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

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and poyson so the devill casts out nothing but virulent words against God and his Saints and spewes out after the Church a flood of poyson to drowne her How hee blasphemed Iob how he is the accuser of the brethren how of the head Christ himselfe the Scripture declares Fiftly as a serpent is cursed above all beasts so is the devill The first cursed creature in the world was this serpent and hath ever since remained the cursed head of all cursed rebells and wicked ones to whose custody and condemnation they shall all be gathered in the last day Mat. 25. 41. goe ye cursed c. 2. Why called fiery serpents Answ. 1. From their colour Through abundance of poison they had a shining and glistring skinne and they seemed as if they had been made of fire A resemblance wee have in our snakes that seeme to shine and sparkle against the Sunne 2. From their effect For with their sting they infused such poison into the bodies of the Israelites as stirred up in them an outragious heat and fire Now these diseases are most painfull and so tormentfull as if a wild-fire were in the bowels feeding upon the bones marrow and members 3. From their end First because they were appointed by God and after a sort inflamed and kindled with desire of revenge of the Lords wrongs and they so fiercely assaulted the Israelites as if a raging and devouring fire had seased upon them which no way they could avoid Secondly that in their punishment they might bee admonished both what a fearefull fire of Gods wrath they had kindled by their sin against themselves as also that they had deserved a more fearefull fire in hell to seize upon their whole man everlastingly 3. Why stinging serpents Answ. To imply unto us First that sinne is the sting of this old serpent even a poisoned sting that hee hath thrust into all mankind But with this difference in that this poison is farre more generall and the wounds infinitely more mischievous then were those of the fiery serpents For 1. They stung a few Israelites but not all but this serpent hath stung all mankind none excepted 2. They stung the bodies onely but these soules and bodies also 3. They stung one part of the body this serpent all parts and whole man 4. They to a temporall death this to an eternall Secondly to imply that sinne is the sting of a fiery serpent 1. Set on fire with wrath and cruelty and desire to poison and destroy us Revel 12. 17. 2. Setting on us with fiery darts For so his temptations are called Ephes. 6. 16. for three reasons 1. From the manner and custome of souldiers in times past which cast poisoned darts the poison of which inflamed the wounded bodies and made the wounds incurable As now many out of desperate malice poison their weapons and bullets to make sure with their enemy So doth Satan by all meanes poison his darts to speed the Christians soule 2. Because as fiery darts they inflame and kindle in the heart all manner of burning lusts and sinnes one of them being but as a sparke or firebrand to kindle another 3. Because they leave for most part a cauterized and seared conscience behind them as if they were burnt with an hot iron which makes the sinner stung senslesse of his wound Whence is another miserable difference betweene the stung Israelite and the stung sinner The former was alwayes felt with griefe and paine but this often not felt and so more desperate Thirdly the effect of this stinging was death in many And so the effect of sinne is death in all The stung Israelite had death in his bosome and no other could be expected so the guilty sinner is stung to death In his nature is every man the sonne of death and can expect nothing but death every moment And as the stung person in the wildernesse had no meanes in himselfe nor from others to avoid either the serpent or death from it till God appointed them the brazen serpent So the poore sinner was destitute of all helpe in himselfe and others till the Lord appointed Jesus Christ the promised seed to breake the serpents head There is given no name else whereby we must be saved Act. 4. 12. First note hence how deceitfull are the pleasures of sinne It is as a sweet poison Iob 20. 12. sweet in the mouth but poison in the bowels What wise man would drink a draught of poison for the sweet taste of it Wicked men hold sinne as a sweet morsell but sower sauce followes it Secondly what little cause we have to love our sinnes for that is to love our owne bane Prov. 8. 35. Hee that sinneth against mee hurteth his owne soule and all that hate mee loue death No sinne but the more pleasing the more poisoning the more delicate the more deadly Sinne never so much disguised never the lesse deadly Thirdly that sinners are but dead men while they live 1. Tim. 5. 6. An Israelite stung was but a dead man So although the reasonable soule in a sinner makes him a man yet the want of the Spirit of grace makes him a dead man Death waits upon sinne as the wages on the worke and hell upon death that comes before repentance Fourthly A foole hee is that makes a mocke of sinne Who would play with a deadly serpent or make a jest of his owne death or drink up the poison of a serpent in merriment or cast darts firebrands about him to burne himselfe and others and say Am I not in sport See Prov. 26. 18. and 10. 23. and 14. 9. Oh that wee could discerne our wounds as sensibly as we are certainly stung It would make us runne to God and get Moses to goe to God for us and pray that these serpents and painfull wounds might be removed If wee saw death as present and as ghastly in our sins as Israel did in their stinging we would hasten our repentance and seeke after meanes of cure Sect. II. The remedy is First prescribed Num. 21. 8. Secondly applied vers 9. Thirdly in the same verse is the effect they recovered and lived So then in the remedy are I. ordination 2. application 3. sanation or cure 1. The appointing hath First the person appointing which was God himselfe who devised it and prescribed it to Moses for God will save onely in his owne meanes So God himselfe so loved the world that hee gave his onely begotten Sonne c. Ioh. 3. 16. This way of remedy and cure could bee no devise of man nor Angel For 1. The Angels stand still admiring and amazed at it 1. Pet. 1. 12. 2. Men without a superiour teacher cannot conceive it 1. Cor. 2. 14. much lesse invent it Secondly the thing appointed a serpent of brasse resembling Christ in the matter and the forme 1. The matter was of brasse not gold for five reasons 1. God ties not himselfe
this is a guilt And who can deny but the corruption and poison of the soule and spirit is farre more poison full and mortall then poison of the flesh 2. Bodily leprosie is a disease of some men sinne is of all men and of all the man Bodily leprosie spreads over all parts of the body but cannot reach the soule but this spreads over the whole man the soule and all the faculties are weakened and tainted there is not a debility onely but a corruption in the understanding will conscience memory in all affections in all sences in all parts no man no part of man exempted or excepted 3. No disease is more stinking and hatefull to men then leprosie So nothing is so hatefull and abominable to God as sinne his eyes cannot abide to behold it hee will not endure it in his dearest servants no nor Angels themselves unrevenged hee esteemes the sinner as dung 4. No disease more contagious and infectious A leper must meddle with nothing unlesse hee would defile it All hee can doe is to make others uncleane by breathing touching conversing The plague of pestilence is not so infectious as the plague of leprosie so called Levit. 13. 20. infecting houses walls vessells garments Nothing is so infectious as sinne which not onely foules the person or house but heaven and earth and all creatures are subject to the vanity of it Neither can an impenitent sinner doe any thing but make himselfe and others uncleane by the filthy breath of his corrupt communication by his wicked example and conversation No leaven is so spreading no pitch so cleaving 5. Leprosie of all diseases separated the infected persons from the fellowship of all men both in civill and divine ordinances for many dayes and if they proved incurable suppose them Kings they were utterly and for ever excluded the host as Vzziah 2. King 15. 5. Neither might they come to the Temple to joine in holy things for the Temple was legally the most holy place and no polluted thing might enter into it So in our sinne unrepented we are out of the campe aliens from God Sinne shuts out of the communion of faith and Saints shuts out of the state of grace and salvation it shuts out of the Congregation of God in earth and heaven No fellowship place or reward with them 6. Of all diseases none is more painfull sorrowfull mortall or incurable and therefore they were enjoyned to put on mournfull garments seeing God had inflicted so lamentable a disease on them so hardly and seldome cured as most did cary it unto death as Gehezi and Azariah In which the Lord as in a glasse would shew us the extreme sorrowes and paines that wait on sinne unpardoned sorrows of this life and of the life to come And that we should put on mourning garments of timely sorrow and afflict our selves for our sinnes seeing wee are all poisoned with so incurable a disease as there is no hope to expect any cure in this life for every man carries the running issues of sinne to his death naturall the most to the death eternall 7. The signes and symptomes of leprosie are most correspondent to the symptoms and effects of sinne in the soule 1. As there is a debility and weaknesse of all parts because the spirits are exhausted so sinne weakens all faculties because the spirit of grace is resisted and driven out 2. There is a tumour and swelling in the flesh here a tumour and proud swelling of minde none more proud then hee who hath least cause 3. There is burning and thirst through the adust and burnt blood by melancholy whereof it ariseth here is inflammation and burning of anger of lust and thirst after the world after revenge after preferments and this insatiable as every sinne is 4. There is filthy putred matter still breaking forth most loathsomely so here from within breaks out corrupt matter of envy of hatred of goodnesse of uncleannesse in speaches and behaviour 5. There is an hoarse and weake voice here the voice so weake as it cannot pray or cannot be heard God heares not sinners for either they pray not at all or they are in their sinnes 6. There is a filthy stinking breath and therefore they must cover their lips that by their breath they might not infect others So here is a filthy breath of corrupt communication of uncleane and adulterous speaches swearing and cursing speaches lying and false speaches slanderous and uncharitable speaches and seldome doe such cover their lips being like the uncleane vessells of the Law which were ever open to the corrupting and poisoning of numbers Sect. IV. I. From the former description of legall uncleannesses note the state of Gods Church and people here upon earth subject unto many sorts of defilements and pollutions within them without them and on every hand of them by foule and uncleane creatures and persons by foule courses and actions which a godly man may not touch or tast but hee is presently defiled as hee that toucheth pitch cannot but be defiled with it Where bee they that will see no Church if they see any uncleannesse Or who say that God is in no such society where any pollution is seeing God vouchsafeth to walk among his owne people who were daily subject to so many legall and morall pollutions God might if it pleased him wholly purge his floore here upon earth but it makes more for his glory to suffer sinne and evill and to set the Saints in the middest of defilements here below 1. There must be a difference betweene this heaven and earth and that new heaven and new earth in which dwells nothing but righteousnesse for had the Saints no warre there needed no watch there could bee no victory if no seede time no harvest 2. GODS mighty power is more manifest in gathering and preserving a Church to himselfe out of sinners and among sinners and hee magnifieth his mercy both in covering and curing so great and many corruptions 3. The godly in sence of their uncleannesse are kept low in their owne eyes and watchfull of their waies and so are driven out of themselves unto Christ for righteousnesse and unto God for strength continually as privy unto their owne continuall weakenesse So to subdue presumption Paul must have a buffeter and to way-lay security comming on Israel all the Canaanites must not be subdued 4. In that they cannot expect freedome from foulenesse and uncleannesse heere below they may the rather desire and aspire to that heavenly Tabernacle into which no uncleane thing can enter Rev. 21. 27. and wish to bee translated thither where righteousnesse shall dwell yea the righteous and holy God shall dwell immediately in the midst of his Saints and all things together with themselves shall be most absolutely cleane and holy II. The Lord by so large a description of legall uncleannesse would have them and us looke more neerely and seriously upon
and take our flesh that by death he might destroy him that had the power of death 2. The scarlet cedar and hysope must be dipped also to shew that all the graces we receive from him must be dipped in his blood by which alone we have both accesse unto grace and acceptation into grace For by the dipping and union of this live bird and slaine we come into the grace and favour of God being united first to his humanity then to his divinity and so are knit to his whole person and by him we come to the father 3. The Priest must let the live bird goe into the broad field ver 7. signifying 1. Christs escape and deliverance from death and the power of the grave 2. His exaltation after he was once consecrated his ascending on high and being made higher then the heavens Heb. 7. 26. 3. The publication and manifestation of righteousnesse purchased by the death of Christ in the broad open field of the Church and this in the daily ministery of the Gospell Thirdly concerning the party to whom this cure must be applyed The Priest must sprinkle on him that is to be cleansed this blood seven times signifying 1. That only Christ Jesus doth sprinkle his blood on penitēt soules from whom only they must expect pardon purging from sins 2. That Christs blood must be particularly applyed to every beleever to every thing that is to be cleansed Partly by Gods imputation of Christ and his merits to the penitent sinner Partly by his Ministers in the publishing and speciall applying the particular promises to every soule that is weary 3. Seven times sprinkling noteth 1. Perfect justification by the blood of Christ the number of seven times perfect sprinkling he is able perfectly to save all that come unto him and needeth no other seeking of other merits to satisfie or justifie 2. To put the uncleane person in minde how hardly he parts from his foulenesse and us that it is no easie thing to be rid of sinne 3. How weakly and imperfectly our selves apply the blood of Christ that have need of so many sprinklings to humble us for our weaknesse of faith and slow progresse in sanctification Sect. IX I. All these ordinances and ceremonies in discerning and curing this disease in generall teach us two things I. That it is no small businesse to be rid of the leprosie of the soule and infection of sinne which was but shadowed in that as that was occasioned by this For whence is bodily leprosie but from leprosie of the soule Or what is it that strikes the body with such contagious sicknesse but the infection and sicknesse of the soule As in Gehezi Mariam Vzziah whose bodies were so fouly infected and deformed by the leprosie of the soule and corruption of heart And who sees not how the Lord would lead them and us to take speciall notice hereby of the soules leprosie by sinne in that hee committeth the knowledge and discerning of this disease of leprosie to the Priests sending them to the Physitians of their soules and not to the Physitians of their bodies whom one would thinke it more specially and properly concerned This should admonish us all that if there be so much adoe to get cleane bodies cleane faces cleane skins how great our care and businesse should be to get clean soules the soile of which cleaves not to the skin onely but sticks closer to us then our skin or bones and yet wee thinke every slight sigh or Lord have mercy or three words at our death sufficient to rid us of our sinnes and soules leprosie II. How carefull the Lord is to sever the cleane from uncleane for feare of generall infection Teaching 1. the Magistrate that as the Lord puts difference betweene him that sweareth and him that feareth an oath so should they to incourage and countenance the clean person that is the godly and faithfull David set his eyes on the godly in the land not to maligne or wrong them but to cherish their persons and help up religion and the feare of God in them As also to discountenance and terrifie the foule blasphemer the drunkard Sabbath breaker idle persons and gamesters that thrust themselves out of their calling all the week long But if a man by his course shuffle cleane and uncleane together nay runne with the uncleane and countenance gamesters swearers bibbers how doth he execute the judgements of God 2. A good minister then stands in the counsell of God when he severs the precious from the vile Ier. 15. 19. The Priest in the Law must pronounce him cleane that is so indeed He durst not pronounce a foule person to bee cleane nor a cleane person foule Then how dares a man that stands to judge between the Lord and his people scandalize or scorne such as endeavour most to be clean How comes it that we doe not heare drunkards adulterers theeves swearers blasphemours so rated and disgraced as them Or how dare men sell praises of religion to foule Atheists swearers haters and despisers of goodnesse as if men should gild rotten posts or wash dead bricks making them at their death seeme as white as lawne who all their life were white as Lepers Well let not the despised members of Christ be discouraged we know that the judgement of Christ shall passe righteously betweene the cleane and uncleane If thy heart be upright let all men cast the foule brand of an hypocrite on thee Jesus Christ shall pronounce thee cleane 3. Every good man must and will be glad of this separation rejoyce in that arbitrement that differenceth clean and uncleane as most savoury Wicked men can abide nothing lesse then this shedding differencing of men Whence are so many tumults Oh you are more holy then all other you are the pure ones you are all cleane c but because they have learned a trick to deceive themselves and to hide their foulenesse as they thinke by crowding all into one confusion Now is that doctrine onely intolerable that fetcheth them out of their holes and casts them out among their uncleane fellowes for whose company they be a great deale fitter then for the society of Saints and beleevers II. Note in speciall 1. In that the Leper must bee sent to the Priest to have his leprosie discerned we see that our Lord Jesus who was typified by the high Priest can discerne our leprosie Thou maist hide thy sinne from man but thou canst not deceive him no idle excuse or fig-leafe can cover thee If he see thee an adulterer a swearer an unjust person a covetous or proud person if he see thee an enemy a profane person he will judge thee a Leper Thou canst not sinne though never so secretly but thou art sure to be discerned and tryed by him whose eyes are as a flame of fire And if he judge thee a leper he will pronounce thee a leper and thou canst not appeale from but must
of God looke confidently upon it be it never so unreasonable 〈…〉 There bee foure things which a man sha●● never attaine till the eye of his faith close up the eye of his reason 1. Hee shall never attaine the true knowledge of divine things Gods wisdome hath no greater enemy then humane wisdome not sanctified No men hardlier nor seldomer converted then worldly wise men as the Scriptures which say not many wise and experience shewes daily What wiser men in the world then the Philosophers and Stoicks of Athens but when Paul came to dispute among them of doctrine of religion he was called ababler Act. 17. 18 what will this babler say and reasoning among them of the resurrection hee was derided and mocked ver 32. Was not Festus a wise man and a prudent governour and yet when Paul preached to him no other things then Moses and the Prophets had foretold of these sufferings death and resurrection Festus tells him too much learning had made him mad Act. 26. 24. Ioh. 9. 6 Christ to cure a blinde man tempered clay and spittle together and applyed it to his eyes and bids him goe to Siloe A remedie likelier to put out a mans eyes then to recover sight There was no reason in the earth of the remedy but onely to try whether the blinde man did constantly beleeve Yet if the blinde man had not wholly resigned himselfe to Christ and shut up his owne reason had not he acknowledged Christ able to do what hee would by what hee would and to bee the same God who at first put all sences into a piece of clay and now by a piece of clay would recover his sence he had never seene but remained blinde still So every naturall man borne as blinde as he in spirituall things till he wholly submit himselfe and subdue his reason to the meanes appointed shall never see any thing to salvation but abide in naturall blindnesse still What hope hath he to be taught by the spirit that must give lawes to the Spirit of God or what a short metwand is naturall reason to measure divine things by 1 Cor. 1. 21 1 Cor. 2. 14 Why else did these Jewes esteeme the doctrine of the Gospell scandall but that reason of flesh would not nor could behold life and glory in such a base life and ignominious death as Christs was nor could hold him the Messiah who was made a curse upon the Crosse as if hee had beene crucified through infirmity and this vaile as to them remaineth at this day unremooved And why was Christ foolishnesse to the Graecian but that reason would not yeeld that life should be fetched out of death or salvation to be sought in curse and malediction 2. Hee that shuts not the eye of reason can never attaine faith There bee sixe things which a man cannot beleeve so long as he sticks to naturall reason First he cannot beleeve the word of God nor depend upon but scorne the ordinances of God in the word preached and Sacraments administred which is the visible word Reason unrenewed cares not for this foolishnesse of preaching 1. Cor 1. 21. And to a carnall man the threatnings of God are like Lots warning to his kinsmen he was as one that mocked or jested A promise to a carnall heart is as tastelesse as the white of an egge The wiser men are the further off they are from beleeving in a crucified God or conceiving that by the foolishnesse of preaching God will save such as beleeve Flesh and blood reveileth nothing Secondly hee cannot beleeve the maine promises of God which cannot bee comprehended but by the eye of faith and not by that till the eye of reason bee shut up God hath promised his presence favour and love with his children how can reason conceive the truth of this promise seeing them in hunger thirst wants hearing them reviled slandered disgraced observing them cast out of companies and societies as refuse and out-sweeping that were their hopes here onely they were of all men most miserable Reason will not bee perswaded that God can send us by hell to heaven yet that is his promise Humane reason will never pray My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee How could Abraham have beleeved the promise of a sonne by Sarah had he looked to naturall reason Thirdly he cannot beleeve the maine Articles of faith that hath not resigned up his reason Example Reason will not beleeve an happy resurrection seeing the body raked up in dust and corruption but denies this Article Reason cannot conceive or beleeve an eternall life because it sees it not given but to dead men It cannot apprehend how the Sonne of God should become the son of man or that this Sonne of man was borne of a virgin without man And so of the rest Fourthly he cannot beleeve the miracles of Scripture for confirmation of Gods truth and our faith Naturall reason cannot beleeve that the Sunne ever stood still as in Gi●eah much lesse went back ten degrees as in Hezekiahs time 2. King 20. 11. Or that fire should descend which naturally ascendeth and feed upon water contrary to nature as at Elias prayer 1. King 18. 39. Or that fire should raine downe as on Sodome which is proper to water Or that fire should not burne the three children Or that water should stand as a wall as in the Red sea and in the river Jordan whose property is to be fluid Fiftly he cannot beleeve the worke of creation if he will beleeve reason the universall consent of which is That of nothing nothing can bee made and not any thing much lesse all things out of nothing To reason therefore it will be incredible that there should be light before the Sunne or fruits before any raine as in the Creation Heb. 11. 3. By faith wee know not by reason that the worlds were framed by the word of God so that things which are seene were not made of things which doe appeere Sixtly he cannot beleeve the great work of Redemption For naturall reason thinks it unreasonable that the life of the Church can bee fetched out of the death of Christ. That a man can be justified by the imputed righteousnesse of another and yet there dwell so many sinnes in him Reason will not beleeve that one man can recover life by anothers death no more then one man can live by anothers soule or be wise by anothers learning or be cured and brought to health by anothers disease 3. So long as the eye of reason is open a man shall never attaine sound obedience unto God For much of that obedience required at our hands is cleane against corrupt nature As the whole doctrine of repentance of mortification or watchfull and carefull conversation of restraining our selves in unlawfull liberties yea and in lawfull all crosses reason Had Abraham ever sacrificed his sonne had he consulted with reason Had Paul ever joyned to the disciples to
Christ bee detained in the grave and lie under buriall three dayes and three nights parts put for the whole as perhaps also in Ionah till the case seemed desperate in both not onely in their owne apprehensions as I have before shewed but in the disciples apprehension Luk. 24. 21. Wee thought this should have beene hee that should have delivered Israel and behold this is the third day IV. Ionah was a manifest type of Christ in his resurrection For 1. As Ionah was taken into the belly of the Whale whole and passed through the ranges and armies of teeth as sharpe as speares without breaking or crushing one bone of him or the least limb of his body So Jesus Christ passed through the strait gate of death but as one bone of him was not broken the speciall and extraordinary providence of God in both of them watching the whole businesse 2. As the Lord spake unto the fish and the fish against his will must cast up Ionah on dry ground So the belly of the earth can keepe Christ no longer then the third day no more then the belly of the Whale could keepe Ionah his blessed body must see no corruption 3. As Ionah returned from his grave with a song of praise and thankesgiving Chap. 2 So Jesus Christ returned to life from his grave with a song of triumph and victory fore-prophecied Hos. 13. 14. and accomplished 1. Cor. 15. 55. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory 4. As Ionah an Hebrew goes not to preach to the Ninivites being Gentiles till after his resurrection out of the belly of the Whale So Jesus Christ an Hebrew not till after his resurrection leaves the obstinate Jewes and by his Apostles ministery and preaching turnes himselfe to the Gentiles Act. 13. 46. 5. As Ionah after this delivery went and preached the doctrine of repentance with great fruit and successe to the conversion of all Niniveh and preventing the fearefull wrath denounced to come within fourty dayes So our Lord Jesus after his resurrection and ascension sending out his Apostles to preach repentance and remission of sinnes mightily prevailed and suddenly converted many nations of the Heathen and brought them to faith and repentance For Application I. Let us acknowledge a greater then Ionah here Matth. 12. 41. Lest as the Ninivits shall rise up against the Jewes they rise also against us if wee convert not nor repent at Christs doctrine as they did at Ionahs For 1. Who are they to us They barbarous Heathens and Gentiles never instructed before wee have beene trained in the Scriptures from childhood 2. What were their meanes to ours Ionah preached but three dayes to them Christ hath preached not three dayes as he nor three yeeres as to the Iewes but aboue threescore yeares He preached one sermon Christ a thousand 3. What was their Preacher to ours 1. Ionah was a weake man Christ is God and man 2. Ionah a sinful man cast into the sea for his owne sinne Christ an innocent man cast into the sea for our sinne 3. Ionah a Prophet a servant Christ the Lord of all the holy Prophets therefore of Ionah 4. Ionah a stranger to them Christ of our owne kindred and family 5. Ionah preached unwillingly Christ preached freely and spent himselfe for us 6. Ionah preached nothing but destruction of them and their City Christ a sweet doctrine of grace salvation and the promise of a kingdome of heaven 7. Ionah came indeed out of the belly of the Whale but did no miracle for confirmation of his doctrine Christ came both from the bosome of the Father and from the heart of the earth and did innumerable signes and miracles in which wee see his glory 8. Ionah a most angry and impatient man would faine die because the Ninevits did not Christ a mirrour of patience will die least his hearers should 9. To Ionah no Prophet gave witnesse or foretold of him To Christ all the Prophets gaue witnesse Act. 10. 43. and spake before of him Shall now Nineveh repent in sackcloth and ashes by Ionahs Ministery of three dayes and shall not wee by Christs constant Ministery of threefore yeares Shall Nineveh condemne Judea for not acknowledging a greater then Ionah and shall it not condemne us not repenting whose sinne shall bee farre greater then that of the Jews who rejected Christ in his abasement and humiliation but we reject the Lord of glory now exalted II. In the type and truth the freedome of Gods favour in the calling of the Gentiles Ionah was a preacher of grace to the Gentiles and Christ was a preacher of grace not to Jews onely but the Gentiles also being given for a light to the Gentiles that he might be the salvation of Gentiles to the farthest parts of the earth For 1. God is not the God of Iews onely but of Gentiles also Rom. 3. 29. 2. Christ was the promised seed in whom all nations must be blessed Gen. 22. 18. Hence comes in our title to grace and not from any desert of ours For what is amiable in the wilde Olive It is onely Gods free calling who calls her that was not beloved to bee beloved Object If we bee grafted into Christ and received into grace all is well we are in state good enough Sol. Some are grafted into the Church by profession of mouth onely as all were not Israel that were of Israel and some planted into it by the faith of the heart The former are not altered from their wilde nature the other are renewed to the Image of Christ. Therefore let none content themselves with externall profession joyning in the word sacraments and prayer but labour for soundnesse of faith and grace by which onely wee become branches of the true Olive whereas to be hanged as a scien by a thred of profession will not keep it from withering III. In both we have a certaine Embleme and proof of our resurrection Rom. 8. 11. If the Spirit of him that raised up Ionah and Jesus be in us he shall also quicken our mortall bodies and if the head be risen the members must rise also For as God spake to the fish and the fish gave up Ionah as from the dead so shall God speake to the earth and sea and all creatures and they shall give up their dead Isa. 26. 19. he shall say to the earth give and to the sea restore my sonnes and daughters and they that are as seed under clods shall awake and sing And these dry bones shall be againe covered with sinews flesh and skin as Ezek. 37. 6. For as it was impossible for Christ to be held ever under death Acts 2. 24. as impossible is it for his members Let us comfort our selves in the approach of death to our selves or our friends and by rising before hand from the grave of our sinnes provide for a blessed and joyfull resurrection 2 King 13. 21. a dead
1. For the kinde in that he was Mediator God and man in unity of person and the onely redeemer of his Church In this regard Rom. 8. 29. he is called the first borne among many brethren Which phrase noteth quality not equality with him some similitude but no parity betweene him and beleevers He holds his birth-right as the Sonne of God by nature and wee by grace made the sonnes of God he disdaines not to call us brethren 2. For undertaking his office 1. In his incarnation he was the first borne of his Mother Mat. 1. 25. till she had brought forth her first borne Son not in respect of any that his mother had after him but because she had none before 2. For the strange maner He was the first borne of a virgine and so never had brother 3. He was the first borne without sinne 3. For accomplishing his office in his resurrection He is called the first begotten or first borne of the dead two wayes 1. In respect of his father who first begot him from the dead Whence his resurrection is called a begetting Act. 13. 33. thou art my sonne this day have I begotten thee the Apostle applying it to the resurrection of Christ. And had not the Father thus begotten his sonne from the dead we had never been raised from death 2. In regard of himselfe whose priviledge it was to raise up himselfe from the dead by his owne power Rom. 1. 4. As himselfe said I have power to take up my life againe And being risen he was the first that ascended in body and soule into heaven Thus consider Christ as God as Mediator as incarnate as raised and ascended he is the Lords first born and the birthright belongs to no other II. The first borne of Israel was the second and next to the father of the family yea after the father instead of the father So is Christ to his family the Church he performes all offices of a carefull and tender father and takes on him not the affection onely of a father but even 1. the name of a father Isa. 9. 6. Father of eternity 2 the office of a father 1. He supplies the meanes of spirituall life as they of naturall 2. Hee nurtures and teacheth his Church 3. Hee provides for the present and bestowes the inheritance of eternall life III. The first born had the preheminence among the brethren and were chiefe in office and authority rulers in the house after their fathers and Priests in the family before the Leviticall order was established Gen. 27. 29. when Isaac blessed Iacob for Esau supposing him the first borne one part of it was Be Lord over thy brethren and let all thy mothers children honour thee So all the sheaves must bowe to Iosephs And Gen. 49. 8. when Iacob blesseth Iudah this is added as his right Thy fathers sonnes shall bowe downe unto thee Here in they were speciall types of Christ who in all things must have the preheminence as first in time in order in precedency first in the excellency and dignity of his person Of whom comming into the world was said Let all the Angels of God worship him And for glory and authority he sits on his fathers throne the onely King of kings who hath a name above all names Phil. 2. 9. And Heb. 2. 9. we see Iesus crowned with glory and honour the head of the mysticall body the Prince and head of all his brethren And besides he is the high Priest of our profession by offering up himselfe a sacrifice for us Thus Christ is first in order in glory in Priesthood IV. The first borne had a double portion in goods Deut. 21 17. Signifying 1. The plenitude of the spirit grace in Christ who was anointed with oyle of gladnesse above all his fellowes 2. The preheminence of Christ in his glorious inheritance advanced in glory and majesty incomprehensible by all creatures I. Out of the occasion of the Law of the first borne learne that the more God doth for any man the more he ought to conceive himselfe to be the Lords and the more right and interest the Lord challengeth in him For therefore the first borne were his by a speciall right because he had not onely delivered them out of Aegypt as others but from the speciall plague of Aegypts first borne Speciall mercies call for speciall service More mercies are more bonds of obedience And new mercies are so many new cords to draw and fasten us to God and duty Is it not reason that the more it pleaseth the Lord to become ours the more we should become his Ought not great benefits become great binders And should not great love bee a great loadstone of love Should not strong cords of Gods love draw us strongly to love our God Examine the encrease of Gods mercies on thee in all kindes and whether they have had this fruit to make thee more dutifull Hath God multiplied blessing on thy head that thou shouldest blesse thy selfe in wickednesse Hath God continued mercy that thou shouldest continue sinne Art thou the Lords by Creation providence redemption stored with all personall kindnesses pertaining to life and godlinesse to continue a slave to sinne and Satan Remember good Iosephs conclusion Gen. 39. 8 9. My master hath dealt thus and thus with me advanced me from nothing to this estate committed all to my trust kept nothing from me but thee How then can I doe this great wickednesse and sinne against God 2. If Christ be the true first borne of whom all they are but types we must give him the honor of his birth-right The whole Church and all the sonnes of that mother must honour him all the sheaves of the brethren must vaile and bowe to his sheave Let not the basenesse of his birth the humility of his life the ignominy of his death the shame of his crosse the poverty of his professors the weaknesse and frailty of his followers draw our eyes aside from him as the Jews at this day but acknowledge him the first borne esteeming him as doth the Church the chiefe of ten thousand and with the Apostle esteeme to know nothing but Christ and him crucified Quest. How shall we honour Christ as the first born Sol. 1. If we honour him with the same honor that is due to the Father Iohn 5. 23. 2. Advance his estate above our owne or other mens confesse and professe his name though with losse and disfavour 3. Depend upon him and make him our chiefe refuge for all the family depended on the first borne for protection so doe members on the head 4. Greeve to offend him by sin How pitifully can men and women grieve for the death of their first borne So much more should we that our sins have pierced Gods first borne Zach. 12. 10. III. Here is a ground of much consolation 1. In that Christ being the truth of the first borne from him the birthright is
Ierusalem for sinne and for uncleannesse Here we have Christ himselfe the true water out of the Rock who onely refresheth dry and weary soules and comforteth the fainting heart with the sweet promises flowing from the Gospell And that wee may see the excellency and benefit of this fountaine we will a little compare this Rock with the other and set the truth above the type to draw our eyes and desires after it 1. In that rocke the rocke was one thing the water another here Christ is both the rocke and water both the giver and water given 2. That rock refreshed wicked men and beasts this is bestowed upon and comforteth onely beleevers 3. That rock refreshed bodyes onely this both soules and bodies That preserved naturall life but this torrent preserves the supernaturall life of grace so as a leafe withers not nor falls from a tree of righteousnesse planted by this river of water Psa. 1. 3. 4. That rock might preserve and comfort the living but could not helpe a dead man but this quickneth the dead soule with new and heavenly life 5. The waters of that rock quenched natural thirst but this quencheth all unnaturall One drop of it tasted by Zacheus quenched all his unnaturall thirst after the world and in Paul all the thirst of revenge and furie against the Saints 6. The rock gave water twice this rock gives waters of comfort alwaies The water of that rock followed them a great while but at length were dryed up but the waters of this rock are never dried up The blood of CHRIST is alwaies running and a fresh fountaine never dry 7 The Israelites dranke of that water and were contented for a little while but by and by did thirst againe But he that drinkes of this water shall never thirst againe Ioh. 4. 14. that is miserably as they however he shall desire it still yet his very desire is his happinesse and saciety II. How we are to carry our selves to this rock and fountaine namely as Israel to that rock 1. The Israelites thirst and call for water they see and feele their need and want so we must feele our want of Christ and get a fervent desire after Christ and his graces because onely the thirsty are called Isa. 55. 1. and onely they in want see the worth of the thing wanting Now we may not thinke that every wish after Christ is this thirst for the worst can wish a part in Christ but this thirst and desire must have three conditions 1. It must be fervent and eager as Sampsons Give me water or I die Iud. 15. 18. As the chased Hart panteth after the rivers of water so doth my soule after thee Ps. 42. 1. 2. It must be faithfull We must not thirst with repining and diffidence as the Israelites but with faith and confidence This drawes vertue from Christ According to thy faith be it to thee 3. It must be constant The Israelites thirst still till they obtaine their desire so we must not content our selves with desire or to come where this water is and goe without it but we must never be content with our estate though it be never so well with us for the world till we taste the sweet comfort strength of Christ and his merits To continue thy thirst observe two rules 1. So long as God hath any grace to give or is not weary of giving thou must not be weary of thirsting begging asking 2. So long as thou wantest any grace or any measure of grace received thou must thirst still Ever be desiring one good thing after another and one measure of grace after another till thou beest compleat and then shalt thou never give over this thirst while thou livest here 2. Israel thirsty runs to the rock so in thy thirst run thou to the rock Dost thou thirst for pardon of sinne for grace of sanctification for sence of Gods love for assurance of eternall life come to this Rock for supply Art thou ready to faint in thy soule for want of grace and comfort art thou ready to sinke in sorrows feares faintings wants dangers runne to this fountaine which God hath opened for thee To move thee hereto consider 1. the rock it selfe calls thee which art thirsty which that rock could not doe Ioh. 7. 37. If any man thirst let him come to me and drinke 2. That to runne any whither else is to forsake the fountaine of living waters and dig pits that will hold no water Let Papists runne to the puddle waters of their owne merits or seek other Mediators or Intercessors say thou with the Apostles Lord thou hast the words of eternall life and whither should we goe Let others runne to humane helpes and remedies in their sorrowes to cards dice merry company let them runne to devils and witches and make them their rock Let thy heart say The Lord is my Rock and if the word were not my comfort I were sure to sinke in my trouble 3. Israel comming to the rock did not onely draw from thence but drinke heartily so we must not onely come to the place where Christ is preached but we must beleeve in him and specially apply to our selves the merit of his death For as drinking is a speciall application of water to the thirsty body so by beleeving in Christ we specially apply the waters of grace to the refreshing of the soule To beleeve is to drinke this water Ioh. 7. 38. with Ioh. 4. 14. Nothing could quench Israels thirst being bodily but water and onely faith quencheth our spirituall thirst And therefore as they to Moses we must say to Christ Lord give us faith to quench our spirituall thirst Let these motives provoke us to drinke these waters 1. As Israel was by drinking that water revived and refreshed so onely these waters from Christ quicken us with new life and coole the heat of raging and accusing consciences Every beleever hath true tranquillity of heart and joyes of the holy Ghost within him yea so plentifully doe these waters of consolation rise from the Rock that he that drinkes them is said to have the kingdome of God in him which stands in righteousnesse peace joy c. 2. What madnesse and folly is it to lay about us so eagerly for this puddle water in comparison and catching with all greedinesse at the bitter-sweet comforts of this life which prove poyson to the most and neglect the sweet and pure streames of saving waters of grace flowing from the true Rock JESUS CHRIST Wee reade what strife and contention was among the Jewes for wells of spring water and now no man will lose a dishfull of well water but he will know to whom and shall we onely not care for the water of saving grace which cost Christ so deare before he could open the well of it for us 3. When the woman of Samaria heard Christ say that he that dranke of this water should
of that of this sinne and of that How may I doe to get mastery of my corruptions In going to Gods Ministers let thy errand bee the same with the Israelites in their going to Moses how to be rid of the Serpents 4. Moses directs them to the brazen Serpent erected for their cure for Moses himselfe cannot helpe them Moses law cannot cure them that rather sharpens the sting and thrusts it deeper into the flesh and spirit He directs them to no merits or works of their owne to cure them for their merits brought in those poysoned stings among them but he sends them quite out of themselves to Gods ordinance which was the brasen Serpent Thou art never in the way of cure till thou art sent out of thy selfe out of the Law and works of it which now cannot justifie till thou commest to the Evangelicall brazen Serpent there is no hope of cure As the Israelite could never be cured till hee acknowledged the brazen Serpent the onely meanes so no more canst thou till thou acknowledge JESUS CHRIST the onely healing God and that there is no other name in heaven or earth to be saved by but the name JESUS Onely Christ onely Christ said that Martyr for he onely can give a perfect righteousnesse he onely can cover our imperfection hee onely being no sinner could conquer sinne he onely by dying could conquer death he onely by entring into the grave could sweeten it he onely by sustaining the sorrowes of hell could shut hell for all beleevers Had Moses sent the Israelites any whither but to the brazen Serpent he had deluded them and they had lost all their labour Who now is so void of judgement that cannot discerne whether our religion or the Roman be the ancient and true religion of Moses and the people of God If a man stung with the serpent come to us for counsell and cure as they to Moses we send him as Moses out of himselfe to Christ onely the true brazen Serpent Our doctrine leads him out of himselfe out of his owne merits out of externall works and ceremonies unto Christ who is our peace and left his peace unto beleevers and by this meanes through Gods blessing the patient attaines true tranquillity of mind and inward peace of conscience and rejoyceth with an unspeakable and glorious joy for his recovery as the Israelites did in theirs But let a man stung in conscience goe to a Roman teacher hee leads him any way but the right any whither so not to Christ. In stead of Gods certaine direction in the words of the Prophets and Apostles which testifie of Christ the onely brazen serpent they send him to unsound and uncertaine speculations fables traditions equall say they to Scripture and some of them say farre better In stead of Christs satisfaction and merit they send him home to his owne merits and satisfactions by which say they he may apply the satisfaction and merit of Christ. But in case he be so bad as he have no merits of his owne the Church hath a Treasury of other mens merits to dispense by taile so he will come to the price So he may buy oyle enough to fill his lampe out of the Popes Exchequer or Burse filled to the top with workes of supererogation But if he make some scruple of this least the wise virgins have not enough for themselves and others then they may have the sacrifice of the Masse not to faile but never apply that one and only sacrifice upon the Crosse it selfe Now whether of us agree with Moses 5. As the Israelite must looke up to the Serpent lifted up so must thou looke up and behold Christ lifted up This must thou doe two waies First on the wood of the Crosse secondly on the throne of the Kingdome both of grace and glory Behold Christ lifted up not in his abasement onely but in his advancement First in the Kingdome of grace as hee is lifted up in the word and Sacraments In which Christ is mightily declared the Son of God and preached the Saviour of the world Gal. 3. 1 among whom Christ was crucified Secondly in his kingdome of glory raysed from the dead ascended into heaven and exalted at the right hand of God above all principalities and powers Phil. 2. 9 God hath given him a name which is above every name Now the looking on Christ thus lifted up is the act of faith not a bare intuition sight or vision as to beleeve that Christ was thus exalted on the Crosse and in his Kingdom but it is apprehensive and applicatory and to beleeve in CHRIST crucified and glorified This looking hath three things in it 1. To beleeve that hee was the Sonne of God and sonne of man our Immanuel 2. That he being so was lift up for the salvation of beleevers 3. That my selfe assuredly trust and depend on him alone as the onely author meritour and bestower of salvation This is Evangelicall looking on the Serpent Now because this looking is the principall thing in the cure we will consider 1. How this looking cures us 2. How wee know wee are cured by our looking 3. Motives to stirre us up still to looke on our Serpent Sect VII I. When the Israelite comes to Moses and asketh Oh what shall I doe to be saved from death being so deadly stung A full answer to this question was goe looke upon the brazen Serpent thou shalt be whole So if an humble soule suppose the Jaylor shall come to the Minister as Paul or Silas Sirs what may I doe to be saved the direct answer to this question is Beleeve in the Lord Iesus Christ and thou shalt be saved and yee are saved by faith and Thy faith hath made thee whole Quest. But how doth faith save us Answ. Not as it is an excellent grace nor as any work of ours We are not saved and cured for beleeving but by beleeving 1. Because faith is the condition of the Covenant and of our cure as looking was the condition of the cure of the Israelite For it was not the having of a Brazen Serpent nor the lifting it up could cure but the Israelites looking upō it so it is not the hearing of Christ nor the lifting of him up in the Ministery nor knowledge of his merits can save unlesse they be received by faith A potion never so vertuous is fruitlesse if not taken As meat uneaten so is Christ not digested and applied by faith 2. Faith cannot cure considered simply in it selfe as a quality or vertue or gift or habit but considered relatively with his object which is Jesus Christ the Lord our righteousnesse for faith is the eye of the soule But as it was not the eye of the Israelite but the eye set upon the brazen serpent that cured him so here faith upon his object cureth because onely faith draweth vertue from Christ as in the Syrophoenician who touched Christ and was cured but
body cast into Elishaes grave quickned so our soules and bodies IV. The wonderfull power and wisdome of God that can draw light out of darknesse Ionahs casting over board into the sea was the occasion of converting the Mariners Even so Christs death converted many of them that were causes and authors of it Acts 2. 36. 41. And as the Mariners lives were saved by casting Ionah into the sea so all beleevers by the death of Iesus Christ. 1. Let us not measure Gods workes by carnall senses This made the two disciples going to Emaus Luke 24. to make but a bad argument Hee is crucified and behold this is the third day therefore though we thought he should have redeemed Israel wee are deceived Whereas faith would have made a cleane contrary conclusion He is crucified and this is the third day therefore he is the Redeemer The Iewes not knowing the Scriptures and power of God are hardned against Iesus Christ expecting a great Emperour as Iulius Caesar or some great Monarch not able to see that by so base a death life could be procured The carnall protestants are held off from the true imbracing of Christ because they see the truth and sincerity of Christ every where so resisted and hated by great Rulers and Doctors as if it had not been so in Christs owne person and Ministery or as if Christ was not set as a sign or butt of contradiction whereas therefore it must needs be he 2. Let us admire Gods power and wisdome and patiently with Ionah expect after darknesse light And seeing God can turne the greatest evill into the greatest good of his Church let us labour to make benefit of all evills hapning to our selves and others 1. Even of our sinnes themselves to make us more humble and watchfull for time to come 2. Of our sufferings as Ionah and Christ learned obedience by the things they suffered V. In the type and truth we have first terror on the one hand secondly comfort on the other 1. Wee see the waight of sinne committed pressed Ionah into the deepest sea of evils and sinne imputed thrust Christ into a deeper sea even the deepest hell Both seem left of God in the hands of death both cry out as left in the depth of hell 1. Doe thou run from God and duty and though thou beest Gods childe thou maist finde God pursuing thee as if he were an utter and irreconcileable enemy 2. Make as light a reckoning of sinne as thou canst the least of them shuts us or Christ out of heaven Doth Christ undertake thy sinne he sees not heaven till he die for it Sinne imputed will not let Christ enter into heaven but by his owne blood yea through Hell Thy sinne repented of held Christ an innocent out of heaven till he dyed for it but where shall ungodly and impenitent sinners appeare 2. This same collation affords us sundry grounds of comfort 1. Both seeme forsaken neither of them was so but both of them goe to his God There is no time nor place wherein the childe of God may not boldly goe to God and pray to his God and say My God my God 2. No deepe is so deepe but Gods hand can reach help into it even into the Whales belly and heart of the earth 3. The extreamest misery and death it selfe worke to good to the godly See it in Ionah Where was feared p●rdition there was found preservation The Whales belly was a prison indeed but to preserve him alive a deep gulfe and a sea but to save him frō drowning Can any man save a man from drowning by casting him into the sea but God can 4. When the case seemes most desperate then the Lord steps in to help when no helpe can bee expected any other way after three dayes and three nights Ionah must be cast up and Christ raised up Never feare extremities but then exercise thy faith most for then is God the nearest however trust in him though he kill thee Iob 13. 15. 5. The deepest sorrowes of Gods children end in greatest joy God hath a dry ground for Ionah after a sea of misery a glorious ascending for Christ after his lowest descent Whatsoever the sorrowfull songs be that Gods people sing here in Aegypt or Babel they shall end in songs of joy and victory and be changed into the songs of Moses and the Lambe Rev. 15. 3. CHAP. XIII The first borne Types of Christ 4. wayes HAving spoken of holy types in sundry special persons now of personall types in some rankes and orders of men sanctified and specially seperated to the Lord. Of whom 1. Some were sanctified by birth the first-borne 2. Some by office Priests especially the High-Priest 3. Some by vow as Nazarites 4. Some by ceremony as cleane persons legally cleansed from uncleanenesse Of these the first borne were speciall types of Iesus Christ. I. As they were Gods peculiar Exod. 13. 2. Sanctifie unto me all the first borne for it is mine Quest. How were they Gods Answ. 1. By common nature But so were all both first and last borne through the world For all the world and inhabitants of it are his Psal. 24. 1. 2. By common grace So all the people of the Jews by reason of common grace were his with whom God had plighted his gracious covenant which was made to Abraham and all his seed wheresoever they were borne of whom hee made choice as his peculiar though all the earth was his Exod. 4. 22. Israel is my first borne that is not only the first people and nation that first professed the true worship of God and had priority of the Gentiles who were yonger brethren but the first borne by a speciall election and choice of that from all other people whom hee would accept as his beloved in the Messiah the first born of all creatures and among whom he would stablish his covenant and raise up his worship thus hee dealt not with other nations 3 By a speciall right The first borne of Israel were Gods by a singular right as no other childrē of any other family were namely by right of that singular deliverance of all the first borne when he destroyed all the first borne of Aegypt And therefore presently after that destruction he makes challenge of them Exod. 13. 2. Thus is Jesus Christ the Lords first borne by a singular right not common to man or Angell whether we respect his nature or office 1. In his nature he is first born as sonne of God the first begotten of all creatures Col. 1. 15. begot before all Creation And thus he is not onely the first begotten before whom there was none but the onely begotten after whom is none Iohn 1. 14. the onely begotten Sonne of the Father the first borne without a second or brother 2. In his office hee was first borne by speciall prerogative 1. for the kinde 2. for the undertaking 3. for the accomplishing