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A37035 A commentarie upon the book of the Revelation Wherein the text is explained, the series of the several prophecies contained in that book, deduced according to their order and dependance on each other; the periods and succession of times, at, or about which, these prophecies, that are already fulfilled, began to be, and were more fully accomplished, fixed and applied according to history; and those that are yet to be fulfilled, modestly, and so far as is warrantable, enquired into. Together with some practical observations, and several digressions, necessary for vindicating, clearing, and confirming many weighty and important truths. Delivered in several lectures, by that learned, laborious, and faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, James Durham, late Minister of the Gospel in Glasgow. To which is affixed a brief summary of the whole book, with a twofold index, one of the several digressions, another of the chief and principall purposes and words contained in this treatise. Durham, James, 1622-1658. 1658 (1658) Wing D2805; ESTC R216058 1,353,392 814

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50 close the parenthesis after remarkable ibid   as also that although they be generally very rich and so in capacity to go in some expedition yet 627 29 begin the parenthesis immediately after the seventh vial 628 34 35 such heathens and dele because it 629 12 dele and 636 50 if papacy be this head then 642 11 dele had 645 19 dele the first as 648 45 Seieucus ibid 56 aquitanica 651 3 either 653 52 their bulls 656 17 close the parenthesis after Antichrist 660 45 close the parenthesis after Alcasar say 664 5 de objecto fidei ibid 50 dele else 665 23 puncto 7. 666 20 from it 686 57 her sins 749 8 2. We acknowledge 750 11 but 752 22 1. Not this for 1. Note this ibid 23 the same with her spoken of chap. 19. ibid 48 49 with any one of the vial● 753 37 2. Epist. 761 11 eternal 770 49 Elect 782 19 what 785 41 prophesies were as chap. 4 and 5. 787 42 1300. year 787 12 it speaketh 399 32 compleated 402 23 will find 412 42 Christ 417 34 Religion for Church 418 35 trumpets for beasts 419 25 Origen in his followers 426 36 Ierem. 51. 446 7 dele These and other lesser escapes be pleased to help with th● pen at least the most material of them and so much the rather as some of them marre or darken the sense though but few AN EXPOSITION Of the BOOK of the REVELATION LECTURE I. CHAP. I. Vers. 1. THE Revelation of Iesus Christ which God gave unto Him to shew unto His Servants things which must shortly come to passe and He sent and signified it by His Angel unto His Servant Iohn 2. Who bare record of the Word of God and of the Testimony of Iesus Christ and of all things that he saw 3. Blessed is he that readeth and they that hear the words of this Prophecie and keep those things which are written therein for the time is at hand 4. Iohn to the seven Churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from Him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven Spirits which are before His Throne IT may look well presumptuous-like to read or undertake to open this Book and indeed there is need of much humility and sober●●ss in going about such a work and that the Spirit of Jesus Christ who hath given this Book for a benefit to His Church help us to a ●ight uptaking of it Yet considering that the subject matter of it is so profitable and comfortable to the Church to the end of the world considering also what was Christs and in giving it as His last Will and Word to His Church to wit to be a Revelation and thereby to make manifest His mind to them therefore Iohn is forbidden to seal it that it might be open for the good of His Church and considering withall the many motives and encouragements that are given to read and search into it as ver 3. Blessed is he that readeth and they that hear the words of this Prophecy which saying is also renewed again after the prophetick part is immediatly closed chap. 22.7.14 which seem to be notable encouragements not only to undertake but also to lay it on as a duty to read and seek to understand it We resolve through Gods grace to essay it that it be not altogether useless to the Servants of God to whom it is sent as ver 1. It is true many things in it are obscure and it is like that the full clearing of them is not to be expected till God in some singular way shall open them up neither is that undertaken Yet there are 1. many clear edifying and comfortable passages of Gods mind in it the holy Ghost mixing in those to be fed upon and to sweeten those passages that are more obscure and to encourage the Reader to search for the meaning of them And 2. though we be not clear to apply such passages to this or that particular time or party or person Yet seing the scope sets out in general the enemity of special enemies of the Church and it being clear who they are we think they may be exponed not only according to the Analogy of Faith and found Doctrine but according to the scope of the place though every thing hit not yet nothing being contrary to it 3. In those things that are most obscure there may be found Doctrines concerning the disposition of enemies and Gods giving victory over them and preservation and outgate to His People And lastly those things that are most obscure being particulars wherein there is no such hazard for us to be ignorant as in fundamental Truths and yet being such as God hath allowed folks by wisdom to search out therefore here is wisdom is prefixed to the hardest places in it as chap. 13. ver ult Upon these considerations we intend through the Lords help to hint at some things in the reading of this Book to you for your up-stirring to search further into it The whole strain and form of it is by way of an Epistle Jesus Christ by Iohn writing His last Will to His Church The Preface is in the words read to ver 9. The Body of it from that to the 6. ver chap. 22. The Conclusion is in the end of the 22. chap. where it is closed with the ordinary close of other Epistles We shall first speak to the Preface and then to the Body when we come to it We need not stand upon the Authority nor Title of it that holds out the Penman it being of such a divine stamp and Majesty doth carry Authority in the bosom of it that if any Scripture hold forth the Soveraignity Majesty Justice Mercy and Truth of God to the comfort of His People and the making the hearts of His Enemies to quake this Scripture doth it The Author that is the Penman is Iohn the Divine as he is holden out in the Title Whether this Title be authentick or not it 's not much to be disputed It is in some Greek Copies The Revelation of the holy Apostle and Evangelist Iohn the Divine And we think it is clear to be Iohn the Apostle honoured here to bear Christs last Message to His Church He got this name in the primitive times as being most full of Divine Revelations and prying into the Mysteries of the Gospel and particularly of Christs Divinity And in the Preface there seems to be some things that bear this out 1. That he is called Iohn without designing what Iohn importing that he was the Iohn that was well known and famous for an infallible and extraordinary measure of the Spirit 2. He is said to be that Iohn that was banished into the Isle of Patmos which from the ancient famous story is clear to be Iohn the Apostle he being banished thither under the persecution of Domitian the Emperour 3. It 's further clear from the 2. ver in his description Who bare
and would be glad to get into the clefts of the rocks and to the tops of the ragged rocks for fear of the Lord and for the Glory of His Majesty Isa. 2.12 Men would think the greatest hill or mountain a light burden in that Day to get themselves bid from the peircing view of a slighted and provoked Mediator Oh but that will be bitter and sore to bide Think upon it There is a time coming when many of you that hears this same word if Grace prevent not shall see and find the truth of it It 's terrible but experience will make it true many of you now skars to hear tell of Christs coming to Judgement but when that day cometh it shall be bitter in another kind to you when this bitter yelling noise crying and howling shall be among the carnal world that slighted Him and ye shall find your selves among them and shall share with them and every cry and yell about you shall be a new wound Therefore humble your selves and seek for mercy and reconciliation in time for either must you get it now or never Obs. 4. A hearty consenting and saying Amen to Christs coming to Judgement to have fore-thoughts of it and to be longing for it and wishing that it may come is a good token of a Believer and friend of Christ to whom this day will be a comfort But if many of us had our own mind we would never wish to die nor that there should be a day of Judgement Vers. 8. Christ cometh in Himself to tell what He is and to confirm what Iohn hath said of Him I am Alpha and Omega which are two letters in the Greek Alphabet Alpha the first and Omega the last and the meaning is in the next words the beginning and the ending The beginning He who gives all things a being and beginning and have no beginning My self The ending He who puts an end to all things and in whom all things end and hath no ending my self for all things terminate in Him as their end Rom. 11.36 To Him are all things which is which was and which is to come the same description which was given to God the Father vers 4. setting out the immutability and unchangeablenesse of His being that He is from Eternity to Eternity the same and as we shew the title JEHOVAH taketh in these three words Then more plainly the Almighty every word here is a proper Attribute of God He is infinite in power soveraign in dominion and not bounded as creatures are And this is clear to be spoken of Christ not only from the scope Iohn being to set out Christ from whom He had this Revelation but from the 11. vers following where he gives Him the same titles over again or rather Christ speaking of Himself taketh and repeateth the same titles Obs. 1. Our Lord Jesus Christ is God equal with the Father and holy Ghost He who is the first and last the beginning and the ending which is which was and which is to come the Almighty must be God These titles can agree to no other there is no created being capable of any of these titles but He is such Therefore c. Obs. 2. the statelinesse and majesty of our Lord Jesus Christ What an excellent and stately Person is He there is not a property attributed to God but it is agreeable to Christ. The use of it is to bring hearts to high thoughts of Christ and it is not for nought but for this end that the Scripture insists so much in giving Him such stately stiles even to wear souls out of these Atheistical thoughts of Him and to prefer and esteem Him above all 3. Looking upon these words as spoken by Christ Himself after Iohn hath described Him He cometh in and takes it off Iohns hand and describes Himself Observe That our Lord Jesus own mouth can best tell what Himself is hearing reading speaking writing will not do it If the description come not out of Christs own mouth it will do little on bearers Vers. 9. Follows the body of this Book or Epistle We will not now enter on a particular division of it That which is vers 19. of this same Chapter shall serve for the time Write the things which thou hast sern and the things which are and the things which shall be hereafter The whole may be taken up in these two 1. Iohn his representing the case of things as they were for the present and 2. as they were to be hereafter The first of these to wit his representing the case of things as they then were is that which is set down in the first three Chapters wherein is set out the case that the seven Churches of Asia were in which he discovers to themselves and to the world and shews how many foul faults they had under a fair name and profession and this takes up Iohn's first vision That which is from the 9. vers to the end of this Chapter we take up in these three 1. There is the vision it self what Iohn saw and what he heard from vers 10. to vers 17. mixed throw other 2. In the 9. and 10 verses some circumstances are set down concerning Iohn and the manner of his receiving the vision to make way for the faith of the vision and the whole story that follows 3. From the 17. vers to the end some circumstances that make way for Iohn his writing and publishing what he saw and heard are recorded The first circumstance that makes way for the faith of the vision and story is the person by whom Christ wrote 1 Iohn of whom we have heard before in the entry And he sets out himself here further under several expressions or titles 1. Who also am your brother a son of the same house a joynt heir with you in the same Kingdom a comforting title to them and a humbling title to him Those he wrote to being brethren he reckons in himself a brother with them for the most eminent Believers Iohn Paul Abraham David c. come in to be brethren with the meanest Believers all being children of one Father of one House heirs of one Inheritance and Abraham his being a brother and Iohn his being a brother prejudgeth not the least of them to whom he writeth And as all have one Father so all are begotten by the same word have one Spirit here and Glory for ever hereafter 2. The next title he describes himself by is companion in tribulation that is a fellow sufferer with you a sharer of the sufferings of Christ as well as you I who am a great Apostle am not exempted from sufferings more than ye are who are in Smyrna Philadelphia c. I have mine own share of the Crosse as ye have yea he takes it to himself as a title of honour as a great prerogative and dignity as Paul Eph. 3.1 I Paul the prisoner of Iesus Christ for you Gentiles So it is Iohn who as I
Generally To write what he saw And 2. More particularly To send it to the seven Churches For this Title we spoke of it before vers 8. It is our Lord asserting His own Godhead as being the first the beginning of all the Creation of God actively being of Himself God essentiall and giving a beginning and being to all things that exist Ioh. 1.3 All things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made and the last end of all things not only everlasting Himself without end but to whose Honour are all things that have a beginning He is the ultimate end they are all for Him Quest. Why is this Title so often repeated Answ. Besides this generall that it is to hold out Christs Godhead therefore this and other such like Titles are so often given Him in this Book which is of excellent use and benefit to have this born in upon the hearts and minds of sinners It is repeated here 1. That Iohn might know from whom he had this Commission even from Him who had power to give him a Commission both to speak and to write The first and the last a thing that concerns Ministers to know when they come out to Preach the Word whose Commission they have that they take not this honour to themselves nor from men except in the ordinary way appointed by Him for except they have Christs Warrand mans will not Commissionate them to go to Churches and Preach at their own hand 2. It is also for the Peoples cause to learn them to take the Word off Iohn's hand It is not Iohn's word that cometh to them but the Word of Alpha and Omega the first and the last And it were good for us so to speak and good for you so to hear the Word That same Jesus Christ that gave Iohn and the Apostles warrand to Preach and Write it 's that same Jesus Christ that sendeth out Pastors and Teachers to Preach it 's He that gives gifts to men for edifying the body Eph. 4.12 His Warrand to both is one and His Authority Commissionating both is one and both are gifts for the Churches good The second thing in this verse is The Commission Iohn gets 1. In generall to write what he saw 2. More particularly to send it to the seven Churches 1. Write what thou seest that is not this Vision only which thou hast seen but all the Words and Circumstances which thou hast seen or shall see and hear And so it 's his first warrand to write this Revelation and send it to the Churches it points at the Authority on which the written Word is founded it depends not on men but on Jesus Christ that gives warrand to write and we should look on the Bible and every Chapter thereof as by Christs direction written to us 2. The matter he should write is restricted Write not every thing that pleaseth thee but what thou seest to point out the guiding and inspiration of the Spirit in these holy Men who were Pen-men of the Scripture they spake and wrote as they were inspired and guided by the holy Ghost 3. It shews that there is need and it is requisite that men have a particular Commission to carry the Word to People not only a Commission in generall to write or to carry the Gospel but for every particular message Not that men should be anxious or perplexed about their Warrand or Commission in an extraordinary way but to weigh well the Time Place Persons and such Circumstances as may clear their Commission in an ordinary way there being some things to be written and sent to one Church by Christs Warrant which are not so to another every Church hath their particular Message and Commission renewed 2. More particularly what he should do with it when it is written in a Book Send it to the seven Churches that is Iohn this Revelation is not to ly beside thee but it 's for the benefit of the Church send it therefore to the seven Churches in Asia 1. Because most famous in that time and because near to Patmos where he was and because it 's probable Iohn had some particular relation to them and their need presently required it This Book of the Revelation is sent for the benefit of the Church and therefore ought to be welcomed thankfully as a rich Jewel We shewed before why these Churches were called seven and not the Church in Asia vers 4. and say no more of it now These Churches are particularly named We shall not stand on a Geographicall description of the Places Ephesus is spoken of at large Act. 19.20 This Church and Smyrna were in that part of Asia the lesse called Ionia Pergamos in that part called Aetolia Thyatira Sardis and Philadelphia in Lydia and Laodicea in that part called Caira or Caria which not being profitable to you to insist upon we shall take some generall considerations from the words and so proceed And 1. It would be considered why these Churches are designed from the name of the Cities wherein they were We rather speak a word to this because we find Churches in the New Testament named by Towns It 's true the Churches in Galatia are also named but most frequently they are named by Cities as the Church at Ierusalem the Church at Rome the Church at Corinth c. And Titus is to ordain Elders in every City by Pauls appointment which was for the City and it 's like also for the edification of these about God making the Gospel spread from Cities to Countries about as it is said The Word spread from Ephesus to all Asia though there were other Churches beside these that were within the walls of these Towns The reasons of this we conceive to be 1. Because the Cities or Towns were most famous for their populousnesse and were well furnished with Officers and there was most occasion of getting a Harvest of Souls in them by spreading the Net of the Gospel among them in respect of which accidentall and politick considerations which belong not to the essence of a Church some Cities being more famous and able to keep the word of truth and make it furth-coming to other Churches It is not un-agreeable to Scripture to have particular respect to Cities and Churches in them as they may further the work of the Gospel 2. Because in these great Cities and Places of concourse the Ministers and Officers of the Church who served in the work of the Lord and went round in a circuit in the Churches about had their most ordinary residence as it would seem and that their fixed collegiat meetings and combinations were there 1. Because we find no particular Congregations mentioned but only the Church at such a Town written unto though there was many particular Congregations about and these Cities kept not the Word within themselves 2. Where they are mentioned as the Church at Ierusalem it taketh in not only these within the walls but all
be a special priviledge of Martyrs and sufferers 718 Whether these living Saints who are raised to reign be the same individual persons who did suffer or if it be to be understood of Saints in their succession The latter is cleared and proven 718 719 Whether bruit and senslesse creatures shall be partakers of the good condition of the Saints 720 721 The good condition of the Saints after Satan is bound described at length and the continuance thereof 731 Some things premitted for understanding of Satans being bound 703 A fourfold dominion or reigning of Satan mentioned in the Word 705 706 Satans restraint mentioned here is not to be understood absolutely and simply in all respects but it is to be taken for the most eminent restraint from Christs birth till His second coming 706 707 The description of the party that bindeth Satan the execution of his errand and the reason why Satan is bound for a set time 728 729 Satans deceiving no more is not to be understood simply 729 How we are to understand Satans being loosed out of prison the time thereof the event of his gathering his followers together to battel 736 737 738 What is implyed when Christs death is called a satisfaction 296 That it is truly and properly a satisfaction proven 297 298 What is understood by Sea in the Scripture 424 The Sea of Glasse See Glasse What is meant by these words There was no more Sea 754 What is requisit for understanding the Seals and types in them 338 339 340 The scope of the fifth Seal 360 By the opening of the sixth Seal there is a dreadful judgment foretold where some things are premitted for understanding thereof 370 371 372 That the judgment held forth by the sixth Seal is a judgement upon the Roman Empire and its heathen and persecuting Emperors cleared and some considerations added for confirmation 373 What is to be understood by that sealing spoken of chap. 7 380 Why those who are sealed are called the servants of God where of a twofold seal 388 Sealing against error no common priviledge 390 The sentence pronounced at the last day just 744 The sentence pronounced in behalf of the Godly a just sentence yet exclusive of all merit 745 746 Wherefore works are mentioned in the passing of the sentence and not faith ibid. Separation from a Church unlawfull for the faults of particular members though not censured by the Church-guides 172 173 Separation from the Church of Rome See Church of Rome Some considerations whereby the meaning of these words thrust in the sickle is cleared 597 598 599 The song of the Church for her delivery from Antichrist the matter of the song the description of the singers their several properties 574 575 576 What we are to understand by the seven Spirits why called seven and why they are said to be before the throne 4 The Spirit may be expresly prayed unto 10 What it is to be in the Spirit 29 If there be such a thing as the haunting of evil spirits in desolate places 679 Why Ministers are called stars 50 51 176 177 Why Christ is called the morning star 174 175 What judgement is it which is threatned by the falling of that great star called wormwood and whether it be any particular heresie and if a particular one to what heresie it is most probably applicable 429 VVhat that star is chap. 9.1 and what is implyed in its falling from Heaven to Earth 436 The power given to the fallen star with the exercise of that power and the effects that followed thereupon 437 438 VVhat we are to understand by the white stone 159 Why the Word is compared to a sword 40 VVhat is meant by Christs fighting against the Nicolaitans with the sword of His mouth 157 In what respects Christ's countenance is as the shining Sun 40 41 VVhat is meant by the darkening of the Sun 437 The Supremacie of the Roman Bishop was not pleaded at first from divine institution 426 A human sympathie in the Man-Christ with Believers and the properties of that sympathie 411 412 A particular consideration of Mede his Sy●chronisms shewing wherein the Author doth agree with him in fixing of periods and wherein he differeth from him 333 334 seq T WHat we are to understand by the Temple of God being opened in Heaven 509 605 What is meant by Gods Throne and why the seven spirits are said to be before the Throne and what by the Rainbows being round about it 4 5 270 271 Toleration not approven of Christ 156 How it cometh that some zealous men are ready to tolerate Error though zealous against Scandals 156 157 Why Christ is so much displeased at Ministers for tolerating corrupt teachers and that it is a thing reprovable in Magistrates also to tolerate them 164 165 No Minister hath power to transport himself from his particular charge yet that the Church may do it for her own greater good proven 112 113 114 115 116 That transportation is to be with great singlenesse and caution with some rules about it 119 That there are three distinct Persons in the Trinity and that this is a fundamentall Truth 5 6 7 8 VVhat is imported by the voice of a Trumpet as used by Christ 32 33 Though both the Seals and Trumpets hold forth trouble to the Church yet do they hold forth different troubles in time and nature and from different enemies 330 The second general Prophesie of the Book of the Revelation comprehended under the first six Trumpets 403 Some things touching the connexion of the Prophesies under the Trumpets with the sixth Seal 403 404 Some circumstances preparatory to the sounding of the seven Trumpets 404 405 Some considerations premitted for understanding the Prophesie of the Trumpets 416 417 The Trumpets denote the state of the Church where of their series and order 418 419 The Arian heresie and what followed from it and followed upon it is especially holden forth by the first Trumpet 420 421 422 The second Trumpet holdeth forth the corruption of the Government and Governours of the Church 424 425 To what time the sounding of the third Trumpet belongeth 429 To what Century the fourth Trumpet doth belong 431 The judgement threatned by the fifth Trumpet 434 435 The judgement threatned by the blowing of the sixth Trumpet the rise of that plague and the executioners thereof 447 The consolation given to the People of God to comfort them in these sad times under the fifth and sixth Trumpets with a description of the publisher of these glad tydings 464 465 The blowing of the seventh Trumpet and the identity thereof with the seven Vials where some objections to the contrary are answered 504 505 506 The event of this Trumpet is a song of thanksgiving for the deliverance of the Church where the singers their posture the matter of their song and the ground of their praise is set forth 507 508 The dominion of the Turks is to be understood as the judgement
A COMMENTARIE Upon the BOOK of the REVELATION WHEREIN The Text is explained the Series of the several Prophecies contained in that Book deduced according to their order and dependance upon each other the periods and succession of times at or about which these Prophecies that are already fulfilled began to be and were more fully accomplished fixed and applied according to History And those that are yet to be fulfilled modestly and so far as is warrantable enquired into Together with Some practicall Observations and several Digressions necessary for vindicating clearing and confirming many weighty and important Truths Delivered in several Lectures by that learned laborious and faithfull Servant of Jesus Christ IAMES DVRHAM Late Minister of the Gospel in Glasgow To which is affixed a brief Summary of the whole Book with a twofold Index one of the several Digressions another of the chief and principall purposes and words contained in this Treatise 2 Tim. 3.16 17. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousnesse That the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished to all good works Revel 1.3 Blessed is he that readeth and they that hear the words of this Prophesie and keep those things that are written therein for the time is at hand Revel 22.7 Behold I come quickly blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the Prophesie of this Book EDINBVRGH Printed by Christopher Higgins in Harts Close over against the Trone-Church Anno Dom. 1658. To the Judicious and Christian READER THe Reverend now triumphing and glorified Author was so famous and deservedly in very high esteem in our Church both because of the singular and extraordinary way of Gods calling him forth to the Ministery of the Gospel having left the Vniversity wherein I was at the same time a Student before he had finished his course of Philosophie and without any purpose to follow his book at least in order to such an end and having lived severall years a private Gentleman with his wife and children enjoying a good estate in the Countrie from which he did no doubt to the great dissatisfaction of many of his naturall friends and with not a little prejudice to his outward condition retire and being called thereto humbly offer himself to trials far from his own home in order to his being licentiated to preach the Gospel in the Ministery whereof he was immediately thereafter settled here at Glasgow where it hath not wanted a seal in the consciences and hearts of his hearers And also because of his eminent piety stedfastnesse gravity prudence moderation and other great abilities whereof the venerable General Assembly of this Church had such perswasion that they did in the year 1650. after mature deliberation very unanimously pitch upon him though then but about eight and twenty years of age as amongst the ablest sickerest and most accomplished Ministers therein to attend the Kings family in which station though the times were most difficult as abounding with tentations and snares with jealousies heart-burnings emulations and animosities and flowing with high tides of many various and not a few contrary humours he did so wisely and faithfully behave and acquit himself that there was a conviction thereof left upon the consciences of all who observed him and so as he had peace through Iesus Christ as to that ministration The Author I say was in these and other respects so famous that he needs no Testimony or Epistles of commendation especially from so obscure and worthlesse a person yet being of his particular and very intimate acquaintance daily conversant with him and withall his ordinary Hearer being in a good providence Coleagued with him in the Ministery though a most unequal yoke-fellow to so strong a labourer I thought it my duty to give thee some brief hint both of himself who loved alwayes to be hid except when it was necessary for him to appear and of his Book wherein thou wilt find that the spirit of Mr. Durham was not of an ordinary elevation notwithstanding whereof as in Preaching the Gospel he liked not to soar and hide himself from the Hearers in a cloud of words it was not in the wisdom of words but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power that he taught So in his writing he used the same plainnesse of speech how low soever his stile seemeth to be I nothing doubt but that every intelligent Reader will find such certainty of truth to satisfie the mind and such sweetnesse of matter to engage the affections that he will count the Author an Interpreter one among a thousand And therefore if at any time thou misse as possibly thou mayest that comptnesse and finenesse of phrase which in this phrasing and wordie age is much in use Know that he had so very sharp and pregnant an ingine and so exceeding rich and fruitfull an invention that they ordinarily did outstripe and go beyond his expression and pen so that these could very hardly and but seldom hold foot with him beside if his expression was such as might make his meaning be conceived by the Hearers or Readers he did not at all affect neither could be stay being so close in his pursuit of the matter to chase or follow after fine words so that I may here without all complement according to the proverb say Aquila non captat muscas yet none of his expressions were base and unsuitable to the matter but ordinarily very massie significant and expressive of his meaning though plain and simple and it may be sometimes not so beautifully situated nor so adorning and out-setting of it as possibly some would be at which the Lord in the depth of His wisdom did so order that as the Author himself might be kept humble and indeed he did exemplarily shine in humility so no other should think of him above what was meet for it hath been thought by some while hearing him discourse that if he had bad such a polished stile and so well combed words as several others have whose matter yet falleth exceedingly short of his he would have been looked upon as a very rare and singular man in his generation as really he was and as these same Lecturs of his upon the Revelation which he was by many importuned to publish will readily give ground to think of him which though for substance except as to these few intermixed solidly succinctly and I hope satisfyingly discussed questions they were delivered by him to the people of his charge within a very short time one of them every Lords-day before Sermon when all that time he did also preach twice a week at least and most ordinarily thrice beside his daily publick Lecturing every fifth week according to his course in the City and all his other Ministeriall duties of Catechising ●isiting of the sick exhorting of the whole from house to house and his weekly meetings with the Congregationall Eldership for the exercise
well and those that have not this benefit let them take and improve other opportunities that may bring them to the knowledge of Christ's mind and the more that blessedness is given but to six or seven sores in this Book and twice or thrice over to those that study it Rev. 22.7.14 2. Observe That it 's not enough to be given to reading and hearing of the Word neither would folks rest on it but joyn practise with both Luk. 11.28 Blessed are they that hear the Word of God and keep it It is not the reader or hearer but the doer that is the blessed man Yea though ye were able to open and unfold all the Mysteries that are in this Book if ye be not suitable and conform thereto in your practice ye are but like that man spoken of Iam. 1.23 24. who beholding his natural face in a glasse goeth his way and forgetteth what manner of man he was He that is a hearer and not a doer deceives his own soul al 's much hearing and reading doth you good as is improven in practice Quest. How is this Book called a Prophecy seing some things in it concern things present as in these Epistles written to the seven Churches in Asia Answ. Prophecies are of two sorts 1. Prophecy is that whereby things past or present are known by an instinct of the Spirit So Moses writeth of the Creation of the World and things that were before his time So Ahijah knew the wife of Ieroboam and Elisha discovered the King of Syria his Counsel and the covetousness of Gehazi And in this respect as well as in reference to things to come this Book may be called a Prophecy because those things that are present are revealed by the Spirit 2. Prophecy is of things to come and in this respect it 's called a Prophecy because the main drift of this Book of the Revelation is to shew things to come the first three Chapters being introductory to the rest Vers. 4. Followeth the second part of the Preface and it 's the particular Inscription and Direction of this Epistle to the seven Churches in Asia Iohn to the seven Churches in Asia and it beginneth as the Epistles ordinarily begin Grace b● unto you and peace Where we have 1. the thing wished Grace and Pea●e 2. The persons to whom the Seven Churches 3. The Persons from whom the Three Persons of the Trinity 4. And upon the back of this a thanksgiving Iohn is the person wishing that which is wished is Grace and Peace two words which comprehend all good Grace is the fountain of Gods free love and Peace the effect of that free love which being here put together is love vented in its precious effects The Persons from whom are Three or the Three Persons of the Trinity 1. From the Father which is which was and which is to come that is from God the Father described from His eternal being without all beginning or ending And this description of the Father relates to that of Exod. 3.14 I AM THAT I AM hath sent me unto you and it is a name that God often taketh to Himself The first and the last the beginning and the ending and the Title JEHOVAH taketh up these three JE the future time HO the time present VAH the time past In a word it 's the paraphrase of the word JEHOVAH and this title is attributed to the Father not secluding the Son and Holy Ghost but the Father being the fountain of the Godhead when He is joyned with the Son and Spirit those things that are essential to God are ordinarily attributed to Him 2. From the Seven Spirits These are not creatures or created spirits for first created spirits ' are not objects of worship from whom we may wish Grace and Peace Secondly neither are created spirits set in betwixt the Father and the Son as those seven Spirits are here Thirdly In the 5. chap. ver 6. those seven Spirits are called the Eyes and Horns of the Lamb Eyes being His Omniscience whereby He sees every where and Horns being His Power working by His Spirit and making stubborn fouls submit unto Him and these seven Spirits being His Eyes which are every where and His Power or Omnipotency which here also are invocated They can be no other but the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost is called the Seven Spirits not only because it 's frequent in this Book of the Revolution to go on the number of Seven but also and mainly to shew the manifold and various operations of the Spirit as 1 Cor. 12.4 6. There are diversities of gifts but the same Spirit and diversities of operations but the same God which worketh all in all 2. Because it hath relation to the seven Churches He is to write to their need requiring much and He being an infinit and powerful Spirit He was able to let out abundance of grace and all consolation to every one without prejudice to another as if each of them had the Spirit wholly Therefore He is so described in this wish Secondly These seven Spirits are said to be before the Throne that is present with God yet made u●e of by God the Father and the Son working by the Spirit effectually communicating what may be for the comfort of His People and in these words the holy Spirit is holden out in a posture apt to execute what is needfull The third Person is in the 5. ver And from Iesus Christ Grace and Peace is wished from Him He is set out in His Three Offices of Prophet Priest and King First In His Prophetical Office The faithful Witness because He reveals the Will of God and that faithfully therefore Isa. 55.4 He is given as a Witness a Leader and Commander to the People Secondly In His Priestly Office The first begotten of the dead To shew 1. that He offered up Himself to the death 2. Because He was the first that rose from the dead in His own strength and made others to rise and He died not again for though Lazarus rose he died again and though Enoch and Elias did not die yet that was by vertue of His Power and Resurrection as also that any other did arise Thirdly In His Kingly Office The Prince of the Kings of the Earth which Title sets out Christ not only to be God equal with the Father but as Mediatour King of His Kirk He is called Prince of the Kings of the Earth not as if Kings and all great men or others were in the same manner subjects to Him in the relation that Believers are in which respect His Kingly Office extendeth no further nor His Priestly and Prophetical Office but though so He have not such a near relation to them nor they to Him Yet He is King over them to restrain them that they prejudge not His Kirk and to judge them for any wrongs or prejudice they do to them and to inflict temporal judgments on them here and eternal hereafter when He
shall be their Judge and the Books shall be opened at the great Day The wish is from the Three Persons and though the Holy Ghost be here named before the Son it is not to confound the order that is among the Persons of the Trinity in Their subsisting and operations but for this reason because Iohn is to insist on Jesus Christ the second Person he keeps Him last in naming to make the progress in his writing the more clear Observe There are three distinct Persons of the blessed Trinity the Father Son and Spirit who are the same one God in the Name of these Three is Baptism administrated and from Them Grace is wished and prayed for 2 Cor 13.14 For 1. That there are Three who are distinctly mentioned here cannot be denied that the first is the Father and the third Jesus Christ really distinct from the Father is clear for the Son and not the Father was incarnate and therefore the like must be said of the seven Spirits that they set forth the Holy Ghost personally seing it is He who in the like places useth to be joyned in with the Father and the Son as 2 Cor. 13.13 1 Ioh. 5.7 8. and therefore it 's said in the seven Epistles to be what the Spirit saith These Seven Spirits therefore is that one Spirit and He a person that speaketh to the Churches Secondly That each of these Three must be God appears 1. Because the last Two are both joyned as equall with the Father of whom there can be no question 2. Because the Son Jesus Christ afterward hath the same Title attributed to Him which is here given to the Father 3. Because the same one suit is prayed for from all of them and it being Grace and Peace which only God can give suppones divine essential Attributes to be in those from whom they are wished yea They are named here as joynt Senders of this Epistle and Authorizers of this Word therefore is it so often afterward said Let him that hath ears hear what the Spirit saith and there can no Authority but what is divine be sufficient here Hence also Thus saith the Lord and thus saith the Holy Ghost are frequently put for one another each one therefore of these Three must be God 3. It may appear from this also that all these Three are One God thus This Revelation and Salutation cometh from one God chap. 1. ver 1. and 22. 18 19. and yet this Revelation and Salutation cometh from the Father Son and Spirit therefore They are that One God Again If the Grace and Peace proceed from one Essence which is common to all then they are the same God essentially though distinct Persons but Grace and Peace looks to the same Godhead and Essence though it be wished for from all for the effect Grace and Peace is but one it doth therefore suppose an unity in the fountain from which it comes to wit these Three Persons of the glorious Godhead who are named distinctly not to shew a different effect from the Father which is not from the Son but to shew the concurrence of these blessed Three in an united way for bringing forth of these so that what cometh from the Father cometh also from the Son and Spirit These essential Attributes and that most simple and infinit Essence being common to all the Three Persons it rests therefore that they are Three distinct Persons and yet of the same infinit Godhead Neither will that which the Secinians and others oppose to this place have weight Say they Christ is spoken of here as dead Therefore cannot be God For it 's one thing to speak of Him who was dead another to say that it speaks of Him as such He that died was God but He died not as God and therefore this can only prove that Jesus Christ as to His Person is man but by it we can no more deny Him to be the second Person of the Godhead than afterward when He is called the first and the last by that we can deny Him to be man And that the Son and the Holy Ghost are equal with the Father appeareth also in this That they are both equally with Him the object of divine Worship here to wit of Invocation and Prayer which could not otherwise be Concerning the Holy Trinity and Object of Worship THere is much spoken of the Glory of God in this Book and no where is the distinction of the Persons of the glorious Godhead more frequently and clearly set forth Iohn was more full in this than any who wrote before him because that in his time Ebion and some others had arisen who did deny the Godhead of the Son and Holy Ghost and therefore with a particular respect to These he did write the more fully of this for which he got the stile of Divine singularly as was marked on the Title It will not therefore be impertinent now once for all to touch that a little further and although here curiosity would be restrained full satisfaction in the up-taking of that Mysterie being peculiarly reserved to that time when we shall see Him as He is as our Lord's word Ioh. 14.20 Then ye shall know that I am in the Father doth import and therefore we would not presume to satisfie our selves in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or particular manner how that is but humbly be contented to have our Faith solidly grounded in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or being thereof which may be done by considering these three to wit 1. the truth of the thing 2. the expressions used in holding of it forth and 3. the necessity of the believing thereof For the first we say That as there is but one God essentially so there are three distinct co-equal co-essential and con-substantial Persons of that blessed Godhead the Father Son and Spirit who yet in a most wonderful excellent and infinitly perfect though an inconceivable manner have an order of subsisting and working amongst Themselves It was a saying amongst the Ancients That to speak of God even that which was truth was dangerous Etiam de Deo dicere verum est periculosum and indeed here it ought to be remembered Yet may we consider the former general Proposition in these Assertions 1. Assert There is but one God essentially considered and in this the Scripture is clear and so in this Book chap. 1. and last although there be a plurality of Persons mentioned yet it is ever God spoken of as One in the singular number and thus He is still opposed as the One living God to the plurality of Idols And indeed there can be no plurality in this for if that One God have in Him all perfections There can be no perfection beside Him and so no God beside this One true God And if we supposed any perfection to be beside Him then were not He God because not infinit in perfection and if infinit then that which is infinit in that respect cannot be
that respect of His Essence Again these expressions that the one is called the Father and the other the Son and yet both One God do clearly hold forth that there are real relations in that Godhead subsisting in a distinct manner and so there must be Persons as Heb. 1. the Son is called the expresse Image of the Fathers Person which plainly sayes that the Father considered as distinguished from the Son is a Person and subsists and that the Son as distinguished from the Father and as so lively and expresly representing His Person must be a Person also having this from the Father and what is said of the Father and Son must also be true of the holy Ghost who is God equal with both yet different from Them both as They differ from each other though not in respect of that same incommunicable property yet he who proceedeth must differ from those from whom he proceeds as he who is begotten must differ from him that begat him For Their operations we may find here that in some things They concur joyntly yet some way differently Some things again are attributed to one which cannot be to another as their personal properties the Son is begotten and not the Father or the Spirit therefore He is allanerly the Son the Father begets and the Spirit proceeds These are called Their personal properties and Their works ad intra or amongst or in reference to Themselves of this kind is the incarnation of the Son which can neither be said of the Father nor of the holy Ghost Again in things ad extra or that relate to the Creatures simply whether in making or governing of the World They joyntly concur the Father createth all so doth the Son and holy Ghost the Son from the Father by the holy Ghost the holy Ghost from the Father and the Son as those expressions of God sending His Son the Son 's sending the Spirit from the Father c. do declare Ioh. 14.26 and 16.7 Gal. 4.6 To the third This Truth concerning the blessed and glorious Trinity being so often insisted on here and coming so near to the nature of God Himself it cannot but be exceedingly necessary for Christians to be through in the faith thereof yet it is questioned of late whether it be to be accompted a fundamental point of Faith or not I say this of late is questioned by Socinus and the favourers of a boundless untolerable Toleration for of old it was most sacredly received as such amongst the Ancients as the Creeds that are called Apostolick Nicene and that of Athanasius do manifest But this Engine the Devil drives first to make the most necessary Truths indifferent that then he may the more easily engage opposers to quarrel the very Truth of them it self but we conceive whatever it was of old before Christ yet now it is to be looked on not only as a Truth which is clear from the Word but also as a fundamental Truth which being shaken would overturn Christianity and the way of Salvation that the Lord hath revealed in His Gospel This is not to be extended to a rigid degree of knowledge in this wonderful Mysterie but to so much clearness in this Truth from the Word as may be a ground to Faith in the thing it self And that this is necessary as a fundamental we think ariseth clearly from these three grounds 1. That Truth without which the true God cannot be taken up believed in and worshipped is a fundamental Truth but this Truth of the Trinity of Persons and Unity of the Godhead is such that without it that God which is proposed in the Word and is the only true God and the object of all Worship can neither be taken up believed in nor worshipped rightly Ergo c. because the true God is One and yet Three Persons and as such hath proposed Himself to be known and worshipped 2. That Truth without which the work of Redemption would be overturned is fundamental But this is such for by taking away the Mysterie of the Trinity they take away the Godhead and Personality of the Mediatour and so do enervat His satisfaction And as on the former accompt the true God is otherwise conceived than He is in Himself so in this respect the Mediatour is made a quite other thing And can any thing be fundamental if this be not 3. The way that God hath laid down in His Worship requireth this seing in Baptism there is particular and expresse mentioning of these Three the Father Son and Spirit as the Superiour to whom they that are Christian Souldiers should be lifted and inrolled and so we may accompt of all after-worship seing God requires us to honour the Son as we honour the Father and seing these Three equally witness from Heaven 1 Ioh. 5. the Father Word and Spirit all which Three are One can their Testimony be received as of Three or can they be accompted as One God without this And yet there can neither be one in Faith engaged unto in Baptism or one whose Testimony we may receive but He who is God and can any think but it's necessary for a Christian and that fundamentally to know to whom they are devoted whom they are to worship whose Testimony it is that they receive whose operations they feel whom they are to make use of c And therefore it 's necessary to know the Trinity of Persons in that One Godhead It may be the exercise of some tender soul that they know not how to apprehend this Object rightly when they come to worship and that often they are disquieted while their minds are unstable Concerning this there is need here to distinguish betwixt what may satisfie us as to the Object in it self and what may be sufficient to us in directing of our Worship to that Object If we take up God as in Himself here is a depth that cannot be searched out to perfection He is broader than the Sea Who can know Him higher than the Heaven What can we do Iob 11.8 But yet we have footing in His Word how to come before this God with fear reverence holy admiration c. and such affections and qualifications as a true Worshipper that worships in spirit ought to have and in this the pure Worshippers who believe this Truth of One infinit God and Three Persons ought to be taken up rather that they may be suitable in their worshipping and have becoming effects on their own hearts than to be disquieting themselves by poring too curiously on the Object worshipped except in so far as may serve to transform the heart into a likeness to Him And it is not aiming to comprehend the mysteriousness and manner of these incomprehensible Mysteries that doth work this but the real through and near impression of the general which is revealed clearly in His Word We would therefore commend these three in Worship 1. That folks would satisfie themselves in the general with the solid faith
thereof without descending to particular conceptions or notions concerning the Persons of the blessed Godhead this particularness is often that which both confuses the mind and disquiets the conscience and cannot but do so in those who would be at the looking upon God immediately here without making use of the expressions Titles Names c. whereby He hath manifested Himself to us and wherein we conceive it 's safest to rest and to bound all our curiositie within those for they must be the most solid notions of God which Himself hath caught Thus Exod. 33 and 34. The Lord did answer Moses his desire of seeing His Glory by shewing him His goodness in the proclaming of His Attributes to him that are manifested in His Word thereby teaching men to conceive of God according as He hath revealed Himself in His Word in the plain and comprehensive Attributes that describe His Nature wherein Gods goodnesse is sufficiently holden forth to sinners which ought to be a sufficient manifestation of God to them here without diving immediatly into His Essence which could no otherways be manifested to Moses than by that proclamation 2. We would beware of forming Idea's representations or shapes of that One God and Three Persons in the heart or in the head these cannot but be derogatorie to Him being a liknesse to Him of our own up-setting in our hearts and cannot but diminish that Authority which the true God should have in our hearts We would remember therefore that He is purely Spirituall whom no eye hath seen nor can see and therefore all such imaginations are to be abandoned and abhorred 3. We would beware of dividing the Object of Worship or separating the Three blessed Persons in our worshipping of them even in our imagination as if when One is named we were not praying unto and worshipping both the other and as if the Son were an other God than the Father or Spirit c. But still this would be remembered that what ever Person be named He is God and that same One God with the other Two and therefore the Object of Worship is ever the same One God Father Son and Spirit that are but One God We Worship the Father the Son and the Spirit but we do not Worship the Father or the Son or the Spirit as if He who is not named were lesse worshipped than He who is named and seing the Son and holy Ghost are the same God with the Father the former ground being laid it 's all one thing what ever Person be named though in Scripture sometimes respect is had to their order of subsisting and operating and so the Father is only named sometimes to be the ground upon and by which we have accesse to God and so the Son only is named Now by what is said it doth also appear that the holy Ghost may be expresly prayed unto as the Father and the Son although it be not so usuall in Scripture because of the reasons formerly hinted at for this will follow He that is God may be invocated c. and where petitions do especially respect the increase of Grace which is the Work of the Spirit we will find Him expresly mentioned with the Father and Son as here ver 4. and 5. Grace be unto you c. And 2 Cor. 13.14 The communion of the holy Ghost is subjoyned as a distinct petition to the Love of the Father and Grace of the Son and these first two petitions being directed to the Father and the Son this third must be to the holy Ghost in like manner and therefore to plead against the Godhead of the holy Ghost upon this ground that he is not expresly prayed unto in Scripture is both inconsequent and false and the Apostl's taking the holy Ghost to be his witnesse Rom. 9. cannot be done without invocating of Him and the generall commands of glorifying God must infer so much supposing the Spirit to be God There is no weight therefore to be laid on that argument If it be objected against the necessity of believing this Doctrine of the Trinity or against the sinfulnesse of tolerating what opposeth the same That the light of nature doth not discover it and that the Godhead of the holy Ghost hath sometimes not so much as been heard of by Disciples as in Act. 19. Therefore c. To the first we answer That now nature being corrupted it can be no good rule to try what is truth concerning God by it it can hardly be denied if nature be considered as in Adam at the beginning but to him there was clearness in this mysterie there being express mention of the blessed Trinity in his creation as the word Let Vs make man according to Our Image doth import which is not for nought mentioned then more than formerly especially considering that excellent knowledge that Adam was furnished with which was a part of the Image of that One God who is Father Son and Spirit But not to insist in this we say secondly That if by nature as it is now corrupted what is tolerable or intolerable in the matters of Religion were to be tried then were the whole Doctrine of the Gospel and Redemption through the Mediator to be accounted no fundamental thing and consequently no Error destroying it were to be restrained because nature hath not discovered that That therefore must be an unsafe rule to walk by And indeed if a master of a family and father who yet as such is to say so a servant of nature is not by that exempted from the obligation of bringing up his children and servants in the knowledge of God according to the Gospel but is notwithstanding to exercise his authority in the restraining of every thing contrary thereunto according to his station Can it be thought that a Magistrate who must count for his Authority over a people as a master must do for his over a family is lesse obliged thereunto For Christians are to be Christians in their stations as in their personal carriage and so to seek the pr●moving of the Gospel and the restraining of what may ma●● it according to their station Thirdly we answer That even this may be drawn from the Morall Law of God wherein not only the true God is alone to be worshipped as in the first Command but also accordingly as he hath prescribed and revealed in His Word which is the sum of the second Command Now this being true that the Lord hath thus revealed Himself to be worshipped according to the Gospel it becomes no lesse necessary to Worship God in that manner than to Worship Him who is the true God and so i● by the first Command and according to the light of nature Magistrates should restrain and not suffer what is inconsistent with the worshipping of the One true and living God so is he by the second Command and that same light of nature obliged to restrain all manner of Doctrine and Worship that is inconsistent with what he
with every petition of theirs whereby His former affections are stirred to say so and His sympathie awakned to make His divine Attributes forth-coming for their good 4. It would be considered that the Scripture allows these considerations of Christ to Believers for helping them up to communion with Him and so with God in Him and for strengthening them to approach to Him with confidence on that ground 5. As there is an exercising of Faith in God and thereby a keeping of communion with Him so there is a proportionable sympathizing heart-warming and bowel-moving affection allowed us even towards the very Man Christ as one hath to a dear friend or most loving husband that so in a word we may love Him who is Man as He who is Man loves us And this kind of communion is peculiar to the Believer with the second Person of the Godhead as it is peculiar to the second Person of the Godhead as Man by humane affections to love Him And thus we are not only one Spirit with Him as with the other Persons of the Godhead 1 Cor. 6.17 but we are one body with Him of His flesh and of His bone Eph. 5.30 in respect of this union and communion that is betwixt a Believer and the Man Jesus Christ. 6. Hence 6. As we have most access● to conceive of Christs love to us who is Man so we are in the greater capacity to vent our love on Him and to have our bowels kindled upon the consideration of His being Man and performing what He did in our nature for us so the Object is most suited to be beloved by us in His condescending to be as a Brother to us And this doth confirm what is said and is a reason also why Believers vent their love to God by flowing in its expressions directly concerning Christ Because He is both the more sensible Object of our Faith and love and also because there is more possibility to conceive and mention what He in our nature hath done than to consider God and His operations in Himself abstractly 7. Hearts would always remember that He is God and so that they love and keep communion with Him that is God that makes the former the more wonderfully lively as this should make souls keep up the estimation and dignity that is due to such a Person so condescending And so by the Man Christ both to love and believe in God And in sum having the excellencies of God dwelling in the Man Christ whose affections they are more able to conceive of whose sufferings have made H●s love palpable in whom God hath condescended to deal with us and on whom our affections and Faith also may have the more sensible footing by the consideration of His humane affections There is no wonder that this way of adoring praising and loving of God be so much insisted upon and yet even then when the heart is upon this consideration delighting and feeding it self upon the Mediator still His Godhead is emplyed and God in Him delighted in without which all other consolations would be defective And so it is God in the Mediator who is the Object of this delight Now unto this One God be praise in the Church by Jesus Christ for now and ever LECTURE II. Vers. 4. Iohn to the seven Churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from Him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven Spirits which are before His Throne 5. And from Iesus Christ who is the faithfull witnesse and the first-begotten of the dead and the Prince of the Kings of the earth Unto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own bloud 6. And hath made us kings and priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen WE heard of the Persons from whom follows now these to whom the Epistle is sent to wit the seven Churches in Asia and they are particularly named v●r 11. and are severall times spoken of in the two Chapters following Therefore at the entry we shall speak to a doubt or two concerning this inscription to them Quest. 1. Why is this Revelation in form of an Epistle sent to particular Churches rather than to the Whole Church 2. And why is it sent particularly to the seven Churches in Asia 3. Why are they stiled seven Churches and not one Church To the first of these Though it be sent to particular Churches yet this excludes none from the use of it to the end of the world for though many particular Epistles as the Epistles to the Romans Corinthians Galatians c. be directed to particular Churches yet the benefit of the Word contained in them extendeth to all Believers in all ages as well as to them to whom they were directed So those particular Epistles directed to the seven Churches in Asia in the 2. and 3. chapters are useful and behoveful to all the Churches of Christ in the like cases as if they had been particularly directed to them therefore is that Word cast to in the close of each of those Epistles Let him that hath a●●ar hear what the Spirit saith to the Churches 2. As to the general subject matter of this Book It concerns not those particular Churches more than others as we told at the entry For ver 1. It is directed to his Servants to be made use of to the end of the world and it 's sent to those particular Churches to be transmitted by them to other Churches and in this sense the Church is called the pillar and ground of Truth 1 Tim. 3.15 as holding forth and transmitting the Truth to others To the second Why is it dedicated to the seven Churches in Asia Answ. 1. Either because those Churches were next to Pasmos where Iohn was now banished for those who are skilled in Geography know that this little Isle lyes off Asia the lesse Or 2. Because it 's like Iohn had particular inspection of those Churches in Asia committed to him which though it be not particularly set down in Scripture yet it 's clear from Scripture that there was a division of inspection among the Apostles without limiting any of them Peter was sent to the Circumcision Paul to the Gentiles Iames shode at Ierusalem And in the Ecclesiastick Story it 's asserted that after Paul had planted Ephesus Iohn stayed there who lived l●st of the Apostles And so these Churches being as would seem under his special oversight while he is absent from them by ●anishment he commends this Epistle to them 3. Jesus Christ sends it to them partly because of some special faults that were among them their need so remaining and because of some special tryals they were to endure and the need they had of consolation under these trials partly because they were the most famous Churches then for Ierusalem was now destroyed this being written in the days of Domician the Emperour To the third Why writes ●e to
am suffering with you so I am confined for Preaching to you in Patmos pointing out this that as all Believers are brethren so all have one lot in suffering here away and none are exempted from the Crosse were it the Disciple whom Jesus loved and leaned on His bosom at the Supper the night He was betrayed yet he must be a companion in tribulation and come into heaven at the same door with the rest Folks would not think this strange that afflictions light on these whom Christ loves best the servant is not greater than the Lord. It should comfort sufferers and make them look on it as their prerogative to be sufferers for Christ. 3. There is a further aggravation or explication of the former and in the Kingdom and Patience of Iesus Christ. Lest it should be thought any thing derogatory to be a sufferer he says he is a companion in the Kingdom and Patience of Jesus Christ with them And these two words Kingdom and Patience are put together not only to shew He is a King and a Priest with other Believers but to shew this much that Christs Kingdom is often more in the exercise of patience than in dominion and that the Subjects of Christs Kingdom here are more put to exercise patience than to reign His meaning is I am a sharer with you in the Spiritual Kingdom of Christ that needeth no worldly grandour but hath need of patience And it saith that he counts it his prerogative to be singled out and put to patient suffering for giving testimonie to Christ as King of His Church Afflictions for Christ and sharing in His Kingdom may stand well together for the time and in reference to the upshot if we suffer with Him we shall reign with Him A second circumstance which is also a further description of himself is from the place and cause 1. From the place of his suffering I was in the Isle which is called Patmos This Patmos is an Isle in the Aegean-Sea near the coast of Asia the lesse not far from the seven Churches in Asia to whom he writeth a place which is called barren by them who write of it not much inhabited then not now because of the barrennesse of it therefore it was a greater evidence of the cruelty of Iohns persecuters that banished him thither 2. The cause is for the Word of God and for the testimony of Jesus Christ that is for his Preaching the Word of God and for his owning and maintaining Christs Gospel for his bearing testimonies that Jesus Christ was the King Priest and Prophet of His Church and the eternal substantial Word of the eternal Father for Christs cause who is the Word of God or for bearing testimony to Him The way how he came to this Island is not set down but Historie tells Euseb. lib. 3. cap. 14. ex Ireneo Clem. Alex. it was in the fourteenth year of Domitian the Emperour when he raised the second persecution against the Church of Christ about the 97. year of our Lord that he after he had tortured Iohn banished him to this Isle near about the same time of Iohn's age This then is the place that Iohn was banished to and yet in the same place he hath sweet fellowship with God is countenanced of Him and honoured to be the carrier of this Revelation to the Church 1. See here how far gracelesse and profane persecuters such as this beast Domitian was may prevail against the servants of Jesus Christ when he doth banish Iohn to Patmos beside other horrible persecutions which he raised against the Church Christ by this would have us know His Kingdom is not of this world 2. Solitarinesse for Christ is not the worst condition Christ can make up that another way and if there be a necessity of withdrawing men from their duty as of Ministers from their publick Ministry He can make it tend as much to their private benefit and to the publick good of His Church if not more neither doth Iohn lose any thing by his banishment and confinement for he finds more intimate and sweet communion and fellowship with Christ and gets more of His mind nor doth the Church lose any thing by it for she gets this Revelation of Gods mind If we believed this we would never go out of Gods way to make up His Work for if He please to lay us by He knows how to make up that both to our selves and Gods people The Christian Church is as much beholden to Paul's imprisonment in Epistles as to his liberty in Preaching 3. Honest suffering for Christ hath often with it the freshest and clearest manifestations of Christ. Folks that will continue faithful and bide by their duty through sufferings they shall not only not be losers but gainers 1 Pet. 4.14 If ye be reproached for the Name of Christ happie are ye for the Spirit of God and of Glory resteth upon you I would have none carnal nor vain in this but humbly confident and constant as they would thrive in their Spiritual condition and maintain their peace LECTURE IIII. Vers. 10. I was in the spirit on the Lords day and heard behind me a great voice as of a trumpet BEfore Iohn come particularly to the Vision he saw he insisteth in some particular circumstances that make way to the more full faith and credite of the Vision and Story that followeth and though they be only circumstances in themselves yet they are profitable and conducing to the main end he hath before him We heard of the first and second circumstance how and where Iohn was when he got this Vision Followeth in the 10 vers the third and fourth circumstances that is the day when he got this Vision and the frame he was in I was in the spirit on the Lords day The words in the Originall are I was in the spirit on that Lords day pointing out a day singularly and a day that in a particular and speciall manner is called His Day beside any other day that Dominik day or day which is the Lords That we may have accesse to the use we shall speak a little to these two 1. What particular day this is seing there is no mention made what day it is more than this that it is called The Lords day 2. What it is to be in the spirit on this day For clearing of the first of these two ye would consider that there is but one other phrase in Scripture like this and it 's spoken of the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11. This is not to eat the Lords Supper They that know the Originall know also this phrase to be singular like this of the Lord's day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 1 Cor. 11.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is opposed unto and contradistinguished from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which was not see apart from other suppers and common use as this was And these two being by one particular phrase expressed we must expound the one by
a body bear out some resemblance and analogie of these qualifications that are in Him far beyond any thing that can be conceived The fourth property or qualification is his voice which is said to be as the sound of many waters It was said in the 10. vers to be a great voice like a trumpet here it is said to be like the sound of many waters both high and great heard afar off and very terrible and dreadfull By His voice in Scripture is understood mainly two things both which may well relate to this resemblance 1. His effectuall willing and commanding of things to be as it 's said He spoke and it was done He commanded and it stood fast Gen. 1. Let there be light and it was light for Christ as God hath not a voice properly but the voice being that by which a man signifies his command and will and being here attributed to Christ as God It is to point out His effectual willing and bringing that forth which He would have done and so points at the effectualnesse of Christs government There is nothing called for by Him but it cometh to passe nothing commanded but is done and that with a word 2. It 's taken for the manifestation of Gods terriblenesse and majesty Psal. 18.13 The Lord also thundred in the heavens and the highest gave His voice hailstones and coals of fire In which sense it is applied to the thunder because by it He manifests His power and shews Himself terrible Hence there is so much spoken of His voice Psal. 29.3 4 5 6 7 8 9. The voice of the Lord c. To shew not only the powerful effects of the voice of God in the thunder and the way it produceth its effects but the terriblenesse and majesty of God who hath such a voice that as it is Hag. 2.6 Can shake heaven and earth which is to point out His dreadfulnesse and terriblenesse against the enemies of His Church If He speaks the word they evanish one word of this King will make the stoutest Tyrants to quake as is clear from Scripture and the storie of former times A fifth qualification is vers 16. He had in his right hand seven stars The seven Stars are expounded in the last verse to be the Ministers of the Churches And the reasons of it we forbear till we come to that only here our Lord Jesus is said to have a right hand that is power and skill and activity in exercising His power for the right hand is the strongest hand and that by which men skilfully and dexterously go about the bringing to passe of that which they would be at He hath not power and fury but power and skill and with power and skill He manages all His matters Believers have not a handlesse Mediator to speak so He hath hands as well as feet But more of this in the third thing contained in this description Sixthly He is described further Out of his mouth went a two edged sword whereby is meaned the Word of God especially the Gospel His voice spoken of before is more generall relating to His universall power and soveraignty over all the World This relates more particularly to the written and Preached Word called The sword of the Spirit which is the word of God Eph. 6. and sharper then a two edged sword dividing betwixt the joynts and the marrow the soul and the spirit and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Heb. 4. The Word is compared to a sword and a two edged sword for these reasons 1. Because of the power of it it hath a discerning peircing penetrating power with it to come in on hearts and to discover the thoughts and intents of the heart when Christ blesseth it and maketh it strik at the roots of corruption it will humble the proudest heart and quicken the deadest spirit and pierce through the Soul and Conscience of the most obdured person as Act. 2. Peters Preaching did prick his hearers This is the saving and proper effect of the Word when it Anatomizes folks and layeth open their thoughts their security pride formality c. and strikes at the root of the body of death to kill it and be its death 2. Because of the effect it hath among carnall hearers and hypocrites in which respect we think it is especially looked on here as afterwards in the Epistle to Pergamos Chap. 2. vers 12.16 I will fight against them with the sword of my mouth This sword when rightly handled proves a torture to the wicked men in the world when it discovers their rottenesse so it 's said of the two faithfull Witnesses Revel 11.10 that they tormented them that dwelt on the earth the Word of God was so sharp in their mouths that it did hew Hos. 6.5 their minds and consciences and galled them at the heart so Act. 7. it is said Stephens hearers were cut in their heart and gnashed upon him with their teeth they could not abide the plainnesse and evidence of the Word accompanied with power 3. Because it hath a further cutting vertue to wicked men when it proves through Gods Justice plaguing to their hearts and minds and hath an instrumentall efficacy for their slaying when God draws out the sentence and gives the Word an edge and makes it cut and in His Justice to promove their destruction Isa. 11.4 With the breath of his lips he shall slay the wicked 1 King 19.17 Him that escapeth the sword of Iehu shall Elisha slay and Hos. 6.5 I hewed them by my Prophets and slew them by the words of my mouth through Gods pronouncing of sharp threatnings and their corruption abusing the threatnings it becomes their death 2. This sword is said to proceed out of his mouth to point out where from the force efficacy and power of the Word cometh when it pierceth It 's not the Word as it is written or spoken by mens mouth but as it proceedeth out of Christs mouth which makes it profitable or convincing and it is this which makes sinners guilt so great and tormenteth hypocrites when He addeth weight with it to thwart their corruption and they repine against it The last qualification is His countenance was as the Sun shineth in his strength whereby is meaned the love that He sheweth to His People and the Glory and Majesty that is in Himself Psal. 4.6 Lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon us that is the manifestation of thy love And Psal. 80. the causing of His face to shine is severall times spoken of And this favour and stately Majesty in Christ is compared to the Sun shining not as in the morning nor at even nor under a cloud but in his strength 1. Because of the glorious majesty that is in it as Chap. 5.15 of the Song His countenance is as Lebanon excellent as the cedars there is an excellency and beauty in it that dazels and obscures all the excellency and beauty of the World even
his moving either to the studying of Divinity or the following of the Ministery as we may see in the multitude of false Prophets of old and in the experience of later times wherein many have and do run whom the Lord never sent And considering the nature of our spirits and the way that the devil may have in the seducing of some and jumbling of others this needeth not to be thought strange The great difficulty then will be how to discern the voice of the Spirit of God in this particular from the voice of our own spirits or of the devil in this respect transforming himself into Angel of light and sometimes even driving honest hearts to the attempting of this as a good thing who yet may not be called thereunto of God indeed To help then in the trial of this Consider 1. That that which is an impulse of the Lords Spirit doth more compose and sanctifie the whole frame of the inward man it being that same Spirit which is the Spirit of Grace and supplication therefore the more sensibly he pouse the more sensibly are these effects and the more composed and sanctified a heart be the more clear and distinct will that impulse of the Spirit be because then the heart is more impartial to discern the same And although this impulse of the Spirit be but a common work which may be in a hypocrite and so alway hath not this sanctifying efficacie with it yet we conceive where one out of conscience reflecteth on it to try whither it be of God or not there can be no conclusion drawn from it to quiet the conscience in the acknowledgment thereof except it be found to be like His Spirit in the effects of it 2. That this impulse of the Spirit is not backed with the assistance of our spirits but some way it constraineth them to yeeld to it even contrary to their own inclination So that it moveth and carrieth a man over the thoughts of gain reproach credit or losse over his inability and unfitnesse which are never more discovered than when this impulse is strongest and most distinct as we may see in the examples of Moses Ieremiah c. whereas motions from our own spirits do often lessen the difficulties and hide the unfitnesse and inability that is within us and readily ground themselves upon some supposed ability or probability more than there is apparent reason for 3. That Gods Spirit moveth by spiritual motives like himself as the promoving of Gods glory the edification of His people the preventing of a challenge by giving obedience to Him and such like whereas other motions have ends and motives like themselves as in the false prophets and other teachers in the New Testament may be seen who fed not the flock but themselves and served not the Lord Christ but their own bellies and sought their own credit ease c. yea even Iudas though extraordinarily moved by the Spirit yet it 's like that was not the motive which prevailed with him to yeeld but some carnal motive whether gain credit or such like as is held forth in the Gospel 4. That the motion of the Lords Spirit is in its nature kindly and in its way regular according to the rule of the Spirit in the Word that is it doth not drive the heart violently as the Devils injections do nor doth it precipitat in the following and persuing of what it moveth to but as having the command of the heart he moveth natively without making the spirit confused and He presseth the prosecuting of what He moveth unto orderly it being the same Spirit that hath laid down a rule to walk by in the Word and now stirs within the heart and therefore the inward impulse cannot but be answerable to the outward rule Hence also the spirits motion is submissive to the way of trial appointed in the Word and is not absolute or peremptory whereas motions from our selves or from the devil are head-strong and irregular aiming at the end or thing without respect to the way prescribed for attaining it or at least do not so heartily approve of the one as of the other especially if it be thwarted in its design by them 5. That this motion of the Spirit putteth to the use of all means that lead to the end as well as to the end it self that is reading studying praying or what may fit one for that end for the Spirit never divideth the end and the means and Pauls word to Timothie subjoyning that precept give thy self to reading to that other of his fulfilling his Ministrie doth confirm this whereas when these are divided there can be no claim made to a motion of the Spirit of God 6. Consider that the impulse of the Spirit is a fitting gifting impulse and carrying along with it a capacity in some measure for and a suitablenesse to the thing that it calls to Hence in the Scripture the Call of the Spirit and the Gifts of the Spirit go together And this last is given as the evidence of the first and in this respect although there may be an impulse to the study of Divinity without the Call of the Spirit unto the Ministrie yet can that never be counted an impulse of the Spirit actually to enter the Ministrie where this gifting of the Spirit is not for it can never be instanced in all the Word of God that His Spirit sent any but his Call was sealed by His Gifting of them And so in effect the trying of this impulse so as one may have satisfaction therein will for the most part resolve in the trial of those two formerly mentioned to wit the fitnesse of ones Gift to teach Secondly The singlenesse and sincerity of the motive whereby one is swayed to follow the impulse for although the Spirit may move yet if it be some carnal ground that perswadeth the person to yeeld to that which the Spirit moveth unto it can be no ground of peace These two then are at least as to a mans peace the sine quibus non in the trial of this impulse so that without them he cannot conclude himself to be called actually to enter the Ministrie or have peace in the undertaking thereof To speak a word then to what weight is to be laid on this impulse Concerning it we say 1. That if all things beside concur to the fitting and qualifying of a Minister this is not simply to be accounted a sine quo non in ones undertaking Because 1. There may be some impulse though we discern it not 2. Because there are more clear grounds to gather Gods mind from as the effects of the Spirit fitting one with Gifts for the charge and other grounds laid down whereupon weight may more safely be laid than upon any inward apprehending or not apprehending of the Spirits motion which is never given to us in any thing as the alone rule of obedience and we must suppose the motion of the Spirit to h● where
could their Authority have never reached to the formal removing of them as in civil cases was h●nted Thirdly To make out the Argument we say that this distinct independent Power here mentioned is a thing that agreeth to the Church in all Ages and conditions and is not peculiar to any one time as suppose because the Church wanted Christian Magistrates at this time it had been lawful to exercise Authority independent from them which in other cases where the Magistrate is Christian is not to be granted Therefore we say 1. That which is attributed to these Churches here agrees to them as Churches and therefore to all Churches at all times for the duties are common and the hazards are common to Churches at all times Therefore this remedy of Church-discipline must be perpetuall also it being the cure that is appointed for such a disease And that often repeated word He that hath ears to hear let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches doth speak in all ages to the end of the World alswell as then 2. If all other directions exhortations c. in these Epistles be perpetuall and binding to the Church to the end of the World then this must be so also and there can be no reason given why this is to be accounted temporary more than the other especially considering that Christs sending of this Revelation is for the good of His Servants unto the end of the World and that especially is aimed at in these Epistles as the forcited close doth confirm It must then be injurious to Christs mind to sc●ape out so much as concerneth Government as not belonging to His Church for so many ages 3. If the grounds requiring the exercise of this power in the Churches during this time be perpetuall agreeing to all ages Then it is not to be astricted to the time of the Churches being under heathen Magistrates alone But the ground are perpetuall for that is not because the Magistrate is a heathen but that the person offending may be brought to repentance and the seducing of others may be prevented Now these ends are perpetuall which the Church is to study in all times and seing Church Authority and Government is here holden forth as a mean appointed by Jesus Christ for attaining of these ends It must therefore be of perpetuall use to the Church also Although these Truths be clear from the Word yet there are some things which are partly exceptions partly objections insisted on by Adversaries which we shall speak a little to as the nature of our intended purpose will permit A forcited Author pag. 545. doth confidently undervalue all Arguments to this purpose and denieth all distinctnesse of Government in the Church by any Power distinct from that of the Magistrates and to maintain it doth 1. assert That all sort of Power whatsoever is supreamly in the Magistrate whether Heathen or Christian by that place Rom. 13.2 he heaps up with many bigg words several absurdities that accompany as he alledgeth that opinion of a distinct Church-government which he calleth invidiously the building of an Empire within an Empire Yet 3. He granteth that where the Civil Magistrate taketh not on him the care of the Church and maintaineth it not in that case by the Law of Nature and Nations the Church cometh to have an Authority or somewhat equivalent in the place of that whereby she is qualified for the ordering of what concerneth her Members during that case of such a Magistracie allanerly and denyeth any other Authority to have been in the Church during the time that these Epistles were written but what was by voluntary confederacie and association of Members amongst themselves and therefore saith That they had and exercised no lesse Authority during that time in Civil things for which end he maketh use of that place 1 Corinth 6.1 2. c. In reference to all which we say 1. That Authority cannot be denied here however it be derived seing it is a Power to Excommunicate and Exauthorate Officers and Members which they assume as he speaks pag. 654. Yea a Power equivalent to that of the Magistrates because it 's a Power adequate for the time to this end of governing the Church pag. 545. And therefore we say if this confederating or up-making of this Government be a thing jure called for and necessary to be done for this end it is the thing which we assert also and in respect of the particular circumstances that is what places or persons are to associate together is to be regulated by Christian prudence but if it meaned of a voluntary association and confederacie such as trades and crafts use in their Societies as that alone which is the ground of this Power This we altogether deny Because 1. If that confederating be called for by the Law of Nature Then it is not voluntary and free And this Authority is not grounded meerly upon voluntary confederating because as it is not arbitrary to a converted Christian to be Baptized or not so being Baptized it is not arbitrary to him whether to joyn with the Church or not And being joyned submitting to its Government is a necessary duty to him And it becometh not Authority to him because he submits to it but he is to submit to it because it is Authority and therefore supposing that these false Apostles or Iezebel or the Nicolaitans had never consented to subject themselves to the Discipline of these Churches as by their taking such names of Apostles and Prophets to themselves it 's like they did never yet notwithstanding had these Churches Authority over them and it was their duty to submit unto them 2. It 's granted that the Authority that the Church hath in such a case is equivalent to what the Magistrate hath and might exercise and if it be not equivalent to this then the Church of Christ under such Magistrates would not be so perfect as to their Church-state and wel-being as otherwayes which cannot be said without wronging the wisdom of God as if he had left His Church destitute of inward Power when she had least outward Protection but if it be such a Power it cannot be arbitrary and meerly grounded upon the confederacy but must be authoritative upon an other account and may authoritatively enjoyn one to confederate And so confederating is not the ground that constituteth the power but a mean making way for the exercise thereof 3. If it were asked What evidence or proof could be given of such voluntary confederating in the Churches for that time It would be hard to show that universally in all the Churches there was such formall compacting actually agreed upon and yet that there was Government and Authority in them all is evident 4. Suppose confederacies to have been yet could they never have constituted an Authority and Government distinct and independent from the civil supream Power especially while the supream Power opposed the same as supposing to keep the similitudes proponed
odiousnesse of corrupt doctrine on the heart than of grosse outward practices because grosse practices offend nature more directly and are hatefull even to naturall men and even some good men are ready to foster such an opinion as if grace were more consistent with error than with profanity Upon this ground the Lord Himself and the Apostles do more frequently give people warning to mark and abstain from them that cause offences contrary to the Doctrine of the Gospel than they do in matters of grosse practice 2. Persuing of persons that are erroneous hath often little fruit with it as to the persons themselves there being but few that are recovered out of that snare of the devil and to whom God giveth repentance who once deliberately oppose themselves to the Truth but on the contrary they seem to be more bold and to make a greater stir than if they had not been taken notice of as we see in Corinth and Galatia the more that Paul pressed them the more they seemed to despise him and they go on in their contradiction and blasphemy as in the History of the Acts and instances of Hymeneus and Philetus is clear This maketh that even sometimes good men out of fear of the inconveniences that may follow and the difficulties that accompany such a work may be too prone to oversee and forbear them 3. Sometimes respect to the persons of some who may be carried away may have influence on this as suppose some persons for a name of piety sometimes favorie should be seduced preposterous tendernesse to those may make men cruelly to spare them to their prejudice This fault the Lord seemeth to quarrel in Thyatira that they suffered his servants to be seduced 4. There may be also a design by more gentle means to restrain such an errour and recover such as are fallen whereby they may come to exceed and turn to be defective in not using the means appointed as if such censures had been needlesly appointed or as if the Lord did not make use of mediate means for the restraining of errour 5. Such businesses also have often their own mistakes among many tender members of the Church some whereof may be too favourable constructers of the most grosse seducers and so fear to offend them and love to keep all in peace oftentimes may steal in to have weight to the prejudice of the Lords Ordinance It is written of the Schism in Phrygia which arose for Montanus that many did construct too well of him as not thinking it impossible but he might be a good man who therefore could not go alongst in the thoughts that others had of him There is readily something of this amongst the weakest sort where deluders come which getting way for a time doth rather increase than diminish and so leaveth this duty in a greater none-entry than at first We come now to the remedy or duty exhorted to which is laid down and pressed vers 16. It is in short Repent that same which was proposed to Ephesus vers 5. The Lord hereby signifying 1. That when sins are fallen into it is not enough to forbear them but there must be an exercising of repentance for them 2. That there is no expectation to be keeped free from wrath where there hath been sin without repentance 3. That ommissions are sinfull and to be repented of even as commissions are And 4. That sinfull ommissions in a mans publick Station such as this is which is reproved are to be repented of as grosse personall faults are The threatning annexed is in these words or else I will come unto thee quickly and I will fight against them with the sword of my mouth It hath two parts The first respecteth the Church or Angel of Pergamos I will come unto thee quickly that is if thou repent not I will one way or another come in judgement against thee We conceive it relateth to the Angel especially it being in the singular number because this fault being a defect in Discipline is not so to be imputed to the People as to him whose place it was to take order with such corruptions which will appear more clearly afterward The second part respecteth these grosse members that were suffered to be in the Church to wit the Nicolaitans I will fight against them with the sword of my mouth that is seing ye are guilty of defect here if there be not repentance for it I will come in an extraordinary way and my self punish those whom ye have suffered For clearing of this threatning we may consider 1. Wherein it consisteth 2. How it can be a threatning to the Angel 3. Wherefore he is so peculiarly threatned To the first It is clear here that the party immediately threatned is the Nicolaitans whom the Lord threatneth to fight against with the sword of His mouth which looketh not to any external or corporal plague for the sword of His mouth is not the weapon that inflicteth such But it looketh especially to these 1. To a discovery of their wickednesse and of the hatefulnesse of their way by His Word 2. To a censuring threatning and sentencing of them by the same 3. To a fruitlesnesse of such discoveries threatnings and sentences as to any spiritual or saving work upon them but that they should be by such clear convictions and sentences in Gods secret Wisdom and Justice more hardned convinced irritated and affected with spiritual plagues than if they had not been so dealt with in this respect often in the Scripture we have mentioned hewing by the Prophets and slaying by the words of the Lords mouth as Hosea 6.5 and fighting with Antichrist and destroying him by the Spirit of His mouth 2 Thess. 2.8 and elsewhere the like expressions to that purpose This is a sad plague when the Table of the Gospel becometh a snare and when through mens own corruption they become more drunk with their own delusions even under convincing Light and when the Word of God which is the only Weapon whereby they may offend their enemies is through their opposing the Light thereof turned to fight against them as they have turned themselves to fight against it the event here as to them cannot but be desperate For the second It may be questioned how this can be a threatning to the Church or Angel that the Lord would take such course with these corrupt Nicolaitans It might rather look like a favour to them Answer If we consider it more particularly we will find it a threatning in these respects 1. That it implies Christ to be angry at their neglecting of their duty and that this extraordinary way doth insinuate His esteeming of them not to be worthy to have this employment therefore he taketh their duty off their hand and provideth Himself of some others for the performing thereof Thus when Paul is threatning the Corinthians 1 Epist. Chap. 4. vers 21. What shall I come unto you with a vod c. whereby he sheweth himself to be
which is of great consolation to His People This lastly is here mentioned to encourage and strengthen this honest weak Angel and Church against the many difficulties which they had to wrestle with as we will find in the Body of the Epistle This Angel and Church it 's like have been before others far from that estimation that Sardis was in for they have but a little strength and many enemies yet were they much more honest and commendable before God and fruitfull under the Ordinances they had therefore the Lord indites a most comfortable Epistle unto them In the Body of the Epistle we have these three things 1. Their present condition is in several respects described 2. Their commendation is laid down 3. Some excellent encouragements and directions are given them for the time to come These three being interwoven we must open them as they lye Beside this general I know thy works which though common to all the rest of the Epistles in some respect yet may be taken here as holding forth His particular approbation of this Church because there is nothing quarrelled in her This will not indeed prove that she was altogether free but that being honest and free of grosse faults the Lord doth not rigidly reckon with her Besides this I say in the 8. vers this Churches good condition is set forth in these four 1. Behold I have set before thee an open door and no man can shut it this is the fountain of all that is commendable in her and from which it doth flow to wit Christs conferring such a mercy upon her and this is a main encouragement premitted for the strengthning of the honest Angel of this Church For understanding of it we must consider 1. What is meant by an open door 2. What by Christs setting of it before the Angel so as no man can shut it By an open door usually is understood in the Scripture the Lords making way for profitable preaching of the Gospel which standeth not mainly in having accesse and liberty without any external restraint to preach the Gospel but especially it stands in Gods giving inward liberty to the Preacher and in His countenancing of the Word and making it effectuall and successefull upon the hearts of Hearers This is called Colos. 4.3 A door of utterance when a Minister is not straitned in preaching the Gospel but as it were the door is casten open to him And 2 Cor. 2 12. When I came to Troas to preach Christs Gospel and a door was opened unto me of the Lord which is some special signification of Gods sending him and removing of difficulties out of the way and making his Ministery succesefull there And 1 Cor. 16.9 it is said a great door and effectuall is opened unto me and there are many adversaries So that there may be an effectuall door opened even where there is much opposition In sum it imports these two or three 1. That there is a straitnednesse in Ministers who cannot bring forth the Gospel as it ought to be brought forth and will when the Lord sendeth forth the Spirit and enlargeth a man with boldnesse to speak the same in this respect a door of utterance is opened unto him as in that place Col. 4.3 is clear 2. That there is a further let beside this to wit when the ears and hearts of Hearers are so locked up that the Word hath no entrance but is repelled The Lord openeth this door when by the work of His Spirit upon hearts as upon the heart of Lydia He doth make the Word to be received and admitted in which respect 2 Thess. 3.1 Paul desireth them to pray that the Word may have free course that is that there be no shut doors to marr the progresse of the same Both these are understood here to wit liberty for the Minister to speak and that with countenance and successe among the People We conceive also that this phrase of an open door doth take in a concurring of Gods providence for the keeping of the Word ministred and Ordinances in such a place in both the respects that are mentioned notwithstanding of the numerousnesse and maliciousnesse of opposers and this agreeth well with that word in this verse and no man shall shut it And this may be a third thing imported in this expression though it be not of the same kind with the former two every way By Christs setting open of this door before the Angel so that none can shut it is holden forth 1. Christs supreamacie and soveraignty in giving Gifts to men liberty and inward freedom to improve them and also a blessing upon them in making of them succesefull It is not Gifts by which a man will be able to Preach if the Lord'give not a door of utterance yea even the great Apostle Paul hath need of this Col. 4.3 nor is it the having of utterance that will obtain fruits among the people if the Lord do not open an effectual door and give the Word free course among them Hence it is that sometimes where there is most utterance given there may be lesse successe than where there are fewer Gifts because he whose priviledge it is to set open doors doth open more fully the door of utterance to the one and the effectual door to the other and doth not open both equally to all 2. This importeth the necessity and inevitablenesse of successe when Christ thus openeth the door Successe cannot but follow and no man or devil can shut out or impede the same when He pleaseth to countenance His Ministers and to commend the Word to the hearts of hearers Now it may appear what the meaning of this part of the verse is which relateth especially to the Angel to wit I have called thee to this Ministrie and have given thee some measure of utterance though thou hast not much ability and especially I have ordered matters so as the Word from thee shall have free course and successe And rage who will this shall not be obstructed By which also we may see why the Lord took the Title to Himself that doth immediatly go before this The second thing in the verse is for thou hast a little strength by little strength here is not to be understood weaknesse in Grace for that is eminently commended nor yet little countenance in the discharge of Ministerial duties But it looketh to his parts and abilities which its like were not many and great in comparison of what others had that is it may be he was not able to speak of nor search into so many profound mysteries and follow doubtfull disputations as others were in capacity to do This is not mentioned here as any ground of opprobrie to him nor yet as any ground of commendation being considered simplie and in it self but it is mentioned for these two reasons which being put together will clear the scope 1. It is given as a ground of Christs opening the door before him and as an evidence
possible upon mans side as a satisfaction to that Justice there is an external righteousnesse provided to wit the satisfaction of the Mediator which being imputed to the sinner is in law to be accepted as satisfactory for him by vertue of the Covenant of Grace and by vertue thereof he is to be absolved and discharged as if he himself had satisfied this is the meritorious cause of our Justification 3. This satisfaction of the Mediator is not imputed to all nor to any but upon the terms agreed upon to wit that it be received and rested upon Therefore the Gospel is Preached and this righteousnesse is not only revealed therein but offered thereby to all who shall by Faith receive the same in which respect the Gospel ●s it is contained in the Word and the Preaching thereof is ●o●● only called the external instrumental cause of our Justification 4. When by the Power of Gods Spirit the sinner is brought to receive this offer and to rest upon this righteousnesse as the only ground of his peace and his whole defence against the Law before the Justice of God then according to the offer he becometh interested in this righteousnesse and Christ becometh his righteousnesse who is by this receiving of Him put on by the Believer and by this he may plead absolution from the challenges of the Law before Gods Justice as a debtor may plead absolution from his debt upon his instructing the Cautioner to have payed it And in this respect Faith is called the condition of the Covenant because it is upon this condition that Justification is offered to us therein and upon this condition God becometh our God and Christ our Righteousnesse and it is also called the instrumental cause of our Justification because it acteth by receiving Christ as He is ●olden forth in the Word and if that be justly called the external instrumental cause which doth offer him for our righteousnesse Then may Faith well be called the internal instrumental cause because it doth receive Him for that same end and because by this receiving He becometh our righteousnesse upon which our Justification is grounded Hence 5. upon this receiving of Christ and presenting of His righteousnesse for our defence before Gods Justice that righteousnesse and satisfaction is imputed to us and accounted for ours and upon this our sins are pardoned and we absolved before God and this is that wherein formally our Justification consisteth and this is the end why this counsel is proposed that by receiving of this offered righteosnesse this may be attained This way of restoring of sinners by Grace is often set forth by way of mutual bargain as in Covenanting Treating by Ambassadours Marrying B●ying and such like All which do import a mutuall dosing of a bargain upon mutual terms and thus it is expressed to shew not wherein formally our Justification doth consist but to shew the way and terms by which we may come at it and upon which we close with God and in this respect Faith is called the condition of the Covenant of Grace because it supplieth that place and hath in it that which ordinarily a condition hath that is proposed in making of a mutual bargain sometimes also it is set forth under legall expressions as to lybell an accusation against to charge and arraign a sinner before Justice and then to absolve him from that charge in opposition to condemnation and thus sin is called debt and to punish for it is to exact or require satisfaction and Christ in that respect is called the Cautioner or Surety and His suffering satisfying the pardoning of the sinner is called justifying or absolving in opposition to condemning and the deriving of this from Christ is called imputation or to repute the sinner righteous upon Christs satisfying for him or it is the reckoning of Christs satisfaction on the account of the sinner All which expressions are borrowed from the way of legall and judicial procedour before men The first way sheweth how we become friends with God to wit by Covenanting with Him in Christ Jesus The second sheweth a prime benefit which doth slow from that friendship to wit our Justification These two are not to be conceived different things or successive in time much lesse to be separated but as they be different wayes of holding forth the same thing whereof the one doth especially relate to the means the other to the end and that so as Grace and Justice may be seen to go alongst in this great businesse and that a sinner may be helped to conceive of the same the more distinctly when he hath it moulded in the terms and forms used among men and that under diverse considerations that so he may the more satisfyingly comprehend this mystery of free Justification Concerning which in the general we say 1. That the immediat meritorious cause of our Justification is Christs Righteousness we take for granted for it is the gold here that maketh rich without which the dyvour could not pay his debt it is the raiment which covereth our nakednenesse and therefore the righteousnesse of the Saints must be a put on communicated external and imputed righteousnesse so that supposing a man to be pursued before the barr of Gods Justice there is no defence can be proposed but Christs satisfaction which only will be a relevant exception in that Court which in Paul's example is clear Philip. 3.9 as if it were asked Paul what will thou flie to in that day Only to be found in Him saith he not having my own righteousnesse which is by the works of the Law but that which is by Faith in Christ. Thus Christ is our Righteousnesse and we are righteous in Him as He was made sin for us for that opposition 2 Corinth 5.21 doth evince this but our sins were imputed to Him and so were the immediat ground upon which He was found liable to Justice in that same manner therefore His Righteousnesse must be the immediate cause of our being absolved seing His Righteousnesse must be transferred to us as our sins were to Him as is said 2. That this Righteousnesse of the Mediator is immediatly imputed to us hath also been accounted a truth amongst the Orthodox hitherto that is that as a cautioners paying of the debt being instructed in a Court is sufficient for absolving of the debtor from the creditors pursuit because in the Law the cautioners paying in the debtors name is reckoned as if the debtor had paid it and so it is imputed to him and accepted for him so it is here And this way of imputing Christs Righteousnesse immediatly doth serve exceedingly 1. to humble the sinner when that whereby he is justified is not in himself this being certain that we are more proud of what is supposed to be in us than of what is imputed to us even as a dyvour hath lesse to boast of when the cautioners paiment is immediatly imputed to him for his absolution than if by his
flow it being seldome in any Minister but it putteth an edge and weight upon the Word in his mouth as the want of it maketh the most part want savour and in the finest words often to have but little weight 18. We may gather here That a Minister should hold forth the Authority of the Ordinance and Word and of Him in whose Name he speaketh and ought to take it upon him not from supposed weight in himself or addition to it by his gifts but upon this account that it is the Lords message Thus saith he c. being that which giveth himself confidence and boldnesse in the delivery thereof and which ought also to make it have weight upon others yea it followeth from this that whatever a Minister be in himself and whatever his thoughts be of himself and of his gifts yet being called to carry the Lords Message he ought so to carry in it as not to lessen the Masters Authority by his fainting and discouraging apprehensions of his own inability and unworthinesse and by his heartlesse and languid way of speaking but to speak it as the Oracles of God ought to be spoken and as having weight in it self for the vindicating thereof although he be weightlesse and that therefore there ought to be an eye to him for weight thereto and a through-clearnesse that the thing which is spoken in the Name of the Lord is His Truth and Message without which there can be no great confidence in saying Thus saith the Lord and with which a Minister may boldly and authoritatively speak 19. As Preaching would be undertaken and begun with an eye to God so both in the carrying on thereof and in the expecting of fruits thereby the weight would be still left upon the Lord and Ministers would beware of attributing any efficacy either to the warmnesse of their own frame in speaking or to their liberty in pressing any point or to the plainnesse and weightinesse in their manner of proposing or pres●ing the same as if that had any influence as from them to give the Word weight and Authority upon Hearers but still the efficacy would be acknowledged to be from the holy Ghost therefore is that word alwayes at the close He that hath ears to hear let him hear What the Spirit saith Whereby as at the entry the instrument is laid by and the Lords Authority held forth as only to be acknowledged by thus saith the Lord so in the close the Minister even when in the most affectionate temper and frame is to leave what is spoken as weighty only upon this account that it is the Spirit who speaketh and who only can make it effectuall and the more singly this be done the more weighty will it be and thus weighty preaching differeth from the most powerfull rethorick that can be See somewhat to this purpose Chap. 10. vers 4. 20. In the generall we may see that Application is the life of Preaching and there is no lesse studie skill wisdom authority and plainesse necessary in the applying of a point to the Consciences of Hearers and in the pressing of it home than there is required in the opening of some profound truth and therefore Ministers would study the one as well as the other Much of these Epistles is delivered in the second person I know thy works I counsel thee to repent c. for this end that they might know it was them particularly that he meant It is much for Ministers to get the Word leavelled at Hearers so as to make them know that it is they who are reached and that it is not only these that at first it was written to or these to whom Christ and the Apostles did immediately Preach that this Word belongeth but that equally it belongeth to them even to them who now hear it Hearers are often ready to shift-by the most particular words much more when they are more shortly and generally touched Hence Preaching is called perswading testifying bes●eching entreating or requesting exhorting c. All which import some such dealing in Application which is not only a more particular breaking of the matter but a directing it to the Consciences of the present Hearers And in this especially doth the faithfulnesse wisdom and dexterity of the Preacher and the power and efficacy of the gift appear This is to fulfill or fully to preach the Word of God a very significant and much used phrase Rom. 15.17 Col. 1.25 2 Tim. 4.7 a thing also desiderated in Sardi● Chap. 3. or to make a full proof of the Ministery that is when a Minister extendeth himself to the uttermost in his pains seriousnesse and exercise of his gift to be at the yondmost of the Peoples edification and as it is Acts 14.2 to speak so as many may be made to believe an excellent copy whereof is in Paul Coloss. 1.28 29. Whom we preach warning every man and teaching every man in all wisdom that we may present every man perfect in Christ Iesus whereunto I also labour striving according to his working which worketh in me mightily And 1 Thess. 2.10.11 Ye are witnesses and God also how holily and justly and unblameably we behaved our selves among you that believe As you know how we exhorted and comforted and charged every one of you as a father doth his children We conceive therefore that it would conduce exceedingly to make Application weighty upon the Consciences of the Hearers if Ministers after the more generall part of their Doctrine and at their entry to make Application thereof should pause a little and by some serious and grave advertisement put the people in minde that even this Word so applied or to be applied is the Word and Message of God to them in particular and as necessarily requisite to the office of a Pastor as the former general opening of the truth was for Hearers are often ready to take more liberty in shifting of Application as if what were even so spoken warrantably were not equally the Lords Word with the generall truth opened-up Thus we see Paul after his opening up of generall truths Act. 13. when he cometh to make Application putteth his Hearers to it by this Word vers 26. Men and brethren to you is the word of this Salvation sent c. And as it is the main part of a Pastorall gift dexterously to feed by Application so are they the most thriving Christians who as new born babes drink in the Word so applied and take it home to themselves and their own Consciences as they do receive the general truths by their judgements Which sheweth that both Ministers and People have the greater cause to be watchfull and solicitous concerning this main mean of edification to wit particular Application LECTURE I. CHAP. IIII. Vers. 1. AFter this I looked and behold a door was opened in heaven and the first voice which I heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me which said Come up hither and I will shew thee
Omnipotencie and Omnisciencie of the same and they are sent forth into all the earth which could not be if the Spirit were not infinite and Immense and so cannot be understood but of the holy Ghost Where by the way we may perceive the absurdity of the application of Doctor Hamond on this place formerly mentioned who doth apply these seven spirits as representing the seven Deacons of the Church of Ierusalem These operations of the spirit are compared to Lamps because of the shining light that floweth therefrom to the Church they are Lamps of fire burning that is to point out that the saving operations of the Spirit have heat and a purifying efficacy with their light to warm the heart with love to God and to consume and eat up the drosse of corruption that is in the same therefore it is said of Christ Matth. 3.11 that He should Baptize with the holy Ghost and with fire which last word expresseth the nature and efficacy of the former They are called seven lamps or spirits because though there be but one and the self-same spirit yet there are diversities of gifts and differences of administrations and operations as it is 1 Cor. 12.4 5 c. of which we spoke Chap. 1. Lastly These lamps are said to be before the throne to shew that as Kings have their Thrones and Courts lightned with lamps and torches so the Lord hath His Church lightned by His Spirit and hath the operations thereof as it were so placed as thereby light may be given to His Church and Elders that are round about Him this is a speciall part of the Lords statelinesse and of the Churches Glory that His spirit is there and by Him it is Covenanted to His Church for their good unto the end of the world according as the word is Isai. 59.21 As for me this is my Covenant with them saith the Lord My spirit that is upon thee and my word which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor out of the mouth of thy seeds seed saith the Lord from henceforth and for ●ver The fourth thing marked as before this Throne is in the beginning of vers 6. And before the throne there was a sea of glasse like unto chrystall A sea is a great vessel for containing of water called a sea for the bignesse thereof as 1 King 7.23 it is said that Solomon made a molten sea for the use of the Sanctuary The end thereof was that therein the Priests might wash their sacrifices and also themselves in their approaching unto the Altar this was both for great use and ornament in that legall service and also was typicall of Jesus Christ by whom we and our sacrifices are accepted in our approaches to God By it here may not unfitly be understood the blood of Jesus Christ in its efficacy which doth really that in the Church which was but typically performed by that sea in Solomons Temple Certainly all circumstances will agree well to confirm this For 1. It agreeth well to the scope to shew the glory of God in the Church for it cannot be denied but this bloud is one of the speciall ornaments thereof hence Heb. 12.23 and 24. when we are said to come to the heavenly Jerusalem which doth there expres●e the Militant Church it is also added that we are to come to God the Judge of all c. to Jesus the Mediator of the new Covenant and that excellent Society is closed with this sweet expression and to the bloud of sprinkling c. which intimateth this to be a main comfortable part of the glory and furnitour to say so of the Gospel-church 2. Seing the gifts of the Spirit are mentioned immediately before in their sanctifying vertue it is not unsuitable that the justifying vertue of the bloud of the Lamb should be understood by this as joyned therewith for they go well together therefore Chap. 15.2 this sea is said to be mingled with fire which is to be understood of this fire of the spirit here placed with it 3. This will agree well with the reason why it is called the sea to wit to shew the fulnesse thereof and the greatnesse of the efficacy of the same 4. It is before the throne to shew that God hath provided that bloud to wash sinners that they may approach unto Him with boldnesse as may be gathered from Heb. 10.19 and withall that there is no approaching to Him but by the same Lastly It is said to be of glasse like unto chrystall which we conceive is not to expresse the britelnesse thereof for the mentioning of it to be like chrystall contributeth nothing to that But is to expresse its excellency and fitnesse to contain and preserve what is in it clean and pure in which respect it is of an excellency beyond that of Solomons which was but of brasse Yet it may also signifie how reverently and warrily it ought to be made use of left by proud presumption that bloud be trod under foot and despised which is so tenderly reserved as in a sea of glasse This interpretation we think is agreeable to the scope and also not inconsistent with that which is spoken Chap. 15. vers 2. of the Saints their standing on this sea after their victory over the beast which may well be understood to be their washing of their robes and making them white in the bloud of the Lamb as the expression is Chap. 7. vers 14. which also relateth to the same persons and in the same condition for there is no obtaining of victory over the beast by any no● yet a maintaining of the ●ame but by having footing upon Christ by Faith which will make the Saints indeed to sing as Victors and Conquerours over all which is confirmed by Chap. 12. vers 11. They overcame by the blood of the Lamb c. I know it is ordinarily applied to the world and its brittlenesse which hath a sense and application not un-usefull yet considering that this is mentioned as one of the ornaments which wait upon the Lord in His Church and as a singular evidence of His Glory and considering that it is placed before the throne even in that same room which the seven spirits of God have as also considering that it must be conceived to be within the guard of Angels mentioned Chap. 5. vers 11. we conceive it cannot aggree to the world taken as distinguished from the Church especially considering that its being resembled to a sea of glasse and that not of common glasse but that which is as chrystall is not to aggrege the brittlenesse thereof but clearly to commend and set forth its excellency as being something of more than an ordinary value Beside this word sea in this place doth not look to these raging waters which are called sea as contradistinguished from the dry land the mistake whereof may be the ground of this usuall application But it expresseth a
spirituall Priesthood will most properly agree to that according to the usuall application thereof in Scripture These Redeemed are said to fall down before the Lamb which is to shew their humble and reverend way of going about this work of praise and was spoken of Chap. 4. vers 10. Lastly They are furnished for this work having every one of them harps and golden vials full of odours or incense which are the prayers of Saints this sheweth their fittednesse and readinesse for the work and it is done in expressions borrowed from the Ceremoniall worship under the Old Testament when yet the scope is to expresse the spirituall Worship that is given to God under the Gospel By harps are understood instruments for praise as is frequent in the Psalms and we will find the Saints in their chearfull condition Chap. 15.2 so described This sheweth a warmnesse and bendednesse of heart ready to burst out in the praise of the Mediator and to make melody thereby within themselves before Him which is more acceptable to Him and comfortable to them than the sweetnesse of any materiall instrument whatsomever as Ephes. 5.19 and Colos. 3.16 where we are commanded to praise with grace in our hearts which may well be the thing signified by these harps Beside this They have golden vials full of odours or incense Incense was used in the Ceremoniall worship when the people approached to offer up their requests to God therefore we have the word Psal. 141.2 Let my prayer be set forth before thee as incense vials are vessels wherein these were offered and so vials full of ordours will signifie a spirituall fittednesse with the Spirit of Grace and Supplication as is promised Zech. 12.10 to pour out the heart to God in prayer as well as in praise They are two notable qualifications of Believers and it is ordinary both in the Old and New Testament to understand by sacrifices and offerings the morall duties of praise and prayer in the dayes of the Gospel As to the last part this is confirmed in the words following which are the prayers of Saints where two things are answered 1. Would we know who these beasts and Elders were who have these vials It is answered they are Saints that is Believers Members of the Militant Church according to the usuall acception of the word and this confirmeth the former exposition which we gave of these parties Again would we know what these odours are which are in the vials the Text saith they are the prayers of Saints that is these odours represent the prayers of Saints which may either be understood indefinitely as interpreting what is meaned by odours in the generall and so all the prayers of all the Saints on earth in generall may be called odours and incense or we may take it with a speciall relation to this place and so the odours here will signifie the prayers of the same Saints who had the vials in their hands and thus they bring not properly the prayers of others to offer up to God which yet were not absurd considering that these officers were living Saints on earth but they bring their own prayers even as by harps is signified their own expressions of praise or the praise expressed by themselves as the Song following will clear This therefore hath no affinity at all with the Popish Doctrine of the intercession of Saints departed which is utterly crosse to the scope of this place It is to be observed also how different this phrase is from that which is attributed to Christ Chap. 8. vers 3. where he alone offereth the prayers of all Saints adding incense thereunto Their song followeth in the ● and 10. vers Where 1. there is the expression of their praise 2. The grounds or reasons thereof Their song is said to be a new song and they sing a new song 1. Because the matter was so great and excellent that no former expression of praise could as it were reach the same for which cause Psal. 40. David saith He had put a new song in his mouth when by a new and singular mercy He had given him matter thereof 2. It is new as contradistinct from the more obscure expressions of praise that were under the Old Testament Now the Office of the Mediator being more clear and He having made Himself more known to His People they accordingly expresse His praise in a new song The matter expressed is Thou art worthy to take the book and to open the seals thereof that is in sum thou art worthy to be Mediator and to execute what belongeth to that Office This looketh not to be very much at the first yet there cannot be more said For if we will consider 1. This expression putteth Him beyond all creatures for none of them was found worthy and so by this they acknowledge Him to be beyond all 2. This expression hath in it an acknowledgement of His worthinesse and fitnesse to be Mediator and in all things to have the preheminencie and a Name above every name that is named which is the greatest conferred Glory that is conceivable and more than Angels and Men are capable of or can comprehend 3. This expression implieth their hearty assent to Gods constituting of Him in that Office and their exulting to see Him prosper and glorified in the executing of the same which is a thing well becoming a member of Christs Body and a subiect of His Kingdom and is the greatest length they can come at to wit to be assenters by their acknowledgement of His worth to Gods advancing of Him to this dignity The grounds of the praise follow in three steps the last being alwayes more particular than the former and an effect thereof The first is for thou wast slain that is in the execution of Thy Office and in obedience to the Fathers will Thou hast submitted Thy self to death even to a violent de●th and accordingly hath suffered the same and so Thou wast slain This dying of an accursed death is the great article and condition required upon the Mediators side of the Covenant of Redemption upon the undertaking and undergoing of which all priviledges promised to Him therein are grounded and from thi● all the Works of Redemption flow therefore here it is made the reason of His worthinesse to administer the Office of a Mediator in every thing and why He cannot but be thought worthy to do the same and to be praised by His People because He was slain and so hath performed what was undertaken by Him The second ground is And hast redeemed us to God by thy bloud out of ●very kindred and tongu● and people and nation In this there is a very sum of the Gospel and Work of Redemption and it is the more particular application of the former ground and the effect thereof as was said and this inforceth the former reason We have reason say they to praise Thee for Thy death for by it we that were lost and sold
place where they are seen is observed they are round about the thron● and the beasts and the elders by which it seemeth they have the outmost rank of all the attendants that Chap. 4. vers 4 5 c. are mentioned and said to wait upon this Throne and we may conceive it thus upon this Throne is the Majesty of God of which dignity the Lamb and the seven spirits are also ●aid to partake vers 6. next unto them are the four beasts or Ministers upon the severall corners of the Throne then are the four and twenty Elders or the Professors round about the Throne and again about them are the hosts of the Angels as is expresly asserted here This is not to set forth the prerogative of the Church-militant beyond Angels simply or as if Angels were at a greater distance from God than they for it is the great priviledge of Saints glorified to be like Angels and to have a place among them that stand by but this sheweth the infirmities and difficulties which the Saints Militant are subject to and the Lords tendernesse and carefulnesse of them who hath His hosts of Angels encompassing them for their defence and protection according to the word Psal. 34.7 The Angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that f●●r him and delivere●● them There is no mention here neither of the sea of glas●● nor of the seven spirits spoken of Chap. 4. vers 5. and 6. The reason is as we suppose because by them is understood the same that is expressed by the Lamb-slain with seven horns and seven eyes vers 6. of this Chapter And however considering that the sea of glasse hath the same place with the seven spirits of God to wit before the Throne and so betwixt the Throne and the Elders We cannot conceive of either of these but they must be within this guard of Angels even as the rest are And so it is comfortable that the people of God have no lesse Guard and Army waiting upon them than the Lord hath Angels waiting upon Him they being all of them ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall be Heirs of Salvation Their song followeth vers 12. They say with a loud voice Worthy is the Lamb that was slain c. That this is done with a loud voice it sheweth their seriousnesse and affectionatnesse in this work what they ascribe to Him is upon the matter what was ascribed to Him by the redeemed vers 9. and what was ascribed to God Chap. 4. vers 11. It is first in the general an expression of His worth Worthy is the Lamb c. which i● their putting to their seal to the acknowledgement of His worth and carrieth also as implyed in it an acknowledgement of their being unsutable to expresse what was due to Him and therefore the expression is He is worthy to receive power c. which doth insinuate that the work is beyond them as was observed Chap. 4.11 And when Angels are at a stand in the Mediators praise What must be our unsutablenesse in expressing of the same Then in the second place they mention many things which are His due in seven comprehensive words 1. Power because He is furnished with A●thority and Commission ample and large for the discharge of His Offices in which respect Ioh 17.2 He is said to have Power given Him over all flesh 2. Riches that is a roiall possession because He made Himself poor to purchase a seed to Himself by a great price 3. Wisdom beause He hath dealt prudently in the executing of His Office as Isa. 52.13 and with great Wisdom doth He mannage the trust committed to Him 4. Strength because He hath bound the strong man and carried away the prize spoiling principalities and powers in making a shew of them ●penly Col●s 2.15 5. Honour this respecteth the Glory and Majesty of His place who being made head over all things ought so to be honoured by them 6. Glory that is the acknowledgement of the Excellencie and Majesty of His Person with the dignity and preheminencie of His Office and doth import also His being God to whom only Glory is due The seventh word is Blessing this looketh to the many advantages that come by Him so that when hearts can do no more they blesse Him which implieth not only an acknowledgement of His being blessed but also the ardent desire that they have to have Him so as in all the former words respectively By all these put together is understood that every thing which may contribute to set forth a person to be glorious and to make Him to be acknowledged such is in the Mediator If it be asked How the Angels come in to praise the Mediator upon this consideration of His being slain as is expressed in the song Ans. This is done not as if they were equally sharers in the benefits of Redemption with the redeemed for the Elect Angels being never under sin nor at a distance with God cannot be said to be reconciled by Christs death therefore we will find that though both mention Him as slain in the song Yet there are these diff●rences 1. The redeemed do expresly acknowledge this benefit of Redemption to come by His Blood and do derive their priviledges of being Kings and Priests c. from that as the meritorious cause which is not to be found in the song of the Angels Secondly When the redeemed mention Christs death and purchase they look on it as intended for them and therefore do apply the same in the song as claiming a speciall interest therein and acknowledging a special obligation to lye upo● them beyond others because of the same And therefore they say who hath redeemed us by Thy blood c. whereas the song of the Angels is more generall It appeareth then that though they agree in giving praise to the same object to wit the Lamb yet they differ in respect of the particular grounds on which they proceed The grounds then of the Angels praise may be conceived 1. to be the excellencie of our Lord Jesus His Person and Office and the wonderfull glory of Grace Love Goodnesse c. that kyths especially in His humiliation and sufferings And it may be justly looked on as admirable and praise-worthy even to Angels to see God manifested in the flesh as it is 1 Tim. 3.16 and yet more that He was content to die for satisfying the Justice of God and vindicating of His Glory 2. Although Angels cannot be said to have reconciliation by Him Yet according to the judgment of many worthy men they have confirmation through Him in which respect to them He as Mediator is head of the Elect Angels And though we will not enter upon this particularly yet we suppose that there is great accession to the joy of the Elect Angels by Christs incarnation and suffering as having thereby a more clear discovery of the Glory Majesty and Goodnesse of God so that in this respect He
Ier. 31.33 34 c. And seing it cannot be denied but the last promises are grounded upon Christs satisfaction Must not the first be so also especially considering that without Him there is no accesse for binding up a Covenant betwixt God and sinners Neither can it be denied but Faith is a part of that new heart and a speciall fruit of that Spirit which He promised to pour out upon His People Sixthly In Tit. 2.14 our being seperated to be a peculiar people to Christ and zealous of good works c. is expresly asserted to be His design in laying down of His life for His People Also Tit. 3. vers 5 and 6. the washing of Regeneration and renewing of the holy Ghost which must take-in all particular Graces are said to be shed on us abundantly through Christ Jesus which cannot otherwise be understood but that we have these by the interveening procurement of Christs satisfaction Lastly all that we pray for we pray for it in Christs name as having obtained accesse to seek the same through His purchase Now it cannot be denied but Faith Holinesse and increase therein may be prayed-for and therefore these must be understood to be procured by Him also The third Question was If it may be said that the Reprobates or any Reprobate do enjoy any common mercy by vertue of Christs purchase and Redemption Or if any mercy bestowed upon any Reprobate or enjoyed by them may be said to be the proper fruit of Christs purchase or properly to be purchased by His death to them In answer to this we shall lay down these Assertions which being granted there will be no great hazard to the main matter Assert 1. There is no saving nor eternall mercy procured to any Reprobate by Christs death and so according to the Scripture-language it cannot be said that Christ hath redeemed satisfied for them or born their iniquities in their room before the justice of God thereby to procure any such mercy to them because first to be given to Christ to be redeemed and to be justified are ever of equal extent in Scripture and necessarily knit together with His bearing their iniquity Secondly The proper and native fruits of Christs death are not divided but they all go together So that for whom He satisfied and to whom He purchased any thing in one respect He did so in all Therefore we will find Him praying for these who were given Him and for whose ●ake He did sanctifie Himself Ioh. 17. even when He doth exclud the reprobate world who were not of this number from these His prayers Thirdly The proper fruit of Christs purchase is that which is satisfaction to Himself for the travell of His soul c. but no mercy which is common to a Reprobate can satisfie Him for His satisfaction consisteth in peculiar saving mercies such as actually to see His seed to have many justified c. which mercies cannot be said to be purchased to any Reprobate and so it cannot be said that any saving or eternall mercy is purchased to them for if they were purchased to them then necessarily they were to be bestowed unto them and if so they could not be called Reprobates We take this for granted then that no saving thing is purchased to them and that Christ cannot in any proper sense be called their Redeemer nor to have sustained their place and persons before the Justice of God Assert 2. We say that yet many Reprobates do here in time enjoy many things which they had never enjoyed had not Christ suffered Of these Christs death may well be called the cause sine qua non or without which these had not been enjoyed such are the preaching of the Gospel and the glad tidings of the conditionall offer of life which is made in it yea it may be that the keeping off of many temporall judgements and eternal also for a time doth flow from this whereby as it were by the Gardeners intercession Luk. 13. the cutting down of many a barren tree is for a time suspended that thereby the glory of Grace may be the more manifested the honour of the Mediator the more highly advanced and in the close the glory of spotlesse Justice made the more clearly to shine because of their greater inexcusablnesse This cannot be denied to follow upon Christ Jesus His sufferings in so far as they necessarily follow upon the agreement wherein they were transacted and upon the promises made to Him in the Covenant of Redemption unto all which His sufferings are presupposed as the stipulation upon His side Now it being certain that there are some Elect ones given to Him by that Covenant in all ages of the world and that He hath a visible Church and Ordinances granted to Him for the ingathering of them which is so and so to be Administrated to wit by gathering under Ordinances both sheep and goats and such like It must necessarily follow upon the supposition of this transaction in these terms that the world must continue for so many ages that the Gospel should be preached in such and such places and at such and such times that such and such lights should shine for holding forth clearly the truth of the Gospel yea that such and such common gifts should be bestowed upon many Reprobates for the adorning of this visible Church the honour of the Head thereof the furtherance of the edification of the Elect and many other things necessary for the attaining of the ends foresaid And according to the former supposition these cannot be denied to be decreed in the Counsel of God and contained in the Covenant of Redemption largely taken because accidentally to speak so and by reason of the manner of administration concluded they conduce to the honour of the Mediator and to the furthering of His design which is to have the pleasure of the Lord prospering in his hand Asser. 3. Although these former Assertions be true yet we say that the saving blessings that are purchased to the redeemed by Christs death may be and are far otherwayes to be conceived as the proper effects and fruits of Christs purchase to them than any common mercy can be which followeth thereupon to any Reprobate For first The purchasing of the Elect and of saving Grace and Salvation to them and what may tend to their good was intended by the Mediator in a subordination to the glorifying of His Grace in them and so His Glory and their good are joyntly intended in the same this cannot be said of the other for though the things which flow from His death be good in themselves and though it cannot be denied but that therein also He intendeth His own Glory yet it cannot be said that these things are purchased by Him as advantagious to them in respect of any fruit that should flow therefrom unto them because the effect sheweth that in the end they have no advantage by them and therefore it cannot be said that He intended them
connexion may be called occasionall that is when the light of the Gospel with power cometh into the world where sin hath had the dominion and by it mens corruptions begin to be restrained and their liberty in sinning marred corruption and malice in men take occasion thereby to rage as being the more provoked and therefore leaveth no mean unessayed to have that Gospel out of the world which disturbeth their sinfull peace This doth not properly flow from the Gospel but from the devils malice and mens corruptions which are imbittered thereby and now rageth to be disturbed in that dominion and possession which for a long time he hath possessed like a strong man keeping all in peace within his bounds till this stronger come to cast him out This maketh many who lived quietly before light came amongst them to appear quite another thing More particularly we will find these Primitive persecutions to have been raised upon these occasions which went along with the Gospel 1. The Gospel drew men from the old Heathenish way of serving Idols and by force of reason did evidence the nothingnesse of Idolatry and vanity of that worship which was used by these Emperours and almost all the world Upon this Satan took occasion to charge Christians with singularity in taking up a Religion of their own and with pride in counting themselves wiser then their Predecessors and to be insufferable as untractable men who would not follow the rest of the world nay not their own Emperors nor Predecessors in the matter of their Religion but took them to a new way of their own all which was exceedingly heightened by the devil to make Christians and Christianity odious This pretext is frequent 2. A second was The devil striving to make Christianity suspected unto the great men of the world as inconsistent with civil Authority and tending to the ecclipsing and diminishing of temporall greatnesse dominion and power of Kings which was confirmed by these things 1. Ministers freedom in reproving the faults of all and their not sparing nor flattering of any often occasioned the enimity of great men who thought that derogatory to their honour and unbecoming inferiours Therefore to suppresse that often the most faithfull men were persecuted as we see in that instance of Herod in Iohn the Baptist Matth. 14. 2. This suspicion was confirmed by the multiplying of Christians and the mistake of the nature of Christs Kingdom as if His Kingdom had been inconsistent with theirs therefore fearing lest the multiplying of Christians should have tended to the setting up of Christs power and the overturning of theirs they endeavoured to bear them down This made Domitian in a speciall manner to search for and put to death all the naturall kindred of our Lord Jesus lest any of them in the abounding of Christians should have pleaded title to his Kingdom 3. The many slanders that were vented against Christians especially by Magicians Idolatrous Priests Iews Apostate Christians and such like who crying out on them as enemies to mankind and guilty of the vilest sins as of Adultery Incest Drunkeness c. at their meetings and so to be the causes of all the plagues that came upon the world which calumnies are fully refuted by Iustin Martyr Tertullian and Cyprian in their Apologies Wherein these two things are asserted 1. That Christians were innocent of these scandals 2. That it was not the Gospel but the worlds rejecting of the Gospel that brought these judgements on 4. This occasion rose from Christians strictnesse who would not flatter their Emperours by worshipping of them and calling them gods as others did 5. Nothing more was mistaken than Church-men in their exercising of Discipline and censuring of others without dependence on civil Power especially when they exceeded in any particular as that law of Euaristus ordaining that no accusation of a Lay●man or laick against a Pastor should be admitted This is recorded to have provoked Trajan to persecute all the Christians 3. The failings and practices of some Christians and their unwarrantable carriage made Christians odious in the world especially these 1. The many differences and divisions that were amongst themselves and the many sects contrary to truth and one to another that sprung up with the Gospel and the great bitternesse wherewith these differences were followed 2. Outbreakings of Professors in any grosse sin made all others to be so accounted yea practices of the Saturnians Nicolaitans and other grosse Hereticks though disclaimed by true Christians yet were imputed to them 3. Unfaithfulnesse in some few of them in reference to their trust provoked persecution against all It is particularly recorded that Philip who was the first Christian Emperour his killing of the Emperour Gordianus by which deed he came to the Empire did not only stir up Decius afterward to kill him but also to raise a most hard persecution against all Christians as become odious by that fact Obs. 6. The persecutions of the Church of God are particularly ordered as well as the preaching of the Gospel and the thriving and flourishing of the Church This horse hath a rider that hath his armour and a sword given to him and it is told what he shall do he shall take peace from the earth go so far and no further yea there is a more particular commissionating of this nor the former to point out that there is a particular hand guiding the sufferings of the Church and People of God See it in Ioh how in all the commissions Satan getteth he is straitly bounded and limited If the world rage at Christ and His followers and persecute yet that horse is not without a rider and a bridle and the sword he carrieth is limited it cannot hurt a hair of the head of any but as it is commissionated Mat. 10. The hairs of your head are all numbred Persecution cometh not without a particular Commission more than one is converted without the influence of His Spirit He that guideth the one guideth the other and our Lord Jesus reigneth now as before 7. The restraint mentioned here to take peace from the Earth sheweth that no persecution can marre spiritual and eternall peace they reach but the outward condition as to hurt the name to plunder the goods and to kill the body but can reach no further Ioh. 14.27 Christs peace is given not as the world giveth it uncertainly but surely which should make us esteem the more of it 8. An earthly condition or peace is never settled any trouble may quickly disturbe that 9. The world is much in Gods reverence for their outward peace at one word He can take peace from the earth and turn order into confusion and imbitter the spirits of most familiar friends and near relations one against another Did not He prevent it our life would be soon miserable It is He that we should depend on and acknowledge even in outward things for when He giveth quietnesse who then can make trouble and when He
their continuance under suffering for a time and therefore must relate to the sufferings mentioned under the former seals as is said 3. That the matter contained here must be understood rather Spiritually as it pointeth at the scope than literally a● the words bear for properly souls can neither be seen nor heard and so also in other circumstances but the Spirit maketh use of such expressions for setting forth the reality and certainty of the thing intended More particularly to come to the words in what Iohn saw vers 9. These three are to be considered 1. What he saw the souls of them that were slain to wit of Martyres 2. Where he saw them to wit under the altar 3. We have the properties whereby he describeth these Martyrs and differenceth them from others They were slain for the Word of God and for the testimonie which they held 1. By soul here which elswhere is called Spirit Acts 7.59 Luke 23.46 Eccles. 12.7 is understood that immortall substance which God breathed in mans body when it was made whereby man became a living soul 1 Corinth 15.45 The soul thus understood is contrad●stinguished from the body as that which cannot be killed when the body is killed Mat. 10.28 In this sense it is taken here where there is a proof given of that which Christ asserteth in that place of Matthew cited and though the soul be not the object of the eye yet are they thus expressed as represented to Iohn to shew the reality of their existence and being even when separated from the body 2. The place where they are seen it is said he saw them under the altar There was then no materiall Temple that of Ierusalem being destroyed So neither by the altar can be understood any materiall altar for in heaven where we must conceive these souls to be there is neither materiall altar nor Temple and to say these souls were under any altar on earth suppose such were were to contradict the scope and overturn the consolation that is intended and would involve many absurdities concerning the nature of the soul its speaking and being under an altar which were also literally to be understood if that concerning the altar were both then must be figuratively understood to set out one or all of these three 1. The happinesse of these souls which not only have a being but exist in a notable safe and comfortable condition in a speciall nearnesse to God as under His altar which was so much delighted in and longed after by the Saints in their life It is like alluding to these places Psal. 31.20.84.3.91 1. For as the Tabernacle was a special signe of Gods presence so the altar was a special part of the furniture of the Tabernacle and it would seem that He looketh on the Martyrs as so many sacrifices offered unto God as Paul speaketh Philip. 2.17 2 Tim. 4.6 thereby to hold out a speciall respect that God putteth upon them 2. More especially this expression pointeth out these souls to be in Heaven the most Holy was a type of Heaven as it is expounded Heb. 9.10 And Heb. 9.12 it is said when Christ entered into Heaven He entered into the most holy The altar was before the most Holy and therefore we conceive this must be understood of the glory of Heaven Heaven being that where Christ is and Christs presence Philip. 1.21 is the company that the souls of Martyrs are to enjoy and therefore it must be where He is which Christ on the Crosse L●k 23. calleth Paradise unto the Thief 3. Most especially by the altar must be understood Christ Jesus by whom we have accesse to God of whom the Tabernacle and all its furniture was typicall and who is called our altar Heb. 13.10 by whom we and all our services yea even the deaths of Martyrs are sanctified and made acceptable to God This we conceive must be understood because other Scriptures hold forth Him and nearnesse with Him to be the happinesse of souls departed and because it is that which made Martyrs so despise suffering that they might be with Christ Philip. 1.21 and because it agreeth best with their own prayers and desires under suffering as in Stephen Act. 7.59 All cometh to this to shew that they enjoyed a most happy condition and Communion with God but is set forth under an expression belonging to the service of the Tabernacle of the Old Testament as many other things of prophesie are The third thing to be considered is the description of these Martyrs which is especially drawn from the cause of their suffering it being an old maxime Non est mors sed causa mortis qua facit Martyrom which is laid down in two expressions the first is for the word of God that is the first character to be adhering to the faith of the Gospel revealed in the Word and to be a conscientious practiser of Righteousnesse according to that same rule and not shunning to suffer any thing rather than to depart from these In this they were led not as to follow their own humours or to propagate their own inventions or any way to seek themselves but out of respect unto God and His will revealed in His Word The second is for the testimony which they held this looketh to the outward profession and confession of that truth which in their heart they believed Christ calleth it Mat. 10. a confessing Him before men And Rom. 10. the Apostle distinguisheth confession with the mouth from believing with the heart which two being put together hold forth a well ordered conversation both in Faith and Practice In Faith that they beleeved right concerning Christ in Practice that they were answereable to it and held forth that word of life by a good example as a witnesse to others and when called unto it they did not shun the testifying of both upon any perill In sum all cometh to this by opening the fifth seal was represented to me the happy condition of the souls of the Martyrs in Heaven who were accounted by God to have lost their lives not for the calumnies and slanders imputed to them by men but for testifying unto His truth This being clearly the meaning of the words the contrary whereof to wit the miserable condition after death of these who seem happy in the world and are not happy in God is joyned with this in the parable of the rich glutton and Lazarus Luk. 16. there is no ground here either of approving of altars under the Gospel or of sanctifying them by burying of the reliques of Martyrs under them which are amongst the superstitions of the Papists It is a poor altar that is sanctified and doth not sanctifie its offerings Beside neither was there Churches or altars in this time neither could the Martyrs who were so numerous be buried under them but they were decently buried together in places called Coemeteria as is plain from the story of these times From this Verse we may Observe 1.
cloud and the Moon shall not give her light c. In all which places the Prophets after their manner are aggreging temporall judgements by such expressions Again the first sort of effects of the Stars falling from their place of the mountains and islands their moving are upon the matter the same with Isa. 34.1 The Lord maketh the earth empty and turneth it upside down c. with vers 3. and 4. with Ierem. 4.24 Psal. 18.7 Habak 3.6 c. The other sort of effects are the same ● e. expressions of terror used Isa. 2.19 They shall go into the holes of the rocks and into the caves of the earth c. The other part of those effects we will find Hos. 10.8 They shall say to the mountains cover us and to the hills fall on us c. which words are by our Lord Luk. 23.30 applied to set out the terriblnesse of Gods judgement upon the Iews which was to come a little after at the destruction of Ierusalem From which places put together it will appear not inconsistent with this description and expressions thereof to apply this event to some temporall judgement For confirming whereof further we may 2. Consider that this event cannot be understood principally and primarily of the day of Judgement but must be understood of something going before that It is true the compleating of vengeance to speak so will be then at its height and by proportion we may gather from the terrible expressions used to hold forth Gods wrath in a temporall judgement the unconceivable dreadfulnesse of the last Day which will be exceedingly beyond the most terrible temporall event Yet we conceive the scope of this place is not to hold forth that day but some particular judgement wherein Gods wrath against the enemies of Christs Kingdom is in a singular and extraordinary way manifested For 1. The seventh seal is yet to be opened which containeth events in time posterior to the sixth as was shewen Lect. 1. on this Chapter 2. No mention hath hitherto been made of Antichrist either of his rise reign or ruine and it will not be consistent with that immediate dependence which each of the former seals hath one upon another to say that this sixth seal leapeth from the Heathenish persecution over many hundreds of years and all the interveening events till the day of Judgement 3. The matter contained in it is only terror against Christs enemies who are enemies to Him as Mediator which cannot be said of the day of Judgement which is as comfortable to His friends as terrible to His enemies and all sorts of wicked men It agreeth therefore better to some particular judgement than to that generall appearances 4. If this were the day of Judgement principally longed-for by the Saints in the former seal Then there needed not have been so many Arguments to presse quietnesse during the suspension of that suit if it were so instantly and immediately fulfilled 5. It is not like that the day of Judgement should be prophecied of and described before any temporall judgement on enemies be heard of especially seing they are spoken of in this same prophesie But concerning this see more in the first and seventh Lectures on this Chapter 3. We say This event prophecied of here cannot be understood as containing sad things to the Church but on the enemies and persecuters thereof which is clear 1. by the former consideration compared with the persons on whom this judgement falleth it is on Kings Captains and great Men of the earth Now during the Heathenish persecution under the former seals unto which this immediately succeedeth there were no such persons in the Church as these 2. This is confirmed by the terror accompanying this judgement which maketh them in their practice flee from Christ and in their words cry out against it as being to be reckoned with against their wills and as apprehending certainly wrath to themselves from His appearing as in the parallel places Hos. 10.8 Luke 23.30 is evident All which agreeth not with the Saints frame of Spirit especially under affliction who are crying How long O Lord as under the former seal and are described by this that they love Christs appearing and are joyfull of it as of the day of their Redemption 3. Persecution on the Church could breed no such terror on the Kings of the earth as is here prophecied of 4. We say this type cannot hold forth defection in Church-men as if that were typified by Stars falling from Heaven darkening of the Sun c. For darkening of light or defection of Church-men could not breed such terror on the Kings and great Men of the earth as is here they are not usually much troubled with these things and yet it is clear that this terror floweth as an effect from this sad judgement typified and expressed by these former expressions And therefore by the same reason this seal is not to be divided as if by the first part thereof were holden out defection in the Church and by the last judgement upon enemies seing this last part doth clearly hold forth the effects of the former and doth more fully explicate the same thing 5. We do also assert that here cannot be understood any trouble brought upon persecuters by Heathens nor any trouble brought upon the Empire while Emperours and Rulers were Christians by these who were Heathens such as that of the Goths and these inund●tions of barbarous Nations which after the four hundred year brake in upon the Empire For 1. the series of time will not agree to that this seal followeth immediately the Churches sufferings by Heathen Emperours and therefore it is not like the great mutation on the Empire when it became Christian should be omitted 2. This judgement speaketh out especially the wrath of Christ and that so palpably as His hand is in a more singular way acknowledged in it than the prevailing of Heathens against Heathens would readily produce This conviction as would seem of Christs being acknowledged in it flowing mainly from the instruments imployed and owned by Him in the execution of it and this terror that falleth on them is not that terror as it seaseth on all the wicked in the generall judgement such as was mentioned Chap. 1.7 nor that which affecteth men simply by the dread of Gods greatnesse as He is in Himself but it is two wayes qualified 1. It is the terror of Him that sitteth on the Throne that is of God as He ruleth in His Church in which respect He is holden forth Chap. 4. v. 5. and so distinguished from the Mediator so now by this judgement on enemies for persecuting His Church He maketh them know that He ruleth and hath a Throne particularly in Iacob to the ends of the earth as the Saints Prayer is Psal. 59.13 2. It is the wrath of the Lamb appearing as Mediator and befriending His Church which the more surpriseth them that formerly they despised both now they find them both
Reformation no such gift of prophesie or Prophets to be expected or admitted who may adde any new truth to the Word or command any new duty contrary to it by arrogating to themselves or imposing something as duty on others which the Morall grounds of the Word do not allow of and it is confirmed by this that we are commanded to try the Spirits and even the Revelations of the extraordinary Prophets 1 Corinth 14. were to be tried and judged which can be by no rule but by the Word It followeth therefore that no Revelation containing any thing contrary to the Word is to be admitted or received as from the Spirit of the Lord. Assert 2. Yet is it not altogether to be denied but that the Lord may in particulars of the last kind sometimes reveal himself to some by foretelling events before they come such as the famine that Agabus foretold of or Pauls imprisonment were of such the story of the Martyrs and Saints do sometime make mention and particularly Athanasius is often advertised of hazards as is recorded and in their verity cannot be denied and of this sort there were many at the reviving of the light of the Gospel who by foretelling of particular events were famous as Iohn Husse his foretelling within an hundreth years after him to follow the outbreaking of Reformation such it is like was Hieronymus Savonarola who was burnt by the Pope not as was pretended for foretelling of events as they imputed to him by unlawfull means but for faithfull reproving of his faults as he is described by Philip de Cumius and other Authors of such many were in this Land as Master Wishart Master Knox Master Welch Master Davidson c. And this cannot be said altogether to be made void for although God hath now closed the Canon of the Scripture yet that He should be restrained in His freedom from manifesting of Himself thus there is no convincing ground to bear it out especially when experience hath often proven the contrary in the most holy men Yet 1. this is not habituall or ordinary to any but is singular at some few times and in some few cases 2. Every perswasion of mind before the event come and answerablenesse in it when it cometh will not be sufficient to make it passe for a propheticall foreknowledge more than when in dreams it may often so fall out 3. This will not denominate one to be a Prophet although in some singular events God maketh this use of him Nor 4. can such predictions warrand any to do a thing as a duty which otherwise would not be warrantable unto them 5. There is difference to be put betwixt the simple foretelling of an event which may be of God and a conclusion which may be drawn therefrom this may be of our selves as we may see in the predictions of these Act. 21. who foretold Pauls Imprisonment at Ierusalem yet was not that to divert him from his going there as many collected that therefore was not from God as Pauls pressure in the spirit to go notwithstanding doth clear every such prediction therefore cannot be made a rule of dutie seing the Lord may have other good ends of triall advertisement and confirmation in it And we will not find that any have made use of such particular revelations as from them to presse a dutie upon others that would not otherwise be warrantable although when it concurreth with other grounds it may have its weight for swaying in lawfull things Assert 3. Prophesie taken for an immediate revealing of Gospel Truths and mysteries such as that 1 Cor. 14. and what was frequent in the Apostolick times is now ceased and there is neither such a gift nor such an office 1. There is not such a gift for it is not common to all that are renewed it was not so in the Apostles dayes there were diversities of gifts and this gift is distinguished from saving grace 1 Cor. 12 and 14 c. neither is that particular gift of Prophesie continued for there is no other gift continued as these of healing tongues and interpretations whereby men may come in an immediate way to the exercise of these And 2. experience sheweth that that hath ceased and God calleth men to the use of ordinary means for the attaining of the knowledge of His will and there being now no such gift that will abide triall there is therefore no such office to be pleaded for that followed upon that yet even these Prophets in the matter prophesied by them were to be tried by the Word and judged and in the gift if it were a revelation indeed 1 Cor. 14. Now there being none such who can abide that proof we are not at least without that to acknowledge such a gift or such an office Assert 4. Yet if we take prophesie for the understanding of Gods mind and for attaining to be well acquainted with the mysteries of God by a mediate way yea and that beyond the applied means or to have a gift and capacity for discerning of these things with little pains and that beyond what some others can attain unto by any labour we conceive that in this sense Prophesie and Prophets may be said to be continued in the Church and such God raised up in the time of Reformation men singularily gifted with a Propheticall spirit in this sense which may be the fulfilling of this prophesied of in this Chapter Assert 5. No gift of Prophesie now can warrand one authoritatively to set down his light although it be truth as Canonick Scripture or as of equal authority from it self with the Writings of Moses c. and other Scriptures That in the first Assertion was casten though one by his gift may reason from or genuinly open these Scriptures by writ as by word Assert 6. No gift can warrant one to take on him the office of an authoritative Preacher even though in some particulars Gods mind extraordinarily should be revealed to him for it is not the gift that giveth the authority of an office but Gods authoritative mission otherwise a woman as Philip's daughters might be an Officer in the Church and have publick accesse to preach and teach which yet the New Testament admitteth not even when it speaketh of this gift of Prophesie 1 Cor. 14. and ordereth the practice of extraordinary Prophets there this inhibition is inserted and elsewhere yea even in these primitive times there was a triall of the spirits and gifts by the Prophets before any was to be accounted such beside one may have a particular event revealed to him who yet may be more unacquainted with the mystery of the Gospel than others who by Gods blessing have attained to knowledge in an ordinary way and if it cannot warrand an office to such neither will it do in this case there is now therefore no Prophet by an immediate Call Assert 7. Yet we say that as God by gifts may furnish some in a more than ordinary way so
said to rise again and their death must be such a death as is consistent with that and with the manner of their rising 3. It is not three years for dayes for 1. no considerable application can be given that agreeth with it That which interveeneth between Charles the fifth his taking and imprisoning the Elector of Saxon and Landgrave of Hessen and Mauritius Duke of Saxon his making him again to flee and the peace which was concluded at Paussow with Ferdinand will in strict account be about five years and odds to wit from April 1547. to August 1552. The third circumstance is vers 10. their exceeding great mirth and jollity which is aggreged from the reason of it in the end of the vers all that dwell on the earth that is all carnall Professors of that antichristian Kingdom for the earth here is opposed to the true Church which is called Heaven shall make such feasts and chearfulnesse and use all signs of joy which men do in their greatest mirth and upon obtaining greatest victories See Esther 9.18 after their delivery and Nehem. 8.10 c. These are the greatest tokens of mirth Let us consider the victory which is the cause These two Prophets that before tormented them now they are rid of them and at ease We shall enquire in the reasons of these 1. Why faithfull Preachers are often a torment and torture to the men of the world who neither can abide their consciences to be stirred their faults touched their designs marred or lusts restrained c. such Moses and Aaron were to Pharaoh the prophet to Ieroboam Elias and Micajah to Ahab and Iezebel Iohn Baptist to Herod c. 2. Why a profane people will be so glad to be rid of honest Ministers and yet well pleased with hir●lings Ahab could abide four hundred Prophets of Iezebel but could not endure one Micajab that spoke the truth The world is now swarming with the supporters of Antichrist who live delicately on the fat of the earth uncontrolled yet two poor witnesses of Christ are unsufferable And 3. Why the Lord often upon the back of a begun rise of the Gospel will suffer an exceeding nipping storm to arise against it For the first faithfull Ministers especially in times of declining may be said to torment the earth these six wayes 1. Their word and testimonie hath influence on the conscience when it forcibly discovereth and reproveth the ill which a hearer is guilty of it is said Acts. 7.54 that Stephens free witnessing cut the hearers that were guilty to the hea● that is when they cannot get leave to quench all challenges and to sleep on but these witnesses by the power and evidence of the Word and Spirit do condemn their deeds and consequently themselves That galleth them and wanteth not ifluence upon profane consciences though they stop it as Stephens hearers did their ears 2. It tormenteth their will and affection that when they would sleep on and delight themselves in these wayes of their own free preaching marreth their quietnesse even as when Elias cometh to Ahab with this word Hast thou killed and gotten possession and so proceedeth in the threatning 1 King 21. he goeth home sad and all the pleasure that he expected in his new garden evanished so saith the same King of Micajab that he hated him because he never prophesied good to him he was alway thorturing him as Elijah did and as Moses and Aaron did to Pharaoh 3. It tormenteth their corruptions and lighteth upon their Idols by discovering and reproving them and so stirreth up their enimity as Iohn's free preaching did to Herod and Herodias they touch folks sores and that tormenteth them though it be tenderly done yea some good men as Asa 1 King 16.10 have been tormented with this and could not abide it and when enimity and envie are wakened they have a cruell torment as we may see in Haman at Mordecai There is no greater torment to a malignant heart swollen with enimity against the power of Godlinesse in the Godly than to have a faithfull testimonie against it and this pain proceedeth not from any unskilfulnesse and untendernesse in the Minister but from the desperatnesse of their corruption which is like some grievous sore that cannot abide to be cleansed or purged by the most tender Physician 4. It affecteth and tormenteth their credit and pride when their Religion is called superstition idolatry and no Religion they cannot away with that to be called guilty of such and such crimes men in nature and as such cannot digest it and faithfull witnesses must tell them when they go to the left hand yea and to the right also and lift up their voice for that end like a trumpet hence the Pharisees say they will bring this mans bloud upon our heads Acts. 4.5 and that tormenteth them to call the Pope Antichrist and Rome Babylon must be pricking This hath ofen made faithfull Ministers appear untolerable when proud humours disdained to have them meddling with their actions much lesse to condemn them 5. Their testimonie affecteth the ease and outward quietnesse of the world for men naturally love so much Religion as never putteth them to trouble but where faithfull witnessing cometh it will not be content with a form but it casteth their old wayes and bringeth in new as they suppose and that ordinarily meeting with Satans opposition in the world and mens corruption bringeth changes contests wars and judgements for abusing this Word which judgement the witnesses threaten in this sense Ahab calleth Elijah the troubler of Israel 1 King 18.17 And the Apostles are said to turn the world upside down and from this many say it was a good world before but since these Ministers arose there is no peace hence some places of the world yea some Pharisees have more outward peace with formall Ministers yea with Idolatrie than when Christ is preached therefore Christ saith He came not to send peace but a sword and thus the world thinketh if they were quit of some heady Ministers all would be quiet It is no marvell then that worldly men rage at this and that it torment these who have their portion here only 6. Men in darknesse have accesse to their private designs but light crosseth their interest and so tormenteth them for the keeping of a good conscience which Ministers that are faithfull must presse maketh folks inflexible to these crooked ends which the world cannot abide to have obstructed or crossed thus the Prophet that testified against Ieroboam's worship crossed his intent and so marred the securing of the Kingdom to him as Ieroboam thought and this made him hate th●t freedom This may in part vexe all sorts but especially it is intolerable to great men who fret to be bounded either in reference to end or midses and cannot abide to be reproved which was in Asa's case formerly hinted we may see it also in the three Children Dan. 3. It galleth the King that a pretext of
is fully happy freed from all miserie and enjoying fully unchangeably and eternally what may make them compleatly happy even God Himself Matth. 5.8 Or the words contain a great end men naturally aim at to wit Blessednesse and 2. the compendious clear way of attaining it by dying in Christ implying 1. a being in Him 2 Corinth 5.17 which is to be a Believer by Faith united to Him 2. to live in Him this is presupposed also for death followeth life Gal. 2.24 that is an exercising of Faith not only for attaining spirituall life but for the fruits and acts of it also living like one in Christ and by vertue of that life bringing forth fruits Iob. 15.4 3. To die then in Him is the adding to these faith exercising itself on Christ in reference to death when it cometh chearfully willingly boldly and confidently in the Faith of Gods promise committing it self to Him 2 Tim. 1.12 as Stephen Acts 7. and carrying with it the sense of its own naughtinesse even to death notwithstanding whereof it resteth it self over upon His gracious promise and like David 2 Sam. 23.5 dieth there contentedly These are blessed This in generall of dying in Him If it be applyed to such in particular who suffering for Him keep faith in Him to the end it will suit with the scope as if he said these that suffer for Christ rightly by persecution under Antichrist and thus to die for Him is to die in Him shall be blessed as if he had suffered under Heathens although the world think there is a great difference The third is the qualification added with its confirmation yea saith the Spirit from henceforth c. which doth not imply that these who die in Christ are from the time of their death blessed as freed from that fancied Purgatory and all labours which certainly is Truth otherwise neither could they from the instant of their death be called Blessed nor yet said to be at rest from their labours For 1. the blessednesse here is brought in as something peculiarly encouraging the Godly against these coming trials 2. The word from henceforth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from now looketh to the instant the prophesie relateth unto as when Christ saith Matth. 26. from henceforth I will not drink of the fruit of the vine it is as if He had said from this time forth so here otherwise it would be from thenceforth if it related to death simply beside the connexion here will not agree that they may rest it is not for they shall rest for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is causally to be understood If it be asked then what peculiar happinesse or encouragement is holden out to the Godly under Antichrists troubles now Answ. 1. It strengtheneth them against the many calumnies of persecuters reckoning them not Martyrs but ill doers for now they suffer from Christians not from Heathens as Martyrs did formerly The Spirit saith not only before this but from henceforth shall they be fully blessed that die in Christ even under Popes as well as Heathen Emperours 2. They are now blessed because freed from many great troubles crosses and tentations that were coming on the world for rejecting the Gospel now preached in which outward troubles the Godly living are involved Isa. 57.1 2. 3. Their blessednesse is the more now because hell groweth hoter as vers 9 10. and it is more mercy to be freed of it 4. They have this use and advantage of their pains as to have peace and clearnesse at their death no fear of Purgatory and clearnesse of salvation now after the Popish uncertainty is banished giveth them quiet which is a great advantage in this time yea whatever the world think of them who in zeal for Christ do suffer under Antichrist God will esteem and reward of Grace their suffering Matth. 5.16 and take speciall notice of what testimonie is given for Him The words yea saith the Spirit are to confirm this Truth to be divine because the world would not believe it The fourth thing confirmeth these reasons to wit why from henceforth they are blessed 1. They are freed from their labours which is supposed in their life they suffered 2. Their works do follow them for these labours they have joy These sufferings work to them a far more exceeding and eternall weight of Glory and there is a proportionablenesse in their glory to their suffering 2 Corinth 4.17 suitable to it though not deserved by it Rom. 8.17 Therefore are these works said to follow in respect of the fruits of them but not to go before as causes to procure an entry In a word God remembereth their good works and in heaven they have the fruits of them Isa. 3.10 Vers. 14. We come now to the last part of the Chapter which setteth forth Gods executing His judgements against Antichrist and his kingdom in deeds when words do not the businesse It is set out in two similitudes one of an harvest whereby the world is compared to a field the wicked to corn and the execution of judgement to reaping like as in the other similitude of a vintage Both of them set out 1. the multitude of wicked men that are like fields of corn and clusters of grapes good men like Berries here and there 2. A growth of sin and an height of ripenesse that it cometh unto as corns at harvest 3. A readinesse of judgement and easinesse of executing it as with a sickle both which similitudes are borrowed from Ioel 3.13 Put ye in the sickle for the harvest is ripe come get you down for the presse is full that is for the wickednesse is great and Ier. 51.33 the like is spoken of Babylon For understanding of this obscure place as soberly we ought to search in what is apparently to come for the most part if not for all we would consider and observe these four things concerning it 1. That both these similitudes hold forth wrath and sad judgements to come 1. Concerning the last it is certain for what is gathered is cast in the wine-presse of Gods wrath and the similitudes are every way alike harvest and vintage sharp sickles are the instruments and they are both ripe Beside these places Ioel 3.13 and Ier. 51.33 hold out an harvest of wrath when wickednesse is ripe which similitudes may well be made use of here when there is clearly an allusion to Babylon So they seem to be of one nature though different in degree Again the scope here cleareth it for it is the fulfilling of these former threatenings of the preceeding Angels and the summary expression of what followeth in the vials which are degrees of the same judgement which ascendeth from the lesse to the greater as the exposition will clear 2. Consider that though both hold out judgements yet apparently different judgements not in kind or object But 1. in degree the vintage is a greater judgement as the close of all 2. In time as it is greater so it is after as
successe they are brought together in Armageddon vers 16. and before this after the preparation in parenthesis there is cast in a word both of warning and of comfort Behold I come as a thief Blessed is he c. vers 15. 1. The Author is designed by three names yet is the same party under diverse considerations The Dragon is the same mentioned Chap. 12.8 9. to wit the devil here acting not immediately but for supporting his lieutenant the beast to whom he gave his power Chap. 13. leaving nothing that hell can do for that end The beast is the first beast named Chap. 13. to wit the Pope as he is head to the civil State of Rome The false prophet is the two horned beast Chap. 13.11 for Chap. 19 20. the false prophet worketh miracles before the first beast which is the very work of that two horned beast Chap. 13. and his place only He is called here the false prophets because that vizorn of respect to the Lamb which formerly he pretended is now taken away and he that pretended to be Christs Vicar is now discovered to be the great deceiver and false prophet which was to come and as these two beasts are one Chap. 13. as was there cleared so is the beast and false prophet one here for Chap. 19. vers 19. the beast is distinct from the Kings of the earth so vers 14. of this Chapter yet it would seem that all Civil powers under the name of Kings as Ch●p 17. are contrad●stinguished from the beast and whore as they that shall once support her and afterward hate her neither can the Emperour be secluded from that reckoning and therefore it is no supream Civil power 2. They are both cast into the lake together vers 20. and the now-Roman Empire likely was either d●stroyed or turned from the Pope to hate him under the fourth and fifth vial 3. They bo●h end together and it will be hard to think that there will be no succession of Emperors or Civil states representing these parts or powers after the Popes overthrow yet are they all three named d●stinctly to shew what concurreth for supporting papacy devilish subtillity temporall power and deep hypocrisie In a word all unlawfull and carnall shifts and that both Civil and Ecclesiastick are made use of Secondly These inferiour agents are severall wayes described 1. In their nature they are spirits not prope●ly for spirits as such cannot be seen neither is it such that can treat with Kings and perswade them to war as sent out of the mouth of the beast and false prophet But spirits 1. for their activity and nimblnesse in compassing their designs 2. Because they call themselves spirituall men in opposition to Laicks such as the Popes Negotiators are as Nuncios Legats Jesuits c. are exceeding meetly taken in here for their institution oath and way of proceeding answereth well to that of these fr●gs as singularly commissionated to spread themselves through the world to engage all Kings against Christs followers who may also have lying spirits waiting on them to make their embassage effectuall as Ahab's false prophets had 1 King 22. to which this may allude 2. They are described by their qualities they are unclean spirits like frogs 1. In their rise not of God but the devil for they are called so vers 14. as all their orders are not of Christs pl●nting therefore compared to locusts Ch●p 9. 2. In their ends devilish opposit to the Lord Christ as the devil is 3. In their manner of proceeding by all means devilish instruments c. as murders treasons lies equivocations c. they care not what if they may effectuate their designs for supporting the beast 4. In their life filthy and loathsome like frogs that use marishes which in Reformations are not cleansed Ezek. 47.11 so that brood continue in these places which remaineth unhealed and haunteth such company 3. In their number they are three that is a considerable number In the 11. Chap. when Christs cause was low he had but two witnesses Antichrist hath three as it were● moe do back him to his last than Christ had so ten●cious and constant are men in evil rather than good Three also to suit with the nature of him that commissionateth them So some act devilish●y and subti●ly as from the Dragon representing him Others by m●ght and civil negotiations carrying the businesse as servants to Princes A third sort counterfeiting Religion either by pretending many miracles to have been done by their party or strengthened by the devil to do great wonders themselves for covering their hypocrisie and strengthening their cause and according to this threefold commission they act 3. This design of the beasts by these agents is more particularly holden forth in four things 1. To whom they are sent to the Kings of the earth and of the whole world that is to all Nations and Powers whether Christian or Heathen that would joyn against the true Church Therefore if the Emperor were one of the Popes followers the commission must be sent to him and he not be a sender but as the naming of the Dragon distinctly supponeth no distinct visible power so neither doth it in the other likewise by the Dragon cannot be meaned heathen persecuters for they are sent un●o by the beast also and do not send but it is the beast now appearing both l●ke a Dragon and a false Prophet 2. Their errand is to gather them to the battell of that great day of God Almighty that i● to an eminent appearing of Gods in taking vengeance on them not that this is their intentention to fight against God as it is expounded Chap. 19. or to meet his vengeance but that in Gods providence thi● is made the result of all and though they think its fighting for Christs Vicar yet he expoundeth it otherwise as it is upon the matter a fighting against God Almighty for it was to oppose His Churches rising and in that battell God was partie 3. The instruments are more clearly designed spirits not of God but of the devil suiting well with such a commission 4. The means how they prevail it is by working miracles such as the devil by his naturall and experimentall knowledge of things and speciall dexterity to do and compasse things can out of naturall causes easily and really bring forth which may be wonderfull to men who can act nothing like these or by his deceit making men believe he doth things of themselves beyond the power of nature which he doth not really perform but deludeth men to believe that they are performed such are the beasts miracles Chap. 13.12 Or by making men believe that all their legends of counterfeit miracles are true which they make a mark of the true Church and thus perswade men to support their Babylon Before he set down the successe of this negotiation which is vers 16. he casteth in vers 15. a word of warning and comfort It should be in parenthesis as
if the Lord Christ said such ill dayes and great temptations to draw folks in snares are coming that many will go on in these designes as thinking all their own The advertisement is Behold I come as a thief when they think least on it and seeth least appearance of it I am at hand to take vengeance on them and to deliver the Church So he speaketh Matth. 24.43.44 2 Pet. 3.10 2. There is insinuated a duty suitable to this advertisement that is to Watch and keep their garments clean which was expounded Chap. 3.3 Implying 1. a strait and difficulty 2. the only mean of being preserved in a strait time that is watching seing by it only men are keeped free of spots in their profession and Christian walk 3. There is set down here two excellent motives pressing this necessary duty of watching 1. from their happinesse who doth so they are blessed 1. In themselves being keeped from much sin and wrath which others fall under 2. In reference to others who being by that design of Antichrists ensnared shall share of wrath The second is because by watching men keep their nakednesse covered which by sinning is discovered to their shame a spotted garment hideth not this shame but manifesteth it To be keeped from sin is a great motive and to keep from sin keepeth from shame for shame followeth ever upon sin And there is a behold prefixed yet Readers may not passe it but observe the warning for their instruction in duty and the encouragement of blessednesse for their upstirring and comfort Gods people would never look for a constant peace in the greatest growth of Religion even at the Iews in-coming the Church hath one of her sorest battels There is great odds betwixt a thriving Gospel and the real advantage that cometh by it and outward peace and prosperity The last thing is the successe these foul spirits had They gathered these Kings who for many years despised the Gospel and never had been gathered by it in Gods judgement they are given up to yeeld to them This hath these circumstances 1. The successe They are gathered and who It is these to whom they were sent both Popish Kings and Heathen Kings It is like the Turks as nearest are most easily engaged to set on Christians In a word such speciall enemies as God mindeth to be about with 2. It is said he gathered them not the spirits that is either the beast who commissionated them or rather God who in His secret providence ordereth that designe of the beasts and the enimity of these Kings for such an end as might glorifie Him and undo them It is like an allusion is to the commission Satan getteth against Ahab in perswading him wherein though the devil be instrumentall by false prophets in bringing Ahab to Ramoth 1 King 22. yet it is by Gods permissive providence to punish Ahab that maketh him prevail So it is here the devil hath one design the beast another God a third and He maketh use of both for furthering of His He doth it when they seem to get most way in theirs and it s but the effectuating of His so Gods hand is soveraigne even in Antichrists designs 3. Concerning the place unto which they are gathered two things are to be enquired 1. What this Armageddon is 2. Why it is expresly said in the Hebrew Tongue 1. Armageddon is not to be taken literally as if there were such a place in which indeed bearing that name that battell is to be fought in but figuratively it setteth down before hand from the effect and event of that expedition and battell after the manner of the Hebrews who called places from notable events in them as Bochim Achor Hamon Gog Ezek. 39. Bethel with many others Now this is two wayes applicable 1. Gnarim which Arma cometh from signifying subtillity and applied to the Serpent Gen. 3.1 yea subtillity with deceitfulnesse 2. Geddon cometh from a root that signifieth gathered together so the word signifieth deceitfully gathered together by craft or the first root may signifie destruction so it is gathered to be destroyed The second way how it is applicable is to take it in allusion to Megi●do so it will be the hill of Megiddo a place in Iudah famous for two events 1. Iudg. 5.19 in overth●owing Sisera's mighty Army by a womans help So these enemies brought into such a fit place shall be as Sisera at the river Kison Psal. 83. The other at Megiddo by Ios●a's death is lamentable Thus it relateth to the great zeal and repentance which shall be among the Iews at such a joyfull event Zech. 12.12 both or either will suit here what ever way it be But take it from the force of the compound word it agreeth best to the Hebrews way and that is the reason why especially it is mentioned here expresly in the Hebrew tongue implying 1. that they put that name on it for it is not like that other Nations would give it a name in a strange tongue 2. Their respecting the event in the name as is their manner as before was said thus the name speaketh out the event If it be asked why the Lord delayeth so these vials or carrieth them so on as the Pope getteth such help and bringeth Gods Church low even when he is near to ruine Answ. 1. This way trieth the faith and patience of Gods people most as here is their faith and patience Chap. 13. importeth So was Israel tried in their slow delivery out of Egypt 2. This effecteth His end amongst enemies more and giveth them occasion of kything and in Gods judgement hardeneth them by hopes sometimes to prevail till His wrath come on them So was Pharaoh by Israels straits at the Red-sea and the Magicians counterfeit miracles hardened thus Christs coming is as a snare Luk. 21.35 3. It contributeth more for Gods glory He getteth them thus together to the great battell He hath by this means many victories and much glory over one enemy as He had over Pharaoh otherwise they would never uphold a contest with God The Lord in this doth as one saith as a man who being to leap far goeth a little back to come up with the greater force For sinfull causes of it we may name 1. their ingratitude and unanswerable walk who receive the Gospel which will make God remove it and therefore also not to propogate it 2. Little pity on them that lieth under Antichrist and little prayer for Gods hastening His judgements on him and fitting of instruments for it 3. Little singlnesse in any undertaking for that end few Kings mindeth it self-interests sway all and others carnally seek their own glory in being instrumentall in such a thing or under such a pretext pursue their own more than Christs therefore they are not blessed 4. Want of a powerfull Ministrie and lives answerable amongst Professors which maketh this Truth to be loathed seing so many are carnall deceitfull c. who professe it Thus
Pallace and the first-born shall be gathered together By Called here are understood 1. those who are effectually so for they are blessed and glorified Rom. 8.30 Yea 2. called even outwardly Now they of the Jews that shall be called to the Supper are more happy than those who were called at the first to the Dinner for God shall make them generally more obedient and the iron sinew shall be taken out of their neck and the vail from off their eyes and they shall generally yeeld to this Call and flow like doves to their windows to this Gospel therefore are they blessed and happy Thus these who are called by this happinesse are not only opposed to these who are not called at all or only to such who are called and not chosen Matth. 20. But this second Call of the Jews is opposed thus to the first Mat. 22. which is in a word that the Jews after their re-ingrafting shall be generally more blessed by being made to yeeld to the call of the Gospel than those who did live under the first offer thereof So the things prophetically confirmed are two 1. That there is a second calling of the Jews or feast of Christs Marriage to come beside what was at first at the Dinner a new offer to be made to the Jews before the end of the world and a new and most beautifull lustre to be put upon the Church 2. That they shall be blessed and happy beyond the former Jews that shall be called to this as is said This truth is confirmed two wayes 1. by a speciall command to write Write saith he as Chap. 14.13 importing a singular excellency in the thing 2. A great certainty in it that it may be recorded ad futuram r●i memoriam as Paul signifieth in expressing that of the Jews calling Rom. 11. 3. A difficulty in believing or receiving the truth so pressed And a second way he confirmeth this is These are the true sayings of God it is from the Author of them and His nature and the nature of all His sayings they are saith he not Mens nor Angels words for there might be a lie in both these but they are Gods all whose words are Truth He Himself being Truth He Himself being God who cannot lie and yet as in these sayings concerning the happinesse of these called there is as it were a singular eminency of His faithfulnesse so in speciall these are His true sayings and will take effect The 10. ver is notable by expressing the infirmity of an eminent Saint and the Angels rejecting of that worship intended to him by Iohn with severall reasons as if purposly he would rectifie men in that point of will-worship in giving that religious adoration to creatures though most excellent which alone is due to God Iohn's infirmity is set down in these words And I fell at his feet to worship him Worship implyeth three things 1. An act in the judgement taking up an excellency in the object worshipped 2. An act of the will yeelding it conformly to that apprehended excellency 3. An externall act of the body This may be common to all sorts of worship Further we may consider a twofold adoration or worship mentioned in Scripture that is allowable one is Religious and is a speciall duty due to God and commanded in the first Table of the Law the other is Civil which is due to creatures and commanded in the second Table Again this second sort is twofold the first is that which proceedeth from a reverencing of men for their stations or relations whatever their qualifications be as Magistrats Ministers Parents great Men c. The second is a reverentiall worshipping of men for their qualifications of wisdom and holinesse so we respect good men though they be not great as Act. 2.47 Such living Saints get and in a greater measure Angels may have when they appear such was that which Abraham and Lot gave to the Angels Gen. 18. and 19. supposing them to be men All these are lawfull There is also an idolatrous and sinfull worship and that is when what is due to the Creator is given to any creature and that either more grosly to Idols Images c. called worshipping of devils or more subtil to Saints as that of Cornelius to Peter Act. 10. and that to Paul and Barnabas Act. 14. and is also of diverse sorts This here is not of the first two sorts for it is not condemnable to worship God nor to give holy Men and Angels due reverence But it is this third sort an unlawfull worship as appeareth by the Angels rejecting it with so much zeal and earnestnesse these two wayes expressed 1. By a vehement prohibition See thou do it not there is no more in the Originall but See no an abrupt cutted expression such as is used when men hasten to prevent something they abhor and would fain prevent 2. It is expressed by the pressing arguments he useth which are two 1. This is not my due to be so worshipped I am saith the Angel thy fellow-servant not thy Lord and the fellow-servant of thy brethren that have the testimony of Iesus and are imployed in his Ministery we have but one Ministery 1. The Angels to the Prophets then the Prophets to the Church Therefore are Ministers called Angels and Angels Ministers The second argument is taken from Gods prerogative to whom only such worship is due W●rship God saith he I am not God and that is alone due to Him therefore give it not to me but to Him allowing by the one argument no such worship to creatures and by the other appropriating it all to God He confirmeth in the close his arguments especially the first thus For the testimony of Iesus is the Spirit of Prophesie which may be thus understood the Spirit of Prophesie and revealing of these things is not mine but it is Jesus Christs hence it may be called the testimony of Iesus as belonging peculiarly to Him therefore worship is not due to me who am but a servant with thee Or to the same purpose reading the words as they lye I am thy fellow-servant for the testimony of Jesus or the ministery of the Gospel called so for its bearing witness to Christ in which respect Ministers are often called Witnesses See Chap. 22.8 is the Spirit of prophesie that is is also His gift and way of revealing secrets and edifying of others as this more immediat message which I bear is they are of the same nature and kind of service and therefore from these who are imployed in one of them religious worship is not due to the other they being fellow-servants For more clear opening the doctrine contained in the words it may be asked 1. If Iohn sinned 2. What sort of sin 3. How he being such an eminent servant of Christ and in the midst of such revelations fell into it First That he sinned we suppose is clear 1. in that he never fell to worship an Angel before
5. in four things 1. that there shall be no intermission of that happy day No night is there no vicissitude or change but an unchangeable day they are above the ups and downs which all the three principall prophesies are obnoxious unto 2. They need no candle no borrowed or artificiall light darknesse is removed and that which was in part is done away 1 Cor. 13. and that which is perfect is come and knowledge is at an height and perfection so that though there be candles or Sun and Moon here and they are needfull yet not so there 3. The Lord giveth them light they have light and immediately from God Himself without all interveening means then shall there be no mistake of God but in that day we shall know that the Father is in the Son and the Son in the Father 4. They reign and that for ever and ever not for a thousand years but eternally in which respect it is certainly opposed to the former Chap. 20. And this of eternity is added as of special use in their happinesse for if it were wanting all their other happinesse would be defective O happy Kingdom and State that cannot be altered there is no wavering to say that it is good to be here Kingdoms on earth have their periods but this hath none but endlesse eternity To be in heaven must be a great happinesse there is no life to that with all the properties of uncontroverted happinesse 2. To be Gods servants must be a great happinesse it is reckoned one in heaven 3. Be comforted O Believers in the hope of heaven and holily long to be there there is no night nor corruption there the heart is stayed there His servants serve Him without gadding or wearying and be the more holily submissive for that endeth all complaints and fully putteth out the life of the body of death We may answer two questions by assertions from these words in short which will further clear them Quest. 1. Do the glorified behold God Himself how can that be seing He is invisible Answ. They see not His Essence by their bodily eyes for He is a Spirit 2. By their understanding they see not His essence adequatly or perfectly as it is for He is infinit and they even then but finit and therefore they comprehend Him not Yet 3. beside what evidences of His glory are seen by created light or splendor about Him as there is much of that or what shineth in the man Christ Jesus who is unconceivably glorious there is a real immediate conceiving and taking up of God though not fully comprehensive of Him or adequatly unto Him because seeing there is opposit to faith and our manner of seeing here And these phrases We shall see Him as He is See His face Know Him as we are known of Him c. confirm it Beside every thing else being but created cannot satisfie the soul without the up taking of God Himself who only can stay the mind and these created excellencies as they point Him out the knowledge of whom is the happinesse of Angels who are also His creatures yet neither see they Him bodily nor do they comprehend Him fully Quest. 2. Do then all see and enjoy Him alike and in an equality Answ. In this sight and happinesse consider 1. the object seen and beholden 2. the manner or capacity of seeing and beholding 3. the effects of satisfaction following thereupon 1. The object of this happinesse is God and His Son Jesus there is one object to all 2. The manner of up-taking is different for before men can conceive of God there must be an elevating or capacitating of them by heavenly qualifications for it and a condescending on Gods part to suit manifestations of Himself to their capacities even when they are enlarged This in glory as here in grace may be different some more enlarged to conceive more of God some lesse yet all have the same object The third to wit the consolation which followeth may be called equal in some respect for they are all satisfied and filled and can desire no more yet in the former respect there is lesse or more according to their measure God 1. proportioning them to speak so in severall sizes then filling all Even as suppose many vessels of diverse quantities were cast into the sea that ocean can fill all and it 's the same ocean whereof they are all full yet some hold more some lesse or suppose some looking to a lovely object that are more or lesse able to discern though none be defective in their sight All behold the same object and discern it to their satisfaction though some see it more distinctly yet all of them satisfyingly So it is here in beholding Gods face LECTURE II. Vers. 6. And he said unto me These sayings are faithfull and true And the Lord God of the holy prophets sent his angel to shew unto his servants the things which must shortly be done 7. Behold I come quickly blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophesie of this book 8. And I Iohn saw these things and heard them And when I had heard and seen I fell down to worship before the feet of the angel which shewed me these things 9. Then saith he unto me See thou do it not for I am thy fellow-servant and of thy brethren the prophets and of them which keep the sayings of this book worship God 10. And he saith unto me Seal not the sayings of the prophesie of this book for the time is at hand 11. He that is unjust let him be unjust still and he which is filthy let him be filthy still and he that is righteous let him be righteous still and he that is holy let him be holy still 12. And behold I come quickly and my reward is with me to give every man according as his work shall be THe body of this Book and Prophesie is now past followeth to the end the conclusion which serveth to the confirming and commending of the whole Prophesie especially of the last vision It hath five parts 1. The Angel confirmeth and commendeth what is said ver 6 7. 2. There is a mistake of Iohns recorded ver 8. 3. The Angel as being interrupted by that superstitious humility of Iohn returneth after checking of him to go on ver 9 10 11. Then 4. cometh-in the Master our blessed Lord to speak to the same purpose ver 12. till ver 20. Where 5. Iohn closeth all with a wish for Christs coming and the Churches happinesse as Epistles use to be closed The Angel doth first confirm this Prophesie ver 6. by two arguments 1. These sayings are faithfull and true the matter is sure for the sayings are such as upon them we may lay weight They are faithfull such a commendation the Gospel getteth 1 Tim. 1.15 and it is frequent in this Book It is added and repeated before the close especially with respect to the former vision because 1. it is of concernment
and spread what is unsound as Philip. 3.2 Beware of dogs c. speaking of these teachers that did mix the righteousnesse of the Law with the righteousnesse of Christ in justification These also are without that is are in the second death Chap. 21.8 From Vers. 16. and forward followeth the Lord Jesus His own close to the same purpose to confirm and commend the truth of the words of this Prophesie In the 16. verse it is commended from the fountain it cometh from I Iesus have sent mine Angel to testifie these things in the Churches These are not Iohns inventions nor the sayings of an Angel out of his own head but they are from Me I own them all I Iesiu taking His proper name to Himself have sent mine Angel in more than an ordinary way to reveal these things to My servant Iohn and by him to the Churches to the end of the world And that this may have the more weight He taketh to Himself such stiles as He took to Himself before Chap. 2 and 3. I am the root and off-spring of David the bright and morning star to bring souls in love with Him He setteth out Himself as the very Messiah come of David as Chap. 5.5 The Lion of the tribe of Iudah and the root of David and the off-spring of David as man because as man He came of David and so is the promised Messiah as Isa. 11.1 There shall come a rod out of the stem of Iesse and a branch shall grow out of his roots c. Or take the words differently I am the ro●t of David that is David God and David is as a branch and I gave him a being And I am the off-spring of David that is as man I am a branch come of David And thus he answereth the question the Pharisees could not understand Matth. 22.43 If David call Him Lord how is He then his son He is Davids Lord as God and Davids son as man so is He his root and off-spring 2. He calleth Himself the bright and morning-star He is called a star by Balaam Numb 24.17 There shall a star come out of Iacob and this relateth to that but to shew that He is not a common star but a singular one He is called the bright and morning star or day-star that bringeth the light of the day with it holding Himself out as the fountain of all light and consolation as Ioh. 1.9 He is that true light that lighteneth every one that cometh into the world This is He that sendeth this message to the Churches and that now we read of He that brought life and immortality to light c. These titles are foolishly applied to say no more to the Virgin Marie as many others are by Bernardine de Busco De denominationibus Mariae The second commendation is in a twofold Come ver 17. the Spirit and the Bride say Come And let him that heareth say Come This is such a word so excellent and true a word and so comfortable a saying that all that have the Spirit in them when they hear it will say Come and wish a performance of it and the Bride the Lambs wife all the Glorified in heaven and all the Regenerate on earth concur in it And not only the Church universal for that time but all that shall hear this word and have the faith of it in their heart shall say Come We conceive the scope is 1. to commend this word from the desirablenesse of it to all Believers especially that word vers 12. Behold I come quickly 2. To let the Church know that He is to send no more new Scripture or Messages of this sort and that they have no more to expect but the coming of the Lord on the back of the fulfilling of this Prophesie And so as Malachy in his last Chapter closes the Canon of the old Testament with a promise of Christs first coming and putteth the People of God to the Law of Moses and the Prophets till then so Christ here closeth the Canon of the New Testament with a promise of His second coming to which He knitteth the longing desires of His Church The second Come that commendeth the excellency of this Book Let him that is athirst come And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely Is there yet any body that is not clear in their interest let them come and take this word before Christ come for he will not get another word as if He said I have made many fair and free offers and now I close My last offer with a good word Who ever will take Christ and life through Him freely on the terms of free grace let him come and take Him without money and without price Isa. 55.1 This is our Lords farewell that He may presse the offer of the Gospel and leave that impression as it were upon record amongst the last words of the Scripture and His scope is to commend this Book and the offers He hath made in it as most free and on the tearms of grace wherein Christ aimeth much to draw souls to accept it And teacheth us that all that would expect comfort of His coming and pray for it with a well-grounded confidence they would first come to Him and close with Him and make use of His offer This maketh a comfortable meeting with Him and who cannot say the first come to Christ that he may come let themselves come to Him and hear and answer His call to them that so they may turn over their request to Him The third way how He commendeth this word is by putting a testimony to the perfection of it ver 18. telling that nothing can be added to it and nothing can be diminished from it as superfluous and both these are set down by way of commination and it is given as a reason why folks should expect no more Scripture after this 1. Let any man beware of adding to these things Adding may be considered formally as denoting the enjoyning of any thing for Scripture or to be accounted as such which is not contained in this Book or declared by God immediatly to be such as this is Or 2. as adding upon the matter by putting or imposing a meaning on that which is written that God never intended or which the words will not bear Therefore deceivers and wresters of the Word are called Impostours as imposing the curse that is threatned on them that add any of thir wayes is God shall add to him the plagues that are writen in this Book that is He shall bring upon him all the curses threatned to come on the openly profane and secret hypocrites or Antichrists followers And that it may be known that it is no lesse fault to diminish than to add he telleth ver 19. If any shall take away from the words of this Prophesie that is either by taking away something that is canonick and derogating from the authority of the Scripture or by hyding or detracting
be spread as would carry about every one whose heart was not established by grace such deceivers privily bringing in damnable heresies that if it were possible the very Elect should be deceived so many duties to be done and so much affliction to be suffered as were impossible to be performed and born without the assist●nce of special grace Therefore as the conclusion of the whole verse last he desireth that the grace of the Lord Iesus Christ may be with them all as that which by its sensible presence or supporting influence would carry them through whatsoever they might meet with for there is no difficulty so great which will not evanish and disappear before His grace and a gracious man is able to do and suffer all things through Christ who strengtheneth him This grace is indeed the one thing necessary to make a man carry creditably for the Gospel and comfortably to himself in all cases that may be incident he who is strengthened by the might of His grace in the inner-man will be sted●ast and immoveable alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord. And therefore it is no wonder that one who was seen in the concerning events which should fall out till the second coming of Christ did wrap up all his desires for the Saints with an Amen in this one wish The grace of our Lord Iesus be with you all The very pulse of a holy soul beateth still this way his temper may be known by the ordinary unconstrained and habituall desires of his heart Let others wish to themselves and their friends what they please that which a holy man wisheth to himselfe and these whom he loveth best is this that the grace of Jesus Christ may be with them he would have his own desires with the desires and endeavours of every man else terminate upon this If ye ask him what he feareth most It is this lest he come short of the grace of God Or that his hopes are most upon It is for that grace which is to be brought unto him at the revelation of Jesus Christ this is the very character of a Christian in good case that he is one who is waiting for the appearance of Jesus Christ and that grace which is to be brought with Him the expectation of this is the rest of his soul he feedeth upon it constantly when he is alone the thoughts of it keep him company and he maketh this his companion in whatsoever company he be In a word he i● content to be empty of all things beside that out of His fulnesse he may receive grace for grace this to him is the one thing necessary and therefore he maketh it his choice Happy yea thrice happy is every one who doth so for he hath chosen that good part that shall never be taken from him The worthy and pious Author of this Treatise whose communication was habitually good for the use of edifying and such as did minister grace to the Hearers being about to leave this world to which he was dead when alive while all that were about him did see him panting for God for the living God as the Hart doth after the water brooks a little before he fell asleep desired one of them who stood by to write for a close to this Commentary these following words worthy to be graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever And now O my soul when all sayes Come and concu●●es in a sweet harmony seing thou hast heard and dost hear the Call of the Gospel say with the Bride and with the Spirit Even so Come Lord Iesus Come quickly FINIS A brief View of the Series of the whole Book of the REVELATION THis whole Book is formed by way of an Epistle Beside some generall circumstances the matter of the Book generally is divided Chap. 1. in these two 1. The things that then were or the present state of these Churches especially 2. The things that were to come on the Church in general to the end of the world Chap. 2 and 3. contain the first part the present condition of these seven Churches set out in seven several Epistles shewing their case and reproving or commending accordingly as was requisit and withall adding directions warnings threatnings and consolations suitable to their respective conditions which though expresly directed to these yet are alike usefull to all in such cases to the end Chap. 4. and 5. contain the Preface introductory to the main and propheticall part of this Book where God the Creator is set on His Throne and His glory as absolute supream Lord of all is set down having all events determined in His Counsel as in a Book that is sealed in the which no creature can pry to reveal them except Jesus Christ who by the executing of His Office of Mediatorship is found worthy to be admitted on Gods eternal secrets concerning the Church Who therefore in that fifth Chapter receiveth these as in a book sealed with seven seals which he openeth distinctly keeping the same comparison in the Chapters following which contain three principal and other three explicatory Prophesies the three principal Prophesies of Seals Trumpets and Vials deducing the events from that time to the end by several steps and the explicatory Prophesies clearing what was more shortly or obscurely set down in the other and contemporating with them or some part of them Chap. 6. We have the first principal Prophesie of the Seals which setteth forth the state of the Church under its first period to wit of heathenish persecution In it the Church is first discovered as flourishing in respect of the Gospels thriving Seal 1. Then as bloudy in respect of persecution Seal 2. After that as decaying and losing much of its beauty not only by the persecution of enemies but by the contests and failings that were in and amongst her friends Seal 3. After which persecution came to a vehement height as if death had been loosed against the Church in the last part of the ten persecutions Seal 4. whereupon the souls cry to God as being at an uttermost strait Seal 5. Upon which followeth Gods judgment upon these persecuters Seal 6 at which the first period of the Churches condition and the first principal prophesie of Seals do end The Church having now gotten outward prosperity and peace and not having made good use of it there are Chap. 7. other sorts of winds ready to blow and fearfull heresies to set on her especially that defection of Antichrist all which she is to be advertised of by the Trumpets but because that exercise would be more sifting and carry moe of the visible Church away than open persecution did Therefore before the Trumpets sound the Lord giveth a little view of the future state of the Church in reference to the two following principall Prophesies The first part is to ver 9. showing Gods care in guarding His Elect against that storm before it came this belongeth to