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B25425 Troposchēmalogia: Tropes and figures; or, A treatise of the metaphors, allegories, and express similitudes, &c. contained in the Bible of the Old and New Testament To which is prefixed, divers arguments to prove the divine authority of the Holy Scriptures wherein also 'tis largely evinced, that by the great whore, mystery Babylon is meant the Papal hierarchy, or present state and church of Rome. Philologia sacra, the second part. Wherein the schemes, or figures in Scripture, are reduced under their proper heads, with a brief explication of each. Together with a treatise of types, parables, &c. with an improvement of them parallel-wise. By B. K; Tropologia. Book 4. Keach, Benjamin, 1640-1704.; De Laune, Thomas, d. 1685. Tropologia. aut 1682 (1682) Wing K101A; ESTC R7039 690,855 608

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2.1 And you hath he quickened who were dead in Trespasses and Sins c. UNconverted Men are dead spiritually dead they are as dead Men. Life is opposed to Death which is either the Privation of natural Life because of the Separation of the Soul from the Body or the Privation of spiritual and heavenly Life because of the Separation of the Soul from God through Sin And this is really true in both respects in a proper Sence yet we shall open the State of Men dead in Sin by comparing this Death with natural Death between which in some things there is a good Parallel and to which in the Judgment of divers worthy Men the Spirit of God doth allude c. Parallels A Dead Man one that is really dead is under a total Privation of Life there is no Life in him So Man by Sin is totally under the Privation of the spiritual Life of God Now the Life of God consisteth in a Principle of Grace which is called a Seed The Seed speaking of a Man quickned remains in him This Seed 1 Joh 3.9 or divine Principle is unto the Soul as the Soul is to the Body but there is no Soul or Seed of Grace no Principle of spiritual Life in an unregenerate Man and therefore really and truly dead in a spiritual Sence as the Body is dead when the Soul is separated from it If there be any true and real spiritual Life in an unconverted Man how can he be said to be dead for where there is not a total Privation of natural Life a Man cannot be said to be dead naturally II. Dead the Dead shall hear c. This imports Man was once alive spiritually alive considering the Subject of whom our Saviour speaks Man before his Fall or the Entrance of Sin was alive Death was threatned upon Adam's eating of the forbidden Fruit In the Day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die The Deprivation of the spiritual Life of the Soul as well as the Life of the Body was in the Sanction of that Law Thou shalt die the Death What Life soever Adam had before he fell he lost it by his Transgression and in that very Day he eat he suffered a Deprivation of the Light of God's Countenance and spiritual Life of God in his Soul He lost that supernatural Power of acting towards God spiritually or Image of God that was in him so that it was impossible for him to live any more to God until quickned by a new Principle of spiritual Life And hence unregenerate Men are said to be dead c. III. A Man that is dead cannot move act or speak all natural Motions utterly cease that is the Effect of Death So unconverted Men have lost all spiritual vital Acts that is all Acts and Duties of holy Obedience acceptable unto God There is in them a total Defect and Want of Power for any such Acts whatsoever or else they are not dead cannot be said to be dead for when the Soul departs it leaves the Body uncapable of any kind of Activity All the natural Power the Body had by means of the Soul's Union with it is gone upon the Separation of the one from the other So Death falling upon the Soul or suffering a Privation of the Image of God or spiritual Life it had all its internal Power to act or live to God is gone the the carnal Mind being expresly said to be Enmity against God Rom. 8 7. An evil Tree cannot bring forth good Fruit. In short there is in all wicked Men a Disability or Impotency unto all spiritual Things to be performed in a spiritual manner and that it is impossible for them to act and do in a way acceptable to God till quickned by the Holy-Ghost IV. A dead Man is an unlovely Object to look on for it is Life that puts a Beauty and Glory upon the Body So an unregenerate Man is an unlovely Object 'T is Grace only or that supernatural Principle of spiritual Life that confers Beauty upon the inward Man or renders the Soul amiable in God's sight V. A dead Man is void of all Sense he sees not feels not hears not If you cast Fire in his Face 't is all one to him or if you run a Sword into his Heart he will not complain lay Mountains of Lead upon him he feels them not c. So those who are dead in Sin are sensless Souls Tho the Anger of God is kindled against them and his Wrath burns never so hot they regard it not nay tho you throw as it were Hell-Fire into their very Faces yet they fear it not Tho there are upon them great Mountains of Sin and horrid Guilt yet they feel them not c. VI. A dead Man cannot be raised to Life again without the mighty Power of God So the Dead in Sin cannot be raised to Life without the mighty Power of God's Spirit Christ who raised dead Lazarus out of the Grave must quicken such who are dead in Sins and Trespasses The Ephesians are said to believe according to the Working of God's mighty Power Eph. 1 19 20. which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the Dead VII A dead Man is loathsom and fit for nothing but to be put under Ground or buried out of sight So the Wicked are loathsom in God's sight and unless the sooner quickned they will be good for nothing but to be cast into Hell some wicked Men are fit to be buried or thrown into that Grave Object It is by some objected That there is a wide Difference between Death natural and spiritual In Death natural the Soul it self is utterly removed and taken away from the Body but in Death spiritual it continues a Man is still notwithstanding this spiritual Death endowed with an Understanding Will and Affections by which these Men are enabled to perform their Duties to God Answ 1. In Life spiritual the Soul is unto the Principle of it as the Body is unto the Soul in Life natural Dr. Owen For in Life natural the Soul is the quickning Principle and the Body is the Principle quickned when the Soul departs it leaves the Body with all its own natural Properties but utterly deprived of them which it had by virtue of its Union with the Soul So in Life spiritual the Soul is not in and by its essential Properties the quickning Principle of it but it is the Principle that is quickned and when the quickning Principle of spiritual Life departs it leaves the Soul with all its natural Properties entire as to their Essence tho mortally corrupted which is equivalent with Death natural but of all the Power and Abilities which it had by virtue of its Union with a quickning Principle of spiritual Life it is deprived And to deny there is such a quickning Principle of Life spiritual superadded unto us by the Grace of God distinct and separate from the natural Faculties of the Soul is upon
the matter to renounce the whole Gospel it is all one as to deny that Adam was created in the Image of God which he lost or that Sinners are spiritually dead in Sins and Trespasses and that we are renewed into the Image of God by Jesus Christ 2. Whatsoever the Soul acts in spiritual Things by its Understanding Will Affections c. as deprived of or not quickned by this Principle of spiritual Life it doth it naturally not spiritually c. Disparity A Man naturally dead is altogether uncapable to make any opposition against the supernatural Power of God put forth in order to quicken him or raise him to Life he can no way directly or indirectly oppose it But a Man who is dead spiritually dead in Sin when God in a gracious way comes to use Means to quicken him or raise him to a State of Life he makes opposition nay and doth greatly resist and strive against the good Motions of the Spirit and Workings of God in order to his Vivification So that the Power of God is more manifestly seen in the quickning of one spiritually dead than in quickning one dead naturally Inferences FRom hence we may perceive the evil and destructive Nature of Sin It is spiritually the Death and Ruine of the Soul and will without the infinite Mercy of God destroy it for ever II. It shews also particularly what the Nature of Adam's Sin was and what it did incur upon his Posterity viz. not only natural Death but spiritual Death likewise III. It sets forth the Riches of God's Grace in the second Adam that quickning Spirit in raising poor dead Souls to Life again IV. Here is much Comfort for all sincere Christians who are raised from Death to Life by Christ in that there is so great a difference between the State of Adam in Innocency and our standing in Christ viz. The Principle of Life in Adam was wholly and entirely in himself It was the Effect of God's good Will and Power 't is true but it was left to grow on no other Root but what was in Man himself it was wholly implanted in his Nature and therein did its Spring lie But in the Life whereinto we are renewed by Christ Jesus the Fountain and Principle of it is not in our selves but in him as a common Root of Head He is our Life Because I live ye shall live also He is the Spring and Fountain of it He by Covenant also hath undertook to maintain Life in us he doth renew and encrease this Life in us so that it is impossible that we should spiritually die for ever V. A Man also from hence may easily perceive whether he be made alive or quickned by the Spirit or no. 1. A Man that hath Life in him breaths So he that is spiritually alive breaths forth his Soul in fervent Desires to God Prayer as some have observed being the Breath of the new Creature Hence God when he would convince Ananias that Saul was regenerated said Behold he prayeth 2. There is in him Heat spiritual Heat and Zeal God-ward 3. He hath his spiritual Senses he can see feel hear c. 4. 'T is a full Evidence a Man is alive when he rises up and walks So a spiritual Man rises up and walks in neweness of Life 5. A Man quickned hath his Beauty restored again So a Man spiritually quickned hath the Image of God restored he is holy heavenly c. Wicked Men blind Luk. 6.39 Can the Blind lead the Blind c. Mat. 23.26 Thou blind Pharisee c Rev. 3.17 Miserable poor and blind c. An unconverted Man or Man in his natural State is blind Parallels SOme Men are born blind All Mankind spiritually may be said to be born blind for as they are under a Privation of Life it follows they are blind that is their Understanding is darkned II. Some Men are blind casually either by Age or some Accident Adam before his Fall could see originally Man's Eye-sight was good but Sin hath put his Eyes out III. Blind Men have not the comfortable Benefit of the Sun So wicked Men receive not the heavenly and sweet Benefit of the Sun of Righteousness Tho the Sun shines never so bright a blind Man is never the better for it unless his Eyes were opened So tho the Gospel be preached never so powerfully yet wicked Men see not nor can they till the Eyes of their Understanding are enlightned IV. Blind Men stumble and know not many times at what they stumble they also are in great Danger without a sure Guide So wicked Men know not what they stumble at they stumble at God himself and at Christ when they stumble at his Truth and his People They know not whither they go nor the dreadful Danger they are in they think they are in the right Way to Heaven and yet are in the broad Way to Hell they are led oft-times by those who are as blind as themselves And if the Blind lead the Blind they will both fall into the Ditch V. Some Mens natural Blindness hath been by the just Judgment of God upon them for their Sin So God in a way of Judgment blinds the Eyes of some Men after common Illuminations Job 12.40 Isa 44.18 Rom. 11.8 He is said to blind their Eyes and harden their Hearts that is he denies them his Grace and withdraws those common Influences of it from them suffering Satan to take full Power of them leaving them to their own Hearts Lusts and so consequently to final Impenitency Disparity MEn who are naturally blind would gladly see they lament nothing more than the Loss of their Eye-sight But wicked Men are willingly blind they love Darkness rather than Light and refuse the Means God is pleased to afford them in order to the opening their Eyes II. Men who are naturally blind do gladly accept of a faithful and sure Guide But wicked Men who are spiritually blind refuse that Guide God directs them to viz. his holy Word they are neither thankful to God nor good Men for any Help afforded them nay they vilify such as would take them by the hand to save them out of the Pit of eternal Misery There is no Blindness like spiritual Blindness Call upon wicked Men and entreat them never so often and earnestly Pray do not go that Way take heed Man O take heed there is a Pit before you alas you are going into the Lion's Den nay worse into everlasting Fire to Death and Hell Yet these blind Wretches will go on live or die sink or swim all is one no Advice or Warning will be received Wicked Men compared to Mad Men. Eccles 9.3 Yea also the Heart of the Sons of Men is full of Evil and and Madness is in their Hearts whilst they live c. Luke 15.17 When he came to himself he said How many hired Servants of my Father have Bread enough and to spare c. WIcked Men are set forth in the
love to hear of him and often from him 9. They highly value every special Token of his Love 10. They rejoice in his Presence 11. They grieve and mourn at his Absence 12. If they have grieved him cannot rest till they see his reconciled Face again 13. They love his Image wherever they see it love all the Godly the poorest Saint as well as the richest 14. They love to be like him in Grace here as well as in Glory hereafter 15. They are troubled when he is dishonoured 16. They are greatly concerned for his Name Kingdom and Interest in the World 17. They often visit him in Closet-Duties 18. Take great care to please him 19. Will suffer for his sake when called to it 20. Long for his Appearance Baptism a Burial ROM 6.4 and COL 2.12 Expounded and Practically Improved Rom. 6.4 Know ye not that so many of us as were baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into Jesus Christ that is into the Profession of his Faith Confession of his Name and Communion with his Church were baptized into his Death Col. 2.12 Buried with him in Baptism wherein ye are also risen with him c. FOr the opening of this Metaphorical Text we will shew 1. The Literal Signification of the Word Baptism 2. The Metaphorical Signification thereof 3. What Burying literally and tropically is 4. Give a symbolical Parallel between Baptism and a Burial 5. Produce some Inferences from the Whole In shewing the Signification of the Word Baptism we will with all Impartiality give the Judgment of the Learned The Word is Greek and we are to seek its meaning from the Learned in that Tongue of whose Writings we have carefully examined the most noted some of which are Scapula and Stephanus Pasor Minshew and Liegh's Critica sacra Grotius Vossius Causabon Selden Mr. Daniel Rogers Mede Chamier Dr. Taylor Dr. Hammond Dr. Cave Hesychius Budaeus Beza Erasmus Buchanan Luther Illyricus Zanchy Glassius c. who with all the Learned of any note that are impartial agree with one Voice That the primary proper and literal Signification of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baptiso is M●rgo immergo submergo obruo item tingo quod fit immergendo that is to drown immerge plunge under overwhelm as also to dip which is done by plunging And 't is certain the Ancients so understod it as appears by their constant Practice of dipping such as were baptized as Tertullian says of his Trine-Immersion Ter mergitamur that is thrice are we dipp'd And that the Change of the Rite to Aspersion or Sprinkling was invented to accommodate the tender Bodies of Infants in these Northern Parts when the Practice of baptizing them prevailed is ingenuously confessed by Vossius and most of the Learned In a less proper or remote sence because things that are washed are dipped in or covered all over with Water it is put for Washing Luk. 11.38 Heb. 9.10 Mark 7.4 And we dare modestly assert That no Greek Author of any Credit whether Heathen or Christian has ever put Baptizing for Sprinkling or used those Words promiscuously The Greeks have a peculiar Word to express Sprinkling viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which they use when they have occasion as might be abundantly shewn if needful From this proper Signification arise some Metaphorical Notations As 1. From the Signification of Drowning they are the Words of * A notione quae merge●e significat profluxit ea quae pro affligere usurpatur quia qui affliguntur calamitatum gurgite quasi mergantur Vossius in Thes Theol. it is put for Affliction because they that are afflicted are as it were drowned in the Gulph of Calamities Mat. 20.22 Mark 10.38 Luke 12.50 Baptismus non significat Afflictionem quamlibet sed vehementem forinsecus irruentem ut sunt in Scripturis undae persecutionum tribulationum quibus qui merguntur abruuntur baptizari videantur Estius ad 1 Cor. 15 2● That is Baptism denotes not every light Affliction but that which is vehement and overwhelming As there are Waves of Persecutions and Tribulations mentioned in Scripture so such as are drowned and overwhelmed by them may seem to be baptized Mat. 20.22 23. Mark 10.38 39. Luk. 12.50 The Reason of the Metaphor is taken from many and deep Waters to which Calamities are compared Psal 18.16 He drew me out of great Waters Psal 32.6 Psal 69.1 2 c. 2. It is put for the miraculous Effusion of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles and other Believers in the Primitive Church because of the Analogical Immersion or Dipping for so as we have proved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies For the House where the Holy-Spirit came upon the Apostles was so filled that they were as it were drowned in it Or the Reason of the Metaphor may be from the great Plenty and Abundance of those Gifts in which they were wholly as it were immerged as the Baptized are dipped under Water Acts 2.3 Mat. 3.11 Mark 1.8 Luke 3.16 John 1.33 Acts 1.5 11.16 When Fire is added it is a Symbol of external Manifestation 3. It is put for the miraculous Passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea 1 Cor. 10.2 which was a Type of Gospel-Baptism These Reasons of the Metaphor are evident and convincing Demonstrations that the Signification of Baptism is to dip or plunge for Sprinkling can bear no Analogy with them The Word is expressed in the Old Testament by the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tabal which the Septuagint or the Seventy Learned Interpreters render by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baptiso to dip as these Texts shew Gen. 37.31 Exod. 12.22 Lev. 4.6 17.14 6.51 9.9 Deut. 33.24 Numb 16.18 2 Kings 5.14 c. Hence also the Baptized are said to be dead and buried in allusion to the putting of dead Men into the Earth and covering them therewith to which we proceed What Burial in a natural sence is every Man knows and in our Text it is a Metaphor the Symbolical Analogy of which with Baptism follows in the Parallel Metaphor Parallel WHen one is buried it imports him to be dead for none but such ought to be buried WHen one is baptized he ought to be dead to Sin that is converted by the Power of God's Word to Gospel-Truth which always makes the Soul loath and detest Sin and then that Soul may be said indeed to be dead to Sin This may be evidenced by this Consideration That Baptism is an illustrious Symbol of the Death of Christ our Saviour who died for us I am he that was dead and am alive behold I live for evermore The true Administration of this Sacrament visibly figures it to us and to that end it was instituted viz. to confirm that great and glorious Truth of his being really a Man and so cabable of suffering or passing through the Death of the Cross Rom. 6.3 4 5. into which Death we are baptized and then being dead to Sin and to this World we are to
the Judgment of some Divines notes God's chusing or taking Christ from among Men to be a Sacrifice for our Sins II. Christ blessed the Bread He took the Bread and gave thanks II. Christ sanctified himself he was set apart to that glorious Work and Office he came to do III. Christ brake the Bread Corn we know is bruised or ground in a Mill that so it may become meet Bread for our Bodies III. Christ was bruised or pierced for our Sins he was broken as it were in the Mill of God's Wrath which was due to us for our Sins that he might become meet Food for our Souls Isa 53. It pleased the Father to bruise him IV. Christ gave the Bread to his Disciples He took Bread and blessed it and brake it and gave it to his Disciples IV. Signifying not only his giving himself for us but his giving himself freely with all his Benefits to us V. The Disciples took the Bread Note by the way 'T is called Bread when Christ took it 't is called Bread after he blessed it and it was Bread the Disciples took V. Which holds forth our taking or accepting of Christ the Bread of Life as the only Food of our Souls VI. The Disciples eat the Bread Bread will do us no good unless it be taken and eaten VI. Unless we receive Christ by a lively Faith and feed upon him that is fetch all our Comforts from him relying wholly by Faith upon him he will avail us nothing to eternal Life Joh. 6.53 Vnless ye eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink his Blood ye have no Life in you VII Bread is the Stay and Staff of Man's natural Life I 'le break the Staff of Bread Ezek. 4.16 It is that which preserves the Life of the Body VII Christ is the Stay or Staff of the Life of our Souls When Christ Col. 3 3. who is our Life shall appear c. Christ preserveth the Life of our inward Man Because I live ye shall live also VIII Bread is the best of earthly Blessings Isa 55.1 2 hence in Scripture it is sometimes put for all good things VIII Christ is the best and chiefest Blessing that ever God gave to his People he comprehends all other Good He that hath Christ hath every thing 2 Cor. 3.22 All things are yours why so because they had an Interest in Christ Christ was theirs Cant. 5.10 Hence he is called the chiefest among ten thousand IX Bread is of a satisfying Nature hence God saith He will satisfy his Poor with Bread IX Christ received by Faith most sweetly fills and satisfies the Soul of a Believer Joh. 4.14 He that eateth of the Bread of Life and drinketh of the Water of Life shall hunger or thirst no more Such have what they desire X. Bread is made of Seed or Corn which before it riseth or becomes fruitful or yields encrease it is sowed Joh. 12.24 and dies Verily verily I say unto you Except a Corn of Wheat fall to the Ground and die it abideth alone but if it die it bringeth forth much Fruit. X. The Lord Jesus like a Seed of Corn was sown did die that so he might not remain alone in the perfect enjoyment of himself but for great encrease viz. to raise up with him all his Elect he was content when his Hour was come to yield himself up to Death He died and rose again and thereby bringeth forth much Fruit. All that ever were or shall be quickned and raised out of a State of Death by Sin were and shall be quickned by the Death and Resurrection of Christ Such hath been the Fruit of the preaching of Christ crucified that Multitudes of Sinners thereby through the Spirit have been converted to God whence also hath sprung forth a Seed to serve him whom he hath accounted to the Lord for a Generation of all which he will not suffer one Grain to be lost but will raise it up at the last Day A Parallel much like this might be run in respect of the Cup or Spirit of the Wine See Wine Inferences THe Apostle saith That what he received of the Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 11.23 24 25. he delivered to the Saints How the Lord Jesus the same Night in which he was betrayed took Bread and blessed it c. And in like manner took the Cup when he had supped c. From whence we infer That whatsoever we do in the Worship of God we must see we have a Command from God to warrant our Practice and also exactly to do it according to the Pattern he hath left us or Directions he hath given us we must not add to nor diminish from nor alter any thing of the Words of the Institution if we do God will not hold us guiltless II. This rebukes the Papists who deny the People the holy Cup of our Lord and give the Sacrament or holy Ordinance only in one kind when that nothing is more clear than that Jesus Christ gave his Disciples the Cup as well as the Bread Quest Why did Christ institute this holy Ordinance and give it to his Disciples the very Night in which he was betrayed Answ 1. To strengthen their Faith in an Hour of Temptation that was just at the Door and ready to come upon them When is a Cordial more necessary than when the Patient is ready to faint and his Spirits fail Christ saw what a sad Qualm was coming upon his poor Saints and therefore gives them this Soul-reviving Cordial to bear up their Spirits 2. Because the last Words of a dying Friend are mostly kept in mind or Tokens of Love given by him are chiefly born in remembrance Quest Who ought to partake of the holy Eucharist Answ 1. None but such who are true Converts or who sincerely believe in the Lord Jesus Christ for this is an outward Sign of an inward Grace received Those who have not spiritually received Christ by Faith ought not to come to the holy Supper of the Lord. 2. It appertaineth to none but such Converts as are baptized Acts 2.40 41 42. Those that received the Word were baptized and They continued in the Apostles Doctrine and Fellowship in breaking of Bread and Prayer We read of none that received the Lord's Supper but baptized Persons 3. Such who are fallen into any gross and scandalous Evil and under the Suspension or Sentence of the Church ought not to partake of the holy Supper of the Lord until they have repented and given satisfaction to the Church and are received again into Fellowship 4. Those who cannot discern the Body of the Lord broken so as to look unto and behold Jesus Christ crucified for them but eat it as common Bread ought not to come to this Ordinance such amongst others if they come are unworthy Receivers Quest What is required of Persons who come to partake of this holy Ordinance Answ They ought to examine themselves it requires
c. Zech. 4.7 Who art thou O great Mountain c. Parallels MOuntains are high and lifted up and seem to have the Preheminence So the wicked Princes and Potentates of the Earth are high in Power and seem to be lifted up in Pride and Arrogancy and to have Preheminence over the Righteous II. Mountains are hard to be removed out of their Places So the Wicked having taken such Root in Sin c. 't is very hard and difficult to remove them and make them become plain Luk. 3 4. This was 't is true one great Design of the Ministry of John Baptist Every Valley shall be filled and every Mountain and Hill shall be brought low c. But this Work is not done upon the Spirits of wicked Men but by the mighty Power of God III. Mountains and Hills are commonly barren and unprofitable Ground So the Wicked who are lifted up in Pride and Arrogancy c. are spiritually a barren useless and unprofitable Sort of Men. IV. Mountains were accounted Places of Defence whither Men used to flie in time of Danger tho many times they failed them So Men oftentimes flie to the lofty Enemies of God the oppressing tyrannical Powers of the Earth to secure themselves from approaching Dangers but in vain alas is Salvation looked for from these Mountains and Hills in the Day of God's Anger Inferences IN this Saints have cause to rejoice God hath promised to throw down all the Hills and Mountains of the Earth that are lifted up Who art thou O great Mountain Zech. 4 7. Before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a Plain Wicked Men compared to the Troubled Sea Isa 57.20 But the Wicked are like the troubled Sea c. Jer. 51.4 The Sea is come up upon Babylon with the Multitude of the Waves thereof Caldee the King with his numerous Hosts in Plenty like the Sea is come up against Babylon c. Note The Wicked are compared to the Troubled Sea and to many Waters c. Parallels THe Sea is a great Convention as one words it or a Multitude of Waters The gathering together of the Waters called he Seas Gen. 1. So the Wicked are a Multitude of People II. The Sea sometimes swells roars and rises very high threatning the Earth as if it would swallow it up immediatly So the mighty Concourse of the wicked and tyrannical Powers of the Earth many times swell in Pride and Arrogancy and make a fearful Noise as if they would in a moment swallow up the Lord's People III. The Sea hath its Bounds set by the Almighty He hath shut up the Sea with Doors Job 38.8 11. c. and hath said Hitherto shalt thou come and no further and here shall thy proud Waves be stayed So the Lord sets Bounds to the Wrath and Rage of the Ungodly no Creatures can go further than God permits them As he that made the Sea can master it so he can soon put a Stop and Curb to the proudest Oppressor and Persecutor in the World Let Men be as angry as they will let them be as stormy as the boisterous Seas yet the Lord hath said Hitherto shall ye come and no further Psal 65.7 He stilleth the Noise of the Seas the Noise of the Waves and the Tumult of the People Nay the Devil himself is like a Sea shut up he cannot do what he would he hath Bounds set him c. IV. The Sea at God's command is still The Wind and Seas oby him So with one Word speaking as it were he can quiet the Wicked and make them silent in Darkness Psal 107.29 He can make this Sea and frightful Storm a Calm and cause the proud Waves to be still V. The Sea produces or brings forth many strange Monsters So the Multitude of the Wicked this metaphorical Sea hath brought forth many a vile and strange Monster See Dan. 7.3 And four great Beasts came up from the Sea diverse one from the other the first was like a Lion and had Eagles Wings c. These four Beasts signified the four Monarchies of the Earth what a Monster the fourth hath been all the World hath had full Experience of that had great Iron Teeth c. What Devils incarnate were many of the Roman Emperors particularly Nero who ripp'd up the Belly of his own Mother c. And what a Monster hath the little Horn been I mean the Papal Power what a mighty Mass of innocent Blood hath the Beast and Whore devoured c. VI. The Sea is very restless it ebbs and flows and seems to be continually troubled So the Ungodly are always restless in their Spirtis like wicked Haman they never cease Plotting against the Just Tho they have very great Power Riches and Honour yet because God's Mordecai's will not bow down their Souls for them to go over all seems as nothing to them they have Riches much Gold and Silver but not satisfied they enjoy all the Delights and Pleasures the World can afford them but yet are like the troubled Sea Many times also their Consciences sorely disquiet them What Rest soever they may have yet certainly they are continually void of the true Peace of God and in this Sence there is no Peace to the Wicked c. Isa 57.21 VII The Sea continually casteth forth Mire and Dirt So the Ungodly never cease casting forth their abominable Wickedness Inferences LEt not the Saints fear the Ungodly What tho they swell and roar God hath set Bounds to them The Wrath of Man shall praise thee Psal 76.10 and the Remainder of Wrath shalt thou restrain No more Wrath of Man shall be let out no higher shall these Seas swell than shall tend to the Glory of God the Over-plus that Wrath that would indeed prove hurtful to the Godly and to the dishonour of the Almighty the Lord will restrain II. Pray hard that God would keep the Doors and Bars of these troublesom Seas fast and prevent the Danger I will yet for this be enquired of by the House of Israel Ezek. 36.37 to do it for them 1. Pray that God will keep the Sea of Man's Wrath within its limited Bounds 2. Pray that God would not suffer Satan to break forth too furiously upon us If God did not set Bounds to him no Man could live quiet one hour 3. Pray that God would set Bounds to the Sea of Prophaneness 4. And also that he would set Bounds and drive back the Sea of Error and false Doctrine c. III. This shews the woful Condition of ungodly Men They have no Peace true Peace whilst they live and be sure shall have none at Death Peace is the Portion only of the Lord's People Great Peace have all they that love thy Law c. My Peace I give unto you Wicked Men dead in Sin John 5.25 The Hour is coming and now is when the Dead shall hear the Voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Eph.
no place free Sin is a Disease that afflicts every part Isa 5. the whole Head is sick and the whole Heart faint IV. The Distemper which we call the Sickness or Pestilence is very mortal and sweeps away thousands Sin is such a Sickness no Pestilence like it Sin is the Plague of Plagues That which is most opposite to God is the greatest Evil but Sin is most opposite and contrary to God and therefore the greatest Evil. That which separates Man from and deprives him of the greatest Good must needs be the greatest Evil or the Plague of Plagues but Sin doth this therefore the greatest Evil. That which is the greatest Judgment to be left unto is the worst of Evils but 't is the greatest Judgment in the World to be left or given up to the Lusts of our own Hearts Ergo c. When God designs to bring his severest Wrath upon a People or a particular Soul when he resolves to afflict them to the uttermost he doth not say I will bring Plague or Sickness or Famine upon them but I will deliver them up to their Sins Israel would have none of me c. and what then Psal 81.11 Rom. 1.26 ●8 So I gave them up to their own Hearts Lusts c. Thus he gave up the Gentiles to vile Affections That Sickness Plague or Pestilence that destroys most that kills Millions which is so infectious that none amongst Thousands nay Millions of Thousands can escape is the Plague of Plagues but such a Sickness is Sin More shall be damned than shall be saved nay but few comparatively enter in at the strait Gate and so find Life Now all that are damned are damned or destroyed by Sin and therefore it is the worst of Evils That which kills or destroys Body and Soul too is the Plague of Plagues but Sin destroys Body and Soul too Ergo Sin is the Plague of Plagues V. Many of those who have the Disease we call the Sickness have Spots upon them which are of two sorts one of which are called the Tokens and when they appear they look upon themselves as dead Men So Sin this spiritual Plague and Sickness of the Soul Deut. 31.4 marks some Men out for eternal Death Their Spot saith the Lord is not the Spot of my Children that is their Sin is not a Sin of Infirmity such as appear upon the Children of God Any Spot is bad but some are worse very bad they are deadly Spots they have the Tokens of Death and Wrath upon them 1. The Sin or Spot of a godly Man is rather a Scar or Wound that is healed or almost healed But Sin in some of the Ungodly is like a rotten putrifying Sore in the Flesh 2. The Spots of the Godly are not so contagious or infectious as the Sins or Spots of the Wicked The Sins of the Ungodly make their very Persons and Prayers loathed and hateful in God's sight now God tho he hates the Sins of his own Children Psal 109.7 yet he loves their Persons 3. Sin in a Saint is his Sorrow 't is that which he hates it wounds and grieves his Soul Rom. 7.3 he is sick of his Sin but the Wicked love their Sin Sin is in a godly Man's Conversation and that is his Trouble but Sin is in a wicked Man's Affection which renders it to be a deadly Spot 4. Sin reigns and predominates in the Hearts of the Wicked But Sin tho it may sometimes tyrannize in a Saint yet he obeys it not he is not the Subject or Servant of Sin The one yields and subjects to Sin the other opposes and resists it every Faculty of his Soul is set against it and not only so but against every Sin VI. Sickness brings oft-times utter Weakness upon the Body So Sin brings Weakness upon the Soul I am feeble c. It makes a Christian very faint See Leprosy VII Some Sickness is very grievous to be born So Sin is grievous to a true Christian who is made sensible of it VIII A Man that finds himself very sick and like to die will soon look out for Help or send to a Physician So the Soul that is sin-sick will seek for Help viz. hasten to Jesus Christ for none else can cure the Sickness of the Soul Inferences ARt thou sick and ready to die and insensible of any Illness doth nothing ail thee This is sad II. Art thou sick and greatly afflicted is thy Soul weary of its Groanings Haste to the Physician go to Christ 1. The more sick the more need of Physick the greater Sinner thou art the more need of a Saviour thou hast 2. The longer thou delayest the more hard and difficult will thy Cure be besides the Danger thou runnest Death may be at thy Door 3. Consider you must have a Cure and be freed from this Sickness this Stone in the Heart this Unbelief or what-ever else the Disease be or else be damned 4. Christ came from Heaven on purpose to be thy Physician He came not to call the Righteous but Sinners to Repentance 5. Soul let me tell thee as it was once said to blind Bartimeus Be of good cheer Mat. 11.28 29. Christ calls thee Come to me all ye that are weary c. Luke 10.30 6. Thou mayest have Physick and Cure very cheap Tho thou hast no Money Christ will do all freely if thou wilt cast thy self upon him 7. Christ is able to cure all Diseases Tho thou art never so sick he is able to make thee whole Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God by him 8. Christ is willing as well as able See Mat. 8.2 Mark 1.41 9. Christ can do the Work when all other Means fail Mark 5.26 when Purposes fail good Desires fail Prayers fail and good Works and Moral Righteousness fails c. 10. Christ is such a Physician that rather than thou shouldest go without Cure he hath shed his own Blood to make thee whole and free thee from thy Sickness 11. If Christ undertakes the Cure he will never leave thee till he hath perfectly restored thee to Health again But remember there is no Cure but by his precious Blood He died that we might live Canst thou be sick and such a Doctor by Thou canst not live unless thy Doctor die Strange kind of Grief that finds no Med'cine good T' asswage the Pain but the Physician 's Blood Fr. Quarles Sin compared to Vomit Jer. 48.26 Moab also shall wallow in his own Vomit c. 2 Pet. 2.22 The Dog is turned to his Vomit again c. A Wicked Man or one who turns to his old evil and wicked Courses is compared to a Dog and Sin to Vomit which a Dog licketh up Parallels A Vomit is a very loathsom Thing but a Dog's Vomit is most detestable So Sin is a very loathsom Thing but Apostacy is the worst of Sins no Sin is more abominable in God's
us also endeavour to improve the Opportunity of Time I mean those gracious Advantages God is pleased to afford us for the everlasting Good and Well being of our Souls when Time and Days shall be no more Men of the World take great Care to improve all Opportunities to enrich themselves or increase their outward Substance They will not lose their Market-time nor Change-time nor Fair-time They will be sure to come early enough and every Way to bestir themselves with Wisdom and Diligence And shall not we be as wise and as diligent for the enriching our Souls Shall we slight Seasons Sabbaths Sermons Convictions c. Let all remember now is the accepted Time 2 Cor. 6.2 Now is the Day of Salvation now whilest it is called to Day or never Now Sinners may get an Interest in Christ Union with God the Gifts and Graces of the Spirit Now they may obtain Pardon of Sin and Peace of Conscience Now there is a Prize put into their Hands they may be made for ever if they look wisely about them Now they may be made Heirs of God Heirs of a Kingdom Heirs of a Crown of a Crown of Life of a Crown of Glory of a Crown that fadeth not away But if they lose the present Opportunity they may never have the like again Time is but in a very short Space it may be said Time was nay Time is past Will it not be sad to hear God tell thee and Conscience tell thee on thy Death-bed Now Time is past 't is too late now these Things shall be denied you now you must perish for ever and be damned in your Sins Of Death The Body of Man in the Grave compared to Seed that is sown 1 Cor. 15.36 Thou Fool that which thou sowest is not quickned except it die THE Apostle compares the Body of Man that is laid in the Grave to Seed that is sown Parallels SEed that is sown lies some considerable Time in the Earth before it rises or springs up So the Bodies of Men lie some Time in the Grave before the Resurrection tho some lie much longer than others as such who lived in Adam's Noah's and Abraham's Days yet generally all lie and shall lie some Time in the Grave before they rise again II. Seed that it may not abide alone is first sown and dies and then it rises again Verily Joh. 12.24 verily I say unto you except a Corn of Wheat fall to the Ground and die it abideth alone but if it die it bringeth forth much Fruit. So the Body of Man must die or be changed or it can never arise nor be made glorious to bring forth the eternal Fruit of Praise to God As Seed loses nothing by being sown So the Bodies of the Saints shall lose nothing by Death Death I mean vvill be no vvays to their Disadvantage but contrarivvise to their great Benefit III. The Body of the same Seed or Corn of Wheat that is sovvn rises again Every Seed hath its own Body 1 Cor. 15.38 So the same numerical Body that is laid in the Grave shall rise again If it vvas not thus the Dead rise not he that denies this denies the Resurrection of the Dead And tho after my Skin Worms destroy this Body Job 19.26 27. yet in my Flesh shall I see God whom I shall see for my self and mine Eyes shall behold and not another tho my Reins be consumed within me Death compared to a Sleep Dan. 12.2 And many of them that sleep in the Dust of the Earth shall awake 1 Thess 4.14 Even so them also that sleep in Jesus will God bring with him DEath is often called a Sleep in the holy Scripture Sleep is a Figure or Image of Death a fit Resemblance of Death as vvill appear by the follovving Parallels Parallels SLeep is Rest or gives Rest to the Body So Death is or doth give Rest to the Body And hence Job Job 3.13 saith speaking of Death I should have lien still and been quiet I should have slept then had I been at Rest We usually say vvhen a Man goes to sleep he goes to rest There is a fourfold Rest vvhich vve obtain in Death 1. From Labour and Travel no vvork there 2. There is a Rest from Trouble and Oppression There the Wicked cease from troubling Job 3.17 and the Weary be at rest 3. There is a Rest from Passion and Sorrovv no Grief shall afflict us there 4. Which is better than all there is a Rest from Sin a Rest from the Temptations and Drudgery of Satan a Rest from the Lavv in our Members II. In Sleep the vvhole Body resteth but many Times the Spirits of some Men are troubled tho the outvvard Man is at rest yet the invvard Man is sorely disturbed vvhereas the Bodies and Spirits too of others are at rest and quiet So in the Death of the Wicked tho their Bodies be at rest yet their Souls are tormented 'T is the Opinion of some Men that the Soul sleeps vvith the Body and is vvholly senseless of Joy or Mysery until the Resurrection But that doubtless is a great Errour For tho it be granted that many Operations of the Soul do cease when it departs from the Body yet the Soul sleeps not There are some Acts of the Soul which are organical and there are other Acts which are inorganical or immaterial The Organical Acts that is whatsoever the Soul acts by the Members of the Body those Acts must needs cease at Death but the Soul can act of it self without the Assistance of the Body Caryl as we may collect by many Experiments while our Bodies and Souls are joined together How often do we find our Souls at work when our Bodies lie still and do nothing When Sleep binds up all our Senses and shuts up the Windows of the Body close that we can neither hear nor see yet then the Soul frames to it self and beholds a thousand various Shapes and hears all Sorts of Sounds and Voices the Soul then sees and hears and deviseth discourseth grieves rejoices hopes fears chuseth and refuseth all this the Soul doth in Dreams and Visions of the Night when deep sleep falls upon Man What Meditations have some good Men had in their Sleep they have had Scriptures wonderfully opened to them and have been grieved when they waked to find the Matter gone from them God seals up Instruction sometimes to his People in their Sleep Also in Ecstasies and Ravishments the Body is as it were laid by as useless and uninstrumental to the Soul I knew a Man in Christ fourteen Years ago so the Apostle saith whether in the Body I cannot tell 2 Cor. 12.2 3. or out of the Body I cannot tell God knoweth c. Now if the Soul was not capable of a Separation from the Body and in that separated State capable of such divine Ravishments Paul might easily have resolved the Case and said he was taken up
the Holiest of all viz. Heaven it self Heb. 9.23 before the Throne of Mercy pleading for us Levit. 16.16 IV. The Priest was to make an Atonement for the Holy-Place because of the Uncleanness of the Children of Israel And so he shall do saith the Text for the Tabernacle of the Congregation c. This shewed the horrible Nature of Sin For tho the People never came into the Holy-P●ace much less into the Most Holy Place yet such was the Power of their Iniquities that the holy Altar Ark and Sanctuary it self was defiled in the Sight of God and could not be cleansed without Blood So our Sins do defile God's Church and his most holy Ordinances therein performed so that neither we nor any of our best Services can meet with acceptance but by the means of Christ's Blood and Merits V. No Man was to be in the Tabernacle when the High-Priest went in to make Atonement only the High-Priest himself c. plainly signifying that Jesus Christ our High-Priest hath no Partner with him in working our Salvation He his own self bare our Sins in his Body on the Tree 1 Pet. 2.24 c. VI. The Altar of Incense was sprinkled with the Blood of the kill'd Goat shadowing that Christ through the shedding of his own Blood should be consecrated our Intercessor and by the Means and Merits thereof our Prayers should be accepted Heb. 8.6 VII The High-Priest was to cast off his glorious Garments when he made this Atonement Verse 4. Phil. 2. signifying that Christ should be abased and lay aside as it were his glorious Robes or va●l his Deity and appear in the Form of a Servant that so he might finish the Work of our Redemption VIII The Day of Atonement shall saith the Text be a Sabbath for ever shadowing thereby that through the Atonement and Expiation of Christ he hath obtained everlasting Rest for us and that in his Death all typical Sacrifices should end IX Once only in a Year this Atonement was made to shew that not often but once for ever without repetition Christ should make a perfect Atonement for us by his own Blood Heb. 9.24 and thereby enter into the highest Heavens to appear in the presence of God for us The Scape-Goat a Type of Christ Levit. 10.20 c. THe Scape-Goat called in Hebrew Azazel that is the Goat gone away c. was so called because he escaped alive representing Christ Jesus alive in his Divine Nature tho put to death in his Humane Nature or alive after he rose again from the Dead II. He was presented alive that by him Reconciliation might be made and this after the other Goat was sacrificed signifying acccording to the Learned two Things 1. The Resurrection of Christ 2. Our rising with him from the Death of Sin to a Life of Grace by the operation of the Spirit c. III. Aaron shall put or lay both his Hands upon the Head of the live-Goat and confess over him all the Iniquities of the Children of Israel Levit. 16.21 c. and he shall bear them c. Figuring thereby how Christ should bear all our Sins viz. the Punishment due to them The Lord hath laid on him the Iniquities of us all Isa 53. IV. And so the He-Goat was sent into the Wilderness or Land not inhabited which the Greek calleth Abaton wayless or inaccessible figuring the utter abolishing of our Sins by Jesus Christ both from the Face of God that so they may not appear before him against us to condemn us or be imputed or charged upon us nor have any Dominion or Power over us They were to confess upon the Head of the Goat all their Iniquities signifying if we would have our Sins c●rried away and for ever to be forgot we must confess them c. By this saith Ainsworth it appeareth that as the killed Goat figured Christ killed or put to death for our Sins so this living Goat figured him also who bore our Griefs Isa 53.4 5 6. and carried our Sorrows c. And because Christ was not only to die for our Offences but also to rise again for our Justification and because these two Things could not fitly be shadowed by one Beast which the Priest having killed could not make alive again therefore God appointed two that in the slain Beast Christ's Death and in the live Beast his Life and Victory might be shadowed See the like Mystery in the two Birds for the cleansing the Leper The Sacrifice of the Red Heifer Numb 19. a Type of Christ THe Colour of this Beast was red As other Sacrifices of Beasts prefigured Christ so this saith Ainsworth in special figured him Red signified his human Nature and Participation of our Afflictions and the Bloodiness of his Agony and grievous Passion II. She must be without blemish and upon whom never Yoak came This signified the perfect Holiness of Christ who never bore the Yoak of Sinfulness nor was subject to the Laws or Precep●s of Man III. The Heifer was burned without the Host and her Blood sprinkled seven times before the Tabernacle of the Congregation which signified Christ's Suffering without the Gates of Jerusalem Heb. 13.11 12. Circumcision what it was a Type of CIrcumcision was the cutting off the Foreskin of the Flesh signifying the cutting off the Lusts of the Heart and Life or parting with the Corruption of Nature Col. 2.11 which rebells against the Spirit II. Circumcision puts the Body to pain Gen. 43.25 So those who come under the Circumcision of the Heart are sensible of much spiritual Pain upon the account of Sin III. As that Part cut off was never set to the Body again but was taken quite away So in this spiritual Circumcision Sin must not be parted with for a time only but must be cast off for ever IV. The Circumcised Person was admitted into the Church and Family of God So he that is spiritually circumcised becomes a fit Person for Baptism and so to be admitted into the Church of God V. Such who were not circumcised were not to be admitted to the Privileges of the Church and outward Worship of God So the Uncircumcised in Heart and Life ought not to be admitted unto the spiritual Privileges of the Gospel and Communion of the Saints VI. The uncircumcised Person was looked upon by God's People as an hateful Person see with what contempt David beheld Goliah upon this account 1 Sam. 17. This uncircumcised Philistine c. So those who are not circumcised in Heart are hateful to God VII Circumcision was a Sign of the Righteousness of Faith So the spiritual Circumcision of the Heart i. e. putting away the Body of Sin c. is a Sign of the Truth of Grace and of an Interest in the Righteousness of Christ Jesus The Rock which was smitten out of which came Water Exod. 17. was a Type of Christ 1 Cor. 10.4 And that Rock was Christ viz. a
like this or that Thing we are not to understand that it is so in all its Parts or in every Respect but only in such Things as are declared in the Similitude So Christ is compared to a Thief only in this respect because he comes in a Time when unlook'd for or when unexpected Luk. 12.39 9. All Parables do not conclude in the same but in a different Manner Some from Likeness a simili as the seven Parables Mat. 13. Some from Things unlike as that of the unjust Judge Him that desired three Loaves and the unjust Steward c. FINIS AN Alphabetical Table OF THE FOURTH BOOK A. Afflictions AFflictions compared to Fire in five respects Page 378 When Afflictions may be said to be very grievous Page 388 389 The Nature Kind and Cause of Afflictions largely opened Page 377 to 390 Ambassadors Ministers of Christ are his Ambassadors Page 282 Angels Angels why so called Page 49 They are compared to Watchers the Reason why shewed in five Things Page 50 Their Work and Office Page 50 51 52 Why they are called God's Host opened Page 53 54 Why they are compared to the Face of a Man c. opened Page 57 Why to a Flame of Fire opened Page 62 Why compared to Horses white red c. Page 63 64 Anchor Hope a sure Anchor shewed at large in eleven Particulars Page 26 27 28 Arrows Afflictions God's Arrows Page 389 What more particularly are God's Arrows Page 390 B. Babylon THe Church of Rome proved to be Mystery Babylon Page 297 First Negatively 1. By Whore of Babylon is not meant Jerusalem 2. Not the Turkish Empire 3. Not Rome Heathen 4. Not Protestants of any Denomination Page 300 to 303 Secondly In the Affirmative That by the Whore or Mystery Babylon is meant the present State and Church of Rome clearly evinced Page 322 to 326 Baptism Baptism how taken Page 36 37 Called a Burial Page 35 Babes Saints called Babes wherefore shewed in eighteen Particulars Page 140 141 Blind Wicked Men blind shewed in five Partic. Page 230 Bitter How a Saint may be sustained under bitter Afflictions Page 389 Breast-plate Why Righteousness is so called Page 10 11 Builders Why Ministers of the Gospel are called Builders opened in ten Particulars Page 277 278 Bulls Wicked Men why called Bulls Page 235 236 Burthen Sin a Burthen shewed in three things What a Burthen Sin is opened Page 344 The least Sin a Burthen to a tender Heart Page 344 Bush The Church compared to a Bush on Fire shewed in six things Page 106 107 108 C. Captives Wicked Men Captives with the Nature of their Captive-State opened Page 201 to 204 Clouds Christ 's Ministers why compared to Clouds Page 269 False Teachers compared to Clouds without Rain Page 294 Captain What kind of Captain Christ is shewed Page 158 Cedars Saints compared to Cedars opened in five Particulars Page 181 182 Children Saints called Children of God opened Page 142 143 Conscience What Conscience is opened Page 69 Conscience a Witness shewed in ten Particulars Page 70 71 72 The Excellency of a good Conscience Page 73 How a good Conscience may be known Page 74 City of God The Church called the City of God shewed in twenty Particulars Page 76 to 83 What a City Sion is Page 84 Church Church the Anti-type of Solomon's Temple Page 87 Church the Anti-type of the second Temple Page 89 Courage Saints like a Lion for Courage wherein their Courage ought to be shewed opened in eight Particulars Page 188 D. Day of Grace WHy so called Page 367 How to know when the Day of Grace draws towards an end shewed in five things Page 368 Darkness Divers Metaphorical Notations of Darkness Page 383 Hell a Place of utter Darkness Page 411 Affliction called Darkness Page 383 Death Death a Sleep why so called opened in three things Page 399 Dead Wicked Men dead in Sin what meant thereby opened in seven Particulars Page 227 228 Debt Debtors Sin a Debt why so called opened Page 332 334 How our Debts are satisfied for and yet freely forgiven largely opened Page 236 to 238 Wicked Men why called Debtors Page 200 Devil Wicked Men compared to the Devil Page 254 Devil why called a Lion and a Serpent Page 363 Dignity The great Dignity of Ministers Page 286 Dogs Wicked Men compared to Dogs in sixteen Particulars Page 232 c. Doves The Property of Doves and why the Saints are compared to them opened in 13 things Page 192 Deceivers Their many Ways to deceive laid open Page 295 Door What the Door is into the true Church Page 278 279 E. Eagles SAints compared to Eagles in ten things Page 141 Why wicked Men are compared to Eagles Page 253 F. Faith FAith why called a Shield Page 16 How you may know true Faith Page 15 16 17 The Necessity of Faith Page 19 20 The Difference between a weak and strong Faith Page 20 21 The Excellency of Faith Page 15 16 Family The Church called a Family Page 128 129 The Nature and Excellency of the Government thereof Page 128 129 Foxes Wicked Men why compared to Foxes Page 241 242 Forgiveness of Sin What it is we ask of God in that Petition Forgive us our Debts Page 340 341 No Forgiveness without Christ's Blood or Reconciliation made by him Page 342 Fowler Satan why called a Fowler and what a subtil Fowler he is opened in 5 Things Page 362 363 Floods Afflictions compared to Floods in 9 Things Page 386 In what respect God may be said to sit upon the Floods ibid Field This World why called a Field Page 392 Furnace Afflictions why compared to a Furnace Page 381 Fools Wicked Men Fools or Idiots opened Page 111 112 G. Garden THe Church why called a Garden opened in many Particulars Page 112 113 Girdle Truth why called a Girdle opened in 10 Partic. Page 4 to 8 Government The Nature of Church Order and Government opened in 12 Partic. Page 129 The Excellency of a Family or Church consists in its good and orderly Government Page 130 Gold The Nature of Gold and why Faith is compared to it opened in seven Partie Page 15 16 17 The Excellency of tryed Faith above Gold Page 18 The Godly why compared to Gold Page 190 191 Goats Why wicked Men as Hypocrites c. are compared to Goats Page 243 244 Why the Devil is call'd the God of this World Page 359 Godliness Godliness a great Mystery proved by nine Arguments Page 371 372 Gray-Hairs Sin and Judgments upon a People why called Gray-Hairs in six Things Page 357 England at this time gray-headed Page 359 H. Hardness CHrist's Souldiers must endure Hardness opened in seven Particulars Page 154 155 Harvest Day of Grace why called Harvest in 8 Things Page 370 Heirs Saints why called Heirs Heirs of God in six Things Page 145 Heart Heart of Flesh why so called and how such a Heart may be known in four things Page 194 Heaven Heaven why called Paradise Page 407 Heaven called
Page 162 Saints the Salt of the Earth Page 166 Saints Merchants Page 168 Saints Pilgrims Page 170 Saints compared to Palm-Trees Page 175 Saints compared to Wheat Page 178 Saints compared to Light Page 180 Saints compared to Cedars Page 182 Saints compared to Myrtle-Trees Page 184 Saints compared to Willows Page 185 Saints why called Vessels Page 186 Saints why called Lions Page 188 Saints compared to Gold Page 190 Saints compared to Doves Page 192 Some Saints like Lambs in a large Place Page 193 The Heart of a Saint compared to an Heart of Flesh Page 194 Saints Stewards Page 195 Saints why called Jewels Page 196 Saints why called Kings Page 199 Saints called Priests Page 200 Concerning Wicked Men. Wicked Men Captives Page 201 Wicked Men why called Sluggards Page 209 Wicked Men Fools or Idiots Page 211 Some wicked Men like painted Sepulchres Page 215 Wicked Men compared to Swine Page 216 Wicked Men Debtors Page 219 Wicked Men why called the Red of God Page 221 Wicked Men compared to Tares Page 222 Wicked Men compared to Chaff Page 223 Wicked Men compared to Thorns Page 224 Wicked Men compared to Mountains Page 225 Wicked Men dead in Sin what meant thereby Page 227 228 Wicked Men mad or besides themselves Page 231 Wicked Men called Dogs Page 232 Wicked Men called Bulls Page 235 Wicked Men called Lions Page 237 Wicked Men compared to Foxes Page 241 Wicked Men compared to Goats Page 243 Wicked Men compared to Thieves Page 245 Wicked Men naked Page 247 Wicked Men Vipers Page 248 Wicked Men poor and miserable Page 250 The Heart of a Wicked Man like a Rock Page 251 Wicked Men why called Eagles Page 253 Wicked Men why called Devils Page 254 The Ninth HEAD c. concerning True Ministers False Ministers and False Churches TRue Ministers why called Angels Page 256 True Ministers Stars why so called Page 258 Christ's Ministers called Labourers Page 259 Christ's Ministers called Watchmen Page 265 Christ's Ministers why called Trumpeters ibid Ministers Christ's Spokesmen Page 267 Christ's Ministers why called Clouds Page 269 Christ's Ministers why called Fathers Page 271 Christ's Ministers called Planters Page 273 Christ's Ministers called Shepherds Page 281 Christ's Ministers Ambassadors Page 282 Christ's Ministers called Rulers Page 287 Concerning False Teachers False Teachers why compared to Wolves Page 291 False-Teachers called Foxes Page 293 False-Teachers called Wells without Water Page 293 False-Teachers why called Clouds without Rain Page 294 False-Teachers called Deceivers Page 294 False Churches Mystery Babylon or the Great Whore proved to be the present State and Church of Rome Page 297 to 330 The Tenth HEAD of Metaphors concerning Sin and the Devil SIn why called a Thief Page 331 Sin a Debt Page 335 Sin an heavy Burthen Page 343 Sin a Sting Page 344 Sin a Wound Page 345 Sin a Plague Page 349 Sin compared to deadly Poyson Page 350 Sin a Sickness Page 352 Sin compared to an abominable Vomit Page 354 Sin an Vncleanness or nothing so loathsom as Sin Page 355 Sin compared to Gray-Hairs Page 357 Concerning the Devil The Devil why called the God of this World Page 359 The Devil why called a Prince Page 360 The Devil a Hunter Page 361 The Devil a Fowler Page 362 The Devil why called a Lion Page 363 The Devil why called a Dragon Page 364 The Devil a Serpent Page 365 The Eleventh HEAD c. concerning the Means of Grace and Providence THe Day of Grace what Page 367 Means of Grace compared to Summer Page 369 Means of Grace compared to Harvest Page 369 Godliness called a Trade largely opened Page 371 376 Of Providence and Afflictions Afflictions compared to Clouds Page 377 Afflictions compared to Fire Page 378 Afflictions why called a Rod Page 379 Afflictions compared to a Furnace Page 381 Afflictions compared to Winter ibid Afflictions compared to Darkness Page 383 Afflictions compared to Tempests Page 385 Afflictions compared to a Flood Page 386 Afflictions compared to great Heat Page 387 Afflictions compared to Wormwood and Gall Page 388 Afflictions called God's Arrows God hath many sharp Arrows Page 389 The Twelfth and Last HEAD concerning the World the Life of Man and the four last Things THe World compared to a Wilderness Page 391 THe World a Field Page 392 The End of the World why called an Harvest ibid Of the Life of Man The Life of Man compared to a swift Post Page 393 The Life of Man compared to a swift Ship ibid The Life of Man compared to an Eagle hastening to her Prey Page 394 The Life of Man compared To a Weaver's Shuttle Page 394 395 396 To the Wind Page 394 395 396 To a Cloud Page 394 395 396 To a Flower Page 394 395 396 To a Shadow Page 394 395 396 Of Death The Body of Man in the Grave compared to Seed sown Page 398 Death compared to Sleep Page 398 399 Death a Departure Page 400 Death a Rest ibid Of the Resurrection The Resurrection compared to the Morning Page 401 The Resurrection compared to an awaking out of Sleep Page 402 The Resurrection-Day a Man's Reaping-Day Page 403 Resurrection-Day a Saint's Coronation-Day Page 405 Of the Judgment-Day The Day of Judgment called an Assize Page 406 407 Of Heaven Heaven called Paradise Page 407 Heaven the Crown of Life Page 409 Of Hell Hell a Furnace of Fire Page 410 Hell utter Darkness Page 411 Moses's Vail removed OR A Treatise of TYPES ADam wherein a Type of Christ Page 413 Noah how a Type of Christ ibid Melchis deck a Type of Christ Page 414 Abraham a Type of Christ Page 415 Isaac a Type of Christ ibid Jacob how a Type of Christ Page 416 Jacob's Ladder a Tyye of Christ ibid Joseph in what respect a Type of Christ Page 416 417 Moses in how many things a Type of Christ ibid Sampson a Type of Christ Page 418 David in ten things a Type of Christ Page 418 419 Solomon in how many things a Type of Christ Page 420 Elisha a Type of Christ ibid Jonah wherein a Type of Christ ibid Zerubbabel a Type of Christ ibid Aaron a Type of Christ Page 421 The High-Priest a Type of Christ Page 421 422 423 What the Tabernacle was a Type of Page 423 424 The Vail of the Holiest what it was a Type of Page 424 The Ark a Type of Christ Page 425 The Mercy-Seat a Type of Christ ibid The Table of Shewbread what a Type of ibid The Candlestick what a Type of Page 426 The Altar of Perfume a Type of Christ ibid The Altar of Burnt Offering a Type of Christ Page 427 The Brazen Laver what it was a Type of ibid The Sacrifice of Beasts a Type of Christ Page 428 The Burnt-Offering of Fowls a Type of Christ Page 429 The Daily Sacrifice a Type of Christ ibid The Sin-Offering a Type of Christ ibid The Meat-Offering what it was a Type of Page 430 The Peace-Offering and what it was a Type of Page 431 The solemn yearly
proceed from one and the same Ground viz. a wicked Pretence that the Scriptures tho divine Truths and the Word of God yet do not contain all God's Will but that there are these other unwritten Verities handed down one says from Moses and the other says from St Peter c. by Word of Mouth Since therefore the Bible hath thus wonderfully surmounted all Difficulties and Oppositions for so many Generations and in so many Dangers and against so many Endeavours to root it out of the World we may according to that Maxim in Philosophy Eadem est Causa procreans conservans The procreating and conserving Cause of Things is one and the same conclude That the same God is the Author of it who hath thus by his special Providence preserved it and faithfully promised and cannot Lie that Heaven and Earth shall pass away but one Iota or Tittle of his Word shall not pass away X. The Scriptures did not only Survive but have Triumph'd over 10. The Success of the Scriptures in converting the World all the Oppositions of the Devil and the World That Success wherewith the Gospel was attended even in its Infancy the mighty and marvellous prevailings of it where-ever it came notwithstanding the many and great Disadvantages it was to encounter are a strong and irresistible Argument that it was from Heaven That a Doctrine directly opposite to the whole corrupt Interest of Human Nature and to the Wisdom and VVill of Man (p) 1 Cor. 1.21 Rom. 8.7 carried on and published by but a few and those to outward appearance weak ignorant and simple Persons Illiterate Fishermen Tent-makers c. without any Force of Arms or Temporal Support but on the contrary against both VVind and Tide the Cruelties of raging Powers and Affronts of vaunting Wisdom A Doctrine against which the whole World Jews and Gentiles perfectly concurr'd those hating it as a Stumbling-block and these counting it Foolishness that such an improbable and unpleasing such a friendless unwelcome slighted opposed Doctrine by such Instruments and under such Circumstances should make its way in the World and subject so many Nations to the Obedience of the Cross and make those who to Day persecuted it to Morrow ready to lay down their Lives in Defence and Justification of it evidently shews it to be owned by Omnipotency and not to be of Human Extract XI But besides these outward and more visible Trophies of the Sacred Scriptures 11. Their inward Efficacy how marvellous is their Empire Efficacy and Power within upon the Hearts and Consciences of Men 't is this that Converts the Soul Enlightens the Eye (q) Psal 19.7 Discovers Sin (r) Rom. 7.7 Convinces Gainsayers (ſ) 2 Tim 3.16 Killeth and Terrifieth (t) 2 Cor. 3.6 Rejoiceth the Heart (u) Psal 19.8 Psal 119.103 Quickneth (x) Psal 119.50 Comforteth (y) Rom 15.4 Manifesteth the Thoughts (z) 1 Cot. 14.52 Overthrows false Religions Casteth down Strong-holds and subverts the whole Kingdom of Satan What Consolations at some Times What Terrors at others do proceed from this Sacred Book How are the poor Souls of Men by it mightily refresh'd Their weak Hearts wonderfully strengthned Their dead Spirits raised and made to live again Those that sate in Darkness and the Shadow of Death are Enlightned Many that were in Chains and Fetters of Fears and Terrors of Soul are delivered and set at Liberty Is it reasonable to conceive that a Tree that bears such wonderful Fruit was planted by any other Hand than that of God Who can speak Words that shall restrain and repel all the Powers of Darkness when falling in to make Havock and Desolation in the Souls of Men That shall be able to give Laws to the Terrors of Death nay Eternal Death when they have taken hold of the Consciences of Sinners Are not all these Wonders perform'd by the holy Scriptures And do they not often on the other side breath Thunder and Lightnings throw down the Mighty from their Seats and destroy the Thrones of the Proud and Confident Do they not turn the Security of many into Trembling and Horrour and make their Consciences to burn as if the Fire of Hell had already taken hold of them These Things are evident from the Experience of Thousands that have felt and undergone such powerful Effects of the Word Nay I verily believe there are few that have read the Scriptures with attention and seriousness but can more or less witness the same And whence should such Mighty Operations proceed but because the Almighty Author has endued them with such Vertue through the Spirit whereby they become the Power of God unto Salvation 12. The Testimony of the Church and Martyrs XII Add to all these Arguments the Testimony of the Church and her Holy Martyrs who have sealed this Truth with their Blood By the Church we do not mean the Pope whom the Papists call the Church Virtual nor his Cardinals Bishops c. met in General Council whom they call the Church Representative But the whole Company of Believers in all Ages who have professed the true Faith The Pen-Men of the Scriptures good pious honest holy Men delivered it out as the Word of the Lord and ever since there have been Thousands and Hundreds of Thousands that have believed and testi●ied the same down from Age to Age in a continual uninterrupted Succession The Church of the Jews to whom were committed the Oracles of God (a) Rom. 8.3 professed the Doctrine and received the Books of the Old Testament and testified of them that they were Divine and in great Misery they have constantly confessed the same when as by the only denying thereof they might have been partakers both of Liberty and Rule And remarkable it is both that notwithstanding the High Priests and others of that Nation persecuted the Prophets while they lived yet received their Writings as Prophetical and Divine as also that since the Spirit of Blindness and Obstinacy is come upon Israel and notwithstanding their great hatred to the Chri●tian Religion the Holy Scripture of the Old Testament is kept pure and uncorrupt among●t them even in those places which do evidently confirm the Truth of the Christian Religion as Isa 53.3 And as for the Christian Church it hath with great Constancy and sweet Consent received and acknowledged the Books of the Old and New Testament for the Universal Church which from the beginning thereof until these times professed the Christian Religion to be Divine did and doth also profess that these Books are of God And the several Primitive Churches which first received the Books of the Old Testament and the Gospels the Epistles written from the Apostles to them their Pastors or some they knew did receive them as the Oracles of God and delivered them afterwards under the same Title to their Successors and other Churches And all the Pastors and Doctors who being furnished with Skill both in
by the powerful Operations of the Holy-Ghost whereby he is made holy and enabled to approve himself to God and Men in all purity of Life and Conversation By the Breastplate of Righteousness in the Text we understand the Righteousness of Sanctification is principall● intended for otherwise this piece of Christian Armor would interfere with the Shield of Faith which comprehends the Righteousness of Justification See Shield It is we say a Principle of new Life which the Spirit works in the Heart of a Believer hence the several Graces of Holiness are called the Fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Man by the Fall had a double Loss first the Love of God secondly the Image or Likeness of God Christ restores both to his Children the first by his Righteousness imputed the second by his Spirit imparting the lost Image of God to them which consists in Righteousness and true Holiness Who but a Man can impart his own Nature and beget a Child like himself So who but the Spirit of God can make a Creature like God by causing him to partake of the Divine Nature 1. This is that Principle of new Life viz. an inward Disposition and Divine Quality sweetly powerfully and constantly stirring up and inclining to that which is holy and spiritually good 2. The Work of the Spirit in this respect was not to recover what was dying Garnal but to work Life de novo in a Soul quite dead hence called a creating quickning forming and renewing Work 3. It is a supernatural Principle by which we distinguish it from Adam's Righteousness which was co-natural to him as Sin is to us Holiness was as natural to him as Health was to his Body they both resulted ex Principiis rectè constitutis from Principles pure and rightly disposed Why Righteousness is called a Breast-plate will appear by the following Parallel Metaphor Parallel A Breast-plate is a main and principal Piece of Armor that belongs to a Souldier RIghteousness in like manner is a principal thing belonging to all Christians who are called Souldiers of Christ 2 Tim 3 3. Endure Hardness as a good Souldier c. II. A Breast-plate is a piece of Armor that every Souldier ought to have on when he engages his Enemy he must not come into the Field without it II. Righteousness is so necessary for every Believer that he ought not cannot be without it there is no engaging any Enemy of the Soul without a Principle of Holiness be wrought in him III. A Breast-plate preserves the principal part of the Body viz. the Breast where the very Vitals of a Man are closely couched together and where a Shot or a Stab is more deadly than in other parts that are more remote from the Fountain of Life A Man may out-live many Wounds received in the Arms or Legs but a Stab in the Heart is a certain Messenger of Death III. Righteousness and Holiness preserves the principal part of a Christian viz. his Soul Satan aims to hit him there where he may dispatch him soonest A Wound in a Man's Credit Estate Relations c. hazard not the Life of his Soul but Sin exposes it to imminent Danger This is that Dart Prov. 7 23 that struck the young Man through the Liver as a Bird hasteth to the Snare that knoweth not 't is for his Life And this is that which Satan strives to tempt entice and draw a Saint to yield unto Hence he should be careful to put on his Breastplate of Righteousness which whilst he has on he is safe from the deadly Stab of the Enemy IV. A Breast-plate is made and prepared for a Souldier before he puts it on It is not his own Work but the Work of a skilful Artist IV. Righteousness which is the Saints Breast-plate is wrought in him by the Holy Spirit who is a most wise and skilful Workman Our own Righteousness is good for nothing hence called dead Works because they are Works from one dead in Sin and spring not from a Principle of inward spiritual Life V. A Breast-plate much emboldens a Souldier and makes him fearless that as he cannot be easily killed so hereby he cannot be soon cowed When a Souldier sees himsel unarmed he begins to tremble but when he hath on a good Helmet and a Plate of Proof on his Breast he is not quickly dismay'd but adventures upon the Point of the Sword V. Thus Righteousness defends and animates the Soul and Conscience when a Man in the midst of the greatest Danger can lift up his hands without spot Holiness fills a Soul with Courage so that he can look in the very face of grim Death whereas Guilt which is the Nakedness of the Soul puts the stoutest Sinner into a shaking Fit of Fear The Wicked flee when no Man pursueth Prov. 28.1 but the Righteous are as bold as a Lion No sooner did Adam see his Breast-plate was off and that he was naked but he was afraid and ran away to hide himself from God VI. The Breast-plate and Girdle were both joined or buckled together VI. So Righteousness and Truth must meet and be joined together in every Christian which is held forth by the Copulative And Stand therefore having your Loins girt about with Truth and having on the Breast-plate of Righteousness Which is taken twofold as hath been shewed First for the Truth of Doctrine or a good and Orthodox Judgment all the Principles of true Religion that are essential to Salvation Secondly Grace or Sincerity of Heart In both these respects Truth must be clasped to or joined with Righteousness and a holy Life Solomon saith Two are better than one So may I say here a good Doctrine with a good Conversation is better than a good Doctrine without a good Conversation or a good Conversation without a good Doctrine as a Man must have the one so he must not be without the other Wo to him that is alone for the Spirit will not be his Strength An evil and corrupt Doctrine may be of as dangerous a Nature as an evil and debauched Life See 2 Pet. 2.1 2. Who privily bring in damnable Heresies even denying the Lord that bought them and bring upon themselves swift Destruction c. In vain is a Man's outward Holiness or moral Sincerity if he be tainted with heretical and damnable Principles and as vain is it for a Man to hold the true Doctrine of the Christian Religion if he be not sincere and live a holy Life Inferences THis may inform us what need there is for every Christian to get and keep on the Breast-plate of Righteousness not only to get a renewed Principle of Grace in his Heart but also to maintain the Power of Godliness in his Life and Conversation This he ought strenuously to labour after and that for several Reasons First In regard of God whose main Design in giving Grace and implanting a Divine Principle in his People is to make them holy to this end he hath put
and abstain from it from right Principles and not only to leave it but to loath it Again it consisteth in keeping up all holy and religious Duties viz. Reading Hearing Praying Distributing to the Poor Conforming to all moral and positive Precepts to be holy at home in the Family in the Church in the World to exercise a good Conscience towards God Acts 24.16 and towards Men. This is to put on the Breast-plate of Righteousness I might give many Directions about putting it on and also shew some of Satan's cunning Stratagems in endeavouring to make useless this blessed Piece of the Christian's Armor in laying Discouragements in the way of true Piety or by persuading Persons they have this Breast-plate on when 't is a counterfeit one He persuades Men that Moral Righteousness will serve their turn and sufficiently preserve them from eternal Death But this shall suffice in this place The Shield of Faith Ephes 6.16 Above all take the Shield of Faith c. FAith is a Grace a most precious and excellent Grace of the Spirit of God whereby the Soul is enabled to believe or go out of it self and wholly to rely and rest upon Christ crucified or on his active and passive Obedience upon the Warrant of the Promise for Justification and eternal Life Metaphor Parallel A Shield is a Piece of Armor that Souldiers were wont to carry with them into the Field when they were to engage their Enemies FAith is a part of a Christian's spiritual Armor All Christ's Souldiers ought to carry this Weapon into the Field with them when they engage the Enemy of their Souls Above all take the Shield of Faith II. A Shield is a Piece of Armor made for Defence II. Faith is of excellent use to defend the Soul from all spiritual Dangers of Sin and Satan and other Enemies III. A Shield is not for the Defence of any particular part of the Body as almost all other Pieces are The Helmet is fitted for the Head the Breast-plate is designed for the Breast so others have their several Parts which they are fastened to But a Shield is a Piece that is intended for the Defence of the whole Body It was wont to be made very large for its broadness called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gurnal a Door because so long and large as in a manner to cover the whole Body to which that place alludes Psal 4.12 Thou Lord wilt bless the Righteous with Favour thou wilt compass him about as with a Shield III. So the Grace of Faith defends the whole Man every part of a Christian 1. Sometimes Satan's ●emptations are levell'd against his Head and if he can hit him there he wounds sorely He will be disputing against this Truth and that Truth and make a Christian doubt concerning them if possible because his own Reason cannot comprehend them As perhaps it may be about the Deity of Christ or the Holy Trinity how they can be three and yet but one or about Satisfaction How the Debt is paid and yet the Sinner freely pardoned c. Now Faith is as a Shield to a Saint at this time and interposeth between a Christian and this Arrow of Satan it comes in to the relief of the Saints weak Understanding as seasonable as Zerviah did to David when the Giant Ishbibenob thought to have slain him I 'le trust the Word of God saith the Soul rather than my own purblind Reason what I cannot comprehend I will believe Thus Abraham not being weak in Faith Rom. 4.19 considered not his own Body now dead c. Sense and Reason would have made sad work at such a dead Lift but Faith brought him off victoriously Secondly Sometimes Satan strives to hit the Conscience all his Assaults and fiery Darts are at another season aimed at that to wound that to cause Horror and Terror within by setting the Evil of Sin and of his own Heart and the Infirmities of his Life before him Satan sets our Sins before us not to humble us but to wound us he shews our Sins to us but hides a Saviour from us Satan hath sometimes tempted gracious Persons to lay violent hands upon themselves when the heinous Nature of their Sin hath appeared to them and the Danger they are in thereby as it was with the poor Jailor Acts 16. Acts 16. But now Faith prevents and keeps off all the Danger and quencheth this fiery Dart. Christ died for Sinners for the chiefest of Sinners and tho thou art a Sinner a great Sinner the worst of Sinners yet saith Faith Thou art but a Sinner and there is Mercy for such Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved if thou canst believe and throw thy self on Christ thy Sins shall not be thy Ruin Thirdly He labours to ensnare the Affections of the Soul or deaden its fervent Love to Jesus Christ by presenting the Pleasures and Profits of this World to it Thus he served our Saviour himself But now Faith shields off this Dart also by shewing the Excellency of the Lord Jesus to the Soul and that all things without him and in comparison of him are nothing nay less than nothing and also by setting the World to come and the Glory thereof before the Eyes of the Soul Heb. 11.1 Faith is the Substance of things hoped for and the Evidence of things not seen IV. A Shield tho heavy and somewhat unwieldy to such as have not skill and strength to use it yet it is a moveable Piece of Armor which an expert Souldier with a watchful eye can turn this way and that way to stop a Dart or Blow from lighting on any part that they were directed to by the Enemy IV. Faith is a piece of Christian Armor which unskilful Professors are not ready to use but an experienced Soul can turn it any way to keep off the Arrow and fiery Darts of Satan from hurting or wounding him He observes what part the Enemy aims to hit or how the Temptation is laid It is a great point of Christian Wisdom rightly to exercise the Shield of Faith A Man must be sure to have a watchful Eye upon his Adversary or else for all his Shield he may soon be wounded V. A Shield doth not only defend the whole Body but it is a Defence to other parts of a Souldier's Armor also it keeps off the Dart from the Helmet and Breast-plate likewise V. Faith doth not only defend the whole Soul but also 't is a Safeguard to all the other parts of a Christian's Armor it is that which secures Hope the Helmet of Salvation for without Faith Hope would soon be broken in pieces Also it secures the Breast-plate of Righteousness for neither Christ's Righteousness nor any inherent Holiness in the Soul will avail any thing without Faith VI. A Shield hath been of wonderful advantage to Souldiers in former Times when it was in use it hath preserved them in the
live in newness of Life amongst the Saints in the Kingdom of God II. When one is buried he ought to be covered all over with Earth else 't is no Burial II. When one is baptized he ought to be covered all over with Water or else 't is no Baptism Which fully appears 1. From the Nature of Burial 2. From the proper and Metaphorical Significations of the Word as is largely opened 3. From Scripture-Practice which always was by Dipping as all the Learned that are impartial acknowledg 4. From the constant Practice of Antiquity who retained the right Form until Clinical Baptism viz. such who deferred their Baptism till their sick Bed came to be used about Cyprian's time in the third Century These Clinici so called because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 baptized in their Bed were such as delayed their Baptism until their Death-Beds because they believed it would take away all Sin and that there was no Pardon if they sinned after receiving it yet not daring to go out of the World without this great Badge of Christianity deferr'd it till they thought they were in danger of Death And since they could not without peril of Life be dipp'd Sprinkling was invented to serve the turn For a like Reason as was said before they changed the Mode of Administration with respect to Infants when their Baptism was introduced out of regard to their tender Constitutions especially in cold Countries Seasons This was the Original of Sprinkling and sprung purely from the abuse of Baptism and the Want of the right Subject as by Divine Aid shall be demonstrated in a particular Sheet impartially and from undoubted Authority One may with as much reason be said to be buried when Clay or Earth is thrown upon his Head only as to be baptized when Water is poured upon his Head or Face And if the one be no Burying 't is as certain the other is no Baptism And he that affirms that Sprinkling may represent or symbolically express the Death Burial and Resurrection of Christ does at the same time speak without colour of Truth Word of Sence and against all the Reason in the World As breaking of the Sacramental Bread visibly betokens that Christ's Body was broke and as the pouring forth of the Sacramental Wine represents the gushing forth of his Blood so the Sacramental Dipping in Water viz. Baptism represents his Death and Burial and the coming from under the Water his Resurrection 1 Cor. 15.2 3 4 c. III. Burial precedes the Resurrection or raising of the dead Body to a State of Immortality III. The Immersion of the Party baptized precedes his Emersion or coming out of the Water which symbolizes or answers to two things 1. The Resur●ection of Christ 2. Our rising again to Newness of Life Buried with him in Baptism wherein ye are also risen with him c. as in the Text. Inferences FRom the whole we may rationally conclude That the Administration of this great Ordinance by Sprinkling which comports not with the Literal nor Metaphorical Signification of the Word nor those great Mysteries represented by it viz. the Death Burial and Resurrection of Christ is disorderly and should be rectified 2. It is a Motive to excite us to admire and reverence the great Grace and Goodness of Christ who hath given us such a visible Symbol of his Death Burial and Resurrection not only to confirm our Faith but also to prevent our being deceived by any seducing Spirits 3. It is not to be wondred at that such as deny the Man Christ Jesus but preach up the Light within to be a Saviour should reject these two great Ordinances stated in the Scripture viz. Baptism and the Lord's Supper because such as deny the Substance are necessitated to deny the Sign Persons of this Judgment may be easily confuted For when ever the Term Baptism is mentioned and God or Christ represented as the Agent it must be understood of the Baptism of the Spirit in the Sence before spoken of When ever Baptism is mentioned as the Act of any Apostle or Minister of the Gospel it denotes Water-Baptism because these have neither Power nor Commission to baptize with the Spirit and with Fire And when ever the Baptism of Blood and Suffering is mentioned it must be understood of Persecutors or ungodly Men who murther destroy or afflict the Godly for neither God without Blasphemy nor good Men without a wrong application of the Term may be said to baptize that way So that when we meet with the Act of Baptism as the Act of a good Man we must of necessity understand it of Water-Baptism in the same Method and Mode of Administration as was practised by the Apostles and Primitive Christians and that being a positive Institution with respect to the Subject and Manner of Administration is not to be deviated from upon any pretence whatsoever unless we will suppose the Laws of the Almighty to be in the Power of Man so as that he may dispense at pleasure with them which is not to be done without sufficient Authority from God himself which is no where to be found 4. If the Laws of the great unerring Sovereign of all things are to be observed without variation unless it be by his express Direction then we are to conform exactly to his Order in this part of the Evangelical Law and to practise it no otherwise than he has prescribed because it was once so delivered to the Saints 5. We would caution all that would approach to this sacred Evangelical Ordinance unless they be dead to Sin that is such as truly and really hate Wickedness and the empty Vanities of the World and unless they have a prospect of and long to have an Interest in that never-fading Inheritance promised by our dear Lord Jesus to his Children not to prophane this blessed Institution Because if they want the due Qualifications of serious and converted Souls viz. Faith Repentance and good Lives they are hereby entitled not real Members of Christ but Hypocrites and incur as great a Hazard as such do who eat and drink unworthily of the Lord's Supper The Lord's Supper 1 Cor. 11.23 For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered unto you That the Lord Jesus the same Night in which he was betrayed took Bread Verse 24. And when he had given thanks he brake it and said Take eat this is my Body which is broken for you This do in remembrance of me THe Papists affirm That after the Words which they call the Words of Consecration spoken by the Mass-Priest the Bread is changed into the real Body of Jesus Christ and many of the blessed Martyrs in Queen Mary's Days were burned to Ashes for denying this Transubstantiation Which absurd and monstrous Conceit of theirs hath been learnedly confuted by many ancient and modern Writers so that it may be thought needless to add any thing here upon that account yet that we may make our way
a mortal Sleep 2. For a dead or senseless State in Sin i. e. Sin ruling and over-ruling in Mens Hearts before Conversion Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the Dead and Christ shall give thee Life Eph. 5.14 This is a spiritual Sleep 3. For a drouzy and slothful Frame of Heart which often attends the Godly I sleep but my Heart waketh Cant. 5.2 Thou Sluggard or slothful Person There is a threefold Sluggard 1. One that is idle loving Ease and bodily Rest neglecting his worldly Concerns I went by the Field of the Slothful c. Prov. 24.30 2. One that is spiritually idle wholly careless and negligent of his Soul and the great Concernments thereof The Sluggard saith there is a Lion in the Way 3. One that hath been formerly awakened in a spiritual Sence and is fallen into a cold drouzy and negligent State again I shall run the Parallel with respect had principally to that Description Solomon gives of a Sluggard Simile Parallel A Sluggard is a Person that makes Excuses The slothful Man saith Prov. 22.13 There is a Lion without I shall be slain in the Street SO the Sinner or spiritual Sluggard hath many Excuses If I should arise saith he and follow Christ I shall suffer in my Name be reproached suffer in my Estate nay it may come to pass saith he that such as are religious indeed may be put to Death There are many Romish Lions without persecuting and devouring Beasts of Prey that I fear will flie upon me in the Street and hence he resolves to keep himself in a whole Skin II. A Sluggard Solomon saith is like a Door that turneth upon its Hinges Prov. 26.14 As a Door turneth upon its Hinges so doth the slothful Man upon his Bed II. So a Sinner or spiritual Sluggard seems to move this way and that way He reads God's Word and hears Sermons and perhaps prays too but still is where he was he is not renewed in his inward Man no Change hath passed upon him he is one that loveth his Lusts this and the other Sin and is not taken off of his old Hinges he is still in the State of fallen Man not taken off of the old Root and transplanted into Christ III. The Sluggard is a Man of Desires but not of Endeavours The Sluggard desireth Prov. 13.4 and hath nothing but the Soul of the Diligent shall be made fat compared with Prov. 22.25 The Desire of the Sluggard killeth him because his Hands refuse to work III. So the Wicked Man or spiritual Sluggard is full of Desires he with Balaam desires to die the Death of the Righteous he desires to be saved Numb 23.10 and hath many faint Desires to be forgiven he cries out sometimes when Conscience flies in his Face and rebukes him God forgive me the Lord help me c. but never strives with all his Might against his Sin and the Temptations of the Devll hence his Desires are said to slay him Desires without Endeavours will deceive the Soul nay eternally ruin and damn the Soul What avails it a Man that is hungry to wish for Bread when he never labours for it Prov. 10. ● 2 Pet. 1.5 10. The Promise runs to the diligent and industrious Person he shall be fed but the Sluggard shall suffer Hunger and pine away IV. The Sluggard neglects his Vineyard and lets his Field run all over with Nettles and Weeds I went by the Field of the Slothful P●ov 24.30 31. by the Vineyard of the Man void of Vnderstanding and lo it was all grown over with Thorns and Nettles had covered the Face thereof and the Stone Wall thereof was broken down IV. So the Sinner or spiritual Sluggard neglects his Soul and the Souls of his Family tho he provides for the Body and takes care what he and his shall have to eat and what to put on yet his Soul and the Souls of such as are about him are neglected nothing but Weeds and Corruption grow there Sin and filthy Lust predominate Pride Passion Jam. 3.16 Covetousness and every evil Work V. The Way of the Sluggard seems to be barr'd or hedg'd up that he cannot go on he cannot find the Path. Prov. 15.19 The Way of the slothful Man is a Hedg of Thorns but the Way of the Righteous is plain V. So the Sinner's Way is as it were hedged up For like as a Hedg obstructs or hinders a Man sometimes in his Way that he cannot pass along so the Wicked by one Temptation Obstruction or another are hindred from going on in the Ways of God Perhaps the Snares that attend their Trade are as a Hedg to them or the Fear of displeasing a Father or Uncle or some other Relation lest they should be left out of their Will or dispossessed of an Estate or a Landlord or some great Man or Neighbour by whom they may possibly have their Livelihood may be as a Hedg or Bar to obstruct them in their following of Christ and by this means is the spiritual Sluggard discouraged VI. The Sluggard doth not enjoy the Good that is in his hand The slothful Man roasteth not that which he took in hunting Prov. 12.27 that is when he hath got Food he doth not prepare it nor make it meet to be received nor feed upon it VI. So the spiritual Sluggard doth not enjoy the heavenly good Things that seem to be in his hand Prov. 17.16 Wherefore is there a Price in the hand of a Fool to get Wisdom seeing he hath no Heart to it Some Men hunt as it were after Knowledg go from one Place to another will hear this worthy Minister and that worthy Minister and at last when they have found the Venison I mean come to understand the Will of God they do not subject to it they know what the Threatning is but fear it not and know what the Precept is but obey it not and know what the Promise is and yet believe and apply it not And thus they roast not that which they have taken in hunting they feed not upon the Word they are forgetful Hearers and not Doers of the Word Jam 1.22 and thereby deceive their own Souls VII The Sluggard is one that loves not to encounter with Difficulties he cannot abide to think of enduring a little Hardship The Sluggard will not plow by reason of the Cold. Prov. 20 4 VII The Spiritual Sluggard loves his Ease If Religion cannot be owned professed and stuck to unless a Man offer some Force as it were unto himself and expose the Flesh to some Hardships he presently grows weary of it He cannot in the Morning go to Prayer because his worldly Business calls for him or perhaps 't is cold or he is indisposed c. And perhaps he cannot pray at Night because it doth not agree with the Flesh the Body is weary and would fain go to Bed And he cannot go to Church to hear the
Apostle expresly tells us that a Man of Sin shall arise who shall be a lawless One 2 Thess 2.3 c. 1 Tim 4. that will lift up himself against God to sit in the Temple of God that was hindred in his wicked Design by the Imperial Power who gets up by a falling away That he was to be so considerable as to be easily discerned and discovered by the Christian World that he was to manage a great Mystery of Iniquity His coming up was to be by the Assistance and Working of the Devil He was to have a twofold Power Civil and Ecclesiastical comprehending all earthly Power He was to suggest Signs and lying Wonders to the People He was to make use of all Treachery or Deceivableness and Lies his Followers were to be given up to strong Delusions his Party was to speak desperate Lies in Hypocrisy to have scared Consciences That he should be against Matrimony that he should command a long Lent and to abstain from Meats If the Pope of Rome be not a Man of Sin then Beelzebub is not a Devil as is largely demonstrated in the foregoing Sheets for no Divine or Humane Law can set any Bounds to his Ambition and spiritual Tyranny That he exalts himself against God in polluting his pure Worship and against Kings by his usurped Supremacy is before evidenced That he was hindred by the Roman Imperial Power is the Opinion and Judgment of the Learned and also that he was the monstrous Spawn of the Great Apostacy That he manages a great Mystery of Iniquity in which his grand Counsellor the Devil lends him Politicks to a double Usurpation and Encroachment upon Soul and Body pretends to Miracles and false Wonders acts like the Metropolitan Cheat and Impostor of Christendom That his Followers are strongly deluded meer Lyars and Hypocrites with seared Consciences forbidding honest Marriage but allowing Canonical Whoredom That he forbids Meats but can dispense with the grossest Debaucheries All these I say with those other Marks the Holy Spirit gives of him are so legible upon the Pope as if the very Sun-Beams had writ them in Capitals upon his Brazen Forehead Therefore we dismiss him with this full-prov'd Conclusion That He and only He is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Antichrist and the very Man of Sin Thus you have had a brief Description of Mystery Babylon and the Antichristian Beast who hath been so long a time so great a Plague to the World but more especially to God's Church and we did intend to have added some probable Conjectures concer●ing the Time of her Fall which according to most Authors will be in this present Age c. according to Peter du Moulin Brightman and others before the Year 1690. 'T is said The ten Horns shall hate her c. And I have met with a very ancient Prophecy that says There shall arise a Prince of the Illustrious Lilly that should make War with ●landers c. And that he should fall out with Rome and make War against Italy and in the fortieth Year of his Reign should burn Rome with Fire And according to the Description there given of the Person it should seem to be the present French King the Difference there seems now to be between him and the Pope causeth many to speak of it c. But this we must leave to what Time shall produce THE Tenth HEAD OF Metaphors Allegories Similes AND Other Borrowed TERMS CONCERNING Sin and the Devil Sin a Thief Luke 10.30 And Jesus answered and said A certain Man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among Thieves which stripped him of his Rayment and wounded him leaving him half dead c. THis is generally taken for a Parable tho 't is not so called and before I run the Parallel concerning Sin and a Thief I shall very briefly open the whole Parable according to my present Understanding and commit it to better Judgments 1. By this certain Man I understand the First Adam 2. By Jerusalem that happy State and Place of Peace and Rest which he enjoyed before his Fall 3. By his going from Jerusalem to Jericho his departing from God in obeying the Serpent 4. By Thieves Sin and Satan c. These stripped him of his Rayment viz. His first Righteousness c. and spiritually wounded him leaving him half dead i. e. tho he was alive in his Body he was dead in his Soul In the Day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die 5. By the Priest and Levite who had no compassion on him may be meant the Law and Levitical Priesthood 6. By the Samaritan Jesus Christ 7. By pouring in Wine the Blood of Jesus that precious Fruit of the true Vine by Oyl the Holy Spirit which those receive who partake of the Virtue of Christ's Blood called the Oyl of Gladness 8. By setting him on his own Beast may be intended the Doctrine of the Gospel for that a Doctrine metaphorically is said to carry the Soul as a Beast doth the Body Be not carried about with divers and strange Doctrines c. Heb. 13. 9. By the Inn may be meant the Church of God for thither the true Doctrine of Christ carries Believers 10. By the Host the Minister or Pastor of the Church 11. By the two-Pence given to the Host to take care of the poor wounded Person may be meant the Gifts and Graces of the Holy Spirit or as others the Old and New Testament but I rather conclude the former 12. The Samaritan going away may signify Christ's Ascension into Heaven who besides all the Divine Gifts Graces and Comforts of the Spirit he bestows upon his faithful Ministers here and to capacitate and fit them to do their Work and Office he will when he comes again give them Eternal Life Observ Sin and the Devil are and may fitly be compared to Thieves and Robbers If this may not safely be inferred from hence yet from divers other Texts of Scripture it may naturally be reduced c. See Rom. 7.11 2 Cor. 11.1 2. Eph. 4.22 Heb. 3.13 In the opening of this we shall first shew what Sin and the Devil robs Men of 2. Shew what kind of Thieves and Robers Sin and the Devil are Thieves Parallel A Thief is one or more that in a secret and felonious manner takes away that which is another Mans whether it be Goods Money c. and thereby oft-times undoe and utterly ruine their Neighbours depriving them of all those good things they had in Possession or the Promise of enjoying c. SIn and Satan strive unjustly to take away or deprive the Sons of Men of their undoubted Right to Divine Things Adam was invested with a very great Estate he had great abundance of all good things in his Possession before the Fall viz. Union and Communion with God perfect Righteousness c. he was the Heir of the World Eden in an especial manner with all the Riches Glory and Delights thereof were his c. nothing
as a Cart is pressed with Sheaves Amos 2.13 Nothing is more opposite to God than Sin or is more loathsome to him 3. Because it wounds bruises and lays the Soul it self a bleeding 4. Because it brings the Soul under the dreadful Wrath of an angry God yea binds down under everlasting Wrath causing a final Separation from God and Christ for ever Inferences WHat insensible Creatures are unconverted Sinners 2. Moreover what a sore and grievous thing it is to have this Burden laid upon the Soul 3. It may stir up such who feel this Weight to cast it off by Repentance and Faith remember Christ hath born it for thee that thou mightest go free Isa 53. The Lord hath laid on him the Iniquities of us all 4. It shews us what a wonderful Mercy it is to be freed from this Burden Saints are delivered from the Power and Dominion Guilt and Condemnation of it Rom. 6.14 through the Lord Jesus Christ Sin a Sting 1 Cor. 15.56 The Sting of Death is Sin Parallels DEath is like a venemous Serpent that hath a cruel and tormenting Sting and this Sting is Sin II. The Sting of some Serpents in the Flesh is very painful it makes such to cry out exceedingly So such who feel themselves stung with Sin cry out like as those did in Acts 2.36 The pain and torment of a wounded Conscience is intolerable as many can experience and the History of Francis Spira abundantly shews III. The Venom or Sting of some Serpents is mortal it killeth the Body so Sin that Venom of Death and the Devil killeth both Body and Soul IV. If a Serpent biteth or stingeth any one part the Venom and Contagion spreadeth over all the Body and destroyeth the whole Man so the Sting and Poyson of Sin which entered by one Man's Offence Rom. 5 15 18. hath infected and killed all the Lump of Mankind moreover he that harboureth but one Sin in his Bosom it will destroy his whole Soul if this Sting be but in his Tongue 't is like the Poyson of Asps his Life must go for it without speedy help V. No Salve or Medicine could heal the Bodies of those who were stung with those fiery Serpents in the Wilderness till they look'd up to the Brazen Serpent no Physician on Earth could cure them Dioscor l 6. c. 30. so no work of Man can cure the biting of Death and the Devil or Sting of Sin but the Venom thereof rageth and raigneth tormenting the Conscience untill the Soul looks up by a true and lively Faith to Jesus Christ VI. As the Sting of a Serpent must be pulled out before the Person stung can be cured so Sin must be lifted pulled or worked out of the Heart and Life of a Sinner by the Spirit before he can be either healed or saved VII As some Serpents cannot hurt when they have lost their Sting so Death cannot hurt a Soul whose Sin is taken away by Jesus Christ Sin a Wound Psal 38.5 My Wounds stinck and are corrupt c. Prov. 18.14 But a wounded Spirit who can bear Luke 10.34 And bound up his Wounds c. SIN wounds the Soul of a Sinner a Church or Nation When Ephraim saw his Sickness and Judah saw his Wounds c. Hos 5.13 The Word translated Wound in this place is from a Word that signifieth colligavit he hath bound up either because of the corruption of the Body that is gathered together or because of the binding of it up with Cloaths Parallels WOunds are either new which we commonly call green Wounds or else old Wounds Now Sinners have an old Wound upon them which is like a stinking Ulcer which they received above five thousand years ago in the Garden of Eden when Adam was wounded by his Sin in eating of the forbidden Fruit all his Posterity were wounded in him also every Sinner hath many fresh Wounds upon him Rom. 5.12 II. Some Wounds are venemous as the biting or cruel sting of some poysonous Serpent c. Sin is a venemous Wound it is the sting of a Serpent the old Serpent See Sting III. Some Persons have been full of Wounds wounded from the Crown of the Head to the Soles of the Feet they are as it were nothing but Wounds so Sinners are full of Wounds every Sin is like a Wound or makes a Wound in the Soul so many Sins a Man is guilty of so many Wounds he hath in his inward Man Every Faculty of their Soul is wounded 1. Their Judgment is corrupt 2. Their Understanding darkned full of Vanity Blindness Incredulity Enmity and Unteachableness 3. The Will that noble Faculty is wounded and fearfully depraved the Mind of a Man being corrupt the Will must needs be corrupt As to a Man that hath his Pallate possest with a vicious Humour every thing seems bitter according to the Humour so the Understanding reckoning the ways of God both Enmity and Folly the Will acts accordingly The Will of wicked Men acts cross and contrary to God and his Holy Will in all things they resist and fight against him and are not subject to his Law neither indeed can be there is much Pride Inconstancy Rom. 8 7. Stubbornness and Disobedience in the Will Our Tongues are our own and who is Lord over us Psal 12.4 4. Their Affections are wounded and very filthy Men naturally love the Creature more than God nay they love their Lusts horrid Sins and Uncleanness above the Majesty of Heaven The Apostle giving a Character of some Men saith they are Lovers of Pleasures more than Lovers of God 5. The Memory is wounded 1 Tim. 3.4 being forgetful of that which is good and like a leaking Vessel Men are ready to remember what God bids them forget but forget that which he commands them to remember they are too apt to think upon Injuries nay may be one Injury will be thought on more than many Kindnesses and Years of good Service they are subject enough to remember Trifles and vain Stories whenas a profitable Sermon or wholesome Counsel is forgot c. 6. The Conscience of a Sinner is wounded with Sin tho not for it or in a deep and real Sense of the evil of it Vnto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure Tit. 1.15 but their Minds and Consciences are corrupt the Conscience which should like Job's last Messenger bring us Word that all the rest of the Faculties are dead i. e. wounded Preston and corrupted alas is maimed dumb or misguided or grievously distempered that when it should accuse it excuseth it should act the part of a faithful Register to set all our Sins down exactly but it falsifies in this and as saith Dr. Preston when it should set down Hundreds it sets down Fifties when it should restrain from Evil it is almost asleep and lets the Sinner alone whom it should condemn for want of Light it acquits And as a Man is
nine Cubits long and of a great Thickness Neither is it to be thought saith Mr. Topsell out of Gesner incredible Topsell p. 704. that the Souldiers of Attilius Regulus killed a Dragon which was an hundred and twenty Foot long Dragons saith he are certainly great Beasts and there are few or none bigger on Earth So there are many Devils and by some places of holy Scripture we may conclude there is a chief or grand Devil one whose Hellish Power is above the rest c. The Earth and Air are full of these cursed Dragons but being Spirits we cannot see them Besides we may suppose that they may abound more in some Countries than in others The Devil a Serpent 2 Cor. 11.3 But I fear lest by any means as the Serpent beguiled Eve through his Subtilty c. Rev. 12.9 The old Serpent the Devil c. SErpents are venemous Beasts that creep upon the Ground or go as it were upon their Bellies w●ich as it appears from Gen. 3.14 was laid upon them at first as a just Judgment of God Vpon thy Belly shalt thou go meaning saith Ainsworth in great Pain c. This Creature the Devil made use of to deceive Eve the Devil spake in or by the Serpent i. e. opened the Serpent's Mouth for we are not to conclude that Serpent was the Devil because the Text saith positively it was a Beast of the Field who as some conceive is said to be more subtil than any other Beast by means of Satan's Influences yet all agree that naturally the Serpent or some Serpents are very crafty and subtil Aristotle and Galen define a Serpent to be Animal sanguineum pedibus orbatum oviparum that is A bloody Beast without feet laying Eggs. There are divers sorts of Serpents we read of the Adder Asp Dart Dragon Dipsus Cockatrice c. Some affirm that the Cockatrice or Basilisk hath Wings from Isa 14.29 Out of the Serpent's Root shall come a Cockatrice and his Fruit shall be a flying Serpent The Basilisk is esteemed the King of Serpents partly for the great Strength of his Poyson and partly for his stately Pace and magnanimous Mind for he goes upright with his Head near half a Yard in length Parallels SErpents are a venemous sort of Creatures especially the Cockatrice For his Poyson Naturalists affirm infecteth the Air and the Air so infected killeth all living Creatures and all green Things Fruits and Plants of the Earth it burneth up the Grass whereupon it goeth or creepeth and the very Fowls of the Air fall down dead when they come near his Den or Lodging So the Venom or Poyson of the old Serpent viz. Sin is very deadly and of an infectious Nature as hath been largely shewed What Creature hath not been hurt and corrupted more or less by this Poyson It hath disordered the whole Creation the very Ground is cursed Gen. 3. and bringeth forth Thorns and Thistles hereby II. Amongst all living Creatures there is none that perisheth sooner than doth a Man by the Poyson of a Cockatrice for with his Sight he killeth him the Beams of his Eyes do corrupt the Spirit of a Man nay saith my Author he kills other Serpents by his Sight such is the Venom of his Poyson So no Creature hath suffered or received such hurt as Mankind hath by the Poyson of the old Dragon Tho the Sin of Man which is the Venom of this Serpent hath been a Plague to all Creatures yet Man receives the greatest Ruine by it it destroys him eternally Wicked Men who are compared to Serpents are destroyed by this old Serpent III. A Serpent is a very subtil Beast Be ye wise as Serpents c. The Devil being compared to a Serpent it principally denotes his Subtilty who hath a thousand Ways to destroy and undo the Children of Men. IV. Serpents are most envious implacable and furious Beasts they are immitissimum animalium genus Topsell Elianus Pliny a most ungentle and barbarous kind of Creatures saith my Author as appears by the Rage of a little Snake one of the least of the Serpents kind for when he perceives he is hurt or wounded he never ceaseth casting out his Poyson until he hath done harm or died of Madness In this he is the very Image of the Devil who is so outragious and filled with Envy to Mankind that he cares not what Mischief he doth though it greatly heightens his own Punishment in the end There is an irreconcileable Enmity between the Serpent and the Woman and between his Seed and her Seed Gesner Topsell A Man naturally by a kind of secret Instinct abhorreth the sight of a Serpent and so doth the Serpent the sight of a Man Pliny Seneca V. There is a certain sort of Serpents that if a Man look stedfastly upon them with one Eye with a single Eye they will run away from him Such a Serpent is Satan for if a Christian face him with a single Eye that is look upon him with an Eye of Faith it will resist him and make him flie Inferences FRom the Whole we may perceive what the Nature of Sin is These evil Angels were glorious Creatures at first before they fell but behold what vile cursed Creatures and Monsters their departing from God and Rebellion against him hath made them II. It may teach all Men to beware of the Devil to watch against him to avoid Sin and the Venom of Sin as they would a Serpent III. It may be of use to stir up the Godly to Diligence and Watchfulness c. Be sober be vigilant c. IV. It may teach us to bless and praise God for Christ in whom through Faith we get the Victory over this terrible and crafty Enemy THE Eleventh HEAD OF METAPHORS SIMILES AND Other Borrowed TERMS CONCERNING The Means of Grace Providence and Affliction The Day of Grace Mat. 20.6 Why stand ye here all the Day idle c. Heb. 3.7 To day if you will hear his Voice harden not your Hearts c. THe Time that God alloweth Men to repent and provide themselves for another World is called a Day Behold now is the accepted Time behold now is the Day of Salvation I must work the Works of him that sent me while it is Day that is whilst the allotted Season lasts John 9.4 To day if you will hear his Voice c. that is before the Time allotted you or the Space given you to repent be expired Parallels A Day is a certain Time so many Hours c. A natural Day is twenty four Hours an artificial Day contains twelve Hours So God allows a Man a certain and prefix'd Time to repent Jerusalem had a Day O that thou hadst known even thou at least in this thy Day the Things that belong unto thy Peace II. The Day is set in opposition to the Night and it signifies the Time of Light So the Time of God's Patience whilst the Gospel is preached to Men and
Paul determined to know nothing so much as Christ and him crucified When we know Christ better we shall understand this Mystery better Christ is the Mystery wrapt up in all the Gospel he is the Scope of all the Scripture the Pearl hid in the Field every Line is drawn to him as the proper Center all the Types and Shadows pointed to him and all the Promises run in him Jesus Christ is really and truly God and yet very Man God and Man in one Person and is not this a Mystery 1. Is it not a Wonder that a Woman should compass a Man 2. That he that made the World should be born of a Woman 3. That the Ancient of Days should become a Child of a Day old 4. That Blessedness it self should be brought under a Curse for Sinners Christ was made a Curse for us Gal. 3.13 as it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree 5. That he that was the Heir of all things Heir of both Worlds should be laid in a Manger 6. That he who was God over all should have no where to lay his Head 7. That he should become poor who was so rich and by his Poverty make others rich is not this a Mystery 8. He by dying destroyed Death and unless he had died we could not live and by Death he brought us to Life 9. And is it not a Mystery that a Person should be capable to die and yet by his own Power raise himself up again from the Dead 10. Is not this a Mystery that the Physician should die to cure his Patient nay and unless he die the Sin-sick Soul could not live and that his Blood should be the Balsam Is it not a great Mystery that the offended Saviour should suffer to free the offending Sinner 11. Is it not a Mystery that the Nature of Man should be so joined to the Divine Nature of God that both should make but one Christ and that our Nature should be exalted above the Nature of the Angels that Man should sit at God's right hand that Man should be very God and God very Man in one Person O how great is ●he Mystery of Godliness Acts 2.23 chap. 4.28 12. Is it not a Mystery that Christ suffered according to the Decree and determined Counsel of God and yet the Jews did wickedly in putting him to Death Secondly The Mystery of Christianity appears to be great 1. in God's casting off the Jews who followed after Righteousness and in calling the Gentiles who followed not after Righteousness That God should not be found of them that sought him and be found of them that sought him not 2. That God should chuse poor and contemptible Ones into his Service and reject the Wise the Noble and the Learned and that by weak Things he overcame the Mighty and by Folly confounded the Wisdom of this World Thirdly There is a great Mystery in Election in Justification in Sanctification in Renovation c. Nay what Branch or Part of the Doctrine of Godliness is not full of Mystery Fourthly There is a Mystery in every Grace 1. In Faith As 1. That a Sinner should believe i. e. go out of himself and be carried above himself to believe Things impossible to Man's Sense and above his Reason that he should seek for Justification by the Righteousness and Obedience of another for a Man as one would think to have a great deal of Holiness and good Works and yet to throw it as it were all away and be dead to it in point of Trust and Dependence is not this a Mystery 2. To believe when every thing is opposite to it To work for Life and to oppose some Sin a natural Man is ready to do but to believe in Christ for Life and Holiness to relie upon his Doings his Works and Merits this the Heart of Map is averse to nay and Satan opposeth it the World mocks at it and accounts it Foolishness 3. That a Man should believe and not see nay believe as Abraham did in hope against hope 2. There is a Mystery in Love that a Man should love him with an endeared Affection with a superlative Love whom the World can see no beauty in nay thus to love him whom their natural Eyes never beheld nay love him who is able to make great and save from all Misery and yet suffers his People and best beloved Ones to lie amongst the Pots and to be hated and persecuted in the World and to appearance to be of all Men the most miserable A Saint knows the Reason of these Things but 't is a Mystery to others The Love of Christ turns the Affections another way it drives as it were Jordan back it makes the Waters ascend and run up hill Is it not a Mystery to see a Saint who hath a Hundred nay it may be Five Hundred a Year a gracious Wife many sweet and lovely Children enjoying much Health and living in all Prosperity yet if he hath lost the Light of God's Countenance or Christ be withdrawn from him he is cast down and greatly distressed and afflicted in his Spirit and crying out Ah! what is all that I possess sith I want the Love of Christ the Presence of Christ what 's an Estate and no Christ Wife and Children and no sight of Christ Christ saith he is all to me and all is nothing without him This is a Mystery to carnal Hearts they wonder at it Nay to see a Man that hath all the Comforts of the World expose himself to cruel Mockings Loss of Goods to Imprisonment and Death it self for Christ's sake is a strange thing to worldly Men they think the Man is mad 't is a Mystery to them c. Fourthly The Effects and Operations of Grace and Godliness are a Mystery 1. That God should make Men wise by teaching them to become Fools 1 Cor. 3.18 2. That the way to become rich very rich eternally rich is to become poor This is a Mystery yet this Mystery is taught us in the Person of Christ David was a King and very rich yet cries out I am poor he was poor in Spirit This poor Man cried There is that maketh himself rich yet hath nothing there is that maketh himself poor Prov. 13.7 and yet hath great Riches 3. That the way to have all is to lose all and that a Man gains most when he loses most Is not this a Mystery 4. That Men must die to live or that the way to live is to die nay that God kills by making Souls alive and yet by that killing and death brings them to life And is not this a Mystery Sin must die and we must die to Sin Sin revived and I died Rom. 7.11 yet by that Death he revived and lived A Man must die to Self or he can never live himself 5. God makes Men blind by giving Sight and turns that Darkness into Light and is not this a Mystery 6. The way
2.4 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Polyptoton in Latine Casuum varietas a variety of Cases or the change of the Case or Termination from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 variously and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 falling derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to fall is when words of the same Root Primitive or Original are used in a different Termination with respect to Mood Tense Person Case Degree Gender Number c. As Psal 68.15 16. Isa 24.16 Hos 10.1 Mich. 2.4 Rom. 2.21 22 23. 4.18 2 Cor. 9.8 10.12 Gal. 2.19 20. Eph. 1.3 c. There is an elegant Polyptoton in those Lines of the Learned Picus Earl of Mirandula Namque tua est nostris major Clementia Culpis Et dare non dignis res mage digna Dei. Quanquam sat digni si quos dignatur amare Qui quos non dignos invenit ipse facit Gen. 50.24 The Lord when he visiteth in visiting will visit you see Rom. 11.36 Eccles 12.8 Dan. 2.37 John 3.13 1 John 3.7 2 Tim. 3.13 Heb. 6.14 Joh. 17.25 Isa 19.2 c. CHAP. II. Of a Paronomasia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Paronomasia Agnomination or Likeness of Words of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in Composition signifies with Alteration and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Name or from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to change or allude to a Name or Word is when by the change of one Letter or Word the Signification thereof is also changed This Figure is frequent in the Latine and is very ornamental as Nata salo suscepta solo patre edita Coelo ab exordio ad exodium And the native Beauty of it being peculiar to the Original Languages can hardly be shewn in English There are many in the Hebrew of the Old and the Greek of the New Testament which the Learned may find in Glassius take however a few English Examples by which you may judg of the rest as Friends turn'd Fiends You are like to have a bare gain out of this Bargain Bolder in a Buttery than in a Battery Wine is the Blood of the Vine No stumbling but tumbling Errors will cause Terrors Scripture-Examples are many as 2 Cor. 10.3 Though we walk in the Flesh yet do we not war after the Flesh 2 Cor. 6.9 As unknown and yet known see 2 Cor. 4.8 9. and Mat. 8.22 Examples in the Hebrew Text are Isa 57.6 65.12 Gen. 18.27 Exod. 25.27 and 32.18 1 Sam. 13.7 Psal 69.30 31 32. Isa 5.7 13.6 Joel 1.15 Jer. 1.11 12. Jer. 48.43 Isa 24.17 Gen. 9.27 Isa 65.11 In the Greek Text Mat. 16.18 Ma● 16.18 expounded Tu es 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 super hac 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 edificabo Ecclesiam meam c. where there is an allusion to the Name of Peter tho Christ speaks of himself Peter having confessed him to be the Son of the Living God 1 Pet. 2.4 5 6. which plainly appears by the Context As if Christ had said The Name I give thee is not in vain for thou hast acted conformable to it when in thy Confession thou hast exprest the true Rock upon which thou and all Believers art to be built Erasmus thus paraphrases it I also because I would not have so magnificent a Testimony unrequited affirm That thou art truly Peter that is a solid Stone so fixt that thou shalt not waver hither and thither according to the giddy humour of the Vulgar And upon this Rock of thy Profession viz. my Self will I build my Church that is my House and Palace as upon an immoveable Foundation which all the open Violence or private Stratagems of Hell shall not be able to destroy Satan will employ his various Artifices to insnare you and will stir up a wicked Generation to circumvent trepan and persecute you but mine All-powerful Protection shall be your invincible Defence during your sound and solid Profession the Church is my heavenly Kingdom the unbelieving World is the Devil 's none of the former have need to fear the latter if he be a Peter that is like thee In the Syraick Tongue in which Christ speaks the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies both Peter a Proper Name and Petra a Rock a Noun Appellative Hence Bellarmine clamors Saying We have what we would viz. that Peter is that Rock of whom Christ speaks If Augustine says he had considered that Cephas signifies nothing but a Rock Lib. 1. de Pont. Rom. c. 10. and that the Lord had said thou art a Rock and upon this Rock c. he had made no doubt of the Truth of our Sentence But the Jesuit gains nothing by this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is a Proper Name has a different Signification from Cephas as it is a Common Name as Abel Deborah Rachel Jona c. signify one thing when they are Proper Names and another when they are Common Names altho there be no change in the Word or Denomination the Syriack joyns a Masculine Pronoun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he to the first Cephas and the Feminine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 haec this to the latter Cephas which is of the Feminine Gender when it signifies a Stone as 1 Cor. 10.4 Mat. 23.42 Mark 16.4 Most faithfully therefore has Matthew expressed the Words of Christ in Greek which alone is to be esteem'd Authentick and 't is certain that the Holy Spirit did on purpose change the Speech in the authentical Greek Text to make it perspicuous lest any body through Error or Inadvertency should apply those things to Peter which must be understood of the Doctrine and Confession of Christ or Christ himself proposed in that Confession From the whole we may infer what a weak Foundation the Pope's Supremacy is built upon Mat. 11.17 We have piped and ye have not danced we have mourned unto you and ye have not lamented In the Syriack Tongue in which Christ spake there is a fair Allusion in those words Danced Lamented for both are of the same Root and differ only in Conjugation CHAP. III. Of Antanaclasis Ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reciproco Refringo AN 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antanaclasis which signifies Refraction or Reciprocation is a Figure when the word is repeated in a different if not a contrary Signification Examples in the Hebrew Text are Judg. 15.16 where the same word signifies an Ass and a Heap 1 Sam. 1.24 And the Boy was a Boy so the Hebrew that is as we render it The Boy was young See Psal 141.5 Eccles 7.7 Psal 58.9 10. Isa 37.18 58.10 66.3 4. Jer. 7.18 19. Jer. 8.4 14. 34.17 Ezek. 20.24 25. 41.24 Mat. 8.22 Follow me and suffer the Dead to bury their Dead the first Dead denotes the wicked who are spiritually dead in Sin the second Dead such as are naturally dead or departed from this Life Mat. 26.29 I will not drink henceforth of this Fruit of the Vine until that day when I drink it new with you in
something is added besides the purpose or exceeds the intended Narration Gen. 2.8 to 15. where there is a Digression respecting the Habitation which God provided for the Man he created Gen. 38. throughout is a Digression as also Chap. 36. In the Epistles of Paul there are many neat Digressions which are fairly tho with different Reasons brought to serve his present scope returning by a circle of Sentences to his first original purpose Rom. 1.1 to ver 8. Rom. 1.1 to 8. the Apostle from his Name digresses to his Vocation ver 1. then to define the Gospel ver 2. then to describe Christ ver 3 4. again he comes to his own Vocation v. 5. at length he greets the Romans with Grace and Peace and so ends the Circle His Scope runs thus Paul the Apostle of the Gentiles separated unto the Gospel ver 1. the Gospel is the Doctrine of the Son of God ver 2 3. the Son of God is true God and Man ver 3 4. By this Son of God and Man Paul was called to the Apostle-ship to preach among the Gentiles ver 5. the Romans are Gentiles ver 6. therefore let Grace and Peace from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ be to the Romans ver 7. See 1 Cor. 1.13 c. Eph. 3.1 c. Col. 1.3 to the end There are many of these Digressions in the Epistles of Peter and in his Sermons as they are described by Luke in the Acts c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Metabasis Transition is when the thing or things to be spoken is briefly hinted or pointed at as 1 Cor. 12.13 But covet earnestly the best Gifts and yet shew I unto you a more excellent way The first Words respect what went before and is their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Sum the latter prepares them with the Argument of what follows See 1 Cor. 15.1 2. 11.17 IV. Schemes taken from Opposites or Contraries 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antithesis Contention is when a thing is illustrated by its contrary opposite As when the Fortune of the wicked is opposed to the Fortune of a good Man Psal 1. 37. See also Isa 1.21 5.3 43.32 c. 59.9 Lam. 1.1 Ezek. 16.33 34. Rom. 5.6 7 8. 8.13.15 2 Cor. 4.17 18. Phil. 3.7 8 9 14. 2 Pet. 2.19 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antimetabole Commutation or Inversion is a kind of a delicate Permutation or Change of Contraries one to another as Mark 2.7 The Sabbath was made for Man and not Man for the Sabbath More Examples see Joh. 15.16 Rom. 4.1 2 3. 7.19 1 Cor. 11.8 9. 2 Cor. 12.14 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anticategoria adverse Accusation or a transferring to the Adversary is when we fasten that upon our Adversary which another was accused or suspected of as Ezek. 18.29 33.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antistrophe Inversion is when we retort any thing proposed as granted into the contrary It is also called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 violent We have an Example in the Answer of Christ to the Woman of Canaan Mat. 15.26 27. which bears this Sence Because thou art a Dog says Christ the Children's Bread must not be thrown to thee Yea but says she because I am a Dog you ought not to deny me the Crumbs which fall from the Table c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oxymaron signifies one that is wittily foolish and is Ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acumen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stultus when Contraries are acutely joyn'd which seem at first sight to be non-sense but upon better view to be Elegant as Job 22.6 To strip the naked of their Cloathing Now the naked have no Cloaths and so cannot be stript so that naked by a Synecdoche signifies to be ill habited Jer. 21.19 He shall be buried with the Burial of an Ass that is with an unburied Burial viz. not at all See 2 Chron. 36.6 and Josephus Lib. 10. Ant. Cap. 8. Acts 5.41 Acts 5.41 Rejoycing that they were counted worthy to suffer Shame for his Name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be worthy and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be disgraced or contumeliously used are Contraries but the Apostle joyns them by a most elegant Oxymoron denoting that it is the greatest Dignity to be treated unworthily for the sake of Christ because the Ignominy of the Godly in this World will be their Glory in the Presence of God 1 Tim. 5.6 1 Tim. 5.6 The Widow that lives delicately or in Pleasure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vivens mortua est living she is dead or as we render it she 's dead whilst she liveth By Life in the former part is meant temporal Life by the latter spiritual Life viz. Dead in Sin Profane Writers much use this Figure sometimes in a single Word as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a faint-hearted Bragger 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a rich Beggar that is a covetous Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bitter-sweet as in Wedlock 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a wise Fool that is a Simpleton that conceits himself wise Sometimes in two or more words as Sophocles says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Gifts of Enemies are not Gifts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a lifeless Life a living Carkass So Epiphanius says of Joseph 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Husband and not the Husband of Mary Cicero If they are silent they say enough so Harmonious discord he is mad with Reason poor in the midst of Riches Hence Scipio Affricanus said Nunquam se minùs otiosum esse quam cum otiosus nec minùs solum quaem cum solus esset c. Vossius says that in the very word Oximoron there is an Oxymoron because it is compounded of Words that signify Acuteness and Folly as if a Man could speak simply and wisely at the same time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apodioxis Rejection or Detestation is when any thing is rejected with Indignation as extreamly absurd and intolerable Psal 50.16 c. God rebukes the wicked that presume to preach his Word so Christ rebukes Peter that would prevent his Passion Mat. 16.23 and his Disciples Luke 9.55 that would have Fire from Heaven to consume the inhospitable Samaritans so Peter deals with Simon Magus that would purchase the Holy Ghost for Mony Acts 8.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anthypophora a contrary Inference is when the Objection is refuted or disproved by the opposition of a contrary Sentence It is also called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Antieisagoge and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Anticatalexis Compensation because it takes away the Question by opposing a stronger Argument as Mat. 21.23 c. this differs from that Antipophora Chap. 6. for that answers a tacit this an express Objection V. Schemes taken from Comparates 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syncrisis Parathesis Comparison is an Amplification of the Sacred Speech by the comparison of such things as are like and unlike greater or less as in a Proposition and its
is said That Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ In which place Grace is opposed to the Curse of the Law and Truth to the Ceremonies Shadows and prefigured Types thereof The Definition of the thing as thus A typical sense is when things hidden or unknown whether present or to come especially when the Transactions recorded in the Old Testament prefigure the Transactions in the New are exprest by External Actions or Prophetical Visions The Division of Types follows Article II. Of the Division of Types HEre we shall wave the wranglings of Criticks who spent many words to confute each other and give the best account we can of the real Division of Types which may be reduced to two sorts 1. Prophetical Types 2. Historical Types of which in Order Article III. Of Prophetical Types and Typical and Symbolical Actions PRophetical Types are such whereby the Prophets who were divinely inspired by External Symbols figured or signified things present or to come in their Speeches or Writings either by way of Warning Admonition or Prophecy This must be considered 1. with respect to Actions 2. Visions 1. Prophetical Actions are typical when some thing mystical and hidden is adumbrated or shadowed by those things which the Prophets by Divine Command acted as for Instance Esa 20.2 Esa 20.2 The Prophet goes out naked that is without his Prophetical Garments to prefigure the fatal Destruction of the Egyptians and Ethiopians Jer. 13.1 Jer. 13.1 c. and the following Verses the Prophet by Divine Command gets himself a linen Girdle puts it upon his Loins hides it in a Rock by Euphrates afterwards takes it from thence but 't is putrified or marr'd or rotten By which Type the Blessings God gave the People their Ingratitude and Wickedness and the Destruction that was to come upon them are prefigured as by the Context appears Chap. 16.2 5. There is a Command to abstain from Matrimony Procreation of Children mourning Feasts for the Dead By which Type God denounces most woful Calamities which were to come upon his People for their Sins See Chap. 18.2 3 c. ver 6 11. And 19.12 13. 27.2 51.63 Ezek. 2.8 c. The Prophet eats the Volumn Book or Roll reached to him to witness the Gift of Prophecy divinely inspir'd into him which afterwards he was strenuously to exercise against the Rebellious People See Chap. 4.2 13.3 24.3 16 to 22. where you have Instances relating to this Head Hos 1.2 Hosea 1.2 and the following Verses gives the Names of Wife of Whoredoms and Children of Whoredoms to a lawful Wife and lawfully begotten Children by which Type he denotes and taxes the spiritual Idolatry of the People of Israel See Tarnovius Exercit. Bib. largely upon the place The like Symbolical Action we read Chap. 3. to this we may also reduce the typical Action of the Prophet which is described 1 Kings 20.35 We may add likewise to these that Action of Christ when he cursed the barren Fig-tree which presently withered For that Curse was not produced from any rash or unseasonable Malice or a desire of Revenge but by it our Saviour would typically shew 1. The Destruction that was to come upon the People of Israel considered as such obstinate Persons who by no Admonitions or Threats would suffer themselves to be amended or reformed See the Parable Luke 13.6 7. 2. The power of Faith whose Analogy or deep Mystery Christ himself expounds To this Head we may also refer the Action of the Prophet Agabus in Acts 21.10 c. who took Paul's Girdle and bound his own Hands and his Feet to intimate Paul's Captivity at Jerusalem c. Article IV. Of Prophetical and Typical Visions THese may be thus distinguished viz. such as were shewn to Men sleeping or waking To Men asleep their Dreams have been sent from Heaven In these there is a twofold difference some are mere or naked Sights or Views 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which without Figures and the mystery of Types represent deep things and future Events such was the Dream of Joseph Mat. 1.20 2.13 of the Wise Men Mat. 2.12 But these concern not this Head some are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or such Dreams which are hidden or involved in Figures and Types these Dreams came sometimes to Believers sometimes to Vnbelievers To the former Class belongs First The Dream of the Patriarch Jacob Gen. 28.12 And he dreamed and behold Gen. 28.12 of Jacob 's Ladder a Ladder set upon the Earth and the top of it reached to Heaven and behold the Angels of God ascending and descending upon it Verse 13. And behold the Lord stood above it and said I am the Lord c. Certain Interpreters by reason of the Antitype refer this Vi●ion to the Patriarch Jacob himself making the Ladder to signify the Journy of Jacob the ascending Angels his Keepers when he travell'd and the descending Angels when he return'd they say that God stood on the top of the Ladder since he is the Moderator or Governour of the whole Affair because by his Providence Jacob is taken from his Parents led in his Journy entertained by his Father-in-Law Laban and led back again This Interpretation they say is made by God himself ver 15. But Christ is a more sure Interpreter who Joh. 1.51 makes himself the Antitype of that Vision Verily verily I say unto you hereafter ye shall see Heaven opened and the Angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man That is from day to day ye shall more and more understand that I am he who is prefigured in that Vision of Jacob's Ladder That Vision holds forth 1. The Personal Union of two Natures in the Messiah which is prefigured by the Ladder standing upon the Earth whose top reached Heaven denoting the Union of the Divine and Humane Nature by the Symbol of the Ladder touching Heaven and Earth 2. The Fruits Benefits or Blessings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the incarnate Word or the Word made Flesh expressed by the Ladder's touching Heaven because through Christ the Ascension or Entrance into Heaven is open to all Believers Joh. 3.14 15 16. and by him only Acts 4.12 As the Patriarch saw but one Ladder so the going up and coming down of the Angels denotes that they were no longer to be hurtful to Mankind but most friendly See Luke 2.9 13. For they come down as Ministring Spirits for the help of the Saints Heb. 1.14 and go up again carrying their Souls into Abraham's Bosom Luk. 16.22 Here is also a Blessing annext by the Lord ver 14. And all the Families of the Earth shall be blessed in thee that is in thy Seed This is that Blessing which comes upon us through Christ Eph. 1.3 Gal. 3.8 9. 3. Here is the principal End for which the Land of Canaan was delivered into the Possession of the Posterity of Abraham and Jacob viz. That there may be a certain Seat or Habitation for that