at the head of the Corner as may fully appear from these following places of Scripture Psal 118.22 Mat. 21.42 Mat.
Circumcising stone in cutting off the head of that uncircumcised Philistine who had defied the armies of the Living God The gates of hell and all the powers of darknesse were presently in an uproare and Junctis umbonibus with their united forces assailed him in a most cowardly manner even then while he was exercised under the frowns of heaven but he prevailed most victoriously and carried them all Captive being chained to his Chariot wheels to the Capitol of glory Even as Sampson of old laid the gates of Gaza (h) Judg. 16.3 on the Hill before Hebron So did our unconquerable Champion triumph openly over all Principalities and Powers laying their gates upon the top of mount Olivet the hill before Heaven in the day of his glorious Ascension unto the Father having fixed his immortal and never to be unhinged Trophies in the Jawes nay in the very Bowels of the kingdome of darknesse In so much that what was said of old concerning the stone that was brought from Scone Abby near St. Johnston's in Scotland by our warlike King Edw. I. and placed under the Coronation-Chaire in Edward the Confessors Chappel at Westminster may be more abundantly verified in this Prince of life being alluded to with some small variation Ni fallat fatum Christus quòcunque locatum Inveniet lapidem regnare tenetur ibidem If heavens decrees shall firmely stand The stone that 's laid by Gods right hand (i) Bethel Gen. 28.18 With fragrant Oyl shall be annointed And for a holy house appointed This King of glory being solemnly inaugurated into his Royal Office by his perfumed unction upon mount Zion must Reign in every place and territory throughout the World according to the Prophetick pen of Daniel interpreting the vision of the (k) Dan. 2.35 mystical stone which shall at length grew into a great mountain and fil'd the face of the whole Earth (l) In Lysandr We read in Plutarch of a stone reported to have fallen from heaven and therefore worshipt by the inhabitants of Cherronesus Nay by a more infallible pen it is related concerning (a) Act. 19.35 the Ephesians that they adored a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an image which they credited to have bin dropt down from Jupiter In which and the like impositions of the old Serpent upon poor deluded mortals there may lye hid some A pish imitations of that divine truth of Christs coming down from heaven and represented in the sacred Scriptures by the Metaphorical expressions of a stone which we are now handling The Heathens and their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (b) De Err. relig p. 284. cum Hyg 80. mentioned by Firmicus whether made of stone and uttering from those Statues or out of rocky Caves their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their ambiguous and doubtful tortuous Oracles fearing lest they should mistake in the issues and events of their predictions and so lose the honour of assumed deities shall be dashed one upon another against the walls of divine fury The (c) Zeph. 2.11 Lord shall be terrible to them and famish all the Gods of the Earth providentially guiding the hand of a poor Graecian ignorant of the truths of God to write a Treatise (d) Plutarch p. 149. Tom. 2. Francof 1620. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 endeavouring to give an account of the defect of Oracles in his daies Wherein he shews that some infernal spirit from the Iland Paxae now Ericusa between Corcyra and Leucas in the Ionian Sea declared their silence to proceed from the death of Christ which is shadowed in the dark words of Heathenish canting Language 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The great Pan is dead reflecting upon Christ most truly as the great Bishop and Shepheard of souls Who when arisen from the grave lead Captivity Captive and stopt the mouths of deluding spirits in a great measure inverting the tripus of the Delphian cell upon the mouth of that rank and putrid den of the old Dragon But as to our blessed (e) Gen. 49.24 Shepheard this stone of Israel his Oracles are infallible the rock on which he sits is impenetrable as to the impression of any external violence In all ages hitherto it hath stood inviolable so shall it stand unmoveable against the force of the choisest Engines of the wit●lest and refinedst Archimedes of Hell and triumph most gloriously against all opposition like (f) Psal 125.1 mount Zion which cannot be removed abiding for ever For the (g) Psal 16.8 Lord was on his right hand therefore this Holy one never saw Corruption Hence is it that the Saints of the most High who are built upon this sure and tried foundation shall find themselves fixed upon such a Rock that no ages can violate no soaking showres can cause to moulder no floods can dash upon with the least sensible impression although themselves by this their allision shall be broken into a thousand flashes no windes can shatter or so much as shake it having stood impregnable against all the impetuous forces that heaven in just and righteous indignation against imputed sin or earth in a foolish rage or Hell in a malicious fury hath ever yet mustered or brought into the field against it In so much that the holy Apostle in opposition to the quaking fits of mount Horeb and the frightful leapings of Sinai the † Bellon Observat twin-tops of that trembling mountain in the wildernesse of Paran in the day of Gods thundring out his fiery law from a midst the thick darknesse might safely inferre that we have (h) Heb. 12.28 received a kingdome which cannot be shaken which cannot be moved To conclude As this imperial stone hath undergone the full weight of Gods just and deserved wrath in respect to sinners whose burden our dear Lord was pleased to sustain on their behalf having also couragiously and triumphantly repulsed all the furious rage of spiritual wickednesses in high places so hath it likewise proved to have bin a tried stone in respect to the Saints of the most High who upon constant and experienced trial have found it to their great comfort and inexpressible joy to have bin a most solid foundation for their grieved and burdened souls to rest upon in their saddest distresses and perplexities This experience of it had good Jacob in that sad night saying it for a (a) Gen. 28.11 pillow the softest that ever he had being lined with choise promises for his troubled and musing head when he was hastning on in a journey towards Padan-Aram from the menacing browes of his angry brother Then was it that this holy man received the promise of the Messiah that should come from his loines when God told him in a dream that (b) Ver. 14. in his seed should all the families of the Earth be blessed When awakened in the morning he set up that stone (c) Ver. 18. for a Pillar and powred oyle upon it (d) Austin de Civ Dei l. 16. c. 38.
Neque enim adoravit cum lapidem vel ei sacrificavit sed quoniam Christi nomen à Chrismate est idest ab unctione profectò figuratum est hinc aliquid quod ad magnum pertineat Sacramentum For saith Austin he neither worshipt that stone nor sacrificed to it but because the name of Christ is from unction verily there is something figured by it which pertaineth to a great Mystery Another likewise of the Ancients speaks to the same purpose (e) Cyprian l. 2. Contr. Judaeos p. 277. Edit Bas 1530. Lapidem consecravit unxit Sacramento unctionis Christum significans He viz. Jacob consecrated and anointed that stone hinting at Christ by the Mystery of unction To mention no more evident is the testimony of one more antient then either of the former who when speaking concerning the present work of Jacob at Bethel hath these words in his dialogue with a Jew (f) Justin Mart. dial cum Tryph. p. 244. Edit Commelin 1593. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We have in like manner manifested that Christ was figuratively set forth by a stone in many Scriptures The holy Patriarch sleeping sweetly on this blessed stone saw him at the top of the ladder in a vision who supported him beneath which was no other then the (g) Id. ibid. lin 40. 41. Joh. 1.51 Son of God teaching us that the secret support which a Saint enjoyes is sometimes illustrated with radiant visions of assurance from heaven If we repose our souls in their saddest agonies upon this anointed stone we shall enjoy sweet silver-slumbers gilded with Angelical visions of divine love reaching down the ladder of assurance from heaven by which we may ascend into the bosome of God when we are terrified with the frownes of a threatning and persecuting World while we are travelling towards Bethel the house of God the mansion of glory This was the stone which blessed Joseph when sold by his unkind brethren found to be his help (h) Gen. 49.24 Rivet Exerc. 185. p. 696. Fol. even the stone of Israel accordingly as his dying father did dictate in that solemn blessing whereby his head was elevated aloft beyond the rest of his kindred and raised up to the second place of state and dignity in the kingdome of Egyyt Moses another Eminent servant of God sate upon this stone on the top of the Hill when his hands were held up to heaven in prayer while Joshuah was fighting with Amalek in the valley (i) Cyprian ibid p. 278. sacramento lapidis stabilitate sessionis Amalech superatus est ab Jesu id est Diabolus à Christo victus est When under the mystery of that stone saith a holy Martyr and the stability of Moses session Amalek was overcome by Joshuah that is the Devil was vanquisht by Christ So (k) Tom. 3. p. 46. Jerom to Fabiola speaking of Rephidim the 11th mansion of the Isralites hath these words sedet Moses super lapidem dictum à Zacharia qui septem habebat oculos that Moses sate upon the stone spoken of by the Prophet Zechariah which had seven eyes In the clift of this (l) Exod. 33.22 Dr. Reynolds on Psal 100. p. 166. quar rock was Moses placed by God himself when the Lord passed by him and proclaimed his glorious name (m) Exod. 3.4 6. THE LORD THE LORD GOD merciful and gracious long-suffering and abundant in goodnesse and truth c. This was the (n) Deut. 27.2 3. Cypr. p. 277. stone on which Moses commanded all the words of the Law to be written when they were passed over Jordan into the land of promise Joshua likewise the Captain of the Lords Armies when he had given the possession of the Land of Canaan to the tribes of Israel convenes them before the Lord at Shechem a little before his death and sets up this Mystical (a) Josh 24.26 stone under an Oake near the holy Sanctuary and having adjured them solemnly to the fear and service of the Great God he said unto all the people Behold (b) Cyprian ibid Jul. Firmic Mat. de Err. prof rel●g p. 27. Lug. Bat. 1652. this stone shall be a witnesse to us For it hath heard all the words of the Lord which he spake unto us When the Ark was brought back out of the Land of the Philistines it rested upon this (c) 1 Sam. 6.15 18. Cypr. p. 278. stone in the fields of Bethshemesh which is alone able to sustain the symbole of Gods presence among his people and give forth the infallible dictates of his will concerning divine-worship and the management of holy Ordinances This was the rock of ages in a Cavern whereof (d) 1 King 19.9 13. Elijah the Prophet once stood being in the same mount of God viz. Horeb wherein the Lord had before manifested himself unto Moses and now passes before Elijah in the still and gentle voice of mercy And why do we find such gracious revelations of his Majesty to the holy Prophets in mount Horeb a place so dreadfully shaken by the thundring dispensations of the Law a place that yielded the two Tables of stone wherein the Commandements of God were engraven with his own finger But to shew that as the positive Law of God was graven in pieces of stone taken out of that rock which signified Christ So we might be comforted under the infirmity of our flesh since the fall seeing Christ alone can retain and conserve the true impressions of the divine will upon his heart and fulfill that law which we had broken by his perfect and intire obedience With which God being fully and compleatly satisfied is pleased in that very place to declare himself a merciful God to poor sinners in a covenant of grace promulgated both to Moses and Elijah in that very mountain with the gentle sweet and melting voice of Gospel love They being the very same persons which afterward appeared with our Lord in the mount of Transfiguration in the daies of his flesh The pen-man of a famous Psalme so often cited by the spirit of God in the new Testament as yielding a very divine Oracle concerning Christ whom though the builders had refused yet he esteemed as the (e) Psal 118.22 head-stone of the corner having had great and sweet experience of the strength and power of God connexed with mercy in the preserving of his soul from sinking in the horrible pit and in the miry clay by setting his feet upon that solid (f) Psal 40.2 rock of salvation Noble Daniel being under a prophetick Ecstasis when his soul was taken up by a very sublime rapture rejoyces in the vision of this living and growing stone which was cut out of the (g) Dan. 2.45 mountain without hands out of the mountain of eternity according to his divine nature or the mountain of the Jewish kingdome as (h) Matthiae Theatr. hist. part 4. p. 6. others take it according to his humane nature
Peter's words in such a sense as may hint to us a large intire stone that lyes flat at the botome and extends to all the four corners bearing and underpropping the whole building both in the middle and all the four Angles thereof which noble and stately stone being indued with admirable strength by reason of the greatnesse and immensity of its body to undergo the burden imposed upon it we cannot apply and resemble it in a spiritual sense to any thing better than to the infinite strength of the merits of Jesus Christ our Lord on whose almighty shoulders there is laid help sufficient for our faith to lean on to support and preserve us from sinking under the direful weight of our sins into the crude raw indigested and boggy ground of our polluted righteousnesse when oppressed by the impetuous storms of temptation and when mourning under the ponderous pressure of Gods wrath righteously imposed upon the backs of sinners Hence is it that they who believe shall not need to make haste away from it as men do from boggy grounds as the noble Prophet expresseth it in the forecited place seeing it's firme ground wherein the Angular stone of our help and salvation is laid The [c] Isa 9.6 government resteth on the shoulders of an omnipotent Atlas supporting Heaven and Earth from falling under the leaden talents of divine wrath and justice So that the foundation of our spiritual house is not laid in the sandy desert of our impotent and lubricous natures or in the soft and shaking bogs of our filthy works but the help and stresse of our happinesse is settled upon One who is mighty to save For behold a hand of grace and mercy descending from heaven and fixing a most sure foundation on which our souls may find a safe and secure repose from all their fluctuations and disquietments Now for as much as the Apostles of Christ are termed also [d] Eph. 2.20 Rev. 21.14 foundations of the Church Nay seeing that even the Church it self is said to be [e] 1 Tim. 3.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the pillar and ground of truth we are to understand the former [f] Noyes Temple meas p. 31. of a doctrinal foundation the Apostles having bin such as did edifie and build up the Church upon the head-stone of the corner So Paul speaks of himself who like a wise master-builder had laid his Corinthians upon Christ as the (a) 1 Cor. 3.10 foundation of their faith By the latter concerning the Church we are to understand the promulgation and conservation of that truth once delivered unto it by our Lord himself and his holy Apostles inviolable and indelible to the day of Christ throughout all generations But of this possibly I may speak more fully in another place of this Treatise Wherefore to conclude this present paragraph about the corner-stone let us also remember that as this stone hath respect unto both sides of the building so it may fairely represent that sacred function and office of our Lord in knitting and uniting both Jews and Gentiles in one Temple of his mystical body Ideo etiam (b) De cessat legal p. 153. saith our famous Grostest sometime Bishop of Lincolne utriusque testamenta sacrificia peregit Christus ut in se angulari lapide continuaret duos parietes aedificii culturae Domini Therefore did Christ also performe the sacrifices of both testaments that he might joyn together the two walls of Gods worship in himself being the corner-stone That so he might become the foundation (c) Jud. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the salvation common both to Jews and Gentiles For through him (d) Eph. 2.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith holy Paul we both that is of the stock of the Jews and of the gentile race have an accesse by one Spirit unto the Father Others there be who interpret this cementing or uniting of the corner-stone to be understood in respect to Saints and Angels Seeing the Father is related by the same Apostle (e) Eph. 1.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to gather together unto a head all things both in the heavens that is Angels and Saints triumphant and also such as are upon the Earth that is Saints militant in Christ the head stone of the corner 6. In the sixth and last place he is termed (f) 1 Pet. 2.4 a living stone ¶ 6. To which purpose we may observe that such stones which still remain in their native place within the Quarry not yet dugg up or removed out of their natural situation are by the antients whether Poets Orators or Philosophers called living stones At present one shall suffice for all it being a thing commonly noted in the poems of the (g) Virgil. Aen. lib. 1. v. 167. Mantuan muse which describing the seats of the Nymphs in a rock upon the African shore sings thus Intus aqua dulces vivoque sedilia saxo Nympharum domus c. Where waters sweet with gentle murmurs slide The Nymphs on seats of living-stones abide Whereas on the other side stones hewn out of the Quarry and translated into stately Fabricks do moulder away by the forcible impressions of stormy weather and impetuous windes and may be styled dead stones though it be an unusual and harsh expression when those that remain in their native seats decay not but are rather increased and augmented and in some sort said to grow The common determination is that these subterraneous bodies are inlarged in their quantity by the petrification of adjacent matter (h) Cont. Cardan Exerc. 108.9.4 Scaliger holds that they are increased by certain exhalations that sweat out of the stones themselves like as gummes out of trees which by the astringent and indurating quality of cold do admit of concretion in their exterior parts and so augment their quantities The acute (i) Principo Philosoph p. 231. Amsteled 1644. quarto Renatus Des●cartes differs from the former teaching that there are many sharp spirits volatile salts Oily exhalations and vapors of a Mercurial nature that ascend out of the bowels of the Earth towards its surface which according to various and different mixtures cleave together when the more lubricous fluid and aëreal parts are evaporated and flown away producing such various sorts of stones both common and precious in the upper parts of the Earth The last that I shall mention is the opinion of our Country-man (a) De orig font p. 233. Lond. 1605. 8● Lydiat who conceives upon many probable grounds that there are great subterraneous fires actually burning in the bowels of the Earth from which there ascend great quantities of spirits and manifold vapours differing in moysture or driness according to the inflamed matter beneath The moyster parts of such exhalations are resolved into water near the surface of the earth by reason of the cold aire condensing these vapors into drops as is ordinarily seen in the art of destillation which are the
originals of springs and fountaines Whereas on the other side the more dry exhalations being contained within such compact parts of the circumambient earth as do not easily yield channels and passages for their transpiration even as it is in ovens well stopt do in length and continuance of time as it were bake together into that firme solidity which we see in stones being also by new ascending vapours continually increased more and more Now hence it is that generally there is found plenty of waters in all mines and quarries which being of near kind to the lapidescent quality by which stones are generated do supply the veins of those quarries with constant moisture thereby assisting them against that gritling friability which exposeth them to corruption when taken forth of their native places As to the point in hand craving a favourable permission at the hands of the learned to speak in an allusive way In like manner the Lord Jesus is not only a solid rock but a living rock a rock that hath a fountain of living water in it and (b) Exod. 17.6 Num. 20.11 flowing from it He is that spiritual living rock which (c) 1 Cor. 10.4 followed the Israëlites in the wildernesse so called by a metaphor taken from living creatures that have a loco-motive faculty In which place the Apostle is to be understood of the water which issued forth of the rock that in a constant stream flowing from it [d] Mede Vol. 1. p. 558. followed them in their several mansions as they passed through that howling wildernesse The first time that we read of water issuing out of a rock was at Rephidim their 11th mansion which satisfied their thirst and extinguished their present murmurs Now it 's evident that the water came gushing forth out of a rock in [e] Deut. 9.21 mount Horeb [d] Exod. 17.6 and yet that mountain is the place of their 12th station at which place also the Law was given and the powder of their golden [e] Deut. 9.21 Calf was cast into the brook of water that descended out of that Moun● But herein Bellonius in his Itinerary observations who carfully searched those parts doth help us in that he acquaints his Reader that in this wildernesse of Sinai there is a large tract of mountaines called by the same name extending themselves a great length and in one place arising into two craggy tops like Parnassus in Phocis one whereof is called Sinai particularly giving denomination to the wildernesse and the other Horeb by both which the range of hills are promiscuously and interchangeably calld He relates also that at this day there is a ●ill of water sliding down from that hill which whither it be the same that was opened by Moses at Gods appointment who can tell But we see by Scripture that the water which Moses fetcht out of the rocky mountain of Horeb for the people in Rephidim the 11th station is recorded to have drunk-in the golden powder of their image in the 12th station which stations possibly might be but little asunder But if Alush the 10th station should be Ptolomies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Jerom's Elusa in his Hilarion or if Rephidim should be Ptolomies * De bell Jud. l. 5. c. 14. ser Ruff. p. 903. Josephus his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Massah his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there will prove a very great journey for the Israëlites to march before they came from that side of the Sinai mountaines westward whence the water flowed to the great and ragged rock where the Law was given in their 12th station All which I have hitherto suggested a little to further the sense of that place of Paul before-cited which according to the insinuation of our Reverend translators adding them to followed seems to carry this sense That a stream of waters from the first smitten rock followed them in that dry sandy and barren desert to refresh the congregation of Israel But to let that inquiry passe at present we are sure that our blessed spiritual rock the Lord Jesus doth supply the living stones of his building with living water flowing from his blessed side Who though taken out of the Quarry of humane nature and placed at the bottome of the sacred building of his Church is inspired with a divine vitality and hath received this gift from the Father (a) Joh. 5.26 to have life in himself and to communicate of this life unto his members (b) Joh. 10.10 that they may have it more abundantly On this living rock as on the head of the corner is the Church of God founded and all the members do come to him as lively stones so called by Peter in the forecited place by reason of a new forme life or vertue infused into them and flowing from their union with Christ Therefore is it that we read in the Prophet Ezekiel that from under the (c) Ezek. 47.1 threshold of the Temple even from this foundation-stone there said that holy man of God did see in a vision waters issuing forth in great abundance which are to be interpreted of the Spirit which Christ after his departure out of this world (d) Joh. 7.39 would send down among his Disciples So that these Temple-stones being drawn out of the (e) Isa 51.1 pit of nature and hewn by a gracious hand out of the old rebellious rock of Adam are become (f) Ezek. 11.19 36 26. fleshy and living stones and are situated upon Christ the grand foundation of his Church Who though they have most happily lost that native vitality unto sin which cleaved to them in the quarry of corrupt nature yet now by their implantation into Christ receive a new and spiritual life The stones which Deucalion and Pyrrha cast over their heads after the great deluge are called by (g) Comment in Iliad 1. Romae 1550. Eustathius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quickened or enlivened stones The weaving instruments also feigned by Homer to be made of stone whereon the Nymphs did make purple webs within their cave are expounded by (h) De antr Nymph Romae 1630. Porphyry to be meant of bones and flesh which by these goddesses were framed into living bodies in that Den which mystically represented the Universe But yet allowing these fables or at least the truths shadowed by them the stones spoken of are animated only with humane or mortal life whereas the stones that we are treating of which are laid upon Christ and fixed in him the head of the Church do receive from him a life which is spiritual and eternal Seeing then the Lord Jesus only is the foundation-stone of the Churches welfare both in grace and glory which God hath laid in mount Zion at the bottome of this sacred building let us esteem it a vain thing to seek him in any place upon Earth but in his Temple the Church wherein he dwells and converses with his people by his Spirit
〈◊〉 Iejus as the one and onely God (e) Plut. ibid. p. 699. Besides this Title at Delphos There was antiently likewise at the * Porphyr de abstin l. 2. p. 155. Temple Epidaurus an inscription in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He to this fragrant Temple hastes in vain Who doth not in his breast chast flames maintain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And that 's Chastity befitting a Temple saith Porphyry in that place when our thoughts are onely exercised and busied about holy matters But whether or no there were any such like inscription on the front of this famous Porch of the Temple though I am not able to resolve by reason of Scripture-silence where as Josephus relates of pillars standing in one of the walls of the Temple in latter ages of 3 cubits high ingraven with certain letters declaring (e) De bell Judaic l. 6. cap. 6. sec Ruffin p. 916. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that no stranger might be admitted within that holy place Yet this I am sure of that the counsel of Paul is most safe and wholesome that he that cometh to God and draweth nigh in a way of holy worship (f) Heb. 11.6 should believe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that HE IS and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him Whether no the antient Temple had any such inscription of an Ehejeh upon it or not to bring to mind the unutterable essence of God whose face they sought that drew nigh to him in his sacred services it is not much material seeing now it is not in the mountain of Samaria not in Jerusalem that God will be worshipped but we must endeavour to preserve the memorials of his fear and the indelible Characters of his infinite essence upon our hearts when we come to worship him in spirit and truth For the (a) Joh. 4.23 Father now under the Gospel seeketh such to worship him We must remember to cast a watchful eye upon the (b) Eccl. 5.1 feet of our affections before we approach to the house of God and seriously consider whether we have taken straight steps in the paths of his commandements and whether they are set in due order and cleansed (c) 2 Chr. 30.19 according to the preparation of the Sanctuary For we must (d) Heb. 10.22 draw near with a true heart in full assurance of Faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water viz. our conversations cleansed with the water of the spirit in the laver of (e) Tit. 3.5 regeneration as the antient Priests of the Temple did wash their bodies in the water of the brazen-sea that stood in the inward Court before they entred the Sanctuary to officiate in their sacred functions We are to observe further that there were several steps by which they were to ascend into this Porch before they could enter the holy place to shew the divine elevation of the souls of spiritual worshippers even as Jacobs ladder had several rundles which the ascending Angels were to climb before they could arrive (f) Gen. 28.13 near to God who stood at the top thereof in that mysticall Vision In like manner in respect to our drawing nigh to God in divine worship Soul-exalting humiliation deep and serious Meditation searching Examination self-judging condemnation by reason of our infinite unworthinesse to converse with so holy a Majesty together with ardent Ejaculations of our hearts in prayer toward heaven his holy place are the several steps by which we mount up into the Porch of Praeparation that gives us admission into fellowship and communion with God in his Sanctuary-worship We read concerning Peter and John (g) Act. 3.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they ascended or went up to the Temple at the hour of prayer grant leave to an allusion thereby to shadow forth the elevation and lifting up of our minds in the heavenly Climax or Scale of praeparation for the spiritual worship of his Majesty in the assembly of his Saints These Stairs or steps in their extent from North to South were of sufficient length to admit many Priests in a joynt ascension up to the Porch and so into the Sanctuary if the occasional Service did so require as at the time (h) 2 Chr. 26.17 of King Uzziah's intrusion into the Priestly function we read of the High-Priest and fourscore of the inferiour at once with the King at the Incense Altar The convenient copiousnesse of which Ascent may hint to us that in Gospel daies many with the voice of gladnesse shall say one to another Let us (i) Ps 122.1 go yea (k) Isa 2.3 let us go up to the Mountain of the Lord to the House of the God of Jacob and He will teach us of his waies and we will walk in his Paths Which places together with many other in Scripture may reflect upon all the spacious and stately ascents at the severall Gates of the Courts and of the Mount Moriah itself where the legall Services were performed This Porch into which we have now brought our devout Reader is generally conceived to have been open and without doores on all sides on which it was not annexed to the body of the Temple possibly intimating to us the open-heartednesse of God's Grace and Mercy under the Gospel the freenesse of his Goodnesse inviting all poor distressed Sinners to draw nigh to Him so be it they make their addresses in a holy and pure Evangelicall manner For (l) Prov. 9.1 c. Wisdom hath hewen out her seven Pillars hath built her House hath slain her Beasts hath mingled her Wine and furnished her Table of Shew-bread within the Sanctuary hath sent forth her maidens of honour the Virgin-Embassadours of her pleasure to cry with a loud voice Whoso is simple let him turn in hither (m) Isa 55.1 Ho Every one that thirsteth (n) Rev. 22.17 The Spirit and the Bride say COME For the Gates of the Temple of the (a) Rev. 21.25 new Jerusalem are never shut yielding constant admission for those that are saved out of the Nations to walk in the light thereof The costly and beautifull gilding that adorned this holy Entrance denoted the Splendor and admirable Excellency of divine and spirituall worship even at our first initiation into Society with God in his blessed Ordinances Oh! how much of God doth a humble and holy Soul find within him when he doth but sett his heart aright toward his testimonies What sweet experienced tastes of God's goodnesse hath such a Soul enjoyed With what divine irradiations upon his understanding hath he been enlightned and enlivened when coming sensible of his own emptinesse and unworthinesse to hold spiritual converse with his holy Majesty The very (b) Psal 119.130 Entrance of his Word giveth light and a blessed understanding to the Simple The fear of the Lord is the (c) Psal 111.10 Beginning of Wisdom when
we approach near the Foot-stool of his holinesse in solemn Worship even in the very entrance of this blessed work The great God having declared that he will be sanctified by all them that (d) Lev. 10.3 draw nigh to him and by all the people he will be glorified The extraordinary height of this stately and pompous building the Porch of the Temple arising even to an 120 Cubits as we have heard before in the former description so famous for its pleasant and capacious Prospect before remembred shews forth to us the excellent sublimity of divine contemplation Wherein the Souls of heavenly Worshippers being intensly conversant look down upon the Earth as beneath a Saint and contemn (e) Mat. 4.8 all the Kingdoms of the World and the glory of them The Heart of a Saint is most humble and lowly who though exalted into divine communion yet is the most noble heroick high-minded person in the whole world being such a one as whose heart cannot be filled with the vast Empire of the whole Globe or the Dominion of all the conceited and imagined worlds in the Universe (f) Col. 3.1 He whose affections are set upon things above is like unto the Church that treadeth (g) Rev. 12.1 the Moon under her feet Upon the Top of this stately Tower which the side walls of the Porch sustained called by the Evangelist Matthew (h) Mat. 4.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Pinacle or wing of the Temple the blessed body of our Lord possibly was (i) D. Lightf Temp. p. 58. arrived when he triumphed over the Devil there tempting him to presumption He was now it seems raised by the power of Satan permitted to him by God above the place of the Solemnities of sacred Worship which may yield us this glance by the way That it is a diabolical Tentation a hellish delusion when any poor Souls are elevated and lifted up in their hearts above the instituted Ordinances wherein God hath appointed that we should worship him under the Gospel Besides it exhibits to our consideration the extream danger of spirituall Pride when we are even exalted to heaven by the means of Grace Our dear Lord in his transaction with and conquest over Satan yielded us an Example that as he himself did not so neither might we dare to presume upon the protection of or communion with Angels unlesse we walk in all the (k) Psal 91.11 waies of God who hath promised therein to keep us and because he hath set his love upon us (l) Ver. 14. he will deliver us and set us on high because we have known his name The Mysteries of the Sanctuary or Holy Place NOw let us enter the Gates of the Sanctuary (a) Ps 118.19 the Gates of Righteousnesse Let us enter (b) Ps 100.4 his Gates with thanksgiving and praise let the (c) Ps 24.7 everlasting Doores fly open that we may see the King of Glory in this his sacred Palace that we may (d) Ps 27.4 behold the beauty of the Lord and enquire in his Temple Angelicall words though pillar'd with the firmest Reason adorned with the choisest Gold of Rhetorick and (e) Cant. 4.10 paved with melting Affections are not Chariots majesticall enough to carry within them those Royall conceptions which become those Mysteries that sate in state within these holy Chambers Incomparably glorious was that place of old wherein the unapproachable Majesty of Heaven was pleased to vouchsafe his presence of favour and grace among dust and ashes to take up a habitation among Worms and to receive Homage and Adoration from Creatures in comparison with him lesse then (f) Isa 40.17 nothing and vanity Yet so pleased it the infinite and incomprehensible God so far to condiscend to the workmanship of his own hands as to keep house in the midst of his people whom he was pleased to choose for himself out of all Nations and within this sacred building to command several Golden Utensils to be made and placed there for his use as if he did indeed dwell amongst them Here were the ten Tables of Shew-bread set before him continually There the Lamps of the ten Golden Candlesticks burned with pure Oyl Olive continually feeding their radiant flames Above stood the golden Altar of Incense sending forth its fragrant odours while the King was held in his (g) Cant. 7.5 Galleries to whom while sitting at his Table the (h) Cant. 1.12 Spikenard sendeth forth its rich Perfume Whoever drawes nigh but to the contemplation of these rare and profound Mysteries therein couched let him pull off the (i) Exo. 3.5 shooes of his worldly Conversation and corrupt Affections For the place whereon he stands is holy Ground which is the earnest and ardent prayer of the unworthiest of his Servants before he enters upon so solemn and sacred a work as this before us In former Lines it hath been declared That the Temple in generall signified the Gospel-Church I hope also it shall appear in succeeding passages That the Oracle or most holy place did signify and shadow forth Heaven or the place and state of Saints in Glory It rests then that the Body of the Temple called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a more eminent and yet usual manner (k) 1 Kin. 6.7 The TEMPLE but more properly and strictly styled the Sanctuary should decipher and exhibit the Type of the Church Militant upon Earth and conversing with God in his divine Ordinances His Majesty of old had acquainted his people of Israël that he would set (l) Lev. 26.11 12. his Tabernacle among them and walk in the midst of them which was most graciously performed from the daies of Moses to the Reign of Solomon At which time he declares himself evidently that it was his holy will to ●well in a fixed Temple at Jerusalem promising that he would (m) 1 Kin. 8.29 place his name there Now that the glorious Fabrick of the Temple did mystically shadow forth the spirituall House of the Evangelicall Church the Apostle Paul will come in as a clear witnesse in that solemn appeal to the Hearts and Consciences of his Corinthians (n) 1 Cor. 3.16 17. Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you Yea further he makes every particular Saint to be a little Sanctuary for the Holy Spirit to dwell in as may appear by that expostulation What know ye not that your Body is the (a) 1 Cor. 6.19 Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you Likewise that the Church of God in general is the (b) 2 Cor. 6.16 Temple of the Living God alledging by way of Testimony that place in Leviticus before cited In another place the same pen-man declares that the Building being fitly framed together and fixe upon Christ the choise Foundation doth grow into a Holy (c) Eph. 2.21 Temple in the Lord. Other where he exhibits the infallible
Characteristick o● the Grand Antichrist to be this that as (d) 2 Thes 2.4 God he sits in the Temple of God under the Gospel times Lording it over the Church and usurping the seat of Christ In fine giving Instructions to young Timothy by an excellent Epistle he tells him the end of his writing was that he might know how to behave himself in the (e) 1 Tim. 3.15 House of God which is the Church of the Living God Other places might be added but these may suffice for the present purpose To which as a Coronis let me subjoyne a passage out of the Learned Jerom to the same effect censuring such as doted too much upon material Temples and were too superstitiously addicted to Pilgrimages unto the Holy Land (f) Ad Paulinum Tom. 1. Epist 13. Qui dicunt Templum Domini Templum Domini audiant ab Apostolo Vos est is Templum Domini Spiritus sanctus habitat in vobis de Hiersolymis de Britanniâ aequaliter patet aula coelestis They that cry The Temple of the Lord The Temple of the Lord let them hear the Apostle Ye are the Temple of the Lord and the Holy Spirit dwelleth in you The Court of Heaven is open to them that dwell in Britain as well as at Jerusalem To conclude I shall add the worthy advice of Gregory Nyssen which he gave to such as conceited some excellency and rare merit or the attainment of some more then ordinary accomplishment if they took but a journey to Jerusalem (g) Greg. Nyss 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cum not Molinaei Hanov. 1607. p. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. But forbearing the transcript of the Greek I shall give it in English as follows Let not therefore our Example offend any but let our perswasion rather find Credit because we give counsel about those things which we have seen with our eyes For we both before we came to that place and since also have confessed Christ to be the true God neither is our Faith either lessened or encreased by it We knew the assumption of the humane nature from the Virgin before we saw Bethlehem And we believed his Resurrection from the dead before we saw the Sepulchre and we have confessed his real Ascention into Heaven before we saw the mount of Olives But this profit onely have we rea●ed by our journy to know by comparison that our holy things are farre beyond these external places Wherefore you that fear the Lord praise him in the places where ye live For change of place doth not effect a nigher approaching unto God but where ever thou art God will come to thee if so be the habitation of thy soul be found to be such as that the Lord may dwell and walk in thee But if thy inner-man be full of wicked thoughts although thou wert upon Golgotha although upon mount Olivet although thou wert under the moniment of the Resurrection thou art as farre from the receiving of Christ into thee as they that acknowledge not the first principles Perswade therefore O Beloved the Brethren to undertake a pilgrimage from the Body unto the Lord and not from Cappadocia unto Palestine Having thus treated in general let us now descend to some particulars and in the first place crave leave to speak concerning the stately stones of the Temple which were laid in the side-walls of the Sanctuary concerning which it is the common opinion that they were of pure white polished marble denoting the beauty preciousness and durability of the Saints The Lowest rank of stones which were more immediately laid upon the Foundation before spoken of are conceived to represent the Prophets Apostles and Ministers of the Church For as in the new Jerusalem the spirit of God expresly saith that the (a) Rev. 21.14 12 Foundations of the City-wall had written on them the names of the 12 Apostles of the Lamb So likewise in the holy Mystical Temple we read that the Saints are built upon the (b) Eph. 2.20 21. Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone So that although the Lord Jesus be the maine and principal Foundation of the Church and all its members whether Ministerial or others Yet the Officers of the Church being compared with those that are to be taught and instructed in the Principles of Faith are termed Foundations also that is Doctrinal not the essential and real Foundation of Saints acceptance with God Such is Christ Jesus onely We shall read therefore the Apostles to be termed Builders in respect to Christ the chief Foundation So Paul compares himself to a (c) 1 Cor. 3.10 wise Master Builder and then according to that Metaphor the several (d) Heb. 6.1 Fundamental Points of Faith may be compared to the principal stones in the Building Nay the Saints themselves that conferre about the things of God are said to Build up or (e) 1 Thes 5.11 edifie one another But to lay that aside great is the consolation which the Prophet Isaiah bringeth to the Church in that memorable promise given forth to her afflicted members that her (f) Isa 54.11 Foundations should be laid with Saphires her Windows with Agates her Gates with Carbuncles and her Borders with pleasant Stones For all her Children shall be taught of the Lord. In another place the Psalmist promises that her Daughter shall be like (g) Psal 144.12 corner-stones polished after the Similitude of a Palace Judicious Calvin upon the 13th verse of the former place in Isaiah saies that from thence it is Evident that by the precious stones there mentioned the Prophet is to be interpreted non de doctrinâ sed de hominibus ex quibus spirituale aedificium Ecclesiae construitur not of doctrines but of men out of whom the spiritual house of the Church is framed This sweet promise doth seem to intimate that God would raise such interpreters men pickt out of thousands Sons of consolation such as know how to speak a word in season to a weary soul that the afflicted people and tossed with Tempests should be inlightned comforted strengthned and bottomed with strong consolation by the power of the spirit of God in their Ministery That men should be compared to stones in a Building is not unusual the former being the parts of a political the latter of an artificial house And therein likewise principal men are usually resembled to Foundations and (h) Gal. 2.9 Pillars as James Peter and John are so set forth by the Apostle Paul It is observable also concerning the Nazarites a sort of people devoted and dedicated unto God that by the Prophet Jeremy in his sad doleful Elegies for the distressed state of the Church they are compared (i) Lam. 4.7 to Rubies and Saphires Nay the spiritual Nazarites who have given up their names to Christ and by Faith do esteem him the most precious are commended by Peter for coming to him as
(k) 1 Pet. 2.5 lively stones who like another Amphion doth by the pleasant harp of his Gospel-voice allure these spiritual stones unto the Building up of the walls of his Holy Sanctuary It is fabled as I remember by the Poets that the walls of antient Troy were built in stately manner by Apollo and Neptune with Sonorous or Ringing Marble The stones of the Sanctuary are situated in such excellent Method and Order that it is admirable for spiritual eyes to behold their lives do in harmonious anthems reply to God's precepts and their mouths break forth into singing to the glory of that God who (l) Psal 22.3 inhabits the praises of Israel Insomuch that his servants take pleasure in these stones of Zion and favour the very dust thereof such as God himself will build up and frame into a Holy Temple for his honour to dwell in Indeed by nature the (a) Lev. 24.40 c. Plague of Leprosy is spread over and hath eaten into all the stones of our Tabernacle but he purgeth and purifieth and cleanseth them by the blood of our High Priest that is sprinkled upon them By nature these stones are as hard and impenetrable as the (b) Zec. 7.12 very Adamant the hearts of men are as inflexible and unmalleable as the (c) Job 41.24 nether mil-stone yet out of such doth he raise up believing (d) Mat. 3.9 Children unto Abraham Many of these stones as well as the other materials of the Temple such as Firre Cedar and Gold are related to have bin fetcht from Tyre * 1 Kin. 5.14 15 17. Lebanon and Parvaim to signifie to us that the Lord Jesus should in Gospel times collect the members of his spiritual Church from the remotest Ilands and Kingdoms of the whole World All these precious and excellent stones that are thus fixed upon and joyned to Christ the prime Foundation by the Coement of Faith unto the Apostles doctrinal Foundations by the coement of obedience and one to another by love when once they are fitly set and compacted together by the line and plummet of the Word do hold communion one with another in the mystical body by (e) Jam. 5.16 mutual prayer (f) Heb. 3.13 exhortation (g) Gal. 6.1 2. meek reprehensions and bearing one anothers burthen and so do fulfil the Law of Christ and obey the new Commandement of Love whereas a stranger intermedles not with this their joy But whensoever it pleaseth the Author of Faith to hew some others and make them fit and square for this excellent Building this glorious Sanctuary hath divers doors prepared for the admission of such into their spiritual fellowship These Doors we read to have bin made of Firr Tree and hung upon posts of Olive Tree They were likewise curiously carved with Cherubims Palme-Trees and open flowers Some are pleased to apply these doors to Christ himself seeing our blessed Lord is recorded to liken himself to a (h) Joh. 10.7 9. Door by which the Sheep of his Pasture do enter in He indeed hath an authoritative commission from the Father to give unto the Elect an admission unto Holy communion with Himself Here though we will not exclude this allusive interpretation of a door hinted by our Lord himself yet may we safely apply the several ends for which doors are erected in a more general way unto the Sanctuary about which we are now treating The ordinary ends and uses of doors in Buildings are 1. To give admission to such whose propriety in the house doth challenge lodging and mansion within 2. To exclude all others who are strangers to the Family And 3. To preserve those persons and things in safety and security which are contained within the house In like manner the Church is compared to an (i) Can. 4.12 enclosed Garden a Fountain sealed as well for the secure habitation of Saints as for the unacquaintednesse of others with her state and condition (k) Isa 26.1 Salvation hath God appointed for Walls and Bulwarks to defend Her He hath strengthened (l) Psa 147.13 the bars of Her Gates and bM●essed her Children within her He hath also commanded her Gates sometimes to be opened (m) Isa 26.2 that the Righteous Nation which keepeth the truth may enter in These doors then may signifie the initiation of members into communion with the Church that are taken out of the World by the mighty Power of God upon their hearts together with the exclusion of such as are (n) Ep. 2 12. aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and strangers from the Covenant of promise For there shall in no wise (o) Rev. 21.37 enter any thing that defileth or worketh abomination but such onely as are written in the Lamb's Book of Life For without are (p) Rev. 22.15 Dogs Sorcerers and the rest of the impure and wicked rabble of the World Violence shall not be heard in the Land of Immanuel but the Church shall call Her Walls Salvation and Her Gates (q) Isa 60.18 praise In ancient times the Lord is remembred to have come down in a (a) Exod. 33.9 cloudy Pillar at the door of the Tabernacle when he spake with Moses Aaron and Miriam and afterwards at another time in the same manifestation when he (b) Deut. 31.15 treated with Moses and Joshua In following Ages the Temple also was filled with the glorious (c) 1 Kin. 8.10 cloud of his presence As to the first we read that when ever the Children of Israël arose from their stations and travelled towards Canaan (d) Exod. 40.36 Num. 9.17 the cloud was taken up from off the Tabernacle Noting to us that when ever the Gospel-Church should take its progresse towards heaven under its spiritual Ordinances that the mystical cloud should be taken away then are we promised to behold with open face (e) 2 Cor. 3.18 and shall be changed into the same Image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord. In respect to the latter the presence of God in the Temple we have a most excellent promise that (f) Isa 4.5 the Lord will create upon every dwelling place of Mount Zion and upon her Assemblies a Cloud and a Smoak by day and the shining of a flaming fire by night for upon all the Glory shall be a defence A Cloud to comfort his people and (g) Exod. 14.19 20. to obscure them from their Aegyptian Enemies a Pillar of flaming Fire to illuminate them in their way and to keep off the wild beasts of this world from them In which respect he hath promised to be a (h) Zec. 2.5 wall of Fire round about Jerusalem to protect and defend them Of old none but consecrated (i) Exod. 35.19 Priests might enter into this holy Sanctuary whereof we are now taking a View If the King himself presumed to enter he was (k) 2 Chr. 26.18 smitten with Leprosy Josephus in one place
intreaty of pardon for this digression whether or no the Tyrians had discovered America before or so soon as Solomon's daies or whether Solomon himself had by Scripture-light or naturall speculation of the frame of the World known the roundnesse of the Earth and thereupon employed Navies to search out the World and its rarities is not to be known because of our defect in historical Writers of those times especially of the Tyrian Annals and others of Egypt mentioned by Josephus We cannot apprehend by the reliques and fragments of stories that remain of those times or the neighbouring Ages when History began to be riper that they had such extraordinary skill in sailing upon the vast Ocean as hath been obtained since the rare invention of the Mariner's compasse but that their discoveries were attained either by reason of impetuous storms driving them beyond their purposes upon unknown Regions or else in coasting slowly by the reaches and Promontories of severall Countries In which manner no doubt Solomon's ships did trend upon the Asian coasts till they came to the habitation of (b) Gen. 10.29 Ophir the Son of Jocktan in the South-Easterly parts of Asia concerning the punctual place of which Country near the Golden Chersonese Stuckius upon Arian's Periplus of the Erithraean Sea Purchas in the first Part of his Pilgrims Sir Walter Rawleigh in his History of the World and above all the learned Bochartus in his Phaleg will give satisfaction to such as please to peruse them while we speak to this excellent Mettal which Solomon brought from thence in great abundance and employed it most bountifully in the adorning and enriching of the Temple Gold the choisest of all Mettals and the finest of that kind must be used about the Sanctuary The Apostle Peter compares Faith to (c) 1 Pet. 1.7 Gold that is tried in the fire and therefore some do accordingly expound that place of Faith where our Lord exhorts the Angel of Laodicea to buy of him (d) Rev. 3. Gold tried in the fire There be who expound it of the Word of God which the Apostle would have to dwell (e) Col. 3.16 richly in the Saints and is more to be desired then (f) Ps 19.10 Gold yea then much fine Gold Others interpret it of the righteousnesse of Christ But I shall enlarge a little more particularly concerning this excellent Mettal of Gold and insert those Observations in their due place It may be observed from Scripture that many things are resembled to Gold as saving and heavenly wisdom though preferred before it Receive (g) Pro. 8.10 knowledge rather then choise Gold for (h) Pro. 16.16 how much better is it to get wisdom then Gold seeing (i) Pr. 20.15 the lips of knowledge are more precious then Gold Sometimes (k) Pro. 22.1 loving favour is compared with but greatly to be valued before Gold Sometimes the purity of Christ's Government in the Church is shadowed by his (l) Delrio in Cant. 5.11 fol. 196. Par. 1604. head of Gold Sometimes the Glory of eternal life is set out by it when the City of the new Jerusalem is said to be of (m) Rev. 21.18 pure Gold Several times the word of God is hereby set forth to shew the estimation that is due to it For so doth the sweet Singer of Israel intimate when he saies that the Judgments of the Lord are more (n) Ps 19.10 to be desired then Gold he acknowledges (o) Ps 119.72 the Law of his mouth was better to him then thousands of Gold and professes that (p) Ver. 127 he loves his commandments above Gold yea above fine Gold Accordingly some have explained that place of the Apostle Paul where he speaks of some that build (a) 1 Cor. 3.12 Gold upon the foundation holding it to be meant of the Word of God Christ doctrinal being built upon Christ the essentiall foundation of the Church It is true that an eloquent light of his Age treating upon that place after several words concludes thus (b) Chrysost Tom. 3. edit Savil. pag. 298. lin 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence it is manifest saith he that the Apostle's speech is to be understood concerning actions But what are the actions of spiritual builders as such whom the Apostle doth elsewhere call Gospel-ministers but their doctrines and teachings which according to their nature shal either be rewarded or destroyed In this very sense doth learned Jerom expound that place as may appear by these his expressions at large in his Comment on the Prophet Haggai (c) Tom. 6. pag. 280. Ego argentum quo domus Dei ornatur existimo eloquia Scripturarum de quibus dicitur Eloquia Domini eloquia casta c. et aurum quod in occulto Sanctorum sensu et in cordis versatur arcano splendet vero lumine Dei. Quod Apostolum de Sanctis qui super fundamentum Christi adificant sensisse perspicuum est aurum argentum lapides pretiosos ut in auro sensus occultus fit in argento sermo decens in lapide pretioso opera Deo placentia His Metallis illustrior fit Ecclesia Salvatoris quàm quondam Synagoga fuerat his lapidibus vivis aedificatur domus Christi pax ei praebetur aeterna The Silver wherewith the House is adorned I take to be The words of the Scriptures of which it is said The words of the Lord are chast words and the Gold that which is laid up in the hidden meaning of holy things and the secret place of the heart and shines with the true light of God Which it is clear that the Apostle did understand of the Saints who build upon the foundation of Christ Gold Silver precious Stones that the hidden meaning is set forth by the Gold comely Speech by Silver works pleasing to God by the precious stones The Church of our Saviour is more illustrious by these Metals then the Synagogue was in times past The House of Christ is built with these living stones and eternal peace is granted to it But to let that passe Gold in Scripture is thought by many to be a comparison whereby to set out the excellency of Faith true saving Faith in Jesus Christ As where we see upon the right hand of this Prince of Might the Queen to stand in Gold of Ophir the learned Rivet doth apply it to Faith and other Graces as the Golden Ornaments of the Spouse of Christ So where we find her neck to be adorned with (d) Can. 1 10. chains of Gold it may be applyed to the beautiful chain of Faith and other spiritual Graces being her choise Ornaments in the eyes of Christ In another place we read of three Kings from the East believing in him whose star they had seen and presenting our Saviour with (e) Mat. 2.11 Gold Frankincense and Myrrhe which Grotius interprets of Faith Prayer and Repentance We hear likewise of (f) Rev. 5.8 golden Vials in the
holy scorn and contempt we may take notice from the narrownesse of the Windows externally and the breadth inwardly together with their elevated situation how little Saints do or should meddle with others conversations looking principally into their own breasts The Floor of the Sanctuary which was laid with planks of Firr overlaid with Cedar boards and plated with Gold the place designed to be walked on might shew the humility of the Saints their meeknesse lowly-mindednesse and prostration of spirit before God's Majesty who was pleased to (z) 2 Cor. 6.16 walk in and out among them such Graces being more fragrant then Cedar more beautiful then Gold The Ornament of a meek and quiet spirit † 1 Pet. 3.4 being in the sight of God of great price We see the Ornaments of the very Floor were the same for matter with those of the insides of the house to shew possibly that humility and lowly reverence of heart as befitting best divine Ordinances is of as high regard with God as other Graces nay in some sort of higher esteem For the humble shall be (a) Jam. 4.10 exalted by him and receive more Grace from him for as the person walking is in more conjunction to the Pavement or Floor whereon he stands than to the other parts of the building Thus the Lord the high and the losty One who inhabiteth aeternity professeth that he will dwell with him and look on him with an eye of favour that is of an (b) Isa 57.15 66.2 humble and contrite spirit Although humble and meek spirits are counted fools by the World and quickly insulted upon by every proud and insolent spirit yet as holy David sitting by the rivers of repentance and hearkning to the sighs of the groaning Willows under the storms of divine anger sweetly be moans himself a (c) Ps 51.17 broken and a contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Happy is the humble person who lying upon his back in a prostrate posture and helplesse condition as to himself yet alwaies is looking up to heaven Even as the lowly Floor did constantly face the cieling of the Sanctuary which was all filled with Cherubims a heavenly Host dispatcht from heaven and ready at hand for their aid and comfort Besides the Roof of the Sanctuary which was laid upon those Cherubims held forth the constant divine protection of the Church that resteth on all the Assemblies of the Saints when feasting in that secret communion which the true Members of the mystical and invisible body do maintain in their hearts with Christ (d) Isa 4.5 6. The Lord will create upon every dwelling place of Mount Zion and upon her assemblies a cloud and smoke by day and the shining of a flaming fire by night for upon all the glory shall be a defence And there shall be a Tabernacle for a shadow in the day time from the heat and for a place of refuge and for a cover from the storm and from rain God will be a (e) Isa 16.4 covert to his people from the face of the spoyler (f) Isa 32.2 a covering from the Tempest and a hiding place from the Wind. Our second Solomon having made his Church like a Chariot as well as a Tabernacle or Temple of the wood of Lebanon c. and the (g) Cant. 3.10 covering thereof of Purple even his own righteousnesse to shield us from the danger of his Father's wrath Nay his banner over us is love in this (h) Cant. 2.4 banquetting house of the Sanctuary Where the people of God having satiated themselves with divine love and fully satisfied with the curious views of all its unparallel'd rarities It 's now high time for them to enter the Holy of Holyes with adoration The Mysteries of the Oracle BEfore we set foot into the Oracle strict notice should be taken of the curious Vail embroidered with Cherubims which hung down to the ground cross the Temple and before that most sacred place But although in the Tabernacle there was no other division between the Holy place and the Holy of Holyes yet in the Temple there was a partition of stone which divided betwixt them and Doors in the midst of the patrition Therefore we shall consider the Walls without the Oracle and then the Door and after that the Vail and so proceed to give some account why probably there were no Windows and then descend to the Floor the Roof and after that to the side-Chambers of the Temple To speak first in general There be some as Rivet on Exod. p. 1129. that say The Oracle noted the Gospel-Church However that be for certain It was the Type of Heaven as 't is clear by the Apostle's acquainting us that the (i) Heb. 9.7 8. High-Priest entered into it alone once every year the Holy Ghost thereby signifying that the way into the holyest of all was not yet made manifest that is while the first Tabernacle was yet standing The meaning whereof may be this (k) Cloppenb Schol. sacrif p. 68. that so long as the sacred ceremonies were performing in the former part or room of the Tabernacle which was called the Sanctuary the entrance into the more secret part or the Holy of Holyes called the second Tabernacle was not yet made open So that while the state of the old Law endured and the rites and ceremonies of the Sanctuary continued in their vigour till Christ appeared for the putting of a period to the Mosaical worship there was no entrance or admission into Heaven the Holy of Holyes But when Christ had once offered up himself and was expiring upon the Cross then the (l) Mat. 27.51 Vail of the Temple was rent in twain to give notice that the Door of Heaven was now opened by vertue of his blessed sufferings who (m) Heb. 10.11 after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever sate down on the right hand of God For the Apostle ver 11. opposeth this to a Tabernacle not made with hands i. e. the heavenly into which by his body and blood entrance is made ver 13. In the Oracle we read of the Ark of the Covenant the Cherubims and the Session of the divine Majesty upon their wings In like manner when the Temple of God was opened in heaven (n) Rev. 11.29 there was seen the Ark of his Testaments whereof more hereafter when I arrive to that mysterous Utensil The place of God's glorious presence is in heaven whither all our prayers are to be directed accordingly as David prayes to be heard in his supplications (o) Ps 28.2 when he lifted up his hands towards his holy Oracle This divine place was a perfect Cube hollow within shadowing the perfection of happinesse as the great Philosopher saies that he that bears the shocks of Fortune valiantly is (p) Ethic. l. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is truly good and of a square posture without reproof Besides as a square figure
the Temple and the Court. Certainly that policy is dangerous to the State which is not founded upon piety Kings must alwayes remember to go up to the house of God and make inquiry at the Temple before they set their designes on foot The sword of Gideon will prove but a weapon made of lead it the sword of the Lord do not lead the Van of his Army David when flying from Saul takes to him a consecrated sword (k) 1 Sam. 21.9 from behind the Ephod at (l) 1 Sam. 22.19 Nob a City of the Priests and proves successeful in evading the hands of his persecutor At another time when he was to fight against the Philistins he (m) 2 Sam. 5.19 consults the mind of God and at a second enqui●y he is commanded not to stir till he heard the sound of a going in the tops of the Mulbery-Trees For then did the (n) Vers 24. Lord go out before him to smite the host of his enemies Afterwards in the Temple-dayes godly Jehoshaphat (o) 2 Chron. 20.4 5. sought help from God and powred forth an ardent prayer against the consederated Armies of Moab and Ammon Good Hezekiah likewise being greatly troubled by the great Army of Sennacharib but more by his (p) Chr. 32.17 raising ●etters against the Lord God of Israel goes up into the House of God and (q) 2 King 19.14 spreads the Letters before him and commits his Cause to his divine protection to the terror and miraculous confusion of his adversaries the comfort of his subjects and for an example to all future Princes to commend their lawful Arms to the God of Battel Happy are those Kings who before their enterprizes seek to the face of God Blessed are the Courts of those Princes that stand within the hearing of Temple Trumpets and successeful are those Worthies that count it their highest interest to hold constant intercourse with Heaven But besides this Royal-gate there were several others in the Western wall of the outer Court of the Temple and more as far as we have any Scripture-light than on any other side possibly to denote the great and marvellous Income of spiritual proselytes to the Gospel from the Western parts of the World in future ages There were likewise gates on the North and South as before is rehearsed more fully So that on all sides there was admission for persons to the Temple-worship thereby signifying that many (r) Psal 107.3 from the East and West the North and the South should come and sit down with Abraham in the (ſ) Luk. 13.29 Kingdome of God Behold persons coming from afar off from the North and West with others from the (t) Isa 49.12 Land of Sinim or the Country of the (u) Gen. 10.17 Sinites Southerly of Jerusalem near Sinai in the Land of Arabia Nay God hath promised to save his people from (x) Zech. 8.7 8. the East and West and to bring them to Jerusalem and there will be their God in truth and righteousnesse As the Temple So Jerusalem it self did signifie the Church Now the 12 Apostles are said to have their (y) Rev. 21.14 names written on the 12 foundations of the gates of the new Jerusalem As by whose holy and faithful (z) Potter in 666. p. 100. doctrine all other Christians have had their admission into the Church and are converted to the true faith It is observed that the lodgings of the Priests and Levites were assigned in the (a) Jerem. 35.4 36.10 Gate-Chambers of the Temple-Courts thereby premonishing the Evangelical Church what provision ought to be made for Gospel-Officers in reference to habitation convenient for their attendance upon divine worship Moreover in the sides of these Courts there were porched-walls round about commodiously fitted with seats for persons to repose themselves upon as may be supposed in the first Temple not unlike those whereof we are sure to have bin under the second seeing our Lord himself acquaints us by the pen of the Evangelist that He (b) Mat. 26.55 sate daily with them teaching in the Temple At another time we find him (c) Mark 12.41 sitting over against the Treasury beholding what gifts were cast into it All which conveniences of walking and sitting in places pleasant and defenced from impetuous weather might yield a glance of reflection upon that pleasurable delight and sweet fellowship that Saints should hold together under the Gospel in communion with each other There being no speculation so sweet in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the portico's of the antient Philosophers no converse so refreshful in the shady walks of the ancient Temple-buildings as are to be enjoyed in Gospel Ordinances no Dialogues so amiable as holy conference no disputes so mild so grave so convincing and so little intermixed with the Checquer-work of vain janglings as those that are managed by meek and holy people in the Gospel-Courts and Porches of our blessed Saviour The most famous of these was called Solomon's Porch by way of eminency as being on the East side of the outer Court most Resplendent and Majestical and as it seems bearing his name in the daies of our Lord which though formerly destroyed by the Chaldaeans as to the super-structures yet reaedified again upon the very same foundations which that glorious King had stupendiously raised out of the Vally whereof hath bin treated at large in the 2d Chapter foregoing In this place (d) Joh. 10.23 24 c. our blessed Lord did Preach himself and bespeak the people with so much perswasive Rhetorick no man ever speaking like him that many believed on his Name Over these porched piazzo's were treasure-Chambers built in several places as is generally conceived standing upon many stately marble pillars In the which were laid up provisions of several sorts for the use and service of the Temple shewing that even under the Gospel also there shall be treasures and (e) Mich. 4.13 spoyles dedicated of mens substance to the Lord of the whole Earth The open places of both these Courts as hath bin formerly mentioned were admirably paved with great variety of curious stones laid in checquered work Shewing how decently all places in and about the Temple were fitted for use what handsome and splendid Ornaments were bestowed upon that beautiful Temple what cost was expended what neat and cleanly provision was made for all the parts of that antient and legal worship To remember us surely that though there be not such holinesse now to be ascribed to publick places of worship as was of Old and although the main stresse of our service lies upon the spirituality of our hearts and sincerity of our minds in drawing nigh to God yet certainly that as to the very places where we now worship there ought to be care taken for all decency and comlinesse so far as may not trend upon the border of superstition If so be the very Rooms of our Houses wherein we lodge
and take our repast cannot be endured to be offensive by uncleanness I● for our civil meetings as in publick Halls and Senatories men take the strictest care to have such places swept and garnished how much lesse should publick Oratories and Temples for the Congregations of the Faithful to assemble in be turned into Garrisons Prisons or Stables Furthermore We read concerning the Temple (f) Dr. Light p. 3. 12. Temple p. 191. as it stood in our Saviour's daies that all the Courts were curiously and strongly arched under ground with double arches one upon another which was on purpose done to prevent any secret making of graves in any of the Courts of the Temple much lesse the Temple it self To (g) Levit. 19.16 18. touch a dead body was a great defilment or the bone of a man or a gave Such a person was to be unclean for seven dayes and there were appointed many curious rites about his purification there observable It should seem in the dayes of our Lord that ordinary burial places were without the gates of the Cities or Towns As may be observed about Lazarus his grave that Christ was not (h) Joh. 11.30 32. yet come to the Town of Bethany and yet was at or near the grave but more particularly about the raising of the young man of Naim who was (i) Luk. 7.12 carryed out at the gate towards burial The (k) Mat. 8.28 33. Tombs likewise where among the possessed person conversed were without the City Lastly our Lord himself as he suffered (l) Heb. 13.12 without the City so was he buried For (m) Joh. 19.41 42. in the place where he was crucified there was a Garden and in the Garden a new Sepulchre of (n) Mat. 27.60 Joseph of Arimathea and there was the body of our dear Lord intombed Nay the Common burial place was in the Vally of Kidron as (o) Jerusal num 204. Adrichomius relates Now whereas we read of the Kings of Judah buried in the Garden of the Kings house that was a particular Royalty as among the Romans they permitted their chief and most noble Patriots or Generals to be buried in the forum or other place designed within the Walls As among the ancient people of God so neither among the wiser Heathens were Sepulchers permitted within their Cities much lesse in Temples Plutarch in the clo●e of the life of Aratus saies that there was among the Sicyonians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an antient Law against it P. 1922. Edit H. Steph. Tom. 3. And Petitus in his explication of the Athenian Laws saies (p) Tit. 8. Pag. 495. Semper extra urbis pomoeria that they alwayes interred without the limits of their Cities As for the Romans the ancient Decem virate in the Laws of the 12 Tables commented upon by (q) Cap. 3 Pag. 20. Kittershushius this is one Hominem mortuum in urbe ne sepelito neve urito Bury not neither burn a dead body in the City Whereof that commentator renders 3 reasons 1. That a publick place should not be tyed up by private Relig●on For they did exercise some kind of Religious piety toward the places of their dead The Lares Larvae and Genii or Ghosts of the departed being esteemed sacred 2. That the sacred places of the City he not polluted which agrees properly to our purpose 3. Because the Air is vitiated by the exhalations from dead bodies In which point the Civillians would do well to consult and recite the opinions of learned Physitians To the same effect he mentions the Laws of several Emperours as (r) Henr. Salmuth in Panciroli de reb deperd Tit. 62. p. 339. Hadrian Antoninus pius in Jul. Capitolin Gratian Valentinian Theodosius who gave expresse charge especially the last and sent out Edicts against burying in Churches or Temples It seems also that the civil Law of the Romans had obtained among us here in Brittain in this matter and had continued for many ages till the dayes of Cuthbert the 11 Arch-bishop of Canterbury who obtained licence of the Pope of Rome to bury in Church-yards as (ſ) De presul Angl. p. 65. Edit 1616. Bishop Godwin expresly mentions in these words Hujus Pontificis precibus indultum à Papâ ut in coemeteriis liceret mortuos sepelire in civitatibus sitis cum anteà mos esset cadavera extra pomoeria tumulanda deferre At the request of this Bishop the Pope did grant leave to bury the dead in Church-yards situate within Cities whereas before the manner was to carry them to burial into places without the Walls Nay it should seem that liberty was also given to bury in Churches themselves at the same time for this Arch-Bishop was (t) Antiq. Britan. p. 61. buried in his own Church who died as these 2 last cited Authours agree A. D. 758. So that this undecent custome it seems of inhumation in (u) Weavers funeral Monuments p. 8. Somner's Canterbury p. 232. Churches hath not bin in England but a little above 800 years and began almost in the depth of Popery Strange it is that a thing to the Jews of old so abhorrent and detested unknown to the Primitive Christians so strictly forbidden by the Civil Nations in their Laws should obtain among Christians in it self so unseemly to the living offensive to the dead unprofitable unlesse that we grant prayers for the dead to be availeable a piece of worship fit for such as decent as the act of burial It is somewhat inconsistent with them that place such holiness in Churches so to pollute them with graves for they are counted great pollutions in the Book of God But I crave pardon for insisting so long upon this Popish absurdity that is so riveted into mens minds by inveterate Custome that it 's almost out of view of cure For my part I think it a great mercy for persons deceased to have comely and decent interrement and according to their quality both lawful and commendable it is to have Monuments of their Vertues erected over them But why it may not be done in a place walled in for that purpose without the bounds of Cities as of old it was customary and is at this day at Newport and Yarmouth in the I le of Wight good presidents for us nay and be lesse subject to impaire let others Judge Sure we are The Temple of Solomon nor its Courts and Precincts knew any such matter but all its pavements were preserved in due Order and Method unviolable Hitherto have we traced the naked buildings of that glorious Temple of Solomon It is now high time to survey the Mysteries of the particular rarities set up in their due places within and without Which with the gracious permission of Gods holy Majesty begging the silver influences of mount Zion I shall proceed to lay down in the succeeding Section SECT III. The Mysteries of the several Ornaments and Utensils of the Temple IN the beginning of
238. or at the furthest at 50. if so be that be the same place with the former which is mentioned by the same Author pag. 818. But when and from whence it was carryed thither it doth not fully appear but that it was here in the daies of King David and the beginning of Solomon is (i) 1 Kin. 3.4 1 Chr. 16.39 21.29 2 Chr. 1.3 plain and evident out of the sacred books till it was (k) 2 Chr. 5.5 brought up to Jerusalem But the Ark steered another course by the special guidance of God For the Philistins having overthrown the Israelites in Battel took the Ark of the Covenant and carried it from Eben-Ezer to (l) 1 Sam. 5.1 Ashd●d thence to (m) ver 8. Gath thence to (n) ver 10. Ekron and having continued seven Months in the Land of the Philistius it was sent home to (o) 1 Sam. 6.12 Bethshemesh in the Tribe of Judah thence to Kiriath jearim in the same Tribe called also (p) Jos 15.60 18.14 Kiriath-Baal to the house of (q) 1 Sam. 7.1 2. Abinadab in the hill and the●e it continued twenty years This place is called (r) 2 Sam. 6.2 Baaleh of Judah and the house of Abinadab that was in (ſ) ver 3.4 Gibeah or in the hill which Josephus reports to have been at the distance of fifty stadiae or furlongs from Jerusalem the Head-City pag. 907. Indeed we find one City of Judah to be called (t) Josh 15.57 Gibeah and I suppose it to be the same exactly with (u) Josh 15.9 1 Chron. 13.5 6. Kiriath Baal or Kiriath jearim called Gibeah from its hilly situation although (x) Vol. 3. p. 14 Weemse would have it a Mistake in the Translation wherein an Apellative is made a Proper Name But seeing as I said we find a City of Judah in the book of Joshua called Gibeah possibly this place might have two Names However that be it 's clear that the place was Kiriath-jearim which (y) Ibid. p. 10. lin 18. Jerom in his Catalogue of Hebrew places fixes but at 1 Mile distance from Jerusalem in the way to Diospolis or Lydda From this Kiriath-jearim it was brought to (z) 2 Sam. 6.6 Nachon's threshing-floor otherwise called (a) 1 Chr. 13.9 Chidon where Uzza was smitten and the place therefore called by David Perez-Uzza and then it diverted to the house of (b) 2 Sam. 6.10 Ver. 11. Obed-Edom probably in the borders of the same City and there it staied three months and thence at last it was brought to the (c) Ver. 12. 1 Chr. 15.29 16.1 City of David at (d) 2 Sam. 5.7 Mount Zion in Jerusalem about the third year of his reigne over all Israel and in the tenth alter his Unction at Hebron it being a Sabbatical year as the (e) Usher Annal p. 52 learned Primate conceivs and there it continued the residue of his Reigne in Zion that is about thirty years and in the eleventh of King Solomon's when the Temple was fully finisht it was brought (f) 1 Kin. 8.1 2 Chr. 5.2 from the City of David in a most solemn manner into the glorious Oracle or Holy of Holies Having traced the Arks motions from place to place till it came to rest in Moriah's sacred Mountain let me cra●e leave to add a few words about that kind of wood whereof it was made (g) Gregor Lexi● sanct p. 401. Some would have it to be a kind of excellent Cedar whose wood will not putrify and is the smoothest of all other sor●s excelling in strength solidity shining and beauty Others a kind (h) Avenari ' of Thorn not subject to putrefaction It seems indeed to have been of a very durable nature by its continuation from Moses to Solomon and thence to the captivity about 900 years Others take it to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mentioned by Dioscorides de med mater cap. 74. the Pitch-Tree others the Box. It could not be the ordinary and common Cedar nor Pine nor Box nor Myrtle for it is reckoned among them as a distinct species under the name of the Schittah-Tree by the Prophet (i) Isa 41.18 Isaiah Jerom in his Comment upon Esay saies it was a Tree like to the white-Thorn for colour and leaves but not for magnitude That it was the same Tree which (k) Lib. 2. Diodorus calls the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I dare not affirm which he reports to have grown in that part of Arabia which the Nabathaeans dwelt in that is the posterity of Nebaioth so called in Scripture whom (l) l. 12. c. 17. Pliny also placeth as borderers upon Syria Yet truly by the Balsame and Palmes which Diodorus reckons up to grow in that Country it seems somewhat probable that it was the place whereabout Moses was at the erection of the Tabernacle It is observable to this purpose that the (m) Exod. 3.3 Bush wherein God appeared to Moses was in the same Mount where afterwards near to it the encamping of the Israelites was fixed at the making of the several Vessels of the Tabernacle Though by some it is thought to be a (n) Talmudists in Schindler Thorn that bore Roses by others a white-Thorn and a Bramble by others Yet (o) Lib. 16. p. 767 edit Casaub Strabo out of Eratosthenes tells us that no other Trees grew in that North part of Arabia but a few Dates the Tamarisk and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or a certain prickly Thorn which probably was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sineh or Bush of Moses which might be the same which is turned in Diodorus by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by some counted to be a sort of sharp prickly Cedar and thought to be the Schittim wood whereof this Ark was made (p) Mar. 12.20 Act. 7.30 Our blessed Lord and the Proto-martyr Stephen following the 70 call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and this might be the same Tree in a low and shrubby state upon so dry and stony a place ● Bellonius in his Observations when travelling that Country saies there was but one sort of Thorn in all Syria which is since brought over into England and nursed in Noblemens Gardens with us if it be the right and termed Our Lord's Thorn If it should be the same Tree with Moses his Bush it is very worthy our note to remember the Churches preservation in all the flames of trouble and persecution to have bin managed by God's presence in the Ark in the midst of them Indeed the Septuagint translate these Shittim Trees by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Tree Thya by (q) L. 5. c. 5. Theophrastus described to be tall ever green like the Cypresse of a solid and sweet sented wood smelling like Cedar and not easily corrupted Of which Homer speaks when he tells us of Calipso's Island that there was a fire Odyss 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That smelt
Syriack also Besides in the 11th ver the wheel is said to follow the face that is most probably of the Cherubim In the like manner the Ark God's Throne in the Temple though we read not that it had wheels yet there is somewhat allusive to it in that there is mention made of a (z) 1 Chron. 28.18 Chariot of Cherubims wherein God's Majesty is said to ride Nay the Throne of God is expresly said to have wheels Dan. 7.9 Further as the Throne of God in heaven is described by John which was shadowed forth by the Oracle as hath been declared we read of four beasts like to those in Ezekiel having six wings In these excellent visions there seems strong allusion to the forme shape and accessary Ornaments of the Temple-Cherubims although I confesse they do not necessarily evince it The remaining description of their (a) c. 1. v. 8. having hands between their wings and that their whole body backs hands and wings were full of (b) c. 10.12 eyes and of their (c) See their picture in A-Lapide's title to Isaiah feet being like Calvesfeet must be built upon the sametion But to leave the description of them and proceed to the mystical exposition of the Cherubims in whatever form it was that they were made By the former Key we must proceed to open the Mystery of these Cherubims For having asserted and manifested by the Epistle to the Hebrews that the Oracle wherein they stood did typify heaven whereinto Christ is entred once for all to make intercession for us it seems we must interpret these curious Attendants upon the Ark of some Persons that wait upon God's Majesty and Christ in heaven To this end and purpose the Apostle Peter leads us by the hand into the explication of them telling us that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sufferings of Christ and his mediation for us under the Gospel and the sending the Spirit from heaven are such 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as into which the Angels desire earnestly to stoop down and look into ●s they did of old upon the Mercy-Seat But before I proceed to enlarge in this point I must lay one Objection out of the way wherein some labour to shew that the four living Creatures in Ezekiel and the four beasts in John are not to be meant of Angels especially in the last which they deem parallel to the former for two Reasons 1. Because Angels are mentioned as distinct from the Beasts Rev. 5.11 and so Rev. 7.11 To which I answer That it doth not follow that therefore the four Beasts are not Angels because they have not the same denomination with the rest but the name of Beasts For this name is given to them by way of allusion to the figures of them mentioned in the ancient Visions of Ezekiel which are generally by the most learned Interpreters expounded of Angels who for their Eyes and Wings their wisdom knowledge and ala●rity to do God's Will are so resembled So that although there is mention made of many Angels round about the Throne besides these even as in the Temple-Walls there were carved Cherubims and on the Veil likewise such might denote the wonderful company of these winged Messengers that are dispatcht as ministring Spirits for the heirs of salvation yet these might denote the constant attendance of some of the Angels neerer the Throne such as did give the seven Golden Vials to seven other Angels Rev. 15.7 But 2ly Whereas the Beasts together with the Elders are alledged to have said that they were redeemed to God by the blood of the Lamb Rev. 5.9 To that I answer That the Angels may in some sort count themselvs happy by the benefit of Christ's blood as to conservation in their Estate being called elect Angels 1 Tim. 5.21 Eph. 1.22 and Christ himself said to be a head to principalities and powers Besides if we strictly examine the Grammar of the eighth verse in Rev. 5. the Text saies Every one of them had Harps and golden Vials where the words in the Greek are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Masculine Gender referring to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Elders the more immediate Antecedent and not to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the four Beasts which is the Neuter Gender Accordingly in the Temple at the time of Sacrifice in which the Allusion harpeth we know that the Levites sang and played with Instruments according to their 24 Courses in which they did Minister which denoted the 24 Elders But I shall not rigidly insist upon this although we find a set number of sealed ones harping before the Throne and the four Beasts Rev. 14.3 and the 24 Elders in another place it being very improper to assigne the transmission of the work of the powring out the seven Vials to Angels by the Ministers of the Word round about the Throne as was mentioned cap. 15.7 Psal 68.17 Act. 7.53 Gal. 3.19 Heb. 2.2 Mat. 18.10 Wherefore seeing that in Scripture the Angels are mentioned to be neer God The Chariots of God are 20000 even thousands of Angels the Lord is among them as in Sinai in the holy place who gave forth the Law by the disposition of Angels and who are they that alwaies stand before the face of our heavenly Father but those glorious Angels Their faces then of a Man signified Wisdom of a Lion boldnesse and courage of an Oxe laboriousnesse industry and patience of an Eagle swiftnesse and alacrity in performing the Will of God 1 King 8.7 Now although I must confesse one place imports clearly That the Temple-Cherubims had but two Wings yet to speak by allusion to the other places mentioned With two Wings they cover their faces as being not able to behold the radiancy of divine Glory with two they cover their feet that is in a modest expression what may be guessed at shewing that the Angels are not pure in his sight with two they flew on the messages of God They were full of eyes shewing the acutenesse perspicacity and sharpness of sight (q) Zec. 4.10 they are the eyes of the Lord that run to fro throughout the Earth They had Calves feet dividing the hoof alluding to the clean Beasts in the Levitical Law so that though three of their shapes were bestiall as thereby denoting some excellent properties in the Angels which we find in each of these Beasts whose faces they bore and although the Lion and the Eagle be unclean yet the feet did shew that these Creatures were clean that is holy and unspotted Angels standing before the Throne (r) Cramer schol Proph. part 1. p. 348 Some speaking of the Cherubims on the Ark expound them of the two Testaments looking upon Christ But we shall let passe that and many other conjectures in silence and speak onely to that of Angels Their looking one toward another might hint forth their intuitive knowledge mutual love concord and harmony Yet as they look down on
Horace or any others Sidonius shall close all Carm. 5. P. 41. Edit Paris 1609. Ser vellera Thura Sabaeus v. 43 And again v. 47. Arabs guttam Panchaia Myrrham Whereby it seems these places were famous for all the chief precious gums in antient times This of ours which we are now speaking to retaining the Hebr. (a) Wocker Antidotar p. 375. and others name in some measure is at this day called Olibanum in the Shops and is of great use in Physical Plaisters as may appear by the writings of our modern Learned Physitians and their Dispensatories Thus much of Frankincense Now to the Mystery of the Incense which was compounded of these four stately ingredients forementioned for the golden Altar As for the Altar it self that the Gold should signifie Christs Divinity and that the Ce●ar-wood underneath should note his humanity or concerning its quantity and dimensions or figure that it was square signifying the firmity or strength of Christ his mediation or that its Angles or Horns should note the extension of his intercession through the four parts of the World these things shew more the curiosity than the solidity of such Interpreters neither date I aver that Its Crown round about the edges should hold forth Christs Kindly Dignity But as to the sweet Incense which was burnt upon it the holy Scripture is a sure guid to us that it exhibited or shadowed forth as to Christ the fragrancy and sweet Savour of his Intercession The odours were to signifie the (a) Rev. 5.8 prayers of Saints The Lord Jesus Christ himself is represented standing with a golden Censor there being given to him much incense that he should offer it with the (b) Rev. 8.3 4. prayers of all Saints upon the golden Altar before the Throne and the smoak of the incense which came with the prayers of the Saints ascended up before God out of the Angels hand So that as the High-Priest on the expiation day did go into the holy of holies and perfume it with incense from this Altar So is Christ gone into Heaven and there (c) Col. 3.1 sitting at the right hand of the Father ever liveth to make (d) Heb. 7.25 intercession for us Nay the prayers of the Saints themselves are shadowed forth by this which were offered up by the Priests every day Let my Prayers saith David be set before thee as (e) Psal 141.2 incense and whereas Zachary was by lot burning incense in the Temple of the Lord we read that the whole multitude of the people were (f) Luk. 1.10 praying without at the same time The time of this service was (g) Exod. 30.7 8. morning and evening about the time of the lighting of the Lamps As The Lamps denoted the light of the Word whereof more by and by So we see that the Word and Prayer must go together In that it was every morning and evening it denotes daily and constant prayers which we ought to powre out before the Throne of grace even as (a) Luk. 2.37 Anna the Prophetess departed not from the Temple but served God with fastings and (b) Rom. 12.11 1 Thes 5.17 prayers night and day In which sense the Apostle Paul is to be understood when he bids us to pray without ceasing to continue instant in prayer Forasmuch also as this Golden Altar was to be sprinkled with the blood of the (c) Exod. 30.10 sin-offering of atonements once in the year by the High-Priest on the (d) Levit. 16 18. v. 29. 10th day of the 7th month it shewes that neither the prayers of Priest or people can be acceptable with God unless the impurities thereof be taken away by the (e) Joh. 1.7 2 1. blood of Christ and his all-sufficient Mediation with the Father or else he that (f) Isa 66.3 offereth incense is all one in the sight of God as if he blessed an Idoll To add a little by way of allusion As these precious gums in this fragrant Incense came naturally and freely dropping out of the Trees which bare them that was counted the best and purest or else the Trees did yield it by inclusion and cutting of the Bark So is that prayer most acceptable that comes with the freeest breathings of the soul or else that we ought to apply the launcings of the Law or cutting-considerations of Repentance to work upon the soul in its ardent drawings near to Heaven in prayer As we have said before that the odours of these gums when burnt did drive away Serpents and perfume the Air from all noxious sents So is it with heavenly and ardent prayers whereby the soul is enabled through faith to resist the Devil and the contagious Air of his temptations and of all corrupt lusts and affections for (f) Mat. 21.17 this kind goeth not out but by prayers and fasting As these ingredients were to be (g) Exod. 30.36 beaten very small into fine dust or powder before they were put into the censers so is the heart by humbling meditations to be brought into a low and self-abhorring frame when it appeares before God in prayer A (h) Psal 51.17 broken and a contrite heart the Lord will not despise Such as with Abraham esteem themselves but dust and ashes Then he whose name is holy who dwelleth in the high and holy place of the Heavenly Temple will dwell also with him that is of a (i) Isa 57.17 humble and contrite spirit to revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones with gracious answers to their prayers Furthermore the burning of this incense shewed the ardency and the heavenly inflammation of the heart in prayer (k) Rom. 12 11. servent in spirit serving the Lord We ought to be so Last of all as the sweet and fragrant smell came from these incensed or fired ingredients upon Gods Altar so it shewes how sweetly pleasing to Gods Majesty it is for the soul to draw nigh to him with a humble holy ardent frame of spirit through the mediation and intercession of Jesus Christ The Golden Tables of Shewbread HErein I shall desire leave to speak somewhat to the four urensils described Exod. 25.29 because omitted in the preceding History viz. the Dishes Spoons Covers and Bowls the Hebrew hath these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Arias Montanus renders Scutellas the 2d is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arias Coclearia the third 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 medios Calamos the last 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyathos ejus The first word is translated a Charger Numb 7.84 85. and was no other then a golden Dish or Charger wherein the Cakes were placed The next is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying hollow and was a little Vessel wherein the Incense was put which we translate a Spoon The 3d is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some translate by scutella others explain it by a Vessel to
almost in every Chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrews His Unction and many of his rare endowments being there mentioned Cap. 1.9.2.17.3.1.4.14 15. 5.1 2 3 5 6 10.6.20.7.1 3 17 21 26 28.8.1 3 9.7 11 24 25.10.12 21.12.24 13.11 12. We shall then consider our blessed Lord as shadowed by the Type of the High-Priest in three things 1 His Election 2 His Rayments or Vestures and 3dly his Consecration 1. As to the Election or choice of the High-Priest and therein we are to look upon the Tribe out of which he was to be extracted and 2dly the Compleatness and comliness of his body wherewith he was to be qualified 1. As to the Tribe It s known that the Jewish High-Priest was alwayes taken from the Tribe of Levi of old the eldest of the Family was the High-Priest But Reuben had forfeited the right of primogeniture by going up to his Fathers Couch and therefore Jacob prophesied of him that he should not (a) Gen. 49.4 excell Simeon and Levi had bin Brethren in iniquity in the matter of slaying the Shechemites and lost their dignity and therefore great was Jacobs (b) Gen. 34.30 anger against them and sad his (c) Gen. 49.7 doom upon them But Levi recovered in some measure his priviledge when the people of that Tribe (d) Exo. 32.26 27 28. slew 3000 of their Brethren upon the account of their worshipping the Golden Calf while Moses was in the Mount with God For he (e) Deut. 33.9 said to his Father and Mother I have not known thee neither did he acknowledge his Brethren c. Therefore they shall teach Jacob thy Judgements and Israel thy Law they shall put incense before thee and whole burnt sacrifice upon thine Altar God was pleased to set them (f) Numb 3.12 13. Exod. 12.29.13.2 instead of the first-born of Israel whom God had hallowed to himself in the day when he smote all the first born in the Land of Egypt Christ the first-born of every Creature was our High-Priest Now out of the Tribe of Levi God appointed Aaron and his sonnes in a direct line to be High-Priests But you 'l say Our Lord came (h) Heb. 7.14 See Pareus in Mat. and Suidas In voce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 edit Aurel. Allobr p. 1228. 1619. of Judah I answer with the Apostle This was to shew the change of the Priesthood and that our Lord was a royal High-Priest not after the Order of Aaron but of Melchizedeck the King of righteousness and Prince of Peace As for the story produced by Suidas concerning our Lord and Saviour that he was descended of the Tribes both of Judah and Levi they being sometimes mixed by Marriage into the High-Priests Family and what he further recites of his being actually admitted into the number of the 22 Priests in the room of one deceased at that time I shall leave as a futilous and idle story seeing Scripture in the preceding Prophesies all along mention him as coming of the royall House he being the (k) Rev. 5.5 Lion of the Tribe of Judah and springing out of the Root of David 2. To speak a little to the comliness and excellency of his body as to which because all the other Priests were to have the same compleat perfections therefore I shall conjoyn them both together To this purpose the Lord gives instruction unto Moses in the 21 Chapter of Levit. beginning at the 16th Verse and so forward Now because all these things which hapned to them as Types or Examples were (l) 1 Cor. 10 11. written for our admonition Give leave to resemble them to those rare endowments and perfections wherewith Christ the Evangelical High-Priest is fully accomplished and Gospel-Ministers should be qualified in a spiritual manner according to their degree and measure wherefore the spots and blemishes to be avoided in Priests are by Jerom compared to spiritual infirmities Precipitur Sacerdotibus c. ne truncis auribus laeso oculo simis naribus claudo pede cutis colore mutato quae omnia referuntur ad animae vitia Jerom. Fabiolae de vest Sacerd. Tom. 3. p. 58. It is injoyned concerning Priests that they should not be crop●eard blemisht in the eye flat-nos'd lame-footed or the skin discoloured all which are to be referred to the vices of the minde The first blemish mentioned is (m) Lev. 21.18 blindness with which if any person of the line of Aaron was afflicted he was not admitted to perform the Functions of a Priest As to this it is sufficiently known that ignorance is set forth in Scripture by blindness His Watchmen are (n) Isa 56.10 blind saith the Prophet Isay they are all ignorant Our Lord calls the Scribes and Pharisees (o) Mat. 23.16 blind Guides and the Apostle Paul sayes that the God of this World hath (p) 2 Cor. 4 4. blinded the eyes of unbelievers that the light of the truth should not shine upon them But of all it is the greatest shame for a Minister to be blind such a one God would have to be (q) Hos 4.6 rejected A second imperfection was lameness a very unseemly thing in a Priest who was to be a Guid to others in the wayes of God Ministers must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (r) Gal. 2.14 walk uprightly according to the truth of the Gospel They must teach with their feet as well as their mouths being (s) 1 Pet. 5.3 examples to the flock and above all others to (*) 1 Joh. 2.6 walk even as Christ the great High-Priest hath walked before them in the dayes of his flesh As the (t) Eccles 5.1 feet in Scripture sometime note the affections of the soul and sometimes the orde●ing the conversation aright in both these respects they ought to make (u) Heb. 12 13. straight paths for their feet lest that which is lame be turned out of the way Another blemish is a (w) Levit. 21.18 flat nose whereof as well as of the rest † Dr. Gell. on the Pentateuch p. 315. a learned Authour hath lately treated who out of Gregory interprets it of folly imprudence and stupidity or dulness of spirit such as are called * Horat. Epod. 12. naris obesae one of a thick nose it being a note of hebetude and flatness of parts as Physiognomists have observed The God of nature hath placed this member over the mouth to be a censor of what things are taken into the body whether putrid or sweet and fit for aliment It fits between the eyes as a Judge of what is proper nourishment The eye may deem that good which when brought to this discerning faculty may prove offensive So should Ministers study for acuteness of judgement and to exercise their senses to judge betwixt good and evil and to discern the spirits An instructor of others out of the Law should have skill (x) Heb. 5.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to prove and make trial of and give
a sound judgement upon things that (y) 1 Cor. 12 10. Rom. 2.18 Phil. 1.10 differ Besides he must not be broken-footed or broken-handed The feet are for walking the hands for working Gospel-Priests must not cease and leave off walking in holy wayes or performing of holy works If others must not be (z) Gal. 6.9 2 Thes 3.13 weary of well doing how much lesse they No nor walk or work by halfs not having fit Organs or Instruments for service Many and great are the inconveniences of the defect in these members but far sadder when those that are imployed in sacred functions tread awry and halt between God and Baal or put forth their hands to any iniquity He must not be (a) Rev. 21.20 Crook-backt or a dwarf or that hath a blemish in his eye or be scurvy or scabbed or unfit for Generation and one word in the Hebrew signifieth crooked and deceitful The crookedness of the body is an usual Index of a perverse spirit They are a (b) Deut. 32.5 perverse and a crooked generation as Moses complained of the Jews Therefore Paul exhorts the people of God to be blameless and harmeless in the midst of a (c) Phil. 2.15 crooked and perverse Nation There is an old saying Take heed of them whom God hath marked which may be heeded in a sober and serious sense It 's observable that Homer brings in crooked (d) Iliad 2. v. 212. Thersites yet alone did unmeasureably brawle Thersites as one full of uncomely Garrulity and as a mover of Sedition in the Army 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And afterwards giving in his description of him saies thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. He was the most deformed man t●at came to Troy goggle-eye ●ame of one foot crook-shouldered his breast bending forward Besides this natural deformity which some bring along with them into the World there is another cause of it that 's accidental viz. a spirit of infirmity and weaknesse through some diseases as the poor woman in the Gospel that had bin (e) Luk. 13.11 bowed together 18 years Sometimes through constant bearing of weighty burdens As (f) Gen. 49.15 Issachar is represented couching down between two burthens and bending down his shoulders to impositions Hence is it that sorrow and mourning and oppression of spirit is resembled to (g) Psal 44.25 145 14. c. bowing or bending down to the Earth In all which respects such as serve at God's Altar should be persons of generous erect spirit calme (h) 2 Tim. 2.24 gentle easie to be intreated full of kindnesse overcoming by meekness those that oppose themselves Neither should yield their shoulders to the weight of worldly cares which depresse the mind down to the Earth and hinder the soul's contemplation of divine Mysteries Neither must he be a (i) Horat. Serm. l. 2. Sat. 3. v. 309. Dwarf such as by way of contempt were called by the ancients moduli bipedalis pigmies of two-foot high Although it be a great sin for any to mock and jeer at natural imperfections for such (a) Prov. 17.5 reproach the Maker more then those who contemn the poor yet because that Dwarfs in stature more low then ordinary are usually taunted at by wicked and profane spirits The wisdome of God thought fit that no such should be exercised in Temple-services Though God might sometimes order it in the course of nature that such deformed persons might proceed from the line of Aaron yet they were not to be advanced to the dignity of service Our Lord may invite little Zacheus to the Gospel-feast yet we read not of his being sent into the work of the Ministery The Children of Aaron though afflicted wich any of these deformities were yet admitted to enjoy sustenance to (b) Lev. 21.22 eat of the most holy things But certainly the intention of his was to signifie of what spiritual growth the Ministers of the (c) 2 Pet. 3.18 Gospel are required to be Men well grown in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Further he was to be void of any blemish in his eye Many are the Blemishes Distempers Diseases of the eyes reckoned up by the Learned (d) Riolani System part 2. p. 119. Edit Basil 1629. Physitians The word in the Hebrew for blemish is usually translated Suffusio from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to confound or mixe confusedly and it signifies either that disease which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Suffusion or a Cataract vulgarly being a humour ingendred betwixt the two coats or membrans of the eye the Cornea and the Uvea so called by Anatomists or that which is called (e) Id Anat. p. 281. Iudg. Bat. 1649. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Albugo a white spot or Cicatrice after the cure of an Ulcer which is seen in the black of the eye or in the Iris that little fibrous circumference about the Pupil We see what great care there is taken about the eyes of the Priests As they must not be blind so neither have any imperfections in their eyes Seers ought to be qualified with acutenesse of eye-sight spiritual watchmen have need of clear and bright knowledge Ordinary Christians may perhaps make shift to get to heaven though with confused knowledge but Ministers must beg for a distinct and choise visive faculty The eye that 's blood-shot can't see clearly The mind that 's vexed with Cholerick suffusions cannot discern in Judgment If (a) Act. 9.18 Paul be sent of the Gospel-messages behold scales do fall from his eyes If any be Angels of Churches let them pray to (b) Rev. 3.18 Christ for a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an oyntment for their eyes that they may understand the truths of God fully and clearly Again the Priests of old were not to be tainted with (c) Lev. 21.21 scurvy or scab The Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arias turns them by purulenta scabies and scabies perpetua The Vulg. jugis scabies impetigo the 70 by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first is translated a (d) Deut. 28.35 sore botch If the 70 have rightly expounded it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then it is the dry Itch as (e) P. 269.6 Riolanus explaines it and so Buxtorf out of Rab. Solomon calls it the Malignant-Scab dry within and without The other is the foul creeping Scab which the last expounds to be the Scab that cannot be healed of near kind to the Leprosie But the matter is not great about terms The meaning seems to be that Priests ought not to be infected either with the ordinary Itch or the incurable Scab which is seldom-healed Now as Itching-eares are (f) 2 Tim. 4.3 tokens of men of corrupt lusts and full of novel fancies every day new itches and lustings after strange things and new doctrines So a Priest that is itchy is much more abominable who is defiled with
and Thummim called by the Septuagint and Philo Iudaeus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Manifestation and Truth But to leave these stories of the Heathens apish imitation and descend to the signification of these Stones in the general Wherein we may observe that as the High-priest carried the 12 Tribes on two stones upon his shoulder so it might denote the Government and imperial Rule of Christ over his Church on whose shoulders the Government is laid And whereas the same Names are engraven on stones which were placed on his Breast (e) Isa 9.6 so might they denote how near the Church is to the heart of Christ He being a most compassionate High-priest a Shepheard that (f) Isa 40.11 carries his Lambs in his Bosom His love is so strong and ardent that the Church his Spouse is set as a (g) Can. 8.6 seal upon his heart Even as the gravings of the Names of the children of Israel on the precious stones is related in the Scripture to have been after the manner of a Seal (h) Exod. 28.21 or Signet With these stones he entred into the Sanctuary and bore them upon his heart before God in prayer So that as Christ was the Exemplar and pattern of every Gospel-Minister to follow In like manner must they alwayes mind the spiritual state of their flock before God in their supplications Besides as these stones were not only precious for value and worth but radiant and shining also So must the vertues and graces of a Minister be manifestative and resplendent before others wherefore the stones of the new Jerusalem which as we have observed do hold an allusion to and a parallelism with those of the Breastplate were gra●en with the names of the 12 Apostles of the Lamb (a) Gerhard loc Commun Tom. 9. p. 546. Edit Genev. 1639. are by a learned German Divine interpreted to hold forth so many rare and excellent gracious endowments of his soul whereof I cannot stand to recite the particulars But now I shall descend to the difficultest point of my whole Task and that is to endeavour the opening of the meaning of the Vrim and Thummim which Moses was commanded to put into the Breastplate The words are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arias Montanus turnes it Et dabis in pectorali judicii Vrim Thummim (b) Exod. 28.30 And thou shalt give on the Breastplate of Judgement the Urim and Thummim The 70 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and thou shalt adde or put to or place upon c. Now if we take the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strictly in his first and primitive signification it is to give though it must be acknowledged that it often signifies to set fix place or apply to any thing To this end I speak it because it is the judgement of many learned Authors that there was no material added but a consecrated blessing given to it by Moses from God that when the High Priest did with Reverence holy and humble submission appear before God to crave the manifestation of his Will in a dubious point enquired after that God would then declare his blessed mind to the people by the High Priest standing before him with this Breast-plate of Urim and Thummim The answers being for clearnesse and perspicuity like Urim lights and for truth and integrity like Thummim most perfect and unerring Here I might tire my kind and ingenuous Reader as well as my self if I should take the pains to transcribe the multitudes of various opinions upon this point which I have collected together in my observations But I shall not be so bold with his patience not conceiving that it would redound to much profit in conclusion when all the opinions are marshalled in their parti-coloured garments before them which would but confound the weaker judgements and give occasion to the Learned either to scorn or pitty so needlesse a labour Therefore I shall only mention some of the Authors where those that please may consult the varieties and take what likes him best Philo Judaeus Josephus Origen Jerome do all go in one Tract in the several places before cited Dr. Rivet on Exodus p. 11.46 Mr. Shecingham on Jima p. 181. Amama in his Antibarbar Biblic p. 566. Edit prior Dr. Prideaux Cunaeus de Rep. Hebr. p. 130. Sckickard Jur. Reg. Hebr. p. 11. 12. c. Harphius in Myst Theolog Gregor Pholos Nicol Fuller c. of the Aaronical Vestments Mr. Ainsworth on the place Dr. Gell on the Pentateuch p. 259. Ribera of the Temple p. 210. c. Dr. Molin in his Vates l. 1. c. 22. Mr. Mede Vol. 1. p. 372. c. Dr. Taylor of Types p. 106. Besides many others who have either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the way in other Tracts or else as Commentators have written directly on the place I am not willing to insist any longer on the very nomination of them Herein I shall not presume to infringe upon the limits of modesty so far as to determine I am sure it is most safe and sober 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to haesitate in this point But if I may without offence and that with all humble submission declare onely that which likes me best and savours to me most probable It is the Judgment of Molin and Rivet much to the same purpose with that whereof I spake before the recitation of the Authors viz. That there were no stones names words or any new materials added to the Breast-plate by this Urim and Thummim But that for as much as in the former part of that 28th Chapter of Exodus we have related to us the forme and fashion of the Breast-plate its materials woven work Golden Ouches and precious stones so here in the addition of these two termes the Lord was pleased to signifie the end for which it was assigned and appointed that when Aaron or the successive High-Priest (a) Exod. 28.30 should go in before the Lord he should bear upon his heart the Judgment of the Children of Israel continually The meaning whereof may possibly be this that when the Priest did enquire of God concerning Warre or Peace and all matters of great concernment he should stand before his Majesty in the Sanctuary with this glorious Breast-plate upon him that the Lord either vivâ voce by a lively voice or by immediate suggestions upon his Spirit would give a clear distinct answer illuminating his mind with the Urim or the light of the knowledge of the divine will in such particulars and satisfying his dubious perplexed thoughts with the Thummim of a perfect and compleate determination of the difficult matter in question before the Throne of God If it were for the revealing of some unknown truth or the predicting and foretelling of some future event or issue it was a most infallible and unerring Oracle which God gave forth by the Priest unto his people whereof they might rest so perfectly assured as if it were fulfilled
of Judaea no other Country affording it besides as many Authors write the Prince of Oyles or Unguents as the name imports should be left out in this choise composition Wherefore some have apprehended it to be concluded in the first words for that which we translate Principal Spices the Hebrew terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beshamim Rosh Aromata capitis the spices of the head that is the chief and most eminent But because these words seem to be onely general terms comprehensive of the particulars presently enumerated therefore others have thought that the Balsame is couched under the name of free and pure Mirrhe However it be this is evident that the choisest ingredients for such a composition are commanded by God wherewith the Priests were to be anointed But as to the spiritual signification of this Unction we have the guidance of the Holy Spirit him self to direct us who in the New Testament doth frequently intimate that the participation of his Gifts and Graces is thereby shadowed forth to us The High Priest upon the account of this legal Unction is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Messiah Lev. 8.3 5. and by the Seventy in the 3d verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in the 5th 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christus the anointed clearly hinting to us our Gospel-High-Priest the Lord Jesus Christ the true Messiah or Anointed of the Father with the (a) Ps 45.7 Oyl of gladnesse above his fellowes which place is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 distinctly and expresly applied unto our Lord and Saviour in the (b) Heb. 1.9 Epistle to the Hebrews The glorious Antitype of David being (c) Psal 89.20 anointed King as well as Priest of his Church The same person the Apostle Peter asserts to have been (d) Act. 10.38 anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power Nay all the people of God who are (e) Rev. 1.6 Priests and Kings unto God are (f) 2 Cor. 1.21 anointed with the same Spirit The ancient Unction was external (g) Ps 133.2 upon the head of Aaron and ran down upon the beard and went down to the skirts of his Garments The Gospel Unction is internal which we (h) 1 Joh. 2.20 27. have received from the holy One and abideth in us the same anointing teacheth us all things and is truth Precious and excellent were the mixtures of that ancient Oyl What particular Gifts or Graces each might signify I leave to others being certain of this that (i) Isa 11.2 the Spirit of the Lord did rest upon Christ the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and might the Spirit of know●edge and of the fear of the Lord and it is of this His (k) Joh. 1.16 fulnesse that we have received even Grace for Grace This Unction was administred by measure to Aaron in a certain weight of sweets and a Hin of Oyl Olive Exod. 30.24 Joh. 3.34 but God gave not the Spirit by measure unto Christ But unto every one of us is given Grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ Eph. 4.7 And when all the Graces of the Spirit do hold communion together in a Saint's duty as the several Ingredients of this Unction in one composition then are duties most fragrant With this Unction were all the Vessels of the Sanctuary to be anointed to signify to us that all religious exercises and Ordinances under the Gospel are no further useful and beneficial then as they are perfumed with the secret and most precious operation of the Holy Spirit through whom we are made partakers of Christ's holinesse and have (l) Eph. 2.18 accesse with holy boldnesse to the Throne of Grace The last thing in the consecration of Priests was Sacrificing whereof may be read at large in the 8th Chapter of Leviticus The blood of the Sacrifice being sprinkled upon them To note that the Office Calling and Execution of the service of Gospel-Ministers are all sanctified by the blood of Christ The Lord Jesus died to purchase a Gospel-Ministry his precious blood consecrates and sets them apart to that excellent function Oh how dreadful a sin is it for vile wretches to trample upon and scorn that Office which was dedicated by the blood of Christ who when ascended up on high * Ps 68.18 received Gifts for men He gave not onely † Eph. 4.8 12. Apostles Prophets and Evangelists but Pastors and Teachers also for the perfecting of Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the body of Christ For how long time Till we all come in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ The Gospel-Ministry anointed by God and consecrated by the blood of Christ and receiving gifts by the benefit of Christ's ascension is we hence learn to continue till all the Members of Christ's mystical body are gathered into one which work will not be compleatly finished till the end of the world For some Saints shall remain alive at the second coming of our Lord 1 Thes 4.15 c. when he himself shall descend from heaven with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the Trump of God c. Then those which are alive and remain shall be caught up together c. in the Clouds to meet the Lord in the aire and so shall they ever be with the Lord who had promised at his ascension to be with his Ministers alwayes Mat. 28.20 even unto the end of the World The High-Priest among the Jews was consecrated with blood he needed Sacrifice for his sins but our High-Priest is holy harmlesse undefiled Heb. 7.26 Ver. 24. separate from sinners and made higher then the heavens he continueth for ever and hath an unchangeable Priest-hood He was without sin and therefore the Sacrifice of himself whereby he was consecrated to all his glorious Offices was to make entrance for others into the holiest by his blood in a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us Heb. 10.20 Joh. 17.19 Heb. 10.14 For their sakes he did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dedicate and sanctify himself that they might be sanctified through the Truth For by one Offering hath he perfected for ever them that are sanctified On this excellent subject I might enlarge amply but considering there are yet several things behind in the two last Sections of this Chapter which refer somewhat to this point I shall speak but a word or two of the other Temple-Officers and come to the close of this 4th Section Having spoken thus much concerning the Priests Let me in brief hint at the rest and I shall conclude They were the Levites and Nethinims whereof at large in the former story of the Temple The Levites according to four distinct charges were divided into Singers Porters Judges and Treasurers Here some might expect possibly that I should
the Jewish Paedagogy so came it to passe also in the approaching Evening of the World Nay in the times presently succeeding James told them that (l) Jam. 5.9 the Judge was then at the door and generally throughout the Epistles Gospel-daies are called the (m) Heb. 1.2 last daies The (n) 1 Cor. 10.11 Dr. Whitaker de Sacramentis pag. 109. Edit Francof 1654. ends of the World being come upon us Some there be who conceived that the Passeover did typify and praefigure the Sacrament of our Lord's Supper wherein the soul of a Believer feeds upon Christ the Lamb of God But doubtlesse in the main the Scripture doth therein point at Christ The Sacraments of both Testaments do hold forth the Lord Jesus the former look forward upon him as being not yet come the latter look backward upon him as being already come For hereby we (o) 1 Cor. 11.26 shew forth the Lord's death till he come that is in his last and most glorious Advent to deliver his people and to judge the World of the ungodly The next Annual festivity was the Feast of first-fruits or Feast of weeks being celebrated fifty daies after the Israelites coming out of Egypt and therefore is called in the New-Testament (p) Act. 20 16. Pentecost At the first Pentecost in the wildernesse was the Law given by Moses In the last Jewish Pentecost was the (q) Act. 2.1 Holy Ghost given to the Apostles at Jerusalem and then the first-fruits of the Gospel were offered up to God through Jesus Christ by that miraculous conversion of (g) Act. 2.41 3000 souls by the Sermon of Peter Which was the earnest of the great Harvest to follow in the whole world The Feasts of the seventh moneth were these 1. The blowing of (h) Lev. 23.24 Trumpets on the first day of the seventh moneth and might hint at the preaching of the Gospel most clearly in the latter end of the world as some apprehend The Fast of Expiation on the tenth day of the seventh moneth was a most clear presignification of our blessed Lord's (b) Crames expiating for sin (a) Ribera p. 339. Some apprehend that this and other Fasts among the Jews might denote the solemn fastings for sin under the Gospel the denial of our selves taking up the Cross of Christ and the constant study of the mortification of (c) Gal. 5.24 the flesh and all the lusts thereof The Feast of Tabernacles as it reflected backward on the Jews (a) Lev. 23.42 dwelling in Booths in the Wildernesse so it looked forward likewise on the state and condition of Christians while travelling thorough the wilderness of this World that we are but strangers in this Earth (d) 1 Chron. 29.15 as all our Fathers were Our dayes flee away like a shadow we have here no abiding City The Lord himself alone is (e) Jerom. Tom. 6. in Zach. p. 347. cum solice Psalm 90.1 the dwelling place of Saints in all generations as holy Moses speaks of himself and the children of Israel while wandring in the howling Desart of Sinai Wherefore Abraham and all the Blessed Patriarchs dwelt in Tents (f) Heb. 11.14 15 16. plainly declaring that they sought a Country which is Heavenly To which God of his infinite mercy bring us through the propitiatory blood of the (g) Heb. 13.20 Great Shepheard of the sheep the Lord Jesus whom he raised from the dead On the seventh day of this great Feast of Tabernacles there was offered the smallest number of Sacrifices to note the declining of that antient legal and Ceremonial Worship (h) Sheringham in Codicem Joma p. 39. and that a more perfect sacrifice was ready to be introduced in their room Besides the presignification of some Gospel-Excellencies by these Feasts It is noted by a learned Man that there was a reason for their celebration among the Jews referring to the impetration of some particular blessings upon the Earth according to the several seasons of the Year wherein they were solemnized There was an offering of the quantity of a Homer given up at the Passover to beg a blessing on the Harvest The first-fruits they offered up at Pentecost to obtain a blessing on the fruits of their trees at the Feast of Tabernacles they (a) 1 Sam. 7.6 powred out water to beg the blessing of Rain upon the Earth it being then the seed-time in the land of Judea These Waters were drawn out of the Fountain of Shiloah Whence it is that the Evangelical Prophet complains of the Jews that they refused the (b) Isa 8.6 waters of Shiloah that go softly not trusting in Gods gracious promise that he made to King Ahaz of the true Shiloah He that was to be sent to them the Messiah Isa 7.14 which was given as a firm word for him to rest upon against the Kings of Israel and Syria For it was plain that the Race of David should continue till the coming of that Immanuel who was to be born of a Virgin and therefore the enemies should not prevail to extinguish the Royal Race of Judah Hence is it that our blessed Lord alluding to this Libation or powring out of Waters at the Feast of the Tabernacles cryes out in the last and great day of the Feast John 7.37 that they should come to him as the true Fountain of Shiloah that gives forth living waters which thing he spake concerning the Spirit For he that believeth on him as the Scripture saith that is he whose Faith is grounded on Scripture-promises for we are not to understand that Text of any citation there being no such place extant out of his belly shall flow Rivers of living-waters i. e. There shall be within him a Heavenly spring of Grace that shall flow into the Ocean of Glory The Heathen had an apish imitation of this great Festivity Plut. Thes gr p. 19. Edit 1. Steph. 80. Plut. Romul p. 66. gr Aedit H. Steph. as Plutarch remembers in the life of Theseus that the Athenians had their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in memory of the deliverance of their City by Theseus and to implore a blessing on the fruits of the earth and moreover concerning the Romans at set times dwelling under Fig-trees as the same Author hath recorded in the life of Romulus and in the fourth of his Symposiacks mentioning this Feast foolishly compares it with the Heathenish Feast of Bacchus qu. 5. Here before I conclude give me leave to treat a while upon the Conjecture of some persons who conceive the 3 solemn Festivals celebrated among the Christians to have been pre-exemplified in those 3 Eminent Feasts of the Jews The birth of our Saviour answering to the Feast of Tabernacles For so a very Learned man of our Nation and others viz. Beroaldus Mede Vol. 1. p. 618. Scaliger and Calvisius conceive and seem to prove it by good arguments that our Saviour was born in September the time answering to
the Feast of Tabernacles Our blessed Lord when brought forth into the light of this world according to his humane Nature did then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make his Tabernacle with men And so for the other that Easter and Whitsontide did resemble the Passover and Pentecost But I shall not lay stress upon these things That which is somewhat more material for such as do sacredly observe these Festivals to consider is this That at this present day we have utterly lost the true time of the celebration of them and truly a great part of the devotion is thereby extinguisht For as to the usual and common solemnization of the Nativity of Christ though we should grant contrary to the sense of Mr. Mede and several learned Authors that our Lord was born on the 25 of December between 1600. and 1700 years ago yet it may be evident to all that will seriously weigh the Truth that we are now several dayes distant from the supposed time and point of his birth For if so be the motion of the Sun from one fixed point suppose the first degree of Aries through the Zodiack to the same point again be comprehended within this space of time viz. of 365 dayes 5 hours 49. minutes and 4 seconds and other odd scruples not worth naming in this Computation According to Bullialdus or as Longomontanus 365 d. 5 h. 48 min. 55 seconds Long. l. 1. Theor. c. 5. p. 2227. and other eminent Astronomers Then there will fall out 11 min. letting passe the 2 seconds to be reserved every year for a Calculation of certain hours yea and dayes at last wherein the Julian year will transcend the true state of the Sun's mensuration For they reserve every year 6 compleat hours to make a day for the Bissextile-year being every fourth in order which doth not precisely agree with the Sun For it exceeds by 4 times 11 minutes which every fourth year arises to 44′ Or to speak more precisely (a) Buliald Astronom Phololaic ed Par. 1645. l. 2. c. 3. p. 68. The Tropical year according to exact Computation is determined to consist of 365 dayes 5 hours 49′ 4″ 21‴ 3 ' ' ' ' which fals short of 6 houres by 10′ 55″ 38‴ 57 ' ' ' ' in every year Now if we compute to the present vulgar year of our Lords Incarnation 1659 These scruples will arise to 11 dayes 13 hours 58 min. 40″ 41‴ 3 ' ' ' ' Wherein the celebration of this Festivity ought to anticipate the 25 of December in our common Julian year and ought to be celebrated almost 12 dayes before our ordinary time As to which who is so ignorant as not to know that therefore the Pontificians do according to the Gregorian Emendation precede us by 10 dayes in their account which is called the New Style But they went no higher than the time of the Nicene Council in the correction of the year and so fell short in this point of the true time The reason why they went no higher I leave for them to give As for the celebration of Easter it is not unknown to such as are but moderately versed in Ecclesiastical History what stirs there have been in the Church in the 5th 6th and 7th Centuries c. between the Greeks and the Latines nay in our Brittain between the Scots and the Saxons as appears (b) Bede Eccles Hist l. 2. c. 2. l. 4. c. 5. l. 2. c. 22. by the Writings of venerable Bede The Christians studying to conform the time of its celebration to the season of the Jewish Passover What laborious Tables Calendars and Canons were framed by Victorius Hippolytus Anatolius Dionysius Exiguus and many others Whereby it comes to passe that this Festival does so vary every year according to that Sabhath which follows the full Moon next after the vernal-Equinoxe Whereas seeing the design of the Christians was therein to commemorate the time of our Lords Resurrection If they would have kept the exact time they should have considered what day of the year he arose and what time of the morning of that day as near as may be to Scripture and by the best Rules have found out the Sun's place exactly in the Zodiack and when the Sun did Return unto that point in every year to celebrate it accordingly (a) Lang. de Annis Christi p. 415. l. 2. c. 8. Langius a learned and laborious Calculator of Scripture-times hath stated the Resurrection of our Lord in the 4746 the year of the Julian period In the 4th year of the 202d. Olympiad the Cycl ☉ 14 of the ☽ 15. the Indiction 6. and on the 5th of April according to the Julian Calendar in the 33d year from his birth according to our common Computation The Aequinoxe in those dayes fell out about the 22 of March and so the Sun will be found in the 14 of Aries upon the 5th of April at noon in the Meridian of Jerusalem or to come nearer the point having examined it by Calculation out of the late corrected Tables I find the ☉ to have been in ♈ 13° 27′ 25″ in the noon of the Resurrection-day agreeing commonly with the 23 of our March By which in any good Ephemeris every one may judge how far the present Celebration of this annual Festivity errs from the Truth and consequently that of Pentecost which depends upon this But I have insisted too long on these things I shall conclude (b) Rom. 14.6 That he who regardeth the day saith holy Paul regardeth it unto the Lord and he that regardeth not the day to the Lord he doth not regard it As for these things as Paul (c) 1 Cor. 7.25 said in another case we have no commandment of the Lord. But of such as endeavour to conform themselves to Jewish Feasts the Apostle may say as of the Galatians (d) Gal. 4.10 Ye observe dayes and times and months and years I am affraid of you lest I have bestowed upon you labour in vain But in this point how far Ecclesiastical Sanctions have power and Authority over Christian liberty in matters of indifferency I leave to the decision of able grave learned and holy men But yet however whoso do incline to keep these times certainly they cannot but think their devotion and zeal to be much cooled by the false assignation of the time of their celebration Having thus briefly hinted at the principal Jewish Festivals I shall come to the second thing proposed in the beginning of this Section touching the various sacrifices wi●h their Appendancies Which that they did portend and presignifie the great and only satisfactory sacrifice of the Lord Jesus is granted by all sober persons any thing versed in the comparison of the two Testaments For so the Spirit of God testifies expresly concerning him when he is brought in by an Elegant Prosopopoeia speaking to the Father on this wise (a) Psalm 40.6 Heb. 10.5 c. 1 Pet. 2.24 Burnt offering and
by the infallible dictates of the Spirit of Grace who hath acquainted us that the antient Sacrifices did foreshew the grand and unspeakably glorious Offering of Christ For they all ceased at the Ascension of Christ which is the Argument of their being but Shadows that were to cease at the appearance of the Substance So doth the blessed Apostle Argue clearly in his Epistle to the Hebrews and out of him b Orig. p. 125. Homil. 3. in Levitic Origen and generally all both Antient and Modern that I have as yet had the Happinesse to peruse upon this Subject unlesse such as have drunk deep of the poysonous dregs of Socinianism All those carnal Ordinances for so the Apostle termes them were to continue only c Heb. 9.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 till the season of Reformation when their obscure conceptions should be cleared their crooked apprehensions rectified in the taking away of all those worldly and beggerly Elements in comparison with the Sacrifice of Christ who was the beginning of the new Heavens and the new Earth by the Substitution of a Gospel frame of spiritual Worship in the room of all those antient Ceremonies So that what was spoken by the Prophet Esay in the Name of God respecting the hypocrisie of the Jews in their worship may be now spoken positively of the very Worship it self since the Offering up of Christ to the Father a Isa 1.13 Bring no more vain Oblations Incense is an abomination to him the new Moons and Sabboths that is of the seventh day seventh year c. the calling of Assemblies he cannot away with it is iniquity even the solemn meeting Their New Moons and appointed Feasts his soul hateth they are a trouble to him he is weary to bear them This is the time even after the apparition of Christ in the flesh wherein God will cause to b Hos 2.11 cease all the Feast-dayes of Judaes her New Moons her Sabboths and all her Solemn Feasts When the c Dan. 9.26 Messiah shall be cut off not for himself the City shall be destroyed and the Sanctuary and he shall confirm the Covenant with many and shall d Vers 27. cause Sacrifice and Oblation to cease After the dissolution of the ancient Sanctuary when e Vers 25. Messiah the Prince shall build the walls of the New spiritual Jerusalem Then from the rising of the Sun even to the going down of the same the Name of God shall be great even among the Gentiles and in f Mal. 1.11 every place Incense shall be offered unto his Name and a pure Offering c. Then shall the people of God in the seven Asian Churches be made Kings and Priests by Christ unto God and his Father g Rev. 1.6 5.10 To whom be glory and dominion for ever and ever Now praier is not the more acceptable because within the Precincts and limits of a holy Temple But 't is the will of God that men pray h a 1 Tim. 2.8 every where lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting God hath promised to gather i Isa 66.18 all Nations and Tongues to come and see his glory and they shall bring the Jews as an k Vers 20. Offering to the Lord even to to his holy mountain at Jerusalem l Isa 19.19 An Altar shall be erected to the Name of the Lord in the Land of Aegypt and the Lord of Hosts shall blesse saying m Vers 25. Blessed be Aegypt my people and Assyria the work of my hands and Israel mine Inheritance The Burnt-Offerings of a Isa 56.7 strangers shall be then accepted upon Gods Altar For his House shall be called a House of Prayer for all people The Gentiles shall come into the light of the Church and Kings to the brightness of her rising b Isa 60.3 6 7. The Dromedaries of Midian and Ephah all they from Shebah shall come and bringing Gold and Incense shall shew forth the praises of the Lord. All the Flocks of Kedar and the Rams of Nebajoh shall come up with acceptance on Gods Altar c Zeph. 3.10 His Suppliants shall draw nigh to him from beyond the Rivers of Ethiopia which place d Fulgent 2. lib. ad monimum p. 85. Bas 80. 1587. Fulgentius particularly expounds of spiritual Sacrifices e Zech. 14.16 17 21. All Nations and all the Families of the earth must go up from year to year to worship the King the Lord of Hosts and to keep the Feast of Tabernacles Every pot shall be holy and all that come to Sacrifice shall seeth therein Then shall the f Mal. 3.4 1. Offerings of Judah and Jerusalem be pleasant unto the Lord as in the daies of old after the Messenger of the Covenant should be come into the Temple of his body when the Aaronical Priesthood g Hebr. 7.12 should be dissolved and a change made of the Law Jerusalem the holy City shall never be more a singular place to h Joh. 4.12 worship in Nor Jewish Feasts the Seasons for they shall i Gal. 4.9 10 c. be disannul'd Neither shall Sacrifice properly and strictly so called be ever any k Heb. 10 2 more offered to God as gratefull and acceptable For we c Heb. 13.10 have now an Altar to eat off which they have no right to who serve the Tabernacle The Priests of old offered up the souls of irrational creatures But now the case is altered saies m Pie Mirand Tom. 1. p. 54. Mirandula For Michael our Prince and Priest doth offer our rational souls to God His Majesty will not be so served now as in former times he expects we should now serve and worship him n Joh 4.23 in Spirit and Truth a Col. 2 17. In Spirit without Ceremonies and external typifying Ordinances In Truth without Shadows The Jews presented God carnal Sacrifices with spiritual significations annexed to them and couched under them We must give unto God spiritual services apart from the b Act. 15.10 unsupportable yoke of numerous Ceremonies c Rain against Hart. p 491 493. They are not to be endured in Gods worship They savour of a Jewish carnal childish spirit It 's commonly observable that those of a Popish strain and temper that are highly rigid and severely tenacious of multitudes of Ceremonies in Gods service either deduced from some among the Jews or others among the Heathens and blended together with some new inventions of their own innovation are usually remiss in holy and close walking with God and are the greatest persecutors of the Saints as we see at this day in the Popedome Paul d Gal. 1.13 14. when most zealous of the traditions of his Fathers then persecuted he the Church out of measure and wasted it It 's a manifest sign of mans departure from uprightness e Eccl. 7.29 when he seeks out many inventions This being then evident that after the coming of
Mal. 3.10 Bring ye all the Tithes into the store-house that there may be meat in my house and prove me now herewith saith the Lord If I will not open you the windowes of Heaven and pour you out a blessing that there shall not be room enough to receive it and I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes and he shall not destroy the fruits of your ground neither shall your Vine cast her fruit before the time in the field saith the Lord of Hosts b Joel 2.14 Who knoweth if he will return and repent and leave a blessing behind him even a Meat-offering and a Drink offering unto the Lord your God that is by blessing of the fruits of the Land that they may yeeld such plenty as wherewithall you may prepare Offerings for his Altar which before was c Joel 1.9.13 Verse 10 c. cut off from the house of the Lord. For the field was wasted the land mourned the corn was consumed the new wine was dried up and the oyl languished Several Appendices there were unto Sacrifices under the legal Administrations Manifold washings to denote the purifying of our souls by way of preparation for our solemn spiritual worship which we are to performe to God under the Gospel In Meat-offerings d Lev. 2.15 oyl was used It was an Embleme of mercy saith e Orig. Hom. 2. in Levitic p. 118. Origen and signified the great condescending favour and mercy of our God to hold fellowship and communion with his poor people in Ordinances of his worship Salt was a constant attendant upon f Lev. 2.13 Sacrifice every oblation of thy Meat-offering shalt thou season with Salt nay with all thine Offerings thou shalt offer Salt No Sacrifice is acceptable to God but what 's savoury Salt resists putrefaction and is a great digester of crude and raw humours We must sprinkle Salt upon our Sacrifices and draw nigh to God in his Worship with a serious savoury frame of spirit If Christian conference must be a Col. 4.6 seasoned with Salt how much more our Prayers wherein we speak to the great and infinite Majesty of Heaven In the sacred pages the word of God is compared to salt as wherewith the hearts and mouths of Christians are seasoned against the waterish and indigested notions of persons erroneous in principle and practice Our Lord doth call his Disciples b Mat. 5.13 the salt of the earth by reason of that sound soul-preserving Doctrine which they should preach in his name throughout the world and especially that of repentance from dead works and remorse for sin which though it be for a time smarting and tedious while men do chasten their own spirits therewith yet is it most safe and wholsom and yeeldeth the peaceable c Heb. 12.11 fruit of righteousness to them who are exercised thereby Every true Christian is an evangelical Sacrifice and is to be salted in this wholsom manner that he may become savoury and relishable before God For with such Gods Majesty will make a d Ps 50 5. Covenant by Sacrifice and it shall prove to them a perpetual Covenant e Numb 18.19 a Covenant of salt for ever before the Lord. To this ancient Levitical custom of salting the Sacrifices doubtless our Lord doth strongly allude in the evangelical story when cautioning his Disciples to beware of scandals and offences he argues à periculo presenting before them the danger and torments of hell fire speaks thus f Mark 9.49 Every one shall be salted with fire and every Sacrifice shall be salted with salt Concerning which place g Camerar in p. 22. Edit Cantabr 1642. Camerarius in his notes on the New Testament affirms that in an ancient Copy he sound the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Every loaf or cake shall be salted in the fire as if there were an Ellipsis of the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 According to that copy there seems to be a more manifest allusion made to that place in Leviticus before cited concerning the salting of meat-offerings For the meat-offering which we translate h Levit. 7.12 13. a Cake in Levit. 7.12 13. according to our division of the Bible into Chapters and verses is found in ver 2 3. of the said Chapter as the printed Septuagints are distinguisht and expresly called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 loaves But it is no wayes safe to allow such varieties of readings in the holy Scripture according to every corrupt and musty manuscript giving great advantage to the Papists in reference to their Vulgar Latine as is excellently noted by the most learned and judicious a Dr Owen on the Bibl. Polyg●●●a Dr Owen in his usefull animadversions concerning the various readings in the late Bibles And yet farre bolder is the censure and correction of b Scal●ger 442 Edit Lug● Bat. 1627. Scaliger upon this place of Mark which is extant in his 442. Letter sent by him to John de Laet pag. 806. where he deals with the sacred Scriptures as if he were criticizing upon Theocritus Pindar or some other Heathen Poet and makes no bones of crying out here 's a fault and there 's another contra gentes it must be thus corrected and nemo praeter me indicaverit and crows too peremptorily and irreverently Nihil verius esse potest and all the stir is that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be expunged and sayes for certain the Evangelist wrote thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. making at length a Tautology in Scripture and that very unfit and improper which clearly appears being englisht thus according to him Every Sacrifice shall be salted and every Sacrifice shall be salted with salt But well have c Cloppenburg Schol. Sacrif Patriarch pag. 200. Cloppenburg and Spanhemius noted that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is never used by the Septuagint or New Testament Pen-men so neither is the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to which the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should answer found in that place of Leviticus and besides that the Greek word is never used in any classical Author for a Sacrifice offered by fire d Spanhem dub Evang. part 3. pag. 453. Whereas our blessed Lord in that place of Mark is shewing that t is better to go to heaven maim'd and halt or blind of one eye expressing matters parabollcaly then for a man to go whole to hell that will not pull out his right eye and cut off his right hand in the case of scandal For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one or every whol man as some gloss upon the place that will not submit to deny himself in the point of scandal shall be salted with fire who being made a Sacrifice to the wrath of God in hell shall be salted with his indignation in that fire that shall never be
other sacrifice alluding to the Peace-offerings I will offer says David in his Tabernacle sacrifices of joy I will sing Psal 27.6 yea I will sing praises unto the Lord. Thanksgiving is another Offer unto God Thanksgiving and pay thy Vows unto the most High He that offereth praise glorifieth me saith God Psal 50.14 v. 23 Ps 107.22 Hos 14.2 Let them sacrifice the sacrifices of Thanksgiving and declare his works with rejoycing The Church in the Prophet Hosea cries unto the Lord Take away all iniquities and receive us graciously so will we render the Calves of our lips Jer. 33.10 11. There shall be heard in this place saith the Prophet Jeremiah the voice of them that shall say Praise the Lord of Hosts for the Lord is good for his mercy endureth for ever and of them that shall bring the sacrifice of Praise into the house of the Lord. By him that is by Christ saith the Apostle let us offer the sacrifice of Praise to God continually that is the fruit of our lips Heb. 13.15 giving thanks to his Name Mercy also is desired of the Lord rather then sacrifice Hos 6.6 Good works and alms are a sacrifice likewise I have all and abound says Paul having received of Epaphroditus the things which were sent from you Phil. 4.18 an odour of a sweet smell a sacrifice acceptable well-pleasing to God Wherefore to do good and communicate forget not Heb. 13.16 for with such sacrifices God is well pleased Righteousness is another Offer the sacrifices of Righteousness and put your trust in the Lord. Do good in thy good pleasure to Zion Psal 4.5 Psal 51.19 build thou the Walls of Jerusalem Then shalt thou be pleased with the sacrifices of Righteousness Prayer is another most excellent and sweet smelling sacrifice under the Gospel My house shall be called of all Nations a house of Prayer Mar. 11.17 Of this we have treated more copiously above when handling the service of Incense Not only our souls in their several heavenly breathings at the Throne of Grace and in all their Divine services presented to God are represented in Scripture under the ancient shadows of sacrifice but our Bodies also are to be presented as a living Sacrifice Heb. 12.9 holy acceptable to God which is our reasonable service As God is the Father of our spirits so is he the Creator of our bodies and expects from both as is most due from creatures all manner of homage obedience adoration and praise for ever Wherefore let us draw near w●th a true heart Heb. 10.22 in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water Also the vocation of the Gentiles is represented in the Holy Scripture as a Sacrifice in the day● of the Gospel to be presented to God when in every place incense shall be offered to the name of the Lord and a pure offering for my name shall be great among the Heathen Mal. 1.11 saith the Lord of Hosts The Apostle Paul says that he was the Minister of Jesus Christ to the Gentiles ministring the Gospel of God Rom. 15.16 that the offering up of the Gentiles might be acceptable being sanctified by the Holy Ghost Psa 116.15 In the last place Martyrdom is esteemed a Sacrifice and that which is most precious in the sight of God Paul compares himself to a Sacrifice when near to his death at Rome Phil. 2.17 The Souls under the Altar that were slain for the word of God and for the testimony which they held are related to cry with a loud voyce Rev. 6.9 saying How long O Lord holy and true dost thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth There being therein a strong allusion to the blood of the Sacrifices of old which was poured out besides the Altar the warm vapours whereof went up reaking towards heaven In which sense Cyprian speaks of the Ministers Exhortations of the godly to suffering in his days Cypr. Ep. 2. p. 4. edit Bas 1530. that thereby they might prepare Sacrifices for God SECT VI. The Endowments of the Temple Officers Spiritualized WHat Priviledges Possessions and Revenues the Servants of God in the Temple Worship under the Law enjoyed I have formerly explained in a set Chapter Hieronym ad Fabio loc Tim 3. p. 58. The end is set down by Jerome in his Epistle to Fabiola Primitiae cibor um c. ut habens victum a●q v●stitum securus liber serviat Domino The Firstfruits of meats c. were given to the Priests that having food and raiment he might with security and freedom give up himself to the service of the Lord Wherefore such as come up to worship God at the Temple were charged never to appear empty before the Lord Nay God himself Exod 23.15 34. ●0 Deut. 6.16 Lev. 27.30 Num. 18.21 who challenged the tythes from ●he people of Israel as his own did make an act of assignment of them to the Levites in consideration of their service in his worship From whence it follows by the same rule of Equity that such as serve God in the great work of the Gospel should have a competent and convenient maintenance to encourage them in the work and service of God Nay A minori ad majus By how much more excellent their Dispensation is and the glad tidings of the Gospel to be preferred before the shadows and ceremonies of the Law by so much the more ought the Christian people to manifest greater love countenance encouragement and obedience to those that watch for their souls Heb. 13.17 But we shall see that the Apostle Paul doth draw an inference from the ancient legal maintenance in behalf of the Gospel-Ministrey in these words Who goeth a warfare at any time of his own charges who planteth a vineyard 1 Cor. 9.7 c. and eateth not of the fruit thereof or who feedeth a flock and eateth not of the milk of the flock Say I these things as a man or saith not the Law the same also For it is written in the Law of Moses Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the Ox that treadeth out the corn Doth God take care for Oxen or saith he it altogether for our sakes For our sakes no doubt this is written That he that ploweth should plow in hope and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope If we have sown unto you spiritual things is it a great thing if we shall reap your carnal things Do you not know they which minister about holy things liv● of the things of the Temple and they which wait at the altar Vers 13. are partakers with the altar even so hath the Lord ordained that they which preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel Dr. Edw. Reynolds on Psal 110 4● at the end of v 4. p. 479. Phil.
4.17 This place is gloss'd upon and expounded by a very learned and able hand who hath discussed this matter clearly and fully In another Epistle the great Teacher of the Gentiles commending the communication of the Church at Philippi to him in necessities tells them it was not therefore because he desired a gift but fruit that might abound to their account It was not to be accounted a matter of meer benevolence and favour which they n●eded not to do but it was a piece of justice and equity thereby demonstrating their obedience to the faith and laying up in store a treasure in heaven against the great day of account For it is an injunction from God Let him that is taught in the word communicate unto him that teacheth in all good things Be not deceived God is not mocked Gal. 16.6 for whatsoever a man soweth that shall he reap Again in his first Epistle to Timothy ●e exhorts Let the Elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honour 1 Tim. 5.17 18. especially they who labour in word and doctrine For the Scripture saith Thou shalt not muzzle the Ox. that treadeth out the corn and The labourer is worthy of his reward which brings me to that place of the Evangelist where when our Lord was sending out his Disciples to preach the word of the Kingdom he charges them thus Provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in your purses Mat. 10.9 10. Luke 10.5 c nor scrip for your journey neither two coats neither shoes nor yet staves For the workman is worthy of his meat And into whatsoever house ye enter fi●st say Peace be to this house and if the Son of peace be there your peace shall rest upon it if not it shall turn to you again and in the same house remain eating and drinking such things as they give For the labourer is worthy of his hire Vers 16. He that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and he that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me By these places of Divine Authority we learn how careful the Lord is of his instituted Ministrey under the Gospel and what weighty and strong commands do lie upon the consciences of those who participate of their spiritual labours Besides as the Priests had their Cities and habitations assigned them Mat. 21.33 so the vine-dressers are said to have a Tower built in the vineyard for them to dwell in Now many will say A maintenance for a Gospel-Ministrey we allow and that competent and fitting for their estate and condition that so they may serve the Lord without distraction But the way of maintenance as it is in our Nation by Tythe we allow not of 1. Because Jewish and annexed to the Ceremonial Law 2. Because brought in under Popery and is therefore Antichristian And in the next place they like not a forced and compulsory maintenance of that or any other manner but that every one should give freely and this to be counted the Gospel way Here I shall premise that it is not my purpose to handle this question nor to declare my own opinion upon it onely so far as to cut the nerves of those objections in sunder it is sufficiently done already by many learned and judicious persons Sir Henry Spelman Sir James Sempill Doctor Garleten Doctor Sclater M. Nettle and others I shall only speak a little to the branches of this objection To the first That it was a part of the Jewish and Ceremonial law given by Moses and therefore to be abrogated by the death of Christ Gen. 14.20 Heb. 7.4 c. v. 6. I answer That long before the Law was given the Patriarch Abraham did pay tythes to Melchisedec who was a signal Type of Christ and had not his descent from the loyns of Levi being yet unborn and yet received Tythes of Abraham and blessed him that had the Promises which Argument the Apostle clearly urgeth against Levitical Ceremonies in the seventh chapter to the Hebrews v. 9 10. For Levi who received Tythes paid Tythes in Abraham for he was yet in the loyns of his Father when Melchisedec met him Now whereas 't is urged that the Levitical Priesthood being changed there is made of necessity a change also of the Law v. 12. I grant it to be true that this Law ought to cease and did so in respect of the Levitical Priesthood which was finished at the death of Christ But the Lord Jesus who was so eminently typified by Melchisedec the receiver of Tythes before the exhibition of the Law hath an unchangeable Priesthood and therefore the Tythes which he received as due annexed to it Heb. 7.24 Mar. 9.41 Mat. 10.40 41 42 do still continue to be his due by Divine sanction But now Christ our High Priest being in heaven counts that done and given to him which is given to a Prophet in his Name he having no where repealed or disanulled his right Gen. 28.22 Besides this holy Jacob also when he was at Bethel in his journey toward Padan Aram made this vow Of all that thou shalt give me I will surely give the Tenth unto thee after this being about to depart from his cruel and hard Uncle and being enriched through the good hand of God he was by the God of Bethel put in minde of his vow which he made at the anointing of the pillar Gen. 31.13 Gen. 33.18 Gen. 14.5 17 18 which no doubt he fully performed but whether at Shalem a City of Shechem whereof Melchisedeck was King a place not far from Shaveh Kiriathaim where he met Abraham for Shalem was in the Tribe of Ephraim not far from Jordan and Kiriathaim in the Tribe of Reuben not far off on the other side the River or whether at Bethel it self for at both places he offered on an Altar but at the last Gen. 33.20.35.7 especially where he was blessed of God probably upon the performance of his Vows At which of the two places he consecrated his tenths to God is not much material seeing that it was done doubtless and that a great while before the Ceremonial Law was delivered by Moses at Mount Sinai Exod. 22.29 Exod. 38 21. Lev. 27.30 Numb 18.21 Again God commanded the rendring to him the first fruits and other offerings an appendix of Tythes before ever the Levites were assigned to their service about the Tabernacle The Tythe whether of the seed of the Land or of the fruit of the Tree is the Lords it is holy unto the Lord and was given by God unto the children of Levi for an inheritance Wherefore we make it not to have been Typical but as a Moral Duty grounded upon equity and the Law of Nature in the main that is as maintenance and the quota pars or the tenth of mens substance upon a positive Law observed by the Patriarchs before the Law Now such things as were before the Ceremonial Law and continued
of eight years But yet says one he gives in some couchant expressions whence we may gather that he did not build all the body of the covered Temple anew but perhaps raised it higher adorned and beautified it with many rare Porches and other external buildings As to this point at present I shall enter no contest though to me it seems very evident from cap. ult Of his 15. book that Josephus doth directly assert it from these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That taking away the foundations he did substitute others in their room upon which he raised the Temple and then in the following words plainly declares both the length and height of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for its length 100 cubits and in height 20 more that is above 100 being 120. in all But how this will stand with the assertion of the Prophet Haggai Hag. 2.9 that the glory of this latter house speaking of Zorobabel's Temple shall be greater then the former Why Because in that house the Lord promised to g●ve peace which is plainly spoken of Christ Luk. 2.14 Hieron in Hagg. 2. Vol. 6. p. 279. who brought peace upon earth especially seeing the word in the Hebrew Text is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is by the 70. translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by Paguine and the Vulgar Latine as we have it and the ancienter of Jerome himself in his own works set forth more purely it is turned by Novissima the last House Hag. 2.7 Mal. 3.1 and so the word will bear it But not to lean upon any versions the seventh verse speaks plainly that therein the glory of that House should consist and excel that other of Solomon's because the desire of all Nations should come and fill that very House with glory which by the Jews themselves is interpreted of the Messiah This as it is a most strong Argument against the Jews to prove that the true Messiah is long since come because that Temple is long since ruin'd so it seems also to evince that Zorobabels Temple should not be pull'd down before the coming of Christ for how could he come into that very Temple if it were pluckt up by the very foundations as to its self and all its Buildings and another more pompous built by Herod before Christ appeared in the flesh Besides the Jews who had little reason to maligne the glory of Herod Joh. 2.20 as a great Benefactor to and adorner of their land with sumptuous Buildings do plainly reply to our Lord concerning the Temple then extant in his days that it was 46. years in Building whereas Herod's by the testimony of Josephus was but 8. Casaubon in Baron execr 13. num 38. p. 203. This I leave to be solved by others as Tarnovius and Chemnitius cited by him who think that the same Temple stood in its entire body but sumptuously repaired and adorned by Herod with great magnificence Insomuch that Josephus and the Jewish Author of the Cod●● Middoth do seem to ascribe it wholly to K. Herod So likewise Tacitus in the fifth book of his Histories Tarnov in Joh. p. 223. cited by L. Empereur seems to manifest That the Temple which Pompey invaded and Titus destroyed were the same Although that learned Author in his Comment on Middoth thinks that Herod did build one anew from the very foundations Tacit. l. 5. Hist p. 626. Edit Lugd. Bat. 1640. but because it was done with the free consent of the Jews to whom he makes an Oration extant in Josephus and for as much as the old materials were used in the frame of the work they still counted it one and the same Temple with the former of Zorobabels and with him the learned Primate agrees Usser Anna. part 2. Lat. p. 516. Though the former speaks in conclusion somwhat dubiously in these words Non dest tuuntur argumentis qui asserunt Templum ab Herode non de integro ex●ructum sed immutatum auctum veteri conserva●o fuisse They want not arguments who do assert the Temple not to have been wholly built anew by Herod L'Empereur praefat in Middoth p. 20. but changed and augmented the old being conserved But leaving this to the fuller disquisition of others we are sure that the last Temple by who ever it was built was destroyed by the Roman Army of Titus who was that Prince prophesied of by Daniel that should come and destroy the City and the Sanctuary the end whereof should be with a flood and unto the end of the War desolations were determined Dan. 9.26 Sacrifice and Oblation was then utterly to cease when the over-spreading of abominations should make all desolate v. 27. even till the consummation and that which was determined should be poured upon the desolate when the ships of Chittim should afflict Eber Num. 24.24 and he should perish for ever when God brought a Nation from far Deut. 28.49 v. 53. Greg. Thol Hist Mir b. Vol. 2. p. 167 ex Babylon Talmud Ezek. 11.23 from the end of the Earth as the Eagle flyeth even under the Banners of the Roman Eagle a Nation whose Tongue they knew not and of a fierce countenance so that they should eat the fruit of their own bodies by reason of that strait siege wherewith they should be girt in all their gates A Prophesie most fully accomplished in the days of Jerusalems final ruine as is wofully and sadly related by Hegesippus and Josephus then the ten miracles finally ceased such as the Jews usually relate concerning their Temple Then the glory of the Lord indeed departed fully from the Temple and stood upon Mount Olivet on the East side of the City the place from whence Christ our Lord ascended up into heaven to shew to us that upon Christ's Ascension that all the glory of an external Temple was then consummated and fully ended Of these and the like matters I might have enlarged copiously But when I reflect upon the Title of this Treatise which leads me to speak only of the Temple of Solomon that being finished manum de Tabula my poor labours must also receive their period which I humbly commit to the blessing of God whose gracious hand hath enlarged my life through his abundant mercy to arrive at length to the conclusion of this present work for which with all adoration of the Divine Majesty I give most humble and hearty thanks to his holy name and freely submit my self and all my endeavours to the iudgement of pious learned candid and ingenious breasts Only for a peroration of the whole work give me leave to observe the admirable fulfilling of the Prophesie of our blessed Lord concerning the irreparable ruine of the last Temple which although Julian the Apostate Emperour endeavoured with all his might to enervate and invalidate yet his designe by the most just judgment of God could never take effect Two witnesses whereof I shall alledge the one of a heathen the