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

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of God looke confidently upon it be it never so unreasonable 〈…〉 There bee foure things which a man sha●● never attaine till the eye of his faith close up the eye of his reason 1. Hee shall never attaine the true knowledge of divine things Gods wisdome hath no greater enemy then humane wisdome not sanctified No men hardlier nor seldomer converted then worldly wise men as the Scriptures which say not many wise and experience shewes daily What wiser men in the world then the Philosophers and Stoicks of Athens but when Paul came to dispute among them of doctrine of religion he was called ababler Act. 17. 18 what will this babler say and reasoning among them of the resurrection hee was derided and mocked ver 32. Was not Festus a wise man and a prudent governour and yet when Paul preached to him no other things then Moses and the Prophets had foretold of these sufferings death and resurrection Festus tells him too much learning had made him mad Act. 26. 24. Ioh. 9. 6 Christ to cure a blinde man tempered clay and spittle together and applyed it to his eyes and bids him goe to Siloe A remedie likelier to put out a mans eyes then to recover sight There was no reason in the earth of the remedy but onely to try whether the blinde man did constantly beleeve Yet if the blinde man had not wholly resigned himselfe to Christ and shut up his owne reason had not he acknowledged Christ able to do what hee would by what hee would and to bee the same God who at first put all sences into a piece of clay and now by a piece of clay would recover his sence he had never seene but remained blinde still So every naturall man borne as blinde as he in spirituall things till he wholly submit himselfe and subdue his reason to the meanes appointed shall never see any thing to salvation but abide in naturall blindnesse still What hope hath he to be taught by the spirit that must give lawes to the Spirit of God or what a short metwand is naturall reason to measure divine things by 1 Cor. 1. 21 1 Cor. 2. 14 Why else did these Jewes esteeme the doctrine of the Gospell scandall but that reason of flesh would not nor could behold life and glory in such a base life and ignominious death as Christs was nor could hold him the Messiah who was made a curse upon the Crosse as if hee had beene crucified through infirmity and this vaile as to them remaineth at this day unremooved And why was Christ foolishnesse to the Graecian but that reason would not yeeld that life should be fetched out of death or salvation to be sought in curse and malediction 2. Hee that shuts not the eye of reason can never attaine faith There bee sixe things which a man cannot beleeve so long as he sticks to naturall reason First he cannot beleeve the word of God nor depend upon but scorne the ordinances of God in the word preached and Sacraments administred which is the visible word Reason unrenewed cares not for this foolishnesse of preaching 1. Cor 1. 21. And to a carnall man the threatnings of God are like Lots warning to his kinsmen he was as one that mocked or jested A promise to a carnall heart is as tastelesse as the white of an egge The wiser men are the further off they are from beleeving in a crucified God or conceiving that by the foolishnesse of preaching God will save such as beleeve Flesh and blood reveileth nothing Secondly hee cannot beleeve the maine promises of God which cannot bee comprehended but by the eye of faith and not by that till the eye of reason bee shut up God hath promised his presence favour and love with his children how can reason conceive the truth of this promise seeing them in hunger thirst wants hearing them reviled slandered disgraced observing them cast out of companies and societies as refuse and out-sweeping that were their hopes here onely they were of all men most miserable Reason will not bee perswaded that God can send us by hell to heaven yet that is his promise Humane reason will never pray My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee How could Abraham have beleeved the promise of a sonne by Sarah had he looked to naturall reason Thirdly he cannot beleeve the maine Articles of faith that hath not resigned up his reason Example Reason will not beleeve an happy resurrection seeing the body raked up in dust and corruption but denies this Article Reason cannot conceive or beleeve an eternall life because it sees it not given but to dead men It cannot apprehend how the Sonne of God should become the son of man or that this Sonne of man was borne of a virgin without man And so of the rest Fourthly he cannot beleeve the miracles of Scripture for confirmation of Gods truth and our faith Naturall reason cannot beleeve that the Sunne ever stood still as in Gi●eah much lesse went back ten degrees as in Hezekiahs time 2. King 20. 11. Or that fire should descend which naturally ascendeth and feed upon water contrary to nature as at Elias prayer 1. King 18. 39. Or that fire should raine downe as on Sodome which is proper to water Or that fire should not burne the three children Or that water should stand as a wall as in the Red sea and in the river Jordan whose property is to be fluid Fiftly he cannot beleeve the worke of creation if he will beleeve reason the universall consent of which is That of nothing nothing can bee made and not any thing much lesse all things out of nothing To reason therefore it will be incredible that there should be light before the Sunne or fruits before any raine as in the Creation Heb. 11. 3. By faith wee know not by reason that the worlds were framed by the word of God so that things which are seene were not made of things which doe appeere Sixtly he cannot beleeve the great work of Redemption For naturall reason thinks it unreasonable that the life of the Church can bee fetched out of the death of Christ. That a man can be justified by the imputed righteousnesse of another and yet there dwell so many sinnes in him Reason will not beleeve that one man can recover life by anothers death no more then one man can live by anothers soule or be wise by anothers learning or be cured and brought to health by anothers disease 3. So long as the eye of reason is open a man shall never attaine sound obedience unto God For much of that obedience required at our hands is cleane against corrupt nature As the whole doctrine of repentance of mortification or watchfull and carefull conversation of restraining our selves in unlawfull liberties yea and in lawfull all crosses reason Had Abraham ever sacrificed his sonne had he consulted with reason Had Paul ever joyned to the disciples to
CHRIST REVEALED OR THE OLD TESTAMENT EXPLAINED A Treatise of the Types and Shadowes of our SAVIOVR contained throughout the whole SCRIPTVRE All opened and made usefull for the benefit of Gods Church By THOMAS TAILOR D. D. late Preacher at ALDERMANBVRY Perfected by himselfe before his death HIERON ad PAVLIN In promptu est Leviticus liber in quo singula sacrificia imo singulae penê syllabae vestis Aaron totus ordo Leviticus spirant coelestia sacramenta LONDON Printed by M. F. for R. Dawlman and L. Fawne at the signe of the Brazen serpent in Pauls Churchyard M DC XXXV TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL Sir MILES FLEETEWOOD Knight Receiver Generall of his Maties Court of Wards and Liveries All welfare in Christ IESVS Noble Sir IT is a truth able to endure the most fiery times trialls None but Christ none but Christ. Ignatius expresseth as much drawing neare to his Martyrdome Let come upon me fire crosse meetings of wilde beasts cuttings tearings breakings of bones rendings of members dissolutions of the whole body and all torments of the devill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only that I may gain Iesus Christ. Thus he intreating the Romans not to intercede for him and hinder his ●uffering for the Gospell And thus the servants of God in these last times when Romanists have thrust them into flames and other calamities Christ is all and in all said the Apostle Look to the Church he supplies all defects of his people heales all their infirmities puts on all comfortable relations and procures all saving benefits In the golden chaine of our salvation which reacheth from eternitie to eternitie we shal observe that Christ is the owke or closure that tyeth every linke together as in these lines He is the foundation of our election Ephes 1. 4. He is the price of our redemption 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. He is the cause efficient of our regeneration Eph. 2. 10. He is the author of our justification Ier. 33. 16. He is the beginner and perfecter of our sanctification Heb. 12. 2. Iohn 15. 4 5. He is the matter of our consolation spirituall and temporal c. 16. 37. Rom. 5. 1. He is the sweetner and sanctifier of all our troubles Rom. 8. 37. c. He is the assurance pledge of our resurrectiō 1 Cor. 15. 20. He is the procurer producer of our glorificatiō Iohn 17. 22. Rev. 21. 23. All of thē good grounds of cōfort set forth the happines of Gods people All of them disgrace merit the worthinesse of the creatures Men and Angels All of them magnifie Gods love and wisedome call unto thankfulnesse and would make us content with little All invite labour to make sure of a portion in Christ without whom all is as nothing And finally all command those that are in Christ to be all unto him do all for him give all suffer all speake live die rejoyce in all through him and with him expect all in his heavenly kingdome Looke to the Word wherein all these things are revealed Christ is evidently the matter and summe of the Gospell and the Apostle affirmes the like concerning the Law Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth First by similitude saith Austin when a man is come to the end of a way he can go no farther so when a Christian is come to Christ he hath no farther excellencie to seek or go unto in Christ there is enough and enough to reconcile him to God and bring him to heaven Secondly for perfection saith Cyril When a thing is finished it is said to come to an end as namely in weaving a garment so Christ hath finished perfected and fulfilled the Law he came not to destroy but establish it so that in him we have a perfect righteousnes to present God withall even as the Law required Gal. 2. 16. 21. Thirdly he is finis intentionis the Law bids us look to Christ in whom only we can live both the Morall Law in the holy precepts of it impossible in this our weaknesse therefore have recourse to Christ Rom. 8. 3 4. together with the curses and threats of it whereby it is a sharpe Schoolemaster leading to Christ Gal. 3. 24. As also the Ceremoniall Law all whose shadowes figure out Christ and his benefits Heb. 10. 1. Now is Christ come saith Tertullian who is the end of the Law opening all the dark matters of it anciently covered under the mists of Types and Sacraments An excellent master an heavenly teacher a setler of truth to the uttermost Austin calls Moses his ceremonies prenunciative or foretelling Observations and saith We are not now constrained to observe things used in the Prophets time Non quia illa damnata sed quia in melius mutata sunt not for any evill in them but because they are changed for the better What they foretold and how they are changed for the better this Treatise in part discovereth and I purpose not now to discourse These glorious times of the Gospel shew evidently how much the truth excelleth the shadow the vertue common to the ancient beleevers as well as unto us Christ Iesus yesterday and to day and the same for ever but as the manifestation is more cleare so the grace is more plentifull and comfortable The same Testator made both Testaments and these differ not really but accidentally the Old infolding the New with some darknesse and the New unfolding the Old with joyous perspicuitie This glorious dispensation of grace as it stands by the good pleasure of God so also by his manifold wisedome who in severall approches of his mercy and goodnesse drawes still nearer to his Church and yet reserves the greatest for his Kingdome of glory Even now in this marvellous light of the Gospell we have our divine ceremonies and sacraments see him afarre off know but in part darkly as in a glasse and receive our best contentment by the acts of faith while the Word and Spirit make us know the things freely given us of God in Christ Iesus But time shall bee when to say nothing of the estate of the Church after the ruine of Antichrist and calling of the Iewes we shall in heaven see him whom we beleeved face to face clearly perfectly immediately without Sacraments or Types in the fullest vision nearest union and absolutest fruition Never till then shall we comprehend wholly what is the marrow of that text I am the Way the Truth and the Life To your Worship I commend this Treatise of that illuminate Doctor excellent sometime in following and opening an Allegory and now more excellent in enjoying the Truth it selfe of whom while here a Preacher you shewed your selfe a joyfull Hearer as of other faithfull Pastors at this day with obedience of the truth religious care of your family integrity in your office love of good men both in the Ministery and private estate and all Christian
Wounds of sin compared to deadly poison in foure things 327 Come for counsell to spirituall Physitians 327 who reproved 328 Confesse speciall sinnes and goe wholly out of thy selfe and all other 329 Look only unto Christ and that two wayes 331 How this looking cures us by faith and how by faith 332 Markes of one cured by looking to Christ. 333 Foure qualities of the eye that looks to him 334 Motives to look upto our Serpent 335 Vse of comfort in five particulars 337 In this Treatise are two things 1 The Introduction chap. 1. where 1 Propositions concerning the Church of God 2 Reasons of the ancient Ceremonies 2 The Treatis it selfe 6. 2. where 1 Christ is figured in holy persons 1 Singular eleven cap. 2 -12 2 Rankes and orders of men separated and sanctified 1 By birth the First-borne c. 13. 2 By office the Priests c. 14 Deputation Execution 3 By vow the Nazarits c. 15 4 By ceremonie Cleane persons c. 16. 2 He is figured in holy things c. 17. 1 Ordinary Sacraments 1 Circumcision c. 18 2 Passeover c. 19 2. Extraordinary answerable to 1 Circumcision Baptism 2 1 Pillar of Cloud Fire c. 20 2 Red Sea c. 21. 2 Passouer and Lords Supper 2. 1 Manna frō heavē c. 22. 2 Water out of the Rock c. 23. Adde hereunto the Brazen Serpent c. 24. CHRIST REVEALED IOHN 14. 6. I am the Truth CHAP. I. HAving formerly delivered that Christ is Truth as opposed to falsehood we are now to shew that he is Truth as opposed to the shadows and figures of the old Law In the entrance into which Treatise we must premise some Propositions 1. That the Lord decreed to have alwayes a Church upon the face of the earth for the upholding of which hee upholds the world For 1. Hee will have his name confessed and praised as well in earth as in heaven 2. Hee will maintaine his publike worship by it to distinguish heathenish Idolaters from true Worshippers 3. To prepare true beleevers in this Church militant to that Church triumphant and to set and polish them as living stones in this mount of the Church for that heavenly mountaine and temple II. For the effecting of his purpose he hath decreed that the doctrine of salvation by Iesus Christ should bee founded out in the Church together with the doctrine of the Law that partly the right way of his worshipp and partly the way of salvation might be made knowen and opened to beleevers III. By the Gospel the Lord hath revealed the Covenant of grace which is in substance but one as God is but one and Christ is but one who is the substance of it As there is but one hope of one eternall life the end of the Covenant and one faith which is the meane to leade to that end Ephes. 4. 5. IV. Christ and his doctrine and Covenant being the same yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13. 8. for substance altereth and differeth onely in the forme and manner of dispensation according to which it is diuersly propounded in the old Testament and New In the former propounded as of the Messiah to come from Adam unto his Incarnation In the latter as of the Saviour already come and so embraced in the Church from his first comming to his second comming againe V. So long as Christ was to come it pleased God to traine his Church by an heape of Ceremonies rites figures and shadows to strengthen their faith in the expectation of him Of which multitude of Ceremonies if more speciall reasons be demanded These may be given I. The nonage and infancie of that Church which was not capable of such high mysteries but was to bee taught by their eyes as well as their eares And therefore it pleased God to put the ancient Church even newly out of the cradle under Tutors Gal. 4. 2. and appointed diverse types and ceremonies as rudiments and introductions verse 3. fitted to the grosse and weake sences of that Church which was to be brought on by little and little through such shadows and figures to the true Image and thing signified who in our Text calleth himselfe truth in opposition to all those shadowes Object But the weaker and duller they were the more neede had they of cleare instruction and God could have revealed Christ as clearely to them as to us Sol. But as the Lord had observed this method in creating the world hee would have darknesse goe before light and in upholding the world hee would have dawning goe before cleare day So in the framing and upholding the Church hee would have Christ exhibited to the Fathers as to the Wise men in swadling clouts which hid his glory He respected them as children he erected for them in Iewry a little free-schoole set up in a corner of the world hee appointed the Law of Moses as a Primer or A. B. C. in which Christ was to be shadowed in darke and obscure maner he would that Christ should come to his brethren as Ioseph to his who first obscured himself to them and afterward made himselfe better knowen One compares it to Noahs 1. Opening the window of the Arke 2. Removing the covering 3. Stepping forth himselfe II. Therein the wisedome of God provided for the further advancement of Christ and his Gospel which compared with the Law must bee manifested in great brightnesse and glory Christ the Sonne must come in more glory then Moses the servant Hence Ioh. 1. 17. The Law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Iesus Christ The Gospel is called grace not because under the Law the same grace was not preached but comparatively that was scarse grace to this which is more full more manifest as the light in the dawning is scarse light in comparison of light at noone-day There was grace but here is more grace 1. In manifestation The light of the Sunne is seven-fold and like the light of seven dayes as was prophesied Isai. 30. 26. 2. In impletion and accomplishment of that which was but a promise of grace in comparison Act. 13. 32. 3. In application and apprehension by beleevers in all Countries not onely in Iudea 4. In the groweth and perfection of faith and grace in the hearts of ordinary beleevers above them Hence Heb. 10. 1. the Law had but a shadow of good things to come and not the Image and truth it selfe that is It had a rude and darke delineation of good things to come as a draught made by a painter with a coale but the Gospel exhibits the picture it selfe in the flourish and beauty that is the truth and being of it Hence also Paul to the Col. 2. 17. speaking of observances of the Ceremoniall Law saith they were but shadowes of things to come but the body is Christ. Whence hee would have us conceive 1. That as the body is the cause of the shadow and the cause more excellent then the thing
the same commandement to the young man and to the disciples of leaving all and following him it is an impossible taske to the one yet in his naturall estate but an easie yoke to the other who with the commandement receive some secret power to draw them to obedience Let the word command an angry furious naturall man to forgive his neighbour that wrongs him and blesse him that curseth him and doe good for evill and recompence love for hatred Oh this is an impossible commandement and flesh and blood cannot possibly brooke it and indeed he must be more then flesh and blood that can heare it hee must have a spirit subduing his will unto the will of God Let God speake as hee did to Abraham to a man unconverted Offer me up now not thy sonne but thy sin thy deare lusts thy Usury thy revenge swearing lying thy Herodias thy Dalilah thy darling thy pride take the knife into thy hand and with thine owne hands kill it sacrifice it let out the life blood of it Oh what grutching gainsaying rising up against the word and him by whom God commandeth Every naturall mans sin is his Isaac his childe his best beloved his joy and laughter hee cannot spare him hee cannot part with him Though the Lord bee in never so great haste and earnest they bee not so hasty as to rise up with Abraham early in the morning to offer up their sinnes a plaine evidence that as yet their nature was never changed but they are in their sinnes Rule II. In dangerous and difficult or costly commandements propp up thy faith with consideration of Gods power and truth So did Abraham in this difficult commandement when hee might have considered of a thousand strong hinderances he strengthened his faith by this Heb. 11. 19. hee considered that God was able to raise him up even from the dead whence after a sort hee received him Thus he supported his faith in that word of promise Rom. 4. 20 21. hee considered not Sarahs dead body but was fully assured that God whom hee beleeved who quickeneth the dead verse 17. who had promised was also able to doe it These two props upheld him even the full assurance of Gods truth in promises and power in performing them In duties of apparant danger the casting an eye on Gods truth and power will bring them forward else they never come on Dan. 3. 17. Our God is able to deliver us and hee will but if not c. So in the time of danger and deepe distresse cast thy selfe on the might and truth of God who quickneth the dead who can say to the dead live and they shall live In duties chargeable if thy obedience must cost thee some part or the whole of thy estate looke on Gods power and goodnesse So the Prophet to Amaziah 2. Chron. 25. 9. what shall we doe for the hundreth talents The Lord is able to give thee more then this Object But I know not whether he will Sol. Faith assures it selfe there is never any losse in obeying God It knows the way to keepe Isaac is to give up Isaac It hath a promise whosoever forsaketh house lands c. for Christ hee shall have an hundreth fold II. In both we have a notable type of our resurrection Isaac was raised the third day as from the dead but Christ indeed raised not as Isaac for himselfe but as an head for his body and members Which assureth us 1. That wee shall rise out of all pety deaths and dangers for our head is aboue water Though the billowes of afflictions inward and outward may rinse us and run over us yet they shall not drowne us because our head is aloft They may threaten and affright us but shall not drowne and destroy us we shall wade out well enough because they can never goe over our head any more 2. That we shall at the last day rise from all the death of mortality and corruption in which argument the Apostle is large to proove that because Christ the head is risen the members must also rise againe 1. Cor. 15. 12. For 1. Can or will a living and powerfull head be alwayes dismembred and sundred from the body 2. Because Christ rose not as a private person as Isaac did but as the first fruits of them that slept verse 20. 3. Because Christ in his resurrection is opposed to the first Adam verse 21 For as by the first Adam comes death on all so by the second Adam resurrection from the dead This is a sure propp and stay against all the miseries and occurrences of this life and against the bitternesse of death and horrour of the grave that we are assured of a better resurrection else were wee of all men most miserable verse 19. III. A sweet consolation God watched every motion in both these Isaacs offering how farre Abraham should goe how long to the lifting up of the knife and where he should stay and when was fit to say doe the boy no hurt So hee watched the executioners the crucifiers how farre they should proceed with Christ but stayed them from breaking his bones and kept him from seeing corruption So when Gods time and terme is come the affliction and afflicter shall goe no farther a voice at length shall come and say Stay thy hand doe him no hurt IV. Both were delivered but not till the third day the one when the knife was up the other being dead and hopelesse at least in the account of men as appeared by the words of the disciples which were going to Emmaus Hence wee learne to make this use for the strengthening of our faith Then to looke for helpe and deliverance when the case is desperate and in humane sence we are gone There is life in this comfort which assureth us of life even in death as Hos. 6. 2. After two dayes he will revive us and in the third day he will raise us up and wee shall live in his sight In all wants and extremities let Abrahams voice to Isaac comfort thee God will provide If Isaac see Abrahams sword in the one hand and fire in the other ready to deuoure him yet a little while and the sword shall bee put up and the fire shall take another object So the faithfull sonnes of Abraham seeing God the Fathers sword of justice drawne against them and the fire of his fury ready to consume them yet at length shall see by Christ the sword put up and the fire of wrath turned againe into a flame of love and grace Faith hath a cheerefull voice God will prouide Unbeleefe is full of repinings and murmurings Oh how should I be prouided for in this or that I see no meanes c. Here the difference holds which was betweene the ten spies and the two Num. 13. If thou see not the meanes for thy deliverance goe to the Mountaine there is a Ramme for Isaac hasten thy obedience and God
honoured Ioseph As 1. He richly decks and attires him puts a golden chaine on his necke Gen. 41. 42. 2. They must cry before him Abrech that is every man must bow to him 3. Every man must depend on his word Gen. 41. 55. Goe to Ioseph saith Pharaoh and what he faith to you doe yee So God the Father hath highly exalted his Sonne Jesus and given him not onely the rich robes of immortality and glory but a Name above all names that at his Name every knee shall bowe He appointed not Iohn Baptist onely to be his fore-runner to make way for him but all the Apostles and Evangelists cry before him Abrech Yea all faithfull pastours and teachers whose office is to bring men to stoope under the subjection of Jesus Christ. Yea he hath given his Sonne plenary authority to governe his kingdome and commands us as another Ioseph to heare him I. From the type and truth learn It is no new thing for the best men to be hated and wronged for their excellency and innocency Ioseph was therefore hated of his brethren because most loved of his Father Gen. 37. 4. Christ was hated because he was the light and gave witnesse unto it This is a certaine truth if God will testifie to a man the world will testifie against him whose judgements are contrary to his If God will advance a man in grace the world will depresse him If God be extraordinary to Moses Aaron and Miriam his brother and sister will hate him If David be respected Saul will envy him Who can stand before envy not naturall brothers No marvaile if men say as of old If we let this man alone all men will beleeve in him Well an evill eye is a signe of an evill man that dares in his thoughts check the Almighty for doing with his owne as he will And a good man cannot expect a surer confirmation in goodnesse then to be hated for it as in our type and truth Let us on the contrary there love most where God sheweth most love nor let any Ioseph leave his goodnesse for the hatred of the brethren II. All the sufferings of Gods children are ordayned and ordered by him 1. They are ordayned by God So in the type Ioseph sees Gods decree It was not you but God sent me afore you So did the true Ioseph It is not thou Pilate that couldst have any power over me unlesse it were given from above Ioh. 19. 11. and Acts 4. 27. 28. against thy holy Sonne Jesus Herod Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel gathered themselves together to doe whatsoever thy hand and counsell had determined Let not us looke so much at mens malice as at Gods decree So did David when he said Shimei curseth because the Lord hath bid him curse David 2. Sam. 16. 10. If for brethren wee find enemies let us say as Ioseph It was not you God hath an hand in it 2. Our suffrings are ordered by God 1. For their measure as in the type Come say they let us kill the dreamer but they could not So in the truth come let us kill the heire and then the inheritance shall be ours let us bury him and lay stones and watch and seale yet with all these they could not keepe him under Feare not evill men they shall not doe as much as they will but as God will 2. For the end they cannot frustrate the counsell of God nor his dreames Neither Gods glory nor Iosephs preferment can be prevented So the Jewes Let us put this seducer to death and we shall well shift our hands of him what will become of his doctrine of his Disciples But all turned to his greater exaltation as Iosephs Conclude hence that all the hatred of evill men unjust accusations false sentences cruell executions shall not hurt but one way or other set forward our truest good As both Iosephs and Christs turne to their greatest advancement both their innocencies breake out as the light And innocency is innocency and will be so knowne and shall be as the Sunne at noone day III. A singular comfort Is Christ the true Ioseph our brother Hee will 1. know us when we know not him as Ioseph He will love us before we can love him he will love us when we shall not know it his bowels will earne within him towards us 2 Cor. 6. 9. as unknowne and yet knowne He is a stone of refuge to all his brethren and though he be rough for a while and try us with temptations and afflictions of sundry sorts as Ioseph did yet he will at length make himselfe knowne to bee Ioseph he will say I am Ioseph I am Jesus your brother 2. As Ioseph tooke order that his brethren should bee washed in his house and set at his owne table So our Ioseph washeth us in cleaner water even the pure streames of his blood and makes us cleane by the water of sanctification sealing it to us in baptisme and after feeds us at his owne table and sets before us the bread and water of life as in the sacrament of the Supper 3. As Ioseph sent his brethren home with victualls without money and with Chariots and all necessaries for their journey till they came againe to be fully provided for by him so our Ioseph furnisheth us in this our journey and travell with all necessaries without our money or merits untill we come to dwell with him and he be all in all unto us 4. As when Iacob and his sonnes came into Aegypt and at that joyfull meeting of Father and all the sonnes Ioseph went out to meet them So our Ioseph meets us now in our way by his grace and spirit and at that great meeting of all his brethren shall make ready the clouds as his Chariot and come in person in state and we shall meet the Lord in the ayre and be ever with him IV. As Iosephs brethren behaved themselves to him Gen. 50. 17. So let us behave our selves to Christ. 1. Humble our selves bee ashamed that we have so wronged our brother pray for pardon and as it is in Zachery looke upon him whom we that is our sinnes have pearced and lament and be sorry for him as one mourneth for his onely sonne 2. Honour him All our sheafes must bow to his he hath that extraordinary blessing from above and below the blessing of his father is strong with the blessing of his Elders Gen. 49. 26. Christ is blessed in himselfe and in his posterity in all ages 3. Depend on him for food as they and say with Peter Ioh. 6. 68. Master to whom shall we goe thou hast the words of eternall life and for all supplyes apply that to him which is spoken of Ioseph Gen. 50. 19. Is not he for us under God 4. Let his gracious promises comfort and feede us as Iosephs brethren were comforted by his Gen. 50. 21. 5. Offer him such gifts as wee have
fellowship of a Kings Court such as Pharaohs in riot feasting drinking gaming is hatefull to a sound minde in comparison of the society of the miserable and persecuted Saints though a fleshly eye cannot see it 3. That it will be no great comfort to beleeve the Communion of Saints and not enjoy it 4. That they which despise it here shall never enjoy it in heaven 4. In the type and truth wee have a sure argument of our resurrection Moses dead body hid in the valley of Moab none knew where appeared glorious on the hill Thabor in Christs transfiguration Christs body hid in the grave comes forth glorious and ascends glorious on mount Olivet Both teach that our bodies are not lost but laid up and as sure as laid downe in basenesse shall rise in glory CHAP. VIII 7. IOSHVA A type of our true Ioshua another Moses I. BOth Saviours For Ioshua under the very same name is propounded a type of Christ. Both had the name Jesus both saved their people therefore Ioshua is called Iesus Heb. 4. 8. the type from temporall and externall enemies the truth from spirituall and eternall II. In his calling 1. Both succeeded Moses who makes way to both 2. Both guides going before Gods people The type to the earthly Canaan the truth to the heavenly 3. Both led them into the land Ioshua led the people not onely toward the land but into the promised land What was denied to Moses was granted to Ioshua Moses might not enter nor those that had disobeyed but Ioshua entreth and taketh possession for himselfe and for all the people So our Ioshua hath taken possession and led us into the possession of our heavenly Canaan What Moses Law could not doe for our infirmity Christ by his Gospel hath done for us That may shew us the way but this brings us to the wayes end and gives us all our promised expectation Thus our Ioshua carries us through from this wildernesse to our rest 4. Both divided the land and allotted to every man his portion Ioshua having entred Canaan assignes every one his portion Iosh. 14. 1. Christ ascended into heaven prepares for every beleever a place Ioh. 14. 2. III. Both confirmed their calling with many miracles 1. Ioshua being to passe over Iordan divides the waters and they gave way unto him Christ in the same Iordan divides the heavens Matth. 3. 16. and they testifie unto him verse 17. Ioshua divides waters but he ascribes it to the power of the Lord of all the world Chap. 3. 13. But our true Ioshua being that Lord and God of all the world by his owne power commanded the seas and they obeyed him 2. Ioshua becompassing the walls of Iericho and the long blast of rammes hornes overthrew the walls of it Chap. 6. 5. Our Ioshua by as weake and vile meanes in the eye of flesh even by the sound and blast of the Gospel shakes downe dayly the high and thick walls of the Devill and Antichrists kingdome and of the Iericho of this world which resists the people of God in their passage to Canaan By the preaching of the Gospel typified by the sound of the Trumpets our Ioshua overthrowes the wisedome power seeming sanctity and whatsoever strength of flesh is opposed to the power of the Gospel 3. Whilst Ioshua was destroying the enemies of God the Sunne in the heavens at his word stood still and stayed his course as a willing spectatour of that businesse and deferred the night lest hee should want day to smite his enemies in Chap. 10. 12. So our Ioshua whilst on the Crosse hee was spoiling principalities and powers and opening the way to Canaan commanded the Sunne to stopp his course and hide his face to witnesse to all the world the great worke in hand that day Of both these dayes may be verified Iosh. 10. 14. there was never before day like nor after it shall be IV. In his fortitude victory triumphs Both of them mightily miraculous miraculously triumphant 1. Ioshua was the Judge and Captaine of Gods people the leader of his Armies the mighty conquerour of all the enemies that rose up and resisted them Hee subdued both princes and people of the Canaanites Hee set his foot on the necks of five kings at once and slew them Chap. 10. 24. nay made his men of warre set their feete on their necks and trample them as dung and went on and in small time had slaine one and thirty Kings with their Armies Chap. 12. 10. Never had Israel so many enemies in their passage to Canaan as Gods people have unto that heavenly Canaan their countrey and rest typified by that Even all the gates of hell the rage of Satan the power of sinne the allurements of the world whole armies of temptations a troupe of pleasures honours profits on one hand a whole band of crosses and discouragements on the other a legion of lusts within our selves But our Ioshua the mighty Captaine not onely of the Lords hosts but who is the Lord of hosts is described to sit on a white horse whose name is called Faithfull and true and hee judgeth and fighteth righteously Revel 19. 11. Hee hath valiantly triumphed over all enemies spoyled principalities and powers set his foot on their necks troden Satan under his feet and made us tread him under our feet too If Ioshua have slaine one and thirty Kings Our Ioshua hath slaine so many thousand commanders 2. By meanes of Ioshuas faithfulnesse and fortitude not one word failed of all the good things which the Lord had said unto Israel but all came to passe Chap. 21. 45. and 23. 14. So by meanes of our Ioshua all the promises of God concerning heaven and happinesse are accomplished which are all in him Yea and Amen Heaven and earth may faile but not one jote of Gods promise but this Ioshua will see it accomplished V. In sundry actions 1. Ioshua saved Rahabs house that had the red cord hung out at the window because they had saved the Spies Chap. 6 So Christ saves every penitent sinner that expresseth faith in his blood and love to the true Israel of God especially his Ministers and Seers 2. Hee graciously accepted the Gibeonites when they humbly sued and intreated peace of him So a broken and a contrite heart our true Ioshua never despised Hee that offers repentant sinners grace before they seeke it when they seeke it will not deny it 3. When God by Ioshua had wrought that great miracle of stopping up the river Iordan till they passed over Chap. 4. 2. Ioshua commmanded twelve men of Israel to gather twelve stones out of Iordan and set them up memorialls of Gods great acts to all posteritie So our Ioshua having wrought many mighty miracles for the confirmation of his holy doctrine commanded twelve men his twelve disciples by the preaching of the Gospel to erect through all the world a monument and memory of the
thirst no more Lord faith she give mee this water that I may no more thirst nor come hither to draw Ioh. 4. 15. So let it stir up our desires after it also that wee may get within the well that springeth up to eternall life 3. What meanes may we use for the attaining of water out of this rock Answ. 1. Be an Israelite That rock was smitten onely for them This rock is laid in Sion not in Aegypt No Aegyptian no Canaanite no Romish Aegyptian that drinkes of that Popish puddle no profane worldlings taste of these waters swill and draffe is good enough for such swine 2. Come to the place Israel must goe out of their houses as well to fetch water out of the rock as to gather Manna The place whence the rock sends water is the threshold of the Sanctuary Ezech. 47. If wee will not stirre out of our dores wee may justly starve 3. Avoid letts and hindrances that damme up these waters As 1. Ignorance of their worth and of thy owne neede Ioh. 4. 10. If thou knewest the gift of God thou wouldest have asked c. Good reason thou want it who thinkest it a thing thou mayst best want Many among us like Tantalus in the midst of water die for thirst 2. Hardnesse of heart which keepes the soule dry and barren and abiding in the naturall hardnesse of a rock all the waters of this spirituall rock are lost upon it 3. A quenching and grieving of the spirit this turns the stream another way that it finds another channell Greeve not the spirit but grieve rather that thy selfe art so strait-necked a vessell 4. Secure neglect of meanes A man that will be rich followes the meanes so he that meaneth to be rich in grace whereas he that meaneth to die a begger casts up all and makes holy day at his pleasure 4. Provide 1. the bucket of faith to draw for the well is deepe and without this bucket thou gettest none Ioh. 4. 11. 2. Find a fit vessell to put these waters in As 1. a cleane vessell of a pure heart Who would put Aquavitae or Balme water in a fusty and stinking bottle 2. a whole vessell that it leake not out againe This whole vessell is a whole and sincere heart but broken all to pieces No vessel here can hold but a broken and contrite heart God fils the humble the haughty and proud are sent away empty CHAP. XXIV The Brazen Serpent a Type THe History of the Brazen Serpent is in Numb 21. 6 7 8. where are two things I. The disease II The remedy The disease is set downe 1. in the occasion ver 5. 2. in the kind by fiery Serpents sent by God to sting them 3. in the effect many dyed In all which Story wee must not stick in the letter or barke but breake through to the kernell and truth The rather because our Lord Jesus an interpreter beyond all exception brings us hereby to himselfe and to the consideration both of our disease and of the remedy and the application of it Ioh 3. 14. 15. As Moses lift up the serpent in the wildernesse so must the Sonne of man be lift up that whosoever beleeveth in him should not perish but have eternall life It will be now both pleasant and profitable to looke a little while upon the apt resemblance of the type with the truth both in the disease and remedy and first of the occasion of the disease Sect. I. I. The occasion of the disease was the peccant humor of ingratitude and murmuring against the grace of God miraculously manifested in the wildernesse Never had any people upon the face of the earth the like mercies from God the like experience of God Never any fed and feasted with so many miracles as it were in ordinary They have water following them every where out of a rock They have read from heaven delicate even to a miracle but this Angels food is too light and no bread will serve them but from earth God gave them abundance of it for the gathering he rained it most bountifully round about their tents but their unthankfull souls loathe it and tread it under foot And therefore rising up against God and tempting him they were destroyed of Serpents 1. Cor. 10. 9. Note here by the way 1. The Justice of God Hee that brought Manna from heaven to feed them for contempt of his grace now brings serpents out of the earth to revenge and destroy them Rom. 2. 4. 5. The despising of Gods bountifulnesse treasureth up wrath See the same Justice on our selves How lightly did wee in our first parents regard that upheaped measure of bounty and grace conferred by God in our Creation and innoceny And how justly were we stung to death by the old serpent for it The unthankfull person is the greatest robber that is 2. See the equity of this Justice on the Israelites They not contented to murmur against the Lord set also upon Moses and Aaron his servants Why have ye brought us into the wildernesse to die Now their punishment is answerable to their sinne They transgresse in hot and fiery tongues and are punished by hot and fiery stings Venemous words against God and his servants are revenged by the mouthes of poysoned and venemous serpents Doe thou at thy perill sting God and his servants with bitter words God will have some serpent or other to sting thee I am out of doubt that many great plagues have lingred and doe amongst us in this land for the poysoned and reviling speeches cast against God and his servants every where We sting his holy profession and servants incessantly and he stings us with the scorpions of his Judgements 3. Beware of being weary of manna Never did man complaine of plenty of manna but was justly stung with want of it Doe thou complaine without cause and thou shalt have cause to complaine Israel that complaines of too much manna shall shortly change their note and cry out of too many serpents II. The kind of the disease The Lord sent fiery serpents to sting them Where 1. why serpents 2. why fiery 3. why stinging 1. This disease by serpents lively resembles our disease of soule which is no other then the fiery sting of the old serpent which is the devill Rev. 12. 9. Our spirituall disease is hence noted to come from that old serpent at first Now satan is aptly compared to a serpent in five respects First because he covered himselfe with a serpent when he first stung and deceived mankind Secondly he is more subtle then any serpent crafty to insinuate and deceive 2 Cor. 11. 3. 14. Thirdly as a serpent dwels and lies among thornes bushes bryars and feeds upon dust so the devill raignes in the thickets and bushes of worldly cares and lusts and feeds upon worldlings exercising his chiefe power against them Fourthly as a serpent casts out of his mouth venime
to the excellency of meanes but by weake and unlikely meanes effects his great works And therefore that which had no power of cure in it selfe must cure and heale that the worke may be knowen to be his and not the meanes 2. The lower and baser the meanes are the better may the Israelites be led through them and so beyond them It was not the will of God that they should rest in the brazen serpent which had no power of cure but through it bee led by faith vnto the Messiah who onely could cure them 3. Though it was of brasse yet it was strong and signified Jesus Christ how weake soever in mens eyes yet was hee first the mighty and strong God secondly powerfull and able to deliver his people thirdly most invincible and potent also against all his enemies he is a wall of brasse and his strength is as the strength of brasse Reuel 1. 15. 4. Being of brasse as it was strong so was it shining and bright signifying Christ in respect of his divine and eternall generation truely shining and glorious Hee was the brightnesse of his Father Heb. 1. 3. the very brightnesse of the glory of God excelling all the Angels in heaven in their clearest glory and brightnesse Revel 1. 16. 5. As that serpent so shined that the Israelites might look upon it and their eyes not dazled so this great glory was so vailed by his flesh and humility as we the Israel of God might behold it yea approch it and fetch our salvation and happinesse from it 2. It resembled Christ in the forme for the forme was of a serpent First a serpent is of an hatefull and contemptible shape and appearance so was Christ in his owne habite Isai. 53. a despised man a worme rather then a man men saw no beauty in him but hid their eyes Secondly the serpent was accursed of God So Christ lay under the curse of sinne for us Gal. 3. 13. Thirdly that was but like a serpent in the forme of a serpent not a serpent it had onely the shape not the life sting nor poison of a serpent So Jesus Christ was the similitude of sinfull flesh but no sinner No venim or poison of sinne was found in him neither in his nature nor actions Rom. 8. 3. hee was in the similitude of sinfull flesh as that of a serpent but without all sting or spot of sinne The third thing in the appointment is the end or use of the serpent It must bee lift up upon a pearch that all Israel might see it Which plainly noteth both the kind of death which Christ must suffer as also the proper end and vertue of it as in these particulars 1. Both must bee lifted up So Christs crucifying is called an exaltation from the earth Ioh. 12. 32. 2. Both must be exalted upon wood the Pole a type of the Crosse of Christ. 3. Both among the Jews out of the Church is no salvation 4. Both to be looked upon one with the eye of the body the other with the eye of faith 5. Both to recover health and life one of body the other of soule one frees from corporall death the other from spirituall and eternall II. The applying of this remedy was nothing but the looking upon the brazen serpent which signified the sinners beholding of Jesus Christ for his cure The meanes of application of the remedy was the eye of the Israelite So the instrument of applying the remedy by Jesus Christ is the eye of faith which is the eye of the soule So our Saviour Christ himselfe expoundeth it Ioh. 3. As the brasen Serpent was lift up so shall the son of man that whosoever beleeveth in him c. That which Moses calls looking on the type Christ calls beleeving in himselfe the truth Which if the Lord had not purposed to expresse he could as easily have remooved the Serpents as appointed the making of another and as easily have healed them by his word as by this signe but hereby affords them a double mercy and cure one of the body by the signe another of their soules by the thing and truth thereby signifyed III. From this application followes a saving effect The Israelite by looking lived and received present ease with freedome from paine and poyson So the beleever looking on Christ by the eye of faith hath an heavenly life restored present ease from the paine of a guilty and accusing conscience freedome from the poyson of sinne both the guilt and staine of it But herein the truth is advanced above the type 1. That brazen Serpent had not power in it selfe to cure this hath power in it selfe 2. Whereas they were cured to dye againe beleevers attaine a sound cure never to dye more Ioh. 11. 26. 3. Whereas that did not alwaies reta●●e the vertue of curing our brazen Serpent doth ever retai●e power and vertue for the salvation of beleevers looking towards him to the end of the world 4. Wheras this brasen Serpent now a remedy against poyson was after turned to poyson the Israelites in Hezekiahs time which made him stampe it to powder our brazen Serpent ever remaineth the soveraigne and healing God as unchangeable in his goodnesse as hee is in his most holy and divine nature 5. That remained a great while about seaven hundred and threescore yeares but after was defaced and destroyed Our brazen Serpent can never bee defaced or destroyed but abides the Saviour of sinners to all eternity Oh now what a sweet Sermon doth this one type containe of the whole summe and marrow of the Gospell what a pregnant testimony and vaticinie is it alone of the death and passion of Jesus Christ as also of the vertue and merit of the same and consequently what a prop and stay of our faith what a goade and spurre to drive us to Jesus Christ in whose name alone wee can bee saved Sect. 3. I. Note What weake and contrary meanes the Lord useth to effect great things for his Church and in his Church Was there any sence or reason to be conceived in all this counsell and ordinance of God in healing thus his people 1. Could a Serpent of brasse a shape only more heale then hurt them 2. Could a dead Serpent prevaile against so many living and fiery Serpents 3. Shall not this shape and image of a Serpent be so much as touched or applyed to the wound but the sight of it onely a farre off cure a mortall wound really inflicted How inconceivable is this to humane reason which perhaps would count it foolish and ridiculous But the Lord though he might by many other more mighty and likely meanes will by no other meanes effect their deliverance He that brought in the Serpents could as easily have remooved them if not that yet he might have hindered them from biting them or hee might powerfully of the same poyson have made a remedy but he chooseth most unlikely meanes Qu.