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A52807 A compleat history and mystery of the Old and New Testament logically discust and theologically improved : in four volumes ... the like undertaking (in such a manner and method) being never by any author attempted before : yet this is now approved and commended by grave divines, &c. / by Christopher Ness ... Ness, Christopher, 1621-1705. 1696 (1696) Wing N449; ESTC R40047 3,259,554 1,966

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Works hath a double respect The 1. Respecting Gods part ma the 2. Respecting Man 's As it 1. Respects God who is Unchangeable so that Covenant must in some sense be Unchangeable also to wit in the substantial part of it which is as Unchangeable as Gods Justice by this all the Sons of Adam that do not Believe are Condemned and by this Christ was brought from Heaven to be made under the Curse of that Covenant Gal. 3 13. that he might fufil it for all that Believe in him 2. As it Respects Mans part so it is Changeable as to its accomplishment by Man with whom it was made it being not built upon Gods Unchangeable purpose within himself that it should stand for ever in that first Paradise Dispensation and not be changed but it was left to the Liberty and Free Will of Man either to keep it or break it as he himself best pleased God neither purposed nor promised to give Adam any additional Grace of influence whereby he should be caused to keep this first Covenant as he doth in the second Covenant but only Life is promis'd him on condition of his obedience by that Grace he was created with That God never intended the first Covenant Dispensation in Paradise to stand for ever is evident three ways 1. The Scripture saith nothing of Adam after his Fall save only his begetting of Children and of his Dying but little of his Life and as little of the Place of Paradise where it was is not well known which intimates God had a farther design to lay aside that first Law-Dispensation and to set up the Covenant of Grace given therefore to Adam in Paradise immediately after his Fall 2. God no where saith that he would be the God of Adam as he oft saith the God of Abraham for in the first Covenant he was to win this Honour by his Obedience and so to wear it This Royal Charter thus dated expired at his Disobedience God the Creator never said he would be Adam's God in the first Covenant so as to grant him influences to obey and to obey to the end as was to him and to us by God the Redeemer in the Covenant of Grace Ezek. 36.27 Deut. 30.6 Jer. 32.39 40. c. The 3. Evidence is The Lord did purposely give Adam that positive Law of prohibiting his Eating the Fruit upon pain of Death and did purposely suffer the Serpent to tempt him although he foresaw the Tempter would Master the Tempted All this was a Divine design to have the first Covenant abolished and then to deal with faln Man in the Dispensation of a better Covenant They first Covenant gave way for the Theatre of Grace to be Acted in the second to be short the Law Covenant is abolished not only the Ceremonial Law under which the Galatians were not but also the curse of the Moral Law in sundry Respects 1. It remains not for Justification for no Man is justified by the Law in the sight of God Gal. 3.11 for the Law promiseth Life only on condition of compleat Obedience and this is not to be found in any Man save in the Man Christ Jesus 2. It remains not for Condemnation for Christ is the end of the Law for Righteousness and he Redeemeth us from the curse of it so that there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 A Believers first Husband as to judging and condemning him is Dead and if he to wit the Law Covenant will he cursing and condemning any one in Christ that soul may say Uxori lis non intenditur the Law cannot commence a Suite against a Wife under Covert Baron I am Married to Christ Go Sue my Husband Rom. 7.2 3 4. Nor 3. Doth it remain in its commanding any more than in its condemning Power as it hath lost its Damning so its Domineering Authority Thus the Apostle argues Ye are not under the Law but under Grace that is not under the First but under the Second Covenant you are not under the Rigour and Irritation under the Curse and Coaction of the Law as Slaves under a Tyrant forcibly provoking or Compelling and Cursing you by Vertue of Sin therefore saith he sin shall not have dominion over you Rom. 6.14 rebel it may but reign it shall not in any under the Covenant of Grace Sin may have a Being and also a Dwelling in a truely Believing Soul but like those Beasts in Dan. 7.12 hath its Dominion taken away though its Life be prolong'd for a Time and a Season Although it be dejected from its regency yet it is not ejected from its inherency By this Men may know under what Covenant they live If you be led by the Spirit as your Tutor into all goodness righteousness and truth Eph. 5.9 and fetching you home from all your outstrays you are not under the Law or Covenant of Works Gal. 5.18 but are Sons of God Rom. 8.14 and have received the Spirit of Sonship or Adoption Gal. 4.6 Rom. 8.13 15. mortifying the Flesh c. Thus the Law as a Covenant Christ becoming sin for us and a curse for us and satisfying for all that ever the first Covenant required of us in our stead and as our Surety hath taken out of the way and Nail'd it to his Cross with the same Nails wherewith himself was Nailed Col 2.14 So we are dead to the Law and it is dead to us by the Body of Christ Rom. 7.4 his Body bearing our sins upon the Tree 1 Pet. 2.24 So that now 't is only the Rule of all Righteousness in the Hand of a Mediator Gal. 3.19 and in the Hand of his Spirit also Rom. 7.9 and 8.9 without which subserviency the Law is but a dead and a killing Letter 2 Cor. 3.6 when Christ is not the Writer his Spirit the Ink and Mans Heart is the Table whereon it is written by the Finger of God Rom. 2.15 and 6.17 and Heb. 8.10 To have the Law from which is our only fear a Servant to the Gospel is our great comfort now through the over-ruling Grace of the second Covenant the Law Covenant is become David's delight Psal 119.92 And Oh how he loved Gods Law ver 97. as his Rule and Counsellor ver 24. above Gold ver 127. yea as his Comforter against the sting of Death which is Sin and against the strength of Sin which is the Law not made by the purchase of Christ subservient to the Gospel 1 Cor. 15.56 57. where Blessed Paul Christs chief Herauld proclaims Victory over Sin and Death with a World of Solemnity and Triumph through Christ who had disarm'd Death and unsting'd Sin by satisfying the curse of the Law as he hath taken away not Sin it self but the Guilt of it so not Death it self but the Sting of it it may now be safely put into our Bosoms How the second Covenant is Everlasting though the first be abolished both à parte ante and à parte post will
one found righteous and religious to enter the Ark and to be saved with the family Would to God Masters and Mistresses of families had not so much cause to complain now that Servants of all sorts and Sexes arc almost universally corrupted and become uncomfortable to them in their Services otherwise what meaneth the bleating of the Sheep and the Lowing of the Oxen as Samuel said that I hear in so many families all over this great City which generally complain of this grievance as if it were a kind of over-spreading Plague upon many Housholds Assuredly this that no Servant was good enough to be saved in Noah's Ark must sound a loud Alarm in the Ears of Servants now and sink down into their Hearts to make them look about them lest they in this Debauching Age have no Interest in Christ the true Ark when either some particular or that general Judgment Day come upon us See more of this in my Christian Walk page 234 235. Thus Cham which signifies Hot because he dwelt in the Hot Countries entred to save the Serpents Seed which must be in the World the cursed Canaanites who descended from Cham Gen. 9.18 25. were Scourges to Israel yet afterwards were cut off c. Shem which signifies a Name entred to he the Father of the famous Jews and Japhet which signifies perswaded entred to be the Father of the numerous Gentiles God hath perswaded Japhet the unbelieving Gentiles to dwell in the Tents of Shem Gen. 9.27 The good Lord at last perswade Shew the unbelieving Jews to pass over into the Tents of Japhet or believing Gentiles 't is Gods work alone to bring them to the Faith Christs Name is a strong Tower or Ark God must perswade bath Shem and Japhet Jews and Gentiles to run into it and be safe Prov. 18.10 All these four Persons went into the Ark by pairs at the Destruction of the World by Water but it shall be otherwise when the World comes to be destroy'd by Fire then our Lord telleth us Two shall be in one Bed to wit the Man and the Wife as some do sense it the one shall be taken and the other left Luke 17.34 and Mat. 24.40 God will then separate his Saints with a most marvellous reparation to be admired of all them that believe 2 Thes 1.10 And whereas the Floud in a manner swept all but eight Souls away yet at Christs coming a considerable Company shall be of such as are saved The 3. Enquiry VVhat Animals entred Answer All kind of Creatures enter Male and Female by pairs for propagation as the eight Persons did both VVild and Tame Beasts and Birds Clean and Unclean This was a Mighty Work of Almighty God The VVild Creatures Noah did not Hunt for then as Hunters do now or drive them into the Ark by force but they were all brought to hand by an over-ruling Divine Instinct as we see a common Natural Instinct will cause an Herd of Swine fore-seeing a Storm to run home for shelter The Great Creator gave out his word of command to all these Creatures and they could not but obey it leaving their Desart places they come to God and to his Servant Noah as they had all given Obeisance to their Lord Adam before to receive their several Names according to their several Natures Gen. 2.19 As to him who was the first Storer of the VVorld so how they come to their Lord Noah who was to be the Restorer and Repairer of the VVorld that with him for that end they might find safety according to 1 Sam. 22.23 Abide with me fear not for with me ye shall have safeguard Hereupon Savage Beasts came Tamely to Noah and enter obediently into the Ark. The same Hand of Almighty Power shut up their Mouths from violent Actings which shut them up after with Noah in the Ark for their safety It may easily be imagined that Tubal-Cain Jubal and those wicked Men then alive must needs be astonished when they saw the Lion the Leopard the Tyger c with all their Females running voluntarily and innocently to the Ark Yea and Jabal the Herdsman Gen. 4.20 22. could not but wonder to see seven of his best Rams and best Ewes c. run out of his Flocks and Herds into the Ark as desirous to change their bad Master into a better Jabal's Oxe and Ass knew their right Owner when he himself did not and their best Masters Crib as Isa 1.3 to wit the Ark of Noah which their bad Master knew not Hence these Corollaries may be deduced ☞ 1. That Reason Debauched in Man is worse than the very Brutishness of Beasts yea Rebels against God fall below the Stirrup of Sense as well as Reason therefore God frequently puts Man to the School of Beasts c. to learn some good Lessons from them Go to the Ant thou sluggard Prov. 6.6 to the Stork Turtle and Swallow and to the Crane Jerem. 8.7 Those with the Oxe and the Ass Isa 1.3 All despicable Creatures God placeth in the Chair as it were to read Divinity-Lectures or Divine Lessons to Rebellious Man whose Disobedience and Foolishness is against the very Principles of Nature Man was once the Captain of Gods School but he turned Truant and for his Truantly Tricks is turned down into the Lowest Form as it were to Learn his A B C again and that from the meanest of Animals they must Teach Man to use Sedulity and to take Seasons to understand when the Summer of Grace is offered and when the VVinter of VVrath is threatned NB. 2. When a Beam of Divine Power falls upon wild wolfish wicked Men it tames them and makes them come to Gods Hand and to the Hand of his Preachers of Righteousness as the wild VVolves c. came to Noah's Hand Our Maker can mollifie the very adamant-Adamant-Hearts of the maddest Men they must then leave the Tombs the Mountains and the Desert places and come to sit down at Jesus's Feet Mark 5.3 5 18. by vertue of a New Law written in their Hearts Ezek. 11.16 19. and 36.9 26 27 31. Learn from hence also NB. 3. That all Creatures groan under the Bondage of Sin and have an earnest expectation of changing their bad Masters which make them groan into better that will be more merciful to them Row 8.19 20 21 22. Prov. 12.10 Thus the Cattel by a strange Providence run over from Churlish Laban to Godly Jacob Gen. 30.37 38 42 43. and 31.8 9. 'T was God the True Proprietary who made the change dealing kindly with Jacob as a Son while Laban did unkindly to him as a Servant Eleazar was kind to Dumb Creatures Gen. 24.32 while Balaam spurr'd his Ass till she spake Numb 22.27 Thus so many Creatures both Clean and Unclean run here from their Wicked Masters unto Godly Noah but two of the latter for preserving their Kind yet seven of the former the most useful the most respectful The two Unclean must but live the six Clean
upon the Sea Shore this latter call'd also the Dust of the Earth Gen. 13.15 resembles his Carnal Seed which with the Cursed Serpent did seed upon Dust but the former the Stars of Heaven Gen. 15.5 holds forth his Seed of Believers all Heaven Born and shone as Stars in their Generation accordingly the Lords design was Double in giving his Law on Sinai First Unto the Carnal Seed it setteth out the Old Covenant of works which they had broken and which God would not have wholly blotted out of the Mind and Memory of Men thus the Law strictly or absolutely taken as it was given to Adam as his way to Life in his first Estate so it shut up all these Jews under it as legally Dead except they would slee to Christ seeing they could not attain to any righteousness or Life by the Law simply considered for so 't is the sum and substance of the Covenant of Works and begets Children to Bondage which shall have no Inheritance with the Children of the Promise who all lay hold on Christ in the New Covenant as Gal. 4.21 to the end of the Chapter demonstrateth where Paul speaks of the Law absolutely and properly as a Law Covenant strictly taken in a contradistinction from the Gospel affirming how its Children as those of the Bond-Woman come short of Righteousness and Salvation are cast out of the Kingdom being Persecutors of the Spiritual Seed the Children of Promise as now all reprobates are The Second Design was for the Start of Heaven the Spiritual Seed or Believing Jews to whom the Law on Sinai did darkly shadow out the Covenant of Grace therefore did it bind them to the observation of the Ceremonial as well as Moral part the former being a Metaphorical or Figurative Gospel as the latter was a Literal Law the Letter whereof was not so much killing even to the carnal Jews in Gods Intention as by their own Corruption whereby they scorn'd Christ and his Righteousness in the New Covenant thinking to save themselves by their own Righteousness in a Covenant of Works Rom. 10.3 whereas this Covenant on Sinai was not otherwise designed upon a Damning but only upon a proving Design hence Moses saith there Exod. 20.20 Fear not for God is come to prove you he saith not to damn you and therein as Israel avouched the Lord for their God so God avouched them for his people Deut. 26.17 18. and 29.10 11. which could not be done with Man faln out of the Covenant of Works but by a Covenant of Grace and had this Covenant on Sinai been a Covenant of Works then was God injurious to Israel in calling them back from that Covenant of Grace given to Abraham their Father four hundred and thirty years before Gal. 3.17 to this worse Covenant as if God having begun with them in the Spirit would now perfect them by the Flesh Gal. 3.3 whereas 't is Gods plain method to lead his people from Faith to Faith Rom. 1.17 and from Grace to Grace John 1.16 Job 17.9 and Prov. 4.18 but never from Grace to Works Object 3. But then why was the Moral Law being the sum of the Covenant of Works given to Israel at Sinai or Horeb Deut. 29.1 if it were not that very Covenant Answ 1. Besides all the aforesaid for farther clearing this great Truth I shall add 1. The Law was not given to Israel as intended they should seek Justification and Salvation thereby but for a fuller discovery of Sin and a further conviction of Conscience 'T is true the very Law of Nature did discover Murder to be a sin in Cain Gen. 4.9 Whoredom to deserve burning Gen. 38.24 with 34.31 and the Patriarchs could say God forbid that we should steal Gen. 44.7 Yea those two Heathen Kings abhorred Adultery yea looking and lusting after any Woman Gen. 12.17 20.3 the same I might add concerning the breach of all the other Commandments as 1. Gen. 35.2 2. Gen. 31.34 35.5 3. Gen. 4.26 4. Gen. 2.3 Exod. 16.23 5. Gen. 27.41 All these were discovered to be sins before the Law was given by Moses even by the light of Nature but in Moses time this light was almost extinguish'd and this Law was obliterated and blotted out by Israel's conversing so long among the Idolatrous as well as Ignorant People of Egypt Indeed Adam's Fall broke this Law and Light in pieces and afterwards it grew dimmer and dimmer daily yea the Sheards of Gods Image wherein Man was created and being broken by his fall became smaller and smaller every Age after so that they could hardly be put together Men successively marring their own Consciences more and more and the Devil stepping in to promote it the Superseminator sowed Tares to choak the good seed wherefore lest it should be lost for ever as a Law in the heart God caused it to be written for the eye as well as spoken to the ear The End why is expressed by the Apostle The Law entred that the Offence might abound Rom. 5.20 to wit where it hath abounded in the Conversation it might now by the light of the Law abound also in the Conscience in great Grief for it and due Detestation of it as the greatest evil He saith also that he had not known sin but by the Law Rom. 3.20 and 7.7 and therefore was the Law added because of transgressions Gal. 3.19 which are discovered by it Ubi Lex ibi Lux. Torah Or Hebr. Gods Law is Mans Light Prov. 6.23 laying all open as 1 Cor. 14.25 and threatning destruction to transgressors Rom. 3.20 23. Answ 2. The Law on Sinai was not given to stand as Covenant of Life 'twixt God and Israel by which they might live for when it was given in its Thunders and Lightnings they were so affrighted that they saw they could not come near the Lord by that Law wherefore then saith the Apostle serveth the Law Gal. 3.19 he answers himself it serveth to chase us to Christ v. 24. whom he calls the End of the Law being accommodated to that Insantstate of the Church which though an Heir of the Promise in the Covenant of Grace made to Father Abraham yet while under Nonage was also under Tutorage and so the Law was her School-master to scourge her to Christ who was able to give her life which the Law could not give her Gal. 3.18 21 24. but rather clapt her up close Prisoner as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 3.22 23 from whence she could not possibly escape unless delivered by her Goel or Redeeming Angel Gen. 48.16 Christ Jesus the Avenger of blood being at her heels she must flee for her lite to this City of Refuge The third Consideration is That the Apostle in those chapters 3d. and 4th of his Epistle to the Galatians doth not make the Covenant on Sinai a distinct Covenant from that of Works and that of Grace to make a third Covenant but he
10.10 where he expresseth how afraid he was lest God should destroy them being far more troubled for them then they were for themselves insisting so much upon this eminent History of his interceeding for them this second time when their case was almost desperate insomuch that Moses was put upon a Peradventure I may make an Atonement Exod. 32.30 implying the difficulty thereof and therefore makes he use of his best levers at a dead lift as Prayer and Fasting Thirdly That there was sufficiency and consistency of time for all those three forty days fasts Dr. Lightfoot makes manifest in his Chronology affirming that Moses came down to break the Golden-Calf c. upon the 17th day of the Month Tammuz which answers to our June the next day he returns to God by prayer but is returned back the same day with a sad Answer whereupon Israel is humbled c. Exod. 33. from 5 to 12 c. The next day Moses goes up again and falls upon his second forty days fast wherein he desired to see the glory of God as in his first he had seen a glorious Tabernacle upon Israel's humbling the Cloud of Glory which had been removed by their Idolatry was restored c. On the 30th day of the Month Ab which answers to our July he enters on his third fast then he seeth the Lord and heareth him proclaim himself by most glorious attributes c. Exod. 34. and on the tenth day of the Month Tisri which answers to our September he came down with the glad tidings that all was well betwixt God and Israel with the renewed Tables in his hand and with a Commission to set about the making of the Tabernacle here 's time sufficient for two forty days fasts c. The Twelfth Remark on this Twelfth Station of Israel at Mount Sinai is the erection of the Tabernacle which was the visible sign Divinely appointed of God's favourable presence with his Church the glorious Cloud taking possession of it to dwell therein among his people Exod. 40.17 and 34. Mark here how God renewed his Covenant with Israel when duly humbled for their gross Idolatry God had given Moses upon his first fast Exod. 24.18 two Tables which were the work of God hewn out of the Saphire of the Throne of God's glory v. 20. say the Jewish Doctors and the writing was the writing of God Exod. 31.18 and 32.16 Moses brake those Tables at the sight of the Golden Calf to shew that Israel had made themselves unworthy of so great a Jewel and whereas the Lord had given him a Pattern and a Command for making and setting up a glorious Tabernacle and die service of it that benefit is also forfeited by their Calfish Idolatry and neither Tables to be restored nor the Tabernacle to be made tho' Moses had directions for it Exod. 25 26 27 28 29 30 31. Chapt. All those Love tokens from the Lord were lost by their peccatum flagrans the flaming Sin in Exod. 32.1 to 7. until Moses by long and earnest prayer had prevailed for Israel's peace upon their due humiliation 'T is said the People mourned Exod. 33.4 even in Mourning Habit as they had good cause they looked after Moses c. v. 8. to see what success his interceeding for their sin might obtain And when they saw signs that God was appeasable they bowed in thankfulness v. 9 10 11. This Friendship and familiarity of God with Moses was further manifested in those words hew thee two Tables of Stone c. Exod. 34.1 4 c. Herein they differed from die first Tables which were the work of God Exod. 32.16 but these were of Moses's hewing to shew the work of Moses's Law is to hew an heard heart Hos 6.5 yet cannot change it from Stone to Flesh nor write the Law in it that is Christ's work Ezek. 36.36 37. he makes all new Rev. 21.5 the first Law writ in the heart was broke by the sin of the first Adam The Messiah as Moses here renews all both heart and life God writes the Law again here in Moses's two new hewn Tables renews his Covenant with Israel thus humbled gives a new Commission to set about making the Tabernacle the People freshly fall on the work Exod. Chap. 35 36 37 38 39. and so freely frame they furniture for this Worldly Sanctuary Heb. 9.1 as they not only do but over do Exod. 36.7 to make amends for breaking the Law by Idolatry The Women devote their Looking-glasses whereby they dressed their Bodies to make the Laver whereby through Faith they might sanctifie their Souls Exod. 38.8 All was finished by the first day of the first Month in the second year then the Tabernacle was erected the Cloud of Glory fills it Exod. 40.17 34. So that Moses who had oft entred the Cloud cannot here v. 35. when God took up his Seat on the Ark to shew the unworthiness and weakness of all Flesh to come into God's presence as Levit 16.2 Aaron went in only at God's call as Moses into the Cloud when called Exod. 24.16 If so such da●ling Glory was not usual then it had hindred the service there it was a Type of God's dwelling with Men in Christ The Thirteenth Remark upon this Twelfth Station at Sinai is that no sooner was the glorious Tabernacle erected in all its furniture both without and within and God had taken his Chair of State upon the Mercy-Seat between the Cherubims but immediately he who had hitherto spoken to Israel out of Heaven Exod. 20.22 and Nehem. 9.13 c. now speaketh from the Mercy-Seat in the newly-erected Tabernacle and called Moses who stood without and could not enter when the glory of the Lord had filled the place Exod. 40.35 to come to him Levit. 1.1 and there taught he Israel by Moses how they should serve him with Sacrifices according to the Levitical Law c. all expressed in the whole Book of Leviticus which only containeth an entire History of one Months time while they still staid at Sinai after the Tabernacle and its service was set up being the first Month of their second years wandring in the Wilderness and of their Redemption from Egypt and the 2515 year of the World Note the first from hence This was wonderful Divine Condescension that the Great God should vouchsafe to humble himself so far as to meet Man in this Tabernacle which had the Cloudy Pillar upon it by day and fire upon it by night in the fight of all Israel in all their journeyings after this Exod. 40.36 38. Numb 9.17 23. this great favour is oft Celebrated Neh. 9.19 Psal 78.14 105.39 Note Secondly God did not call Moses to him with a loud frightful thundring voice as he did upon Sinai but with a sort low yet audible voice as the last letter in Vaiikra He called being less than all the other in that first word doth intimate or it may hint that tho' this were a glorious Oracle yet was
order Notwithstanding this six-fold unlikely-hood of this loud Lye yet is this Grand Imposture of the Priests who had given Pilate some hint of it before Mat. 27.64 is commonly believed for a Truth among the Jews until this day Mat. 28.15 They are given up to believe this gross Lye because they received not the Truth in love that they might be saved 2 Thes 2.10 and thus the Chief Priests and Elders gave a large round sum of Money though they sold the Saviour of the World for the Trifle of thirty pieces to bribe that Nation into unbelief among whom this most sublime and vilest piece of Knavery finds belief with Misbelievers The result of all this Discourse is That seeing 1st Christ's Resurrection hath so many famous and memorable Remarks as all those abovementioned put upon it 2dly Seeing Christ came not out of his Grave as Lazarus came out of his fast bound about with his Grave cloaths and therefore Christ when he raised him from Death to Life said Loose him and let him go John 11.43 44. He rose up with his Hands Feet and Head bound fast with those bands of Death because he rose not up as Victor or Conquerour but rose to die again and remained bound above ground until Christ commanded his release But Christ as a Conquerour releaseth himself having the power of laying down his Life and taking it up again in his own hands John 10.18 and loosed off his own Grave cloaths wherewith he was bound laid them in that due order mentioned in Scripture and left them behind him in his Sepulchre c. 3dly Seeing the Great Apostle in relating his full Chest of comfort wherewith he makes his challenge against all condemning Powers Rom. 8.33 34. He puts a most remarkable Rather upon the Head of Christ's Resurrection as the chiefest Box of all his other Spiritual Cordials 4thly Seeing Christ himself Hands in this very consideration I was dead and am alive again as a Cordial to the Church of Smyrna in a time when those Asian Churches were under some sad Apostacy as the Apostle Imports saying All them of Asia are turned from me 2 Tim. 1.15 and some of them had a name to Live and were Dead Rev. 3.1 Hereupon Christ comes in with this seasonable and suitable comfort behold I who was dead but am alive again Rev. 2.8 will make thee who art now in a dead and dedolent disposition to be alive again and to become lively for God and Godliness I am the first and the lust saith Christ to sweet smelling Smyrna who out-live and out-last all mine and thine Adversaries Therefore should we be oft searching in this Box that so abounds with comfort And the result I say of all these premises is that therefore the Day of Christ's Resurrection having all these most eminent Remarks upon it doth mostly require the uppermost Room in our Remembrance above all other days See more of this point in my Christian Walk upon the Lord's Day And more hereof here when we come to Christ's Manifestation Secondly Having thus discoursed upon the time When the next point is the manner How this Resurrection of Christ was managed wherein consider 1st By what Power Christ Rose again This was not done by any Extrinsick Forreign or Borrowed Power as was the Resurrection of Lazarus ut Supra but Christ Rose again by his own Intrinsick Innate and Congenial Power and that in despite of Death Men and Devils Because he was the Son of God so it was hot possible that any bands of Death or Devil could hold him down Acts 2.24 and his rising again after this manner did declare-him to be no less than the Son of God Rom. 1.4 Therefore if the manner of Christ's Rising be more particularly inquired into It must be Answered that as the Angel of the Lord whom some suppose to be the Son of God who loved to be oft among the Sons of Men long before his Incarnation Prov. 8.30 31. did wonderfully in Manoah's Sacrifice Judg. 13.18 19. so undoubtedly our Lord herein did wonderfully As our Lord died wonderfully in dying willingly and not of coaction though it was of necessity in respect of God's Immutable Decree Acts 2.23 4.28 therefore when he gave up the Ghost he cried with a loud Voice which shews as is abovesaid that his Vital Spirits and Strength was not spent at that time but he might have retained his Life longer if he would and thereupon the Centurion concluded him to be the Son of God Mark 15 39. so and much more than so must our Lord rise again wonderfully for his Resurrection hath an Apostolical rather put upon it Rom. 8.34 and this act above all other acts in his state of Humiliation did declare him to be the Son of God Rom. 1.4 It being the first step of his state of Exaltation The Centurion did but suppose him to be so by the Miraculous Manner of his Death but all the Saints are assured of it by the Miraculous Manner of his Resurrection which indeed was the more Miraculous if we take it for granted that Christ conveyed his own self-quickened Body through the Great Grave stone that lay upon his Tomb. But some may object against this opinion saying what need we grant this seeing 't is expresly affirmed by the Evangelists that the Angel of God rolled away the stone Answer None of the Evangelists do say that the Angel did this to let Christ out of the Sepulchre for Christ was risen indeed in the Earth-quake before the Stone was rolled away and that great thing was done not to let Christ out who was gone already but to let the Good Women in to be the first Witnesses of this great Truth of his Resurrection for so soon as the Angel had rolled away the Stone he sat down upon it expecting the Women who were now at hand and were saying one to another Who will roll away the Stone for us Mark 16.3 that he might be as Christ's Gentleman-Usher to hand them into the empty Sepulchre The Angel did not roll away the Stone out of any necessity our Lord had for its removal in order to his own Resurrection for he by the Power of his Godhead could rise without it but it was from a necessity for the Good Women without which they could not enter into the Sepulchre It was only for Christ's honour to have such an Heavenly Herald for the first solemn Proclamation of his Glorious Resurrection Learn hence to cry with these Holy Women 1. Who will roll away the Stone of an Hard Heart 2. Of the Curse of the Law which was Writ in Tables of Stone not only to shew its duration but also our obduration 3. Of the Darkness of the Durus Sermo or Hard saying John 6.60 which we meet with here and there in Christ's Word that needs an Interpreter 4. And Lastly Who shall roll away this Stone of Offence for the Churches Inlargement that in this Valley of Achor or trouble
about the Circumstance of it Therefore should we not wonder now that the Prophets or Pastors of the Church have some differing apprehensions to wit in points extra-fundamental less material about Modes and such as touch not the foundation Here Father and Son were divided in matter of Ceremony and though the Son Joseph was a great Prophet and Diviner yet was he out in his Judgment here not minding that mans dignity is not by Works or Nature but by Grace and Election Rom. 9.7 8.11 12. And not knowing that God oft sets the younger before the Elder and makes the first to be last and the last first and hath mercy on whom he will Rom. 9.18 Thus ' also concurs the 5. and last instance in Noahs family Shem the younger Brother hath priority before the Elder brethren Gen. 9.18 It hath oft been Gods rule and method that the Elder shall serve the younger Isaac is preferr'd before Ishmael Jacob before Esau as here Abel before Cain Inferences hence be these First Men may and must be respected according to their Places and Dignity in this World 't is not an idle complement but a Religious Duty to render Honour to whom Honour is due Rom. 13.1 7. This was Pauls practice in his salutation of most noble Festus Acts 26.25 Thus Gods Word gives Cain priority because of his Birth-right The second Inference is Though God allow of such due honour to the outward ranks and qualities of men according to their birth and breeding yet this will nor avail to render a man acceptable with God for neither Worldly greatness nor Millions of Money can bear any Mastery in the Kingdom of Grace though they be so much valued in the Kingdom of the World as the former instances shew how God inverts the Order where he findeth Grace David the youngest of seven is preferr'd before them all as one after Gods own Heart The third Inference is This reproves the folly and partiality of those who so much adore rich Worldlings and abase yea despise poor Christians Jam. 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greek a Gold-finger'd man ought not to be admir'd beyond a gracious-hearted believer who is the Glory of Christ 2. Cor. 8.23 nor the Wicked Rich be preferr'd before the Godly Poor Grace in Rags is as lovely a Grace in Robes as to God so to Men. The fourth Inference is though Birth-right be indeed a Blessing a great outward blessing having many priviledges yet this is but nature still Grace hath a prerogative before it God stands not upon how we are Born but that we be born again or from above as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies John 3.3 5. 'T is not the First-Birth but the New-Birth that makes Men the best sort of Gentlemen as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 17.11 signifies 'T is not the Birth-right in nature but 't is that Birth-right in Grace that hath the greatest honour put upon it in Scripture-Record as Rom 16.7 Andronicus and Junia saith that great Apostle were in Christ before me and 't is Recorded as an honourable encomium upon Mnason that he was an old Disciple Acts 21.16 and it was in this sense that the good old man in Ecclesiastical History answer'd one that ask'd him how old he was said he was but four years old when indeed he was fourscore speaking of his age in Grace not in Nature reputing all his many other years before his conversion to be lost or nothing non quamdiu fuimus sed quamdiu viximus c. saith Seneca 'T is not so much matter how long we have been in the World but how long we have lived unto God for without the life of Grace we are dead while we live 1 Tim. 5.6 and while alienated from the life of God we are dead in trespasses and sins Eph. 2.1 and 4.18 until Christ quicken us by Grace The fifth Inference is This shews us whom we ought to please in all our Works or Worship It must not be Man but God who knoweth the Heart John 2.25 Acts 1.24 'T is well supposed Cain strove to please Adam his Earthly Father only in this his Worship but Albel strove to please God his Heavenly Father also 'T is not enough for the Hireling in his day-tale work to strive the pleasing of By-standers only and not at all the pleasing of his Master who hires him to do his work and must pay him his wages also such an one is every careless comer to Gods Worship who never mind or matter their pleasing of God therein provided they can but merit a good opinion amongst Men thereby Alas men are but standers-by it is God who is the only allower and approver of our Holy actings He is not approved that commendeth himself or is commended by men but whom the Lord commendeth 2 Cor. 10.18 He is not a Jew that is one outwardly c. Rom. 2.28 29. God seeth not as man seeth 1 Sam. 16.7 Oh then how careful and conscientious should we all be not so much to please Man why he is a looker-on only and judges the outward actions But especially God who judges inward Affections cuts out work and pays us wages Mat. 20.1 2. The second particular is the ground of that Inversion or the reasons of this Disparity the Causes why the one was accepted and the other rejected There is a twofold difference here very remarkable 1. Of their Persons 2. Of their Actions 1. In regard of their Persons and that is also twofold 1. God put or set the Difference And 2. He saw the Difference 'twixt those two Person unto Abel God had respect but unto Cain he had not Gen. 4.4 5. From the former of these take this first Observation 'T is the most wise God that puts or sets the Difference twixt one man and another twixt a good and a bad Man as here twixt Cain and Abel 'T is the Free-grace of God that is the main Fundamental cause of Difference preferring Abel before Cain This was the Head and Fountain of that discriminating and distinguishing Difference between them as afterwards betwixt Jacob and Esau of whom 't is said before they were Born neither had done good or evil Jacob have I loved and Esau have I hated Rom. 9.11 12. Hath not the Potter power over the Clay v. 21. Where God compares himself in respect of his Soveraignty over all Men not to a Goldsmith whose Materials he works upon are precious as Gold Silver and precious Pearls but to a Potter who always works upon base and sordid Matter as Clay No better is Mankind in that Massâ corruptâ or corrupt Mass of the faln Estate yet God out of that filthy Lump of Earth or Clay maketh one Vessel for honour and another for dishonour as here Cain and Abel even before they were Born God put a difference betwixt them in his Eternal Purpose and Decree God Elects not from foreseen Faith or VVorks but from Free-grace and being a free Agent
saith and that very probably no sooner was Sarah taken into Abimelech's Court but he and his whole Family were smitten of God with some deadly Diseases when his Physicians consulted with could give neither Satisfaction nor Cure Then God told him in a Dream if he perfected his sin he was but a dead man c. By this Disease coming as out of an Engine immediately from God he was restrained from sin ver 6. and 17. and constrained to restore Sarah to her Husband all which teach us 1. That even Kings themselves may not be Licentious to do what they list but they are under limitation both of Humane and Divine Laws 2. Adultery even in Kings is punishable with Death both Popes and Emperors have been justly cut off by the Just Hand of God in and for this abominable sin 3. Ignorance cannot altogether excuse Sin as in Abimelech here it may excuse à Tanto something Luke 12.48 but not à Toto altogether 4. The whole Family may be blessed or cursed for the Masters sin as here ver 17 18. and Luke 19.9 This day Salvation is come to thy House as thou art a Son of Abraham Thus also the sins of Kings bring Plagues upon Kingdoms 2 Sam. 24.17 Delirant Reges plectuntur Achivi ver 9. here Thou hast brought on me and on my Kingdom this great sin 5. So dear to God are his Saints that he severely punisheth even Kings for their sakes he suffereth no Man to wrong them so as though they may heavily oppress them they shall ever utterly suppress them Psal 105.14 15. Touch not mine Anointed is spoke to not of Kings Be wise now therefore O ye Kings kiss the King of Kings lest he be angry Psal 2.10 Revel 19.16 Potentes potenter torquebuntur ingentia beneficia flagitia supplicia Great Sins under great Mercies bring great Plagues and Judgments 6. Things wilfully taken away must be willingly restored Non remittitur peccatum nisi restituatur ablatum Knowledge must reform wherein Ignorance hath offended till Sarah was restored no Mercy could be expected Lastly Those two Captivities of Sarah may resemble the two Captivities of her Seed the Old Testament Church First In Egypt under Ten Plagues 2dly In Babylon sent out with good Conditions Thus it befalls both the Church of Christ and the ●●●l of a Christian they are sometimes Captivated by Beelzebub that Prince of black Gypsies 〈◊〉 Devils or by Abaddon that God of this World which lyeth in wickedness 1 John 5.19 or King of all the Uncircumcised in the Mystery as Sarah was in the History yet both are not only seasonably and safely rescued but also brought off abundantly Enriched as she was with her Sheep and Oxen c. coming Richer out of Temptation than they went into it which leaves them through sanctifying Grace always better than it found them Oh that there were that Beauty in us which was in her The fifth Mystery of Sarah's Person in the History of her Life was her Constancy and Faithfulness to her Husband she was a Loving and Loyal Wife to him not hankering after strange no not though Royal Flesh as was Pharaoh and Abimelech Abraham was a covering of Eyes to her Gen. 20.16 Her Reverend regard to such a Reverend Husband made him a better Veil betwixt her Eyes and the Eyes of wanton Person than that Veil which Abimelech gave a Thousand Shekels of Shillings to her Husband to purchase for her that she might cover her Face with it whereby she might be known to be a modest Matron as well as a Married Woman in subjection to the Man Gen. 24.65 and 1 Cor. 11.3 6 7 10. Hence the Supouse took it ill that her Veil was pulled off whereby she might be judged to be a light and dishonest Woman Cant. 5.7 We should shun and be my of the very shew and shadow of sin if either we tender our Credit abroad or our Comfort at home Oh what a comfortable Companion was Sarah to Abraham in all his Travels and Troubles doing him good and not evil all her days Prov. 31.12 She was constant in her Conjugal Yoke carrying on and even her part thereof not drawing the contrary way and did stick to him with faithful Affections in all Changes and Chances whatsoever yea though she suffered many hardships as before with him and was oft put very hardly to it yet was she not afraìd with any amazement 1 Pet. 3.6 driving out all servile fear of the World with a stronger filial fear of God as the stronger Nail drives out the Weaker Oh that the Churches of Christ and the Souls of Christians could be so constant and faithful to their Lord and Husband as she was to hers Hos 3.3 We must bear his Cross after him Luke 9.23 here on Earth if we would wear his Crown with him in Heaven The sixth Mystery of Sarah's person in the History of her life was in having her faults transmitted from her self to her Husband as Gen. 18.13 The Lord said to Abraham wherefore did Sarah laugh Here was Sarah's sin doubled 1. Her Unbelief of Gods promise 2. Her Untruth she covered her Unbelief withal yet all is charg'd upon Abraham the Wives sin reflects upon her Husband and this is not all learnt from hence but it teacheth also that the Spouses Beloved bears upon him all her Transgressions Surely he hath born our griefs and the Chastisement of our Peace was upon him Isa 53.4 5. He bore our sins in his own body upon the Tree 1 Pet. 2.24 He the true Scape-goat taketh away the sins of the World Joh 1.29 Bearing them into the Land of forgetfulness Lev. 16.21 As this is a continual practice of Christ for us so this posture of his carrying away our sins should be as a perpetual Picture born about in our hearts Seeing his satis-passion is our satisfaction he took upon him whatever was Penal and Satisfactory to Divine Justice that belonged to Sin whereby we may be made Free Joh. 8.36 He was content to go down to the Wine-Press that we might be brought up into the Wine-Cellar or into the Banqueting-House Isa 63.3 Cant. 2.4 'T was the manner of those that offer'd their Burnt-Offerings of old to lay their Hand upon the Head of Beast Offered signifying the imputation of our Sins upon Christ this is done now by Faith O● that as Christ was Crucifixus so he may be Cordifixus fixed to our Hearts as to his Cross The last Mystery of Sarahs Person in the History of her Life is she in conjunction with Hagar and with their two Sons represents the two Covenants Gal. 4.24 c. which indeed is the main Mystery and that which hath most manifest Manuduction to it by the blessed Apostle under the Infallible conduct of the Holy Spirit In this Main or Principal Mystery there be manifold Members all coupled together in couples and compared per pares by pairs As 1. Here is the Shadow or Type 2. Here is the Body
argueth A Mediator is not a Mediator of one Gal. 3.20 but sin became the Make-bate and set God and Man at odds and variance as Mans Eating Forbidden Fruit was the Transgression of God his Makers Law and when God was one party offended and Man was the other party offending then there was need of a Mediator ☞ NB. 1. If the penitent Prodigal found compassion in his Earthly Fathers Bowels without any Mediator to intercede for him notwithstanding his high offences 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how much more may we if truly penitent hope to find compassion in our Heavenly Fathers Bowels Psal 103.13 and Mat. 7.11 having a Mediator and such a Mediator as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man Christ Jesus is whom the Father heareth always John 11.42 and answers him with good words and comfortable Zech. 1.13 Oh sweet 2. Miserable is the condition of those that never took hold of this Covenant of Grace Isa 56.4 6. but hopes to be saved by the Covenant of Works their good deeds cannot outweigh their bad ones Job 9.3 c. If they would wage War against Divine Justice with Ten Thousand good Works 't will War against them with Twenty Thousand bad ones and overcome them contrà 3. No better are they that have no Interest in Christ the Mediator who is our peace Eph. 2.13 and by whom all blessings come John 1.16 17. Eph. 1.7 Psal 68.18 and Eph. 4.8 2 Cor. 2.20 The third Difference betwixt the Covenant of Works and that of Grace is In the former Divine Acceptation begins at the Action and so goeth on to accept of the Person the Work renders the Worker or the Person working acceptable to God but in the latter this Divine Acceptation first begins with the Person and then goes on to the Action the Work cannot be accepted before the Worker be so in the beloved one Christ Eph. 1.6 In the Covenant of Works God accepts the Person for the Work or Actions sake but in the Covenant of Grace God accepts respects and rewards the Work or Action for the Persons sake This may be thus Illustrated The Tenure of the Covenant of Works runs thus Do and live upon which Father Ambrose hath an excellent Gloss saying God the Creator called all his Created things good and very good at the end of every Days Creation yet when he had Created Man he speaks not one word of the goodness of his Creature Man not so much as Tob good much less Meod Tob very good and why so saith he Homo priùs probandus quàm approbandus c. Man must first be proved before he be approved but alas Man bal Jalin non pernoctavit abode not one Night as the Hebrew signifieth in his Honourable Estate Wherein he was Created Psal 49.12 He failed in his Action so God accepted not of his Person But the Tenure of the Covenant of Grace runs thus Believe and live The VVorker must be a Believer before the VVork can find Acceptance according to that saying of Father Augustine omnia opera Infidelium sunt tantùm splendida peccata all the Works of Unbelievers are no better than shining sins their very praying a Religious Action as well as Plowing a Civil Action is an abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 with 21.4 As Copress will turn Wine or Milk into Ink so Unbelief turns all their Natural Civil Moral or Spiritual Actions into Sin their Plotting and Plowing mischief Hos 7.15 and 10.13 is Iniquity and not only so but whether they Plow or Play or Pray or Eat or Sleep to the Impure and Unbelieving all things are impure Tit. 1.15 Their very Incense stinks of the Hand which Offereth it Isa 1.13 14 15. though of it self it be a most sweet and precious Perfume Yea their own Table much more the Lords Table becomes a Snare to them Psal 69.22 and their very Prayer though materially good is formally bad and becomes sin Psal 109.7 whereas the Prayer of the Righteous whose Persons are first accepted is Gods delight Prov. 15.8 his Melodious Musick even to a Charm or Inchantment as the Hebrew word Lachash Isa 26.16 signifieth unto his Ears Psal 18.6 as Honey-drops to his Taste Cant. 4.11 and his most fragrant perfume to his Smell Psal 141.2 Insomuch that God-hearing Prayer as if charmed with their Prayers breaks out into these words saying Ask of me concerning my Sons and concerning the work of my hands command ye me Isa 45.11 Oh the latitude of that Royal Charter What improvement may fervent Faith make thereof Luke 18.1 7. Jam. 5.16 17. This great Truth concerning the Persons Acceptance before the Action of any can be accepted may be exemplified by sundry Scripture Instances As First Gen. 4.4 and Heb. 11.4 God had respect to Abel and to his Offering c. Gods Respect was there and then first to his Person and then to his Oblation his Sacrifice was Respected by and accepted of God because himself was justified by Faith first Abel was a Believer and one under Grace in his Person hereupon Divine Respect or Acceptance being first to himself ascended secondly to his Sacrifice Whereas on the contrary Cain was an Unbeliever and not under Grace and therefore though he Offered as well and as good as Abel God having no respect for his Person had as little for his Offering Gen. 4.5 But unto Cain and his Offering God Respected not Cain was under the Covenant of VVorks which was first made betwixt an holy God and an holy Man wherein Man stood upon his own Legs and by his own strength and in his own Person without a Priest to bear his Sin to Offer his Sacrifice Adam had no more need of a Priest in his Representative Covenant wherein he represented all Mankind descending from him than the Angels have in their Personal Covenant so called because they had not their Being by Descent as Mankind hath but were all Created at once to wit while both Adam and Angels stood in their Integrity but when that Covenant was broken Abel being a Believer had a Back-door and a Surety or High-Priest 1. To present his Person as to stand in his stead to bear his Name both upon his heart and upon his shoulders 2. To offer his Sacrifice c. This gave Acceptance to his Person and Offering but Cain was an Unbeliever and all such men have no more benefit by an High-Priest than the Devils have only to Men there is a possibility and not unto them while they continue under this broken Covenant he was under the Covenant of Works as appeareth by Gods saying to him If thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted Gen. 4.7 Under which Covenant there can be no Acceptation of the Person while there is found any Imperfection in the Work not transmitted to a Surety Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things contained in the Law any one failure in the Work procures a Curse on the Person This therefore is the
a Priest and 3. Gold as to a King The Covenant makes 1. Christs Prophetical Office ours hereupon we must go to him in all Arduous affairs in all our difficult Cases as the Israelites did to Moses Exod. 18.22 And hear him in all things Matth. 17.5 Christ is an excellent Teacher even of Ignorant Disciples Act. 4.13 'T is no matter how dull the Schollar is if Christ himself will be but the Teacher for he enlighteneth the Organ or Faculty as well as the Object opening our understandings in us as well as his Scriptures to us Luk. 24.27 31 45. And all this he doth gradually as Noah did First opening the Window of the Ark Gen. 8.6 Then he removed the covering thereof ver 13. and then he stepped out himself into the before drowned but now dryed World ver 18. Thus our blessed Noah Christ our Comforter comes and first opens the Eyes of our understandings Isa 42.6 7. Act. 26 18. Eph. 4.18 Col. 1.9 Then he removes the Vail or Covering that is upon the Heart as well as on the Head 2 Cor. 3.14 15 16 17. And then Christ steps into the Soul before drowned in sin but now dryed up by Grace that he may dwell in our Hearts by Faith Eph. 3.17 2. His Sacerdotal Office is ours wherein Christ was the Altar the Offering and the Offerer He offered himself the Sacrifice of his Manhood upon the Altar of his Godhead which did not only Sanctifie but also Dignifie the oblation putting an infinite worth into it Christ is the High-Priest of our profession Heb. 3.1 Who can have compassion on the Ignorant c. Heb. 5.1 2. All our Sacrifices or Services we must put into his hands who must bring them as well as burn them to the Father for us Lev. 1.15 This Office is the Grand Magazine of all our Grace and Comfort we have on this side Heaven as a relief against all temptations Heb. 2.17 and 4.15 When any sinner brought his Sacrifice to the Priest as the person was not to Offer it himself so the Priest was not to refuse it This should raise up our Faith to know that Christ is both able and willing he will not nay he cannot refuse our offerings he blesseth the weak as well as the strong where he finds sincerity looking more at Truth than at Measure 'T was the High-Priests Office to bless the People Numb 6.23 24. And 't is a blessed sign that our High-Priest hath blessed us when other Souls be blessed by us The Covenant gives us Interest into the merits of this incomparable Sacrifice which takes away the guilt of all sins greatest as well as least As the Red-Sea drowned the stoutest Champions in Pharaohs Army as well as the faintest and weakest Soldiers Exod. 14.13 30. His choicest Captains as well as his common Soldiers Exod. 15.4 So sins of all sizes and of all sorts of sinners are drowned in the Red-Sea of Christs Blood He shed as much Blood for Peasants as he did for Princes peccata non redeunt if once upon our Repentance our sins become drowned in the Blood of Christ we shall see them again no more as Israel the Egyptians unless Dead on the shore Christ is our Goel or near Kinsman who hath Redeemed our inheritance in Heaven which was Mortgaged by sin for us he is our Surety paying our Debt to Divine Justice 3. His Regal Office is ours also Here 's the ground both of our Assurance and of our perseverance that Christ is our King that Conquers all our cursed Canaanites our Corruptions in us Mic. 7.18 and Treads the Tempter with his Temptations under our Feet for us Rom. 16.20 Heb. 2.8 1 Cor. 15.25 He puts down all Powers opposite not only from without us but also from within us This is our Joshua or Jesus who calls upon us and capacitates us to put our Feet upon the Necks of our Enemies Josh 10.24 provided always he come as King into our Hearts in his Regal Capacity as the Psalmist intimates Psal 24.7 8 9.10 The Everlasting doors of our Souls must open to him as a King of Glory he will come in as a King or he will not come in at all Though Christ be a King yet hath he no Natural born Subjects we are all Born with War in our Hearts against Christs Kingly Office other Lords bear Dominion over us Isa 26.13 We are not born but made his Subjects Christ first makes an Holy War upon our Rebellious Hearts and must make us Subjects or he can never find us such This is done in the day of his Power Psal 110.3 not External but Evangelical to make us come in to him as true Voluntiers when he speaks to us with a strong hand upon our sturdy Hearts Isa 8.11 The Elect tast not of Death untill they see the Son of Man come in his Kingdom Matth. 16 28. Those carnal Capernaites would have Christ their King because he had been their Cook Joh. 6.15 'T was for Loaves not Love ver 26. But we must love the Lord Jesus Christ as our King Priest and Prophet or we are Anathema Maran Atha 1 Cor. 16.22 That is Cursed till and at the coming of Christ they that will not kiss his Golden Scepter his Iron Rod will make them his Footstool for rejecting his Throne Luke 19.27 Happy be such as yield subjection to him hold dependance on him and have their Acquiescence in him Matth. 11.29.30 Thirdly All the Motions and Operations of the Spirit are made ours to wit 1. The Quickening 2. The Actuating 3. The Regulating 4. The Corroborating 5. The Comforting Influences of the Holy Ghost are all made ours by the Covenant yea and 6. As he is Convincing 7. supplicating 8. Sanctifying 9. Sealing 10. Discerning 11. Witnessing 12. Adopting Spirit All this and all more that can be said concerning Diversities of Gifts or Graces all are ours by the Covenant yea all those excellent endowments for secular as well as for Spiritual employments Exod. 31.3 1 Sam. 11.6 c. Isa 28.26 All Arts and Sciences do flow from the Spirit therefore is he called the seven Spirits of God Rev. 1.4 3.1 4.5 yet the Spirit of Grace 't is said the World cannot receive Joh. 14 17. though it may the Spirit of Gifts Do we want Water Wind or Fire The Spirit is all these we cannot have clean Hearts unless washed with this Water Psal 51.10 Joh. 3.3 5. we cannot have warm Hearts unless warmed with this Fire Luk. 24.32 There is no Sailing to the Port of Heaven without this Wind Joh. 3.8 the fresh gales of this breathing Spirit must first fill the Sails of our Affections turning them into Graces and then we go off a ground roundly and pass on the Road comfortably This is a mighty priviledge to have the presence and influence of the Spirit for as God the Son made an agreement or Covenant with God the Father before all time so God the Holy Ghost doth transact the
upon God himself at the top This makes Jacobs Ladder or Christ to be what the Spouse calls him Cant. 5.10 He is Hebr. vexillatus prae decem millibus the most matchless and incomparable Ladder in the World The chiefest among ten thousand over-topping all others as Saul did the people Antesignanus or Standard-bearer conspicuous above all The way of life is above to the wise Prov. 15.24 and that way of wisdom upon this Ladder in a pleasant way Prov. 3.17 It doth many a Soul good to be running up this Ladder I have sometimes wondred at Horace's expression Coelum ipsum petimus nostrâ stultitiâ we attempt Heaven it self in our folly but sure I am it holds more truly Gratiâ prudentiâ by Gods Grace and by Divine Wisdom not by Humane Folly we should all attempt to climb up to Heaven upon this Ladder The Posture and End of its Erection is for saving from Hell and sending to Heaven The fifth Excellent Property is 'T is a large Ladder there is room enough both for Saints and Angels upon this Ladder 'T is so large that it enlargeth and stretcheth out it self into all Lands as do the great Luminaries of Heaven This Ladder is 1. Extensive as 't is found every where where either Jacob or any of the seed of Jacob may be found whether it be in Europe Asia Africa or America whether it be in the City or in the Country whether it be in publick or in private whether in Family-worship or Closet-retirements in all those places Believers do find this large Ladder of Love let down to them and there doth Christ give them his Loves Cant. 7.11 12. Upon which account the Apostle saith I will that men pray every where c. 1 Tim. 2.8 whether in the Fields or in the Villages or in the Vineyards or under the secret places of the stairs Cant. 2.14 any place yea a Chimney-corner may make a good Oratory upon this Ladder whereon Christ accounteth our voices sweet and our countenances comely And this Ladder Christ himself asserteth this great Truth Joh. 4.21 This Ladder as 't is Extensive in the first-place to all places as above So 2. 'T is comprehensive to all persons there is room enough upon this Ladder for all the Saints in all the Nations of the World for those in Rags as well as for those in Robes they need not justle one another in their climbings up to Heaven for want of room Though the way to Heaven be call'd a strait and narrow way Matth. 7.13 14. 't is not call'd so as if there were no room for more than for those few that find it for there is room enough therein for many millions more had they but hearts to seek and find it but because it allows men no Elbow-room for Vanity and Villany This Ladder is that way and may have the same name given it which Isaac's Third Well had calling it Reboboth Gen. 26 22. because then God had made Rooms or Room enough for him So here God hath made Room enough for all Believers upon this Ladder and if they do justle one another as God knows they do too much it is not for want of Room in it but for want of Love and Brotherly Affection in themselves and 't is well if this doth not discover the carnal seed of the Bond-woman from the spiritual seed of the Free The former being the justlers of the latter Gal. 4.29 As it was in Abraham's and Paul's day so it is now in our day Now seeing Christ this Ladder hath room enough for us both in his Kingdom of Grace and in his Kingdom of Glory John 14.2 he hath many Mansions and many Rooms in those Mansions enough of both in his Fathers house for us Oh what a shame is it that we should not have Room enough for Christ but our straitned hearts are too much like the place of Christs Birth which thrust that sweet Babe of Bethlehem into a stinking Stable for there was no room for him in the Inn Luke 2.7 Have we room enough for beastly lusts to which our hearts can be a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an open Inn that entertains all comers and have we or can we make no Room for the holy Child Jesus to whom we should say as Laban said to Eleazar Come in thou blessed of the Lord wherefore standest thou without Gen. 24.31 As Aaron had room enough to bear all the Names of the Twelve Tribes of Israel in the Breast-plate of Judgment upon his heart before the Lord Exod. 28.29 So Christ our High-Priest hath Room enough for all Believers Names both in his Book call'd the Lambs Book of Life Rev. 13.8 and in his heart both while on Earth Joh. 14.2 If it were not so I would have told you he could not find in his heart to hide any thing from them that might help and heal their troubled hearts v. 1. and when in Heaven he is much concern'd with all our sorrows and sufferings Isa 63.9 Acts 9.4 and this Ladder hath Room enough for our descending down into our hearts to view the greater abominations there Ezek. 8.7 8 13. and for our ascending up to view the Excellencies of Christ Alas that we have no more Room for him the chiefest of ten thousand and who deserves ten thousand times more of our loves The sixth Excellent Property 'T is a long and lofty Ladder so long as to reach from Earth to Heaven The distance must needs be vast and prodigious betwixt as the Scripture stiles the Heaven and Earth Gods Throne and his Footstool yet this Ladder is so long that it rests with its Top upon the former and stands with its Bottom upon the latter If Learned Authors do but reckon right they do demonstrate by as they call them undeniable Rules that the distance betwixt Earth and Heaven can be no less than an hundred and sixty millions of miles at the least in its due Longitude And some Astronomers do critically and curiously calculate that long distance to be five hundred years Journey from the superficies or surface of the Earth to the Starry Heaven which is yet but the under-ceiling the glorious glittering Rough cast or the most splendid and bright Brick-wall that encompasseth the Royal Palace the Heaven of Heavens the Throne of the great God and the Habitation of the Blessed Eliphaz in Job 22. v. 12. saith Behold the height of the Stars how high they are so high that our Eyes can hardly reach them 'T is a wonder saith Dr. Hall upon the Creation that we can look up to so great an height and so admirable a distance and that our very Eyes are not wearied and tired out in that long way before they come to that long Journeys end Yet hereby that vast distance is undeniably discovered seeing that some fixed Stars as well as the Sun are bigger than the whole Globe of the Earth notwithstanding they seem to the beholders Eyes but as so
had served his Uncle with all his power Gen. 31.6 Oh that we could serve the Lord so who is a far better Master a more Liberal Lord and a more Bountiful Benefactor than ever churlish Laban could be to Jacob. All this doth plainly hold our that God is a good Master and will see to his Servants that they lose not all as Laban design'd Jacob should do by severing the Ring-straked from the white c. Gen. 30.34 Hoping thereby to disappoint Jacob of having any thing for his Wages in that way he himself had so modestly proposed casting himself chiefly upon the good Providence of God in the use of lawful means as we all ought to do though the World like Laban doth think it neither pity nor iniquity to defraud us of those things that are due to us both as Men and as Christians Neither did God who is Lord of all Acts 10.36 any wrong to Laban in transferring his Cattel to Jacob no more than to the Canaanites when he gave their Land to the Israelites for God is the true Proprietary of all the Earth is the Lords and the fulness thereof Psal 24.1 God gives but his own Goods to whomsoever he gives them and may not the Lord do what he will with his own Matth. 20.15 Besides God herein gave to Jacob what was due to him by a double right 1. In respect of his Twenty years Service all which time he served without Wages as he complains Gen. 31.6 7. In regard of his Wives Dowry hereof his own Daughters do complain as a part of their Fathers Hardness saying Hath he not sold us and doth he not count us as strangers c. Gen. 31.15 16. So that God only directed Jacob to recover out of his churlish Uncles hands that which was his right and due to him both as wages for his hard service and as a Debt for his Wives Dowry Thus the Israelites borrowed of the Egyptians their best things which were but a due Recompence to them for their long Service and cruel Bondage Therefore Laban had as little cause to look lowringly upon Jacob as his Sons had reproachfully to rail at him and the great Grudge which the Father bare against Jacob in his heart providentially proclaimed by the frowns of his face upon him before friendly now spiteful Hen quàm difficile est Animum non prodere Vultu The Fathers frowns I say grieved this good man more and wounded him worse than all the Fraps and Frumps of Slanders that the bare-fac'd Boys blurted out of their black mouths speaking their malicious minds freely This was the double occasion of Jacobs resolve to Return which he would not do rashly without a warrantable cause and call God was good to Jacob while Laban and his Sons were evil to him 1. In giving him due warning to beware of their wicked Intents against him by the backbiting words of the one and by the lowring looks of the other therefore must he look to himself 2. God bids him look homeward Gen. 31.3 11 12 13. This was the third and the fullest call for his Return Oh that the Worlds Affronts and the Frowns of wicked men who change their Countenances as Times do change towards us may drive us to him who changeth not Jam. 1.17 and may make us more to look homewards to our Heavenly Canaan and Countrey Heb. 11.14 15 16. where we shall have a better place v. 10. than heart-grieving Mesheks Psal 120.5 and better company than churlish Laban and his currish Sons The two former Reasons both Impulsive Causes of Jacobs Return were Humane arising from the Sons carriage and the Fathers countenance but this third Reason of his Removal was Divine from the Oracle of God so more clear and satisfactory than the other two upon this he obeys Gods call in way of Duty and trusts him with the Event and Success thereof Former experience of Gods favour breeds in him future confidence therein Hereupon he first consulting with his Wives as it ought to be in weighty matters especially in Removes and gaining their consent they preferring an Husband before a Father according to Gods Word Gen. 2.24 Psal 45.16 casts himself and all his upon God who call'd him and commanded him to be gone He packs up his bag and baggage and yet steals away secretly Gen. 31.20 27. Gods Saints are often put upon the use of such means for their own safety as render them contemptible to worldly and wicked men Jacob assuredly feared that had Laban known of his departure his Avarice and Malice was such as he would lay his Tarrying-Irons upon him and not permit him to go away so long as he could stay him as a Servant whose service had long been a vast blessing to his small Estate NB. Jacobs obedience to Gods command was attended with two remarkable Mischiefs and Discouragements yet the God of Jacob who had promised him his presence carried him safely and comfortably through both This teacheth us two Truths 1. That evils may attend good men even in the way of obedience as Christs Disciples were going whither Christ had commanded them to go Matth. 14.22 yet in their way thither they met with a most dreadful storm v. 24. so that they were almost ship-wrack'd by the boisterous blasts the Prince of the Air had raised which sat cross and contrary to them and if the Winds be contrary to blow in the face of those that walk in the way of obedience oh what horrible Tempests of Fire and Brimstone of the most tormenting temper may beat upon the backs of those that are found in ways of disobedience Psal 11.6 The first thing God will rain upon the disobedient is Snares to catch them and to hold them fast that they may surely and certainly suffer all the rest that follow there God will assuredly command his Judgments to go forth and take hold of the wicked suddenly surprizing them as some pelting Shower doth unexpectedly the unwary Traveller and hold them fast too till they drink up the Cup of Gods Wrath though it be brim-full and hath Eternity to the bottom of it Psal 75.8 God will sooner or later wound the hairy scalp of such as go on in their wickedness Psal 68.21 The hairy scalp'd or shag-hair'd ones as evil Spirits are call'd Shegnirim Levit. 17.7 Mark that all Anti-Round-heads who suffer their locks to grow too long Ezek. 44.20 like Womens or who dress themselves so in an Antick dress with borrowed hair surely saith Mr. Burroughs the Devil forgot this Text when he raised so much Reproach against the Round-heads to be hairy-scalp'd the garb of Gods Enemies Psal 68.21 or shag-hair'd the Character of Devils Levit. 17.7 as before The second Truth taught hence is Though evils do attend good men in ways of obedience yet a good God carries them safe through those evils and however saves them from the evil of evils Many are the troubles of the Righteous but the Lord delivers them out of
no more But 2. As this motion of Judah was good in these three respects so we shall find that it was a bad and an evil Motion in the General because this motion of Judah for selling Joseph had very evil effects to the Sellers and to their posterity for some hundreds of years after for this selling of Joseph was without controversy the occasion of Israels going down into Egypt where they suffer'd a severe Bondage for a long time But this motion of Judah was not only evil in its effects in the General 't was also evil in nature in particular As First If it be considered how Judah's motion was bad in the positive part of it though it was good in the Negative He did well in disswading his Brethren from killing Joseph but he did very ill in perswading them to the selling of him For his counsel ought to have been thus stated as a right case of Conscience Brethren seeing we are like to reap no profit by our unkindness to our Brother but rather reproach and much mischief not only from Men who will repay Justice but also from God who will make Inquisition for Blood Psal 9.12 and to whom Vengeance belongeth Rom. 12.19 yea who is the Avenger of all evils and injuries Psal 10.14 Gen. 50.15 this mischief of selling as well as of killing Joseph will return upon our own Heads and our violent dealing with him will come down upon our own pates Psal 7.16 Therefore I counsel you neither to kill him nor to sell him but to save him from both those evils draw him out of the Pit nourish him with meat clothe him with his party coloured Coat again and restore him safe to his Father Secondly Consider As his Counsel had been good indeed had Judah advised according to the aforesaid so had he aggravated the evil of Selling him as well as of killing him his advice had been good also 'T is true it was the lesser evil to sell him than to kill him yet the selling him was a kind of killing him for therein they spoil'd him of his Liberty which is dearer than Life in selling him for a Slave as Cattel are Sold in the Market to Butchers transmitting by that Sale a power to the Merchants either to kill him or to keep him Besides there was a manifest Breach of the Plagiary Law He that stealeth a Man and selleth him shall surely be put to death Exod. 21.16 and again If any Man be found stealing any of his Brethren of the Children of Israel and maketh Merchandize of them as they do here of Joseph then that Thief shall die and thou shalt put evil away from among you Deut. 24.7 This Law was then writ in their Hearts Rom. 2.15 long before it was writ in Moses Tables otherwise Cain's killing his Brother Abel had not been Murder c. Therefore this Sale of Joseph was no less than a double Inquity 1. In Stealing him from their Father whose proper goods he was and not theirs 2. In selling him to Arabians who were strangers to Religion Upon both those Heads Judah had he been a good Councellor might have amplified and illustrated the evil of both those Acts As 1. He might have said Brethren our Brother is as we all are our Father's best Goods as Job's Children were to him having God's Image which no other Goods have The more excellent that a stolen thing is the greater Punishment that Theft deserves Man is the Master-piece of God's Creation being created so no other sublunary Creature is in the Image of his Creator Hereupon the very Law of Nature hath branded Man-stealing as Crudelissimum Institutum The most Cruel of Thievish Enterprizes and no less than Crimen laesae Majestatis High Treason against the King of Kings being a stealing of God's Image Hence the Ancient Roman-Laws condemned Men-stealers to the Metal-Mines and a latter Law of the Great Constantine casts them to the wild Beasts Judah might have said here Joseph is a Man so hath on him God's Image this will be the worst sort of Theft and Joseph is a Jewel so Jacob accounts him the greater Injury this will be to our Father to Rob him of his Darling and Diamond Therefore Oh do not this abominable thing Jerem. 44.4 we may not so much as steal Joseph much less may we 2. Sell him Seeing to be Sold into Slavery is a certain loss of Liberty which is as precious as life it self besides quid aliud est quàm sexcentis eum mortibus objicere what is it else than to expose him to an Hundred Deaths but the worst of all is we do not sell him to Israelites where he may still enjoy the Ordinances of God's pure Worship but to Ishmaelites who are degenerated from the Church yea to Arabians who have no knowledge of the true God to an Heathenish Idolatrous People so we become Sellers of Souls as well as of Bodies for hereby he will be in danger to be corrupted in Religion and carried off also to Idolatry by which means he will be seduced out of the Service of God into the Slavery of the Devil and so his Soul will be brought into the basest Bondage as well as his Body Though such Soul-Merchants and Spiritual Merchandize be found in mystical Babylon which the literal never pretended to practice among her Pardon-mongers for Purgatory whose Trade is wholly about the Souls of Men either fixing them there or freeing them thence Rev. 18.13 There must none such be found in the true Church of Israel and the right God-worshiping Sion And if those Court-Sycophants were cursed for driving David from the Inheritance of the Lord that is from being present at God's Publick Worship in the Tabernacle and for bidding him Really though not Verbally Go serve other Gods in Idolatrous Countries 1 Sam. 26.19 what could Judah and his Brethren who were the Patriarchs of Israel expect both for stealing Joseph from his Fathers hand and for Selling him from his House wherein the true worship of God was upheld then only in all the World into Arabia and into Egypt two Heathenish and Idolatrous Countries what was this but a plain bidding him Go and serve other Gods than thy Father's God and was not this as cursed a Crime in the Patriarch's dealing thus with Joseph as it was in Doeg that Dog the Cursed Edomite who dealt thus with David and brought him to bewail his Banishment crying Woe is me that I must sojourn in Mesek and among the Tents of Kedar Psal 120.5 that is among the Arabians the very People to whom Joseph was here Sold of Ishmael● Posterity Gen. 25.13 and who used to live in Tents Cant. 1.5 Thus it plainly appeareth that Judah's Motion for Selling Joseph was bad as well as good 'T was indeed very good as it was a saving his Brother from being slaughtered yet the selling of him was very bad and a notorious wicked Act though God over-rul'd it for good every way to him to
lest Parents partiality presume to put a Difference where neither God nor Nature hath put any Fond Affection express'd by Parents to some one Fantling above all the rest is the ready way to exasperate the slighted against the cockered Against this Evil the Apostle warneth Eph. 6.4 Parents provoke not your Children to wrath well knowing that Parents partiality may breed Heart-burning among Children Therefore 't is a part of Prudence in all Parents so to govern their inward Affections or at least so to order and restrain the Demonstrations of their love in outward signs that they give no cause of either Grudge or Grief among their Children 'T is no marvel saith Ambrose if Brethren fall out about Houses and Land when Joseph's Brethren could so hate him and all comparatively about a Coat finer than theirs Secondly Note hence that over-strong Affections mostly end in over-strong Afflictions they that Love over-much shall be sure to Grieve over-much The excess of one Passion the case coming into the contrary point hath a natural tendency to turn into the excess of another How did David dote upon his Son Absolom who kissed him 2 Sam. 14.33 when he should rather have kicked him if not have killed him by the hand of Justice for his former Villany than thus to have harden'd him for future further and far worse wickedness but he severely smarted for his excessive love and unbounded affection towards his over-loved Absolom for whom he afterward as much over-grieved 2 Sam. 18.33 wishing he had died for him Thus also David doted upon his other Son Adonijah 1 King 1.6 cockering him when he should have been correcting him The fond Father pleased his Son in his Childhood and the foolish Son displeased his Father in his old Age not caring if he crush'd his very Heart when now Bedrid a poor Clynick by his Disloyalty and Usurpation This also was an Evil in old Eli 1 Sam. 2.22 to 29. who likely had marr'd his Sons all along with too much fond Indulgence and now in his old Age had quite lost his Authority over them This gentleness of Eli to his villanous Sons God reproved him smartly for because he would not rebuke them sharply or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cuttingly and to the quick Tit. 1.13 for their notorious Villanies saying because thou wilt rather gratifie-them than glorifie me thou shalt have thy belly full of them and in the end they help'd to break both his Neck and his Heart Ch. 4.17 18. Thus also Jacob here very probably was too fond a Father to his Son Joseph who yet was more worthy of his Fathers love than any of the aforesaid yea than any of his own Brethren notwithstanding immoderate Love or over fond Affections even to one well deserving them displeaseth the Lord and therefore he permits Jacob to smart for it so severely as to refuse all Comforts as if there were not a good Providence of God without leave whereof no Beast could bite Joseph to be submitted unto and as if there were no Resurrection to restore Dan. 12.2 Hebr. 11.34 All Parents must therefore watch in both the best may offend that Passions grow not too wild whether love or grief and such as will not be governed either by Refined Reason or by Divinely inspired Grace This may cost them dear as to Jacob here The Third moving Cause in those Sellers to Sell Joseph was as 2. for his Gawdy Coat his Earthly Father gave him out of his probably too fond Affection as before to him So 3. For his Divine Dreams he received from his Heavenly Father once and again and revealed them to his Brethren and Jacob. These Remarks are observable 1. Joseph's Dreams were Divine for it must be the finger of God or a Divine Hand which made Joseph a Child to become a Prophet as the Child Samuel was after 1 Sam. 3.1 4 8 10 and 11 c. and which out of the Mouth of a Babe ordaineth Strength Psal 8.2 to foretel future things Though for the present Joseph being but a Child had as little understanding of his Dreams as the Child Samuel had of his Visions 1 Sam. 3.7 neither of them yet being acquainted with them 2. Those Dreams were doubled as Pharaoh's were Gen. 41.32 not only to make a deepe● Impression upon the Mind but also to import both Assurance and Expedition of the matter and though his Dreams were double in Vision yet were they but single in Sense and Signification as Pharaoh's were Gen. 41.25 both the Dreams had one and the same Interpretation 3. Those two Dreams were of two differing Kinds The first was of Terrestrial Things that his Brethrens sheaves in their personal Joint-Harvest work did obeisance to his sheaf The second was of Caelestial Things that the Sun Moon and Eleven Stars bowed themselves to him Gen. 37 7 9 that is Father Mother Brethren 4. The former of those Dreams Joseph relates to his Brethren only who could give a right and better Interpretation of it than the Child Joseph as it seems could do and though Joseph told them this Dream not out of any Ambition but out of Simplicity yet in stead of hearkening to this Oracle of God they stubbornly resist Gods revealed Will and hate Joseph yea rebuke him for revealing it 5. The latter of them he declares not only to his Brethren but also to his Father conceiving him concern'd in it as well as them and though Jacob at first gave Joseph a light Rebuke for it either not yet understanding the Mystery of it or prudently pretending a dislike for preventing the further Envy of his Sons against Joseph This latter the judicious Judge to be Jacob's drift and design in rebuking the Dreamer Gen. 37.10 and therefore he draws his Argument 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the impossibility and absurdity of it Shall thy dead Mother Rachel rise again and reverence thee this the Prudent old Patriarch might say to mollifie the Malice of Joseph's Brethren who notwithstanding did bear him more Malice for it v. 11. however as light as Jacob seem'd to make of it he laid it to heart as Mary the Mother of Christ did who made her Memory like the Golden Pot that kept the Mannah so he minded those remarkable Matters judging them not to be Vain but to have something more than ordinary in them Mark here the Mistake of Josephus who saith that Joseph's Brethren found no fault with him at the telling of his first Dream whereas the Text saith expresly they said Shalt thou indeed Reign over us v. 8. and that they said nothing at the rehearsing of the second referring it to the Judgment of their Father to whom it was told again by Joseph whom therefore his Father rebuked in the presence of his Brethren and therefore they spared their Reproof but all this Moses might think meet to omit as Mercer thinketh 6. The Sixth Remark is Joseph in Dreaming and declaring his Dreams thus did not deserve 1. Any real
God was the prime Efficient Cause of Joseph's Prosperity even in his lowest and hardest Adversity Gen. 39.2 the Lord was with him and made him a prosperous Man c. All men have God's Essential Presence Enter praesenter Deus hìc ubique patenter But only Godly Men have God's gracious Presence such an one was Joseph whom his Father Jacob had religiously Educated and with whom through God's Blessing that Divine Tincture received likewise remained His brutish Brethren did bereave him of his Embroidered Garment but they could not rob him of his inherent Holiness of his infused and imprinted Grace and Godliness He brought this along with him into Egypt and retain'd it even in the worst of his Slavery and whithersoever Grace goes thither God goes and wheresoever Grace stays there God stays The Lord is with us while we are with him 2 Chron. 15.3 As Joseph had God's Grace so he had God's Favour and God's Favour was the Fountain from whence did flow that Happy Success in all his Undertakings and that Foundation whereon it stood His Piety through Divine Favour procureth and produceth his Prosperity Joseph though now a Slave leads such a Convincing Life which was the 2d Cause of his being made a Master in his Master's House that Potiphar saw not only that Jehovah was with Joseph according to the Hebrew reading v. 2 3. but also that God's Providence made him a prosperous Man Hebr. Ish-Matsliach Homo boni pedis as his Father Jacob had been to Laban Gen. 30.27 30. his very coming on his feet into his House and his doing though but Drudgery-work was wonderfully blest with Success This his Master saw by the effect who though he knew not the True God yet acknowledg'd that God was the Giver of Prosperity and that Piety is so pleasing to God as to be bless'd by him with Prosperity yea and that Potiphar's Affairs became prosperous Improvements even for the sake of Pious Joseph The third cause was Potiphar did not only see his Service made successful by a Divine power over-ruling Humane Affairs but also his Patience and Humility under all his Servile Labours 'T is said He abode in the House of his Lord and Master that is he did not run from him as many evil Servants do 1 Sam. 25.10 Though his Service was severe and slavish and therefore one would think to such an Ingenuous Mind and tenderly Educated Body and to the Cocker'd Son of such a Mighty and Wealthy Patriarch seem'd unsufferable notwithstanding Joseph neither murmurs against God for laying upon him so cruel a Cross nor mutters against his Master though an Egyptian to whom he was his Drudge and Bond-slave though of himself an Honourable Hebrew He doth not like Rivers damm'd up break his Banks nor as refractory and unruly Bullocks break his Bands Joseph doth not break away from his Austere Slavery as many Ro●ues and Runagates run away from their Masters He runs not away Home to his Father Jacob which many in his Circumstances would have done But good Joseph doth patiently and humbly submit to the Hand of God which for the present had brought him into that House of hard Bondage in Egypt that Israel afterward were afflicted in for two hundred and fifteen years not daring to break out from under it till Gods time came to deliver them Moses saith Vahi Be Beth Adonau Hamitsri He was or remained in the House of his Egyptian Lord Gen. 39.2 that is he quietly bore his Bondage and ran not away to his Father again for his full time till God set him free All this Excellency his Master saw to his Amazement and Conviction Joseph's faithfulness God having all Hearts in his own Hand Prov. 21.1 and fashioning them to his pleasure Psal 33.15 as he did the Great Kings towards Nehemiah Neh. 2.4 5. procureth Potiphar's Favour Gen. 39.4 and God giving him to find Favour and Grace in his Masters sight Potiphar hereupon as the Hebrews say raiseth Joseph from a Skullion to a Page from a Page to a Chamberlain and from thence he Advanced him to be the High and Chief Steward of his House This is the less improbable seeing 't is expresly said that Joseph ministred to his Master ver 4. In our reading 't is served him but the Hebrew word there is Sharath not Gnabad which latter signifies a more Servile and Slavish Service as that of Bond-slaves Thus David saith that Joseph was sold for a Gnebed a Slave or Servant Psal 105.17 but when he comes to describe those that should serve him in his own House and Court Psal 101.6 then he useth Sharath the upright shall minister to me which word is always used to express some Honourable Service even that of Freemen Isa 60.7 yea and that of Publick Office both in Church and State Seeing therefore Moses useth this very word Sharath to express Joseph's serving his Master and that after he had found Grace in his Masters sight it plainly implies that Potiphar now look'd no more upon Joseph as a contemptible Three-half-penny Slave good to nothing save to sordid Drudgery but gives him then more Honourable Employ a Ministration of freer and Nobler Service differing from Slavery and so he rose gradually to be made Vice-Master in the Family his Master seeing all his undertakings so signally successful committed the whole care of all his Concerns both in City and Countrey taking no care himself for any thing save only for Eating and Drinking Thus far Joseph's Bow abode in strength He that was hated of his Brethren yet was favoured of strangers and so highly Favoured as to be highly Advanced Not only here by Potiphar who made him his Vice-Master but also after by Pharaoh Potiphar's Master who made him his Vice-Roy Inferences hence be 1. God loves to Act by a way of his own working all by contraries Thus God brought Joseph through the most despicable Slavery into most High Advancement He Dream'd of the latter but never Dream'd of the former Yet this was Gods method the more to commend his Mercy he makes the way to Heaven by Hell Gates The second Inference hence is God the Creator supplies the want of Creatures to comfort his Servants in distress 'T is said expresly God was with Joseph but Jacob was not with him No he was stoln and sold away from his Father into a strange Land Yet the want of his Earthly Father was sweetly supplied by the presence of his Heavenly Father who furnish'd him with Prudence Piety and Prosperity to allay the smart and to dulcifie the bitterness of his sad Adversity Let none then in their lowest Estate despond therein provided they be pious such as own God God will own them Deut. 26.17 18. He will not despise them in their Affliction Psal 22.24 but his Eye is upon them c. Psal 34.18 19. 2 Pet. 2.9 Inference the third wait Gods time for Deliverance which is alway the best time as Joseph did here who remained in the
25. They must be Pharaoh's Slaves and Drudges in Building Treasure Cities for him Exod. 1.11 At this Juncture Moses is born brought out of Eminent Danger brought up a Courtier by Pharaoh's Daughter banish'd thence into Midian and there Married c. Exod. 2. from Midian God calls Moses sends him Embassadour to Pharaoh with small Success Chap. 3.4 5 6. Pharaoh harden'd his own Heart adding Sin to Sin the Devil hardened it as God's J●ilour and as a Spirit tempting to Sin but God harden'd it in a Judiciary way as a Punishment for his Sin Then came the ten Plagues upon him and his People Chap. 7.8 9,10 11. each higher and deeper drenching than other Secondly The Concomitants when God had by his ten stroaks at Pharaoh's hard heart extorted a Dismission of his People out of the Tyrants hands Israel began his Journey out of Egypt having first the Law of a yearly Passeover ordained for their Observance Chap. 12. and the Consecration of the first-born Chap. 13. They depart from Succoth not the right way to the Mediterranean Sea by Palestine but to the Red Sea by the Wilderness thence coming to Aetham c. Pharaoh pursues them Chap. 14. and is Drowned for which was Sung a Song Chap. 15. At their coming to the Wilderness of Sin they want Meat Chap. 16. at Rephidim They want Drink and are Assaulted by the Amalekites Chap. 17. Moses complains of the Burden that the Government of Six hundred thousand Men c. should lay upon his Shoulders Chap. 18. Then they came to Mount Sinai the place designed for meeting God Exod. 3. and Chap. 19. Thirdly The Consequents are two great things First The Giving of the Law And Secondly The Erecting of the Tabernacle As to the first There was 1. The Preparation for it Chap. 19. 2. The Promulgation of it Chap. 20. not only of the Moral but also of the Ceremonial and Political Laws Chap. 21 22 23. Then 3. the Confirmation of all by a Solemn Covenant entred into betwixt God and Israel Chap. 24. and when forseied by the Golden Calf was again renewed with the two Tables of Stone c. Chap. 34. As to the Second the Pitching of the Tabernacle The Form 1. was shewed to Moses in the Mount. 2. The Matter And 3. The Makers of it all prescribed by God and described in his Word Chap. 25.26 27 31. 4 The Worshippers in it the Priests Habits Ordinations and Offices Chap. 28 29 and 30. Next follows the Obstruction of this work by the Idolatry of the Golden Calf Chap. 32. but 't is removed by a Reformation Chap. 33. Upon which the Materials of the Tabernacle are brought together and all placed in their due form and order for erecting the Tabernacle Chap. 35 36 37 38 39. And Lastly When the Tabernacle was compleatly Erected God himself comes and Consecrates it Chap. 40. Now come we to make Remarks upon all these three Premises The first Rank is from the Antecedents of Israel's Deliverance out of Egypt The first Remark from hence is That Divine Compassion is the Foundation of the Churches Deliverance out of her deepest distresses and not any Desert on her part c. The Church of God had lain long even two hundred and fifteen years in a distressed state God having turned the Egyptians Hearts to hate his people Psal 105.25 as much as they had loved them before during all the time of Joseph's Government This fault we may not father upon God as if he were the Author of this Sin for he is not of any Jam. 1.13 14 15 as it is impossible to be so 't is abominable to think it Man's Inclination to Good is properly and peculiarly from God but his Inclination to Evil is from his own depraved heart drawn out by Satan's Suggestions and must be ascribed to God only by Accident God did this saith David that is not positively but permissively in giving the Egyptians an occasion to hate his People for by his multiplying them so marvellously through his Blessing c. They conceited that the Israelites would soon grow stronger than themselves c. Psal 105.24 One and the same Fire softens Wax but hardens Clay God did not infuse this Envy into them the Sun setting is only by Accident the cause of the Night whereof the shadow of the Earth is the proper Cause c. All Hearts are in God's Hands who fashioneth them as to their liking or disliking of others at his pleasure yet without Sin This was a Judiciary Act in God to suffer the Egyptians thus hardly to handle the Hebrews 1. Because some of them were faln to Idolatry Ezek. 20.5 7 8. and 23.3 8. Josh 24.14 2. To wean them from Egypt and to make them long for Canaan 3. That by a just Title they might spoil their spoilers 4. That God might glorifie himself by pouring forth his ten Plagues upon Egypt 5. Because the Sins of the Amorites as well as of the Egyptians were not yet full Gen. 15.16 And 6. Because the Hebrews were not brought to a true and due Humiliation for their Sins till their long and hard Affliction handed them to a saving sense thereof How remiss they were in their Repentance and how hardly wrought up to it God's Complaint of them doth Demonstrate Ezek. 20.7 8. that is I might say what I would they would do what they list so that God was so highly provoked with their obstinacy as his Justice made him say I am just ready to Resolve your Ruin in Egypt and never Redeem you out of the House of Bondage God had as much ado to forbear Killing them as he had Moses in the same Country for neglecting to Circumcise his Child Exod. 4.24 the designed Law giver must not be a Law-breaker But behold how God's mercy triumphs over his Justice Jam. 2.13 but I wrought for my own Names sake c. Ezek. 20.9 10. No sooner were Israel brought to a right sense of their Sins so as they sighed groaned and cried to God but immediately Divine Bowels began to yern and to be broached and bleeding over them Exod. 2.23 24 25. and 3.7 8 and 6.5 and 22 23 27. When Israel understood that God had a seeing Eye an hearing Ear and a commiserating Heart together with his Promise of an helping Hand They fall down prostrate to adore him Exod. 4.31 c. And then began Divine Bowels to yern and to flow forth freely and fully in order to their Deliverance Thus saith God When Israel was a Child then I loved him and called my Son out of Egypt Hos 11.1 that is not so much 1. Because all young things be lovely especially Children not only for their pretty features but for their Innocency ignosceney c. But rather when Israel was unlovely a mere Child having nothing of worth in him to make him desirable while he was an Infant in his Birth-blood Ezek. 16.6 c. the Church's Infancy takes Date from her being in Egypt's
passeth through them Isa 27.4 and which seemingly might Promise Fruit but were really dry to shew that there is no hope of Relief by any legal Performances N.B. The Apostle calls the Law given upon Mount Sinai a Covenant of Works Gal. 4.24 which was a fiery Law Deut. 33.2 and hath still something of the Fire in it but no Relief or Comfort as the Tenure of it is do and live so 't is full of Terrour and Malediction to those that continue not in all things Gal. 3 10. It made not only the People but even Moses himself their Mediator Tremble Heb. 12.21 But we have a better Mediator in the Gospel-state not God coming down in a thick Cloud as here but God manifested in the Flesh c. 1 Tim. 3.16 'T is the Gospel-state that 1. Gives us Relief from the Curse of the Law 2. Procures Acceptance both of our Persons and of our Actions of Obedience And 3. Obtains Pledges of Divine Favour both for here and hereafter The Voice of Words was the Decalogue or Moral Law which was first writ in the Heart but now by the overspreading Corruption of all Flesh was much worn out Therefore God gives it here such a glorious Renovation and not only Audibly spake those Ten Words in the Audience of all this prodigious Auditory but also wrote them with his own Finger in Tables of Stone to shew both the Law 's Duration and our Obduration The Seventh Remark is the Perturbation of the People at this horrible Promulgation and Delivery of the Decalogue Wherein the Objects the Effects and the Remedy of their Horrour and Trembling are expresly observable in this Place First The Object Exod. 20.18 They saw the Thunders c. which strictly taken are rather heard than seen but seeing is largely taken for perceiving by any Sense or by the Understanding Thus Jacob saw there was Corn in Egypt Gen. 42.1 is explained by the Holy Ghost by Jacob heard Act. 7.12 Seeing is the surest Sense for believing one Eye-witness is of more Credit than many Ear-witnesses therefore 't is oft used for Knowledge that comes by Hearing or by the other Senses as Exod. 5.21 Yea by the Light of Reason or by the Evidence of Faith whereby many Truths are apprehended so assuredly as if they were seen with our Bodily Eyes Omnes Sensus conjuncti sunt in communi sensu all the five outward Senses are conjoined in the inward common Sense Nor doth Moses relate all the People saw for there was Fire mixed with Smoak and Darkness c. which burned up to the midst of Heaven This was the Object that affrighted them Secondly The Effects were twofold First Their Supplication that God would no more speak by himself but by Moses to them Exod. 20. ver 19. 'T was here Man 's own choice and we should therefore look on it as a great Mercy that God's Mind is made known to us by the Ministry of Men like to our selves as Elihu said to Job Behold I am according to thy wish cut out of the Clay My Terrour shall not make thee afraid Job 33.6 7. N.B. God speaking ●he Law was so terrible to the People that they had need of a Mediator wherein Moses ●ypified Christ Gal. 3.19 1 Tim. 2.3 to mediate betwixt God and Israel Secondly Their Tergiversation or flight from the Mountain as frighted ones retreating to their Tents ver 21. For which doing God commiserating their Infirmities gave them his Commission Deut. 5.30 As he had before given them his Commendation in requesting a Mediator Deut. 5.28 29. The People being terrified seek for a Mediator ver 27. which was the end of the Law as a Schoolmaster to drive us unto Christ Cal. 3.24 This humble motion pleased God and for the present he gave them Moses to mediate for them but farther promiseth them a Prophet like to Moses who was Christ our Blessed Mediator Deut. 18.15 18. Act. 3.22 26. Whose Office is to go near unto God and declare his Mind to us which was fulfill'd in Christ Joh. 1.18 and 3.13 and 8.28 c. The Law was given in this terrible Manner for many Reasons 1. To shew forth the dreadful Majesty of God 2. To awaken the Consciences of Sinners 3. To declare the controversie betwixt an Holy God and sinful Men without Christ by whom Grace cometh and the Gospel of Grace invites those whom the Law excludes 4. The Law given out of the Cloud intimated it's obscurity without the Gospel 2 Cor. 3.13 c. God is not clearly seen in the Law for God is Love 1 Joh. 4.8 5. All this Dread and Terrour was to shew the Nature of the Law how it is a killing Letter like Draco's Law written not in black but in Blood holding forth Justice only and not Mercy manifesting God's Will and Mens Sins and to warn them of the Wrath deserved summoning them to appear before the Judge And 6. To assure that as the Law was given at first with all this Horrour and affrightment so with much more unspeakable Consternation of all Flesh God will require it at the Day of Judgment when all the World that have been are or shall be must appear before the Judge The Third Branch is the Remedy of the Peoples Perplexity Moses saith to them Fear not there 's a Prohibition Yet fear that 's a Precept Exod. 20.20 Servile or Slavish fear which startleth and stareth perplexed ones at the Approach and Apprehension of Danger he forbids here yet promotes he a filial and awful fear which is compounded of Reverence and Love this must be a Bridle from Sin and a Spur to Holiness as well as Beneficence is a Bait to Obedience Isa 1.19 20. Or the sense of the Words runs thus Fear not this glorious Appearance so much as to cry out Let not God talk with us lest we Dye ver 19. for they now had heard God yet they did not then die and this they acknowledge Deut. 5.24 but such was the guilt of their Sin that they feared should God continue to speak to them any more they could not escape death Moses wisheth them here to raise up their Meditations from this terrour in giving the Law to that future fearful appearance of the Law-giver at the last day when he cometh to take vengeance upon all breakers of this Law not only Jews but all Gen●iles c. For which day we must much more sanctifie our selves to day and to morrow as they did for receiving the Law when God comes to require it our Sanctification is not perfected in one day nor may we only promise obedience as they did but be as ready to perform it They promised universal obedience without any limitation Exod. 19.8 yet soon forgot their promise when they made a Golden-Calf c. Our Lord tells us in the parable The Son that said to his Father he would not go to work in his Vineyard yet after repented is commended before him who said I go Sir
was Blood and call'd up one another now Moab up to the Spoil 2 Kings 3.22 23. where they mused as themselves had used 2 Chron. 20.23 Such Misconceits might possess them here Animating each Man his Neighbour to spoil Israel whom they had now got under their Feet and that for a long term of time even for Eighteen Years which was Ten Years longer than was their first Slavery under the Syrians for Israel's second Apostacy was of a deeper Dye than the first seeing they had now sinned against more Light and Love in their Redemption by Othniel therefore are they punish'd more than double and must serve more than a double even almost a treble Apprentiship of Slavery under Eglon as a Linen Garment if but lightly fouled is soon cleansed from those slight Soils but if a deep Tincture of Defilement be contracted in it by long and dirty uses thereof then must there be a strong scouring thereof and many Frosty Nights lying out of Doors will be little enough to reduce it unto its primitive Whiteness So the Lord deals with Israel here and no doubt but this long Servitude cost them many a groan and many a Cry and at last when they cryed aright the same Gracious God that had heard them in Egypt Exod. 3.7 was graciously pleased to hear their Groans and Crys now ver 15. The Third Remark is Israel's Repentance raiseth up Israel's Redeemer the second time the Lord heard their penitent Crys and stirr'd up Ehud to deliver them from Eglon he was Israel's Second Judge he was a Man of Benjamin ver 15. which Tribe was by this time pretty well recruited through the Blessing of God upon the Marriages of the Six Hundred Men that only remained out of the Wars with the other Tribes in the Rock Rimmon as above in the matter of Gibeah and probably saith Dr. Lightfoot he was of Gibeah for he descended of this same Family in Benjamin that King Saul was of afterwards and thus the Honour of Benjamin that was lost in the defence of Gibeah's Villany was somewhat restored in him who sprung from the same Gibeah and as Othniel of the Tribe of Judah made good Jacob's Prophesie That Judah should be a Lyon's Whelp Gen. 49.9 that should bring the Tents of Cushan into Affliction Habbak 3.7 So Ehud of the Tribe of Benjamin made good likewise Jacob's Prophecy That Benjamin should be a Ravening Wolf in the Morning devouring the Prey and at Evening dividing the Spoil Gen. 49.27 which was accomplish'd in Ehud as Judah had the first honour of the Judge ship in Othniel so Benjamin had the second in Ehud who was Left-handed and likely was one of those Left-handed Benjamites who are recorded for Famous Warriours Judg. 20.16 and which might be the encouragement of the Benjamite's Confidence or rather Impudence to Patronize the Notorious Iniquity of Gibeah's Belialists against all Israel However Ehud was Left-handed whether it came from some Infirmity of Nature in his Right Hand or from an ill Custome in Childhood which in time becometh a second Nature especially if it be affected is not told us Yet this is expressed that he used his Left Hand as his Right not only as a mark of his Courage and Activity but principally as a considerable Circumstance in the following Story whereby he might more advantagiously and more unsuspectedly give the deadly Blow at God's Appointment which teacheth us That the Lord oftentimes bringeth to pass exceeding great Works by exceeding small infirm and contemptible means as here by a Left-handed Man God wrought a Right handed Deliverance for Israel Ehud Hebr. signifieth praising God chuseth none of the Right-handed Men of Israel though there were many Thousands of them and Men of great Gallantry c. but this single Left-handed Man to work their Redemption that the praise thereof might not be ascribed to Man the Instrument but to God the principal Agent N. B. And upon the like account must God be greatly praised by the Church for his employing Mr. William Perkins one lame of his Right Hand and as an Expositer saith no less famous in his way than this Ehud for the Lord enabled him in his most Learned Writings even by a Left-handed Pen to stab the great Eglon of Rome to the very Heart Hereupon a Poet writeth upon him this Distich Dextera quantumnis fuerit tibi Manca Docendi Pollebas Mird Dexteritate tamen The Fourth Remark is The Manner how this Israel's Redeemer wrought Israel's Redempiion The Senate or Sanhedrim which bare the sway Judges not ruling as Monarchs but being as Chief Commanders or Generals sent a Rich Present by Ehud to Eglon this Present was not their ordinary Tribute but some extraordinary large and liberal Donative thereby to Ingratiate themselves the more into Eglon's Favour for lightening the load of their Intolerable Oppressions and this is the more manifest inasmuch as this present required so many People to bear it as is expresly said in ver 18. Ehud furnishes himself for this Embassage with a two edged Dagger long enough for his design and not too long for carriage and concealment girds it under his Raiment upon his right thigh both to avoid suspicion and to have it the more ready for his left hand with more nimbleness ver 16. Ehud the Chief Embassador having delivered his grand Present out of the hands of his Associates departs with them as far as Gilgal there dismisses them and returns alone to Eglon as if he had forgot some matter of great importance and said to him I have a secret Errand unto thee O King ver 17.18 19. Hereupon Eglon commands all his Attendants to withdraw till Ehud had deliver'd his secret Message which none of them ought to hear Ehud then draws nigh him as he was sitting in his Summer Parlour the place of his Retirement and where his Servants sometimes waited long e're they went in to him ver 25. and said again to Eglon I have a Message from Elohim unto thee ver 20. Some suppose here that Eglon thought Ehud had been Worshipping Moab's Idols set up at Gilgal to intice Israel to Idolatry and that some Secret touching the King was revealed by that Idol Oracle to him which he was now returned to reveal to the King and the rather because Ehud uses the word Elohim and not Jehovah for God But others say that the sight of those Stone-Images set up by Eglon at Gilgal where Joshua had erected an Holy Monument Josh 4.20 and where God had rolled away the Reproach of Israel Josh 5.9 did so enrage his Spirit that he returned resolving to kill that Idolatrous King Eglon hearing of a Message from Elohim supposed it came from his False Gods and therefore from a deep Veneration according to the common practice of Pagans a shame to that Irreverence to the true God too frequent among us riseth up from his Seat though he was a Fat Vnweildy Man to receive it his Fatness is recorded to
but none of those foul faults could the find out much less the Plague of their own Hearts and thereupon their Sin found out them 1 King 8 38. Numb 32.23 N. B. So grosly ●gnorant was Israel now that their deficiencies in Morals they think to make up with some cheap Ceremonials N. B. Too many such we have in our Day N. B. Israel here can easier fetch the Ark into their Army than Reform what offended God by Repenting of their sins and Returning to the Covenant made with Him The Third Remark is The Ark of the Covenant is fetched without waiting upon God for his warrant or consulting with Samuel which should not have been severed from the Mercy-Seat and between the Cherubims v. 4. N. B. Therefore as Mendoza thinketh they fetch'd all together to shew what an horrible loss did befal Israel when the Ark did fall into the Philistines hands which had this People been truly Penitent would not have been But the two Sons of Belial went with the Ark and this alone was enough to Forseit and Betray it The Fourth Remark is The entrance of the Ark into the midst of the Army causeth 1. The Israelites to rejoice And 2. The Philistines to tremble v. 5 6 7 8 9. Now Israel on the one hand placeth their confidence in an Ark of Wood among them not regarding the absence of the God of Israel from his Ark Herein they were become as bad as the Superstitious Philistines themselves who carried their Carved Images which are called their Gods into the Field with them 2 Sam. 5.21 that they might fight for them But such Carnal Confidence always concludes in Dreadful Confusion as it did here But on the other hand as Israel Triumph'd at the Arks presence though it was but a Short Triumph Job 20.5 and a Triumph without a Victory so the Philistines trembled at it crying Was there ever such a thing heretofore that is not as they knew of though it had been at the Siege of Jericho and in the War with the Meidianites Numb 31.6 c. and they add Wo unto us Acknowledging the God of Israel to be mightier than their Gods yet harden themselves and resolve to fight c. The Fifth Remark is The Second Battle had far more Fatal and Foul effects to Israel notwithstanding their Carnal Confidence that the Ark of Wood would fight for them than the first had for now there fell down Dead Thirty Thousand men v. 10. The Ark wherein they trusted was taken and the two Belialists that were the bearers of it Hophni and Phinehas were both slain ver 11. Of whom Josephus saith that their Father Eli charged them that they should live and die with it and if it were lost never to look him in the Face more N. B. By all this God taught his People that his Ark and Ordinances were never instituted by him to become Sanctuaries to impenitent sinners but for the Comfort of those that truly repent and believe c. Psal 132.8 The Sixth and Last Remark is The sad Catastrophe caused by the very tidings of this dismal Defeat First Old Eli sat trembling v. 12 13. his guilty Conscience misgave him from Samuel's Prediction Bad News like bad Weather comes in hastily unsent for v. 14 15 16 17. He bears to hear of the loss of his Subjects as Judge and of his Sons as a Father but the loss of the Ark as an High Priest this knocks him down backward v. 18. and 't is hard to tell whether his Neck or Heart was first broken after he had been Israels Supream Governor beth in Civils and Spirituals Forty Years And Secondly His Daughter in-Law a good Wise to a bad Husband was by grief for the like loss not of her Husband but of the Ark brought to travel before her full time and so she brought forth yet was she so overwhelmed with sorrow that she was uncapable of comfort when told it but her Soul and her Son passed out of her Body almost both together save only that she named him twice Jechabod speaking but once of the loss of her Father and Husband but twice of the loss of the Ark Israel's Glory This good Woman bewailed her Spiritual loss more than Civil or Domestick v. 19 20 21. 1 Samuel CHAP. V. THE Fifth Chapter sheweth how the Philistines were punished for carrying away the Ark of God Captive The First Remark is The procuring cause of the Philistines punishment was their prophanation of the Ark of God which was his own Institution by Moses in the Wilderness c. and though Israel had now most grosly abused it by over-valuing and Idolizing it so that God justly suffered it to fall into the hands of the Philistines yet will not God suffer it to be under-valued and abused by Uncircumcised Hands which they did in placing it when they had taken it captive in their Temple of Dagon their Idol at Ashdod consecrating it as a most rich spoil and a famous Trophy to their supposed God by whose help they thought the Victory was obtained v. 1 2. The Second Remark in General is Though the Israclites had much benefit by their having the Ark of God among them heretofore as in its being their Conduct to Canaan when the Cloudy-Pillar departed from them in the Dividing of Jordan in the overthrow of Jericho c. Yet now when it was faln into the Philistines hands these Vncircumcised ones found but little joy in their having it but it proved fatal to them and Plagued them from Place to Place and from one City to another N. B. This happened that Men may know how little good is gotten by Holy things if not used in an Holy manner The Third Remark is The particular punishments wherewith God Plagued the Philistines for abusing his Holy Ark this was first upon their Religion or rather Superstition in confounding their Idol Dagon once and again to make it the more contemptible v. 3 4 5. As First God who had seemed to be Asleep hitherto now Awakes in the Vindication of his own Ark and will not suffer Dagon to be its Co-Rival but with his own immediate Hand throws Dagon down flat upon his own Dunghill insomuch that when the Philistines Priests came early in the Morning to Worship Dagon behold they find their Dagon himself in a posture as it were of Worshipping the Ark of God before which the Idol was not able to stand N. B. And thus it still falls out That Diabolical Delusions all fall down before the Glorious Light of the Gospel of Christ whereof this Ark was a Type There is no concord betwixt Christ and Belial 2 Cor. 6.14 15. N. B. How the first fall of Dagon came to be hushed the Sacred Scripture telleth us not but saith only They of Ashdod arose early c. to wit the Crafty Priests of Dagon were both Curious to observe what Correspondency their Idol had with its new Neighbour and whether Dagon had received any damage
himself fell down and Died So true Hope lands us in Glory then Expectation Dies into Fruition c. N. B. Note well here This Deplorable prospect of Divine Vengeance in Absalom's Hanging on a Tree may not be passed over without some Divine Contemplations upon it as First This Unnatural wretch was unworthy to be Slain by the Sword but he must be Hanged on a Tree and so Die that Cursed Death Deut. 21.23 Gal. 3.13 Secondly His haughty mind resolved to be on high right or wrong though he made his own too Affectionate Father's Carcase a steping stone whereon to step up to the Highest Throne and now is he Hanged up on high and his Ambitious Head is in its proper exaltation Thirdly He is Hanged by that very Head wherewith he had been plotting the worst sort of High Treason against so good a Father Fourthly His Hair wherein he had so much prided himself God made an Halter to Hang him with The Instrument of his vain Glory became the Instrument of his Death and Ignominy So perilous it is to pride our selves in any habiliments either of Nature or of Fortune Seeing the matter of our Pride may be the means of our ruine N. B. 'T is probable Asabel was proud of his Swiftness chap. 2.18 and Achitophel of his Policy chap. 17.23 as Absalom was of his brave Bushy Locks yet all these three were destroyed by those things they were prond of Absalom was wont to weigh his Hair and was proud to find it weigh so heavy chap. 14.26 and now the Hair of his Head poiseth the weight of his whole Body which having Armour on also must needs make it more heavy and thereby the greater was his Burden the greater was his Torment c. The Fifth Remark is The Dialogue betwixt General Joab and the Souldier that first saw Absalom Hanged in an Oak ver 10 11 12 13. Wherein Mark First It seems Absalom did Hang some time before he was seen being in a By Path and Blind place this long and lasting Dolour was far more intolerable than had he been Hanged outright in a Halter Mark Secondly This Souldier that first saw him durst not dispatch him though Absalom might desire him to do it to put him out of his pain as Saul had desired his Armour-bearer on the like account 1 Sam 31.4 N. B. Tho rich spoils would have fallen to his share thereby yet dare he not do it either to ease Absalom or to enrich himself for David forbad it Mark Thirdly Joab when he told him what he had seen chides him for not doing it and if he would still go back and do it he would give him a Rich Reward ver 11. Though Joab was desirous that such a Publick Pest were Slain yet would he rather have it to be done by another hand than by his own for fear of David's displeasure N. B. Polititians like the Ape pull Nuts out of the Fire with the Paw of a Cat. Mark Fourthly The Souldier Answers ver 12. I dare not do it for a Thousand Sbekels for the King commanded to the contrary ver 5. it would be as much as my Life is worth which is of more value to me than all thy Thousand Shekels and Belts and Badges of Valour N. B. What Mad Men are many that for a few paltry Shillings play away their precious Souls which this Souldier durst not do Mark Fifthly Should I have done it saith he I should have been false to my self ver 13. in betraying my self to David's revenge or should I do it now and then deny it to save my Life by a Lie the King is so wise he would soon discover it and then inflict a double punishment upon me not only for my foul fact in doing it but also for my falshood in denying it Mark Sixthly And Thou thy self saith he would'st set thy self against me that is thou would become my Adversary or Satan Hebrew and would be the first that would accuse me to the King's Court for doing that which thou now would draw me to do against the King's command N. B. Thus the Devil deals with Tempted Souls as Joab would have dealt with this Souldier first he tempts them to Sin and then he Accuses them for Sin as he is the Accuser of the Brethren Rev. 12.10 Job 1.9 The Sixth Remark is Joab's Slaughter of Absalom ver 14 15. Wherein Mark First Daring Joab saith as his Vale or Farewell to the Souldier Without delay I will dispatch him though thou look on that thou mayest know I bid thee do nothing but what I dare do my self Hereupon he takes Three Darts and thrusts them through Absalom's Body Yet were not those wounds Mortal though a fair mark for him to hit seeing Joab's Ten Young Men are said to slay him outright afterwards Mark Secondly Behold here the just judgment of God upon this vilely vitious Ambitious Absalom He will needs be a new King before his time and now hath here 1. This Oak for his Throne 2. His Twisted Hair about the Bough for his Crown 3. Three Darts in his Heart for his Scepter his proud Heart is Darted thorough And 4. Joab's Ten Armour-bearers for his Royal Guard for Defiling David's Ten Concubines N. B. Thus God Writ his Sin upon his Punishment that little Breath still left in him these Ten did beat out of his Body ver 15. So here 's Ten to Ten in both cases Mark Thirdly Joab's killing of Absalom contrary to the King's command some Condemn but others justifie and commend it Peter Martyr and Grotius do canvase this Controversie Pro and Con c. First Such as Condemn it Argue thus First The King was to be obeyed in his express command lest Civil Discipline be destroyed Secondly Though Joab feared there would be no safety to King or Kingdom if Absalom lived yet Events ought not to be heeded so much as the Justness of Matters Thirdly Though Absalom suffered justly yet Joab was not so much as an Ordinary Judge to pass Sentence in a Just manner much less to be the Executioner himself God Commands Judges to be set up and to Judge Justly Deut. 16.18 19. Fourthly Joab should have considered what a Cordolium an Heart break it would be to David who would only have his Son Live that he might Repent Fifthly Joab's fact taught the Souldiers to contemn the King's Commands which might have been of evil Consequence to ruine Royal Authority Sixthly As to the Civil War Joab might have done better and more advisedly had he only took Absalom prisoner and delivered him bound to David Seventhly Joab killed him out of spleen either because he had Burnt his Corn or rather because he had Cashiered Joab and made Amasa his General But Secondly Such as Justifie and Commend Joab's fact Argue First Joab looked not so much what the King had commanded by his Pers●nal Authority as what he ought to have commanded by his Legal Authority which required that justice should be executed
and tired themselves in vain Elijah Jeers and Ridicules both their Persons Actions and Idols taunting them with saying Baal was so busie in pursuing his Foes that he had no leisure of attending his Friends c. N. B. Which teacheth that all Jesting is not unlawful faith Peter Martyr save that only which intrencheth upon Piety and good Manners saying that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Paul condemns Eph. 5.4 is taken for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Salt Jests and Scurrility not for an inoffensive Vrbanity or a pleasant facetiousness of Speech Mark 7. When Baal's Priests end and can do nothing with all their ridiculous Endeavours all the day long then Elijah begins at the time of the Evening Sacrifice ver 30 to ver 40. who no doubt did all by divine Direction He 1. calls the People to come away from those falle Prophets that had so long seduced them unto him the true Prophet of God 2. He repairs the Altar of the Lord which Baal's Worshippers had demolished with twelve Stones representing the Twelve Tribes thereby renewing the Covenant betwixt God and Israel now when Ten Tribes were Apostatized ver 30 31 32. 3. He orders twelve Barrels of Water supposed to be fetch'd from the Sea near Carmel when the drought had dried up all their Land-Brooks to be poured upon the Wood and Altar to avoid all suspicion of any Collusion in hiding Fire any where under such a vast quantity of Water which ran upon the Altar and filled the Trench too that the reality of the Miracle might be made the more manifest by a greater fervency of such a Fire as to lick up all ver 33 34. 4. Then betakes he to Prayer for fire c. 36 37 38. wherein though the Prophets of Baal had cried loud yet this Prophet of God cried louder saying Hear me O Lord hear me well knowing that God and not Baal was the true Prayer-hearing God N. B. The Baalites Prayers had been long and tedious to a deaf dumb and dunghil Deity but Elijah's Prayer was short and pithy charging God with the care of his Covenant of his Truth and of his Glory N. B. Nor did his twelve Stones for repairing the Altar and his twelve Barrels of Water wherewith he filled the Altar and Trenches any less rebuke the Ten Tribes for falling off from the Two in the Worship of God N. B. This is beyond doubt that his strong Crys of Faith did reach the Throne of Grace and soon discover to Israel that Elijah's God was unlike Baal neither talking nor travelling nor pursuing nor sleeping not a God of such a narrow Uunderstanding as unable to mind two things at once But as he is the Creator so the Governor of all things both in Heaven and Earth and hath the command both of Fire and of Water at all times and as an Evidence hereof at this time he first sends fire to consume Elijah's Sacrifice and not only to lick up the twelve Barrels of Water that filled the Trenches by that flash of fire but after gives abundance of Water in a plentiful Rain also to remove the Judgment of Drought and Famine insomuch that when Israel saw the first Sign that God had answer'd by Fire to the Prophet's Prayers they cry out as fully The Lord and not Baal is God the Lord is God and he can give us Water as well as Fire if our Sins hinder not N. B. They might say Oh well is it with us that this fearful flash of fire hath not consumed our own flesh for our Idolatries as it hath done the flesh of the burnt Offering and licked up our Blood as it hath all the Water in the Trench and so they might acknowledge God's Mercy as they did his Power twice over ver 39. Remark the Sixth is the Execution of Justice upon Baal's Prophets and the return of Rain after a long Drought of Three Years and six Months from ver 40 to 46. wherein Mark 1. Elijah strikes while the Iron is hot he takes hold of this Opportunity while the Peoples Hearts were warm with the fresh Conviction of this wonderful Miracle and bids them take those juggling Priests and let not one of them escape v. 40. and kill them at Kishon that their Blood might help to fill that River which their Idolatry had emptied by the Drought N. B. All this Elijah might lawfully do at God's direction and according to God's Law Deut. 13.5 and 18.20 for which like Justice Jehu is afterwards commended 2 Kings 10.28 and probably he had the consent of the King who found them Impostors and was assured of Rain when this Work was done c. indeed Luke 9.55 Our sweet Saviour rebukes that over-hot Spirit which would call Fire from Heaven to consume such as slighted him this he said was not suitable to the Gospel of Peace but Elijah was a Restorer of the Law c. Mark 2. After this Execution of Justice Elijah foretels Mercy was now coming ver 41. saying to Ahab Haste thou from Kishon up to thy Tent on Carmel and refresh thy self there after thy long fasting day The chief cause of the Drought being now removed God will send Rain therefore go eat thy Bread with joy and drink thy Wine with a chearful heart c. Eccles 9.7 For Col. Ha●non c. Hebr. I hear a Wind whistling in the Heavens and presaging abundance of Rain He heard this noise with the Ears of his Faith saith Osiander when none else did hear it Mark 3. Ahab now satisfied with news of Rain goes up to his Repast and Elijah goes up to his Prayer ver 42. minding more God's Glory in that great day's Work than his own Refreshment Josephus saith He prayed sitting but 't is otherwise expressed here He put his face between his knees the very posture saith Peter Martyr wherein the Babe layeth in the Womb with his Head between his Knees N.B. This was a Gesture of his deep Humility as unworthy to lift up his Eyes to God of his remembrance with thankfulness how he was brought to light from a miserable beginning at his Birth and now was about to be as it were born again after his three Years and half absconding in the Womb of Providence The Prophet prays for Rain in this posture which strained all the strings of his Head Heart and whole Body well knowing though God had promised Rain yet would he have his Prayer to fetch it and therefore no wonder if the Apostle say He prayed earnestly James 5.17 18. And though 't is not told us what he prayed yet this is Recorded his Prayer was so earnest that he opened Heaven by that Key Mark 4. The Prophet unwilling to break off his Prayer sends his Servant which Vatablus saith was the Widow of Sarepta's Son to watch the first rise of a vaporous Cloud out of the Sea ver 43. Elijah had pray'd saith Sanctius that the Fire might descend immediately for a speedy freeing of his own Faith and for
in all His Imitable Excellencies Our suitable Holy practice is the bese sort of Preaching forth Christ's praise The Image of this our Dearest Friend should not only be Hung up in the Private Closets of our Hearts but also in the most Conspicuous places of our Lives This is to walk in Christ Col. 2.6 not daring to take so much as one step out of Him who is the way to walk in the Truth to walk with and the Life to walk by John 14.6 And this is to walk as he walked treading in and following his Holy footsteps If we abide in him 1 John 2.6 In this General Discourse upon the Life of Christ there be three things next to be Discussed The Caution Counsel and Comfort hereof First The Caution It may not be Imagined unnecessary to build some Battlements about this lofty structure to secure Children and Fools from Toppling and Tumbling over Know then that the Actions of Christ's Life are of three sorts 1. Miraculous 2. Moral And 3. Mediatory As to the First which were Miraculous They are not set down in Scripture as Actions Imitable by us poor Mortals for some of them were personal as of the World's Redeemer Thus was he born of a Virgin which we cannot be He suffered upon the Cross for the World's Ransom and for Sin 's Expiation which we cannot Do. Nor can we Rise again the third Day as He did for our Justification and Ascended Triumphingly into Heaven lead Captivity Captive c. wherein we cannot Immitate Christ Those and such like were our Redeemer's Personal Actions and peculiar only to him as Incommunicable to any other There be other Actions of Christ beside those Personal which are not only Praeter-natural but also Supernatural As were His Fasting Forty Days His Giving sight to the Blind Life to the Dead c. Now for any Mortal to presume an Imitation of Christ in the Former of these is no better than Blasphemy These were the proper Prerogatives of Christ's Person And for any man to strive as presuming to follow Him in the Latter which were all Miraculous is a mere Impossibility Christ did such works as never any Man did Joh. 9.32 Therefore we are no where bid to make a new World to walk on the Sea c. as he did Secondly Next to Christ's Miraculous both Personal and Supernatural are his Moral Actions to be considered And these we are to Imitate our Lord in He commands us to learn from him the right Practice of those two Twin-Sister-Graces of Meekness and Lowliness Mat. 11.29 and to follow his very footsteps in the practick part of his Holy Life Christ is the Head of the Church which is the Body Eph. 1.22 23. Now as the Body Natural follows the Head naturally so ought the Body Mystical to follow Christ Spiritually in all his Morals though not in any of his Miracles especially in those two Moral Vertues or rather Evangelical Graces Meekness and Lowliness which so walk hand in hand together as they are there call'd Christ's Yoke The Yokes that the Flesh the World and the Devil lay upon Mankind are manifold but Christ's Yoke is but one not many All Gospel-Duties are reducible to one single Head Rom. 10.9 that is to Faith which worketh by Love Gal. 5.6 There is but one main Duty and this is the Whole Duty of Man Eccles 12.13 which hath Two Objects and Two Offices The two Objects be God and Man The Grace of Lowliness giveth to God his Due and the Grace of Meekness giveth also to Man his Due And the Two Offices do concern the Debt as the two Objects do the Due for Lowliness gives and Meekness forgives the Debt Both these in conjunction make up Christ's Yoke as one which while it is Green and we be unaccustomed to the Yoke Jer. 31.18 seems Heavy but when this Yoke of Christ comes to be Dryed Tryed and Worn a while then it proves Easie as Christ calls it Mat. 11.30 and very Light after a Man is once used a little to it though perhaps He cannot fadge so well with it at the first 't is then no more a Burden than Wings are to a Bird wherewith she flies aloft when and whither she listeth That which maketh this Yoke of Christ easie is that Christ beareth up the heaviest part of it upon his own Shoulders as He did the cross-burdensome end of his own Cross when Simon the Cyrenian bore only the Lower and Lighter end upon his Shoulders after Jesus Luke 23.26 And Christ gives his Spirit to help our Infirmities in all those Duties which He Himself Acted in his own Person for our Instruction and Imitation Hereby come we up to Delight in doing the Will of God Psal 40.8 This main Duty of Man is yet a Yoke lest any should Presume but still 't is a light and easie Yoke lest any should Despair This confuteth Carnal-Gospellers on the one Hand and the Monkish Merit-Mongers on the other hand assuredly our Lord Jesus by passing through all the parts of Active and Passive Obedience hath made all Gospel duties both easie Imitable and Delectable too now no command of God is grievous 1 John 5.3 c. N. B. Thus a serious Meditation upon the Meekness of Christ did most powerfully convert the Aethiopian Eunuch Acts 8.32 33 c. And we read of an Earl call'd Eleazar who being oft overcome with Immoderate Anger was cured of that Head-strong Passion and Inordinate Affection by his sedulous studying upon the Patience of Christ which consideration He never suffer'd to pass out of his meditating and musing mind before He found his Heart transformed into his Saviour's Similitude as Surius who writes this Earl's Lise tells the Story of this Passionate Prince Thirdly The Actions of Christ are not only Miraculous and Moral but also Mediatory as Christ's Dying Rising again and Ascending c. As we ought to Imitate Christ in his Moral Works by a Real Doing and Suffering as we have Him for Our Example So must we imitate him in his Mediatory Works by way of Similitude This is done by Translating that to our Spiritual Life which He did as our Mediator That is we must Dye to Sin Live to Righteousness Ascend up to God with our Desires and Sit down at his Right Hand with our Affections Besides this There is a Conformity to him in the framing of our Inward and Spiritual Life which consists not in a doing what Christ did upon the Cross c. but in Doing the like by a certain kind of imitation As 1. As Christ resign'd up himself an offering with strong Prayer and Tears c. so should we give up our selves to God as a Spiritual Oblation and as a Reasonable Sacrifice Ps 40.8 and Rom. 12.1 2. As He bare his own Cross c. so ought we to bear ours Luke 9.24 If it lays 'twixt us and our Duty 3. We must be like Him in Crucifying and Mortifying the Cursed Body of Sin as was done
had in perfection from the first but in Natural Acquired and Experimental Knowledge only such as to be Angry and Grieved Mark 3.5 6.6 and to be Ignorant of some things Mark 13.32 Mat. 24.36 The Son knew not the last day but from the Father This was Ignorantia morae privations non pravae Dispositionis Notewel If Christ thus humbled Himself that he might Suffer for us both in Soul and Body c. How should we be content to be Humbled even to a Nothingness for His Glory and the Churche's Good and how should we be content to be Humbled One for Another The same Mind that was in Christ should be in us Phil. 2.5 6 7. and we should wash one another's Feet as He gave an Example John 13.14 15. 'T is a shame for Man to be so-Proud where God hath been so Humble c. Notewel Secondly As Christ was Conceived in the Womb of the Virgin so must He be Conceived in the Heart of a Christian Gal. 4.19 Paul had a Travelling Spirit till Christ were formed in them This he did promote by two Means 1. By casting the Seed of the Word into their Souls which being Hid in the Heart Psal 119.11 and Well Watered there by the Ordinances will Through Grace breed Christ 2. He presseth them to min ●his word with Faith Heb. 4.2 otherwise It will be as a Miscarrying Womb No sooner did Mary Believe what the Angel had told her but she straight way Conceived Christ Luke 1.35 38. So Faith is a necessary Ingredient for Conceiving Christ Spiritually for Christ dwells in our Hearts by Faith Eph. 3.17 All which we may know by the ●abe's Motion as in the Womb. And without this we can have no comfort in the Literal unless we can feel the stirrings of the Spiritual Conception also The Antients say That Mary carry'd Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in her Heart as well as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in her Arms. Notewel Thirdly As the Literal so the Spiritual Conception cannot be wrought by any Power of Nature but by the Overshadowings of the Spirit of Grace As the Watry Cloud Overshadows a Fleece of Wool and the Rain thereof soaks and sinks into it insensibly so did the Spirit into the Virgin 's Womb and so sometimes into our Hearts Many may abound with the Power of Nature and be indued with all Natural Excellencies yet not have Christ Conceived or formed in their Hearts This cannot be till the Power of the Holy Ghost come upon us which the Wisest Sages and the greatest Luminaries of the Heathen World were strangers to 1 Cor. 2.8 Eph. 4.18 No man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 12.3 There can be no fiducial Assent of the Heart to own Christ as our Lord but by the Spirit Notewel Fourthly As Christ was Conceived by the Holy Ghost that Man's Nature and Sin might be Severed Asunder All born from the first Adam had Nature and Sin so joined together that none could take Man's Nature but He must take his Sin too till the second Adam came to part these two by his Supernatural Conception So All that have Christ Conceived in their Hearts by the Over-shadowings of the Spirit shall feel this parting Power of Christ who was the first from Adam that purify'd Man's Nature and parted it from Sin Thus it was in Regenerated Paul The good He would do He did not The evil He would not Do He Did Rom. 7.19 Sin was one thing in him and Nature Imported in the word I was another would to God we may All have this parting power of Christ to say as the Apostle 't is no more I but Sin that Dwells in me that though we keep the Nature of Man yet Sin may be parted from us As a spark of Fire may but up Towns and Cities c. So this Spirit of Burning can consume a World of Corruption in us Notewel The Fifth Mystery arises from the Third Particular to wit The Commotion at Christ's Conception Joseph cannot sleep Mary must be put away and the Angel must come to quiet all c. Mat. 1.19 20. Thus there is much ado when Christ is conceived in any Christian Heart such a one presently becomes a Table-Talk A Song of the Drunkards Psal 69.12 Men say He is Mad or at least Melancholy Acts 2.13 15. Mark 3.21 Oh what a Rout is made about it and nothing but an Angel from Heaven can hush all not only without in the World but also within in the Christian's own Conscience c. CHAP. III. AFter Christ's Conception followeth his Birth to be Discussed wherein consider five Particulars 1. The Person of whom he was Born 2. The Time When. 3. The Place Where 4. The Manner How 5. The Manifestation of it First of the First First The Person of whom He was Born Wherein two Branches be observable 1. He was Born of a Virgin 2. Of the Virgin Mary Mat. 1.23 1. Of a Virgin for three reasons 1. That he might be freed from the Guilt of Sin which comes by the course of Nature All have sinned in Adam Rom. 5.12 who proceed from his Loins by ordinary Procreation Though Christ was as a Man in Adam yet not simply so as other Men Are both from Adam and by Adam He was from him in his Humane Nature but not by him as a Procreant Cause by Ordinary Generation Therefore was he Born of a Virgin not in the common course of Nature that the purity of his Conception and Birth might sanctifie the Impurity of Ours Christ Began at the farther end of Man's Sin the first Tincture whereof is when Conceived and Brought Forth both in Iniquity Psal 51.5 That he might be our Compleat Saviour The 2d Reason is To Fulfil the Prophecies of Him Isa 7.14 Gen. 3.15 A Virgin shall bring forth Immanuel and the Seed of the Woman Born without the Seed of Man shall be the Breaker of the Serpent's Head and by this Signal and Singular Sign he was known to be the Saviour of the World The 3d Reason is That the strangeness of Christ's Birth might awake a Drowzy World to expect strange matters by his Life Yea much more than at the strange Births of Isaac Jacob Moses Samuel Samson and John Baptist The World did wonder a little at it Luke 2.18 'T is a wonder that they wondred no more that Christ should be Born of a Woman without Man whereas All the World wonders after the Beast Rev. 13.3 and not at this that the Son of God became the Son of Man to make us Sons of Men to be the Sons of God Learn hence a fourfold Mystery 1. What is Impossible with Man is yet possible with God Mat. 19.26 That a Virgin should bear a Son is Impossible by the Power of Nature yet Possible by the Power of God 'T was Impossible in Nature that Sarah when her Womb was Old and Cold should bear a Son yet was it possible with
God for nothing that is Possible or Honourable is too hard for his Power Omnipotent Gen. 18.12 14. Rom. 4.19 20. When Moses smote the Flinty Rock Numb 20.10 't was more possible in Nature to fetch Fire out of it than Water yet was Water not Fire fetch'd from it by the Almighty Power of God The Unbelieving Lord said God's plenty promised by the Prophet could not possibly be performed though the Windows of Heaven were opened 2 Kin. 7.1 2. With Nicodemus we oft say How can these things be John 3.9 Can God prepare a Table c. Ps 78.19 Can this Corruption be mortified Can this Temptation be Resisted Can this Sin be Remitted Can our bodies be Raised Can Christ's Cause be revived Thus do we Err not knowing the Scriptures nor the Power of God Mat. 22.29 Remember to rest your Souls upon the Power of God in his Promises as Dan. 3.17 and Mat. 3.9 8.2 26.53 c. He can make a Virgin bear a Son c. He can what we cannot 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Heathen Poet Linus could say All things are easie with God and nothing is Impossible Notewel Were we but Virgins Cant. 1.3 Rev. 14.4 Christ and his Cause may be born again of in and among us There is nothing Impossible with God c. N.B. The Second Mystery is As there must be a Spiritual Conception of Christ in the Conscience of a Christian ut suprâ so there should necessarily follow a Spiritual or Mystical Birth of Christ He must be born of us as well as conceived in us and both these are best effected in and by a Virgin Heart that is renewed so as to love Christ with an Holy Chast Virgin-love as more of that after alas there be many that seem to have Conceptions of Christ but they prove meer Embryo's Moles false Conceptions that become bare Abortives and never see the Sun Many have good Motions and good Desires kindled in their Consciences by some strong Convictions yet these come to be quenched either by withdrawing of Fuel a neglect of Ordinances or by pouring on Water in falling into soul Courses so Christ that seem'd to be conceived in the Heart comes not on to be born and brought forth into the Life they cannot say 'T is not I that live but Jesus Christ that liveth in me c. Gal. 2.20 How many fair Buds of good Desires are blasted and never Blossom into the flower of good Resolutions much less into the Fruit of good Actions Some seeming Palpitations or Pantings of Heart after good some Inquietations of Spirit and unsatisfiableness of Soul are oft stifled by Men who should not quench the Spirit 1 Thess 5.19 but be careful to add fuel to that Holy Fire Lev. 6.12 13. and 24.2 3. The neglect of this Duty should be confessed 2 Chron. 29.6 7. and we ought to blow up those sparks of the Spirit of Burning Isa 4.4 into a Flame 2 Tim. 1.6 that our Lives may shine in a dark World Matth. 5.16 Phil. 2.15 1 Pet. 2.12 If we have but the sparks of true Grace and we be but smoaking Flax Christ will not smother or quench it Matth. 12.20 God forbid we should do it our selves Therefore should we be like the Woman greatly wondred at which Travelled and was in great pain to be delivered c. Rev. 12.1 2. The New Birth will cost us strong cries and tears before we bring forth Christ into our Lives and Actions N. B. The Third Mystery is This can be done in none but in a Virgin-Heart as was before intimated effectually Christ was born of a Virgin And 't is the Virgins that love Christ Can. 1.3 that have a spiritual Chastity and are not defiled with the Corruptions that are in the World through Lust 2 Pet. 2.20 These follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth Rev. 14.4 and these are they that bear and bring forth Christ first conceived Mystically in their Hearts into the most conspicuous Parts of their Lives and Actions The Life that they now live in the Flesh they live by the Faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 they are Redeemed for Royal Vse The Hebrew Word Gnalamoth for Virgins signifies God's hidden ones for so they are called Psalm 83.3 Their Life is hid in Christ Col. 3.3 Would to God such Virgins were without number now Cant. 6.8 N. B. Note well The Fourth Mystery is As Christ-lay nine Months in his Mother's Womb not Idle but eating out the Core of Corruption which cleaves to our Natures and then was borne So we under the Spirit of Bondage are prepared for the New-Birth she first received of the Holy Ghost before she conceived and brought forth Christ So must we do c. The Second Branch is The Person of whom Christ was born was as a Virgin in General so the Virgin Mary in Particular Concerning whom there is a double History and Mystery respecting 1. Her Stock And 2. Her State She was one of a very high Stock and Pedigree yet one of a very low State and Condition First The Mother of our Lord was nobly descended therefore is Christ call'd the Son of David Matth. 1.1 and 9.27 and Luke 20.41 So was Joseph his Reputed or Foster-Father of David's Lineage also Matthew shews the latter and Luke the former Matthew calls Christ the Son of David and of Abraham Matth. 1.1 2. because these two had the Promise of Christ's proceeding from their Loins This was for the Comfort of the Jews that God had made his Promise good to Abraham whom they call'd their Father And Luke derives Christ from Adam Luke 3.23 38. for the Comfort of the Gentiles who were of Adam though not of Abraham These were convincing and undeniable Testimonies that Christ was the true Messiah and the Saviour of the World This we must believe and with blind Bartimaeus cry out Jesus Thou Son of David have Mercy on me Mark 10.46 so strong was his Faith that it did not only break through but also increased by all rebuking Contradictions He cryed a great deal the more ver 48. Notewel True Faith works its way as the Sun doth through all Obstructions Yea and when he heard that the Master call'd him as he doth us daily he cast away his Garments ver 50. though but a Beggar so knew not where to get another Coat in this Case he stood not upon the loss of his Coat but for Joy of his being called cast it from him that he might hasten to his Redeemer Oh that we could cast away our rotten Rags of Sin Heb. 12.1 and that filthy Garment also of our own Righteousness Isa 64.6 let Christ tread upon it Matth. 21.8 Leave thy Water-pots and all John 4.28 All this is Recorded in the Gospel for the Everlasting Honour of this poor Blind Man when mighty Monarch's are pass'd over in silence they if not utterly forgotten lay shrouded up in the Sheet of Shame c. Secondly Though Mary was of a most
Jericho's City with the blasts thereof Josh 6.4 5 c. So the Weapons of the Word in the Ministry though weak seemingly as those Priests Trumpets and in respect of the Flesh yet are they Mighty through God and his Spirit for pulling down the strong bolds of Satan and for casting down Imaginations c. 2 Cor. 10.4 5. As the Fasting Spittle that cometh out of Man's Mouth is said to kill Serpents so doth that which proceedeth out of the Mouths of God's faithful Ministers quell and kill evil Thoughts and carnal Reasonings which are that Legion of Domestick Devils that hold a constant correspondency and intimate intelligence with the Old Serpent in us This weak Word is made strong to overthrow captivate and subdue a sinful Soul into the obedience of Christ and of that small Seed arise those goodly Trees of Righteousness which are not of the Devils but of the Lord 's Planting and Watering Isa 61.3 The Second Congruity is As Seed must be Harrowed into the Earth it must be cast not only on but into the ground Mar. 4.26 so the Word must be hid in the Heart Psal 119.11 or it will not fructifie Job 22.22 23. Thus as David so Mary kept all pondering in her Heart Luke 2.19 when the Word is well covered with a moisty Moul in the hidden Man of the Heart it takes Root downward and springeth in Branches upward first the Blade then the Ear after that the full Corn Mark 4.28 were but our Minds as the Holy Ark wherein were hid the two Tables of God's Testimony and our Memories as Aaron's Golden Pot wherein was kept the Heavenly Manna Heb. 9.4 Rev. 2.17 preserving Divine Truths of the Gospel and remarkable occurrencies of Providence God would bless our buds Isa 44.3 while we strive to better that Blessing The first springings in the Womb of Grace are precious to God Ephes 2.1 The Third Parallel is As Seed requires a good Soil without which though never so good in it self it cannot be successful So the Word unless received into an Honest and Good Heart Luke 8.15 proves unprosperous Oh that our Hearts may be as Isaac's Soil Gen. 26.12 to bring forth an hundred fold The Fourth Parallel is Though Seed be sown in a good Soil yet no success can be expected without Heaven's Influence Hos 2.21 22. nothing but an Harvest of Weeds can be had when God Rains no Rain upon it Isa 5.6 c. Thus though Paul Plant and Apollos Water yet all is nothing If God give not the Increase 1 Cor. 3.6 7. without this Men will rush on in their own Sins and run Headlong to Hell though great be the Company of good Preachers Psal 68.11 The Fifth Parallel is As the Hope of a good Harvest lies potentially in the Seed that is sown so doth Eternal Life in the Word that is preached Rom. 1.16 This honour is given to that Ordinance above others As the Rain from Heaven hath a greater fatness and a more peculiar fructifying Vertue in it than any other standing or running Waters on Earth so there is not the like life found in any other means of Grace as in this which like Goliah's Sword hath none like it for Converting Work Secondly The Disparity As 1. This is not Corruptible Seed 1 Pet. 1.23 2 'T is not for food to the Body but to the Soul Angels food that nourishes up to to Eternal Life 3. This brings forth the best Harvest where Angels shall be Reapers and the Joy of the Harvest is Everlasting Vse I. Is there any Seed of God in you though but as a Grain of Mustard-seed very little yet if true God looks at Truth more than Measure If born from above or again John 3.3 and the Heart be sound in God's Statutes Psal 119.80 having the spirit of a sound Mind 2 Tim. 1.7 the Acorn now may become an Oak in time a small beginning may have at latter end a greater Increase Job 8.7 It may be you have not vast Heards and Flocks of Graces to offer unto God as Solomon did 1 Kin. 8.63 yet may have a Lamb to send unto the Ruler of the People Isa 16.1 Jacob in a time of scarcity had not much to send as a present to the Lord over the Land of Egypt yet he bids Take a little of each the best of the best Gen. 43.11 Though Nehemiah had not his three thousand Talents of Gold of the Gold of Opher nor his seven thousand Talents of refined Silver as David had to Beautifie the Temple with 1 Chron. 29.4 yet had he a thousand Drams of Gold c. to give for Repairing the Temple Neh. 7.71 and his Drams were acceptable as well as David's Talents For if there be first a willing Mind it is accepted according to that he hath and not according to that he hath not 2 Cor. 8.12 The Lord looks more at the willingness of the Offerer than at the worthiness of the Offering Artaxerxes was exceedingly affected with an handful of Water which one of his Common Souldiers brought him because it was the best present in his power to procure Oh that sweet Gospel in the Law but if he be not able to bring a Lamb c. Lev. 5.7 or two Turtles ver 11. let him bring the Tenth part of an Ephah And if he be not able and cannot get so much let him bring such as he is able to get Lev. 14.21 22. Goats Hair was accepted for the Tabernacle as well as better things Exod. 25.3 4 c. so was the Widows Mite for the Treasury Mark 12.41 to 44. Pence be accepted where Pounds are not and Drams where Talents are not and sure I am a dram of saving Grace is better than a pound of Notional knowledge Vse 2. Ask your hearts those sew questions about this Seed though but small Mat. 13.31 17.20 Mark 4.31 Luke 13.19 First Are any Furrows prepared in your Hearts for the Reception of this Holy Seed Have you had compunctions in Vend Cordis Acts 2.37 making you cry out What shall we do to be Saved Unless your Hearts be Plowed with Gods Heifer as Judg. 14.18 to see the eagerness of others for Heaven will be a Riddle you understand not Secondly Hath this Sower cast his Seed into these prepared Furrows Man may forfeit or neglect his Sowing season but this Sower cannot do so for all seasons are the Lord's first Furrows are prepared then the Seed is sown both in their season not by any natural power it pertains to the power of the World to come Thirdly How hath that Holy Seed succeeded after Sowing One may taste of the Power of the World to come in the Word of God Heb. 6.5 yet bring not forth an Harvest of Holiness without which notwithstanding all bedewings that soak not deep enough no harvest of happiness can be expected Heb. 12.14 c. The Third Part is the Soil Wherein First the Congruity As First much ground lyes fallow where the Plow
of the Gospel hath not passed divide the World into thirty equal parts and nineteen of those 30 be Heathens and fix of the eleven remaining are Mahometans so only the odd five profess Christ and of those there be many Papists but few Protestants yea of these Protestants how few are true Bellevers a profession is oft without power Oh what a Weedy World is here to be burnt at the last day Secondly As the natural product of the Cursed Earth is Weeds c. not Corn So are our fallen Natures the proper Fathers of Sin and but Stepmothers to Grace hence sin must humble us because it is our own and Grace must humble us too because 't is not our own but is as Corn that is forced Wild Olives by Nature Rom. 11.24 Mors in Olla Death in the Pot 2 Kin. 4.40 All good is received 1 Cor. 4.7 Thirdly There be variety of Soils in the World some are Mountains of Pride and Presumption barren of Grace others are Wildernesses Souls pining away with thirst c. yet some Hearts are as well Watered Valleys where the Lilly of Grace grows greatly Cant. 2.1 There is some Sandy some Stony some Thorny Ground as here and yet some good though three to one in this England Secondly the Disparity As First This Mystical Soil that is good is not any Earthly thing lying low to be trodden under foot in the World but 't is an Heavenly Heart that brings forth the Seed of God the property of the Earthly Heart is changed by an Heavenly Power The Second The Ground is more fitly disposed to bring forth Corn than our Hearts are for Grace though Corn growing be praeter Naturam beside Nature not so Grass unsown yet Grace growing is contra Naturam against Nature Grass is graceful to ground and hath its usefulness but Weeds are a Curse c. The Third The Litteral Soil brings one only Crop in the year but the Mystical every Month Rev. 22.2 in Winter as well as Summer yea every Week and every Day it bears fruits to God Vse I. Ask what sort of soil are you Barren Mountains droughthy Desarts without Wells of Salvation Isa 12.3 where the Lawgiver hath not yet Digg'd such a Well Numb 21.17 18. Vse II. 'T is no matter how base or barren harsh or hard your Heart be where Christ undertakes the Culture he can make parched ground become as the Garden of Eden Isa 35.6 7. 51.3 c. The Fourth part is the Success Wherein First The Congruity As First 'T is various not only from divers but also from one and the same Soil that brings forth bad crops sometimes as well as good So though Grace never differs from it self yet a gracious Soul may have its withdrawments as well as inlargements hath its Winter as well as Summer time Cant 2.11 13. Secondly Success is various not only from the Soil but also from Influence as it hath more or less from Heaven Where much is Received there much is Required Luke 12.48 Cant. 6.11 Isa 5.2 Mat. 21.34 1 Cor. 9.7 Danda igitur est opera we must endeavour to answer to God's Pains lest he lay us wast Luke 13.7 c. Thirdly Success is not without Watering Weeding out what offends c. Mat. 13.41 Isa 5.3 the Church is call'd a Garden that needs much Trimming Pruning and daily dressing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 15.2 Solomon lets out his Vineyard to Tenants Cant. 8.12 but Christ himself both Weeds and Waters His c. Secondly the Disparity As 1. Nature contributes much to the literal but Grace doth all to the mystical success 1 Cor. 3.6 7. 2. This latter hath more certainty than the former which an Enemy may Reap Psal 105.40 Mic. 6.15 c. but the Gates of Hell cannot prevail to prevent the other Mat. 16.18 John 10 29. Rom. 8.38 1 Pet. 1.4 5 c. 3. This brings in such store as is inexhaustible profit and pleasure for evermore Psal 16.11 Rom. 8.17 2 Cor. 4.17 Vse I. Beware you be not High-way ground where Sin hath a way over the Heart Psal 139.24 Impressions of sin in its customary path-way wear out the impressions of the Word Edom deny'd a passage through them Numb 21.23 and Josiah did the same 2 Kin. 23.29 Ezek. 44.2 3 c. Seed cannot be covered in a Sin trodden Heart hence the Prince Fowl picks it up Heb. 2.1 Psal 119.11 16. Vse II. Take heed of being stony-ground Though the Seed be not pick'd up by that Prince Fowl Satan nor trodden down by the foul feet of Sin yet may it have as a sudden growing so a soon dying This Rocky ground is the hard heart a Rock of the Devil 's not of God's making Rain falling on a Rock soaks it not sinks not in Blind Bede Preach'd to a heap of Stones with small success c. Vse III. Be not Thorny ground having both root and growth some desires to the Word and some purposes to obey it but Cares and Pleasures over-grow all taking up the Place Time and Affection Christ should have but almost a Christian Acts 26.28 Earth out-grows Heaven as Thorns do Corn c. Vse IV. Have Honest and Good Hearts Luke 8.15 Tho' all such not alike fruitful yet God accepts of the thirty as well as of the hundred Zech 4.10 Mat. 12.20 so it be answerable to our helps and furtherances Luke 12.48 suitable both to our Supernatural Principles and to our Evangelical Priviledges c. CHAP. XVII THere be many other Parables which Christ delivered as Oracles full of sweet significancy and most aptly accommodated to his various Auditors as before that might be accordingly gloss'd upon as this of the Sower would it not swell up this Discourse into too prodigious a Prolixity c. The brief account I can give of them here is this besides this Parabolical Sermon which he Preached to the People March 13 c. wherein he demonstrates the divers effects of the Word Preached the pretiousness of it when rightly imbraced and the strict account that must at last be given of it There be other Sermons of our Lord dress'd up both in Parables and Plainly As First That to his Twelve Apostles after his long and lively Sermon in the Mount as above when he sent them forth to gather up the lost Sheep of the House of Israel after they had been as Probationers a Twelve-Month with him to learn the Gospel of the Kingdom from his Mouth Mat. 10. per totum and chap. 9. ver 1. Mark 6. v. 7 8 9 10 11. and Luke 9.1 2 3 c. which some calls Christ's Concio ad Clerum his Sermon to the Clergy instructing them what to do how to teach and the measures they must expect in their Ministry c. Secondly When Christ had done Documenting his Ministers then Preach'd He a vindication Sermon for the Ministry both John Baptist's and his own Mat. 11.1 2 to the end The End of his former Sermon was
not undertaking this hazardous Voyage without his express Precept so they safely lay in the Arms of Christ's protection and so long as he keeps the Insuring-Office the Devil himself could not harm them without their Lords-permission And 3. Their vain Imaginations If the darkness was not so condensed as to hinder them from beholding the Spectrum they might also have seen and known their Saviour had they trusted in him and their senses not been disturbed by their fancies and fears which were now got above their Faith when they should have been below Psal 56.3 Gen. 15.1 Thus it is with the Church things seems to go backward ere they go forward though Christ be come Duplicantur lateres venit Moses when the tale of Bricks were doubled then came Moses 12. As the Disciples deserved reproof for their misbelief yet Christ pities and pardons their perplexities and passions speaks good words and comfortable to them saying Be of good cheer it is I be not afraid 't is no nocturnal Bug-bear but your very Saviour in whose presence ye have no just ground to fear your extremity is my opportunity I am that I am Exod. 3.14 Hereupon they desire him to come up into the Ship when he had made them able to know it was he that spake as he ever doth to his own People John 6.21 N. B. Note well Thus Christ covers our mistakes we think sometimes he is mad as Mark 3.21 when he exercises us with harsh Providences though he do all things well Mark 7.37 They mistook him for a Spirit not only now but after Luke 24.37 till he had convinced them by both being touched by them and by his eating with them v. 39.42 nor was this the only time of Christ's seeming to go from them Mark 6.48 for he did so Luke 24.28 only that they might invite him both times let us do so also c. 13. As still Peter must be tryed for asking a sign and Christ must be entertain'd tho' at hand before the Storm cease c. N.B. Note well So we still hanker after signs and invite him not earnestly to a constraint c. were this done the Sea would be calm and as soon as Christ sets his foot upon the Ship she would immediately be at Shore Our Jesus sets his foot upon the proudest Waves of wickedness as did Joshua upon the necks of his loftiest Adversaries Josh 10.24 Christ is not far off Acts 17.27 Rom. 10.6 c. constrain him to come in and he will bear the Ship more than she bears him so can lift her into the Haven of Hope No sooner is Christ come into any heart but presently Conscience is becalm'd Lust is our Tempest while we love the Lord we with Peter can walk on the Waters but when we love the World then begin we to sink yet if then we cry to Christ he hath an helping-hand for us c. The Romanists applaud this fact of Peter but Pareus shews he believed not without a sign as the rest did and had it but with a check v. 31. Mat. 14. CHAP. XXII NO sooner were Christ and Peter come up into the Ship Mat. 14.32 but the Wind ceased as if it had been weary with blowing so big and boisterous out of the Devils mouth and now desired rest after its hard labour as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Then both the Tryal and Trouble of the Disciples and Mariners ended together and most happily ended both in the Increase of their knowledge and in glorifying God ver 33. They all came and worshipped him as the Son of God not by Creation as Adam Luke 13.38 and as the Angels Job 1.6 nor by Adoption as all Believers John 1.12 and 1 John 3.1 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. By Eternal Generation Prov. 8.22 And 2. By Personal Vnion Psal 2.7 This new Experience of Deliverance from the danger of death made a deeper Impression upon the Disciples spirits concerning Christ's Divine Power and Godhead than his miraculous feeding of 5000 with five Loaves had done for then were they not in any imminent or eminent danger of dying as here therefore being then secure they considered not so well that Miracle Mark 6.52 N.B. Note well We are more teachable in Adversity than in Prosperity especially if God illuminate our minds then Now when Christ had brought the Ship safe to Shore over the Bay betwixt Bethsaida from whence his Disciples launched out and Capernaum not to the contrary side of the Lake but only cross that Bay or Bosom on the same side therefore 't is said the People whom he had fed with the Loaves here did before follow him on foot from Capernaum to Bethsaida John 6.1 Mat. 14.13 and Mark 6.32 33. and came up to him in Bethsaida's Desart where he fed them And now when his Disciples return by Sea again they are said to go over to Bethsaid●● Mark 6.45 and from thence to Capernaum John 6.17 coasting still upon the same side yet met they that astonishing Storm tho' they pass'd not over the Lake to the other side beyond Jordan aforementioned But that which is highly remarkable here is that these very People which had footed it after Christ from Caperndum to Bethsaida over a Bridge near Tiberias yet they return in Ships back to Capernaum that they might ' meet with their bellies-filling Jesus so much the sooner John 6.22 23 24. and they mee● with no Storm in their Voyage as the Disciples had done to teach us that the World sails with fair gales of Wind when the poor Church is tossed with Tempests Isa 54.11 as also that the greatest Graces must expect to encounter the greatest Exercis●● Now Christ is got to Genezareth supposed to be the same Countrey with Cinnero●● Josh 11.2 19.35 however out of Herod's Jurisdiction where he wrought his next Miracle of healing all the Sick in that Countrey by their only touching the hem of his garment Mat. 14.34 35 36. and Mark 6.53 to the end wherein we have these following Remarks 1. Our Lord went about doing good Acts 10.38 healing every where such as came 〈◊〉 him yet harming none no not such as were refractories any where no not in obstinate Samaria Luke 9.53 56. Though his Apostles did strike dead those two Lyars against the Holy Ghost Acts 5.5 10 and did strike blind that Sorcerer Acts 13.11 by their gift of Miracles but we have no such Instance in Christ the giver thereof The 2d Remark is A People that have blown upon the Gospel are more unkind to Christ than they that have not had it before Thus Christ's own Countrey-men Nazareth reject him and resolve to break his neck Luke 4.29 when this Genezareth an Emblem of the Gentiles Conversion do kindly receive Christ and acknowledge him the Messiah and they rejoyced at his coming amongst them c. The 3d Remark is Oh the matchless candour and kindness of Christ to all commers to him He heals all promiscuously here
Remedy first upon the Malady this is Threefold The 1st Remark is This Mans wandering the wrong way departing from the Holy City Jerusalem which Hebrew Name Jereu Shalom signifies they shall see Peace and Shimet found it a place of Peace while he continued in it 1 Kin. 2.36 41 42 46 c. and so did this certain Man in the Parable the Thieves did not dare to Assault him while he staid in this Mountain of Rocks amongst which it was built Josh 18.28 and 2 Sam. 5. ver 6 7 8 9. it was a strong City of Refuge yea glorious things are spoken of it Ps 87.3 It 's Walls were called Salvation and its Gates Praise Isa 60.18 God loved to look upon it Isa 49.16 and he delighted to dwell in it Ps 132.13 14 c. The Old Jerusalem was the more Famous for being a Type of the New Jerusalem which hath a most Glorious and Graphical Description of all its parts Rev. 21. per totum Oh how foolish was this certain Man to turn his back upon such a Blessed place the Terminus a quo from whence he went but more especially considering the Terminus ad quem the Cursed place that he turned his face toward which was Jericho signifying the Moon Hebr. that is placed under the feet of the Church of Christ Rev. 12.1 and it was Cursed by Joshua Joshua 6.17 as a kind of first Fruits of that cursed Country Dedicated to Divine Justice Levit. 27.28 Though Hiel presumed to Redeem this place so devoted to Gods Curse and to Rebuild it 1 Kin. 16.34 yet did he pay most dearly for so doing inasmuch as be lost his living House namely his Children while he busied himself in Raising up lifeless Houses upon a Cursed Spot of Ground N.B. Note well t is said of Christ that he sets his face as one going to Jerusalem Luk. 9.53 Sure I am it should so be said also of every True Christian whose Heart as well as Face must be toward Sion for the way to Sion is writ in their Hearts Ps 84.5 but wo to such as wander the wrong way from Sion to Babylon from places of Gods Worship to a Land of Darkness 1. Remember Dinah who was Defloured by her gadding abroad from her good Fathers Tent Gen. 24 2 23. 2. Remember Naomai who left the Land of Promise and went to Sojourn in the Land af Moab yet was she so wise as to Return again in due time and upon her Return gives this Account of her self what she had got by her wandring the wrong way she saith call me no more Naomi which signifies Delightful but call me Marah which signifies bitter for my God the Almighty hath dealt bitterly with me I went out full but am returned empty c. Ruth 1.20 21. 3. Remember Shines who judged the Kings command good in confining his Abode in Jerusalem a place too good for so bad a Man and he kept the Kings Command for three full years yet after this he breaks the bridle runs over to the Uncircumcised whereby he lost his Life by the hand of Justice and his own Heart was privy how justly he suffered 1 Kin. 2.38 39. to the end 4. Remember Samson what a Turmoiled and Toilsom Life he led by his Leaving Canaan and his Conversing so much among the Cursed Philistines Lastly Remember the Prodigal who by leaving his Fathers House made himself more miserable than the very Hoggs that he kept therefore little Children abide in Christ and continue ye in the love of Christ 1 John 2.28 and John 15.9 The Second Malady of this Man Remark the 2d is His falling among Thieves ver 30. Hence Great Grotins's Gloss is that this Portion of Scripture is a true History of a matter of Fact that happened in that time and place because the Road-way betwixt Jericho and Jerusalem was notoriously infested with Robbers as our High ways near London are too well known to be and as Savoy or Salvoy was of old called Malvoy which signifies an Evil way because High-way-men abounded there so that no Travellers could have any safe passage to any place but when those Robbers were routed out then was it named Savoy or Salvoy which signifies a safe way But waving this singular Sentiment of Grotius Literal Sense let us follow the concurrent Opinion of both Antient and Modern Authors who make it a Parable N.B. Note well 1. This certain man is either the Original Sinner the first Adam or the Actual Habitual or Unconverted Sinner to wit All Mankind descended from Adam or the Backsliding Sinner c. N.B. Note well 2. The Thieves that all these three sorts of sinners did fall among were Satan Sin and Death the two first are the founders of Evil and the last is the finisher of it Satan and sin are the Efficient cause of all Evil and Death is the final effect of Evil Rom. 5 12. and Satan is a most dangerous Thief as he hath got the upper ground of man for he is the Prince of the Air Eph. 2.2 which is about the Earth where man walks and sin is no less dangerous a Thief for the Iniquity of mans beels do compass him about Ps 49.5 and so if left to himself he is ever in danger to have his Heels tripped up thereby and Lastly Death comes oft as a Thief in the Night upon Man 1 Thes 5.2 2 Pet. 3.10 Revel 16.15 and 3.3 c. N.B. Note Well 3. The Original Sinner Adam fell among these Thieves when he minded more Satans promise and Eves proffer of the forbidden Fruit than he did of Gods Praecept against it his Hearkening and Hankering after Honour of the Devils giving made him walk the wrong way from the Tree of Lifs to the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil This made him to sin that greatest of sins Reckoned to be next unto that unpardonable sin the sin against the Holy Ghost seeing it was a sin against so much Light Life Love and liberty such as never any Mortal Man had His sin was not the Rebellion of a poor peasant upon the Dunghill but of the highest Favourite in the Court even in Paradise it self Hereupon Bernard descants Si hoc Adamo Contigisse● in paradiso quid nobis in seerquilinio If Adam fell among Thieves in Paradise it self Oh what falls may befall us that are cast upon the Dunghil of this evil World Satan made Adam sin and his sin brought forth Death the Fruit of his fall from Obedience and Innocency c. N.B. Note well 4. The Habitual and Unconverted sinner drives the trade of sin and the chiefest place of his Trading is Jericho Satan leads him Captive at his Will 2 Tim. 2.26 and such must needs goe yea run the wrong way whom the Devil drives Such as are not only sold under sin as we all are by Adam Rom. 7.14 but they sell themselves to sin with Ahab 1 Kin. 21.20 who being past feeling give themselves over to work all kind of wickedness
and all glorious within and without and any Alchymy here is abominable Mans Tool pollutes it Exod. 20.25 Secondly Of its Excellent form signifying Eternity This Adopting Ring is round as it is made up of the Eternal Spirit Heb. 9.14 And of Everlasting love Jer. 31.3 So it hath neither beginning nor ending They Disparage the Excellency of this Adopting Union that dare affirm this more than a Gord●an hnot may be untyed by any Alexander our Lord hates putting away Mal. 2.16 Though we oft let go our hold on him yet he abides Faithfull 2 Tim. 2.13 And having this Seal or Sealing Ring the Foundation stands sure ver 19. So that he will never let go his hold of us his love is as unchangeable as himself John 13.1 c. Semel Electus Semper Ditect●s saith Austin if once chosen then ever loved beyond the end c. Thirdly The Mystery of its Excellent Posy which was I am thine and thou art mine as it is phrased Cant. 2.16 doth signifie farther to us the grace of Adoption Grotius saith here Vnus A●●li usus inter alios est signan●● gratiâ Erg●non male veteres donum Spiritus Sancti quo nos obsignamur b●it Annulo Resp●●dere putant the use of a Ring among other uses is to Seal with therefore the Antients did not think amiss in Interpreting by it the gift of the Spirit whereby we are Sealed 2 Cor. 1.21 22. And after Believing me are Sealed Eph. 1.13 and 4.30 Rev. 7.3 to 8. As God sets the Seal of his Spirit to out Souls so we set the Seal of our Faith to his Truth John 3.33 Thus are we said to receive the Spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father as our Lord cryed to his Father Mar. 14.36 And as this penitent Prodigal did to his here ver 18.21 Rom. 8.15 And because we are Sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into our Hearts Crying Abba Father Gal. 4.6 Thus Christ giveth the white Stone which hath a new Name written in it like the Posy within this Ring which no Man can read saving he that receiveth it Rev. 2.17 There be many indeed who lay claim to an interest in the Heavenly Father as that Mad Man at Athens laid claim to a share in every Rich Ship that came to shore there c. or as Hanghty Haman who hearing that the King intended to Honour some Man foolishly thought himself to be that same Man c. Esth 6.6 Or as those presuming professours that boldly knock at Heavens Gate and Cry Lord Lord open to us c. Christ who is called an Everlasting Father Isa 9.6 Professeth unto them that he never knew them and bids them depart being but workers of Iniquity Matth. 7.22 23. Alas their Faith was but a fancy and their Confidence no more than Presumption but the True Believer hath a Faith that is unfeigned 1 Tim. 1.5 and 2 Tim. 1.5 He knows whom he hath believed 2 Tim. 1.12 He apprehends Christ by his Faith as Christ apprehends him by his Spirit Phil. 3.12 So resigning up his All to Christ Gal. 2.20 As this Penitent Son doth to his Indulgent Father He therefore can groundedly say according to the Posy within this Ring My Father is mine and I am his as the Spouse did Cant. 2.16 Fourthly The Mystery of the Richness of this Ring set round about with sparkling Jewels may signifie the Faith of Evidence or Assurance both for Pardon of Sin and for acceptance of Person Indeed there be also plain Rings which is the Faith of Adherence and Recumbency upon Christ the Rock of Ages Isa 26.3 4. Wherein there may be some mixture of Faith and Vnbelief as Mar. 9.24 Yet this Child of light though in some Darkness as to Assurance still leans upon the Lord c. Isa 50.10 They may be True Sons and not Bastards though they cannot Read or Write their own Names So nor such as cannot Read this new Name written in the white Stone or in the Royal Ring which is a Name better than of Sons and Daughters Isa 56.5 The assurance whereof is the Sweet-Meats of a Sanctified Conscience Prov. 15.15 which is Joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 Oh Soul hast thou got this Ring whether broken or whole whether plain or Enambled with Pearls God hath assuredly brought thee into his Miraculous Light 1 Pet. 2.9 A Lease of an Estate for three Lives is much a Lease for a 1000. years is more but this Ring is an Evidence for Eternity Neither Tongue nor Pen can Describe how the Ewe knows her Lamb by smell and bleating Nor how the Spirit of Adoption teacheth Christs Sheep to hear his Voice John 10.3 Cant. 8.13 Oh Soul walk worthy of this Robe und of this Ring This returning Son saith not because I know my Father will disown me no more therefore I will play the Prodigal again c. The 3d. Entertainment this lost Son finds with his loving Father is Shooes for his feet it may well be supposed he returned as good as barefoot Home or with Old Shooes and Clouted like those of the Gibeont●es Josh 9.5 c. N. B. Note well 1. Here is much more restored by the Second Adam than was lost or ruined by the First Adams For the First lost indeed the Robe of Righteousness but the Second Adam redeems not only a Royal Robe for his Redeemed but also a Royal Ring and Royal Shoes yea and the fattest Call after all to Feast upon c. For he is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was Established upon better promises Heb. 8.6 and 7.2 A Covenant of grace and not of works N. B. Note well 2. The Mystery signified by this History of these shoes is the grace of Perseverance in the way of Sanctification Teaching us that every True Repenting Soul returning to his Fathers House hall his feet shod with Gospel Shoes which enableth him to hold on and out in the way of Holiness untill he come to the Race end to wit the Heaven of Happiness 1 Cor. 9.24 Heb. 12.1 N. B. Note well 3. The Mystical feet to be ●●od here are our Affections by which we Run from God untill they be shod with the preparation of the Gospel of Peace Eph. 6.15 Which is Armour of proof indeed then do we Run to God the Natural Motion of our Affections in the fallen Estate is an uneasy Trott untill the Lord take us by the Arms and teach us to go Hos 11.3 The Septuagint reads it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to pace a more easie Motion to the Rider c. The Gospel is the Doctrine Drine with our peace with God in Christ there is Peace and Joy in Believing Rom. 14.17 and 15,13 And when we are Gospelized that is shod with Gospel Comforts then are our Hearts enlarged to Pallace or to run the way of Gods Commandments Ps 119 32. By the Gospel of Peace God Creates Peace Isa 57.19 Such a Soul toucheth
or matter of it and Secondly the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Formale or Form of it both those must be well minded N. B. Note well 1. The Material part may not be wrested as if it justified griping Usury or that it proved any Austerity in God unbecoming to God c. This were no better than to squeeze Blood in stead of Milk out of this Sacred Scripture which indeed is as it is called a Breast of Consolation Isa 66.11 N. B. Note well 2. Therefore the Formal part of this Parable must mostly be minded take these Similes for its Illustration as 1. Though it be the Plough-share only that plows up the Ground in order to Sow Seed upon the Soil yet all the other parts of the Plough are needful Contributors to that plowing-work and 2. Though it be the strings of a Musical Instrument only that make the sweet Melody to our Ears yet the Back the Belly the Bridge and the Handle especially the Bow c. are all necessary parts for Accomplishing the Musick even so in some Parables some passages are Annexed which do signifie nothing sometimes saith Augustin concerning the Main Scope of it yet are added for the sake of those passages which do signifie something yea the chief thing designed by it c. N. B. Note well 3. Therefore as we may not abuse those passages aforesaid either for Mans Usury or for Gods Austerity so nor any of the other superadded sayings as to think that the Saints shall be made Rulers over Cities or that there shall be any Expostulatings of Man with God in the last Day or that the Gifts of God given to one shall be taken from him and given to another or that there shall be any sending of Mens Messages after Christ c. Multa Talia in parabold sunt quae Vexari possunt saith Austin there be many such passages in some Parables which may be Misimproved 'T is a true Maxim in Moral Philosophy Omnit similitudo non currit cum quatuor pedibus every Similitude or Parable doth not run upon four equal feet c. In this Parable Mat 25. There be four principal parts to be considered The First two are the Lords Traveling and the Servants Trading contained in ver 14 to the end of ver 18. And the Second two are the Lords Returning and the Servants Reckoning contained in ver 19. to the end of ver 30. First of the first of those four to wit of this Lords Traveling The first Enquiry is who is this Traveller c Answer The Evangelist Luke calls him a Nobleman Luke 19.12 By whom is meant our Blessed Messiah who is truly Noble every way as 1. By his Birth Nobly Descended as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie for he was by Birth the Son of God 2. By his Beauty which was Noble indeed the Spouse beheld him as White and Ruddy of a most lovely Complexion above all Cant. 5.10 to ver 16. And the Disciples saw his Glory the Glory as of the only begotten of the Father John 1.14 3. He is Noble for his Wealth too as full of Grace and Truth John 1.14 It pleased the Father that in him should all fullness ●●●ell not the fullness of a Vessel only but also the fullness of a Fountain never to be drawn dry Col. ● 19 No Nobleman hath any such fullness the fullness of the Firmament of the Earth and of the Sea are all his All Treasures are ●id in 〈…〉 Col. 2 3.14 He is Noble also in his Candid and Kind Disposition this is his True Generosity to Give Gifts even to the Rebellious c. Ps 68.18 P●ss● Nolle est 〈◊〉 Nobile to b●●ble to take Revenge upon Rebels and not to be willing to do it is the Character of 〈◊〉 truly Noble Mind Naturalestis say the Lion is so Noble an Animal that Satis ●●t prostrasse L●o●● 't is enough for the Lamb to fall down at the Foot of the Lion than his Magnanimous Mind looks upon it as below him to devour that prostrate Prey Sure I am it holds most true concerning this Lion of the Tribe of Judah Rev. 5. ● Who most freely Pardons Truly Penitent Persons such as Humble themselves at his Feet Where he seeth a casting down he then gives a lifting up and saves the Humble Person Job 22.29 He Remembers and forgets not the Cry of the Humble Ps 9.12 Especially such as Cry God be Merciful to me a Sinner as Luke 18.13 The Second Enquiry is What is that far Country into which this Noble-Man Traveleth Answer It is Heaven it self into which our Lord passed at his Ascension and then sat down at the Right Hand of God the Father God the Son went up with a merry Noise Ps 45 5. And we ought to look up after him as his Disciples did at his Ascension Acts. 1.9 We need not say Who will go up into Heaven for us Rom. 10.6 And as David said Who will bring him into the strong City Ps 80.9 For our Blessed Mediator hath Insisted upon this point That his Departure out of this World was as needful and expedient for us at that time as was his first coming into the World John 16.7 He went up into this far Countrey as our Embassadour of Peace who hath his Residence in the Court of that King of Kings to Negotiate all the Affairs of all his Redeemed and this Great King the Father did bid his Son welcome home to that Glory which he had with him before the World was John 17.5 And which he had out of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Love to Mankind Tit. 3 4. left for a while during his State of Humiliation And the Father provided for his Returning Son a most easie and glorious Seat at his Right Hand to Rest in after all his Sore Travels here below and to Intercede merein continually for his Church and Children upon Earth c. N. B. Note well For our Comfort our Advocate in Heaven will not excuse himself from pleading for us as too many Lawyer-Advocates do in Inferior Courts among us saying they cannot stand in the Crowd 't is either too Hot or too Cold c. so will be absent and wanting to us when our Cause comes to be Tryed c. But our Blessed Saviour is a surer Friend in this Superiour Court having all Accommodations of Ease and Satisfaction he sits always at Gods Right Hand and there appears as the Rainbow Gen. 9.12 to 15. To be an Everlasting Remembrancer unto God concerning his Covenant with Man Nor will he nor can he forget any of his Redeemed as the Chief Butler forgot Joseph and Remembred him not Gen. 40.23 He is our High Priest who beareth all our Names upon his Heart or Breast place for a Memorial before the Lord continually as Aaron did for his Israel Exod. 28. ver 29 30. The Third Enquiry What is this Nobleman's Errand c. Answer We are told Luke 19.12 That it was to
had they not pressed him to it beyond his Pagan Power yet doing it with great Reluctancy however our Lord was thus Intitled by his Hand which was guided by the great God and whose Head and Heart were so confirmed in it that though he understood it not yet would not Retract it with all the Priests pressing him to the contrary He was unchangably Resolved that what he had writ should stand How much more the Writings of him whose Name is I am that I am Exod. 3.14 and the same yesterday to day and for ever Hebr. 13.8 N. B. Note well We may learn from this Pagan to be constant to a good Cause and in a good Course and not be changlings But we must raise our Minds higher and look beyond Pilate at the Counsel of God who would have Christ proclaimed his Churches King by this Publick Testimony in Pilate's Inscription and that it might be made manifest to the World that Jesus was Innocent and that he was Executed for the same Truth for which he was before Condemned by the Sanhedrim of the Chief Priests and therefore was the Title writ in Hebrew Greek and Latin the best known Tongues then every where that this venerable Elogy might be read and understood of all and that Christ's Innocency might appear unto all not only intimating that he was King of that Religion among the Hebrews of that Wisdom among the Greeks and of that Power among the Latines or Romans for which three things those three People were then Famous The Jews glory'd in their Law and the Greeks in their Wisdom and the Romans in ●heir Power and Dominion but also as presaging the Future Vocation of not only the Hebrews but of the Greeks and Latines too to the Kingdom of Christ N. B. Note well to which may be added that hereby the Holy Ghost hath commended to us the Dignity and Study of these three Learned Languages Hebrew Greek and Latin which are to be Retained for ever in the Church of Christ and seeing Christ hath Sanctified those three Tongues upon his Cross by this Inscription 't is but a Brutish Notion to call them the Languages of the Beast N. B. Note well Moreover this may reprove the Sacrilegious Tyranny of the Romanists who render themselves worse than Pilate in not only forbidding that the Sacred Scriptures should be Translated into the Mother-Tongue of each Land but also Restraining the People from Reading them in Hebrew Greek or Latin yea or in their own Native Language whereas Pilate as God's publick Herald will have Christ Read and acknowledged to be King in any Language both Forraign and Domestick 'T is pitty a poor Pagan should exceed and excell those Papagans who profess to Adore Ch●ist The 4. Branch of the Introduction is their Crucifying two Thieves the one on the Right and the other on the Left Hand of Christ Matth. 27.38 Mar. 15.26 27. Luke 23.33 Joh. 19.18 placing Christ in the midst not so much that he might have Companions in Misery for Solamen Miseris socios adhibere Doloris 't is some Comfort to those in Misery to have Companions in it As it was designed by those Priests to Palliate their wickedness that the People might look upon Christ Crucified in the midst as the worst and as the Prince of Malefactors and the greatest of those three had they Crucified Christ alone he would at least have seemed a better Man than any Thief But Mark the Evangelist lifts us up to look beyond this politick design of the Priests at the profound Counsel of God who directed this Deed that the Prophet's Oracle might be Accomplished saying He was Reckoned to wit by those Priests among Transgressors Isa 53.12 and not only among them but as Chief of them Thus he became the greatest of Sinners both by Imputation as he bare the sins of many ver 6.12 and by Reputation as he was Reckoned among Thieves Robbers Throat-Cutters and Traitors yea in the midst as exceeding the worst of them N. B. Note well As this may teach us how vastly prodigious was the wrath of God against Man's sins for the Expiation of which our Surety the Son of God must be cast into the Catalogue of Notorious Malefactors So no less holds it forth the most Immense Love of our Lord Jesus to us who can submit to be a Companion of Miscreants to make us fit Associates with Holy Angels Zach. 3.7 both Here and in Heaven c. but of these Thieves more afterward is discoursed c. CHAP. XXXII Of Christ's Crucifying NOW come we after those five Introductions to Discourse upon the Passion and Death of Christ Crucified upon the Cross wherein many most Eminent Remarks are comprehended in the Bowels of that one Act of Crucifying Christ As Moses turn'd aside to behold that great wonder of the Bush burning yet not consumed Exod. 3.3 So let us turn aside here to see this great Sight to behold the grand Sin-offering burnt without the Gate yet not consumed to Corruption Levit. 9.11 16 27. Hebr. 13.12 Psal 16.10 11. Acts 13.35 36 37. and to behold the High-Priest himself of our profession Hebr. 3.1 As the great Sacrifice for the whole World was now laid upon the High Altar his Cross and there was Rosted with the Hot Fire of the Wrath of God and of Men and of Devils Behold the Son of God Bleeding Mocked Tortured Dying and Reconciling God and Man and Marrying Justice and Mercy together c. Psal 85.10 The First Remark is Behold the Man He must Die the worst of Deaths for us so Angry was God with Man for Eating the Forbidden Fruit of Sin that he spareth not his own Son when he became a Surety for Sinners He shall die saith Saul though the Lot fall upon my Son Jonathan 1 Sam. 14.39 We Read of Zaleucus's Law that the sin of Adultery should be punished with the loss of two Eyes his own Son was found faulty herein Zaleucus put out one of his Sons Eyes as he was a Just Judge but that he might save his Sons other Eye and not make him quite blind he to satisfie the Justice of his own Law is content to put out one of his own as a Compassionate Father This Resemblance falls far short of the matter Resembled Yet thus far they do Symbolize in an Apt Parallel Congruity The Creator gave this Law to the Creature If thou Eat the forbidden Fruit thou shalt surely dye Gen. 2.17 Man Transgresseth that Law of God even Adam call'd the Son of God Luke 3.38 Now that Justice might be satisfied Man the sinner loseth one Eye only to wit his Paradise-Happiness c. and God the Father of Adam is content to give his Son who was as Dear to him as his Right Eye out of his Bosom to make full Satisfaction for the Breach of that Law N. B. Note well Sinfull Man may say here is both a Just Judge to the Law and yet a Compassionate Father to me
despised his very Miracles now as nothing though clear demonstrations of his Deity because of his present Sufferings Mark Their Fifth Taunt or Mocking is If he be the King of Israel let him now come down from the Cross and we will believe him And say you so Sir yea but when Sir will you do it suppose Christ should exert his Almighty power for his own deliverance which he could do if he would might this gratifying your curiosity have made you to Believe Nay certainly you would not do so but rather have said that he had delivered himself by the Devil's help It was a more mighty evidence of his Divine power to raise himself from the Dead Acts 2.24 Rom. 1.4 than had been his coming down from the Cross for the power of the Grave is stronger than that of the Cross Hos 13 14. yet could it not possibly hold him but by his Resurrection he was declared with Power to be the Son of God yet when this was done you Sir Priests would not believe nor would you do so now should he come down c. Mark The Sixth Satanical Sarcalm or Sacerdotal Scoff was He trusted in God let him deliver him if he will have him This wickedly imptoved Shaft shot here at the Lord Jesus was borrowed out of Holy David's Quiver Psal 22.6 7 8. what was there done to David the Type was much more done to Christ the Antitype of whom David was both Father and Figure The Title of that Psalm is Aijleth-Shahar the Morning Stag such an one was David hunted upon the Mountains by the Devil's Blood-hounds And so was Christ David's Son upon the Cross here Behold the Man even he who was more than a mere Man even 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man N. B. Note well Oh what a wonderful Divine condescension and care over us is there that the Lord of Angels those highest of created Beings should stood so low as to become a Worm the lowest of Creatures yea that the Creator Christ should become a Creature and the most contemptible Creature even a Worm to be trampled upon and troden under foot that he might raise us up when fallen under the forbidden Fruit-Tree Cant. 8.5 and thereby made worse than sinless Worms and place us into an equality with Angels Mat. 22.30 As they shoot out the Lip and shake the Head at and Derided David there saying He trusted in God that he would deliver him let him deliver him seeing he delighted in him All which was Prophecied and more fully Accomplished in this Mystical David here who Trusted in or rolled himself up on God Hebr. and who delighted in God and God in him Mat. 3.17 17.5 and not only would have delivered him above all according to his Promise call upon me in time of trouble and I will deliver thee Psal 50.15 If God will do this for his Servants in General how much more for his own only best beloved on in special had it now been consentaneous to the Counsel of his own Wisdom N. B. Note well but did also indeed deliver him when he had paid the Decreed Ransom at his Resurrection which was a greater Deliverance than that from the Cross could have been notwithstanding all that you Sir Priests did to Secure him c. Mark The Seventh Sacerdotal Scoff was For he said I am the Son of God this gall'd those wicked ones most of all for the Doctrine of the Godhead of Christ is the very Rock and Foundation whereupon all Believers are builded therefore the Devil and Reprobate ones do Rage against it Those Wicked Wretches do offer to believe this great Truth indeed but it is upon condition they may have such proofs as themselves prescribed to wit of coming down from the Cross c. N. B. Note well But such as will not believe upon such ground of Faith as God had given shall not have such grounds as they require All his matchless Miracles such as never any Man did John 9.32 were now nothing to them if the would not gratifie their present demands and except he would save himself at their Directions they will look upon his saving others to be no better than a Cheat N. B. Note well Whereas the truth was his not saving himself was the appointed expedient for his saving of others nor will they look upon his Faith in God no better than a fancy of Man if this prosperity lasted not so long as his Life and if God did not now deliver him from Death as if his trust were vain if he were suffered to die upon the Cross Not knowing that the Way to the Crown was by the Cross Mark The Last of those Mookings was from the Malefactors that were Crucified with him Mat. 27.44 They cast the same in his Teeth and Mark 15.32 They also Reviled him both these Evangelists do intimate that at the first both these Thieves were Mockers of Christ and therein they were more to blame than the People because they were Fellow Sufferers with him and so should have had some more commiseration of him from the sense of their own Misery N. B. Note well But this reviling is fixed upon one of the Thieves only Luke 23.39 who railed on him saying Save thy self and us from this Death inflicted upon us by the Roman Power if thou be the King of the Jews or the Son of God 'T is probable this was the Speech of the bad Thief and the good Thief being silent a while seemed to give consent by his silence to his Fellows Railing but when he heard Christ's Prayer for his Enemies notwithstanding their outrage against him especially seeing that three hours Darkness a Miracle and of those seven Miracles wherewith our Lord honoured the Ignominy of his own Death both these in Conjunction with his own present Affliction which God was pleased so far to sanctifie to him as to make his Heart mallable and tender c. did cause him to break out into that brave Confession worthy to be Written in Letters of Gold Luke 23.40 41 42 43. N. B. Note well Or the Speech They Railed on him might be Synecdochical the Plural for the Singular it being usual in Scripture to speak Plurally in instancing of something done by one of that sort So this is said to be done by both which was by one only N. B. Note well The Thief that Railed had an hard Impenitent Heart and his Misery upon the Cross c. took no more Impression upon him than doth the Smiths Hammer upon cold Iron No torment will tame a Reprobate neither Ministry nor Misery nor Miracle nor Mercy will mollifie him here but when at the very Mouth of Hell and just stepping over the Threshold thereof he dares blaspheme God and Mock him who is the Saviour of Mankind and that without the least Provocation offered to him on Christ's part he was justly condemned for Robbery yet had a Scoff to cast at Innocent Jesus who was unjustly Crucified N. B.
10 18. He gave up the Ghost thus commended into his Fathers Hands by Prayer and this Golden Sentence that drop'd from the dying Mouth of our Dear Redeemer in his last Breath is Recorded only by the Evangelist Luke which still farther Demonstrates how necessary it is to have an Harmony of all the four Evangelists without which we cannot have a full History of our Lords Passion and Death seeing what Circumstance thereof is omitted by any one Evangelist the same is all along seasonably supplyed by another Now when Christ had wrought and was working of seven Wonders upon the Cross wherein all Creatures could co suffer with their Creator a Crucified Christ for the Sun was Eclipsed the Heavens were Darkened the Earth Quaked the Rocks Rent asunder the Graves opened and the Vail of the Temple did dwindle away yet all this time of all other Creatures only Miserable Man would not Co-suffer with Christ though for Man only it was that Christ suffered And when Christ was speaking the last words he had to speak before his Death this Sentence was the last of the last And this last is also borrowed out of the Book of the Psalms as his my God my God c. before said was to shew the Congruity betwixt the Literal and the Mystical David the former being the Father and the Figure of the latter as the other Eli Eli c. was drawn out of Davids Quiver Psal 22.1 So is this last word out of Psal 31.5 where David in great distress commits his Spirit to God and here Christ commends his Spirit to God This Denotes how our Lord loved to Dig in Davids Delf and to Dive into his depth in deriving those sayings from the Psalmist to shew the fullfilling of the Scripture and the Symbolizing of the Type with the Antitype though with some small difference in this last for 1. David Literal was but the Adopted Son of God but David Mystical here was the Natural Son of God 2. David Resigns up his Spirit to his Redeemer that is to Christ our only Redeemer the Lord God of Truth that alone Redeemeth us But Christ here Resigneth up his Spirit to his Natural Father 3. David uses the word Commit but here Christ useth the word Commend which difference of the Verbs may admit of this Criticism things of small value may be committed to the Trust of a Keeper and commonly are so though they cannot be highly commended for any Intrinsick worth in them being only of common commodity and usefullness as ordinary Vessels of Wood Stone Glass or Clay Such an one was David as compared with Christ David saith of himself what profit is there in my Blood in the very Psalm before this Psal 3●● but Oh the unspeakable profit that is in the Blood of Christ the Blood of God Acts 20.28 Not the Blood of a meer Mortal Man but of that God-Man the Lord Jesus Therefore it is called the most pretious Blood 1 Pet. 1.19 and in the Blood as in a Vehicle is the Life of the Body Gen. 9.4 Levit. 17.11 Now as Christ's Body was of the Finest and most Refined Temper of Mankind being purposely fitted by the Father for uniting with the Divine Nature Psal 40.6 7. Hebr. 10.5 So his Soul that Particle of Divine Breath that Animated such a prepared Body must needs be the most precious Soul in the World And if the Soul of Man in general be of more worth than the whole World as Christ himself who best knew the worth of a Soul because he only paid down the full price of a Soul plainly declareth Matth. 16.26 Then assuredly the Soul of this our Redeemer which he was to powr out as an offering for sin Isa 53. to and which was to pay the price of Redemption for all the Souls of the Election all Ages of the World must needs be of a most prodigious value and a most Inestimable Jewel This is that precious Gemm which our Dying Jesus here commends to his Father which Teacheth also that his Soul did not Descend into Hell the place of the Damned for he immediately commends it into his Fathers Hands c. had he gone down to Hell Luke must mention it but not one word of this Acts 1.1 yet of all else c. and to Teach us what we ought to do in a dying Hour 'T is a standing Duty Incumbent upon all that fear God to commit their Spirits to Gods Keeping all the Days of their Lives as David did Psal 31.5 and to commit their Souls to God as to a Faithful Creator in all ways of well-doing as Peter Requireth 1 Pet. 4.19 Those that can thus commit their Souls to God while living may most comfortably commend that most precious Jewel the Soul to God ●hen dying as Christ did here CHAP. XXXIV Seven Signs of Christs Triumph THE Sixth Grand Remark is the seven Signs of Christ's Glorious Triumph over even his most Ignominous Death at that Juncture of Time when his State of Humiliation was at its lowest Ebb in its last Accomplishment As Christ's seven last words had a kind of coincidency with his seven last Wonders in some particular Branches So likewise those seven Signs of Christ's Triumph over Death while yet he did Hang upon the Cross have an Happy Coincidency with both his last words and his last Wonders and therefore little more than a bare Narrative of them need be added here save only a Discourse in brief upon the first and the last of those Seven which have not been at all touched upon before These seven Signs are these 1. The Title upon the Cross of Christ Jesus of Nazareth the King of the Jews Mark the Over-ruling Hand of Almighty God That this very Title of Christ's Crime should stand unalterably in these very Terms when the Chief Priests c. did use their utmost Indeavours for the Alteration of this Inscription John 19.19 20 21 22. Though those Priests could prevail with Pilate to pass the Sentence of Condemnation upon Jesus contrary to the conduct of his own Conscience yet can they not with all their Rhetorick c. perswade him to alter this Inscription But stands stiffer in this without any yielding than he had done in Condemning Christ for popular Applause But he who pleased the People in that will not please the Priests in this saying what I have Written I have Written it was as unalterable a Superscription as if it had been the Law of the Meeds and Persians a Decree not to be changed Dan. 6.8 whereas indeed it was the unchangeable Decree of Heaven that it should stand thus for the Great God by whom all Men Live Move and have their Being Acts 17.28 Thus guided Pilate's the proconsuls Hand and Governed his Heart both to write this Title and to Ratifie this writing against the Priests Minds And Pilate wrote this Title to the Hebrew Greek and Latin that all People out of every Nation flocking to Jerusalem at this Paschal
his Candlestick c. Oh that we could cry to Christ Now if ever now or never before it be too late Vespera jam venit nobiscum Christe maneto Extingui Lucem nec patiare Tuam The Day is far spent and the Night is at hand c. The Night of Trouble is already come and how near the Night of Death is we know not Oh leave us not sweet Saviour Jer. 14.8 9. But if we grow cold and careless of the Gospel as Luke 12. v. 47. or dare to live in known sins as Ezek. 8.6 c. Christ will pack up his All and be gone if we lament not after the Ark as 1 Sam. 7.2 6 If we do not repent of our Sins and then do not take faster hold of Christ also as these two Disciples do here And as Jacob did long before and would not let him go without a blessing he had then let his Flocks and his Herds go his wives and his Children go when in his wrestling he said I will not let thee go Gen. 30.26 Thus likewise when the Lord told Moses that he would not go himself with Israel but turn them over to the Conduct of a Created Angel that himself might no longer be vexed with that stiff necked People Exod. 32.34 and 33.2.3 Moses will not lose his Lord so easily but cries out Lord let me die upon the spot here rather than that thy presence should not go with us c. Verse 12 15 16 17. wherein he challengeth God with his promise made Exod. 23 20. That God the Son that Angel and Lord of Angels might go along with them although the Justice of God the Father could not bear them nor forbear from destroying them He cannot be content to live or stir without some visible signs of God's gracious presence Oh that we were in such a holy frame of heart in all our Undertakings and Removals 'T is now become absolutely necessary for us to do as the People did who sought Christ out in a Desart place therein was their Faith they came up to him therein was their Hope and stayed him that he should not depart from them therein was their love to him Luke 4.42 If ever we have tasted how good the Lord is Psal 34 8. what a sweetness there is found in his gracious presence c. we cannot carelesly let him go as the indifferent World do that never tasted any good 1 Pet. 2.2 The 3d Remark is He went in and tarried with them and made Himself known to them in breaking of bread c. Luke 24.29 30 31. If we have but tasted the sweetness of Christ and of the Breast-milk of the Gospel and cannot be quiet without it even the Sincere milk of the Word of God but cries to Christ with good Abraham and like sons Daughters of old Abraham My Lord If now I have found savour in thy sight pass not away I pray thee from thy Servant Gen. 18.3 do not depart with thy Gospel from us for by these good things we live and herein is the life of our Spirits saith holy Hezekiah Isa 38.16 could we but Court Christ aright with both Fervency and Importunity as did the widow such an one is the Church if her Lord and Husband depart from her by a bill of Divorcement Luke 18.3 4 5 6 7. He would be prevail'd with to tarry as here and Matth. 15.22 to 29. Christ had no purpose to deny that woman's request who would not be said nay either by silence or sad Answers but at last grants her the Key of his Treasury and bids her go into it and please her self with any Mercy that she wanted c. So here he had no purpose to pass away from these Disciples though he made a shew of it by his posture not by his speech yet this was only to try their Affections and to prove how they prized his presence which once being demonstrated he went in and supped with them c yea turn'd their Supper into a Sacrament as the Romanists would have it to palliate their Dry Eucharist of Bread without Wine c. but it is most apparent to the contrary for an Inn was no proper place for it nor would Christ administer it to such persons as yet knew not who he was able or not able to minister it Nor would our Lord cross his own Rule in giving it to persons who had not examined themselves first 1 Cor. 11.28 nor made any preparation for it seeing Christ did not give any intimation that he was going about such a Celebration and for ought we know other Guests Supped with them in the Inn which could not be worthy Receivers N.B. Beside Christ never gave this Sacrament but once and that to the Twelve only now these two being of the 70 Disciples so had never seen him Administer that Ordinance could not possibly know Him by Breaking Sacramental Bread as Romanists say which they never saw before Indeed they had often seen his Customary practice in Blessing the Table and Breaking the Bread for common natural refreshment and though this were no more seeing moreover Christ used not here the words of Institution of the Holy Supper Take eat this is my Body which Romanists call the five words of Consecration for Transubstantiating the Bread into his Body N.B. Yet was it an extraordinary Priviledge to have Christ's presence in his glorified Body even at an ordinary Supper Happy are we when He will vouchsafe us his blessed presence at our common Meals but more happy shall we if we gravel with Christ●● Company the who●e Day of our Lives in this lower World then at the Night of Death we shall be sure to sup with him in a De●●r World●s for so hath he promised us Luke 22.20 The 4th Remark is Christ made himself known to them 't is not said By breaking of Bread but in breaking c. Luke 24. v. 35. Nor is it said By a Form of thanksgiving that he constantly used Nor was it by working any wonder at the Table as some ●ay He broke the Bread so smooth and even as if it had been cut with a knife c but the particle in doth not denote the Cause But the Time to wit while he s●t at Table with them then was the Time when that which held their Eyes from knowing him hitherto was removed then the Lord opened their Eyes at the beginning of the Supper Which teacheth us 1. That we should never dare to eat unblest Bread c. 2. And to account it an high Divine favour that we have the free use of our senses How may our lives beheld as theirs was to hinder us from discerning one another And 3. That Christ may be present with us at Bed and Board at Home and Abroad and yet we may not be able to discern Him or his presence c. The 5th Remark is He vanished out of their sight not as a Spirit usually doth though it was a Spiritual Body
yet our Saviour tells him he looked upon all the good or evil done to his Members as done to himself And 2 The Lord reclaims him with a Proverbial speech borrowed from stubborn Oxen or Slaves whom Men used to prick on to their work with Goads c. which being obstinately spurned at did usually wound their Spurnets shewing hereby that such Kickers against the pricks of the Law Deut. 32.15 and 1 Sam. 2.29 do it to their damage and deadly detriment Much more such as are Kickers against the pricks of the Gospel How much sorer punishment do such deserve c. Heb. 10.28 29. N.B. As this should teach Persecutors Moderation so must it teach the Persecuted Patience knowing that the evil which evil men do will recoil on their own heads Persecutors do but provoke God who is more potent than the most powerful persecuting Potentate to lay a more crushing load upon them and to batter them down by a more fatal blow 1 Cor. 10.22 Jer. 7.19 c. whereby the Innocency of Christ in his Members may be vindicated N.B. Thus our Lord had knocked down this Persecutor here to the Earth and he seconds his Blow with these Rebuking words By this time Saul laying all along groveling upon the ground became humbled and docible his foregoing Question Who art thou Lord were words of one doubting yet desirous to learn and somewhat disposed to believe In his Who art thou he acknowledged his Ignorance yet in calling him Lord this was a word of Faith It was a sign of some feeble inclinations toward Believing Saul lay still but a little while humbled under Christ's mighty hand then moves he his second Question with trembling and astonishment Lord what wilt thou have me to do Acts 9.6 Oh what a strange change is apparent here wrought by an immediate and omnipotent hand of Christ How soon is Saul altered from himself he is now not only another Man as his old Name-sake King Saul was 1 Sam. 10.6 but as it were a quite contrary Creature not a Wolf as before but now a Lamb. The Wolf that had hainously hunted and hideously howled for catching his Prey now gently couches here like an harmless Sheep yea and which is more admirable is become both willing and desirous to hear the Voice of the Shepherd He that had been so violent to oppose is now made a Volunteer to obey the Gospel of Christ and he that thought he had done God good service John 16.2 in persecuting Christ now offers himself as Rasa Tabula a white Paper for Christ who had now rased or scraped out the depraved principles of his mistaken Zeal to write the Divine Principles of his Evangelical Law upon the Tables of his heart his heart was now in the hand of Christ and was as a Rased Table out of which his Raging and furious Phrenzy against the Gospel was well wiped off and now 't is made a Marble Monument Ingraven with Christ's Graving-Tool the lively Pourtraiture of Saving Grace N.B. 'T is not What shall I say but That shall I do We may sooner find a fire without any operative heat and a burning Nature than a true Convert without a lively heart and a working grace The Mark in the forehead of one whose name is writ in the Lamb's Book of Life is that he willingly and speedily inquireth after his Lord's Will that he may do it 't is not the talking but the walking and working person that is the true Christian indeed Such an one crys with converted Saul here Lord Reform me of my sins Inform me of thy Will and Conform my will and way to it N.B. The Lord's Answer to Saul's second Question was Arise go into the City and it shall be told thee what thou must do Here be three remarkable parts in this Answer The First is Saul is bid by his Lord to Arise He was knock'd down and fallen to the ground by the Lord's Power but now hath he not only the Lord's leave but Life also to Rise again Christ did not strike Saul down to confound him but to convert him His heavy Revengeful hand could have done the former Psal 2.12 so have made him to perish in his way of wickedness but his gracious and compassionate heart did the latter that he might become a Monument of Mercy upon Divine Record to all Generations 1 Tim. 1.13 14 15. Saul did but fall to rise again Christ thus smites him to heal him who otherwise would have smitten Christ in his Members to have wounded himself against the pricks he kick'd at This was a favourable though an affrighting stroke that did strike down with a design to raise up again N.B. Why should we not humble our selves under that hand which hath therefore cast us down when a very little time is over Isa 10.25 to lift us up again Should we lay still that little time N.B. Secondly Go into the City He was going to Damascus before at the Devil 's bidding but now he hath the Lord's leave and Law for it Why he rose not up the same Man as when he fell down for he fell from a Wolf a Saul a Persecutor but he rises again a Lamb a Paul a Preacher c. As he had now a better Authority to go thither than was his Commission from the High-Priest so he had now likewise a better Errand It was not now for other's destruction but for his own instruction N.B. So it follows Thirdly Ananias though he was taught immediately by Christ himself Gal. 1.12 must be his Teacher whose Destruction he designed but now whose Instruction must be accepted Thus Christ honoured his own Ordinance here and Acts 10.3 6. Neither did Christ Read a Lecture of Redemption unto Saul here nor the Angel to Cornelius there but both are referred to Preachers that the Ministry and the use of Gospel-means which are call'd the power of God unto Salvation Rom. 1.16 might be commended thereby N.B. The Fourth Remarkable Circumstance is the Testimony or Witnesses of Saul's Conversion to wit the Men that Journied with him Acts 9 7. 'T is evident he carried many Companions with him such as were base Bailiffs and busie Pursivants or Sergeants by whom he was designed by the Sanhedrim to bring both Men and Women that profess'd Christianity bound to Jerusalem verse 2. which was a fuller Aggravation of his Sin to involve others in the same guilt and provocation of God N.B. 'T is said that those Fellow-Travellers of Saul saw indeed the Lightning and heard the Thunder and were struck astonished thereat yea struck down with Saul to the ground Acts 26.14 And though they heard a Voice here that is a confused Noise or an Inarticulate Sound as of Thunder yet did they not hear that Articulate Voice of Christ that spake so powerfully so convincingly and so convertingly to Saul Acts 22 9. Thus it was in a parallel case The People are said to hear that Voice which spake to Christ from Heaven yet
Tim. 3.16 even from that God who cannot lye Tit. 1.2 and they knew also that truth alone and not error is able to abide that Divine Test Those only are false Wares which need a dark Shop wherein to put them off to the too Credulous Chapmen N.B. They did all this laudable work in the way of Religion yet were not still truly and throughly Religious and Regenerated but were yet unconverted for after all this it is said of them verse 12. Therefore many of them believed both Jews and honourable women of the Gentiles and of men not a few N.B. Upon all those to whom God had given this preparation of the Heart in Attentive hearing in serious pondering and comparing with the Scripture what they heard c. God blessed his own Gifts he had given them and their improvement of the Talents bestowed on them and he gave still more unto them to that which they had according to his promise whosoever hath to him it shall be given Matth. 13.12 and 25.29 namely such Talents of Nature and providence which he hath received from God for imploying and improving in a way of practice but if persons prove lazy idle and negligent herein then their Right-arm and Right-eye which they seemed to have Luke 8.18 shall be dryed up and darkned Zechar. 11.17 the rust of whose Riches shal rise up against them James 5.3 God oft withdraws those gifts which he hath given to persons when they do not use them for God's Glory and the good of their own and others Souls the great ends for which we are betrusted with those Talents N.B. We are even in the faln Estate betrusted with some liberty in external Acts such as are resorting to Gods Ordainances hearing and reading his word c. and our indeavours ought to be Answerable in the use of this liberty would we lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness and receive with meekness the ingrafted word which is able to save our souls James 1.21 we may find the Lord's hand not shortned but his word as powerful and piercing as ever it was to those Noble Bereans but if we hide our Talents with the bad Servant we cannot expect that Spirit of Sanctification which the Bereans found The third Remark is That Humane prudence and policy is lawfully Subservient to Divine piety It was an High Piece and Point of prudence in their not sending Paul the nearest and direct Road to Athens but round about by the Sea from avoiding the danger from those that lay in wait for his life 'T is written then immediately the Brethren sent away Paul to go as it were to the Sea Acts 17. verse 14. yet those that conducted him and had undertaken to secure him from those murdering Jews brought him to Athens verse 15. This was pious policy to make towards the Sea-side as if Paul had designed to take shipping and be gone out of those parts quite away This was pretended and the rumour of it was reported abroad to hinder the malicious Jews from pursuing him any farther whereas a Journey to Athens in the same Countrey was really intended and it may well enough be supposed that Paul's implacable Adversaries pressed Horses to purs●● after him towards Athens but Paul gave them a fair go-by by his taking the long Circumference round about towards the Sea on foot in the by-foot paths that he might disappoint his pursuers by his going on foot to Athens Tho' Silas and Timotheus stayed at Berea still not only because they were less maligned than Paul but also because they had some Kins-folks in Macedonia N.B. Thus our Lord doth allow as much of the Serpent as of the Dove in us in his saying be wise as Serpents and harmless as Doves Matth 10.16 17. The Sagacity of Serpents may be imitated in our Christian prudence so far as it consisteth with the Dove's Innocency Piety without policy is too simple to be safe and policy without piety is too subtle to be good Christ would not have his sheep so simple as to stand still and let the Crows stand upon their backs and pull off their wool from their sides There is a Sanctified subtilty and sagacity in foreseeing evils and hiding from them Prov. 22.3 we may not willfully cast our selves upon the needless dangers a Serpent's eye is a singular ornament in a Dove's head Our meekness must be mixt with wariness that it way be the meekness of Wisdom James 3.13 As we may not be crafty Foxes on the one hand to deceive others c. So nor must we be dull Asses that couch under every burden without necessity on the the other hand The Dove without the Serpent is easily caught and the Serpent without the Dove doth sting most deadly The Dove never provokes the Hawk nor projects revenge yet when pursued saves it self if it cannot by fight yet by flight as Paul did here c. Now come we to the fourth Station of Paul in Greece lying in Europe which was in Athens as before in Philippi Thessalonica and Berea Thus the Providence of God over-ruled all the Devil's-mischievous attempts to suppress the Gospel so as thereby the Gospel was much more spread abroad from one City to another until at last it came to this famous University The Relation of Paul's fourth Station which was at Athens hath two grand parts First the Resolves of it And Secondly The Remarks upon it First The whole Narrative hereof Admits of this Analysis or Resolution What Paul acted at Athens may be thus resolued First There is his preparation to preach there wherein we may consider the causes moving him thereunto which were twofold External and Internal for beside the opportunity of a large Auditory and such as were learned yet inviters of him to preach as they had an Itch after Novelties and were curious Inquirers after News these were outward motives there was also another cause more inward namely the Divine Zeal of this Blessed Apostle who beholding the vain Superstition and abominable Idolatry of that famous and learned City could not bear it nor restrain himself from declaring the vanity of it verse 16 17 18 19 20 21. Secondly The Sermon which Paul preached consists 1. Of an Exordium or Preface and Prologue wherein he useth a pious Insinuation for Captivating the Ears and Hearts of his Hearers to attend diligently unto his discourse verse 22 23. 2. Of the Principal Proposition that the True God is only to be worshipped and tho' as he granted they did worship the true God among their Idols as to the matter of worship yet did they do it after a false and vitious manner therefore doth he make known this their Vnknown God to them by declaring to them God's Attributes and his works of Creation and Providence obviating an objection drawn from their fore-fathers Ignorance as also by putting them into a dread that even that same Christ who was crucified should become the most dreadful Judge of Quick