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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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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
such however adorned with Philosophical Notions or Metaphysical Speculations cannot comprehend They are like the Waters of the Sanctuary where a Lamb may wade and an Elephant may swim A weak Christian that is gracious may go through were the unsanctified Schoolman may be plunged and overwhelmed They are so plain and easy that a Babe in Christ may understand them and some Places so difficult as to find Work for the utmost Study and Inquisition of the most knowing This is the Second and Last Volume and perfects our whole Design which I thought at first might have came into one entire Book That which was promised at first concerning the Divine Authority of the Scripture and the Whore of Babylon you will find here And tho there is one Thing omitted or left out which was in the Specimen viz. Demonstrations touching the Validity of our Translation which we lately found done some time since by the Learned Dr. Owen and others Yet you have in the room of it a Treatise of Types which I am persuaded will be more acceptable to most Men and hath been much more laborious and chargeable to compleat it containing divers Sheets A Treatise of Types under the Law carefully opened we have ground to believe will be very serviceable especially to those in the Ministry And such hath been my Care that I have not run one Parallel concerning Types but what I have had the Opinion of the most learned Typical Writers upon so that I readily confess 't is rather their 's than mine And tho there is a great difference between Metaphorical or Allegorical and Typical Scriptures yet we thought an Essay to open the most eminent Types found in the Old-Testament would well suit with this sublime Subject And because some for want of Study or Learning may not readily understand the Difference that is between them we will give you here the Sence of the Learned upon it See Mr. D●rham of Glasgow Key to his Clavis Cantici particularly between what is Allegorical and Typical we take Allegory here as Divines do who take it not as Grammarians or Rhetoricians for a continued Discourse of many Figures together properly or strictly taken For sometimes an Allegory may be taken largely and so may comprehend whatsoever is figurative whether Typical Tropological Analogical c. as the Apostle hath it in Gal. 4. speaking of Abraham's two Sons Isaac and Ishmael which is yet properly a Type differeth from Types or Typical Scripture thus 1. Types suppose still the Verity of some History as Jonah's being three Days and three Nights in the Fishes Belly when it is applied to Christ in the New Testament it supposeth such a thing was once done c. Allegories again have no such necessary Supposition but are as Parables propounded for some mystical End Thus whilst it is said Mat. 21. A certain King made a Marriage for his Son planted a Vineyard c. Those Places suppose it not necessary as to the being of the Allegory that ever such a thing was but a Type cannot be without reality in the thing as Fact which is made a Type 2. Types look only to Matter of Fact and compare one Fact with another as Christ being slain and lying three Days in the Grave to the Paschal Lamb and Jonah's lying so long in the Whale's Belly But Allegories take in Words Sentences Doctrines both of Faith and Manners as in the former Example is clear 3. Types compare Persons and Facts under the Old-Testament with Persons and Facts under the New and is made up of something that is present prefiguring another to come Allegories look especially to Matters in hand and intend the explaining some hidden and mystical Sence upon the Words which at present they seem not to bear 4. Types are only Historical as such and the Truth of Fact agreeing in the Antitype makes them up it being clear in Scripture that such things are Types for we must not forge Types without Scripture-Warrant But Allegories c. are principally Doctrinal and in their Scope intend not to clear or compare Facts but to hold forth and explain Doctrines or by such Similitudes to illustrate and make them the better understood and to move and affect the Heart the more or the more forcibly to convince the Conscience as Nathan made use of a Parable when he was about to convince David 5. Types in the Old-Testament respect only some Things Persons and Events as Christ the Gospel and the spreading thereof c. and cannot be extended beyond these But Allegories Similitudes c. take in every thing that belongs either to Doctrine or Instruction in Faith or Practice for ordering of one's Life Hence according to the Judgment of the Learned Metaphors Allegories c. are more extensive and comprehensive in their Meaning and Application than Types tho 't is not denied but that care ought to be had that they be not run beyond the Analogy of Faith and many times it behoveth to see we go not beyond the Scope of the Text which plainly shews the whole Mind of the Spirit in making use of such Similitudes for Illustration sake and we hope we have kept within a due compass in this respect and avoided whatever may give just cause of Offence to any You had in the First Volume a Treatise of Tropes reduced under their proper Heads and here you have the Schemes or Figures in Scripture handled after the same manner And because there is some difficulty to understand Allegorical Scriptures or to know what Places are to be taken metaphorically we shall shew See Key to Clavis Cantic as 't is noted by the Learned 1. What an Allegory or figurative Scripture is 2. When 't is necessary to understand a Scripture figuratively or in an Allegorick Sence For the first there is a great difference betwixt an Allegorick Exposition of Scripture and an Exposition of Allegorick Scripture The first is that which the Fathers and School-men fail in i. e. when they allegorize plain Scriptures and Histories seeking to draw out some secret meaning other than appears in the Words and so would fasten many Senses upon one Scripture This is indeed unsafe and is justly reprovable for this makes clear Scripture dark and obtrudes Meanings on the Words never intended by the Spirit As suppose one speaking of Goliah's Combat with David should pass by the Letter and expound Goliah to be the Flesh or the Devil and David to mean the Spirit or Christ Such Expositions may have some pleasantness but very little solidity and such who commonly thus interpret Scripture often fall into Errors and guilty of this Fault Origen is thought to be 2dly An Exposition of ●llegorical Scripture is the opening and expounding of some dark Scripture wherein the Mind of the Spirit is couched and hid under Figures c. making it plain and edifying by bringing out the Sence according to the meaning of the Holy Spirit in the place tho at
Sacrifice of the Bullock and He-Goat a Type of Christ opened in nine Things Page 432 The Scape Goat a Type of Christ ibid The red Heifer a Type of Christ Page 433 Circumcision what it was a Type of ibid The Rock that was smitten a Type of Christ Page 434 Pillar of Cloud and Fire a Type of Christ ibid Passeover a Type of Christ Page 435 PHILOLOGIA SACRA The Second Part. The Schemes or Figures in Scripture opened OF the Figures of a Word Page 1 Of a Paranomasia Page 3 Of Antanaclasis Page 4 Of the Figures of a Sentence in Logism Page 5 to 11 Of an Erotesis or Interrogation Page 12 Of Figures of a Sentence in Dialogism Page 14 Of other Schemes of Sentences and Amplifications Page 15 to 25 A Learned Discourse of TYPES PARABLES c. wherein you have 1. The Definition of a Type Page 25 to 28 2. The Division of Types Page 28 3. Prophetical Types and typical and symbolical actions ibid. 4. Prophetical and Typical Visions Page 29 5. An Historical Type and its first Division Page 31 6. Other Divisions of an Historical Type Page 41 7. Nine Canons or Rules expounding Types Page 41 to 45 Of PARABLES Wherein shall be given 1. The Definition of the Word and Thing 2. It s Division 3. Canons respecting it Page 46 c. ERRATA PAge 25. line 35. for Faith read Hope P. 27. l. 29. for he undertook read he hath undertaken P. 269. l. 2. dele for P. 336. l. 27. dele viz. Tropes and Figures OR A TREATISE of the METAPHORS ALLEGORIES TYPES c. contained in the Holy Bible of the Old and New Testament The Divine Authority of the Holy Scriptures asserted and vindicated and the groundless Cavils against the same detected and confuted THE main Scope of this Work being to offer some Assistance towards the explaining and finding out the true Sense and Meaning of the Holy Scriptures it will be convenient according to our Promise in our Specimen of this Undertaking to premise something touching the Divine Authority of that blessed Book For tho it be commonly own'd by Christians to be the Word of God yet since on the one Hand there are especially in this Atheistical Age too many amongst us whose Love of Sin and Resolutions to continue therein tempt them to seek for shelter in bold Contempt of or subtile Cavils against those Heavenly Oracles and on the other hand not a few poor Souls are sometimes shaken with Temptations and know not how to discharge themselves from the ensnaring Questions that they are often attaqued with touching the Divine Original and Authority of those Sacred Records Not so much for want of Assent thereunto as of a right Understanding or Consideration of the Grounds of that Assent and the true formal Reason thereof Therefore that with a perfect Security to our present and future Wellfare we may rely on that Book as the infallible Store-house of Heavenly Verities that great and only Revelation whereby God does Inform Rule and will Judg the World we shall set forth some Considerations evincing this most important Truth But finding that divers able and worthy Men have of late wrote most learnedly and excellently upon this Subject we shall upon that account be the more concise and tho we have said but little yet we hope enough to satisfy any rational considering Man and confute the vain Cavils of the Adversary for all along in this Essay we strive to join Perspicuity with Brevity and to speak so plainly and familiarly that the weakest Capacity may with ease gather it up the neglect hereof having rendred the Labours of some others on the same Subject less serviceable to the vulgar unlearned Reader It being our great Design to endeavour the Help and Establishment of the Unskilful and to assist weak Christians knowing that if Satan can once bring them into a diffidence of the Truth and Authority of God's Word he at the same Instant shakes the very Foundation of all their Hope and Religion And if the Foundations fail what shall the Righteous do Psal 11.3 That the Scripture or Book called the Bible is of Divine Original Inspired by the Spirit of God and therefore of infallible Truth and Authority Appears 1. The sublime Matter of the Scriptures shew them to be Divine I. By the Contents or Matters therein discovered and treated of which are so transcendently sublime and mysterious that they could never be the product of Human Invention or Discovery and therefore tho written by Men as Instruments must needs be revealed from above for what Human Brain could ever have imagined a * Ma● 28.19 1 Joh. 5.7 Trinity in the Deity or such an Existence of one simple Essence as this Book acquaints us withal It describes the Person of Christ so plainly fitly and excellently that if the Mind of Man consider it attentively of necessity it must needs acknowledg it doth far exceed the reach of a finite Understanding It discovers unto us the Misery and Corruption of Man by Nature together with that general defect of the whole Creation which tho some of the Heathen had some glimpse of yet could never find out the Cause nor how it came to pass No finite Intellect could ever have travell'd into such Heights and Depths touching the Nature of God and his Eternal Counsels that stupendious Contrivement for the Salvation of Man that the second Person should descend from Heaven and assume Human Nature into a Conjunction with the Divine take upon him in his own Person the Sin of Mankind and die for the World thereby making a satisfaction proportionate to infinite Justice so that God may show the utmost Act of Mercy in a Conjunction with the highest Exercise of Justice Nothing less than an Infinite Understanding could have found out Expedients to reconcile those two infinite Attributes in his dealings with an Apostate Creature It unfolds the Covenant of Grace which God made after the Fall all which can be drawn from no other Fountain but Divine * 1 Cor. 2.7 Eph. 3 4 5. Revelation it contains the Law of God which is wise and just the Gentiles themselves being † Dan 4 5 6 7. Judges In its Precepts shines forth its Divinity 1. The surpassing Excellency of the Act requiring that we should deny our selves in all those things which the corrupt Nature of Man cleaveth to and hateth to forego 2. The wonderful Equity that doth appear in every Command 3. The admirable strangeness of some Acts which a natural Man would account Foolishness and yet prescribed as absolutely necessary ‖ Joh. 3 36. 8.24 shews its Divine Original 4. The manner how Obedience is required viz. that it proceed from a pure Heart a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned * Deut. 6.5 1 Cor. 13.1 1 Tim. 1.4 5. Take a view of the Ten Commandments are they not plain brief perfect just extending to all binding the Conscience and reaching to the very
How suitable to the holy Nature of God! What superlative Piety and Vertue without any spot of Vice What punctual and perpetual Truth and Honesty is here required yet without the least Taint of base Means or unworthy sordid Ends No Vain-Glory no Esteem of Men no corrupt Advantages But on the contrary what Charity is here required What repeated Commands not to offend weak Ones What mutual Forgivenesses What Provocations to Love With what Patience and Meekness Justice and Modesty are we taught to behave our selves In a word 'T is such a Doctrine as makes a Man perfect throughly furnished to every good Work which brings Men to the best Way of Living the noblest Way of Suffering and the comfortablest Way of Dying Now must not such pure Streams needs flow from the Fountain of all Perfection Does such a serious and effectual Advancement of Holiness in the World look like an Intrigue of polluted Man or any unclean Spirit How can we better judg of a Law that declares it proceeds from God and is of Divine Obligation than by its Nature Tendency and Influence on humane Life Whether it be suitable to those Pretensions and such an adorable and unspotted Original And when we find so holy and excellent a Design as appears throughout this whole Book for the Honour of God and compleating the Happiness of Men by Methods so agreeable and yet above the reach of Humane Invention what can we judg unless we will be obstinately perverse but that such a Book 's Testimony of it self is true and that it is indeed of God and not of Men V. The sweet and admirable Agreement Consent Dependence and Harmony 5. The Harmony of the Scriptures that we find in all and every part of Scripture tho there are so many Books thereof written by so many different Persons of various Conditions many Ages remov'd in several Places and in different Languages yet all agreeing with each other and every part with the whole which could not be foreseen or contriv'd by any humane Wisdom or Cunning in the writing of any one Part For all the Histories Prophecies Promises Types and Doctrines in an orderly Connection tend to promote the same Thing and every Age proves a fresh Interpreter and reveals to us more and more of this admirable Concord which could not be the Effect of humane Artifice nor of any other Cause but an infinite Comprehension and Fore-sight and that the several Writers of this Book were in all Times guided in what they wrote by the Supreme Wisdom of that one God who is always constant to himself and the same yesterday to day and for ever VI. This further appears from the Credit and Sincerity of those that were the Pen-men 6. The Credit of the Pen-men If the Scriptures were not what they pretend to be viz. the Word of God and dictated to the Writers thereof by his holy Spirit it would be the greatest Affront to the Divine Majesty and the grossest Cheat towards Mankind that ever was put upon the World But if we consider the Pen-men thereof we shall find them all of undoubted Credit generally esteemed holy and good Men in the Ages they liv'd in so no way to be suspected of Imposture Some of them were Kings and of the deepest Learning not likely to be guilty of such a mean-spirited Baseness as Lying and Forgery Many of the Prophets and most of the Apostles were Men illiterate of Parts and Education so mean that of themselves they seem no way capable to write so profoundly or lay so deep a Contrivance for deluding the World And as 't is incredible that so many Men of such distant Times Qualities and Abilities should all agree in the same Imposture and so harmonize in promoting it so neither could any Interest or Ambition prompt them thereunto For as the main Tendency of this Book is to mortify Mens Ambitions and Lusts so most of them exposed themselves by publishing these Writings to great Hazards and Persecutions Nor have several of them been shie to record the great Failings and Imperfections of themselves or their Brethren Thus Moses (a) Exod. 3 4 chapters relates his own Infidelity and Averseness to submit to the extraordinary Call of God In another place (b) Numb 11.21 he records the Shame of his Distrustfulness or at least the Carnality of his Conceit or Apprehension of the Power of God Again (c) Numb 20.12 he inserts God's heavy Sentence and the Ground thereof against him The same Moses did not set up any of his own Posterity to succeed him in the Guidance of Israel but left Joshua to succeed him c. and placed the Kingly Superiority over that People in another Tribe from his own viz. the Tribe of Judah Indeed throughout the whole Book there is a visible Antipathy to all self-seeking Flattery or Compliance God alone is exalted and all Mens Persons Actions and Reputations are laid in the Dust in respect of his Honour and the Truths therein delivered Besides these very Writers appear themselves to be under a subjection to the Doctrine they taught and no way Masters of it as their own All which plainly shews that they were inspired from above and wrote not their own Words or for their own Honour but as inspired and for the Honour of God 8. Scripture-prophecies and their Accomplishments prove 't is divine VII Another Demonstration or Proof that the Scriptures are from God is the exact and punctual fulfilling of the Prophecies therein contained To foretell Events is the Prerogative of God (d) Isa 41.22 Let them bring forth saith God the Lord expostulating with his People about the Vanity of Idols and shew us What shall happen Shew us the Things that are to come hereafter that we may know that ye are Gods Now the Body of the Scriptures is enlivened with the Spirit of Prophecy almost throughout That of Jacob recorded by Moses (e) Gen. 49.10 That the Scepter should not depart from Judah nor a Law-giver from between his Feet untill Shiloh come and to him shall the gathering of the People be was not compleatly fulfilled till well near two thousand Years after tho made good during a great part of that Time viz. from the Entrance of the Tribe of Judah upon the Government in King David until the going of it out again in the Person of Hircanus whom Herod slew as Josephus testifies But when the Time appointed was expired the Prophecy it self was compleatly fulfilled For when Herod a Stranger and of another Nation had cut off the House and Line of Judah from the Government of Jewry then and at that Time Shiloh the long-expected Messiah our Lord Christ punctually came into the World for that by Shiloh is meant the Messiah the Jewish Rabbies do not deny Now at the Time of Jacob's uttering these Words there was little probability that any of his Posterity should have a Scepter or any Kingly Power being poor
so eminent so visible and lasted so long for they continued in the Church two or three hundred Years and the Account of them has descended down to us by such a constant uninterrupted written and unwritten Tradition that scarce any Man has assumed Impudence enough to gainsay them Irenaeus who lived about the Year of our Lord 200 affirmeth that in his Time the working of Miracles the raising of the Dead the casting out of Devils healing the Sick by meer laying on of Hands and Prophesying were still in force and that some that were so raised from the Dead remained alive amongst them long after And Cyprian and Tertullian mention the ordinary casting out of Devils and challenge the Heathen to come and see it Remarkable are those Words of the latter (h) Tertullian Apol. Ca. 23. Let any one be brought before your Tribunals who is apparently possessed with a Devil that Spirit being commanded by any Christian shall confess of truth himself to be a Devil as at other Times he boasts himself a God And in his Book to Scapula the Procurator of Africk Cap. 4. he repeats several miraculous Cures done by Christians Quanti honesti viri c. How many Persons of good Quality and Esteem says he for we speak not of the Vulgar Sort have been remedied either from Devils or Diseases Severus himself the Father of Antoninus was recovered by Christians c. So that here we have the best Doctrine under the highest Attestation God himself setting thereunto his supernatural Seals to convince us of the Truth thereof And this was the great Argument whereby Christ all along convinced the World for upon his beginning of Miracles at Cana in Galilee he manifested his Glory and his Disciples believed in him (i) Joh. 1.48 The Jews therefore enquired for Signs as that which must confirm any new Revelation to be of God (k) Joh. 2.18 And tho Christ blames them for their unreasonable unsatisfied Expectations herein and would not humor them in each Particular yet he continued to give them Miracles as great as they desired They that saw the Miracles of the Loaves said This is of a truth the Prophet that should come into the World (l) Joh. 6 14. Many believed when they saw the Miracles which he did (m) Joh. 10 4● Acts 4.16 Heb. 2.4 If I had not done the Works that no Man else could do ye had not had Sin in not believing (n) Joh. 15.24 And the Way of bringing Men to believe in these Days is expressed Heb. 2.3 4. How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord and was confirmed to us by those that heard him There is the Evidence of Sense to the first Re●eivers and their Tradition to the next God also bearing them witness both with Signs and Wonders and divers Miracles Let us conclude this Argument with that smart Interrogation of that blind Man (o) Joh. 19.16 Can a Man that is a Sinner do such Miracles Natural Reason shewing us that God being the true and merciful Governor of the World the Course of Nature cannot be altered but by his special Appointment and that he will never set the Seal of his Omnipotency to a Lie nor suffer the last and greatest Inducement to Belief to be used to draw Men to embrace Falshood and Forgeries 9. The wonderful Preservation of the Scriptures IX To these astonishing Miracles we may fitly add the Preservation of these holy Writings for so many Ages being it self little less than miraculous and such as is a great Argument that they belong to God as the Author and Parent of them It being reasonable to derive that from God as a Book of his own Dictates about which he has exercised a peculiar Care Were not the Bible what it pretends to be there had been nothing more suitable to the Nature of God and more becoming Divine Providence than long since to have blotted it out of the World For why should he suffer a Book to continue from the beginning of Times falsly pretending his Name and Authority How do learned Men accuse Time of Injuries for swallowing up the Works of many excellent Authors and bewail the Loss of divers of Livy's Decades and other choice Books which are now no where to be found Nay tho the Romans were so careful for the preservation of the Books of the Sybils that they lock'd them up in Places of greatest Safety and appointed special Officers to look after them yet many Ages since they are gone and perished and only some few Fragments do now remain Whereas on the contrary the Bible notwithstanding part of it was the first Book in the World as we proved in the second Argument and tho the Craft of Satan and the Rage of Mankind have from time to time combin'd utterly to suppress it yet it has born up its Head and remains not only extant but whole and entire without the least Mutilation or Corruption Antiochus Epiphanes when he set up the Abomination of Desolation in the Jewish Temple in the Days of the Machabees with utmost diligence made search after their Law and wheresoever he found it immediatly burnt or destroy'd it and threatned Death with exquisite Tortures to any that should conceal or retain it In like manner since Christ the Tyrant Dioclesian about the Year 300 with a full purpose to root out Christianity for ever out of the World publishes an Edict That the Scriptures should every where be burnt and destroyed and whosoever should presume to keep them should be most severely tormented Yet God permitted them not to quench the Light of these Divine Laws But the Old Testament above two hundred Years before the Incarnation of Christ was translated into Greek the most flourishing and spreading Language at that time in the World and about thirty Years before Christ it was paraphras'd into Caldee and at this Day both Old and New Testaments are extant not only in their Original Languages but in most other Tongues and Languages that are spoken upon the Face of the Earth which no other Book can pretend to So that all Endeavours that have from the very first been bent against it have been vanquished and remarkable Judgments and Vengeance shew'd on all such as have been the most violent Opposers of it And further whereas even those to whom it was outwardly committed as the Jews first and the Antichristian Church of Apostatiz'd Rome afterwards not only fell into Opinions and Practices absolutely inconsiltent with it but also built all their present and future Interests on those Opinions and Practices yet none of them could ever obliterate one Line in it not even of those Places which make most against their obstinate Errors and Defections But for their own Plea they both are forced to pretend additional Traditions for the Mishua Talmud and Cabala of the Jews and the Oral Traditions of the Papists all
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
or Characters which are subjectively left in the Scripture and upon it by the Holy-Ghost its Author of all the divine Excellencies or Properties of the Divine Nature are the first Means evidencing that Testimony of the Spirit which our Faith rests upon or they give the first Evidence of its divine Original whereon we do believe it The way whereby we learn the eternal Power and Deity of God from the Works of Creation is no otherwise but by those Marks Tokens and Impressions of his Divine Power VVisdom and Goodness that are upon them for from the consideration of their Subsistence Greatness Order and Use Reason doth necessarily conclude an infinite subsisting Being of whose Power and VVisdom these Things are the manifest Effects These are clearly seen and understood by the Things that are made so that we need no other Arguments to prove that God made the World but it self (b) Psal 104. c. Now there are greater and more evident Impressions of Divine Excellencies left on the written VVord from the infinite VVisdom of the Author of it than any that are communicated unto the VVorks of God in the Creation of the VVorld Hence David comparing the VVorks and VVord of God as to their instructive Efficacy doth prefer the VVord incomparably before them (c) Psal 19.1 to 10. Psal 146.8 9. 19 20. And these do manifest the VVord to our Faith to be his more clearly than the other do the VVorks to be his to our Reason c. God as the immediate Author of the Scriptures hath left in the very Word it self evident Tokens and Impressions of his Wisdom Prescience Omniscience Power Goodness Holiness Truth and other divine infinite Excellencies sufficiently evidenced unto the enlightned Minds of Believers c. This is that whereon we believe the Scriptures to be the Word of God with a Faith divine and supernatural And this Evidence is manifest unto the meanest and most unlearned no less than unto the wisest Philosophers And the truth is if rational Arguments and external Motives were the sole Ground of receiving the Scripture to be the Word of God it could not be but the Learned Men and Philosophers would always have been the forwardest and most ready to admit it and most firmly to adhere unto it because such Arguments do prevail on the Minds of Men according as they are able aright to discern their Force and judg of them But how apparent the contrary is is evident 1 C●r 1.26 You see your Calling Brethren Not many wise Men after the Flesh c. 2. The Spirit of God evidenceth the divine Original and Authority of the Scripture by the Power and Authority which he puts forth in it and by it over the Minds and Consciences of Men with its Operation of divine Effects thereon This the Apostle expresly affirms to be the Reason and Cause of Faith 1 Cor. 14.24 25. And thus are the Secrets of his Heart made manifest c. It was not the Force of external Arguments it was not the Testimony of this or that Church nor was it the Use of Miracles that wrought upon them v. 23 24. Wherefore the only Evidence whereon they received the Word and acknowledged it to be of God was that divine Power and Efficacy in themselves He is convinced of all and thus the Secrets of his Heart are made manifest c. He cannot deny but there is a Divine Efficacy in it or accompanying of it And thus the Woman of Samaria was convinced of the Truth of Christ's Words and believed in him i. e. because he told her all things that ever she did (d) Joh. 4.29 1 Joh. 5.10 The Word of God is as all sincere Souls find quick and powerful c. so that he that believeth hath the Witness in himself John 7.16 17. Jesus answered them and said My Doctrine is not mine but his that sent me If any Man will do his Will he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speak of my self In a word let it be granted that all who are really converted unto God by the Power of the Word have that infallible Evidence and Testimony of its divine original Authority and Power in their own Souls and Consciences that they thereon believe it with Faith divine and supernatural in conjunction with the other Evidences before-mentioned and largely demonstrated as parts of the same divine Testimony and it is all I aim at herein This Testimony tho it is not common unto all nor can it convince another yet is it very forceable to those who experience the Virtue and Efficacy thereof which we having in another place more largely opened we shall conclude this last Argument entreating all to labour after a taste of its divine powerful and Soul-changing Operations and then they will need no further Arguments to prove 't is of God We shall therefore conclude this brief Discourse on this Subject with those excellent Words of a Learned Man upon the some occasion Let this remain and be received as an establish'd Truth That those whom the Spirit hath inwardly taught do solidly acquiesce in the Scripture And that the same is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Self-credible or for its own sake worthy of belief and that it obtains that Certainty which it justly deserves with us by the Testimony of the Spirit For tho its own Majesty does of itself conciliate a Reverence yet then only does it seriously affect us when by the Spirit it is sealed in upon our hearts With whose Truth being enlightned we no longer believe that the Scripture is from God by our own Judgment or that of other Men but most certainly above all humane Judgment we are assured thereof no otherwise than as if there we beheld the very Voice of God by the Ministry of Men flowing from the Mouth of God to us No longer do we then seek for Arguments and probable Proofs whereon our Judgment may rely but subject our Judgment and Understanding thereunto as to a Matter already out of all doubt or debate yet not so as wretched Men are wont to addict their captive Minds to Superstitions but because we find and feel the undoubted Power of God there to breath and flourish To obey which we are drawn and inflamed knowingly and willingly but more livelily and efficaciously than either humane Will or Knowledg could affect us 'T is therefore such a Persuasion as does not require Reasons and yet it does not want them neither such a Knowledg to which the best Reason appears and agrees as being such as therein the Mind can acquiesce more securely and constantly than in any Reasons 'T is in fine such a Sense such a Taste as can proceed from nothing but a Revelation Divine Nor do I speak any thing but what every true Believer can bear witness to from his own Experience save only that Words are too short and unable to express a just Explication of the thing Calv.
Thess 1.3 3. It is called the Faith of God's Elect Tit. 1.1 4. It is called unfeigned Faith 1 Tim. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.5 5. It is called Faith that works by Love Gal. 5.6 6. It is called Faith of the Operation of God Col. 2.12 7. It is called precious Faith 2 Pet. 1.1 8. It is called holy Faith 9. It is called the Faith of the Son of God It s excellent Names set forth its transcendent Nature 2. Faith is precious in respect of the Means of its procurement or the Price that was laid down for the obtaining of it viz. the precious Blood of Christ for had not Christ died we should never have had one dram of it it is given to us as the Fruit and Effect of his glorious Undertaking 3. Faith is precious in respect of the Fountain from whence it proceeds 4. Faith is precious in respect of the Means by which it is wrought in the Soul viz. by the Word and Spirit of God in a wonderful manner Eph 1.19 20. even like as God wrought in Christ when he raised him from the Dead 5. Faith is precious in respect of the Object it takes hold of or fasteneth upon viz. God the Father the Holy Spirit but more immediatly Christ crucified Ye believe in God believe also in me 6. Faith is precious in that it joins or unites the Soul to Christ it makes us one with him as it were Flesh of his Flesh Bone of his Bone a lively Member of that Body whereof he is the Head 'T is that which ties the Conjugal Knot between him and every Believer 7. It is the Eye of rhe Soul no Man without it can behold Jesus Christ nor the fulfillings of future Promises Abraham by Faith saw the Day of Christ 8. Hereby a Christian is made a Child of God To as many as received him Joh. 1.12 Gal. 3.26 to them gave he power to become the Sons of God even to them that believed on his Name Ye are all the Children of God by Faith in Christ Jesus 9. It is the only way or means God is pleased to take to deliver the Souls of Men from Sin Wrath and eternal Death 10. It is that which interests the Soul into all the sweet and precious Promises of the Covenant of Grace See Light 11. It is the Instrument of Salvation Believe in the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved 12. Faith is a most excellent and precious thing upon the account of the Fruits of it viz. Life Light Peace Purging Boldness at the Throne of Grace Joy in the Holy-Ghost Hope and good Assurance of eternal Life 13. Faith is precious in respect of that glorious Power and Virtue that is in it 'T is medicinable and the most Sovereign Antidote and Cordial in the World 1. It will expell Poyson 2. 'T will perfectly as it applies the Blood of Christ cure a wounded Conscience 3. It will bear up and revive a fainting Spirit Mat. 8.23 I had fainted unless I had believed 4. It is good against the Feebleness of the Knees and Weakness of the hands 5. It is a most excellent thing against Fear and Tremblings of the Heart But when he saw the Wind boysterous he was afraid and beginning to sink Luk. 8.23 Mat. 14.30 he cried saying Lord save me And immediatly Jesus stretched forth his hand and caught him and said unto him O thou of little Faith 6. Ezek. 36.26 It is a precious Remedy against the Stone of a hard Heart it will dissolve it break it in pieces and cure the Soul perfectly of it 7. It cures all manner of inward Deadness it may well be called lively Faith or Faith of the Operation of God 8. Col. 2.12 It is good against the Dimness of the Eyes it helps them that cannot see afar off 9. It is a most Sovereign Thing against evil Spirits it will resist the Devil and make him flie 10. It is excellent good to purge and work out all those noxious and evil Humors of the inward Man cleansing and purifying the Heart 11. It is good against the Falling-Sickness Believers stand by Faith but if through a Temptation they should fall Faith will help them up again David and Peter had not so much Faith as to keep them from from falling yet they had enough to raise them up again when they were fallen It is an universal Remedy it cures all the Diseases of the Soul so that we may say with the Woman let the Distemper be what it will If I can but touch the Hem of his Garment I shall be healed 14. Faith is precious because it shields and gloriously preserves the whole Soul from all Dangers it is that which works with and tends to the perfecting of all other Graces in us 15. It was by Faith that Saints in every Age of the Church Heb. 11. were enabled to undergo and suffer all those hard and bitter Tortures and Torments they met with for Christ's sake 16. It is that which helps the Godly to overcome the World 1 Joh. 5.4 He that is born of God overcometh the World and this is the Victory which overcometh the World even our Faith VI. Gold is often tried and refined in the Fire we read of Gold seven times refined The Refining-Pot is for Silver Prov. 17.3 and the Furnace for Gold VI. Faith is often tried in the Fire or Furnace of Affliction 1 Pet. 3.12 Think it not strange concerning the fiery Trial which is to try you c. He shall sit as a Refiner's Fire Mal. 3.2 3 and as a Purifier of Silver c. and purge them as Gold and Silver c. God this way tried Abraham's Faith together with the Faith of many others of whom we read I will bring the third part through the Fire and I will try them as Gold is tried Zech. 13.9 VII Tried Gold is much better than that which is not tried nor refined in the Fire VII Faith that is tried is of wonderful value much more to be prized than that which was never brought under Exercise How excellently did Abraham's and Job's Faith shine when tried The Trial of your Faith is much more precious than Gold tho it be tried in the Fire c. VII Gold tried in the Fire is of an enriching Nature if a Man has much of it it enriches him greatly We esteem him a very rich Man that hath great Store of tried Gold in his own Possession VIII So Faith that is tried in the Furnace is of a Soul-enriching Nature he that hath much of this Faith is a very rich Man a rich Saint James 1 5 God hath chosen the Poor of this World rich in Faith and Heirs of the Kingdom See more of the Nature of Gold in the Metaphor Gold where the Word of God is compared to it Metaphor Disparity GOld is naturally an earthy Sort of Metal 't is from beneath and therefore corruptible Not with
in the way of Obedience But a strong Faith in all it doth is kept up by Christ's doing by Christ's Obedience he sees his Acceptation comes in through the Lord Jesus's Undertaking for him 5. A weak Faith is subject to rest too much upon the Means and outward Ordinances He performs Duty and is found in the Appointments of Christ because of the Fat and Sweet of them or some present Comforts of the Spirit in the performance of them rather than because commanded of God and to manifest his Obedience and Subjection unto him and if he meets not with his expectation he is ready presently to faint and be discouraged and concludes the Ordinances do not belong to him or he is not a converted Person c. or else thinks wholly to neglect them for time to come 6. A weak Believer is ready to judg of his Justification by his inward Sanctification When he finds eminent Power over Sin then he begins to conclude he may be in a saved State tho I do not say that a Man is actually justified before he is in some measure or degree made holy where the one is the other will follow as the Effect the Cause Quest How may a weak Faith or Hand be strengthned and feeble Knees confirmed Answ 1. Consider a weak Faith is precious a little Gold is Gold a little Water is Water Thou art a Believer though thou art but a weak Believer 2. A weak Faith being true may in time prove strong and grow to be a great Faith 3. Tho thou hast but a weak Faith it will save doubtless some weak Eyes beheld the Brazen Serpent and were healed 4. Weak Faith if it be true shall never fail totally nor be taken away He that is the Author of it will likewise be the Finisher Phil. 1.6 Being confident of this very thing that he which hath begun a good Work in you will perform it to the Day of Jesus Christ Hope compared to an Helmet Ephes 6.17 And take the Helmet of Salvation c. 1 Thess 5.8 And for an Helmet the Hope of Salvation AN Helmet is a Piece of Armor for the Head commonly called a Head-Piece Hope the Word is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Havah which signifieth to expect or wait and it notes a very vehement Intention both of Body and Mind in waiting expecting or hoping when a Man waits as it were stretching forth his Spirit or his Mind putting himself out exceedingly to hope or wait for a thing Hope is a Divine and Super-natural Grace or Fruit of the holy Spirit and may be thus described First 'T is a patient and well-grounded Expectation of whatsoever God hath promised God is the Author of it called the Hope of Israel and the God of Hope The Believer is the Subject of this Hope The Object in a strict sence is God who comprehends all the Good that Saints dwell in the Faith and expectation of Psal 39.7 What wait I for my Hope is in thee In a large sence it is the Good of the Promise not in hand Rom. 8.24 or already accomplish'd but to be performed hereafter Hope that is seen is not Hope for what a Man seeth why doth he yet hope for it Futurity is intrinsecal to Hope's Object and distinguisheth it from Faith which gives a present Being to the Promise Heb. 11 1. and is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Substance of things hoped for The Good of the Promise hath a kind of Substance by Faith in the Soul it is in Heaven as it were in an Interview it brings the Christian and Heaven together as if he were there already Why Hope is compared to an Helmet will appear in the following Parallel Metaphor Parallel THe Helmet defends the Head that eminent part of the Body from the Dint of Bullet or Sword HOpe of Heaven defends the principal Parts and Faculties of the Soul from the dangerous Assaults of Sin and Satan particularly the Judgment which most Expositors understand is intended by the Head What avails that Faith which Men have without a well-grounded Hope of future Life Devils have a kind of Faith they believe but have no Hope Faith eyes the Promises and Hope preserves the Soul from Satan's Wounds keeping it in a faithful and stedfast expectation of the fulfilling of them By which means a Saint is help'd chearfully to suffer the Loss of all other things and that in Judgment hoping it will be made up again to him in another World Like as Hope causeth the Husband-man to cast his choice and precious Seed into the Earth He that ploweth ploweth in Hope 1 Cor. 9.10 he hopes for a greater Increase at Harvest So a Merchant ventures much Treasure to Sea as far as the Indies in Hope for had he not good Hopes of advantagious Returns all would account him a Fool so to do II. The Helmet maketh a Souldier fearless and very couragious in the Day of Battel for if his Head and Heart be well defended he is in no great danger of his Life II. In like manner Hope of Heaven makes a Saint very couragious for Christ and his blessed Interest Rom. 5.5 Hope maketh not ashamed 'T is the Hope of Heaven that causeth Saints to endure Afflictions and Persecutions with Patience and not to fear the Faces of their Enemies for if the Judgment Will Affection and Conscience of a Believer be preserved from the mortal Wounds of the Adversary he is safe and out of Danger which is all done by this part of the Christian's Armor How confidently and daringly did Goliah come forth against Israel with his Helmet of Brass and other Furniture as if he had been so enclosed in his Armor that it was impossible any one should prevail against him This made him carry his Crest so high and to defy a whole Host Tho he was mistaken in his Armor Isa 49.23 yet here is an Helmet c. that whosoever wears it shall never be put to shame for his holy Boasting God himself allows him so to do and will bear him out in the rejoycing of his Hope Psal 27.3 They shall not be ashamed that wait for me Therefore saith David Tho an Host should encamp against me my Heart shall not fear c. My Head shall be lifted above mine Enemies Two things make the Head hang down Fear and Shame now Hope easeth the Christian's Heart of both these and so forbids him to give any sign of a desponding Mind by a dejected Countenance in the worst of Times Luk. 21.28 When these things come to pass then lift up your Heads for your Redemption draweth nigh III. An Helmet tends to the compleat harnessing and setting out of a Souldier to meet his Enemy by which means he is terrible to behold as Experience shews for how fierce doth an Army of Souldiers look when armed Cap-a-pe And especially the Head-piece tends to do it Many have been struck with great trembling by
the more plain to these metaphorical and figurative Expressions used by our Saviour when he instituted the holy Sacr ment of the Supper saying This is my Body something briefly we shall offer in confutation of their pernicious Doctrine which may soon be done for they confute themselves in saying that the Sacrament is a Feast for our Souls and not for our Bodies Now what is my Soul the better when I eat the very Body of Christ Christ is eat and received spiritually Whoso eateth my Flesh and drinketh my Blood hath everlasting Life Joh 6.54 and I will saith Christ raise him up at the last Day Therefore the eating of Christ's Flesh cannot intend the receiving of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper for if it did it would be a very easy way for the vilest Sinner to go to Heaven But to come directly to the Business in hand Either Christ spake figuratively when he said This is my Body or he did not And that the Words cannot be taken in a proper sence is evident for it is impossible for Words to express any thing more plainly than that by this is meant the Bread It is said that Christ took Bread and brake it and gave it and said Take eat this is my Body where this necessarily relates to that which Christ took brake and gave Also the Apostle saith positively thrice in a Breath that it is Bread 1 Cor. 11.26 As often as ye eat this Bread c. And whosoever shall eat this Bread 1 Cor. 1● 16 The Bread which we break is it not the Communion of the Body of Christ Also the Participation of the Sacrament is called breaking of Bread Acts 2.46 20.7 which Popish Authors themselves understand of the Sacrament Now can any be so ignorant and foolish to believe it is Christ's proper and real Body which the Holy-Ghost calleth so often Bread after it is blessed c. Object By this say some of the Papists is neither intended the Bread nor Christ's Body Bellarmin l e Euch. l. 3. c. 12. but in general this Substance which is contained under this Species Answ What do they mean are there any more Substances under those Species besides the Bread first and afterwards the Body of Christ Do not they affirm as soon as ever it ceaseth to be Bread it becometh the real Body of Christ Then surely if it be a Substance according to what they say it must either be Bread or the Body of Christ or no Substance at all Object Christ's Body is there after the manner of a Spirit taking up no room so that Head Hands Feet are altogether in the least Crumb of the Host Answ In arguing thus as a learned Man observes they plead for the Propriety of Words and destroy the Propriety of things How can they say it is properly a Body which wants the essential Properties of a Body which is to have quantity and take up room take away this and the Body may properly be a Spirit for it is that only which differenceth it from a Spirit But further to shew how idle and absurd it is to take our Saviour's Words in a proper Sence we shall shew that it is utterly against Sense and Reason as well as contrary to Scripture as you have heard First It is against Sense What greater Evidence can there be of things than what Sense affordeth But if this which the Papists affirm about the consecrated Bread being the real Body of Christ be true the Senses of all the World are deceived For since the great Argument for Christianity as all agree was the Words that Christ spoke and the Works which Christ did now how could we be sure he did so speak or so work if we may not credit the Reports of our Eyes and Ears This was St. Luke's great Evidence of the Truth of what he wrote That it was delivered to him by Eye-Witnesses Luke 1.1 2. and St. John's What we have seen with our Eyes and our Hands have handled of the Word of Life 1 Joh. 1.1 And St. Paul's for the Resurrection That he was seen of Cephas then of the Twelve then of above five hundred Brethren at once 1 Cor. 15.5 6. Even Thomas his Infidelity yielded to this Argument That if he did thrust his hand into Christ's Side he would believe Joh. 20.25 Christ judged this was a convincing Argument when the Apostles thought they had seen a Spirit Handle me and see for a Spirit hath not Flesh and Blood as you see me have Luke 24.39 But now if after the Words of Consecration there is under the Species of Bread the Nature and Properties of Flesh then are the Senses of the wisest of Mortals deceived And if our Senses be deceived here Dr. Tillotson they are not as a late Author observes to be trusted in any other thing no not when they are most sure that we see Father or Mother or Wife or Children Can we be sure This is my Body is written in Mat. 26. Mark 14. Luke 22. 1 Cor. 11. For may not those Words be some other Words why should we trust our Eyes What if we should tell the Papists These Words This is my Body are neither in this Chapter nor any where else written in the New Testament and grow confident of it and tell them the Words are This is not my Body 'T is the Bricks that were laid to build Babel 'T is the Gates of Solomon's Porch This is the Shew-Bread that Abimelech gave to David the Bottles that Abigail took from Nabal If they tell us We are strangely deceived and the Sense of all that can read will give it against us may not we tell them as well when they say This is the real Body of Christ when it is nothing but a Wafer-Cake That they are strangely deceived and that the Senses of all that can either see taste smell or feel will give it against them This being so what reason is there for them to burn us because we cannot see the Bread to be Christ's real Body more than there is for us to kill them because they cannot see that it is the Gates of Solomon's Porch Secondly It is against Reason And shall any conclude that is any Principle of the Christian Religion that is contrary to and utterly against Reason For it would make us believe things that are absolutely impossible and gross Contradictions Tho some things may be above Reason yet they themselves confess no Principle of Religion can be against it Object But they say We imagine many things impossible that really are not so and further intimate If we can prove any real Impossibilities which this Doctrine forceth them to believe they will yield to us For they with us condemn the Lutheran Opinion See a Book called Scripture-Mysteries p. 279. That Christ's Body is every where because it is impossible and therefore expound those Words I am the Vine I am a Door c. figuratively as we do because
Fire 3. Thrones which are Royal Seats of Kings and Monarchs in their Magnificence and Glory 4. Dominions or Lordships Col. 1.16 5. Principalities connoting special and peculiar Jurisdiction 6. Powers such as have Right to execute Authority by God's appointment and not by his Permission only 7. Mighties 1 Thess 4.16 8. Archangels 9. Angels c. Others account but seven Orders of Angels and some but three The holy Scripture doth not fully open and unfold the Mystery of Angels to us in this respect therefore it is good for us as I said before not to be wise above what is written tho no doubt but there is a most excellent Order amongst them And probably there are different Ranks and Degrees of them and yet all are in subjection to our Lord Jesus Christ who is their Prince and Supreme Head whom they all reverence worship and adore III. An Host or Army is raised to make War and fight under the Banner of their Prince and Sovereign and many times do dreadful Execution and make great Desolation in the Earth III. The holy Angels God's mighty Host are employed to fight his Battels and at his Command to fall upon his Enemies when all Terms of Peace and Reconciliation are rejected and Sinners are grown incorrigible c. What fearful Execution and Desolation have they made in the World when they have had Commission from the Almighty Was it not this Host that came against Sodom and Gomorrah and the Cities about them Gen. 19 13 2 Kings 19 35. We will destroy this Place One of these Souldiers destroyed no less than an hundred fourscore and five thousand Men in the Camp of the Assyrians What cause have the Enemies of the Church to tremble when they consider what a mighty and powerful Army is raised and always in readiness at God's Command to fall upon them What is the Power of the proudest Monarch here below when compared to the Strength of the Lord's Host or Christ's heavenly Army IV. An Host or great Army sometimes breaks in upon a People that are secure utterly destroying and spoiling them on a sudden IV. The Angels of God come upon the wicked Enemies of Jesus Christ and his Church sometimes on a sudden in one Night was that great Host of the Assyrians destroyed Hab. 3.16 When he cometh up unto the People he will invade them with his Troops V. An Host or mighty Army hath many slaughtering Weapons if one doth not Execution another will V. So the Angels of God have many slaughtering Weapons or Ways to dedestroy sometimes by Famine Ezek. 9.2 sometimes by Plague sometimes by the Sword and sometimes make use of all these three together against a People that God resolves utterly to destroy VI. An Host or victorious Army sometimes meet with great Opposition and are fiercely engaged by stout and sturdy Enemies that will not quickly yield tho at last they are forced to fly being vanquished VI. The holy Angels of God are sometimes opposed by evil Angels who are fierce sturdy and cruel Enemies to them And there was War in Heaven Michael Rev. 12.7 and his Angels fought against the Dragon And the Dragon fought and his Angels and prevailed not c. Metaphor Disparity AN earthly Host or Army tho never so victorious at other times may yet meet with their Match nay be sometimes worsted THe Lord's Host was never worsted Tho the evil Angels are mighty in Power and have been oftentimes too hard for the Saints yet they are not able to stand before the holy Angels of God II. Souldiers of an earthly Host are mortal Men and may be put to the Sword or lose their Lives by the hands of their Enemies II. The Angels of God are immortal Spirits and cannot sustain the least Hurt or Wound much less be slain in any Wars they are engaged in against their Enemies Inferences WHat Comfort may this administer to the Godly May I not say with the Prophet Fear not for they that be with us are more than they that be with them 2 Kings 6.16 2. And as it affords Comfort to the Saints it may serve to terrify Sinners and such especially as are Persecutors of the Church of God How sad is their Condition considering who they make War against Can they stand before the terrible God God is their Enemy Christ is their Enemy and the Angels of Heaven are against them and their Enemies likewise 3. Bless God you that are in Covenant with him for the sake of these Helpers 4. This shews us also what great Glory is conferred upon the Lord Jesus Christ our blessed Mediator He is the Head and chief Leader of all the glorious Angels they are all at his Command and ready to engage in his Wars if he does but speak the Word they come with slaughtering Weapons in their hands Ezek. 9.2 to execute his Wrath and Displeasure upon the World The Holy Angels compared to the Faces of a Man of a Lion of an Ox and of an Eagle Ezek. 1.6.10 And every one had four Faces c. that is every one of the living Creatures or Angels which the Prophet saw in the Vision FOur particular Angels as some conceive which were chief over the rest of the whole Host of Angels Others upon better Reason rather understand it relates to the four Parts of the World East West North and South i. e. the Work of Angels laid out in all those Parts See Mr. Greenhill on Ezekiel pag. 85. Observ 1. God employeth glorious intelligent Creatures in his Service in the Ways and Workings of his Power and Providence in the World Observ 2. That Angels are in all Quarters of the Earth taking notice of Mens Works and Ways they perceive what is done in every Place by the Just and by the Vnjust The Consideration of which should make us carry our selves wisely and holily at all times and in all Places And every one had four Faces 1. The Face of a Man 2. The Face of a Lion 3. The Face of an Ox. 4. The Face of an Eagle In some Pictures saith Reverend Greenhill you may see several Faces so drawn that which way soever you look a several Face is presented So here before was the Face of a Man behind the Face of a Lion on the right side the Face of an Ox and on the left side the Face of an Eagle There is not a Face but is compared to the Face of some principal Creature Man is the chief of all the rest a Lion is the King of wild Beasts the Ox is the chief of the tame Ones and the Eagle is the chief of the Birds To these distinctly I. The Face of a Man Metaphor Parallel THe Face of a Man notes Understanding and the Excellency of Reason by which all human Actions are managed ANgels have great Knowledg and Understanding By their Likeness unto Man is laid before us the Rationality Knowledg and Understanding of Angels They
their own Nature look up to Him it might convince us that all inferior Creatures do depend upon Him as well as those noble Ones But when they come in with the Faces of other Creatures looking up it is a clear Evidence that all depend upon Christ By him were all things created Col. 1.16 17. that are in Heaven and in Earth visible and invisible whether Thrones or Dominions Principalities or Powers All things were created by him and for him and by him all things consist Sixthly We are to learn from hence to be heavenly-minded with the holy Angels to look up The Holy Angels compared to the Wind and to Flaming-Fire Psal 104.4 Maketh his Angels Spirits and his Ministers a flaming Fire Heb. 1.7 And of the Angels he saith Who maketh his Angels Spirits and his Ministers a Flame of Fire SOme of the modern Jews deny there is any mention made of Angels in Psal 104.4 affirming that the Subject the Psalmist treats of are the Winds with Thunder and Lightning which God employs as his Messengers and Ministers to do his Will and Pleasure But that the Psalmist means the Angels is evident from the Design and Scope of the Words The Consent of the ancient Jews lies against the Sentiments of the modern both the old Translations either made or embraced by them expresly refer the Words unto Angels On Heb. 1. so Dr. Owen observes do the Seventy and so doth the Targum thus rendring the Place Who maketh his Messengers or Angels swift as Spirits and his Ministers strong or powerful as a flaming Fire The Supply of the Note of Similitude makes it evident that they understand the Text of Angels and not of Winds and of making Angels as Spirits and not of making Winds to be Angels or Messengers which is inconsistent with their Words The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth usually denote the Angels themselves and no reason can be given why it should not do so in this place The Apostle puts it out of doubt positively saying And of the Angels he saith c. That the Apostle speaketh not here of the Nature and Essence of Angels but their Dignity Honour and Employment is evident upon which account saith our Reverend Author he preferreth the Lord Jesus Christ before them Observ God sendeth his Angels like the Winds or like a Flame of Fire Metaphor Parallel THe Wind is invisible who can see it ANgels are invisible Spirits we are daily attended upon by them but see them not II. The Wind blows at God's Command he is said to hold the Wind in his Fist II. Angels go at God's Command He hath them at his Beck Psal 103.20 III. The Wind is quick piercing and powerful in its Operation the Cause of many gracious Effects tho sometimes sent as a Judgment III. Angels are quick agil and powerful in their Working and many great and glorious Blessings Saints receive from their Ministration tho sometimes sent as a Scourge to Nations and particular Persons to execute God's Displeasure as on Sodom c. Flaming-Fire I. A flaming Fire is of a burning quality I. Seraphims signify Burning noting that mighty Zeal they are attended with in doing God's Will II. A flaming Fire is of a consuming destroying and devouring Nature II. So have the Angels of God been to many of God's implacable Enemies as hath been hinted III. A Flaming Fire is a good Defence in a howling Wilderness especially if it be round about such as dwell therein III. The Angels of God are a glorious Defence to the Church whilst in the Wilderness of this World where they are daily surrounded by wicked Men who are compared unto Beasts of Prey Psal 34.7 The Angels of God encamp round about them that fear him c. Inferences THis may comfort the Godly who dwell among blood-thirsty Enemies they are surrounded with a Flame of Fire viz. the holy Angels of God 2. Let ungodly Ones tremble can they stand before a flaming Fire and not be consumed God can soon send his Angels to destroy them 3. It should also stir up Believers to act with much Zeal and Fervency in the Work and Service of God The Angels for Zeal and Agility are like a Flame of Fire We should do the Will of God on Earth as the Angels of God do it in Heaven The Holy Angels compared to Horses 2 Kings 6.17 And Elisha prayed and said Lord I pray thee open his Eyes And the Lord opened the Eyes of the young Man and he saw and behold the Mountains were full of Horses and Chariots of Fire round about Elisha Zech. 1.8 I saw by night and behold a Man riding upon a red Horse and he stood among the Myrtle-Trees that were in the bottom and behind him were three red Horses speckled and white BY these Horses all Expositors understand the holy Angels of God are intended They are compared to Horses and Chariots of Fire also to Horses of divers Colours These things seem very dark and mysterious 1. We shall briefly however hint a few things why they may be compared to Horses II. Why to Horses and Chariots of Fire III. Why to red speckled and white Horses Metaphor Parallel A Horse is a strong and a very couragious and fearless Creature which God himself elegantly setteth forth Job 39. v. 19 to 24. Hast thou given the Horse his Strength hast thou cloathed his Neck with Thunder Canst thou make him afraid The Glory of his Nostrils is terrible He rejoyceth in his Strength He goeth on to meet the armed Man He mocketh at Fear and is not affrighted neither turneth he back from the Sword c. ANgels are mighty in Strength One of them saith an eminent Writer is stronger than all the World They are called mighty Angels or God's mighty Ones Angels of his Strength They are couragious and void of Fear their Necks may be said to be cloathed with Thunder they turn their Backs for none They fear not the glittering Spear nor the Shield Who is able to engage or encounter with one of the glorious Seraphims or Cherubims Are any of the Sons of the Mighty a Match for him What was Alexander or Julius Caesar or all the mighty Champions that ever were to the Angels of Heaven II. The Horse is a very useful Creature useful to carry Burthens and draw the Chariots of Princes useful to ride on useful for War c. II. Angels are exceeding useful See Oxen. They bear up the Saints they help support and carry them along in their Journey to their everlasting Home they carry their Souls into Abraham's Bosom The Beggar died and was carried by the Angels c. The Chariots and Horses of Fire that parted the two Worthies 2 Kings 2.11 12. those Princes of the Prophets and carried one of them to Heaven were the Blessed Angels of God II. They are compared to Horses and Chariots of Fire to shew how fierce agil and swift they are in their Motion and how
destructive and amazing to their Enemies III. They are set out by red speckled and white Horses to note the different Work and Office they are set about whilst they are employed in the Workings of Providence in governing the World 1. Red signifies the Sufferings of the Church together with the Blood and Slaughter or dreadful Judgments that Jesus Christ hath to execute on the World by the Ministration of Angels or a severe Dispensation 2. Speckled shews a mixed State or Dispensation of God's Judgments mixed with Mercy 3. White notes Peace and Prosperity to the Saints and the whole World which will be produced by the Providence of God after the bloody and mixed State of the Church is gone The Soul of Man compared to a Ship Heb. 6.19 Which Hope we have as the Anchor of the Soul c. HEre observe two Doctrines one implied the other expressed Doct. 1. The Soul of a Believer in the Judgment of some Divines is and may fitly be compared to a Ship Doct. 2. Hope that noble and precious Grace of the Spirit is and may fitly be compared to an Anchor Metaphor Parallel A Ship is a rare and curious Piece of Workmanship it shews forth the excellent Wit and Invention of Man THe Soul of a Believer is a very rare and curious Piece of God's Workmanship The Body and Face of a Man doth magnify the Wisdom and Glory of the Creator but what is the Body without the Soul it is but the Cabinet without the Jewel II. A Ship is a very costly thing a little will not build rigg and fit out a Ship to Sea especially if it be designed for a long and profitable Voyage as to the East-Indies or the like II. The Soul of a Believer is a very costly and chargeable thing God hath parted with much Treasure in building 1 Pet. 1.18 or rather rebuilding and fitting of it out to sail through the Ocean of this World to the Haven of eternal Happiness hath parted with his Son with his Spirit his Grace his Gospel c. III. Some Ships are built for noble and eminent Service and are very profitable to the Owners III. The Charge that God hath been at in building and rebuilding the Soul of a Believer is for renowned and eminent Service viz. the Glory of God and everlasting Happiness IV. He that builds and owns a Ship doth usually commit the Care and Charge of her to another who is to sail in her IV. So doth God Almighty commit the Charge and Care of our Souls to us We are employed but as Stewards Deut. 4 9. Prov. 4.23 or Deputy-Owners and must be accountable to God if our Souls are lost V. A gallant Ship that is bound for India or for some noble and eminent Service is richly fraighted hath divers rare Commodities in her c. V. So the Soul of a Believer that it may make a blessed and glorious Voyage is most richly stored and fraighted with the precious Gifts and Graces of God's holy Spirit c. VI. A Ship ought to have a good Bottom or the Danger is very great Whatever she seems to be above Deck tho never so stately and lovely to look upon yet if her Bottom be naught and defective she will never make the Voyage VI. So ought the Soul of a Christian to have a good Foundation If not built upon Christ if not sincere and firm at Heart what Profession he may make tho never so glorious will prove fruitless and vain the Soul is in danger and will for ever unavoidably be lost VII A Ship cannot sail without Wind or Tide VII The Soul of a Believer cannot sail Heavenwards in any Service Duty or Suffering without the sweet Movings and Gales of God's Spirit VIII A Ship ought to have a wise and skilful Pilot. VIII So ought the Soul of a Believer for if it hath not Christ to guide and steer its Course for it it is impossible to escape the Danger of the Sea of Trouble and Temptation IX A Ship needeth often to be repaired being very subject to spring a Leak IX So doth the Soul of a Christian need often to be repaired by Prayer and Repentance or else it will fall under sad and fearful Decays Heb. 2.1 The Soul is like pared to a leaking Vessel X. A Ship is tossed upon the rough and tempestuous Waves and has its Ups and Downs and seldom hath rest or quiet till she has made the Voyage X. Thus 't is with the Soul it is often tossed upon the boysterous and tempestuous Seas of Temptation sometimes transported up to Heaven Psal 107. v. 23 to 28. and then by and by down again to the Depths and all the Billows of God's Wrath seem to run over it XI A Ship is in danger of being lost and that many ways viz. by Rocks by Sands by the raging Waves and by springing of a Leak c. XI The Soul also is in great danger Never was Ship in more eminent hazard than the Soul of a Christian and that many ways Zech. 4.7 viz. by the Rocks and Mountains of great Opposition the Sands of Despair and raging Waves of Persecution besides the Leaks occasioned by indwelling Sin c. XII A Ship hath a Compass by which she is steered from place to place without which no Man can or dares go to Sea XII So likewise the Soul must have a Compass unto which we are with care and diligence to look and to be well-skilled in all the Points thereof viz. the Word and Spirit of God 2 Pet. 2.19 XIII A Ship is exposed to great Danger of being robbed by Pirates of all her Treasure XIII So is the Soul of a Believer by that cursed Pirate Satan who sometimes transforms himself into an Angel of Light and to trapan the Soul 2 Cor. 11.15 puts out false Colours pretends himself a Friend when his whole Design is Blood and Slaughter and treacherously to ruin and spoil the Soul 1 Pet. 2 1● The Flesh is another secret Sea-Thief and the World yea and Sin is as arch a Pirat as any XIV A Ship often meets with sudden Storms and a good Mariner doth not only look for them but also provide and prepare for them XIV So must the Soul expect to meet with a dreadful Tempest or Hurricane The Winds will rise and a Storm will come upon the Ship where Christ is David was aware of these Dangers Psal 55.8 and saw how to prevent and escape sinking XV. 'T is a rare thing to see a Ship sail along before a fresh and prosperous Gale XV. 'T is a rare and lovely thing to see a Soul carried swiftly along in the Work and Service of God being under the powerful Influences a fresh and prosperous Gale or Wind of the Spirit XVI A Ship is sometimes becalmed XVI So alas it is too often with the Soul of a poor Christian XVII 'T is a Wonder to see a Ship to live in a
in Man Job 32.8 and the Inspiration of the Almighty giveth him Vnderstanding III. A Candle is but a small Light in comparison of the Light of the Sun it giveth Light but a little way and discovers things but darkly III. The Spirit of Man is but a small Light in comparison of Christ the Sun of Righteousness and the Light of the glorious Gospel that discovereth those things that the Light of natural Conscience will not 1. The Spirit of Man will discover unto him by the help of the visible Creation Rom. 1.20 that there is a God that made the World but it cannot discover that there is a Redeemer who died to save the World which the Gospel doth 2. The Spirit of Man will discover Man's Duty in Morals to do as he would be done unto but it cannot teach him in all things his Duty towards God viz. his Divine Laws and Institutions and how he ought to be worshipped 3. The Spirit of Man will convince him of some Sins but it will not convince him of Sin because he believeth not in Jesus Christ for this the Spirit of Truth and glorious Gospel only convince Men and Women of 4. The Spirit of Man discovers to him that he must die but it cannot discover to him without the Light of the written Word a Resurrection IV. A Candle is oftentimes put out IV. So is the Light or Candle of the Wicked God in a way of Judgment when Men have abused their Light and Knowledg they have had of Him giveth them up to vile Affections as he did the Gentiles so that they sin without controul Conscience is seared and asleep as it were and reproveth them no more The Candle of the Wicked shall be put out Prov. 24.20 Inferences THis reproves those that say The Light which is in every Man that cometh into the World is God Christ and the Holy Spirit whereas it is evident 't is Man's Spirit and called but the Candle of the Lord and in it self no more than the Light of Man's natural Conscience II. It reproves them also for saying It is sufficient to make known or discover unto Men all things that are necessary to Salvation and that they should have known by the Light within all things which the Holy Scriptures declare of Christ and the Mysteries of the Gospel if the Scriptures had never been written Which is easily detected 1. By considering of that great Darkness that is in those Heathen Nations and People that have not the written Word of God concerning Christ and Salvation for tho they have the Light of this Candle viz. the Light of their own natural Consciences yet know nothing of Christ who was born of the Blessed Virgin nor of his Death and Resurrection 2. By considering the absolute Necessity there is of Gospel-Revelation and Ministration to make known to Men those glorious Mysteries according as it is held forth in divers places of Scripture for if Man's chief and only Teacher were within him what need was there for Christ to ordain and send forth his Apostles and Ministers to preach the Gospel to the World and why is Faith said to come by hearing the Word preached 3. They are disproved by this viz. they cannot make known any of those other things which Christ did that were not written III. From hence we may perceive what the Substance is which the Light of Man's Spirit will do it searches all the inward Parts of the Belly i. e. makes known the very Thoughts and Intentions of the Heart unto him and reproves him for not living up to the Light God hath afforded him IV. What Fools are they these things considered who plead for a Candle-Light and chuse rather to be lighted and directed by it when the Sun is risen and shineth clearly blessed be God in our Horizon Conscience a Witness Rom. 9.1 I speak the Truth in Christ I lie not my Conscience bearing me Witness in the Holy-Ghost c. 1 John 3.20 If our Hearts condemn us God is greater and knoweth all things Rom. 2.15 16. Their Conscience in the mean while accusing or else excusing in the Day when God shall judg the Secrets of Men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel COnscience is in these Scriptures called a Witness We shall 1. Shew what Conscience is 2. Run the Parallel First Conscience is a natural Power with which God hath endued the Soul of Man by Creation for his Comfort if he walk uprightly or for his Torment if he walk in evil Ways We do not imagine that Conscience came not into the World until Adam's Fall for this were to suppose Adam in Paradise to be a Man without Conscience Conscience indeed as an Accuser and Condemner came not in until then for as long as Adam obeyed the Commandments of God there was no cause that Conscience should accuse him but as sooon as he had sinned Conscience flew in his Face Secondly Conscience we 1. say is a natural Power which the Soul of Man hath Mr. Lockier c. Now saith one whether this Power be in the Understanding only or partly in the Understanding partly in the Will I find controverted amongst the Learned some speak of it as a distinct Faculty This Power we speak of I conceive saith he to be a reflect Act of the practick Understanding only transcendently 2. By the Power of the Holy Ghost St. John confirms that it is a reflect Act of the practick Understanding only where speaking of this Power in the Soul he saith And hereby we know that we know him if we k●ep his Commandments 1 Joh. 2 3. That is as if you should say We do view our Ways by the Word of God which is an Act only of the Understanding and finding them to be in some measure levell with the holy Rule we have this comfortable Reflection back upon our selves That our Faith is not a Fancy but a Faith that works by Love and also sincere and saving Paul confirms the second That it is a reflect Act of the Understanding transcendently seconded by the Power of the Holy-Ghost My Conscience bearing me Witness in the Holy-Ghost That is My Conscience transcendently s●conded and assisted by the Holy-Ghost doth strongly testify to my Soul that I am full of Bowels towards my Kinsmen after the Flesh and could do any thing or suffer any thing for their Good The Order according to which the Holy-Ghost strikes in with Conscience is this The Understanding makes a double Proposition one grounded in the Word of God the other in the Heart of Man as thus He that keepeth the Commandments of God truly loves God but I do keep the Commandments of God This is grounded in the Heart of Man and then draws a Conclusion from both Therefore I do love God truly This Conclusion whilst holy and drawn from Divine Premises to wit the Word of God and true Grace in the Heart the Spirit of God strikes in with the Soul
more safe and secure to dwell in and some Cities have two or three Walls to make them more impregnable II. The Church of God hath strong Walls about it We have a strong City Isa 26.1 Salvation will God appoint for Walls and Bulwarks The Church hath a threefold Wall about it First The Wall of God's Providence Hast not thou made a Hedg or Wall about him As the Mountains are round about Jerusalem Job 1. Psal 125.2 so the Lord is round about them that fear him c. Secondly The Protection of the holy Angels Psal 34.7 The Angels of the Lord encamp round about them that fear him c. Thirdly God in an extraordinary manner is as a Wall of Fire round about her Zech. 2.5 every one of his Attributes is a gracious Defence to the Church III. Some Cities are bravely scituated they are built upon a Hill III. The Church of God is famous upon this account Beautiful for Scituation Psal 48.2 the Joy of the whole Earth is Mount Zion on the sides of the North the City of the great King Mat. 16.18 Ye are as a City set upon a Hill IV. A City is built of many Materials and in it are many Buildings or Houses set in rare Uniformity curiously joined and compacted together IV. The Church of God is built up of many living Stones consisting of divers particular Societies or spiritual Houses Now therefore ye are no more Strangers and Foreigners Eph. 2.19 20 21 22. but Fellow-Citizens with the Saints and of the Houshold of God And are built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief Corner-stone In whom all the Building fitly framed together groweth to an holy Temple in the Lord c. In whom ye also are builded together for an Habitation of God through the Spirit Jerusalem is builded as a City that is compact together Psal 122.3 V. A City hath its particular Laws Institutions and Customs by which it is governed V. The Church of God also hath special Laws Institutions and Customs belonging to it by which it is in all things governed which are contained in the holy Scripture the great Charter and Statute-Book of the Church VI. A City hath a supreme Governor in it who rectifies all Disorders and Confusions that otherwise would be therein considering the Multitude of its Inhabitants VI. The Church of God is not without a good Government and a Supreme Magistrate viz. the Lord J●sus Christ who is the chief Judg and Law-giver or Head of this spiritual Corporation VII A City hath besides the chief Governor and principal Magistrate divers inferior Officers for Administration of Justice and well governing thereof VII So the Church of God hath inferior Officers under Jesus Christ which the Citizens by the appointment of Christ are required to substitute and ordain to govern and keep all things in good Order And he gave some Apostles Ephes 4.8 9 10 11 12. and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers c. VIII A City hath some special Trade belonging to it by which its Inhabitants are enriched VIII The Church or City of God hath a spiritual Trade belonging to it which all the Citizens do and ought always to follow by which they are also greatly enriched IX Many Cities have Merchants in them who trade into remote parts of the World and fetch their Merchandize from afar IX The Saints or Citizens of Zion are all Merchants who trade daily to Heaven they fetch their blessed Merchandize from thence Phil. 3.20 Prov. 41. Our Conversation is in Heaven Hence the Church is by Solomon compared to Merchants Ships See Merchants Ships Saints have like other Merchants their Correspondent Jesus Christ who makes glorious Returns of all they venture or send to Heaven For every Duty rightly performed he makes Returns of Mercy for Tears of godly Sorrow he returns them the Oil of Joy Thou wilt saith holy David put my Tears into thy Bottle By which means the spiritual Citizens grow rich in Faith Hope Experience c. See the Parable of the Merchant-man Now touching the Trade Traffick or Merchandize of this City upon which its Wealth and Prosperity doth wholly depend take what follows First Their Trade is heavenly Wherefore holy Brethren Heb. 3.1 2 Partakers of the heavenly Calling consider the Apostle and High-Priest of our Profession Jesus Christ And as they are all Merchants and use one Trade so they all deal with one and the same Benefactor from whom they have quick Returns they fetch their Goods from afar Something touching the Excellency of the Trade of the City of God I shall hint in a few Particul●rs Secondly As touching her Commodities or the Merchandize which her Citizens deal in First Negatively 1. They are not prohibited Goods 2. They are not counterfeit Goods 3. They are not temporal and corruptible Goods Secondly Affirmatively and more directly they are 1. Soul enriching Commodities things that are of very great worth and value The Merchandize of Wisdom is better than the Merchandize of Silver Prov. 3.14 and the Gain thereof than fine Gold 2. They are needful things such things as we cannot be without Some things that Merchants of a City deal in and fetch from afar tho they are of great value yet we may very well subsist and live comfortably without them as Pearl and precious Stones c. But there is an absolute Necessity of all those things the Citizens of this City trade in and for 3. They are such Commodities as will make the Nations and Persons that buy them happy for ever and indeed there is no true Happiness without them Quest What is the Traffick of this City of God Answ The first thing that I shall mention is the Truth this she offers to Sale Buy the Truth and sell it not Prov. 23.23 The Church is called the Pillar and Ground of Truth 1 Tim. 3.15 Truth is only to be found in this City or in the Ware-Houses of the Citizens of Zion viz. the Word of God and the Hearts of Believers The second thing is a Soul-converting Gospel and blessed Ordinances The Law goeth forth of Zion and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem Mic. 2.4 The third thing they deal in are the Gifts and Soul-enriching Graces of the Spirit Hope Love Humility c. things of very great worth The fourth is Justification every true Sinner makes it his Business to get this precious Treasure The fifth thing is the Peace of God which passeth all Understanding one of the rarest Commodities in the World The sixth thing is Union and Communion with God 1 Joh. 1.3 That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that ye also may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ The seventh thing is Peace of Conscience Herein do I exercise my self Acts 24.16
to have always a Conscience void of Offence towards God and towards Men. The eighth thing is Sanctification or a holy Life they who trade not in this Commodity are none of the true Sons and Citizens of Zion Ninthly the Pearl of great price worth more than ten thousand Worlds Tenthly The last thing that I shall mention is Eternal Life 1 Pet. 1.4 a Crown of Glory that fadeth not away X. A City whose Commerce lies principally in a Foreign Trade or Merchandizing hath usually a navigable River belonging to it by which Means their Commodities or those Goods they deal in are brought home to their very Doors as we see by experience What infinite Profit doth the River Thames yield this famous City and what would its Trade be worth were it not for it X. The City of God whose Trade lies in spiritual Merchandize fetch'd from afar hath a most glorious River belonging to it which may indeed be said to run through every Street thereof viz. the holy Spirit and Word of God The Spirit in several places of Scripture is called a River and by means of these blessed Streams are all divine and sacred Commodities which the Godly deal in brought home to their very Doors viz. Gifts Graces Pardon Peace and Joy in the Holy-Ghost c. wh●●h are very excellent Merchandize And were it not for this River what would become of this City we should soon be impoverished and undone It is the holy Spirit that enriches and chears the Hearts of all gracious Souls There is a River the Streams whereof make glad the City of God Psal 46.4 the holy Place of the Tabernacle of the Most High It may not be amiss here to consider 1. From whence this River comes See River under the 3d head of Metaphors c. 2. The Nature of the Water 3. The divers Streams thereof First The River comes 1. From a Rock Numb 28.8 11. This Rock was first smitten and then the Water came out abundantly 2. It comes from an infinite inexhaustible Fountain Rev. 22.1 't is said to proceed from the Throne of God and the Lamb. Secondly Touching the Nature of this River tho we have spoken of it under the Third Head of Metaphors in the first Volume yet we will touch a little upon it here It hath besides other Properties of spiritual Water these divers Qualities 1. It will heal all the Diseases of the inward Man it will soften and make very tender and pliable and break in pieces a hard Heart 2. It will cure the Soul of spiritual Blindness nay it will open the Eyes of him that was born blind 3. It will infallibly cure all spiritual Consumptions that spiritual Waste or Decay of Faith Love Zeal Hope c. which seizeth sometimes upon many Christians 4. It will bring down the Tympany of Pride and make a Man very humble and little in his own Eyes the more of the Spirit the more humble 5. It will cure all manner of spiritual Deadness or Deafness making a Man very lively and diligent to hear good Counsel and Instruction as Lydia experienced Acts 16 14 6. It is good against the Tremblings of the Heart and will make a Man bold and couragious in the Cause of Christ in evil Times We cannot but speak the things which we have both seen and heard Acts 4.20 7. It is an excellent Remedy to purge out all noxious and evil Humors of the Soul from whence many Distempers flow making a Man sound at Heart and holy in Life 8. It will effectually restore a lost Appetite and make a Man relish well the Food of God's Word causing it to be sweeter to him than Honey Psal 119.103 or the Honey-Comb 9. It will preserve from the Plague of Sin of what sort soever it be tho a Christian be amongst infected Persons every day 10. It will revive a fainting and drooping Spirit 11. It will set and make whole all broken Bones Psal 27.13 as David and thousands others have found by experience 12. It will cure the Leprosy and all old running Ulcers and also all fresh Wounds of the Soul tho never so deep stinking and loathsom 13. It is good against Weakness of the Hands and Feebleness of the Knees 1 Thess 5.14 2 Pet. 1.9 14. It is sovereign good against spiritual Barrenness making the Godly to bring forth much Fruit. 15. It will clear the Sight and make a Man to see afar of 16. It infallibly cures the sleepy Disease or the spiritual Lethargy of the Soul 1 Thess 5.6 so that they shall not sleep as others do 17. It cures all Diseases of the Tongue and Mouth and an unsavoury Breath Jam. 3.5 6. that common Sign of a foul Stomach 18. It cures all spiritual Lameness it causeth a lame Man to leap as an Hart Isa 35.6 and never halt any more between two Opinions 19. It perfectly cures all Distempers of the Head occasioned by Error and erroneous Principles that corrupt the Understanding 20. It is Water of Life he that drinks of it shall never die Joh. 4 14. Thirdly This River hath three special Streams 1. The Stream of Ordinances 2. The Stream of heavenly Graces 3. The Stream of Divine Promises Sinners come to these Waters O come before the Stream be turned another way See River and Water of Life XI In a glorious City usually is the King's Palace or his chief Place of Residence which tends much to its Honour and Renown XI The Church is the Habitation of God The Lord dwelleth in Zion Psal 9.11 Isa 8.18 Psal 76.1 2 3. Psal 132.13 14. Isa 57.15 in Judah is God known his Name is great in Israel in Salem also is his Tabernacle and his Dwelling-place in Zion This is for the everlasting Honour and Renown of the Church The Lord dwelleth in Zion Sing praises for the Lord hath chosen Zion he hath desired it for his Habitation This is my Rest for ever tho he be the high and lofty One that inhabiteth Eternity yet he dwelleth with them that are of an humble and contrite Spirit The special and most gracious Presence of God is with his People XII A City hath some certain Privileges Freedoms and Immunities belonging to it which Strangers have nothing to do with Foreigners may not dwell within the Walls of some Cities XII So the Church of God hath many glorious Privileges and Immunities belonging to it which unconverted Sinners have no Right to The first Privilege or part of that Freedom that belongs to the City of God is Pardon of Sin Isa 33.24 The Inhabitants shall not say I am sick the People that dwell therein shall be forgiven their Iniquity 1. This is a glorious Privilege and Freedom if we consider the abominable and hainous Nature of Sin which is opened in the first Volume under the third Head of Metaphors 2. Because of that which is couched and comprehended under the Blessing of
Mat. 4.2 II. The Moon receiving Light by the Beams at the Sun she shines forth and giveth Light to the World II. So the Church receiving Light from Christ she shines forth in Brightness and Glory The Sun gives Light but receives none the Moon both gives Light and receives Light So Christ as God hath his Light in himself but as Mediator hath his Light from the Father to communicate it to the Church that the Church may give Light to the World Ye are the Light of the World Mat. 5.14 III. The Moon giveth Light to the World only in the Night III. So the Church gives her Light forth to enlighten Sinners whilst the Night of this World lasteth IV. The Moon tho very fair and bright yet as Naturalists observe hath her Spots IV. So the Church tho pure and holy yet in her self is not without Spots of Sin No Saint is without Blemishes If we say we have no Sin we deceive our selves and the Truth is not in us 1 John 1.8 V. The Moon hath her various Aspects sometimes she is in the Full and sometimes in the Wane sometimes she shines more glorious and sometimes less and yet still the same Moon She doth not saith an ancient Writer always shew her Light in her full Orb she sometimes so decreaseth that there seemeth to us not to be any Moon yet she is not then destitute of the Sun-Beams tho it seem otherwise to our Sight V. So the Church is under various States and Changes She doth not always shine as at Full Moon or send forth a full Brightness but is sometimes so obscured that she appears hardly visible she was forced into the Wilderness Rev. 12.6 from the Face of the Dragon and Romish Beast yet it is certain the Church is always in being Posse putes nobis persuadere eum esse Ecclesiae statum ut obscurari nequeat ut nil Perfidia nil Hostes nil Antichristus valeat Delere hi quidem Ecclesiam nunquam possunt sed in angustias compingere compellere in latebras possint saith Whitaker Thinkest thou that thou canst persuade us that the State of the Church is such that it cannot be obscured so that the Perfidiousness of Enemies and Antichrist can do nothing against it They cannot indeed destroy the Church but they can bring it into a narrower Compass and drive it into Holes The Church saith Augustin is like the Moon which sometimes shines wholly being enlightned with the Sun-beams and sometimes is deprived of a great part of her Light so the Church shines sometimes most gloriously and sometimes is so obscured that she hardly appears at all Inferences HEnce we may learn to look and earnestly expect to receive all our Light as well as Life from Christ the Light of the World and earnestly pray with David Psal 4.6 that he would lift up the Light of his Countenance upon us that forasmuch as we have no Light but what is communicated from him unto us he would dart continually his glorious Beams into our Hearts Mat. 5.16 that we may indeed be as shining Lights in this dark World 2. This may also humble the most glittering Saints to consider that they cannot shine so bright in this World but that their Spots may be discernible to themselves and others which may excite them to apply themselves daily to the Sun of Righteousness for cleansing Mal 4.2 3. To keep clear and shine as much as possible that the poor benighted dark World may obtain Benefit by them and confess it to the Glory of God Mat. 5.16 Let your Light so shine c. 4. Take Comfort from hence notwithstanding your various Changes Ebbings and Flowings in this World for that the Enemy may as soon change the Ordinances of the Moon as make an utter end of God's Church as you have heard 5. What a dreadful Doom will such be sure to have that love Darkness so as that they do not only contemn oppose and endeavour to pull the Moon viz. the Church out of her Orb but so wicked are they they slight and contemn the Sun from whence she receives all her shining Brightness Let such read Job 5.14 They meet with Darkness in the Day-time and grope in the Noon-day as in the Night To whom is reserved the Blackness of Darkness for ev●● 2 Pet. 2 17 except Grace prevent by giving them Repentance The Church the Temple of God 1 Cor. 3.16 Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God 2 Cor. 6.16 For ye are the Temple of the Living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them c. THe Church is the Anti-type of Solomon's Temple and we shall therefore run the Parallel with respect to that Type Parallel THe Temple was built with costly Stones well hewed squared and polished before they were laid into the Building SO the Church of God is built with spiritual Stones 1 Pet. 2.3 4 5 6. Acts 2.40 41. who are well hewed and polished by the Word and Spirit before added to or laid into the heavenly Building II. In the Building of the Temple there was no Noise heard of Hammer or Ax and the House when it was in building was built with Stones made ready before they were brought thither 1 King 6.7 so that there was neither Hammer nor Ax nor any Tool of Iron heard in the House whilst it was in building II. So in the building of the Church there should be no need of the Hammer or the Ax to square and hew by Repentance the Stones of this Building being every way prepared and made fit before Conversion is the polishing Work and those that receive unconverted Persons violate the holy Rule of God's Word for that maketh Work for the Hammer and Ax in the Temple Hence Solomon saith Prepare thy Work without Prov. 24.27 and make ready thy things in the Field and after build thy House III. Others besides Solomon were concerned in the building of the Temple as Hiram King of Tyrus and the Zidonians who hewed the Timber for it III. To shew that in the building of the Church of God the Gentiles as well as the Jews are concerned they all concur together Eph. 2. ●1 to build up a holy Temple in the Lord. IV. The Temple was a most rare and glorious Structure 1 Kings 6.21 it was overlaid with fine Gold upon carved Cedar IV. To shew the Beauty and Glory of the Church which is adorned with the Gifts and Graces of the Spirit The Church is inwardly pure very rich and beautiful Hence the King's Daughter is said to be all glorious within Psal 45.17 V. In the Temple were many Windows 1 Kings 6.4 to let in Light abundantly V. So in the Church the Light of the Gospel and the blessed Spirit shines gloriously these let Light in in great abundance VI. In the Temple were several Degrees of Galleries or Lofts each one
Diet. III. So the Church is a Place of Soul-refreshment to all spiritual Travellers and Pilgrims There is both the sincere Milk of the Word and strong-Meat 1 Pet. 2.1 2. Heb. 5.12 all things ready the Soul needs Some are for one sort of Diet some for another In the Church also is sweet Repose there Christ giveth Rest to the Weary IV. An Inn sometimes lodgeth unknown to the Host evil Persons Thieves and Deceivers IV. So the Church notwithstanding all the Care that is taken by her Officers doth sometimes receive or take in false Professors such as are unsound at Heart Hypocrites and deceitful Workers V. An Inn is a very desirable Place to Men in their Journey V. So is the Church of God hence David longed after the Courts of God's House Psal 84.2 VI. An Inn is not a Place to abide long in the Traveller takes up his Abode in it but a Night or two and he is gone VI. So the Church Militant is no long abiding Place Christians stay in it but for a short time 't is a Place of Refreshment as it were for a Night Psal 30.5 Heb. 13.14 Here we have no continuing City we are Strangers as all our Fathers were when we come to Heaven we shall abide with the Church Triumphant for ever Metaphor Disparity IN an Inn there is little to be had without Money if a Man hath not Money or Credit he is no Guest for them THe Church is a Place for the Poor for such as have no Money they are welcome thither The Doors of this Inne are always open to all sincere Souls whether they be poor or rich II. A Man that comes to lodge in an Inn tho he hath never so good Entertainment yet he is not contented to stay there he makes ready in the morning to go forward in his Journey II. But he that comes to take up his Lodging in the Church or spiritual Inn if he be sincere desireth not to go out from thence any more he desireth to dwell therein as long as he liveth tho our abiding in this World is but compared to a Night One thing have I desired of the Lord and that will I seek after Psal 27.4 that I may dwell in the House of the Lord all the Days of my Life III. An Inn may be so full of Guests that a weary Traveller especially if he come late can have no Entertainment but is forced to seek it elsewhere Luk. 2.8 There was no Room for them in the Inne III. The Church was never yet so full but that there was Room for all those that were weary and heavy-laden All that ever truly travelled towards Sion have found Entertainment there nay Mat. 22 3 to 14. tho the Servants of the Lord have been sent into the Streets and Lanes to fetch in the Poor and the Maimed and the Halt and the Blind and they do accordingly yet there is Room As there can be no want of any Accommodation of spiritual Food so there is no want of Room All that have been called by the Word and Spirit and compelled by Grace to come in in all Ages have had blessed Entertainment and as God hath enlarged and encreased Converts so he hath enlarged and encreased the Church by three thousand at a time Acts 2.40 IV. Commonly those that lodge in an Inn are Strangers and Foreiners and staying but a night or a very short time have no acquaintance with any that dwell therein IV. But the Saints that are in the spiritual Inn the Church Eph. 2.19 are no more Strangers and Foreigners but therein make their abode for tho it be said 't is but for a Night or a Day c. yet 't is as long as they live and they get very great Acquaintance with those that dwell therein Inferences BLess God that he hath provided such a Place of Refreshment for poor weary Travellers 2. You that look upon your selves to be Strangers and Pilgrims in this World may learn from hence where to take up your Lodging 3. Also it may inform God's People and faithful Ministers what care they ought to take in receiving Men and Women into the Church Inn-keepers will examine all suspicious Persons The Church compared to a Vine Psal 80.8 Thou hast brought a Vine out of Egypt thou hast cast out the Heathen and planted it c. Verse 14. Behold and visit this Vine c. Cant. 2.15 For our Vines have tender Grapes c. Hos 14.8 And flourish as the Vine The Church is compared to a Vine Metaphor Parallel A Vine is no beautiful Plant yet very fruitful it abounds with inward Sap. SO the Church altho she doth not seem so beautiful to carnal Eyes yet she is very fruitful to God Psal 104.6 The Trees of the Lord that is the Saints of God are full of Sap full of Divine Vertue or good Fruits II. A Vine spreads forth its Branches and accordingly grows much in a short time II. So the Lord 's spiritual Vine hath in former times exceedingly spread her Branches forth the Mountains are said to be covered with the Shadow of it and the Boughs thereof were like the goodly Cedars Psal 80.8 9 10 11. She stretched out her Branches to the Sea and her Boughs unto the River Israel God's ancient Vine grew wonderfully and so did the Gospel-Vine how did it in a little time spread forth its spiritual Branches Eastwards and Westwards over many Nations and Kingdoms She extended her Bouhgs into Parthia Media Mesopotamia Egypt Judea Cappadocia Pontus Asia Pamphilia Lybia Spain Italy England c. III. The Vine must have much Pains taken with it it needs Pruning often or else it will decay III. So God takes much pains with his Church it is pruned and purged Joh. 15.2 that it may bring forth the more Fruit. IV. The Vine is in it self but a weak Plant and therefore needs Under-propping IV. So the Church is in her self but weak and needs to be born up by Christ God is the Strength of his People they are wholly supported by Him V. Tho the Vine hath many Branches yet all have a Sufficiency of Sap and Nourishment from the Root to make them fruitful V. So the Church tho she hath many Members yet all receive a Sufficiency of Grace and Divine Virtue of the Root viz. the Lord Jesus to make them fruitful VI. The Vine if it be barren or unfruitful is the most unprofitable of any Tree and fit for nothing but the Fire Son of Man what cometh of the Vine-Tree above all other Trees and of the Vine-Branches which is amongst the Trees of the Forrest Shall Wood be taken thereof to hang any Vessel thereon Behold it is cast into the Fire to be burnt VI. So are the Members of the visible Church if unfruitful good for nought but to be cut down and cast into the Fire as our Saviour himself sheweth John 15. Therefore thus saith
Fire Exod. 3.2 And the Angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a Flame of Fire out of the midst of a Bush and he looked and behold the Bush burned and was not consumed c. ACcording to Ainsworth and divers other Expositors by the Bush is meant the Church of God in great Affliction the severe Trials of God's People being often set forth in the holy Scriptures by Fire by a Flame of Fire and sometimes by a smoaking Furnace as in Abraham's Vision Gen. 15.17 And behold a smoaking Furnace and a burning Lamp that passed between the Pieces Gen. 15.17 By the smoaking Furnace was signified to Abraham Israel's great Affliction in Egypt and by the Lamp the Law of God that afterwards was given or as some understand it the Lamp of Deliverance or that Salvation God would work for them c. for that the Salvation of God is like to a Lamp that burneth Isa 52.1 Quest Why is the Church of God compared to a Bush to a burning Bush The Scripture usually sets out the Church by things whose Natures or Qualities are excellent things that are of great Worth c. And why should she be compared to a Bush to a Bramble-Bush for so Ainsworth and others read it Answ Some of the Reasons of it according to our weak Judgment are hinted in the following Parallels Metaphor Parallel A Bush is a thing of small worth and value few esteem or regard a Bramble-Bush stately Trees are viewed and prized and some of them valued highly but so is not a Bush SO likewise the Church of God was then and is now a thing of small value of little or no esteem in the eyes of wicked Men it was no more regarded by proud Pharaoh and many of the Egyptians than a sorry Bramble-Bush Hence the Apostle speaketh of the Church as being very contemptible in the sight of Men. We are made as the Filth of the World 1 Cor. 4.13 and are the Off-scouring of all things unto this day II. A Bramble-Bush as it is a thing of no Worth or Value so it is a thing that hath no Beauty in it in comparison of other Trees it is in no wise taking to the eye Some things that are of no great worth seem very glorious and beautiful but there is none of this in a Bramble II. So the true Church of God is not cloathed with outward Beauty not arrayed in Purple and Scarlet deck'd with Gold precious Stones and Pearls like the Mother of Harlots but seemeth low Rev. 17.4 base and contemptible to a carnal Eye her Beauty being all hidden The King's Daughter is glorious within Psal 45.13 And 't is from hence the World values her no more As Christ made himself of no Reputation Phil. 2.7 so the Church for a while remaineth among Men in a like State no carnal Eye that seeth her doth at all desire her III. A Bush is not only a thing of little worth in the esteem of Men but it is in it felf really of small value What is a Bramble worth what is it good for but to be cut down and cast into the Fire III. So the People of God considered abstractively as they are in themselves what are they what Worth or Excellency is in them All the Beauty and Glory of the Church is from Christ They are naturally vile Sinners Mich. 7.4 and are called Thorns Bryars and pricking Brambles and tho converted and changed by the Power of God's Grace yet there remaineth something still of the Old Man and evil Nature in them And God in other Places of Scripture where he compareth them to a Vine to Lillies to a Garden to Golden Candlesticks c. speaks of them with respect to what they are by his special Grace in Christ Jesus But here in comparing them to a Bush he hath respect as we conceive to what they are in themselves and by Nature to set forth their own Unworthiness that so he might thereby raise Moses his Wonder to see the mighty Condescension of the Blessed God in having regard to such a poor and undeserving People to dwell in them and in keeping and preserving them in the midst of such fierce and cruel Enemies when a small Spark might easily consume and destroy them in an instant but that he stretcheth forth his glorious Arms of Grace and Divine Power for their Succour and Relief IV. There is one thing more touching a Bush which for Illustration sake I shall here mention not that the Spirit of God had respect to it in this Vision viz. A Bush is a common Receptacle for Birds 't is the Place where they lodg make their Nests in and are secured from many Dangers that do attend them IV. The Church of God is the chief Place for the Saints of God to dwell or make their Abode in who in the Song of Songs are called Birds The time of the singing of Birds is come c. Cant. 2 12 Which saith Reverend Mr. Ainsworth signifies the Saints who feeling the Comforts of God's Word and Spirit do sing the Praises of God with Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs Isa 24.16 They shall lift up their Voice they shall sing for the Majesty of the Lord and from the uttermost Parts of the Earth we have heard Songs even Glory to the Righteous And indeed in our Judgment the Godly are compared to Birds principally upon this Consideration i. e. in respect to their Singing which is laid down in several places of Scripture as an undoubted Duty I wish that Christians who are not in the practice thereof would consider of it But to proceed How safe is the Bird when she getteth into the Bush so are the Saints when they are got into the Church God being a Wall of Fire round about her Ze●h 2.5 and her Defence and Glory on every side V. It is a strange and marvellous thing to see a Bramble-Bush on fire and not consumed this made Moses to turn aside I will turn aside to see this great Sight V. So it is a strange Sight a Prodigy a Mercy to a Wonder enough to astonish all true thinking Christians to see the Church of God the unworthy frail polluted weak and declining Church as set on fire yea all on a Flame as it were many Fires being kindled on her by wicked Adversaries and yet she is not consumed How many Plots and Hellish Contrivances were there on foot against poor Israel in Egypt First They made a Law that the Midwives should kill all their Men-Children when they did their Office Secondly When that would not take because the Midwives feared God and saved the Men-Children alive E●od 1.17 They feared God 't is said and did not as the King of Egypt commanded c. then they thought of another way another Plot was set on foot a new Fire as it were was kindled which was to cast all the Men-Children into the River And Pharaoh charged
Mother of Harlots for putting to Death such as she calls Hereticks is deemed by the Law of God and Nations a Murtherer and as such must and shall in God's due time die Her Plagues shall come upon her in one day Death Rev. 18.8 Mourning and Famine and she shall be utterly burnt with Fire for strong is the Lord God that judgeth her XIII It is a great and high Honour to a Mother that her Children and Family are well governed having their Food in due Order and that her Children and Servants are all at her Beck and dearly love one another and when none of them are missing at Dinner or Duty-time XIII So 't is the Honour of the Church of Christ when all her Children humbly and faithfullly submit themselves to good Order and Discipline when all of them carefully attend their respective Duties and do not absent themselves when she calleth them together at Times of publick Worship or upon any other occasion as to rectify Disorders or chuse Officers c. O how lovely and amiable is it Psal 133.1 2. and how doth it tend to the Glory of the Church to see Saints live together in Love and Unity always making Conscience of those Laws that respect the well ordering and religious Government of the Family or Houshold of God! XIV Some Mothers have Daughters who have Children XIV So the Universal Church hath many Daughters many particular Churches which are very fruitful to Christ There are many Disparities wherein the Church excelleth other Mothers which I leave to the ingenious Reader to find out Inferences THis should teach Believers to reverence and obey the Church of God as dutiful Children do their godly Mother in all things 2. And take care they do not grieve her 3. To have relenting Bowels towards her in all her Troubles Shall our Mother be in Distress and ready to be devoured by hungry Lions and shall not her Children be in bitterness of Soul for her When Sion is afflicted we should be afflicted when her Eyes are wet shall ours be dry when she is sad should not we be sad too 4. How doth this greatly reprove them who instead of comforting of her in her Widowhood State add to her Sorrow The Church compared to a Garden Cant. 4.12 A Garden enclosed is my Sister my Spouse c. Verse 16. Awake O North Wind and come thou South Wind and blow upon my Garden c. Cant. 5.1 I am come into my Garden my Sister my Spouse THe Church of Christ is or may fitly be compared to a Garden Metaphor Parallel A Garden is a Piece taken out of common or waste Ground appropriated to more special Use than the rest THe Church of God and every Believer or Member thereof is taken out of the common Mass of Mankind to be a chosen and select People to Christ II. The Ground of a Garden before it is planted is as barren and as unprofitable as the rest out of which it was taken II. The People of God and Soul of every Believer naturally were as barren blind sinful Enemis to God and every way as vile and rebellious as any other Sinners in the World Eph. 2.2 3 And were by Nature the Children of Wrath as well as others Who hath made thee to differ from another c. III. In a Garden no choice or rare thing cometh up naturally of it self until it is sown or planted therein III. So no spiritual good Thing can grow or spring up in our Hearts until the Seed of Grace is sown in us or a Divine Principle of Life be implanted IV. A Garden before it be sown or planted must be digged purged and well prepared IV. So must our Hearts like fallow Ground be digged up with powerful Convictions of the Word and Spirit that so Grace may the better take Root in us Hence 't is said of God's Vineyard when he was resolved to bring Judgment upon it It shall not be pruned nor digged Isa 5.6 Jer. 4.3 Hence God calleth upon them to plow up their fallow Ground and sow not among Thorns V. A choice Garden is walled or well fenced about for its Security from Danger and Spoil V. So the Church of God or every Christian is hedged or walled in Job i. 10. Hast thou not made a Hedg about him and about all he hath on every side c. God is said to be a Wall of Fire round about Jerusalem See Vineyard Zech. 2.5 VI. A choice Garden hath in it many Plants Herbs and Flowers of great Worth and Value both for Pleasure and Profit VI. So in the Church are many choice pleasant and profitable Plants of God's own right-hand planting Jer. 5.8 'T is sown with holy right Seed ye Men of Israel are his pleasant Plants All choice and saving Graces and Gifts of the Spirit are found in God's Garden VII A Garden must have much Cost bestowed upon it and much Pains taken with it or it will soon decay VII So must the Church of God have much Pains bestowed upon it Prov. 4.23 it must be kept diligently As God spares for no Cost and Pains so should his Servants be industrious or else the Church will soon decay VIII A Garden hath some Weeds in it which must as they appear be pluck'd up or they will spoil and hinder the Growth of the precious Flowers and Herbs that grow therein VIII The Church is not without some corrupt Members in it which injure it like as Thorns and Nettles do a Garden which as they are discovered are pluck'd up and cast out And also in the Hearts of the best Christians Weeds are apt to spring up from that Root of Bitterness that naturally is within them whereby many are troubled and defiled which if not pulled up will hinder their Growth in Grace IX A choice and fruitful Garden is valued highly by the Owner thereof he esteems it above an hundred times so much fruitless Land One Acre made into a curious Garden is prized above many Acres of common barren Ground IX The Church of God tho it be as it were but a little Spot a small Remnant in comparison of the World is highly prized by Jesus Christ he esteems of his own People above all the People of the Earth 1 Pet. 2 9. Hence he calleth them his Inheritance his Jewels his peculiar Ones I gave Egypt for thy Ransom Isa 43.3 4 Aethiopia and Seba for thee Since thou wast precious in my Sight thou hast been honourable and I have loved thee Therefore will I give Men for thee and People for thy Life Wicked Men are like barren Mountains they are the King 's Waste such whom he sets but little by X. A rare and fruitful Garden will afford Fruit to plant others many Gardens upon this account have as it were sprung out of one X. So from the Church of God that was first planted in Judea many blessed Churches proceeded in a little
time By means of the Fruitfulness of that one spiritual Garden seven Gardens more were planted in Asia viz. Ephesus Smyrna Pergamus Thyatira Sardis Rev. 1.11 Philadelphia and Laodicea besides many others which we read of c. XI A Garden must be often watered or else it will soon fade and the Fruit thereof wither away and the choice Flowers will hang down their Heads XI God's Garden must be often watered by the Divine Rain or Dew of Heaven viz. the Word and Spirit of God My Doctrine shall drop as the Rain Deut. 32.1 2. And without these Waterings from above the Fruit of the Church will soon fail all our Growth and Greenness is continued by the means of the Word and Ordinances XII A Garden must have the Door carefully kept and look'd after lest Thieves and other Spoilers should get in and ruine it XII So the Door of the Church must be carefully kept by such as have the Charge of it viz. the Ministers or Pastors thereof or the Danger is great it behoveth them to take care who they let in Christ's Garden should be as a Garden enclosed and Fountain sealed to all Unbelievers But yet let them be never so careful some Dec●ivers or Hypocrites will as in former Times creep in 't was so when the chief Gardener himself was upon the Earth there was a Judas among the twelve Apostles XIII The chief Owner of a Garden loves to take his Walks in it to see how the Plants and precious Fruits do flourish XIII So the Lord Jesus who is the Owner and only Proprietor of his Church loves to take his Walks in it Cant. 5.1 I am come into my Garden my Sister my Spouse He is said to walk in the midst of the seven Golden Candlesticks Let us get up early to the Vineyards Cant. 7 1● let us see whether the Vine flourish whether the tender Grapes appear and the Pomegranates bud forth there will I give thee my Loves XIV In a Garden as it is found by Experience Worms do much hurt especially when they get to the Root of Plants or Flowers They may seem very green and flourishing when there are some devouring Worms gnawing at the Roots by which means in a little time they die are pulled up and cast away XIV So in the Church Sin which may be compared to a Worm or hurtful Vermine doth exceeding much Detriment A Christian seemeth very green amiable and fair to the Eye like some Plants full of Leaves but there is some cursed Worm some secret Lust that mars his Root and in time he withers and dies and is pluck'd up and cast away This may be a Caution to all to take heed XV. In a Garden whatsoever choice Flower the Owner of it seeeth is fully ripe if he hath a mind to it he crops it off and takes it to himself XV. So in the Church those Flowers or precious Saints Jesus Christ seeth are fully ripe for Heaven he crops off by Death and taketh them to himself A godly Man dies when he is ready and ripe for Death When a holy Man dies saith Mr. Caryl Caryl it is Harvest-time with him Tho in a natural Capacity he may be cut down whilst he is green or cropp'd in the Bud or Blossom yet in his spiritual Capacity he never dies before he is ripe God ripens his speedily when he intends to take them out of the World speedily XVI A Garden flourisheth best that hath the sweet warm and splendent Rays of the Sun shining upon it How sweet do the Flowers and precious Herbs smell when the Rain distills the South Wind blows and the Sun sweetly breaks forth upon it XVI So the Church never thrives nor flourisheth but when the Sun of Righteousness shineth in a gracious manner upon it when the Rain or spiritual Dew descends the South Wind of the Spirit bloweth and the Sun of Righteousness sweetly shineth what a fragrant Scent doth the Church of God and gracious Ones then send forth Hence Christ calleth for the South Wind to blow upon his Garden Cant. 4 1● that the Spices thereof may flow forth XVII A Garden is attended with several Seasons Winter as well as Summer And tho in the Winter many Flowers seem decayed and their Glory gone yet a Winter's sharp Frosts and cold North Winds are as necessary as the Summer for the killing of the Weeds and Worms which otherwise would abound XVII The Church hath its Winter as well as its Spring and Summer-Season nay and the nipping Frosts and North Winds of Temptations and Afflictions are as profitable to the Saints as the Summer of Comfort Peace and Prosperity for God seeth need of the one as well as the other to destroy those Weeds of Corruption or indwelling Sin that is in our Hearts If need be 1 Pet. 1.6 ye are in Heaviness through manifold Temptations Disparity THere are divers Disparities Christ's Garden excelleth all other Gardens They are the Plantations of Men this is planted by Christ Their Fruit is temporal and fading this is spiritual and lasting They that plant other Gardens cannot make them grow but Christ can And many others might be minded which I here omit Inferences THis shews what a vast Difference there is between the Church and the World What is a howling and barren Wilderness to a choice and lovely Garden II. Bless God that this precious Garden is not spoiled and its Hedg of Divine Providence not removed nor pluck'd up III. Let us pray tho it be surrounded about at this day with cruel Enemies that it may never be moved taken and trodden down by Romish Wolves or other ravenous Beasts of Prey IV. Let the Adversary tremble whose evil Intent is fully discovered how they proceed in their Designs against God's Church Christ's spiritual Garden since it is so prized by him and his own proper Inheritance he alone being the Proprietor thereof How often doth he say My Garden my Vineyard It appears it is his 1. In that he bought the Ground with the Price of his precious Blood to make a Garden of it 2. He hath at his own Charge planted and sown it 3. He keeps it and waters it and watcheth over it Night and Day Isa 27 2 3 4. 'T is he only that gathereth the Fruit of it Wo therefore to them that adventure to crop and pull up and destroy any of its choice Flowers They that touch God's People Christ's Lillies touch the Apple of his Eye V. Let the Saints of Christ also learn from hence to be fruitful Christ hath been at great Cost and Pains in order thereunto And that you may be so 1. See that you are Plants of his own planting otherwise you will be pluck'd up 2. See that you are well-rooted such bring forth most Fruit. 3. Take heed of the Worm at the Root 4. Take heed whom ye chuse for Garden-Dressers and look to your Hedge or Wall of Church-Discipline You must know
is a Habitation a Place built for some Man or Men to dwell in THe Church is the Habitation of the Holy-Ghost I will dwell in them 1 Cor. 6. Joh. 14.17 and walk in them c. For he dwelleth with you and shall be in you 2 Tim. 1.54 That good thing which was committed to thee keep by the Holy-Ghost which dwelleth in us Know ye not that ye are the Temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you II. A House is built by a wise Builder upon a sure and firm Foundation some are built upon Rocks II. 1 Cor. 3.16 3.11 The Church is built upon a sure Foundation viz. Jesus Christ Another Foundation can no man lay c. Vpon this Rock will I build my Church III. A House is builded with or doth consist of divers Materials as Timber Stone Brick c. which are well hewed and squared before III. So the Church doth consist of several Members who are called or compared to Stones Ye also as lively Stones 1 Pet. 2.5 are built up a spiritual House an holy Priesthood And these Stones are also well hewed and squared by the Word and Spirit of God IV. A House hath some main and principal Parts appertaining or belonging to it as Pillars Beams Rafters c. IV. So the Church or House of God hath some famous Pillars Beams and Rafters as the Holy-Ghost calleth them The Beams of our House are Cedars Cant. 1.17 and our Rafters of Fir. The Righteous are compared to Cedars in Lebanon those Trees are tall and durable Cedar was used in building of Solomon's Temple a Type or Figure of the Church which denotes the Strength Usefulness Beauty and Excellency of the Saints or some among them who are called Pillars Gal. 2. And when James Cephas and John who seemed to be Pillars c. And Christ saith Rev. 3.12 Him that overcometh will I make a Pillar in the Temple of my God V. In a House Pillars Beams and Rafters are of great tho of different use all are to support strengthen perfect and compleat the Building the least Material is needful and cannot be wanting V. So in the House of God Eph. 4.7 to 12. the Prophets Apostles Pastors Teachers Deacons c. are of great Use tho of different Offices and all for the support of every part of the spiritual Building and the least Member cannot be spared Some are strong and some are weak some have five Talents and some but two Mat. 25. yet one ought not to despise the other As in a material House Beams and Rafters tho divers in Strength and Use yet all have a firm Connexion amongst themselves to make up one compleat Structure even so in Christ's Church tho there be divers Members severally gifted and placed as we see in the Body natural yet as the Apostle there shews verse 25. there should be no Schism in the Body 1 Cor. 12.24 but such a Conjunction of one another as they have of themselves a holy Sympathy in Supportation Suffering and Rejoycing VI. The House of a Prince when built is furnished and most richly adorned that it may become a meet Habitation according to the Degree Glory and Grandure of him who is to dwell therein VI. So the Church and Temple of God being built for the glorious Prince of Heaven and Earth is most richly and curiously adorned with the precious Gifts and Graces of the Holy-Ghost For as the Materials of this House are Silver Gold and precious Stones so its Ornaments or Furniture doth infinitely excell it being the King's Palace The King's Daughter is all glorious within Psal 45.13 VII A House is a Place of Security it defends from many Dangers which those are exposed unto that are harbourless and forced to lie without Doors besides some Houses have Walls about them VII So the Church is a Place of Security God having made such a blessed Wall about her And the Lord will create upon every Dwelling-Place in Mount Zion and upon her Assemblies a Cloud and Smoke by Day and the shining of a flaming Fire by Night for upon all her Glory shall be a Defence I will saith God encamp about mine House because of the Army because of him that passeth by c. He hath promised to be a Wall of Fire round about her Zech. 2.5 VIII A House is a Place of Repose a Resting-place it is hence greatly desired by every one that belongs to the Family that dwells therein VIII The Church of God is a sweet Place of spiritual Repose Sion is called a peaceable Habitation Isa 32.18 19. and sure Dwellings and a quiet Resting-place IX A House hath a Way that leads to it and a Door that openeth into it that so those who are Strangers may be readily directed how to find it IX So the Church or House of God hath a Way that readily leads to it In a strict Sence Christ is both the Way and the Door If any enquire more directly how they may find the Way into the Church if they take the Counsel of the Holy-Ghost they cannot miss Thus saith the Lord Stand in the Ways and see and ask for the old Paths Jer. 6.16 where is the good Way and walk therein c. This good old Way is the Way of Repentance Faith and Baptism the Saints of the Primitive Time walked all in this Way and knew no other Door into the Church And they that gladly received the Word were baptized Acts 2.41.42 and the same day there was added to them about three thousand Souls X. A House is a Place of Devotion there a Man reads prays meditates and instructs his Family X. So the Church of God is the principal Place of Publick Devotion there Prayers are made the Word is preached and the Sacraments are duely administred XI A House is subject to go to decay and therefore needs often to be repaired By the Slothfulness of the Hands the House droppeth through XI So the Church of God will soon decay if it be not often repaired by a wise and careful Discipline Metaphor Disparity AN earthly House in which Men dwell is the Work of Mens Hands BUt the Church or House of God is called God's Building the choice preparing of the Matter and the framing and jointing every part as to the Manner is of God II. A House is built with such Materials as are without Life II. But this spiritual House consists of Believers who tho they were once without Life yet now are quickned who are therefore called living Stones 1 Pet. 2 3. built up a spiritual House III. Some Houses are left desolate without Inhabitants and so go to decay and at length fall III. But it is impossible that ever the House of God should be without Inhabitants For the Lord hath chosen Zion Psal 13 2. 13 14. he hath desired it for his Habitation This is my Rest for ever here will
Places might be known by the Church the manifold Wisdom of God Hence God is said to love the Gates of Zion Psal 87.2 viz. the Place of his visible Worship more than all the Dwellings of Jacob. Can there be a greater Reproach to a Church or any thing more provoking to God than to have Prayer and other Branches of Publick Worship and Devotion wholly neglected among them X. All the Family yea every particular Person thereof ought to be called together and they diligently to obey that Call and come together at the Time of Devotion or when Prayer is solemnly performed therein X. So the whole Church I mean each Community of Christians yea every particular Member thereof ought to be called together and they diligently to obey that Call at all Times when Prayer or any other part of Church-Service Devotion and Worship is to be performed Heb 10.25 Not forsaking the assembling of your selves together as the manner of some is c. Acts 2.1 They were all with one accord in one Place XI Some Families are exceeding great consisting of many Persons especially if it be the Family of a Prince or noble Person XI The whole Family of Christ the great Prince of Heaven and Earth I mean the whole universal Church both Militant and Triumphant is exceeding great the one part of which is in Heaven and the other on Earth Eph. 3.15 16. For this Cause I bow my Knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ of whom the whole Family in Heaven and Earth is named c. Ephes 3.15 16. XII It is exceeding commendable and honourable for all that belong unto a Family to be truly and cordially affectionate one to another to be ready and willing to do all Offices of Love and Kindness so far as the Law of such a Relation doth require of each in their respective Places and Callings XII So the Lord Jesus the Head and Governor of his Church hath strictly commanded and doth exceedingly commend the Grace of Love in and among all his Family The Church is never more desirable or comely in this World than when the Love of each Member doth abound one towards another when Ministers love the People and the People heartily love them and when every one in the Station wherein God hath set him is ready and willing to do any Office of Love How amiable upon this account is the Church of God! Inferences THis shews that the Church of God are a choice and peculiar People such who have given up themselves in the Order and Fellowship of the Gospel walking together in Love as a holy religious and united Family according to the Order and Discipline Christ hath left in his Word having sweet Acquaintance and Intimacy one with another And now to conclude with this Head from the Whole we may infer I. That God's Church is most dear and precious in his Sight or a People that he hath most choice Love and Affections to and takes great Care of II. That the Church of God under the Gospel-Dispensation is not National Parochial c. III. That the Church of God are a People separated from the World in respect of the Worship Traditions and sinful Customs thereof c. Non-conformity to the World in these respects is an indispensible Duty Be not conformed to this World Rom. 12.2 Come out from amongst them and be ye separated saith the Lord and touch not the unclean thing c. 2 Cor. 6.17 IV. That the true Church of God is a Number of sincere and godly Christians who have solemnly covenanted and given up themselves to walk in the true Order and Fellowship of the Gospel according to the exact Rule of God's Word amongst whom the Word of God is truly preached and the Sacraments are duely and in a right manner administred V. That God's Church hath many Enemies and yet in despite of them all shall abide and the Gates of Hell shall never prevail against her And tho for a time she may be low and under great Sufferings yet she shall arise to a great Degree of Glory in the latter Day THE Eighth HEAD OF Metaphors Allegories and Similes WITH Other Borrowed TERMS That respect MEN. I. Of Men in general II. Of the Godly or good Men. III. Of Sinners or wicked Men. Men compared to Earth Jer. 22.9 Hear O Earth Earth Earth Psal 33.5 Let all the Earth fear the Lord. Let all the Earth keep Silence Rev. 12. But the Earth helped the Woman BY Earth in these Scriptures we are to understand Men dwelling upon the Earth Earth Parallel THe Earth is far from Heaven there is a vast Difference between them ALl Men whilst they remain unconverted or abide in a State of Nature are said to be far from God tho not in respect of Place yet in respect of Condition Men being by reason of Sin in a State of Enmity Eph. 2.13 Ye that sometimes were afar off are now made nigh by the Blood of Christ II. The Earth is a heavy lumpish and gross Body II. So Man naturally is Earth-like a heavy and lumpish Piece being taken out of the Earth and the Off-spring of red Earth As is the earthy 1 Cor. 15.48 such are they that are earthy III. The Earth hath its great Dependency upon the Heavens did not the Rain from above water it and the Sun shine upon it how hard and barren would it soon be II. So Man hath all his Dependency upon God neither the spiritual Man nor the natural Man can subsist unless the Heavens send down Blessings upon them All humane as well as divine Growth and Fruitfulness comes from above IV. Earth turns and cleaves to Earth as its proper Center Tho a Piece of it may by force be lifted up or thrown upward yet by an innate Propensity to descend it naturally falls down again IV. So Man naturally cleaves to and takes delight in earthly Things He that is after the Flesh Rom. 8.5 minds the Things of the Flesh He that is not born anew born of the Spirit but is wholly an earthly Man the Earth is his proper Center tho sometimes his Heart may in an artificial way as it were be lifted upwards yet down he falls again to his own Center V. What a dark Dungeon would the Earthly Globe be did not the Heavens shine upon it V. So what a dark Dungeon is Man's Heart and in what Egyptian Darkness would all Men and Women be involved were it not for the Light of the God of Heaven his Word and blessed Spirit VI. Those Things that are fed and nourished by the Earth are Earth and we see go or return to Earth again VI. So the Body of Man which is fed from the Earth which was taken out of the Earth we daily see goeth to the Earth again and therefore Man may be called Earth Earth Earth Jer. 22.29 that was his Original Earth he was and Earth he is and to Earth he
thee Isa 41.14 c. Why should Worms seek to destroy one another 6. Lastly What cause is there these things considered to admire that the glorious God of Heaven and Earth should be mindful of a Worm Job 7.17 nay to set his Heart upon him and give his Son to die for him and to take such a poor and contemptible thing as Man into Union and Communion with himself Man compared to a Flower Job 14. He cometh up like a Flower and is cut down Isa 40.6 All Flesh is Grass and all the Goodness thereof as the Flower of the Field A Man in his best Estate and in every Estate is altogether Vanity Caryl so he is in his best Days and in all his Days but a Flower or may be compared to a Flower Metaphor Parallel A Flower hath a Root from whence it grows and springs up SO all Men have one common Root from whence they spring up viz. the first Adam II. A Flower springs up out of the Earth suddenly and at first is but a tender Bud fresh and flourishing II. So Man springs up like a Flower and at first is like a tender Bud fresh and flourishing III. A Flower hath but a little time of continuance tho some abide longer than others yet most Flowers last not long III. So Man that is born of a Woman is but of few Days Job 14.1 his Time is but short upon the Earth tho some continue longer than others yet generally their Days on the Earth are but few in a comparative Sence IV. There are divers Sorts of Flowers some fair to look upon very lovely to the Eye but of an ill Savour IV. So there are divers Sorts of Men and Women some very fair and amiable to the outward Sight but of an ill and stinking Savour in their Lives and Conversations in the Nostrils of God and all good Men having no Grace and are besides of a perverse and crooked Nature V. There are some other Flowers that are not beautiful to the Sight whose Nature and Virtue is most excellent V. So there are some Men and Women who tho they are not lovely and beautiful to carnal Eyes yet are of most sweet and gracious Dispositions and whose Worth and Excellency is exceeding great Psal 45. VI. Great Care is taken of some choice and rare Flowers they are prized at a high rate by such as own them and know their Worth VI. So the Saints who are choice Flowers in God's Esteem are greatly cared for He esteems them above what Men esteem of their choicest Flowers they are his Jewels and prized by him as his chiefest Treasure of them he hath said the World was not worthy Heb. 11. VII Some Flowers greatly magnify the Wisdom of their Creator there being many great Rarities to be seen in them VII So the Wisdom of God appears in the Creation of Man He is a curious Piece of God's Workmanship in his first Make in respect of his Body but more especially touching his Soul But the greatest Rarity that appears in this Flower shines forth in his second Creation in his being new made or transplanted into Christ Jesus whereby he is adorned with all those most transcendent and incomparable Gifts and Graces of the Holy Spirit VIII The rarest Flowers grow in Gardens what is a Field-Flower to some of these VIII So the best and most choice spiritual Flowers grow in God's Garden the Church What are those sinful Ones who grow in the Field of the World to some of these IX A Flower is most beautiful when it is fully ripe IX So Christ's choice Flowers his precious Saints are most lovely and amiable when they are fully ripe for Heaven X. The Owner of Flowers knows the best Time to crop them and who shall be offended at him when he takes to himself this or that Flower out of his Garden He may do what he pleaseth with his own X. So God knows the best Time to crop off or take away by Death this and that precious Flower Sometimes he cuts them down before others think they are half ripe but God knows better than we He never pulls nor takes any of his Saints unto himself till he seeth they are fit to die And who shall be offended at him in what he doth tho he take such out of the Garden that we would fain have grow still there because they are such a sweet Ornament to it but may not God do what he pleaseth with his own XI Some Flowers are gone on a sudden Naturalists tell us of a Flower that lasteth but one Day and I have read of others that fade in the very Budding XI So some die as soon almost as they are born they are taken away and fade in the very Bud. Also some Christians God crops off and receives to himself as soon as they are born again they come up and are presently cut down c. XII Some Flowers have Seed in them which if sown will produce a Flower again the next Spring XII So Man tho he wither away and die yet his Body is laid but like a Seed in the Earth at Spring viz. in the Resurrection-day he shall arise again Every Seed shall have his own Body it shall not be another but the same Body shall arise from the Dead My dead Body shall arise c. 1 Cor. 15.38 Isa 26.19 Act. 24.5 There shall be a Resurrection both of the Just and Vnjust Inferences WHat a fading thing is Man Let every one from hence learn to make ready to die Happy are they who are fit and prepared for it for Man in his Beauty and chief Flourishing is near unto withering 2. How fading and transient is all our Glory 3. What Fools are Mortals to value themselves so high 4. How vain a thing is it also to set our Hearts inordinately upon our dearest Friends There is mention made of the coming up of this Flower and of its cutting down but nothing of its growing Alas its standing is so small a time it is not taken notice of we are born to die and we die as soon as we are born Saints compared to Babes 11 Pet. 2.1 2. As new-born Babes desire the sincere Milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby Simile Parallel A Babe is begotten Abraham begat Isaac Hearken to thy Father that begat thee A Babe in Christ is begotten by the Word and Spirit of God Jam. 1.18 Of his own Will begat he us by the Word of Truth not of corruptible Seed but of incorruptible by the Word of God that liveth and abideth for ever II. A Babe hath not only a Father but also a Mother II. A Saint hath not only God for his Father but the Church for his Mother Jerusalem that is above Gal. 4.26 is the Mother of us all III. A Babe partakes of the same Nature of its Parents That which is born of the Flesh John 3.6 is Flesh III. A Babe
Christ who is their Righteousness and Strength He satisfieth their Mouth with good things Psal 103.5 so that their Strength is renewed like the Eagle's As the Lord brings his People low by bodily Sickness and Weakness and then renews their natural Strength so when there are Decays and Declinings upon their Souls he renews their spiritual Strength And as the Eagle renews her Strength by the Growth and Succession of new Feathers of the same kind in the place of the old so a Believer reneweth his Youth and Strength by casting off gradually the Old Man which is corrupt and by putting on more of the New Man Eph. 4.24 who is quite of another kind created after God in Righteousness and true Holiness IX Naturalists do observe that Eagles are fed and best nourished by Blood they suck and take in that both young and old IX So saith Mr. Caryl do Believers the feeding of the new Creature is upon Blood every godly Man spiritually drinks the Blood of Christ My Blood saith he is Drink indeed as offered to him both in the Promises and Ordinances of the Gospel A Saint could not live a Moment nor have any subsistence in Grace if he had not as the Eagle Blood to drink A godly Man is nourished by a believing Contemplation upon the Sufferings of Christ and the Effusion of his Blood X. Young Eagles are borne and carried upon the Wings of the old Eagle and thereby are preserved from the Dangers of Enemies X. So the Saints are borne supported and carried by the Power and Arms of the Almighty who is pleased to compare himself to an Eagle Deut. 32 11 12. As an Eagle stirreth up her Nest fluttereth over her Young spreadeth abroad her Wings taketh them and beareth them upon her Wings so the Lord alone did lead him and there was no strange God with him Ye have seen what I did unto the Egyptians and how I bore you upon Eagle's Wings and brought you to my self See Christ compared to an Eagle Disparity EAgles have many evil Qualities They are Birds of Prey c. yea and a very Vermine Sort of Creature and upon that account wicked Men are compared to Eagles which is opened under that Head of Metaphors concerning ungodly Men and Persecutors to which we refer you Saints compared to Sheep John 10.27 My Sheep hear my Voice c. THe Saints may be compared to Sheep in many respects Sheep are harmless Creatures meek sociable contented with hard Commons very tractable patient fruitful and very profitable are made a Prey to evil Beasts c. Upon all which Considerations and many others the Saints are likened to Sheep which is fully opened under the Metaphor Flock to which we refer you Saints compared to Souldiers 2 Tim. 2.3 Thou therefore endure Hardness as a good Souldier of Jesus Christ. A Souldier is taken in Scripture either properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or metaphorically Properly it is understood of a Person that is employed in Military Affairs one that bears Arms and is under Military Command Mat. 8.9 Metaphorically it is to be understood of a Christian that is engaged to fight the good Fight of Faith under the Command of Jesus Christ against the Enemies of the Soul This Title is not appropriated only to Ministers it is not a discriminating Title only to distinguish them from other Saints as the Title of Ambassador Pastor Watchman c. but a Title that belongs to every Christian and Professor of Christ So that Timothy is not called a Souldier meerly because he was an Evangelist but as he was a Disciple c. Saints are compared to Souldiers every true Christian is a spiritual Souldier of Jesus Christ Metaphor Parallel A Souldier is listed under some Captain or Commander he gives up his Name to him and enters himself into his Service SO every true Christian listeth himself under the Command of Jesus Christ who is the Captain of our Salvation He gives up his Name to him to serve him in all Uprightness as becometh a faithful Souldier to do making a solemn Covenant with Christ and his People to be on their side and this is visibly done in Baptism II. A Souldier leaves all other worldly Affairs and Incumbrances to follow that particular Employ No Man that warreth 2 Tim. 2.4 entangleth himself with the Affairs of this Life that he may please him that hath chosen him to be a Souldier They ought not like Reuben to abide among the Sheep-folds Jud. 5.16 to hear the Bleating of the Sheep II. So a true Christian forsakes all and follows Christ he becomes dead to this World he is crucified to it and that many times to him His Heart is not set upon Things below Col. 3.1 2. but upon Things above he looks upon Religion and Godliness as his great Work and Business They that are after the Flesh Rom 8.5 do mind the Things of the Flesh but they that are after the Spirit the Things of the Spirit III. A Souldier after he is listed and entred into his Company he is armed and put into a fit Posture for that Work and Service he is called to III. So a true Christian also is no sooner converted listed and entred into Christ's Company viz. his Church but he is armed likewise He puts on the whole Armor of God hath his Loins girt about with Truth and hath the Breast-plate of Righteousness his Feet shod with the Preparation of the Gospel of Peace Eph. 6 10 11 12. the Shield of Faith the Helmet of Salvation and the Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God And because most of those Parts or Pieces of a Christian's Armor are spoken to and opened under that Head of Metaphors respecting the Graces of the Spirit we shall speak no more of it here IV. A Souldier is known by his Habit Armor and Weapons from other Men they put off their own Clothes and put on the King 's especially if poor and ragged when they are listed IV. So a true Christian is known by the Clothes he hath on from the Wicked and Ungodly of the World He is cloathed with the Garment of Holiness and Humility and hath on all the precious Graces of the Spirit as Armor of Proof fast girt to him by the Girdle of Sincerity and this shews him to be one of Christ's Souldiers V. Souldiers many times are cloathed at the King's Charge and it is greatly for the Honour of a Captain to have all his Men bravely cloathed and glittering in their Armor V. So Christ cloaths all his Souldiers and they are all attired alike cloathed in white Their Robes cost dear viz. the Price of his own most precious Blood and it greatly tends to his Honour to have them kept clean and without Spot or Stain all glittering in their spiritual Armor viz. adorned with the blessed Graces of the Spirit VI. It is a Reproach to Souldiers to be meer mercenary to fight for
or Life it self in his Cause but he can restore it with great Advantage Joh. 12.25 He that loveth his Life shall lose it but he that hateth his Life in this World shall keep it unto Life eternal III. Souldiers are armed with carnal Weapons and fight with Men like themselves and yet many times are overcome and lose the Victory III. But Saints fight with spiritual Weapons and not only with Men like themselves but with the Devil and his infernal Crew and yet through Christ their Captain they get the Victory For the Weapons of our Warfare are not carnal Eph. 6. but mighty through God c. For we wrestle not against Flesh and Blood but against Principalities and Powers c. Inferences THese things being so let all true Christians take Heart and be valiant and fear not the Face of Enemies 1. Consider the Worth and Dignity of your Captain Christians have the best Captain and Leader in the World 1. He is of a most honourable Extraction of a most high and noble Descent the Heir of all things the Father's First-born the express Image of his Person He is King of Kings and Lord of Lords and he is saith one Generalissimo of all his Majesty's Forces in Heaven and Earth 2. Consider his Strength and Valour He hath an Omnipotent Arm and is of a most valiant undaunted couragious and heroick Spirit What was Sampson Gideon David Alexander Julius Caesar Scanderbeg or any other mighty Warrior to the Lord Jesus This is he who cuts in pieces the Gates of Brass and breaks asunder the Bars of Iron that hath the Keys of Death and Hell that flew Rahab Isa 51.9 and wounded the Dragon who is terrible to the Kings of the Earth and will come upon Princes as upon Mortar This is He that is the Terror of Devils the Dread of Mortals who will make other Captains tremble and cry out to the Rocks and Mountains to hide them in the Day of his Wrath. 3. Consider his Wisdom His Skill and Policy far exceeds the Craft and Subtilty of all the Machiavellian Politicians in the World He knows how to assault and harm his Enemies and to carry on and bring off to preserve and defend his People and faithful Souldiers Let Men and Devils be never so skilful and politick Christ knows how to outwit them and over-reach them all He knows where all their Mines are digged where all their Forces Flankers and Ambuscadoes do lie He knows their Plot and how laid this day against his Interest Gospel and Covenant-People in this and other Nations He knows how to confound them and catch them in their own Craftiness and to bring them to Shame He is wonderful in Counsel and mighty in Working He hath an Omniscient Eye as well as an Omnipotent Hand He makes his Countermines and blows them up or burieth them in the Pit they have digged He outshoots the Devil and the Wicked in their own Bow He will bring down the Beast and Whore and all their Abettors and make them ashamed of their Hope Mark the Issue of this present Dispensation See Captain in the First Volume and God a Man of War 2. Consider the Excellency of your Cause which is just and righteous 3. The Goodness of your Call against which nothing can be objected 4. For your further Encouragement consider the Strength of your Fortifications They are all impregnable and impenetrable of most invincible Strength Your Out-Works your Walls your Bulwarks your Forts and Towers all your Defence is admirable The Name of the Lord is a Strong-Tower Prov. 18.10 Isa 26.1 Salvation will God appoint for Walls and Bulwarks O how formidable and terrible are the Attributes and Threatnings of God to his Enemies 5. Consider Tho your Number be the fewest yet your Side is the strongest God is for us and on our Side With them is the Arm of Flesh but with us the Lord our God to fight for us How many said Antigonor will you reckon me for Poor Mortal How many then may we reckon God Christ the Holy Ghost for The whole Trinity is engaged for us 6. Consider Tho your Service be hard and Conflict sharp yet it will be short It is but a little while and your Enemy shall trouble you no more 2 Cor. 4.17 Our light Afflictions which are but for a moment c. 7. Consider the Devils and all other Enemies tho never so potent cruel and malicious yet they are all conquered and spoiled Col. 2.15 Having spoiled Principalities and Powers he made a Shew of them openly triumphing over them in it The Romans were wont in a triumphant manner to carry those they had conquered about with them and to brandish their Swords and display their Colours and carry their Arms in open View as Trophies and Emblems of Victory So the Lord Jesus having conquered Satan and the Powers of Hell rode as it were in Triumph through their Kingdom the Air and made a Shew of them openly as a glorious Victor 2. Again the World is subdued Be of good cheer saith Christ Joh. 16. Rom 8. I have overcome the World And we through him are hereby made more than Conquerors Come Tribulation Distress Persecution c. with all their Blackness Darkness Threats and Terror what will they do Who shall separate us from the Love of Christ Rom. 8.35 or hinder us of eternal Life 3. Death is subdued Christ hath got the Victory over that What Joy and Comfort is this to Believers to hear that all their Enemies are conquered your Captain-General hath broken them all to pieces 6. The Enemy cannot hurt you Rom. 8.28 the worst you can meet with will work for your Good 9. Consider Tho you meet with hard Things Christ can and will make them easy to you All your Wounds he can heal and all your broken Bones he can set The more you suffer for Christ the greater your Reward will be 10. Consider what great and glorious Pay you shall have in the end Is not a Kingdom a Crown of Glory that fadeth not away worth fighting and striving for 11. Look to Christ remember what he hath done and suffered for you and consider what many Saints have endured for his sake before you that were most precious in God's sight Is it not better to suffer here than to suffer in Hell What is the Pain and Sorrow of the Godly in this Life to the everlasting Pains and Torments of the Damned in the World to come Get much Faith and provide your selves with all your Armor and the right Use of it the Nature of which is opened under the Fifth Head Get your Hearts loose from the World No Man that warreth 2 Tim. 2.4 entangleth himself with the Affairs of this Life Labour for much Love to God It was a notable Saying of Mr. Bland the Martyr when he was at the Stake This Death saith he is more dear to me than Thousands of Gold
Pilgrim but he had such a cruel Burthen upon his Shoulders that he tired before he came to the end of his Journey Covetousness or an unsatisfied Desire after the Things of this World is compared to a Burthen or Load of thick Clay Who enlargeth his Desires as Hell and cannot be satisfied c. Wo to him that encreaseth that which is not his how long Hab. 2.5 6 And to him that ladeth himself with thick Clay Would not a Man that hath a long Journey to go be laugh'd at should he carry with him a heavy Burthen of Dirt and Rubbish Such Fools are many Professors See Runner III. A Pilgrim in his Travels goes up-hill and down-hill sometimes he meets with good Way and sometimes with bad Way Sometimes he passeth over Stiles and through dirty Lanes and then again through green Fields and pleasant Pastures and delightful Paths till he comes to his desired Place III. So the Pilgrim that would travel to the New Jerusalem meets with various Ways and Passages 1. He must go out of the horrible Pit of Prophaneness that is Work enough for the first Day 's Journey 2. Through the Brook of sincere Repentance or true Contrition for every one that leaves open Prophaneness is not truly penitent 3. Down the Valley of Self-denial a very difficult Passage 4. Over the Mountains of Opposition for the Devil and all will straitway make head against him 5. Over the Stile of carnal Reason Immediatly I consulted not with Flesh and Blood 6. Into the pleasant Ways of the New Covenant 7. So upon the Top of the Rock of Ages and there he may take a Prospect of his own Country IV. A Pilgrim that hath a long and difficult Way to travel is very thoughtful how to find the right Way being a Stranger in that Country through which he must pass And besides being told there are many cross Ways and Turnings and hard difficult Passages to find he takes care therefore to get a good and skilful Guide lest he should lose his Way IV. So the spiritual Pilgrim spares no Cost omits no Study to get the best Information imaginable of the ready Way to the Land of Promise He ceaseth not to enquire of such as pretend themselves to be Guides and such as know the Way but finding them to be short-fighted and ignorant of the Way themselves he seeks further And as he goes along one cries This is the Way Mat. 24.23 another That Some bid him believe as the Church believes and he shall never go astray Others bid him co●form to the Laws of Men and do whatever the Supreme Authority of the Nation doth enjoin in Matters of Faith and Religion Others call upon him to be led wholly by the Light of his Conscience and that will bring him unto the Land of Promise the Place he longs for And at last he meets with another that seems yet to differ from them all and greatly to slight and condemn one grand Fundamental God's Word holds forth under plausible Pretences He cries up Holiness and just Living which all confess is required but in the mean time strives to persuade him to cast off the Satisfaction of Jesus Christ and trust to his own Righteousness or to refined Morality rendring Faith in Christ crucified little more than a Fancy and that the main Design of Christ in coming into the World was only to be a Pattern of Holiness and Humility But he perceiving the Danger great upon this account and that none of these Pretenders could give any convincing Evidence why they should be believed and their Counsel followed above others he rejected all their Directions and resolved to be led by none of them further than their Doctrine agreed with a certain Directory which through the Grace of God he hath obtained namely the written Word of God and that tells him plainly The Way is Christ viz. Christ as a Priest dying for him to appease the Wrath of God Joh. 14.6 and make Atonement for his Sin fulfilling the Law and bringing in everlasting Righteousness Christ as a King to subdue his Sin and to rule and reign over him Dan. 9.24 according to those blessed and wholesom Laws Ordinances and Institutions given forth by him and left in his Word Christ as a Prophet to teach and instruct him Christ as a holy Pattern and Example to imitate and follow so far as by the help of Grace he is able See Surety Sin a Debt The Word compared to Light The Spirit to a Teacher and Guide He hath learned of Christ to be holy and is helped therein by the Holy-Ghost to excell his Neighbour and denies all his Ungodliness and worldly Lusts and yet casts himself only on Christ relying upon his Merits labouring to be like him in all things as the Apostle observes 1 Joh. 3.3 He that hath this Hope in him purifieth himself even as he is pure He lets his Sins go nay loaths that which is evil he lives a mortified Life unto the World and yet trusteth not to any thing that he hath done or can do for eternal Life Acts 4.12 knowing there is no Salvation but by Christ alone He is as godly as any Socinian in the World and yet magnifies the Riches of God's Grace and Christ's Merits so as not to expect Justification any other way V. A Pilgrim often meets with Trouble and great Difficulties in his Way by Winds Storms and Tempests hard Weather Cold Frost and Snow deep and bad Ways and many Dangers which he narrowly escapes V. So the spiritual Pilgrim is also exposed to many Difficulties in his Journey Heaven-wards Terrible Storms sometimes arise Winds of Persecution and Temptation blow so hard that he is scarce able to stand upon his Legs Psal 73.2 My Feet were almost gone my Steps had well nigh slipt c. He is often beset with Crosses and Afflictions that he is as a Man in the Mire and can hardly get out VI. A Pilgrim is a Stranger in the Country through which he passeth and being not known he is much gazed on and sometimes abused by the rude Rabble all which he takes with patience and makes no resistance VI. So the Godly are Strangers in this World And confessed Heb. 11.13 that they were Strangers and Pilgrims on the Earth David breaks forth Hold not thy peace at my Tears Psal 39.12 for I am a Stranger with thee and a Sojourner as all my Fathers were Hence they are made oftentimes a Gazing-stock to Men by Reproaches and Afflictions Heb. 10.33 And how grievously have they been abused by the wicked Rabble of the Earth as Jesus Christ himself testifieth If ye were of the World the World would love its own Joh. 15.19 22. but because ye are not of the World but I have chosen you out of the World therefore the World hateth you All these things will they do unto you because they know not him that sent me VII A
Men Heb. 2.1 2 Rev. 2.4 like leaking Vessels let out the precious Grace of God they lose their Zeal Faith Love Courage c. And also many times the Word of God as it comes from the Preacher savours of the earthen Vessel for the best of Men have Flesh in them as well as Spirit Were there nothing but this precious Treasure of Grace and Divine Wisdom in them it would not be so but Satan like a cursed Enemy stirs up the Remainders of the Old Man in the Soul and through his subtil Temptations causes the Preacher to mix the Wine with Water or the pure Doctrine of Christ with Man's Wisdom by which means he vaunts and prides it oftentimes in himself IX When a Vessel proves very defective the Owner perceiving he is like to come to loss empties the choice Liquor from Vessel to Vessel IX So God many times finding his Vessels defective and that they contract Filth or prove leaky empties his choice Liquor from Vessel to Vessel according to that of the Prophet Jer. 48 11. Moab hath been at ease from his Youth and hath setled upon his Lees and hath not been removed from Vessel to Vessel which is meant of Afflictions God by bringing a People into Adversity in the sence of this Text may be said to move pour out or empty them from Vessel to Vessel A long Time of Ease and Prosperity proves hurtful to God's Children like as the Wine receives detriment by setling on its Lees. A Day of general Persecution proves various in its Effects Some are thereby emptied of chice Gifts and Endowments that were in them and others receive thereby a double measure God takes away the one Talent for want of Improvement and gives it to him that had five Mat. 25.28 X. Earthen Vessels are soon broken they are very brittle Things alas but with one Knock they are gone X. So the Saints of God and Ministers of the Gospel are poor frail and brittle Creatures when God permits the Enemy but a little to let flie against them how are they dashed to pieces by their hands How many precious Vessels did Queen Mary destroy and consume to Ashes But this must always be considered viz. God hath a gracious Design in suffering the Enemy thus to break in pieces his choice Vessels and one Reason thereof is That the precious Treasure of the Gospel may be the more diffusive and spread it self that its precious Odor might perfume the more Souls The Blood of the Saints hath been always accounted the Seed of the Church XI Earthly Vessels are of little value they are not much accounted of XI God's faithful Saints and Servants as they are of little esteem in the Eyes of the World The precious Sons of Zion Lam. 4.2 comparable to fine Gold how are they esteemed as earthen Pitchers So they have but low and mean thoughts of themselves 2 Cor. 4.7 Rom 9.23 We have this Treasure in earthen Vessels that the Excellency of the Power might be of God and not of us Simile Disparity OTher Vessels are made by Men. BUt the Saints and Ministers of the Gospel are Vessels of the Lord 's making He did not only form them considered as Men but also as spiritual Vessels viz. they are chosen Ministers prepared for his blessed Use He is a chosen Vessel to bear my Name amongst the Gentiles c. Acts 9.15 The Saints are called Vessels of Mercy prepared unto Glory II. Other Vessels when broken into small Pieces are generally quite spoiled and can never be set together again II. But the Vessels of the Lord tho they are broken in pieces by Death are not thereby spoiled and utterly lost but shall be set together again and be made far more glorious than they were before Inferences IT may teach the Saints of God to have low thoughts of themselves What is an earthen Vessel It is true the Treasure may be excellent that is in the Vessel but that doth not appertain to the Vessel Let God have the Glory of all 1 Cor. 4 6 7. What hast thou which thou hast not received 2. Take heed you that are Saints that you do not like earthen Vessels smite one against another lest by one another you are dashed to pieces Remember what frail and brittle Creatures you are even poor earthen Vessels 3. It may teach the Saints also to look to themselves lest they gather Filth let every one keep their Vessels clean Wash your selves daily in the Tears of true Repentance and by Faith in that Fountain that is set open for Sin and for Uncleanness 4. It may teach the Saints of God to be careful of their poor Ministers remembring always that they are also but poor frail Vessels 5. Let the Wicked dread the Thoughts of the great Day such I mean as have or strive to break in pieces Christ's chosen Vessels what will they do in that Day when He makes Inquisition for Blood Saints compared to Lions Prov. 28.1 The Wicked fly when none pursue but the Righteous are as bold as a Lion Micah 5.8 And the Remnant of Jacob shall be as a Lion c. The Godly are compared to Lions Simile Parallel A Lion is a very magnanimous and couragious Creature he will not flie from his Enemies he turneth not away for fear of any SO the Saints of God are full of spiritual Courage they are not dismayed at the Threats of Men. Psal 27.3 I will not fear what Man can do unto me Tho an Host should encamp against me my Heart shall not fear tho I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of Death I will fear no Evil. Hence they are said to be as bold as a Lion Shall such a Man as I flie Neh. Quest But some may say Wherein doth the Courage of the Godly appear wherein are they as bold as a Lion Answ In their being valiant and couragious for the Truth And this they shew forth many ways 1. By their speaking for it when others speak against it God's Truth his Way and People are commonly derided and spoke against and he that is a sincere and valiant Christian will at all times when he sees there is need for it vindicate it and speak in the behalf thereof 2. In their endeavouring to clear it from Reproach and Infamy The Way or Truth of God is frequently reproached 1. 'T is called Error and Heresy Acts 24.14 Acts 24.5 Acts 17.19 After that way you call Heresy so worship I the God of my Fathers c. 2. 'T is called Sedition Hence Paul was accused for being a Mover of Sedition 3. 'T is commonly called a new Doctrine We would know what this new Doctrine whereof thou speakest is 3. They shew their Courage in contending earnestly for the Truth they will dispute and argue out the Matter in behalf of Truth and not give up the Justness and Goodness of their Cause as long as they are able to stand
III. A Heart of Flesh cannot bear a great Weight a heavy Burden will crush and mar it exceedingly Lay never so great a Weight upon a Stone and that will bear it you cannot crush that nor make the least Impression in it what Weight soever you lay upon it but a Heart of Flesh or that which is of a soft Substance is of another Nature a Weight will bruise crush and mar it immediatly So a tender-hearted Christian cannot bear the Weight of Sin he feels the Burthen so heavy that he is sorely crushed down and oppressed under the Guilt thereof and grievously bruised Thus it was with David Psal 38. I am sore broken I am bowed down greatly c. IV. A Heart of Flesh I mean a living Heart for 't is such a one of which the Text speaks is a sensible Heart So a tender-hearted Christian or a Man or Woman that hath a Heart of Flesh is very sensible Such are sensible of their own Vileness and loath themselves before the Lord cannot bear the Thoughts of God's Displeasure it goes to their very Heart to think that the holy and infinite God should be displeased and offended with them they are sensible of their own Sorrows and of the Sorrows and Miseries of others A tender-hearted Person will grieve for the Afflictions of his Brethren and Sisters if his Mother or any dear Relation is distressed and in great Misery O how sensible is he of it and how sorely troubled and disquieted in his Spirit And thus it is with a tender hearted Saint O how is he grieved for the distressed Saints and for distressed Sion c. V. A Heart of Flesh i. e. a tender Heart will take any Impression you please So a tender-hearted Christian will take any Impression from God He is like Wax melted that will take the Impression of the Seal They are ready to take the Stamp of the Word the Image of God which is Righteousness and true Holiness The Spirit and Word of God can mould these Hearts into any Form or Fashion God pleaseth c. Saints compared to Stewards Luk. 16.2 Give an account of thy Stewardship c. 1 Pet. 4.10 As good Stewards c. Note Every Saint is the Steward of God Parallels I. A Steward is a Person that hath Goods or Moneys committed to his Charge So every Christian hath many Goods called Talents committed to him Mat. 25.14 15. both Spirituals and Temporals II. A Steward cannot say the Riches which are committed to him are his own no he is but the Steward of them in Trust they being the proper Right of another Man or his Lord's Goods So a Christian cannot say any thing he hath is his own all he is and hath is the Lord's III. A Steward ought to dispose of every thing committed to his Charge according to the special Command of his Master who possibly orders him to pay so much to such an one and so much to such an one and so much to such Poor that dwell in the Parish c. So every Christian ought to dispose of all his Lord's Goods according to his express Command laid down in his Word or he is no faithful Steward So much he is required to dispose of to the Ministers of the Gospel that may tend to make their Lives comfortable and free them from the perplexing Cares of this Life which greatly hinder them in their Ministry The true Minister's Maintenance is jure divino of divine Right So hath the Lord ordained 1 Cor. 9.14 that they that preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel Also they are required to give to the Poor that they may not want c. Their Charity ought to be according to their Ability and the Poor's Necessity and not only to give but to give cheerfully with a willing Heart c. IV. Stewards are required to improve their Lord's Money c. So Christians ought to improve all those spiritual Gifts and Graces Time and Strength Wisdom and Knowledg Whatsoever God hath given to them he expects they should improve it to his Glory and to the Profit of their Neighbours V. 'T is a great and horrible Evil in a Steward to mind his own Business and Concerns more than the Concerns of his Lord and Master So 't is an utter Fault and that which may justly call in question the Truth of his Sincerity and Christianity for a Christian to mind the World and his own private Interest more than the Interests and Concerns of Jesus Christ Some care not what becomes of Christ's Labourers or of the poor Saints nor of the Interest of the Gospel so that they have all things to their Hearts Content They eat the Fat and drink the Sweet and lay up great Store of Treasure for their own Children c. they have perhaps their Hundreds and Thousands by them and in the mean while many faithful Ministers hard put to it to get Bread Is it not an abominable Evil in a Steward to live like a Lord himself upon his Master's Goods and let his Master's Children want Bread and also to keep back the Right of his faithful and painful Labourers for whose sake he intrusted him with so much Substance VI. A Steward must expect to be called to an Account Give an Account of thy Stewardship c. So must every Christian expect to be called to an Account by Jesus Christ concerning his Stewardship and what will they have to say who have embezelled much of their Lord's Goods and converted the rest to their own private Use Let all take heed and so demean themselves that they may have their Accounts to give up with Joy Saints compared to Stones 1 Pet. 2.5 Ye also as lively Stones are built up a spiritual House an holy Priesthood c. THe Saints of God are compared to Stones to the Stones of a a Building c. Parallels I. SOme Stones that Men build with are very rough and rocky as they are taken out of the Quarry and therefore need much Hewing and Squaring before they are fit for the Building So naturally the Hearts of Sinners are rocky and like rough Stones Hos 6.5 and to this the Lord alludes I have hewed them by the Prophets Ministers are God's Tools by which He does his Work upon Mens Hearts II. Stones are fit Materials to build a House withal So God sees Believers are the only fit Materials to build his spiritual House III. Stones in a Building are well knit and united together So should the Saints in Love c. IV. Stones are durable so are the Saints Disparity I. NO Builder builds his House with preeious Stones But Believers are called precious Stones This notes the Richness and Excellency of the spiritual Building 1 Cor. 3.12 Now if any build upon this Foundation Gold Silver precious Stones c. II. No earthly Stones have Life in them they are not living but dead Stones But the Saints are living Stones Eph.
2.1 being quickned and made alive by Jesus Christ that so there may be a fit Resemblance or Similitude between the Stones and the Foundation See Foundation in the First Volume pag. 242. and Christ the Corner-Stone p. 246 247. The Saints God's Iewels Mal. 3.17 They shall be mine in that Day when I make up my Jewels THe Saints are in this Place called Jewels they are God's choice Jewels There is nothing so excellent in the Eyes of Men but God's People are as amiable in his Sight and why he calls them his Jewels is opened in the following Parallel Metaphor Parallel JEwels are rare and excellent Things made by the hands of curious Workmen they are made of precious Stones set in Gold and Silver THe Saints are to God most choice and excellent Ones Psal 45. The King's Daughter is all glorious within These Jewels are made up of a Complication of all the precious Graces of the Holy Spirit II. Some Jewels are long in making they are not made near so soon as some others are They carry on their Work gradually every Day 's Work adds to their Beauty and Richness yet having begun they resolve to go forward and never cease till they have finished them and made them up quite fit for the Cabinet II. So some of the Saints are not so soon made up and fitted for Heaven as others are God carries on the Work of Grace gradually All Persons as soon as ever they are converted are not made fit for Heaven but they must go from one degree of Grace to another Yet God hath promised to perfect the Work he hath begun he will never cease until he hath made up the Jewels he hath begun to make He that hath begun a good Work in you Phil. 1.6 will perform it to the Day of Christ III. Jewels are a most rare and excellent Ornament nothing richer and are therefore worn only by rich and noble Persons in which they take great delight III. So Believers are the Glory of Christ Whether any do enquire of Titus 2 Cor. 8.23 he is my Partner and Fellow-helper concerning you or our Brethren be enquired of they are the Messengers of the Churches and the Glory of Christ Which agrees with that in Isa 62.3 Thou shalt also be a Crown of Glory in the hand of the Lord Isa 62.3 and a Royal Diadem in the hand of thy God and hence called Hephzibah The Lord delighteth in thee No Prince esteems more of his Crown Jewels and Royal Diadem than God doth of his People The High-Priest under the Law was to have the Names of the Children of Israel engraven on the Breast-plate See Exod. 28. And thou shalt make the Breastplate of Judgment the Work of cunning Workmen c. And thou shalt emboss in it Embossments of Stones four Rows The first a Row of Sardius Exod 28.6 7 8 9. a Topaz and a Smaragd the second Row a Chalcedony a Saphire and Sardonyx and the third Row an Hyacinth a Chrysophrase and an Amethyst and the fourth Row a Chrysolite a Beryl and a Jasper And they shall be set in Gold in their Imbossements and the Stones shall be with the Names of the Sons of Israel c. Also in the Ephod there was two Beryl-Stones and on them was engraven the Names of the Children of Israel Now the High-Priest was a Type of Christ and his having the Names of the Children of Israel engraven with precious Stones upon the Ephod which was upon his Shoulders and upon the Breast-plate signifies not only Christ's bearing his Saints upon his Shoulders as it were and upon his Heart but also what an Ornament Christ looks upon his Saints to be unto him for those precious Stones were a wonderful Ornament to the Priest both on his Shoulders and Breast Take Mr. Ainsworth's Annotations on the 11th Verse The Engraver Stone-cutter or Jeweller thus engraving in precious Stone and that like a Signet the Names of the Children of Israel signified the firm and perpetual Love Memorial Esteem and Sustentation of the Church And to this the Spouse alludes Cant. 8.6 Set me as a Signet upon thy Heart as a Signet on thy Arm c. IV. A Man takes great care of and exceedingly values his rich and choice Jewels he will not lose one of them if he can possibly keep them IV. So God takes great care of his Saints esteems of them as his chiefest Treasure and will not lose one of them All that the Father hath given me have I kept and none of them are lost c. That God highly prizes esteems and takes great care of his People doth appear many ways 1. By the Price he paid for them He gave up that precious and invaluable Jewel of his Heart viz. the Lord Jesus to be broken in pieces that so he might thereby make unto himself many thousand choice and precious Jewels 2. By the great Pains he hath used in forming and fashioning them for himself We are his Workmanship c. 3. By his making of such a firm and sure Covenant with Christ in their behalf that none of them might be lost 4. By the Charge he gives to the Wicked not to hurt them 2 Chron. 16.21 22. He suffered no Man to do them Wrong yea he reproved Kings for their Sakes saying Touch not mine Anointed and do my Prophets no harm 5. By his declaring that they that touch them touch the Apple of his Eye He pities them as a Father pities his Children 6. By his bestowing so many precious Graces and good Gifts upon them to make them shine and gloriously set forth their Lustre 7. By executing Wrath and Displeasure upon their Enemies 8. By his defending saving and preserving them in the midst of so many great and imminent Dangers 9. In hiding them in a secret and secure Place out of the reach of Adversaries 10. Lastly by providing such a glorious Place for them after Death that they may be with him for ever V. Jewels are subject to many Casualties whilst they are making and are often marr'd or receive much Detriment which without much Labour and Cost is not repaired and made good again V. So God's Jewels are subject to sustain great Detriment and are often much marr'd whilst he is about making of them up by Sin and Satan and through their own Carelesness which is not soon nor easily repaired Tho God graciously by his Word and Spirit renews his Work again upon their Souls as in the Case of David Peter and divers others VI. When a Man hath quite made up his Jewels he puts them into a rich Cabinet VI. So when God hath quite made up his spiritual Jewels he puts them into Heaven that is the rich and glorious Cabinet which he hath provided for all his choice and goodly Jewels VII A Person that hath many rich and choice Jewels shews them as he sees occasion to his Friends and also to others declaring his Right to them and
that God had brought upon them was the Cure But why saith God should I afflict or chastise you any more or use Means for your Help and Healing when under the Use or Exercise of that Sovereign Means I have used you grow worse and worse 'T is said of the Man that went from Jerusalem to Jericho and fell among Thieves Luk. 10.30 that he was not only stript of his Raiment but wounded also My Wounds stink and are corrupt saith David and in another place he cries out Lord Psal 88.51 have mercy upon me and heal my Soul for I have sinned against thee From whence it appears Psal 41.4 that a godly Man may be wounded by his Sin and that sorely too Every Sin makes a Wound in the Soul what a fearful Case are unconverted Souls then in O that Sinners would but consider this See Sin a Wound and Sickness X. Some Persons that have been taken captive and brought into Prison and Bondage besides other sad Circumstances they have been under they have been brought under the Sentence of Death nay and for their horrid Rebellions Treasons c. under a fearful and painful Death as to be torn in pieces or burned alive X. The Ungodly who remain Captives to Satan being under the power of their Lusts or abiding in the State of Unregeneracy are not only under all the sad Circumstances you have heard but to render them every way miserable as in truth their present State is they are under the Sentence of Death Perhaps some would conclude that Death to such Persons I have given the Character of is better than Life and with Job they had better chuse it Alas it would be so indeed were it to die the common Death of all Men. Death puts an end to all the external Miseries of Mortals but the Death of Sin 's Captives is quite another thing They are condemned to be burned to be burned alive too but this is not all to lie burning in the Fire of God's eternal Wrath for ever where they shall be always dying but cannot die Where the Worm dieth not and the Fire is not quenched Captive Disparity CAptives that are so only to Men are but externally enslaved BUt wicked Men that are Slaves to Sin and Satan are captivated in their Souls notwithstanding as to the Body they may be at Liberty as to outward Thraldom II. Some Persons may be free and at Liberty in their Souls at the same time when they may be Captives as to their Bodies and so their Captivity may seem less grievous to them II. But it cannot be so said of a wicked Man for whatever Misery befalls his Body 't is abundantly aggravated by and from the Captivity and Slavery of his Soul nay in the enjoyment of his greatest outward Liberty he is in dreadful Thraldom by Sin and Satan III. Captives that are so only to Men may and have been redeemed with Money III. But spiritual Captives such as are in Bondage to Sin and Satan cannot be redeemed with Money It is not Silver or Gold that can purchase the Redemption of one of Satan's Slaves for the Redemption of the Soul is so precious that nothing can make a Compensation for it but the precious Blood of Christ 1 Pet. 1. IV. If no other Means can procure the Liberty of Captives that are so only as to their Bodies yet Death sets them free and those to whom they are in Bondage have no more to do with them IV. But wicked Men living and dying in Bondage to Satan and their own Lusts cannot be free by Death but are thereby put into an irrecoverable State of eternal Misery from which there can be no Redemption being delivered up to Satan V. Some that are Captives only in their Bodies are so sensible of their Misery and Thraldom that they seek and desire to improve all Means imaginable for their Deliverance V. But some wicked Men are not only insensible of their Bondage to the Devil and their own Lusts but are lifeless as to any ways or means of Deliverance Tho Means be used daily to convince them of the dreadful Danger of their Bondage-State and of the Way and Means of their Redemption yet through the Blindness and Hardness of their Hearts they rest at quiet in the Devil's Prison where they are shut up as Captives And that which declares their greatest Thraldom and Misery is they refuse all the Tenders of Grace in order to their Redemption nay set light by Jesus Christ who came to proclaim Liberty c. VI. Captives to Men only may may be redeemed and set at Liberty and yet so captivated by them again as that they may die in Slavery VI. But wicked Men tho the saddest Captives imaginable in respect of Misery and Thraldom yet if set free by Jesus Christ they shall be no more the Slaves of Satan Joh. 8.36 For those whom the Son makes free are free indeed free from the Dominion and Power of Sin and Satan here and free from the Wages of Sin which is eternal Death hereafter Inferences Quest SOme may say If this be the State of unconverted Men and Women they are miserable Objects indeed But is there no Relief nor Help for these poor Captives must they perish inevitably and be damned for ever Answ God forbid There is good News for these Slaves and Captives of Sin and the Devil a Gospel to be preached to them God is full of Bowels were there no Deliverance to relieve it would be sad beyond what any are able to conceive But to prove that there is Salvation and Relief for the vilest Sinners consider these three things following 1. The Lord Jesus hath purchased Deliverance for them he hath laid down a satisfactory Price or Ransom for those Captives who through Faith in him shall obtain Deliverance 2. Christ is ordained and anointed to preach glad Tidings to them Luk. 4.18 Isa 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the Poor He hath sent me to heal the Broken-hearted to preach Deliverance to the Captives and recovering Sight to the Blind and to set at Liberty them that were bound 3. Many who have been in the like State of Captivity and Bondage have been set at Liberty Thousands that have been Slaves of Sin and Satan through the infinite Mercy of God are now in a perfect State of Freedom Such were some of you 1 Cor. 6.11 saith the Apostle but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God Sirs what blessed News is this for poor Sinners Suppose a Man who is a Slave or Captive and suffereth justly for his Sin were stript naked and put into a Dungeon bound with cruel and heavy Chains wounded in a most fearful manner from Head to Foot and only fed with Ashes and Gravel-stones and in this Condition were condemned
come upon them partly by the Pride abominable Lust and Extravagancy of their Parents and partly by their own Idleness Lust and Prodigality Even so the spiritual Want and Poverty of Men was in part brought upon them by the Sins of our first Parents and partly by their own actual Sins This is the State of unregenerate Persons they are all even thus poor and miserable And happy are they who see this to be their Condition Mat. 5.3 Blessed are the Poor in Spirit for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven Those who see their own Wants Poverty and Misery shall out of the Fulness of Jesus Christ be supplied with whatsoever they need for tho Man naturally be so poor that he hath nothing can do nothing and hath no earthly Friend or Brother that can do any thing for him and besides he owes ten thousand Talents and is worth no regard nor pity yet the eternal God hath found out a Way for the manifestation of his own glorious Grace and Bounty to enrich him and make him happy for ever 2 Cor. 8.9 He that was rich became poor that we through his Poverty might be made rich Disparity POor Men are full of Complaints they commonly bewail their Poverty and would gladly have all their Wants supplied and be made rich if they knew but which way it might be done But wicked Men tho they are poor so poor and miserable as hath been shewn yet they are contented being wofully blinded by the Devil c. So that tho they are daily told how they may be made rich yet they slight all Advice and Counsel and stubbornly refuse the Riches of Grace and Glory The Heart of a wicked Man compared to a Rock Jer. 23.29 And like a Hammer that breaks the Rock in pieces Ezek. 11.19 And I will take away the stony Heart c. Luke 8.6 And some fell upon a Rock c. Zech. 7.12 They made their Hearts as an Adamant-Stone NOte The Hearts of Sinners are like Rocks or wicked Men have stony and rocky Hearts Parallels A Rock is a barren and fruitless Place what will grow upon a Rock So the Hearts of wicked Men are barren and unfruitful to God they bring forth no spiritual Fruit to him II. Rain cannot enter nor soak into a Rock but as it falls so it glides off and runs away So the spiritual Rain of Heaven viz. God's Word tho it falls never so powerfully upon ungodly Men it will not enter into their Hearts My Word hath no place in you saith Christ c. Good Doctrine and heavenly Counsel glides off of these spiritual Rocks like Rain from a Rock or high Mountain III. Rocks and Stones are naturally rough and unfit for use until they are hewed and squared c. So the Hearts of wicked Men are naturally rough and unfit for any spiritual use until they are hewed by the Ax and Hammer of the Word Hos 6.5 I have hewed them by the Prophets IV. A little thing will not break a hard Stone or a flinty Rock c. So a little Matter will not break a stony or rocky-hearted Sinner God strikes often and strikes hard gives many a Blow upon their Hearts by his Word and by his Spirit and sometimes by Afflictions before their Hearts will yield or break in pieces V. He that will break a Rock in pieces or hew Stones to make them fit for use must have a meet and convenient Instrument So God makes use of a right and fit Instrument to break in pieces the hard and rocky Hearts of ungodly Men viz. his blessed Word in the hand of the Spirit Is not my Word like a Hammer Jer. 23.29 that breaks the Rock in pieces VI. A Man many times employs Workmen to break a Rock and hew Stones So God employs his Ministers as Work-men in his hand to break these spiritual Rocks and hew these rough and ragged Stones to make them fit to lay in his spiritual Building I have hewed them by the Prophets Hos 6.5 VII Seed that falls upon a Rock or stony Place tho it doth spring up it soon withereth away if the Fowls of Heaven do not pick it up So the Word of God if it be sown upon stony and rocky-hearted Sinners tho it may seem to spring up yet it soon withers for want of Root They believe for a while Luk. 8.13 but in time of Temptation fall away Inferences NO marvel Ministers Work is so hard and laborious they are God's Stone-cutters or Rock-hewers nay and it fares worse with them than with other Work-men that work in Stone-Pits or hew Stones they labour all Day and go home at Night and come again in the Morning and find their Work as they left it But God's Workmen hew and take pains and leave their People and come again and find them worse than before their Hearts many times growing more hard and obdurate c. II. Let not Ministers notwithstanding all this be discouraged for they know not but at last God may set a Word home that may do the Business and make the hard-hearted Sinner tremble and cry out as they did Acts 2.36 Men and Brethren what shall we do Quest But some may say From whence doth it arise or what is the Cause of this spiritual Hardness that is in the Hearts of Men. Answ 1. Naturally the Sinner's Heart is hard and like a Rock we all brought a flinty and churlish Nature into the World with us such is the Effect of original Sin 2. There is also an acquired Hardness Pharaoh hardned his own Heart and the Prophet saith Zech. 7.12 They have made their Hearts as an Adamant-Stone 3. There is a judiciary Hardness of Heart which is inflicted by God as a Judg. Men harden their own Hearts against God and God at length resolves they shall be hard indeed and therefore he withdraws the common Influences of his Grace from them and deprives them of all gracious means of softning And when all these three meet together in a Man Isa 48.4 he is irrecov●rably hard and sinful His Neck is an Iron Sinew and his Brow brass 4. A Man is hardned in his Sin gradually and as he grows harder and harder so nearer and nearer to eternal Ruine 1. He takes leave to meditate on Sin he rolls it up and down in his Thoughts as it were a hard Heart lets vain Thoughts dwell in it 2. He takes some Tastes of the Pleasure and Delight of Sin it seems to him as a sweet Morsel under his Tongue and this is a Sign of a further degree of Hardness 3. The third Step is Custom in sinning it argues great Boldness to venture often 4. And then in the next place he defends and maintains his Sin he has got some Plea or Argument for it he is an Advocate for Sin 5. He is angry with them and secretly hates them in his Heart that reprove him for his Sin or advise him against such
we reade their Brightness and Glory was very great V. Christ's true Ministers are lively and very beautiful when the Spirit of the Lord is eminently upon them they shine gloriously in Grace and Holiness Act. 6.15 Stephen who was a glorious Preacher was said to shine like the Face of an Angel VI. Angels are very obedient to God they do his Commands and wait for his Word VI. The faithful Preachers of the Gospel are very ready to obey God's Commands tho they are thereby exposed to great Danger if God bid them go Rom. 1.15 they go VII Angels are swift in executing their Business hence said to have Wings VII The Ministers of the Gospel are swift in their Spiritual Motion they are said to fly in the midst of Heaven having the everlasting Gospel to preach c. Rev. 14.6 VIII Angels have made known much of the Mind of God to the Sons of Men. VIII Christ's true Ministers daily make known the Mind and Will of God 't is one great part of their Work and Business IX Angels admire reverence and adore the glorious Majesty of God and therefore vail their Faces before him and give Glory to him Yea as Mr. Venning observes 't is their very Business to sing Hallelujahs to God Angels Worship is singing and praising of God they seek not themselves in serving God IX The Ministers of Christ and all true Christians admire and adore God and his glorious Maj●sty and with self abhorrency vail their Faces as it were ascribing all Glory and Honour unto God Not unto us O Lord not unto us Psal 115.1 but to thy Name do we give Glory the Servants of God desire only to rejoice in God they know no other Name to Glory in but in the Name of the Lord and hence they sing his praise tho in Prison Act. 16. in all which they seek not themselves in any Service they do for God but the Honour and Glory of his Name only X. Angels do their Service to the Lord with joyfulness the Morning Stars 't is said sang together and all the Sons of God shouted for Joy X. So Christ's true and faithful Ministers and People take much delight in their Service their Minds run exceedingly upon their Work to do for God to spend and be spent for God and his People is the desire and delight of their Souls XI Angels are without wearisomness in their Work and Service they are as strong and as lively at the end as they are at the beginning XI So Christ's faithful Ministers and People by the help of God's Spirit labour and faint not 2 Cor. 4.16 For which cause we faint not c. They shall run and not be weary Josh 14.7 8 9 10 11. Caleb was as strong and as able to do Service for God at fourscore as he was at forty Years old XII Angels serve the Saints and watch over them and daily administer to them and tho glorious Creatures do not think it below them so to do XII So the true and faithful Preachers of God's Word serve the Churches Members and Saints of God and daily watch over them and minister unto them and tho possibly some of them may far excell in Parts and Wisdom yet they think not his Service below them XIII Angels are often sent to comfort the Saints when cast down as they ministred to Christ in his Bloody Agony XIII So are Gospel-Preachers sent and commanded to comfort the Feeble-minded and support the Weak they know how to comfort others with the same Comfort whereby they themselves are comforted of God 2 Cor. 1.4 Inferences THis may inform us what Glory and Dignity God hath conferred upon his Servants who labour in the Ministry they have a glorious Name and are greatly honoured by the Lord and therefore should be received with all due respect and esteemed very highly for their Works sake II. It shews us who are true Ministers of the Gospel III. It shews Christ's faithful Ministers how they should do their Work and behave themselves before the Lord. Ministers compared to Stars Rev. 1.20 The Mystery of the seven Stars which thou sawest in my Right-hand and the seven Golden Candlesticks The seven Stars are the seven Angels of the seven Churches and the seven Candlesticks are the seven Churches BY Stars in this place it appears the Ministers of God's Word are meant Metaphor Parallel NAturalists say the Sun communicates his Light to the Stars SO Christ imparts of his Spirit and saving Light and Knowledg to his faithful Ministers II. The Stars are placed by the Lord in the Heavens II. So the Ministers of the Gospel are placed by the Lord in the Church III. The Stars are a great Ornament and shine gloriously in the Heavens III. So faithful Ministers are a great Ornament to the Church in which they shine forth gloriously in Doctrine and Conversation IV. Stars differ one from another in Glory IV. So there are Diversities of Gifts of the Spirit in the Ministers of the Gospel some shine more than others in Parts and Piety V. Stars sometimes are obscured by Clouds and shine not V. So Ministers sometimes through Temptations are beclouded and shine not as at other times VI. Stars are a Guide unto Mariners VI. So the Ministers of the Gospel are Guides to spiritual Mariners VII A Star led the wise Men to Christ VII A true Minister's design in Preaching is to lead Men to Christ VIII Stars give light to Men only in the Night VIII So Christ's Ministers shine forth and give light to Sinners and others whilst the Night of this World doth last IX The Stars send down sweet Influences on the Earth Job 38.31 Canst thou bind the sweet Influences of Pleiades or the seven Stars IX So the faithful Ministers of the Gospel in a blessed manner influence by their heavenly Doctrine and Life the Souls of Men to whom they preach and daily converse with Inferences O What a Blessing are faithful Teachers to a People or Nation where they live Is it not a lovely thing to see the Gospel-Stars Pray that the Heavens may be clear and that these Stars may not disappear nor withdraw their shining Ministers compared to Labourers Luke 10.7 The Labourer is worthy of his Meat THe Lord Christ compares his faithful Servants that preach his Word to Labourers to such as externally work and labour with their hands Labourers Parallel Labourers usually are hired and then set to work We read of one that went to hire Labourers Mat. 20. c. SO Christ spiritually is said to hire Labourers and send them into his Vineyard he assures them of a glorious Reward when they have done their Work II. Some Men labour in the Field they are Harvest-Men II. Such Labourers are the Preachers of the Gospel The Harvest is great Mat. 9.37 and the Labourers are few c. They labour to make ready and gather in Christ's Wheat III. Some labour so hard
Severity and Mildness to all studying the Nature and Disposition of every Member VIII Fathers ought to walk wisely before their Children in all Holiness and Sobriety setting themselves as Patterns to all that are in the Family of Grace and Vertue VIII So 't is the Duty of Pastors and Ministers of Churches to lead an holy and godly Life and be as Examples of true Vertue and Piety to all they converse with Be thou an Example of the Believers 1 Tim. 4.12 in Word in Conversation in Charity in Spirit in Faith in Purity IX It is a great Sorrow and Grief to a good and godly Father to see his Children froward and fall out one with another violating the Bonds of Nature IX So 't is an Heart-breaking Sorrow to a godly and faithful Minister to see the Saints and Members of the Church walk loosely and live in Strife and Vain-Glory wronging and abusing each other and thereby violate the sacred Bonds of brotherly Love Tenderness and Forbearance For many walk of whom I have told you often and now tell you even weeping that they are Enemies of the Cross of Christ Phil. 3.18 X. It is the Property of a godly Father to pray for his Children and also for the whole Family committed to his Charge X. So Christ's faithful Ministers do not cease to pray for those whom they have been instrumental to beget by the Word of Truth unto Christ nay not only for them but for all committed to their Charge nay for all the Children of God Eph. 3.17 That Christ might dwell in their Hearts by Faith and that they may be rooted and grounded in Love c. Inferences WE may infer from hence that the Office of a Minister is an honourable Employment 2. It may in many things teach Pastors their Duties to their Members and Members their respective Duties towards their Pastors 3. It also serves to inform us who are faithful wise and discreet Ministers of Christ 4. We may further learn what a great Concern it is for a Church to chuse wise and sober Persons to be their Pastors Ministers compared to Stewards Luke 12.42 Who is a faithful Steward c. 1 Cor. 4.1 Let Men so account of us as the Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the Mysteries of God Verse 2. Moreover it is required in Stewards that a Man be found faithful Liegh's Crit. Sacr. STeward Stewardship the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred in 1 Cor. 9.17 Dispensation properly signifieth the Administration of Houshold-Business whereof one taketh such and such Care and doth so dispose thereof as that he appointeth every one what they are to do Note True Gospel-Ministers are Stewards spiritual Stewards Stewards of God Metaphor Parallel A Steward is an Officer that principally belongs to great Men few besides rich and noble Persons have Stewards of their Houses SO true Gospel-Ministers or Pastors are Officers that belong to Christ's House who is a great Prince nay King of Heaven and Earth II. A Steward is a Person that hath a great Trust and Charge reposed in him many rich and excellent Things are committed to his Care and Oversight sometimes all the Goods of the House and Charge of the Family II. So faithful Ministers have a mighty Trust reposed in them the Lord Jesus hath committed to their Care and Charge Things of very great worth and value even all the Goods of his House 1. They are entrusted with the Truth and every Branch and Part of it called the Mysteries of God which is of inestimable Value 2. The whole Church they have the Care and Charge of the whole Family or Houshold of God 3. They have the Care and Charge of Mens Souls committed to them See Watchmen III. It behoveth a Steward to be faithful in all things seeking the Honour of his Lord They ought to be much in their Business not leaving it to others that are not experienced in it nor careful to look after it nor leave their Master's Business to mind and look after their own III. So ought every Minister of Christ to be faithful in all things wholly studying the Profit Honour and Interest of the Lord Jesus They ought continually to be about his Affairs not leave the Management of the Church and Concerns of the Ministry like some self-seeking Priests of our Days to others who are unexperienced negligent and worse to follow their own Concerns and living in Ease and Pleasure pursuing after the Riches and Vanities of the World mattering not whether Christ be honoured or no or whether his Interest sink or swim so that things go well with them and they thrive in the World There are too many such in this Day so that we may well say with the Apostle All seek their own and none the Things that are Jesus Christ's IV. Stewards give direction to all inferior Officers and others in the Family about their respective Work and Business IV. So Ministers give directions to the Deacons and other Members of Christ's Church how to discharge their Duties in their respective places c. V. Stewards must expect to be called to an account and if unfaithful are frequently put out of their Stewardship Luk. 16.2 Give an account of thy Stewardship for thou mayest be no longer Steward V. So all the Ministers of Christ must expect to be called to an Account The Time is coming when Christ will reckon with them and happy will they be that have their Accounts to give up with Joy to whom the Lord Jesus will say Well done good and faithful Servant c. Ministers compared to Planters 1 Cor. 3.6 I have planted and Apollo watered c. Verse 8. Now he that planteth and he that watereth are one GOD is the chief spiritual Planter Isa 5.7 60.21 61.3 Mat. 15.13 None but he can implant a Principle of Grace in the Sinner's Heart 't is his proper Work to take us out of the old Stock and Root and plant us into the new But forasmuch as these Things are asserted by the Preaching of the Word Ministers are called Planters I have planted c. 1 Cor. 3.6 They are but under or subordinate Planters and Waterers to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 him that gives the Increase viz. Jehovah Metaphor Parallel A Skilful Planter is a curious Artist one that knows the Nature of Trees Plants and Seeds He is skilled in Setting Ingrafting Innoculation or Grafting with the Scucheon as they call it c. SO an experienced and able Minister of the Gospel is a very skilful Person one that hath knowledg of great Mysteries both of Nature and Grace He knows the State of Man in the first Adam that old Stock and also the Nature of Planting or Grafting into Jesus Christ how and which way it is and must be done II. A Planter hath fit Tools or Instruments to do his Work withal viz. a Spade a Knife c. without which he can do nothing II. So Ministers of Christ
have fit Instruments to work with viz. the Gospel which is called the engrafted Word i. e an Instrument or Means by which Souls are planted or grafted into Christ by the help of the Holy-Ghost without which they can do nothing III. A Planter knows that until the Ground he is to plant be dug up and well prepared 't is not meet to be sowed or planted III. So Ministers know unless the Hearts of Sinners are dug by the powerful Convictions of the Word and Spirit of God they are not fit to receive the Seed of Grace nor to be planted in God's Vineyard IV. Planters as Naturalists observe find by experience that a wild ungrafted Tree never bears good Fruit nor can till it be removed out of its natural Soil into a good Soil and grafted with a better Kind The Root that bears this wild Fruit is a degenerate Root and that is the Cause the Fruit is so unpleasant sowre and naught IV. So Ministers also know that unregenerate Men who grow upon the natural Root of old Adam unless they are removed and planted into Jesus Christ cannot bring forth acceptable Fruit to God until removed by the Power of the Word and Spirit and transplanted into Jesus Christ by a lively Faith Mankind naturally are the Off-spring of a corrupt and degenerate Root viz. the first Adam for as is the Root and Tree such are the Branches and the Fruit thereof A corrupt Tree cannot bring good Fruit. Mat. 7.18 V. A Planter who hath Skill in Grafting knows the Stock must be cut off before the Sienes as some call them or after Pliny Sions be grafted in V. So a Minister knows that until the new Stock viz. Jesus Christ was cut off that is to say crucified no Men as spiritual Syenes can be grafted into him by a lively Faith Tho there is in this a great Disparity as applied to Ministers for Planters cut off or cleave the Stock themselves before they graft the Siene but Christ was cut off by another hand VI. A Planter knows a Twig that is to be grafted or a Bud inoculated must first be cut off with a Knife that is keen or sharp or an Instrument from the Tree on which it naturally grew And when the Grafts are cut off in order to this Work 't is a critical Season with them saith worthy Mr. Flavel if they lie too long before they are engrafted or take not with the Stock they die and are never more recovered they may stand in the Stock a while but are no part of the Tree VI. So a Minister knows before a Soul can be grafted into Christ he must be cut off of the old Stock viz. old Adam and taken off of his own Righteousness The first Work upon a Christian is cutting Work They were cut or pricked in their Hearts Acts 2.37 Heb. 4. while Peter preached to them The Word of God is sharper than a two-edged Sword As no Siene is engrafted without cutting so no Soul is united to Christ Joh. 16.8 9. without a true and cutting Sense of Sin and of its own Misery And when Souls are under a Work of Conversion 't is a critical Time with them many have miscarried then and never recovered again They have indeed for a time remained like dead Grafts in the Stock by an external lifeless Profession but never come to any thing for such dead Grafts in a little time fall off from the Stock Christ and perish But this I must needs say it is principally for want of being quite cut off or because they were never throughly cut or wounded at Heart Convictions upon their Hearts were never deep enough or not kind Convictions rather Legal than Evangelical they were not cut by a fit Instrument c. VII A Planter when Grafts are cut off and prepared to be engrafted makes all convenient speed he can to close them with the new Stock the sooner saith one that is done the better The Graft is intimately united and closely conjoined with the Stock the Conjunction is so close that they become one Tree VII So a Minister when he sees poor Sinners are fitted and every way prepared by powerful Convictions ought to make what speed he can to apply the Plaister and direct them to a Closure with Christ that is to say Act. 16.30 31. to believe on the Lord Jesus And when this is done there is an intimate Union betwixt Christ and the Souls that believe in him He that is joined to the Lord is one Spirit 'T is the nearest closest and strictest Union they are so glewed one to the other so that look as the Graft is really in the Stock and the Sap of the Stock is really in the Graft So a Believer is really tho mystically in Christ and the Spirit of Christ is communicated to a Believer He that dwelleth in Love dwelleth in God 1 Joh. 4 16 And as the Graft is bound to the Stock so steadily that the Wind cannot lose it so the believing Soul is fastened to Christ by such Bonds Flavel as will secure it from all danger of being loosed from him any more This doth the Soul's Vnion with Jesus show And where and how these heavenly Plants do grow VIII A Planter sometimes plants a whole Vineyard with the help and assistance he hath from others VIII So a painful Minister may nay and has planted a whole Church by the help and assistance of the Spirit of God yea several Churches as St. Paul and others we read of c. IX A Planter's Work like other Labourers is very hard they oft-times sweat at it spend and waste themselves they find some Ground very rocky and difficult to dig up and to manure IX So is the Minister's Work a very hard and laborious Work no Digger nor Planter works harder or takes more pains than some faithful Planters or Preachers of the Gospel they frequently sweat at their Work as we have elsewhere shewed and by their Study and great Labour waste their frail Bodies Some Sinners have rocky Hearts X. A Planter doth not only plant but also water his Plants that they may grow and thrive the better X. So godly Ministers do not only preach whereby Souls are planted by the heavenly Doctrine but also pray for Encrease whereby their Plants are watered I have planted and Apollo watered What Paul plants Apollo comes after and waters with his Doctrine that dropp'd like Dew Neither is he that planteth any thing nor he that watereth but God that giveth the Encrease XI He that plants a Vineyard with his own Labour ought to be allowed to eat of the Fruit thereof and it would be accounted a strange thing should he be denied it XI So a faithful Minister or spiritual Planter ought to eat of the Fruit of that Church or Vineyard he hath planted or doth keep prune and manure that is to say to be fed and comfortably maintained by them Who goeth a Warfare at his
House go about to hew them by the Word i. e. endeavour to convert them Ministers are Hewers and the Ax is the Word of God I have hewed them by the Prophets But they must proceed orderly i. e. not baptize Mat. 28.19 ●0 and then teach but first teach or make Disciples and then baptize them VI. A Builder can tell how many principal Pillars or Posts belong unto the House or Building and sees to fit all the Materials thereof in their proper place and will be sure to see that he wants never a principal Pillar VI. So Ministers can tell how many fundamental Principles there are of the Christian Religion I mean Principles necessary to Salvation and also the Number of the Foundations of Church-Constitution and Fellowship and will see that every thing they do be done orderly every thing fitted according to the Directions of God's Word and that they want not any one of the Foundation-Principles of the Christian Religion 'T is dangerous you know if a House be to be built upon six main Pillars if it want one Read Heb. 6.1 2. VII A Builder has his Rule by which he doth all his Work He does not work by Guess nor by the Sight of his own Eye only but by a certain and unerring Rule VII So a wise Minister hath his Rule viz. the Word of God he doth not do what he thinks is right in his own Eyes until he hath tried it by the Rule nor will he follow the Humor and Fancy of others who may say this is right and that is right but according as he finds Things to agree or disagree with the holy Scriptures and Spirit of God that unerring Rule by which he receives or rejects takes or leaves He with Moses will do all things according to the Pattern shewed in the Mount As many as walk according to this Rule Peace be on them and Mercy Gal. 6. and upon the whole Israel of God The Word of God should be our Guide in all Things VIII A wise Builder takes care that all the Building be fitly framed together and well fastened to the Foundation VIII So a wise Minister or spiritual Builder endeavours to see that all the Saints be united fitly framed or joined together in Love and well fastened by Faith and Love to Jesus Christ See what the Apostle saith Eph. 2. Eph. 2.20 21 22. And are built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief Corner-Stone in whom all the Building being fitly framed together groweth to an holy Temple in the Lord in whom ye are builded together for an Habitation of God through the Spirit IX A Builder takes great care to give directions about the Door or Way into the House he is building and makes it plain that all People who have a mind or ought to enter in may readily find the way and not stumble at the Threshold IX So a wise and faithful Minister takes special care to give directions about the Door into God's House that all whom Christ would have enter in may not be at a loss about it nor stumble as it were at the Threshold 'T is absolutely necessary that they are acquainted with and able to shew to others what are those initiating Ordinances into the House or Church of God And sad it is to see so many worthy Ministers among us at so great a Loss in this respect as is demonstrated in a small Treatise written by Mr. W. R. entitled A sober Discourse of Right to Church-Communion It hath always been asserted by Christians of all Persuasions till of late that Baptism in Water that holy Sacrament Christ ordained and left in his Church is absolutely necessary to Church-Fellowship and Communion though touching the Subject and Manner of the Administration of that Ordinance there hath been much Controversy but sure I am the Word of God is very full and plain in this Case 1. The Lord Jesus hath positively enjoined Repentance Faith and Baptism to be taught as the first Principles of his sacred Doctrine and as Fundamentals of Church-Communion and Fellowship See Mat. 28.19 20. Heb. 6.1 2. 2. This also was the Door the holy Apostles those wise Master-Builders directed Persons to and opened for entrance in the Primitive Time Repent and be baptized every one of you c. Then they that gladly received the Word were baptized and the same Day there was added unto them about three thousand Souls Acts 2.40 41. Compare this with Acts 8.48 16.33 Gal. 3.27 And hence 't is said By one Spirit are we all baptized into one Body or to be of one Body Moreover as it is in the above-cited Treatise proved upon an Examination of the Records of the next Age after the Apostles 't is evident the same Order was retained and kept up as appears by Justin Martyr in his Apology to Antoninus Pius the Roman Emperor This Food said he we call the Eucharist to which no Man is admitted but only he that believeth in the Truth of the Doctrine being washed in the Laver of Regeneration so he called Baptism for the Remission of Sins and that so liveth as Christ hath taught Tertullian and Cyprian positively affirm the same and divers others of the ancient Fathers as Basil Nazianzen Optatus Athanatus Epiphanius Hilarius Ambrose Jerome Sozomen Athanasius Augustin c. as is largely shewed by the Divines of Magdeburg in their History of the Church printed at Basil 1624. Also all our modern Divines fully agree with the Ancients in this great Point viz. That Baptism is absolutely an initiating Ordinance and that no unbaptized Person ought to be admitted into the Church nor to the Lord's Supper tho 't is confess'd that some do not say that Baptism alone is the Door into the Church but Baptism and Imposition of Hands There are two Doors to be passed through as saith a learned Writer ' before we can come aditus intima Ecclesiae penetralia viz. Baptism and Laying on of Hands whereof the latter properly and immediately gives admittance Mr. Hanmors cites some ancient Christians speaking thus Confirmatio sive manuum impositio protinus dat jus communicandi in Sacramento corporis ac sanguinis Christi That is Confirmation or Imposition of Hands forthwith giveth full Authority and Right of Communion in the Body and Blood of Christ And in another place saith the same Person He that was not confirmed was not admitted to the Eucharist X. A Master-Builder goes on with his Work when the Foundation is laid the Scaffolds are not taken down till the Building be finished but rather raised higher and higher as the Fabrick goes up he resolves every Day 's Work shall add some further Beauty to it in order to the final perfecting of it X. So a true faithful Minister when he sees the Work of God's House going on every one labouring diligently every day to be more and more holy and pressing on towards Perfection Not laying again
Gentleness Goodness Meekness Temperance Pardon of Sin Communion with God Joy in the Holy-Ghost c. Now he ought to know all these Things the true from the counterfeit And next unto the Graces of the Spirit and the other excellent and rare Things he deals in there are the Ordinances of the Gospel the Nature and Usefulness of which he ought also to understand and not to be deceived about them lest he take the Traditions of Men for Christ's Institutions IV. A Man who sets up a Trade ought also to know who he is to deal or trade with So ought every Christian and that is God through the Mediator Jesus Christ for without him there is no trading to Heaven 'T is by him we believe in God by him we come to the Father Christ is a Saint's only Correspondent he receives all our Prayers and Duties and makes Returns of Mercies V. A Man who begins a Trade ought to be well instructed and to know every particular Art and Mystery in it Some Trades or Professions are hard to learn they are full of Mystery and very intricate and if they understand them not or are not Crafts-masters therein they will never live comfortably of them as Experience commonly sheweth So every Christian ought to learn the Mystery of Godliness this heavenly Calling is not easily learned there is no Trade that is more mysterious than the Trade or Art of Godliness as we shall fully evince and make appear 1. By plain Texts of Scripture 2. By Arguments and Demonstrations drawn there-from As to the First see these Scriptures 1 Cor. 2.7 But we speak the Wisdom of God in a Mystery even the hidden Wisdom c. Compared with Rom. 16.25 Eph. 1.9 3.3 4. Col. 1.26 1 Tim. 3.16 Without Controversy great is the Mystery of Godliness God manifest in the Flesh c. Godliness is twofold 1. The Doctrinal Part. 2. The Practical Part. A Mystery is a Thing hidden hard to find out that which few understand Godliness a Mystery which lies not open to the Sight and Apprehension of Men. Many Arts used amongst Men are full of Mystery If a Man go into a Chymist's Shop possibly he may see there several Extractions of Minerals but he may not know how he extracted those Spirits nor doth he understand the Nature and Operation of them that is a Mystery There are divers other curious Arts and Devices very hard to learn they are so mysterious but all come short of these heavenly Mysteries The Mysteries of Godliness are exceeding great 1. These Things are hidden Things from the Eyes of Men. See Mat. 11.25 The Gospel is read daily every Man hath the History of it in his House but alas very few understand it 't is a Mystery 't is not known but by such only who feel its Power and blessed Effects and Operations of it upon their Hearts 2. The Gospel and great Things of Christianity and Godliness are the rare Contrivance of God's eternal Wisdom 1 Cor. 8.1 and therefore full of Mystery If any Man thinks he knows any thing he knoweth nothing as he ought to know These things are not easily found out 3. The History of the Gospel and Principles of Christianity and Godliness could not be known without Revelation had not God afforded us the written Word what should we John 20.31 Rom. 16.25 26. or could we have known of these Mysteries What do the Heathen know of them that have not the Holy Scripture Doth the Light within discover the Incarnation Birth Life Death Resurrection Ascension and Intercession of Jesus Christ Doth that teach the Mystery of Faith and Regeneration 'T is true some have affirmed that they should have known all Things the Gospel reveals if they had never had the written Word But how false that is appears to all and they themselves have been silenced by putting one Question to them John 20 30. which is this 'T is said in John 20. Many other Signs did Jesus in the presence of his Disciples which are not written c. Now let them shew us what those other Signs were But alas they can tell us nothing but what the Scripture relates neither had we or they known them but by the Record thereof That which we have the History of and yet cannot understand or make our own unless the Spirit of God opens and explains it to us is a great Mystery But we cannot understand the Mystery of Religion and Godliness without the Spirit 's Teaching and Explanation Ergo c. As the History must be revealed by the written Word so the Mystery must be revealed by the Spirit For what Man knoweth the Things of a Man save the Spirit of a Man 1 Cor. 2.11 which is in him even so the Things of God knoweth no Man but the Spirit of God 4. That which needs or requires several Gradations and Mediums to open and explain it from time to time is a great Mystery But the Gospel or Mystery of Godliness requires such several Gradations and Mediums to open it unto the Children of Men. 1. God under the Law revealed these Things by divers Sacrifices Washings and other Rites whilst Persons remained in their Non-age 2. It requires the Use of divers earthly Similitudes to open and explain it to the Understanding of Men. God is compared to a Father to an Husband-man to a Judg to a Creditor to a Portion to an Housholder c. Christ to a Lamb to Light to an Husband to a Vine to a Shepherd c. The Spirit is compared to the Wind to Oil to Water and Grace to Seed to Gold tried in the Fire c. The Mysteries of Religion and Godliness are so hard to understand in their own Nature that God condescends to open them to us by earthly Things In this God shews what Children we are and how difficult 't is for us to understand these Things And tho they are thus explained yet how little is it that we are able to understand of them Now that which the Children of Men are not able fully to take in or comprehend tho God makes use of the best Mediums he in his Wisdom sees good to make use of is a great Mystery But the Children of Men are able to take in but little of the Mysteries of the Gospel notwithstanding these gracious Mediums God is pleased to make use of Ergo c. 5. That which the Children of Men are not able to take in or receive the knowledg of at once but when God fees necessary to discover by degrees by little and little notwithstanding all those proper and fit Mediums he condescends to make use of is a great Mystery But the Mysteries of the Gospel and Godliness God sees the Children of Men notwithstanding all those Mediums he is pleased to make use of cannot take in or receive at once but that there is need for him to open and discover them by degrees by little and little Ergo 't is
long they are but for a season a Thaw will come So the afflicted State of a godly Man tho it be unpleasant yet 't is not lasting to be sure not everlasting Tho some Frosts hold longer than others yet none hold always Summer will come And usually where Winter is fiercest Summer for a Recompence is pleasantest Our Modern Geographer having described the Sharpness of Winter in Muscovia Heylin 's Geography concludes thus Such is their Winter c. Neither is their Summer less miraculous for the huge Seas of Ice which in a manner covered the whole Surface of the Country are at first approach of the Sun suddenly dissolved the Waters dried up and the Earth dressed in her Holy-day Apparel such a mature Growth of Fruits such flourishing of Herbs such chirping of Birds as if it were a perpetual Spring Even thus after a cold Winter of Affliction shall the Church or a particular Soul be relieved by a sweet and comfortable Summer of Prosperity Inferences THis may help the Godly to bear up under Afflictions and Sufferings in this World What tho they be pinching and troublesom whilst they last yet they have a very good Effect Like as Frost mellows the Earth and after it the Clods crumble easily whereas if there was no Winter no Frost they would be more stiff and not fit for the Husbandman So thy Heart is hereby made mellow and more meet and fit to receive the good Seed Frost dries up the ill Humors of the Earth so do Afflictions those of the Soul c. The Winter-Frosts kill the Weeds and Worms which eat the Roots and hinder the Growth of Herbs and Corn So Afflictions tend to kill our Lusts those Weeds and Worms that breed and grow in our Hearts always hindering our Fruitfulness in Grace and true Godliness II. You know Fire does well in Winter to warm the Blood c. So the Fire of the Spirit will warm and heat thy Soul in and under Afflictions and Temptations get therefore near it and labour to experience its powerful Operations See The Word and Spirit compared to Fire in the First Volume III. It may reprove such who are discontented under Afflictions they would not be in such and such a troubled Condition c. Alas Soul will a wise Man be angry and offended with the Winter Wouldest thou have all Summer and no Winter all Peace and Prosperity and no Adversity Consider how necessary Winter is Affliction compared to Darkness Isa 8.22 Behold Trouble and Darkness c. Lam. 3.2 And brought me into Darkness c. Joel 2.2 A Day of Darkness c. DArkness is taken properly or metaphorically 1. Properly Darkness is nothing else but a Privation of Light Caryl 't is no positive Creature it hath no Cause in Nature but is the Consequent of the Sun's Absence 2. Metaphorically or improperly it signifies divers Things 1. The State of Nature or Unregeneracy or deep Alienation from the Life of God Ye that were sometimes Darkness c. 2. Several Sins wherein wicked Men live 3. Desertion 4. The Grave Eph. 5.8 Eph. 5.11 5. Hell 6. Afflictions Note Afflictions Calamities and spiritual Desertions may be compared to Darkness Parallels DArkness is a Judgment thick Darkness was one of the Plagues of Egypt So some Calamities and severe Afflictions are brought upon a People or Nation as a just and dreadful Judgment of God II. Natural Darkness is occasioned by the Absence of the Sun and Obscurity of the other Luminaries of Heaven So some Afflictions and Calamities are occasioned by the absence of the Light of God's Word and hiding of his Face When the Gospel is taken away from a People that People are presently involved in thick Darkness which is a most sore and fearful Judgment III. Darkness is very uncomfortable 't is a dolesom thing to have no Light So to be under some Afflictions especially Desertion is the most uncomfortable State in the World IV. Darkness causeth a Man to lose his Way and wander about and exposeth him to many Dangers So spiritual Darkness causes a Man to stumble Walk whilst you have the Light lest Darkness come upon you for he that walketh in Darkness John 12.35 knoweth not whither he goeth Give Glory to the Lord your God Jer. 13.16 before he cause your Feet to stumble upon the dark Mountains and whilst you look for Light he turn it into the Shadow of Death V. There are Degrees of Darkness Darkness and thick Darkness and the Blackness of Darkness c. One degree of Darkness may attend the Day a Day may be dark but not like the Darkness of the Night and some Nights are darker than others as Experience shews And hence we read of Darkness and of the Shadow of Death Psal 23.4 Tho I walk through the Valley of the Shadow of Death I will fear no Evil c. That is the greatest Darkness and Evil that can befall a godly Man The Shadow of a Thing in Scripture saith Mr. Caryl denotes the Power of a Thing and to be under the Shadow of a Thing is to be under the Power of it To be under the Shadow of the Almighty is to be under the Power of the Almighty c. To be under the shadow of Death is to be under the power and reach of it Tho I may be so near Death that it may seem to others to be really Death and that it is impossible to escape Death yet I will fear no Evil. Some Afflictions threaten Death upon God's People and upon his Concerns and Interest in the World and Christians may seem to be under the Influence of Death The Influences of Death are those Fears and Doubtings Divisions Distractions and Vexations of Heart and Mind Cries and Confusions which usually accompany or prepare the Way for Death Job 3.5 Let Darkness and the Shadow of Death stain it c. That is such Darkness as dwells with Death such Darkness as fills the House of Death the Grave Such Darkness as this Heman complained of I am accounted with them that go down into the Pit c free among the Dead Psal 88.4 5 6 7. like the slain in the Grave wh●m thou remembrest no more and they are cut off by thy Hand Thou hast layed me in the lowest Pit in Darkness in the Deep Thy Wrath lieth hard upon me and thou hast afflicted me with all thy Waves Selah He seemed to be under the greatest Darkness so sorely deserted that he saw no Light he sate in the very Shadow of Death Caryl viz deadly Darkness thick Darkness stifling Darkness such as is in deep Pits and Mines under the Earth where Vapors and noisom Damps do many times strike Men with Death in the most deplorable State and Condition imaginable 'T is one thing to have some Afflictions and some Doubtings of Mind and Spirit and another thing to be in these great Deeps of Affliction and Desertion VI. No natural
under sore and bitter Afflictions Answ 1. Consider that all your Afflictions tho never so bitter are less than your Sins deserve He hath not dealt with us after our Sins nor rewarded us according to our Iniquities 2. Consider that tho God chastize a godly Man very sorely yet it is not in a way of Wrath to destroy him but contrariwise for his great Good and Advantage 3. Consider there is not one Dram of Gall in the bitterest Cup thou dost partake of but what God the most wise Physician put into it and if less Gall would do thy Potion should not be so bitter All our Afflictions are proportioned to us by the Almighty both for kind and quantity 4. Consider thy Afflictions are not so bitter as the Afflictions of many of God's Children were of whom we read who were far more worthy and deserving than thee or I are What are thy Afflictions compared with holy Job's 5. Consider the bitter Potion Jesus Christ drunk up for thy sake He never offended and yet suffered and his Sufferings were intolerable no Mortal is able to express the Nature of his Grief and Sorrow Shall Christ suffer willingly for us who sinned not and shall we be troubled at the bitterness of our Sufferings who are so grievously defiled with Iniquity and many times suffer for our Sins 6. Consider that all the Bitter a godly Man meets with or ever shall will be in this World As wicked Men have all their Sweet here and shall have nothing but bitter hereafter So godly Men have all their Bitter here and shall have nothing but Sweet hereafter 7. Consider how gracious God is to his own Children in intermixing all their Bitter with Sweet 'T is not like the Bitter some wicked Men have in this World Isa 27.7 Hath he smitten him as he smote those that smote him Or is he slain according to the Slaughter of them that are slain by him 8. Consider all the Bitter thou meetest with in this Life will be turned into Sweet John 16.20 Ye shall be sorrowful but your Sorrow shall be turned into Joy Afflictious God's Arrows Job 6.4 For the Arrows of the Almighty are within me c. Lam. 3.13 He hath caused the Arrows of his Quiver to enter into my Reins AN Arrow is a deadly Engine so called in the Hebrew from its Effect Cutting or Wounding Taken properly it is an Instrument out of a Bow of Wood or Iron either for Sport or Fight but figuratively it signifies divers Things in the holy Scripture 1. The Word of God Thine Arrows are sharp in the Heart of the King's Enemies Psal 45.5 whereby the People fall under thee that is thy Words are sharp and piercing 2. Bitter and reproachful Words They bend their Bows to shoot their Arrows Psal 64.32 Psal 120.4 even bitter Words 3. Any evil or mischievous Purpose which a Man intends or aims to hurt his Brother When he bendeth his Bow to shoot his Arrows let them be as cut in pieces Psal 58.7 Zech. 9.15 4. Any kind of Affliction or Punishment And the Lord shall be seen over them and his Arrows shall go forth as Lightning c. Parallels ARrows are shot out of a Bow by some Man some Arm must bend the Bow and shoot the Arrow or the Arrow moves not So all Afflictions come from God who is the efficient Cause of them hence called the Arrows of the Almighty II. Arrows flie swift and wound suddenly So Afflictions come very speedily oftentimes with a glance as an Arrow quick as a Thought III. Arrows come unexpectedly oftentimes and wound a Man So Afflictions come many times upon a Person or People unexpectedly When they cry Peace and Safety then sudden Destruction comes upon them IV. An Archer hath commonly many Arrows his Quiver is full of them So God hath many Judgments we read of his Quiver too He can send one Arrow after another Psal 91.5 1. He hath the Pestilence this is one of his Arrows Thou shalt not be afraid for the Terror by Night nor for the Arrow that flieth by Day nor for the Pestilence that walketh in Darkness c. Ezek. 5.16 2. He hath Famine this is another of his Arrows When I shall send upon them the Arrow of Famine c. 3. He hath the Sword This is another Arrow of the Almighty and this Arrow God shot at Job Job 1.15 He brought upon him the Sabeans who slew his Servants with the Edg of the Sword 4. He hath Thunder-Bolts and Hail-stones which are also some of the Arrows of his Quiver and these are in readiness against the Day of Battel 5. The withdrawings of God from a Soul or People are also part of the Arrows of his Quiver psal 38.1 2. and these go deepest of all they go to the very Heart For thine Arrows stick fast in me saith David V. Arrows flie secretly and make no Noise they are felt before they are seen So many Afflictions flie silently upon a Man stealing upon him and wounding him unobserved and unseen VI. Arrows are sharp Things and made sometimes more sharp than ordinary as the Archer sees cause So Afflictions are very sharp and bitter Things and sometimes God makes them sharper than at another time I will make mine Arrows drunk with Blood Arrrows are Instruments drawing Blood Deut. 32.42 and some Rebukes and Judgments of God are like unto them The Arrows of the Almighty are within me Job 6.4 the Poyson whereof drinketh up my Spirit Job seems to allude to the Custom of those cruel Men Caryl who when they pursued the Enemies with deadly Hatred and would wound them incurably used to dip the Heads of their Arrows the Top of their Spears and the Point of their Swords c. in Poyson that so every Wound might be Death The Poyson of such Arrows c. drinks up the Spirit and corrupts the Blood Job compares the Arrows God shot at him not to ordinary Arrows which kill only by piercing but to poysoned Arrows which kill by infecting Afflictions like Arrows put a Man to great Pain When a Man hath Terror without and Terror within Terror coming from the Wrath of Man and Terror coming from the Wrath of God his Potion is bitter Such Arrows are sharp and tormenting THE Twelfth HEAD OF METAPHORS SIMILES AND Other Borrowed TERMS CONCERNING The VVorld the Life of Man AND THE Four Last Things The World compared to a Wilderness Cant. 3.6 8.5 Who is this that cometh out of the Wilderness leaning upon her Beloved c. WIlderness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tohu A Wilderness is properly a wild Place a Place without shape or order Moses hath this Word Gen. 1.1 to express the Chaos The Earth was without form and void 1. Metaphorically 't is taken sometimes for Affliction Hos 2.14 Rev. 12. 2. For this World and so understood generally by Expositors in this and other places i. e. for the
in the Body but he could not tell whether the Soul acted with his bodily Organs or without them He had mighty Operations in his Soul his Spirit wrought strangely and then took in such Revelations of God and from God as his bodily Organs could never fashion into Words or represent by Speech He heard quae fando explicari à quoquam homine non possunt unspeakable Words Beza which it is not lawful or possible for a Man to utter The Soul hath an Ear to hear such Words that the Body cannot find a Tongue to express So John in his divine Ravishment saith I was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day as for his Body that was as to that Business laid aside and suspended as useless in that Day and his Spirit called up to that angelical Work viz. the receiving of Visions and Revelations from on high c. Now as the Souls of good Men whilest they are in this World in Sleep and in Trances or Ecstasies are capable of such glorious Ravishments c. So when their Bodies dy or fall asleep their Souls are with Christ in Heaven and the Souls of the Wicked they go into Chains of Darkness Torment Luk. 16.22 2● and Misery The rich Man died and was buried and in Hell he lift up his Eyes being in Torment III. Sleep is not perpetual we sleep and wake again So tho the Body lie in the Grave yet Death is but a Sleep as it were the Man will awake and rise again IV. The going to sleep and sleeping of some Men greatly differs from others So the Death of the Saints greatly differs from the Death of the Wicked 1. In the Preparation the one makes to go to rest over what the other doth Some go to sleep before their Work is done So some die before their Work is done As no Saint dies before his Work is done So there is no wicked Person that dies but he dies or goes to sleep before his Work is done This is our Working-day when the Sun of our Life is set no more Work can be done The Time comes saith Christ when no Man can work All a Godly Man's Care is to be ready when Night comes to go to rest But the Wicked take little Thought about it 2. Some Men fall asleep in an hurry of Business and in great Distraction when others in a sweet Manner lay their Heads down upon their Pillows So some wicked Men die in great Distraction and under sad Horrour of Conscience when many a Godly Man dies in a sweet and heavenly Manner declaring to all he hath nothing to do but to die 3. Some Men dread the Thoughts of going to sleep for that it is dangerous in some Cases for some Persons to sleep So some wicked Men dread the Thoughts of Death like him who cryed out I am so sick I cannot live and so sinful that I am afraid to die But most Godly Men are delivered from the Fear of Death they go willingly to Bed Luk. 2.29 Now lettest thou thy Servant depart in Peace c. Saints are many times willing to go to rest because they are quite wearied out 1. Sin wearies them and even wares them out and makes them groan 2. The World wearies them and makes them willing to go to Bed Eccl. 5.12 3. The Devil the God of this World wearies them with his Temptations 4. Their bodily Weaknesses and disquieting Pains wearie them 5. The Absence of Christ also makes them willing to go home 4. Some Men fall asleep in a dangerous Place nay and sometimes in the midst of their Enemies So wicked Men die in a dangerous Place being far from God and out of the Covenant of Grace and besides are surrounded about with evil Angels who stand ready to devour their Souls But a godly Man falls asleep in Jesus O that 's a sweet Place to sleep in 1. He sleeps in the view of Jesus Christ knows his Grave and will preserve his Dust 2. He falls asleep in the Love of Jesus 3. He falls asleep in the Covenant of Jesus I am the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob. 5. Some Mens Sleep is much more sweet and comfortable than others as we shewed before some Mens Sleep is very troublesom their Spirits are troubled So the Death of the Godly is sweet they have Peace and heavenly Joy being with Christ but the Death of the Wicked is troublesom their Spirits being in Torment whilst the Body lies in the Grave I might also shew you the great Difference there shall be in the awaking of the one and the other but that I will leave to its proper place V. A Man that is asleep taking his natural Rest may be easily awakened and called up by the Power of Man So the Body when it is dead can with infinitely more ease be raised up by the Power of God 't is but a Call from Heaven and we are awakened out of the Dust The Day is coming when all that are in the Grave shall hear his Voice and come forth c. John 5.28 Inferences WHat a blessed Condition are Believers in They are not only happy whilst they live but shall be blessed when they die their Bodies have not only quiet Rest but their Souls also rest in Peace and Quiet 2. It may stir up all Christless Souls to labour after an Interest in the Lord Jesus for if they are not in Christ whilst they live they are not like to fall asleep in Christ when they die 3. We may learn also from hence what little ground there is for a godly Man to be unwilling to die when his Work is done Are any unwilling to go to sleep at Night that have laboured hard all Day 4. Let us labour hard whilst the Day lasts whilst we have Health and Life that we may have done our Work and be ready to go to sleep Death a Departure Phil. 1.23 Having a desire to depart c. WE at Death leave one Place to go to another If godly we depart from our Place here on Earth and go to Heaven we depart from our Friends on Earth and go to our Friends in Heaven we depart from the Valley of Tears and go to the Mount of Joy we depart from an howling Wilderness to go to an heavenly Paradise Who would be unwilling to exchange a Sodom for a Sion an Egypt for a Canaan Misery for Glory Death a Rest Rev. 14.13 And I heard a Voice from Heaven saying unto me Write Blessed are the Dead which die in the Lord from henceforth Yea saith the Spirit that they may rest from their Labours and their Works do follow them Parallels REst is a desirable Thing to a labouring Man Paul desired to die Death or to depart was greatly desirable in his Sight II. Rest is sweet and therefore desirable to a weary Man So will Death be to a poor weary Saint one that is weary of Sin weary of the World weary of the Temptations
Ainsworth gives it from the Hebrew Word a Propitiation covering this saith the Apostle applyeth to Christ called God's Propitiation 1 Joh. 2.2 't is in Christ Mercy is truly seated and 't is he that hath made a Propitiation for our Sins II. It was the Cover of the Ark where the two Tables lay So Christ is the true Cover Rom. 3. and Deliverer from the Curse and Accusation of the Law III. It was of pure Gold noting the spotless Holiness of Christ IV. Upon the Mercy-Seat were two Cherubims these Cherubims signifyed the holy Angels they stretched their Wings on high covering or shadowing so the Mercy-Seat This Word is used for Protection or Defence from Evil saith learned Ainsworth And doubtless it might signify the usefulness of Angels in Christ's Spiritual Kingdom they looked down upon the Mercy-Seat signifying the Mystery of Christ's Incarnation or God manifested in the Flesh which things the Angels desired to look into hence the Apostle saith in another place 1 Pet. 1. He was seen of Angels seen with Delight and Admiration Some by the Mercy-Seat and Cherubims understand the Holy Trinity in Unity viz. By the Mercy-Seat being a Figure of ●hrist and the two Cherubims the Father and the Holy Ghost and by the two Cherubims at the end of the Mercy-Seat they understand Christ's standing between God and and the Rigour of his Justice God looking on the Law through Christ as fulfilled by him for us and from hence communing with us But that the Father should be represented to us in the Figure of one of the Cherubims I see no ground for it forasmuch as we read of no Similitude of the Father save the Person of Christ only So Deut. 4.15 The Table of Shew-Bread a Type of Christ IT was covered over with Gold and a Crown about it noting saith Guild the Purity of Christ's Humanity with the Glory of his Deity and Majesty of his Kingdom II. It had Food called Shew-Bread set upon it which none were to eat of but the Priest only signifying that Spiritual Nourishment which is in Christ the Bread of Life which none receive or partake of but Believers only or the Royal Priesthood of the Faithful III. The Bread was always to be upon the Table signifying in Christ there is Food continually for our Souls IV. There was much Bread twelve Cakes or square Loaves c. signifying in Christ there is Food and Nourishment enough for all who see a necessity of him or it doth shew how plentifully God feeds his Elect his poor shall not want Bread his Table is always spread always richly and abundantly furnished The Candlestick a Type of Christ and of his Mystical Body IT was the only thing that held the Light which enlightned the Sanctuary So from C rist all the Light of Grace and ●piritual Gifts come for the use and benefit of his Church II. It had seven Lamps to signify that perfection of Light that is in Christ III. It was placed in the Sanctuary So is Christ as a glorious Light placed in his Church or Spiritual Sanctuary Out of Zion the Perfection of Beauty God hath shined Some by the Lamps understand the Ministers of the G●spel were signified IV. It had an upright Stem which bore the many Branches that issued or proceeded from the same typifying Christ Jesus that true and blessed Stalk and Fountain of Light from whom all Light floweth and who bears up and keeps constant in the Truth all the Branches and true Light-Bearers of his Word Rev. 1.20 V. The Branches were adorned with Bowls Knobs and Flowers c. So are the Ministers of his Gospel or true Spiritual Light-Bearers with many rare and most excellent Graces and Gifts of the Holy Spirit VI. Aaron dressed those Lamps and renewed their Oyl daily So our High Priest Jesus Christ is the only Enlightner and Fitter of his faithful Ministers That they may shine more clearly and be the greater Ornament to his Church 't is he that supplies them continually with his Spirit and the saving Graces thereof VII The Candlestick had Snuffers and Snuff Dishes of pure Gold which might figure forth the Good and Godly Discipline of the C●urch whereby those evil Persons who hinder the Peace and Glory of it are taken away by Excommunication The Altar of Perfume Exod. 30.1 to 13. a Type of Christ THe Altar was made of Shittim Greek incorruptible Wood or Wood that never rots overlaid with Gold and having a Crown about it as had the Ark this Altar signified Christ in both his Natures his Deity yeilding Glory to his Humanity and now crown'd with Glory and Majesty at God's right Hand where he abides for ever incorruptible c. II. The Altar had Horns on the four Corners thereof overlaid with Gold which were not only for Ornament Ezek. 43.16 Heb. 3.4 but to keep things from falling off the Altar for the Horns were upward And Horns usually signify Power and Might these four Horns saith the learned Ainsworth signified the Power and Glory of Christ's Priesthood for the Salvation of his Church gathered from the four Corners of the Earth III. The Incense was only to be offered upon this Altar to shew that all our Prayers and Services must be performed in Christ's Name Re● 8.3 4 5. or offered up upon the Golden Altar of his Mediation IV. The Incense was to be first beaten made fit and well prepared before it was to be put on the Altar Psal 41.2 Psal 51. noting how our Prayers which are compared to Incense ought to proceed from a humble contrite and broken Spirit which we offer up in the Name of Jesus Christ V. The Incense was kindled by Fire upon the Altar So must our Prayers be holy and fervent we must pray with much Zeal or be set on Fire by the Spirit and powerful Heat and Operation thereof if we would have them accepted upon the Golden Altar c. Rev. 8.3 4 5. VI. The Incense was offered up by the Priest So are the Prayers of all the Saints made acceptable to the Father through the Oblation and Intercession of our High Priest VII No strange Incense was to be offered upon this Altar This figured the Prayers of the Saints must be according to the Will of God Mat. 21.22 1 Joh. 5.14 Rom. 8.26 by his Spirit and in Faith not in a vain or formal manner after the Tradition of Man we must not intermix them with any Superstitious and Idolatrous Devices or Human Inventions we must offer up no strange Prayer no Prayer to Saints nor Angels 8. The Perfume was to be perpetually before the Lord which signified not only the continual exercise of Prayer which daily we should use Heb. 7.25 but also the perpetual Intercession of our Saviour in the Heavens for us 9. The High Priest only made this Perfume and it might not be applyed to any other use than to burn before the Lord teaching us that Christ
only gives Direction how we should pray and that we should in Prayer only design the Glory of God 10. After the clearing of the Lamps of the Candlestick Evening and Morning then the Incense was burnt shewing that all our Prayers and Duties must be according to the Directions of God's Word and Spirit 11. The Incense was made of divers Spices Psal 51. So must the Prayers of the Godly be seasoned with divers Graces viz. true Repentance lively Faith and unfeigned Love 12. The Incense was offered up in the Holy Place without the Veil of the Holiest near to the Testimony before the Mercy-Seat So we must always have an Eye to Christ in our Prayers who is the true Mercy-Seat we must come to God by him c. 13. Once a Year the Altar was sprinkled with the Blood of the Expiatory Sacrifice signifying how Christ is by shedding of his Blood consecrated our blessed Mediator and that no Prayer is acceptable to God but through Faith in the Blood of Christ The Altar of Burnt-Offering Exod. 27.1 to 9. a Type of Christ Parallels ALtar in Hebrew Mizbeach in Greek Thusiasterion Ainsworth so named of Sacrifices offered thereon it was anointed dedicated sanctfied to be most holy that it might sanctify the Gifts offered thereon This Altar and Sacrifice signified Jesus Christ sanctifying himself for his Church and People that so he might sanctify them II. This Altar was but one and in one place and the Sacrifice only to be offered upon it signifying thereby that we have but one Altar of Redemption and Salvation viz. Jesus Christ alone who only once and in one place offered up a sufficient and unreiterable Sacrifice for the Sins of Mankind III. This Altar had four Horns also See Altar of Incense IV. It had a brazen Grate in the midst of it which let the Ashes and like things fall through c. whereon the Fire was put which might signify two things 1. The Humanity of our Saviour who bore the Fire of God's Wrath for our Sins thus Guild 2. Isa 53.12 It signifieth saith Ainsworth the place wherein the Holy Fire always burneth that is the Heart which sustaineth also the Sacrifice 2 Tim. 1.3 Rom. 1.1 2. Heb. 7.14 and where all Ashes and Excrements of Corruption are inwardly conveyed away as they are discovered by the Word and Spirit of God as also our Sanctification by Affliction V. In that the Altar was to be made of Shittim Wood and overlaid with Brass that it might endure the Fire it might figure out the Human Nature of Christ supported or sustained by the Diety to endure God's Wrath for our Sins VI. They that served at the Altar lived of the Altar So they who preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel Disparity THE Altar was one thing and the Sacrifice another But Christ is both the Altar Sacrifice and Sacrificer too he offered up his Body by the Eternal Spirit as a Sacrifice acceptable to God the Father The Brazen Laver Exod. 30.18 to 25. what it was a Type of THE Brazen Laver served for the Priest-hood to wash their Hands and Feet in before they ministred before the Lord typifying that inward washing by Christ's Blood wherewith all the Holy Priesthood of Christ must be sanctified in Heart and Life before their Services can be accepted in the sight of God and that none ought to minister the Word of Life but Godly Persons who are washed in the Laver of Regeneration Psal 50. Vnto the wicked God saith what hast thou to do to take my Words into thy Mouth c. II. After the Priests had washed themselves clean and arrayed themselves they entred into the holy Place So after the Godly are inwardly washed by the Blood of Christ and have received by Faith his Righteousness to adorn them they become fit Members of the true Gospel-Church III. They shall wash themselves saith the Lord lest they die to shew that all Persons must be purged by Faith in Christ's Blood Mark 16.16 or die eternally IV. He that toucheth or washeth in the Laver it being anointed with the holy Oil as all other Things in the holy and most holy Place were shall be holy saith the Lord signifying that all they who by Faith touch the Lord Jesus who is anointed with the Oil of Gladness above his Fellows shall be spiritually sanctified accepted and accounted holy before the Lord likewise The Sacrifice of Beasts a Type of Christ THe Beasts that were appointed for Sacrifice were to have Horns signifying the Kingly and Priestly Office of Christ Horns as we have elsewhere shewn being a Symbol of Power c. II. They were to be of a tame sort not wild and savage Beasts who by force are brought to the Slaughter signifying the Meekness and Mildness of Jesus Christ who was patient like a Lamb led to the Slaughter Isa 53. III. They must be of the Male Sort which generally are the strongest signifying the Excellency and Strength of Jesus Christ IV. They ought to be without blemish and the best of the Flock or Herd and presented of voluntary Will noting two Things 1. That Christ should be perfectly holy and that he should willingly lay down his Life 2 That we should dedicate to God the best of our Days Time and Strength and not offer unto the Lord a corrupt Thing and also perform all our Services to him with a free and willing Mind V. They were to be presented at the Door of the Tabernacle to be slain signifying that Christ s Blood makes our entry into the Church of God here and into Heaven it self hereafter VI. They must lay their hands upon the Head of the Beast who brought him noting thereby our Sins being laid upon Jesus Christ and that we must lay the hand of Faith upon him if we would have Benefit by his Death VII Then the Burnt-Offering was slain signifying that so it behoved Christ the great Anti-type to be slain or crucified for our Sins Mark 16.15 M●t. 28.18 19. VIII The Blood thereof then was sprinkled about the Altar noting the All-sufficiency of Christ's Death and Plenty of his Bloodshed with the large spreading or preaching thereof universally throughout the whole World IX The Skin thereof was plucked off and the Flesh cut in pieces thereby shewing the Grievousness of Christ's Sufferings X. The Body the Head and the Fat and all was laid on the Fire signifying how Christ should suffer for us both in Body and Soul Isa 53.12 My Soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto Death XI This Burnt-Offering was called a sweet Savour unto the Lord which in Christ's Death is solely and only accomplished for 't is thereby God's Wrath is appeased and his Justice satisfied XII The Ashes were to be carried without the Host and put into a clean Place shadowing thereby how Christ should be buried without the Gates of Jerusalem in a Tomb wherein never Man lay and that his Body should not
Figure of him IT was a Rock which in appearance is dry and barren and a very unlikely thing to afford Water So Christ in his outward State in the Days of his Flesh seemed very unlikely to carnal Eyes to afford such spiritual Waters of Grace and Salvation II. It seemed wonderful that it should send forth Water in such abundance So Jesus Christ to the Wonder of Men and Angels sends forth the Water of Life in abundance to all those that believe on him III. That Rock sent forth its Water to the People of Israel when they were ready to perish for Thirst there being no way to relieve them So Christ refreshes the Souls of poor Sinners that come unto him when they can find no Help Comfort or Refreshment any where else John 8.24 but without him must perish eternally If ye believe not that I am he ye shall die in your Sins IV. The Rock was smitten before it yielded Water So Jesus Christ was smitten of God and crucified that his precious Blood might be poured forth to consummate the Redemption of our Souls V. The Rock was smitten for a rebellious People who murmured against God and who deserved no such Grace and Favour from him So Christ was slain for us who were Rebels and Enemies to him by evil Works who deserved nothing but his eternal Wrath and Displeasure Dr. Th● Taylor VI. The Water out of that Rock followed the Children of Israel through the Wilderness over all Hills and Vallies unto Canaan all the Dryness of that dry and barren Desert could not dry it up So the Waters of Life streaming from Christ that sacred Rock follow the true Israel of God quite through the Wilderness of this World until they come to the heavenly Canaan yea all the Persecutions and Temptations in the World whatsoever cannot dry it up The Pillar of Cloud and Fire Exod. 14. a Type of Christ Numb 9.15 16 17. THe Pillar of Fire was a certain Guide to the Israelites whilst they pass from Egypt to Canaan So Jesus Christ is our true Guide by his Word and Spirit till we come to the heavenly Canaan or Land of Immortality II. It was a Guide to them by Night that they might not lose their Way So Christ is our Guide in the dark Night of Trouble Temptation and Desertion III. The Pillar of Fire was not only a Guide to them but it also afforded them much Light which made their Journey comfortable to them Persons may have a sure Guide in a Night and yet be in Darkness or have but little or no Light So Jesus Christ is not only a Guide to his People in their passing through the Night of Mortality but also a Light a Light to them that sit in Darkness as well as a Guide for their Feet into the Way of Peace Exod. 14.20 he is upon this account the Comfort and Joy of God's Israel IV. The Pillar of Fire was Darkness to the Egyptians tho it gave Light to Israel So is Christ's Salvation Joy and Comfort to the Godly but a Stumbling-block and Stone of Offence unto the Wicked J. K. V. The Pillar of Fire did not afford the Israelites Light only but Heat also as a worthy Writer observes by which means they were kept from the piercing Cold of the Night So Jesus Christ the Anti-type of this Fiery Pillar affords us much spiritual Heat by his Word and Spirit which are compared to Fire by which means we are kept from the cold and lukewarm Temper or Frame of Heart which God's Soul hateth and thereby preserved fervent in Spirit burning in Love and Divine Zeal to God his Saints and to Holiness Exod. 14.20 VI. This Pillar in going behind between the Camp of Israel and the Egyptians was a blessed Defence and Protection unto them So Jesus Christ is the Defence and Safeguard of his People VII The Pillar of Fire if the Enemy had strove with it or made resistance against it would have burned and consumed them together So all that rebell against Christ or resist him shall be devoured Who would set Briars and Thorns against me in Battel Isa 27.4 I would go through them I would burn them together The Pillar of Cloud THe Pillar of Cloud was a great Refreshment to the Children of Israel by Day during their long Journey in the Wilderness the Sun in those Countries shining sometimes very hot which might had it not been for this Cloudy Pillar have been very destructive or grievous to them during so many Years Travels So Jesus Christ as Mediator is as a Cloud or Screen between the hot Beams of God's Wrath and poor Believers 'T is he who keeps us from being consumed by the Wrath of him Heb. 12. ult who is to the Wicked a Consuming Fire II. It was a Fire and a Cloud yet both but one Pillar So Christ is God and Man and yet but one Person and the same Christ who is a Saviour to the truly Penitent will destroy all ungodly and impenitent Ones The Passeover a Type of Christ 1 Cor. 5.7 Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us THe Passeover or Paschal Lamb was a most lively Figure or Type of Christ nay as a worthy Divine observes this one Legal Sacrament preached not obscurely to the ancient Jews the whole Doctrine of the Gospel This will appear in five Things 1. In the Choice of the Sacrifice 2. In the preparing of it 3. In the Effusion of the Blood and Actions about it 4. In the Eating and the Conditions therein 5. In the Fruits and Use Eph. 3.21 Parallels I. In the Choice of the Sacrifice the Lord appointed it to be a Lamb notably signifying Jesus Christ whom the Baptist called the Lamb of God taking away the Sins of the World II. It was to be a Lamb without blemish signifying the most absolute Perfection of Jesus Christ III. The Paschal Lamb was to be taken out of the Fold signifying that Christ should be taken from amongst Men or from among his Brethren Deut. 17.15 one of the Seed of Abraham according to the Flesh IV. The Lamb was to be a Year old and also it must be slain signifying that Christ in his full vigour and strength should be put to death V. The Lamb was to be roasted with Fire which might signify the Manner of Christ's Death He was crucified and pierced he endured the Fire of Afflictions and the Fire of God's Wrath that was due to us for our Sins VI. The Lamb was roasted whole to signify saith Dr. Taylor that Christ bore the whole Wrath of God both in Soul and Body Not a Bone of the Lamb was to be broken to shew that not one Bone of Christ should be broken John 19.36 VII The Blood of the Lamb was to be saved in a Bason it must not be shed upon the Ground nor trodden under foot signifying the Preciousness of Christ's Blood and that great Esteem God the Father and all
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
reading of which we are carefully to heed the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Circumstances of every Text and the Speaker that the Fallacy of Composition and Division may be avoided Jer. 26.17 18 19. Jer. 26.17 c. the Elders of Judea are introduced as speaking for Jeremiah but if any will attribute to them Ver. 20 21 22 23. he goes against their words and the scope of the Prophetical Text For these Verses have a coherence with the last and continue the historical Relation of the Execution of the Sentence and the deliverance of Jeremiah by a Just Judgment from the lawless Violence of the King the Example of which is contained in those four Verses on the contrary the words of Paul Act. 19.4 5. are to be joyned together to prevent Error 2. A false and evil Speech is proposed when the Devil and wicked Men are introduc'd as speaking Psal 3.2 Many there be which say of my Soul There is no help for him in his God Psal 12.4 Who have said With our Tongue will we prevail our Lips are our own Who is Lord over us Isa 14.13 For thou hast said in thy Heart I will ascend into Heaven I will exalt my Throne above the Stars of God c. Mat. 23.16 Wo unto you ye blind Guides which say Whosoever shall swear by the Temple it is nothing but whosoever shall swear by the Gold of the Temple he is a Debter c. Of this kind of Speech we will give some useful Observations 1. An Historical Narration altho most true yet all things therein said are not believed to Observ 1 be true For when a Canonical Writer treats of a thing and speaks of what is falsely or foolishly done or said by another he does not approve of it but only relates it The things in Scripture are of two sorts some are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of narrative or recital and some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of Assertion and Approbation things related of the latter kind are always true but not of the former Here likewise we must distinguish between the History it self and the Speech introduced by him that speaks the first is always true the latter not c. 2. When the wicked or false Speech of another is related a true Sentence Observ 2 or Word of the holy Spirit is intermix'd as 1 Kings 21.10 the words of Jezebel writing to the Citizens of Jezreel are thus related Set two Men Sons of Belial before him to bear witness against him c. the words Sons of Belial are not Jezebel 's who would fain destroy Naboth by a colour and pretext of Right and Justice but they are the words of the holy Spirit which Exegetically and according to Truth describe those suborn'd Wretches that would testify against the innocent as Ver. 13 c. Isa 28.15 Because ye have said We have made a Covenant with Death and with Hell are we at Agreement when the overflowing Scourge shall pass through it shall not come unto us R. Kimhi in Loc. for we have made Lies our Refuge and under Falshood have we hid our selves It was not they that called it Lies and Falshood but the Prophet so intitles their Hope The words of the false Prophets are hereby to be understood who lyingly advised them to hope well Isa 30.10 Which say to the Seers see not and unto the Prophets prophesy not unto us right things speak unto us smooth things prophesy Deceits It is not those Unbelievers but the holy Spirit that calls those Visions which they sought for Delusions for such indeed they were Pag. 360. Vsitatum est quod ingeniosi Homines c. c. Brentius upon Isa 44. thus speaks of this Scripture-way of Expression and brings more Examples 'T is usual for ingenious Men to paint out Impiety of words in colours and obtrude it upon Men as true Piety But the holy Spirit acknowleges not nor owns such things as are framed and pretended to cloak and excuse Impiety but sees because there is nothing invisible to him into the most private recesses of the Mind and judges according to what he finds in the very secrets of the Heart Deut. 29.19 the wicked blesses himself in his Heart saying I shall have Peace tho I walk in the stubbornness of my Heart to add Drunkenness to Thirst Who would be so impudent as publickly to say that his ways are wicked and that he would persevere in them See Psal 14.1 Isa 28.15 44.17 Jer. 18.12 the holy Spirit recites the words of the wicked not the words of their Mouths but the words of their Hearts For the ungodly do not call their own Ways evil but in regard they are really so the Spirit so calls them as his own Sentence Observ 3 3. Yet all things which the Devil and wicked Men are said to speak are not in themselves evil and false altho pronounced with a fallacious and fraudulent Intention this may be seen in the words of unclean Spirits Mar. 1.24 I know thee who thou art the holy One of God See Luke 4.34 Acts 16.16 17. In the words of Caiphas the Jewish High-Priest Gregor Lib. 23. Moral cap 3. John 11.49 50 c. Whatsoever is related in Scripture may be reduced to these four ways viz. When good Things are well spoken When evil Things are ill spoken When good Things are ill spoken When evil Things are well spoken 1. Good Things are well spoken when righteous and holy Things are well preached as Mat. 3.2 Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand 2. Evil Things are ill spoken when a perverse or wicked Action is perswaded to as Job 2.9 Curse God and die 3. Good Things are ill spoken when something is not pronounced with a right Mind and Understanding as Joh. 9.28 the Pharis●es say to the blind Man that had his Sight restored Thou art his Disciple which was true but they spoke it maliciously and by way of Contempt Joh. 11.49 50. It is expedient for us that one Man should die for the People that the whole Nation perish not This was good yea the greatest Good in the World but he spoke it out of spite to Christ and a greediness to destroy him without any respect to the Grace of Redemption of which he was ignorant 4. Evil Things are said well when by the Mouth of the Speaker Vice is expressed so as to condemn and confute it 3. Speeches prudently feigned and composed to signify another thing are to be read in Scripture Parables especially the Writings of the Evangelists which shall be treated of at large in this Work in the Chapter of Parables to which we refer you To this belongs when a Speech is attributed to persons to be a sign of the very state of Things Isaiah 3.6 and is figured as the thing signified by that Speech as is intimated Isa 3.6 When a Man shall take hold of his Brother of the House of his Father saying
Instit lib. 2. BOOK IV. THE Fifth HEAD OF Metaphors Allegories and Similes With other borrowed Terms Respecting the Graces of the holy-Holy-Spirit AND THE Blessed Ordinances of the Gospel Grace compared to Salt Mark 9.50 Have Salt in your selves c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. TOuching the several Metaphorical Notations of this Term Salt we shall refer you unto the Eleventh Chapter of Philologia Sacra By Salt in this place is meant the blessed and most precious Grace of the Spirit Metaphor Parallel SAlt is of a searching quality if it be laid or rubb'd upon Meat it will pierce and search it to the very Bone TRue Grace or the spiritual Operation of the Spirit is of a searching nature it will when received in Truth infuse it self into every Faculty of the Soul The Spirit searcheth all things yea 2 Cor. 2. the deep things of God If there be any Sin hid it will search and find it out Simile Parallel II. Salt is of a purging cleansing and purifying nature it will work out Blood Filth c. as common Experience shews II. Grace is of a purging and purifying virtue it will not only search Corruption out whether it be in the Heart or Life but also in a blessed manner purge and work it forth He that hath this Hope 1 Joh. 2.3 purifieth himself even as he is pure III. Salt hath a preserving quality it will not only purge Corruption out of Meat but also preserve Meat and other things from Corruption and Putrefaction III. Grace preserves the Soul from all manner of Sin and Defilements it will not suffer a Saint to run with others to the same excess of Riot 1 Pet. 4.4 but teacheth us to deny all Vngodliness and worldly Lusts and to live righteously soberly Tit. 2.12 and godly in this present World How shall I do this thing and sin against God IV. Salt seasons things causing that to taste savoury which otherwise would be no way pleasant wholsom or good for the Body Can that which is unsavoury be eaten without Salt Job 6.6 IV. Grace seasons a Christian it makes him savoury to God and to all good Men savoury in his Words savoury in his Dealings and Commerce savoury in all his whole Conversation not only savoury himself but seasoning others also hence called the Salt of the Earth Let your Speech be alway with Grace Col. 4 6 seasoned with Salt That ye may know how to answer every Man V. Salt is of universal use throughout the World it is the one thing needful among Men it is said to season all things we receive great Advantage by it It is known to be exceeding necessary both by Sea and Land V. Grace is also absolutely necessary 't is the one thing needful to Salvation without which there is no getting to Heaven The Advantages all Believers receive thereby are wonderful All Men of what rank or quality soever stand in need of Grace they were better be without Gold than without Grace It is good in every Place and Condition Men need it as well at Sea as at Land in Sickness and Health VI. Salt as Pliny and other Naturalists say is exceeding good against the Sting of Serpents and will destroy Worms that breed in the Body and hath many other medicinable Virtues in it VI. Grace is a most Sovereign Remedy against Sin that Sting of the old Serpent and there is nothing like it to kill the Worm of Conscience that is bred by means of the Corruption of the inward Man and there gnaws and greatly torments the Soul and many other Soul-medicinable Virtues it hath VII Salt was made use of under the Law in Sacrifices And every Oblation of thy Meat-Offering shalt thou season with Salt ●●v 2 13. With all thy Offerings thou shalt use Salt VII Grace must be made use of in all our spiritual Sacrifices and Offerings unto God We must pray with Grace and sing with Grace and do all in God's Worship with Grace in our Hearts nothing we do will be accepted without it Mark 9.4 Every one shall be salted with Fire or seasoned with Affliction and every Sacrifice shall be salted with Salt viz. Grace Metaphor Disparity SAlt is natural or else made by Art of salt Water Ashes Fire Plin. lib. 3● p. 41● 41● c. Pliny says that in India they have Salt out of Quarries of Stone GRace is supernatural No Man hath the Divine Influence and Operation of the Spirit of God naturally nor can he get it by any humane Contrivance or Art whatsoever Joh. 1.14 it is the Gift of God II. If Meat be quite corrupted putrified stink and is loathsom Salt cannot recover it nor make it savoury II. But if the Soul be wholly or in every Faculty thereof corrupted stinks and is loathsom in the Nostrils of God yet Grace can quickly recover it and make it very savoury and sweet to God and good Men. III. Salt may lose its Saltness or Savour and become good for nothing but to be trodden under the foot of Men. III. Grace cannot lose the excellent Savour thereof Christians may lose much of their Salt or decay in Grace but Grace be it little or much will never lose its own precious Virtue IV. Things may be over-salted or seasoned so that they may be spoiled and become unwholsom to human Bodies IV. But no Man can be over-much seasoned with Grace never had any Christian too much of this spiritual Salt in him The more you receive and take in of this the better you will be seasoned thereby Inferences FRom hence we infer That Grace is the principal Thing 2. How unsavoury are all graceless Persons The whole World lieth in Wickedness They are like putrified or stinking Carrion in a Common-Shore as the Greek Word there signifieth 3. This may stir up all ungodly Ones to look out and cry mightily for Grace the excellent Nature of which is set forth under the Metaphor Light Vol. 1. 4. Let all who profess themselves Christians examine themselves throughly whether they are salted with Grace or not Are you savoury Men and Women What is your Communication your Speech your Conversation c. 5. Take heed you lose none of this Divine Salt you will soon become unsavoury if you have not Salt in your selves 6. You that should season others should have much Salt in your own Hearts and Lives Ye are the Salt of the Earth The Girdle of Truth Ephes 6.14 And having your Loins girl about with Truth c. A Girdle properly is a Belt or Girdle used to be worn by Souldiers to preserve the Breast and Belly Truth hath various Acceptations in the holy Scriptures some of which according to Wilson and others you may take as follows 1. The most perfect Divine Essence which is Truth it self and the Author of all Truth in his Creatures Thou hast redeemed me O Lord God of Truth Psal 31.5 2. Jesus Christ I am the
delivered themselves into the hands of Justice 6. That Man can never have good Days that keeps an evil Conscience 7. On the other hand he that hath a good Conscience needs never be sad nor can he be without good Days for as Trouble and Horror of Conscience is the greatest Trouble so Peace of Conscience is the greatest Joy That Man can never want Musick saith Mr. Caryl that speaks in Consort and is harmonious with himself A good Conscience is the poor Man's Riches and the rich Man's chiefest Jewel a Jewel worth keeping It is saith one the best Pillow to sleep on and the best Dish to feed on A good Conscience is a continual Feast so the Geneva-Translation Prov. 15.15 Dan. 5.5 A good Conscience with a Dinner of Herbs is all Varieties but a bad Conscience makes all Feasts and Pleasures like the Hand-writing on Belshazzar's Wall 8. Labour to get and keep a good Conscience because an evil one spoils all the good and best Actions of thy Life it renders thy Prayers to be sinful 9. Consider Conscience is privy to all thou thinkest knoweth what Evil hath been done by thee in private seeth all the Evil thou hast committed and all the Good thou hast omitted the doing of and one day if evil Rom. 2.15 it will lay all open before the Eyes of God Angels and Men and come in as a Witness to charge and condemn thee for ever O therefore get a good Conscience 10. Take heed how thou carriest thy self towards Conscience because it hath a Regal Power in thy Soul a Commission either to accuse or excuse and if he condemns thee as an Unbeliever or as a false Hypocrite by the Light and Authority of God's Word 1 John 3.20 God will also assuredly condemn thee unless thou dost repent in the great Day 11. Consider what a glorious Mercy it will be to have such a Friend as Conscience witness for thee when thou art wrongfully accused and condemned by Men. This was that which bore up Job and holy Paul in their Troubles Job 27.6 2 Cor. 1.12 My Heart shall not reproach me c. This is our rejoycing the Testimony of our Conscience Quest Some possibly may enquire here How a good Conscience may be known or what Characters may be given of it Answ I shall give you some Rules to judg of a good Conscience both Negatively and Positively First Negatively 1. A blind ignorant and misguided Conscience is not a good Conscience Some think that God concerns not himself with their Actions takes no notice of their Hearts Words or Lives Others think that God is made up wholly of Mercy and tremble not at his Justice and so conclude it is an easy thing to get to Heaven One that I have heard of said That if it were as easy to get the Riches of this World as it was to get Heaven he would not care or to that effect not remembring that it is as hard to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven especially for rich Men as it is for a Camel to go through the Eye of a Needle Mat. 19.23 1 Pet. 4.18 and that the Righteous shall scarcely be saved Others think that those Men are Fools that make such a Stir and Ado about Religion thinking that is the best Religion that is easiest to the Flesh and is most free from outward Trouble whereas the Scripture saith 1 Tim. 2.12 that whoever will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer Persecution Some think the Laws of Men must be their Rule in all Matters of Faith and Religion and whatever Magistrates command must be done c. 2. A drouzy and sleepy Conscience is not a good Conscience A Conscience that is not throughly awakened will let a Man alone in Sin such can sleep upon the Brink of the greatest Danger tho they are just falling into the Gulph of Eternity yea can sleep under the most awakening Ministry tho Hell-Fire be thrown as it were in their very Faces yet Conscience giveth them not one Jog 3. A guilty Conscience is not a good Conscience when Conscience flies into a Man's Face for this or that Sin Tit. 1.15 some horrid Pollution or other loved and lived in 4. A seared Conscience a Conscience that hath no feeling in it is not a good Conscience 5. A despairing Conscience is not a good Conscience Such as think their Sins are greater than God can or will forgive Mat. 12.31 notwithstanding Christ hath said All Sins and Blasphemies against the Father and the Son shall be forgiven unto Men and those that believe not there is Life for them in Christ make God a Liar Secondly Positively 1. That Man hath a good Conscience that walks uprightly and faithfully to his Light according to what he knoweth If he hath only a natural Light and walks up faithfully to that then he hath only a natural good Conscience there is Moral Sincerity spoken of in the holy Scriptures Joh. 20.4 as well as Godly Sincerity Abimelech in this respect had a good Conscience In the Sincerity of my Heart and Innocency of my Hands Gen. 20.5 have I done this Here I might shew how a natural good Conscience may be known from a Conscience evangelically and spiritually good take two or three Hints 1. He whose Conscience is only naturally good is usually a proud Man Lord I thank thee Luk. 18 11. I am not as other Men c. Such seek their own Glory they sacrifice to their own Net and burn Incense to their own Drag all centers in Self the Principle of their Action is Self A Saint when his Gifts are highest his Heart is lowest when his Spirit is most raised his Heart is most humble 2. A Man that hath only a natural good Conscience his great endeavour is to still the Noise and stop the Mouth of it but never looks to have the Guilt removed and Filth washed away by Christ's Blood he seeth no need of a Saviour I was alive once without the Law Rom. 7.11 c. He is like a Child that hath got a Thorn in his Flesh who wipeth away the Blood but taketh no notice or thought how to get out the Thorn If bare Performance of Duties whether natural or divine will still or quiet the Conscience the Conscience is but naturally good 2. When Conscience compares a Man's Ways by the perfect Rule of God's Word by which he walks and finds it agreeable thereto 3. An evangelical good Conscience findeth a Man as careful of his Duty towards God as he is of his Duty towards Man and as careful of his Duty towards Man as of his Duty towards God Acts 24.16 Herein do I exercise my self to have always a Conscience void of Offence towards God and towards Man 4. An evangelical good Conscience always stirs up to Obedience and Conformity to God's Word from the sight of the Excellency of it and Purity that is in it Thy Word is very
pure Psal 119. therefore thy Servant loveth it 5. He hath a good Conscience whose Conviction and Trouble for Sin is universal when it is deep when the Spirit searcheth into the bottom Come saith the Woman of Samaria Joh. 4 29 39. see a Man that hath told me all that ever I did And they were pricked in their Hearts 6. He hath an evangelical good Conscience who is troubled for Sin not simply because of Shame or because of inward Guilt or fear of Punishment but because God is and hath been offended his Spirit grieved and his Soul defiled and made unlike God his Trouble riseth from the sence of the hainous Nature of Sin 7. When Conscience findeth that no Conviction either of Sin or Duty is slighted by the Soul Psal 119.80 but tenderly nourished 8. When a Man will suffer any Punishment or Loss before he will offer violence to his Conscience and sin against God 9. When Conscience cannot find any Sin hid spared born with or connived at in the Soul no sweet Morsel under the Tongue 10. When Conscience finds a Man the same in private that he is in publick and that he is not of a Pharisaical Spirit doth nothing to be seen of Men or for vain Glory's sake 11. When Conscience cannot find any Duty or Ordinance which the Soul is convinced of to be neglected tho he is exposed to Reproach thereby To obey God in Baptism is called the Answer of a good Conscience Conscience calls for obedience to this and to all other Ordinances of the Gospel when convinced of them 12. And lastly When Conscience beareth Testimony to a Soul that it loveth God and Jesus Christ above all things in this World c. He that hateth not Father and Mother c. cannot be my Disciple That is if he hath not a lesser Love to them for the lesser Love in Scripture is called a Hatred which our Saviour openeth in another place He that loveth Father or Mother more than me is not worthy of me and he that loveth Son or Daughter more than me is not worthy of me Phil. 3 9 10. c. Yea doubtless I account all things but Loss c. Quest How shall a Man get and keep a good Conscience Answ 1. He must get his Heart sprinkled with the Blood of Christ Heb. 10.22 Let us draw near with a true Heart in full assurance of Faith having our Hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience c. See that you experience that the Blood of Christ hath as effectually purged your Consciences from dead Works Heb. 9.14 as the Blood of Bulls and Goats sanctified to the purifying of the Flesh 2. He must take heed of all such things as offend his Conscience Conscience is a very tender thing the smallest thing will make it bleed 3. He must take heed of evil aad corrupt Principles an erring Conscience is not a good Conscience 4. Labour to fit under a Soul-searching Ministry 5. Take heed of vain Glory and all secret Evil Conscience prieth into thy most inward Thoughts beware of speculative Sin 6. Labour to keep thy Tongue Whoso keepeth his Mouth and his Tongue keepeth his Soul from Trouble 7. Labour to bring thy Heart into every Duty beware of Hypocrisy 8. Do not grieve or offend thy Conscience in any thing tho the Matter may be in it self lawful yet thou must not do it if thou hast a doubt in thy Spirit about it Rom. 14.23 He that doubteth is damned that is condemned in his own Conscience But much more take heed of doing that which is by all owned to be utterly unlawful 9. Labour in all Acts to be sincere Conscience hath power to give in Testimony concerning thy Integrity if thy Heart be unsound and not upright Conscience will soon discover it and reproach thee for it and thou wilt not be able to hold out to the end and sad will it be to have thy own Conscience witness against thee when thou comest to lie on a sick Bed an evil Conscience will be a bad Death-Bed Companion O how doth this reprove those that sin and regard not the Checks and Rebukes of their own Hearts Conscience in the great Day will be more than ten thousand Witnesses against them THE Seventh HEAD OF Metaphors Allegories and Similes WITH Other Borrowed TERMS Relating to the Church of GOD. The Church called the City of God Psal 87.3 Glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God Selah Psal 46.4 There is a River the Streams whereof shall make glad the City of God the holy Place of the Tabernacle of the Most High Isa 26.1 We have a strong City c. Isa 33.20 Look upon Zion the City of our Solemnity c. Isa 62.12 And they shall call them the holy People c. And thou shalt be called a City sought out not forsaken Mat. 5.14 Ye are a City set on a Hill that cannot be hid IN these places of the Holy Scripture Sion or the Church of God is called a City Sion was a Fort or Mount in Jerusalem and the Temple was built upon it hence the Church of the Jews was called as some conceive by this Name Zion because there they assembled but after it was a Name or Title given to the Church whether Jews or Gentiles Heb. 12.12 Ye are come to Mount Sion to the City of the Living God the heavenly Jerusalem God's People may be called by the Name of Sion or Jerusalem 1. Because we were naturally like Jerusalem the Forts of the Jebusites viz. Sinners and Enemies to God 2. Because by Grace we are overcome and conquered like as Jerusalem was by the true David 3. Because the Church is fortified by the Almighty for his own use and chief Place and Residence in this nether Creation 4. In respect of her Renown and Glory As Jerusalem was renowned above all Cities so God's Church is now above all People and Societies in the World 5. Because it is viewed and gazed upon by all Strangers she may well be compared to a Looking-glass as Zion signifies 6. In respect of her Laws for as the Law and publick Worship were at Jerusalem so Christ's Laws and publick Worship are maintained in the Church Hence God is said to love the Gates of Zion more than all the Dwelling-Places of Jacob. Psal 87.2 Observ The Saints or Church of God is the City of God or may fitly be compared to a City In opening of this Metaphor we shall shew the Nature Trade Government Privileges and Glory of the City of God Metaphor Parallel A City is a Place built by Men for a People to inhabit or dwell in THe Church is built by Christ for a Habitation for God Mat. 16.18 Vpon this Rock will I build my Church c. In whom ye are builded together for an Habitation of God through the Spirit Eph. 2.22 II. A City is usually compassed about with Walls that it may thereby become