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A64249 Moses and Aaron, or, The types and shadovvs of our Saviour in the Old Testament opened and explained / by T. Taylor ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632.; Jemmat, William, 1596?-1678. 1653 (1653) Wing T567; ESTC R10533 252,302 330

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be a prayer of faith that is available Jam. 5. 15. If to good works and good life it must be a life of faith led by faith for the just must live by his faith If to the Church of God he must be of the houshold of faith else he shall be but as Judas among the Disciples Faith must be every where diffused to walk by faith live by faith and die in faith as the Saints in former ages have done for our imitation 3. We must hold on this expectation on our Serpent as the Israelites did till they were perfectly cured And because we can never be perfectly cured in this life but onely in part we must still look up to Jesus the Author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12. 2. till we be fully and perfectly healed Hence it is that the Lord will never have this Brazen Serpent taken down as the other was after a short time but hath appointed the Ministery to lift him up and hold him perpetually before our eyes so long as we are here below and enjoyned us the constant use of it all the while we are in this wildernesse which were needlesse if we had once attained our perfect cure This is a strong motive to hold our eyes fast fixed upon Jesus Christ till we come to enjoy him as he is when all Ministery shall cease and the Lamb shall be all in all Sect. VIII From this so excellent a figure ariseth a bright Sun of light and comfort for all the faithful 1. The Israelite that could look to the Serpent if his eye were never so tender weak or dim yet was cured Thou that art the weakest believer be comforted thy weak faith shall save thee thy smoaking flax shall not be quenched but cleared to farther brightnesse Thy weak hand shall be able to receive and hold the gift of righteousnesse and eternal life It is not the greatnesse of thy faith that saves thee but the truth of it Yet with this caution If it be true it will strive to encrease And if there be so much comfort in weak faith how much is there in strong 2. The Israelite stung never so often if so often he did look on the Serpent so often he was cured Oh singular comfort Thou that renewest thy sins every day and every day goest over the same frailties renew also thy faith daily and thy repentance and thou art safe That brazen Serpent lost his vertue of healing but our Brazen Serpent never loseth his If thou sinnest seventy times seven and so many times returnest by faith in Christ and say It repents me by this looking upon the brazen Serpents all those wounds shall be cured Yet with this caution That as he had been a mad Israelite who because there was a Serpent set up to cure him would therefore run of purpose among Serpents to be stung by them So is he no lesse witlesse a Christian who therefore willingly makes his sin abound because grace hath abounded A mad man he is that will therefore break his head or wound his members because he hath a soveraign plaister by him 3. The Israelites stung never so deadly never so desperately never so long wounded yet looking on the Serpent were cured If thy sins be as red as scarlet and never so great if in thy sense some one of them deserve a thousand hells and the guilt of it or them rings continually in the eares of thy conscience frighted with feares of hell and death if thy sins be festered and of long continuance Now come to the Brazen Serpent Never was any Israelite that could look on the Serpent sent away uncured But there is ten thousand times more vertue in Jesus Christ than in ten millions of brazen Serpents onely look on this Serpent by the eye of faith turn from all thy sins and be saved 4. The Israelites looking on the Serpent brought present cure and ease and they went away rejoycing If thou believest in Jesus Christ thou art perfectly cured As Christ was wont to say to his Patients so I say to thee Goe in peace Thy faith hath made thee whole Onely this grace can quiet the heart distressed and can keep it from sinking as once it did Peter Mat. 14. 29. In this is the beginning and accomplishment of thy happinesse The converted Gaolor went away rejoycing that he and his house believed Act. 16. 34. Now if one sight of faith in this our absence from Christ be so joyful a thing what shall the sight of fruition doe in his presence 5. The Israelites having once the brazen Serpent cared not for the fiery Serpents They might sting them now but not much hurt them they might now poyson them but not kill them So the believer looking to the true Brazen Serpent may triumph over the old Serpent and all the serpentine seed and say as the Apostle teacheth 1 Cor. 15. 55. Oh sin where is thy sting Oh hell where is thy victory Nay Thanks be to God who hath given us victory by our Lord Jesus Christ. Great was the power of the Israelites looking upon that Serpent for when the fiery Serpents were present it made them powerlesse and not hurtful Greater is the power of faith in the Lord Jesus which though our sinnes in themselves are most venomous and poysonful stings and such as we cannot be rid of them yet it so blunts them and makes them so powerlesse that they kill us not nay that they hurt us not nay more that they help us and make us better more humble more wise more watchful Thus our good God who out of the most infinite curse of Christ his Son on the Crosse brought forth to us the most infinite blessing which fills heaven and earth doth out of our cursed sins bring forth his own glory joyned with our greatest good For which as for all other his unspeakable mercies unto us be praise given in all Churches and from henceforth to all eternities Amen FINIS J. Lambert Martyr Epist. ad Romanos 1. 2. Rom. 10. 4. Cont. Jul. 9. De cibis Jud. c. 5. Cont. Faust. Advers Jud. Heb. 13. 8 John 14. 6. Heb. 11. 2. Eph. 4. 5. M. Min. Fel. Octav. Rom. 11. 26. Ludov. Coeretus 1553. Christ the truth of legall shadows Introduction to this Treatise 1. 2. 3. 4. Sacramenta sunt mutata non sides August 5. God appointed a multitude of ceremonies to the Iewes for 5. reasons 1. Velata sunt ista done● aspiraret dies removerentur umbrae Aug. 2. Grace in the new Testament specially how Ceremonies called shadows for 4. reaseus 3. Non ex opereoperato 4. Use of them to the Iews 5. Gods wisdome in appointing them The generall division of this Treatise Adam a type of Christ in four things 1. Uterque ad imaginem Dei conditus uterque Deo charissimus 2 Primus ecclesiae doctor audiens immediate a Deo quae ecclesiae erant proponenda ita et Christus 3. 4. Use
honoured think it too base for thy self to attend for thy sonnes to intend Neither the first Adam Lord of the earth nor the second Adam Lord of Heaven and earth did so II. To note the antiquity and authority of the doctrine of free grace by the merit of the Messiah which both the first and second Adam taught neither of them ever dreamed of the doctrine of workes and humane merits What Adam learned of God in Paradise he taught to his posterity what his posterity heard of him the same they delivered and left to their children but they never heard nor taught any other way to salvation but by the promised seed so also what the Disciples heard of the second Adam that they taught to the Churches but they heard the same of him Act. 4. 12. And our doctrine being the same with theirs is not new but more ancient then any other For as this is the honour of all truth to be before error and falshood so of this truth to have precedency of all truthes It truely pleadeth antiquity therefore verity III. In that the Church comes out of Christs side being in the sleep of death as Eve out of Adams he sleeping we learn to seek our life in Christs death That death should be propagated by the sinne of the first Adam was no marvell but that life by the death of the second is an admired mystery Here is the greatest work of Gods power fetched out of his contrary of ranke poyson a soveraigne remedy by the most skilfull Physitian of hearts Let the Jewes scorn a crucified God and refuse the life offered by a dead man they know not the Scriptures nor the power of God who can and doth command light out of darknesse life out of death all things out of nothing How easily can he repaire all things out of any thing who can fetch and frame all things out of nothing He is of power to make of clay and spittle fit to put out the sight a remedy to restore sight He can as easily save a world by the death of his Sonne as multiply a world by the sleep of Adam IV. Labour to be ingrafted into the second Adam that as thou hast born the image of the earthly so thou maist bear the image of the heavenly 1 Cor. 15. 49. 1. Because the second Adam repaires whatsoever we lost in the first By the first we are enemies to God by the second we are reconciled to him By the first we all dye by the second we are all made alive 1 Cor. 15. 22. By the first we are left to Sathans power by the second we are guided by the spirit of God By the first we lost all the Creatures by the second we are restored to the holy use of all By the first a necessity of death is brought in Heb. 9. 27. it is appointed for all men once to dye and then commeth judgement but by the second we have a recovery of the blessing of immortality and life Whatsoever the first Adam brings into the world by sinne the second carries out by his righteousnesse 2. Because by Christ the truth we recover more than we lost or ever should have by the Type For so the Apostle Rom. 5. 16. the gift by the second Adam hath exceeded the offence of the first That as the first Adam by eating the forbidden fruit hath powred all evill into the souls and bodies of all men though they eat not of the forbidden tree So the second Adam by regeneration is made righteousnesse to those who had wrought no righteousnesse and powred all good things into the souls and bodies of his members The first Adam by sinne helps us into misery but the second Adam not onely helps us out of misery but advanceth us to the highest dignity to be of sons of wrath sons of God brethren of Christ members of his body heires of the kingdome of heaven By Adams sinne we are all driven out of Paradise and earthly pleasure in which we should have enjoyed an inconstant happinesse but by Christ we are brought into the heavenly Paradise our Fathers house By Adams sinne we became unjust but by Christs holinesse we are not just onely but sanctified graced confirmed glorified into whom by faith we come to be ingrafted CHAP. III. 2. Noah a type of Christ 7. wayes THe second instance is Noah a manifest type of the true Noah and that in seven respects I. Both were fore-prophesied of to be Saviours Gen. 5. 29. Lam●ch begat a son and called his name Noah saying This shall comfort us concerning our workes and sorrow and curse of the earth therefore he called him by a name signifying ceasing or rest So of Christ Mat. 1. 21. thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people He shall be the true Noah that shall cause Gods wrath to cease and bring the afflicted soule to true rest and tranquility II. Both are said to be just and perfect both said to walk with God and both to finde grace and favour with God 1. Noah was just in his generation So was Christ have nothing to do with that just man saith Pilates Wife Mat. 27. 19. But with difference Noahs righteousnesse was imputed being righteousnesse of faith Heb. 11. 7. Christs was inherent a righteousnesse of nature person and heart 2. Noah was a perfect and upright man Gen. 6. 9. that is not defiled with Idolatry false religion opinions or externall crimes but Christ was perfect simply and absolutely Noah but comparatively Noah was perfect but in part Christ perfectly perfect Christ Legally Noah Evangelically Noah perfect by the perfection of another Christ by his own Noah perfect because without open crime Christ being without sinne 3. Both walking with God found grace with God Noah Gen. 6. 8. Christ Luke 2. 40. 52. But Noah found grace by acceptation and imputation Christ by compleat merit and satisfaction Christ found grace by his own perfection and justice but Noah cloathed with Christs III. Both of them were Preachers of righteousnesse But Christ preached his own doctrine Noah Christs Both invited unto repentance Both called men to avoid the Judgement to come Both lived and preached in a most corrupt age when there was a generall defection both in doctrine and manners Both their Ministeries were despised and that despight of both fearfully revenged the one by water the other by fire and sword both by utter desolation as the like never heard of before IV. Both of them makers of an Ark and Masters of it But Noah of a materiall Christ of a spirituall the Church Noah to save sinners from the deluge of waters temporall Christ to save sinners from the deluge of Gods wrath eternall In the making of their Arkes they are very like 1. Both doe all about their Arkes at Gods commandement For as the Lord did not hide from Noah his decree Gen. 6. 13. So he
that if any died by a Nazarite casually and suddenly though he could not avoide it he defiled the head of his consecration he must be shaven and come and offer a Lamb for a trespass offering and then begin his vow againe Wherein the Lord shewes that he will not endure any sinne in his servant though not willingly committed nor intended if it be but casuall or by happe and stirres up thereby our watchfulnesse against all even the least sinne and urgeth the shunning of the least touch of dead works Jude 23. hate even the garment spotted by the flesh 2. He must study the Law of the Lord to grow in knowledge and conscience Men deceive themselves that think there be no students but those whose profession is learning contrary to Psal. 1. and Joh. 5. 39. III. He must avoid intemperance surfeting drunkenness strongly watch and ward against naturall desires against the allurings and baits of sinne remove impediments of faith and godlinesse strive both against inward corruptions and outward occasions How many of much hope by the immoderate desires and use of these outward things have besotted themselves It is to be doubted that the delicacy of this age affords but a few Nazarites IV. He must restrain his passions and affections in the use of every thing about him use every thing weanedly as not using it not suffering any thing to steale our hearts from us for then we can hardly moderate our selves in the parting from it Nazarites in all changes must be unchangeable in their profession so must Christian Nazarites V. When he hath done all in his generall vow and course of holinesse he must retain humility bewaile his wants confesse how unprofitable he is in his service The Nazarite that hath gone through his vow in the best manner in giveing it up must bring a burnt offering and a peace offering confessing his wants and craving acceptance so must we in our best strife and indeavours present our duty with that burnt offering and peace offering made by Jesus Christ and in that onely seek and find acceptance CHAP. XVI Clean persons Types of Christ. THe fourth ranke of holy persons pointing us unto Christ were such persons as were cleansed from any legall uncleanenesse The person legally uncleane were of severall sorts and every sort had his severall sort of cleansing all of them looking towards and leading us to Jesus Chuist To give some taste in some particulars Legall uncleannesse was caused 1. From without by touching or tasting 2. From within as unclean issues 3. From within and without as Leprosie Order requireth that we should speake I. Of the severall uncleannesses II. Of the severall cleansings Sect. I. I. The kindes of legall uncleanenesse were three I. The first kind of legall uncleanenesse was by eateing or touching any uncleane meat or creature Levit. 11. 11. and 28. Qu. How did the creatures become uncleane which God had made good Answ. The Law of distinction of meates was not therefore ordained because those creatures were evill in their nature for God saw all his workes very good but prohibited onely in their use Neither doth the Lord pronounce them uncleane by their creation but by a temporary institution which restrained their use and touch Object It seemes they were so by creation for before the ceremoniall Law there was a distinction of clean and unclean in Noahs time Gen 7. 2. Answ. It was before the writing of the ceremoniall Law but not before the being of it it being delivered to Adam and his posterity by Gods lively voyce Besides by that institution they were forbidden onely for sacrifice but by this forbidden for common use and food yet still cleane in their owne nature Qu. But how can these creatures defile a man and that of our Saviour be true Mat. 15. 11. That which goeth into the mouth defileth not the man Answ. Now under the Gospel whatsoever goeth into the mouth defileth not in respect of lawfull and limited use And under the law it was not the creature that defiled but the transgression of Gods institution in it In the begin-God permitted all other trees to Adam onely restrained him in the tree of knowledge of good and evill which therefore ceased not to be good of it selfe but became evill in Adams use because of the commandement not the apple not the eating were in themselves defilements but sinful eating against the commandement Qu. But what ends or reasons were there of this prohibition of meats Answ. Very many 1. To shew the Lords soveraignty over his creatures who hath liberty to permit or forbid any creature at his pleasure without impeachment of himselfe or the creature he may do with his own as he will 2. To teach all persons to depend on God and his word of allowance for and in the use of all things even for meats and drinks and all comforts seeing man liveth not by bread but by every word of God 3. To traine up his people in temperance and obedience by restraining them so many creatures in earth ayre and sea as good as any other 4. That his people might professe open detestation of the heathenish superstition about them The AEgyptians took for gods oxen sheep goats doves God will have his people sacrifice these to his service and eat those creatures which they out of their heathenish superstition might not touch The heathens used to offer many kinds of beasts to the Moon the Queen of heaven and to Bacchus God will have his people detest both in sacrifice and meat those which they so offered all to shew how contrary we ought to be to Idolaters in whatsoever we may 5. To distinguish that people of God from all the nations God esteeming them by his grace in the Messiah a clean people and all other unclean And this was a wall of partition between Jewes and Gentiles till Christ by rending the vaile brake it down also as in Peters vision Acts 10. 15. 6. The Lord by this difference of beasts would have them conceive a difference of persons shadowed thereby of whom some are clean some are unclean the former being elect arè cleansed by faith from their pollution of sinne the other remaine foule and filthy still Quest. How shall we know the cleane from the uncleane Ans. 1. The clean are known by the two common marks of clean beasts Lev. 11. 3. 1. They divide the hoofe that is rightly distinguish of things between nature and grace between Moses and Christ between the Law and Gospell truth and falshood They will not receive things in gross and hand over head but being spirituall discerne all things 1 Cor. 2. 15. 2. They chew the cud that is after hearing and reading the word they meditate ponder apply and digest it as Mary laid up the words in her heart Luke 2. 19. 3. The uncleane are known by some naughty and unclean property Some like the dogs that prophane the most
Lev. 14. 8 9. Sect. V. I. The first meanes of purging Legall uncleanenesse is washing which shadowed out the washing of the sinner in the laver of Christs bloud all the water in the sea cannot wash away the least sinne that great work is appropriated to the bloud of Christ 1 Joh. 1. 7. the bloud of Jesus Christ his sonne cleanseth us from all sinne Rev. 1. 5. Who loved us and washed us from our sinnes in his bloud which bloud is opposed to all legall washings Heb. 9. 9. Object Levit. 11. 44. This washing is called a sanctification Answ. Sanctification is twofold 1. By the outward sign 2. By the inward truth They by washing symbolically and in outward profession by these rights sanctified themselves but thereby beleevers were led to the internall truth and the laver of the bloud of Christ. All this washing then leades us to the bloud of Christ by which is meant his whole passion and obedience by the merit whereof he hath procured both remission of our sinnes and mortification of them And herein is no small resemblance 1. Washing is an applying of water to foule parts so in the cleansing of sinne must be a speciall application of the bloud of Christ called Heb. 9. 14. the sprinkling of Christs bloud upon the conscience Which is nothing else on Gods part but the imputation of Christs sufferings to us and on our own part the application of them to our selves by the hand of faith 2. In Washing is a rumbling and scouring off of uncleannesse which will not easily off and in some foulenesse they must wash often for the surenesse of the work noting the paines and true indeavour of the repentant heart in mortification and afflicting it selfe It is well contented with any beating and wringing so he may fetch out the staine of sin which sticks as close as his flesh to his bones 3. The unclean party was to wash himselfe that is his whole man and every part which noteth totall sanctification in the whole man and all parts and members that the washing may be as large and general as the foulenesse is For whatsoever part is not washed by Christ hath no part in Christ which made Peter say not my feet onely Lord but mine hands and head 4. In the foulnesse of Leprosie he must wash againe and againe to note that after our justification by the death of Christ we must look to a second washing of sanctification by his spirit And because we have still washing work with us we must be still washing our selves by daily labour in our own reformation This was more lively signified in that other ceremony added to washing in the Leper that he must shave his haire againe and againe signifying the paring away of superfluities and lusts as fast as they grew and a voluntary departing from his own secret corruptions which were as many as the haires of his head and no lesse rooted in him that well he might shave and loppe them but he was out of hope quite to unroot them as long as he lived He must keep them under but cannot be ridde of them He must shave the first day and the seventh day and resist his lusts which daily grow upon him as haire cut quickly growes againe 5. The unclean person must wash his clothes as well as himselfe signifying that wee must part with all impurity even the least at least in endeavour cherishing none favouring none He must hate the very garment spotted by the flesh all occasions and appearances of evill esteeming the least spot of sinne foule and filthy enough And all this is requisite in purifying of the soule I. Labour against the smallest sinnes Be not a mentall adulterer banish unchastity in the eye and mouth avoid wanton company as did Joseph that of his Mistris Thou art no drunkard or great swearer but art thou a companion of such not reproving them No Papist but a friend and patron as seeing no great harme in their superstition No Atheist but a scorner of the persons and doctrine of godly teachers what dost thou but foam out thy own shame If thou shouldest keep thy selfe never so pure but partakest in other mens sins thou art unclean This reproveth Magistrats who though they themselves come to Church yet suffer others in time of divine worship to lye in streets houses fields openly c. prophaning thus the day of the Lord which is to be kept holy to our God Or if they be ordinary abettors of idle persons and gamesters by example This brandeth Ministers openly pleading for durnkards and hatefull blasphemers This defileth masters parents husbands that suffer their families to run into prophaneness or ryot II. In all these touches goe to the fountaine opened Zach. 13. 1. Every Jew had his water-pots to keep water for daily purification Joh. 2. 6. but now the house of David and Jerusalem that is all the godly have a fountaine opened by the death of Christ. We must every day be washing and cleansing our selves in that fountaine from all filthinesse of flesh and Spirit Sect. VI. II. The second meanes of purging legall uncleannesse is oblation or offering some attonement to the Lord this directly leads us to Christ. For howsoever an unclean person must wash himselfe and his clothes yet no Jew could make an attonement for himselfe but this was common to all uncleannesses legall the Priest must make an attonement for the unclean person For all uncleannesse in generall Lev. 16. 30. In speciall for uncleannesse in touchings Numb 19. 4. In issues Lev. 12. 8. and 15. 15. In leprosie Lev. 14. 53. Noting by the way that all that we can do cannot make attonement for the least spot of sinne Let us wash our selves as often as Naaman in Jordan yea let us take snow water to us and wash our hands most cleane yet our owne clothes will make us foule and God will plunge us in the pit if our Lord Jesus the high Priest of the new Covenant make not attonement for us A fit note against all humane satisfaction and merits The offering for the Legall uncleannesse by touching was done by the sacrifice of a red cow and the sprinkling water made of the ashes of that red Cow prescribed by God to this purpose Numbers 19. called water of expiation That all this ordinance typified Christ to the Jewes the Apostle expresleth Heb. 9. 13 14. when from the bloud of this red Cow he leads us to the bloud of Christ saying If the bloud of bulls and goates and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling them that are unclean sanctifieth as touching the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the bloud of Christ purge our conscience from dead works wherein he not onely compareth but infinitely advanceth the truth above the type For 1. that was symbolicall and figurative this spirituall and substantiall 2. That was eternall and temporary this internall and eternall 3. That
upon the unclean person the third and seventh day and so he washing his clothes and flesh with water was clean at even ver 18 19. Signifying 1. That the bloud of Christ is the onely water of separation for persons separate to separate them from their uncleannesse The water made of the ashes of Christs death and bloud-shed sprinkled upon the unclean can onely purge the conscience from dead works 2. That this bloud of Christ must be sprinkled with hysope of faith and mortification For hysope hath a cleansing quality and is put sometimes for that which onely and properly cleanseth purge me with hysope that is with the bloud of that eternall sacrifice figured by that which is sprinkled with hysope 3. That this bloud of Christ must be often applied the third day and the seventh day The death and merit of Christ must be often meditated and applied to the heart For it is a perpetuall and eternall purging and sprinkling water in the Church and we must have daily recourse unto it I. That the Lord hath appointed meanes for cleansing all kind of impurity 1. That his people and we might know that by no infirmity and frailty we shall fall quite out of the grace of God 2. That the Lord takes not the forfeit of all the scapes and foule falles of his children utterly to forsake them seeing the Jew that was legally polluted seventy times seven times was as often received in againe as he was cleansed according to the purification of the sanctuary 3. That we should not despaire nor the weak Christian be quite dejected in the sence of the multitude of his frailties and foule touches seeing the Gospel affordes us the remedy and meanes to cleanse all morall uncleannesse no lesse certainely and fully than the Law to the Jews to purge their legall II. As the Jew was no sooner defiled by touching a dead man or bone or grave or tent or any thing about him but he must presently repaire to the meanes of legall cleansing So every Christian defiled by the least touch of any dead work must have recourse to the remedy appointed in the Gospel The Law appointed the water of the ashes of a red Cow but the Gospell appoints the red bloud of Jesus Christ sprinkled and applied by faith as by hysope upon the conscience Consider 1. The necessity The person defiled not having this sprinkling upon him shall be cut off from Israel vers 13. So whosoever hath not the bloud of Christ sprinkled upon his soule shall be cut off from the number and inheritance of the Saints Mar. 16. 16. he that believeth not shall be damned 2. Every sin is a separation from God who being a God of pure eyes cannot abide the filth of it and therefore we had need continually to have this water of separation for the washing of our hearts daily and often every day because it is gathering some uncleannesse every hour yea every moment 3. An unclean creature or vessell could not be of any service to man for he must not touch it till it be cleansed So a sinner so long as he is unclean and impenitent cannot be of any good use nor present any acceptable service to God And therefore the Prophet Isa. 〈◊〉 Wash you and cleanse you and then come No man dare present any thing to a King with a foule hand the Lord will accept no such present 2 Cor. 6. 17 18. touch no unclean thing and I will receive you and be a father unto you Implying that the Lord will not receive him that any way communicates with sinne if obstinate and impenitent 4. Nothing else can recover our beauty and first estate of holynesse and happinesse but this laver A cloth once soiled never recovers the beauty and whitenesse but by washing This laver onely brings back a white and unspotted innocency All the holy water in the Sea of Rome cannot wash one sinne for that hath no commandement no institution no promise Besides all legall Ceremonies are dead which in their life time could not cleanse by the meer deed done as they say theirs doth 5. How vaine is it to see men and women curious and carefull in washing their bodies and clothes they will not suffer the least spot on them but wash them weekly and yet go on year by year in the soule defilements of sinne and never desire to be washed and rinsed in the water of separation nay nothing more troubles them than to be called to reformation A cleanly man will have his clothes washed weekly but his hands and face every day A cleanly Christian will not be lesse carefull of his heart III. Seeing there was so much businesse in legall cleansing of the least foulenesse how carefull were the Jewes to avoid those foulnesse and how much more should Christians be to avoid the morall 1. In themselves A good heart will be affected with the least touch of sinne as David to cut Sauls lappet and to avoid the least appearance as well as evill it selfe 2. From others For the Jew might be impured from others as well as by himselfe We must not communicate in other mens sinnes 1 Tim. 5. 22. The just man bewareth not onely sinne it selfe but even the contagion and infection of sinne Watch thy selfe as privie to thine own weaknesse and thy adversaries subtletie and strength Watch against other sinnes as being beset with snares Resolve with good Jacob Gen. 49. 6. Into their secret my soul shall not come This strict watching is counted commonly foolish precisenesse nicety hatefull purity but God esteemes it otherwise It is an apparant losse of mens favour preferments and worldly helps but he onely findes the favour of God and the happinesse to see God Sect. VII The oblation for unclean issues leading us to Christ is appointed Lev. 15. 14 15. In this 1. What foules must be prepared for the offering Two Turtles or two young Pigeons and so for the womans vers 29. Of the clean kind of birds signifying and resembling the purity of Christs humane nature Besides his innocency simplicity meeknesse chastity charity fruitfulnesse of all which virtues these Doves were expresse Emblems 2. What was the use of these foules 1. They must bring them to the Priest No man must offer his own sacrifices but must present them to God by Christ the onely high Priest 2. They must bring them to the doore of the Tabernacle for publick service must not be privately performed and figured our entrance by Christ the doore 3. One must be made a sinne offering the other a burnt offering The sacrifices were types of that onely sacrifice of the Sonne of God our Redeemer performed upon the Altar of his Crosse for the expiating the sinnes and foule issues of the whole world In them both 1. What they were 2. What were the ceremonies about them 1. The sinne offering was a sacrifice in which the whole beast or bird was not
Jacob when he intended evill intreaty towards him 2. He can turn their counsel to folly and bring it on their own heads as in Haman Architophel 3. He can turn their evill to thy good salvation according to the saying of Joseph to his brethren Ye intended evill against me but God turned it to good as this day 4. He can take them off at his pleasure he hath a hook for Zenacherib and Balaam shall not curse though he would never so faine 3. In that Christ brought no unclean thing to his sacrifice figured in pulling out the maw and feathers and casting them besides the Altar in the place of ashes we have comfort in the offering of all our service and sacrifices of prayer praises almes duties all unclean in and from us but presented in Christs sacrifice no uncleannesse is in them II. How carefull the Lord is that his people preserve purenesse among them that the holy God may walk amongst an holy people And teacheth how carefull we Christians should be to cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh spirit 2 Cor. 7. 1. And that we should be ever stopping up those unclean issues which disturbe our chastity of body or mind which these legall issues specially ayme at Oh this chastity of mind and body is a singular grace For 1. It stands with the will of God 1 Thes. 4. 3 4. This is the will of God even your sanctification and that every one possesse his vessell in holinesse and honour 2. It stands with the nature of God which is most holy and pure God is a pure chast Spirit and will be praied unto with a pure and chaste heart How can foule fornicators and adulterers think that their praiers can get into heaven and themselves shut out 3. By holinesse and chastity of mind and body thou becommest a Temple of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 6. 19. Without which thou art no better than a swine-sty fit for foule spirits and devils that delight in uncleannesse to harbour in 4. It stands with the honour of the body which 1. is for the Lord that is created for the glory of the maker 2. The Lord is for the body namely to redeem it so as the body also is a part of Gods purchase 3. The Lord is the head and the bodies are members of Christ. Oh what a great wickednesse as Joseph calls it Gen. 39. 9. to make it a member of an harlot 5. Follow holinesse and chastity without which thou shalt never see God either in grace or in glory Heb. 12. 24. What makes the harlot so sottish so gracelesse in the middest of powerfull meanes but that their hearts are taken away Hos. 4. 12. Gods plague hath already seised upon them in great part for they cannot see God in grace offering repentance and therefore they shall never see him in glory Now the best directions for stopping these running issues are I. Direction Begin at the fountaine labour for inward purity first For 1. Whence issue these but from a wicked and impenitent heart 2. God looks first at the cleannesse of the heart knowing that if he find that unclean nothing is clean 3. Morality and cleanliness make a man care for the cleanness of his face but grace and religion make him look to the cleannesse of his heart Jer. 4. 14. Because he knowes that no beauty of the face can allure a man so much as the cleannesse of heart allureth 4. Get grace into thy heart and it cannot choose but send out as Christ saith According to that which is within According to the abundance of the heart the mouth will speak the eye will look the hand will work the foot will walk Get thy heart purged and washed and it is impossible that thy life should be foule 5. In vaine do men struggle and strive to cast off some wast boughes of sinfull actions if they seek not to strike up the root Thou wouldst avoid oathes and lyes in thy tongue but shall never do it while thou hast a swearing and lying heart Thou wouldst avoid fornication and adultery in the act in the eye in the speech but never shalt thou stop this issue if thou hast an adulterous heart And so in other sinnes Quest. How may I cleanse my heart Answ. Cleannesse of the heart is in two things 1. Justification by the bloud of Christ imputed and applied Joh. 15. 8 10. 2. Sanctification by the Spirit which stands in two things 1. In parting with our filthinesse as evill thoughts pride hypocrysie stubbornnesse mallice in a mortification of all inward lusts 2. In attaining a new estate in all the inward faculties a planting and cherishing of all graces Thus as our Saviour saith he that is washed is all clean II. Direction From the foundation come to the streames If the heart at any time be inflamed with the fire of concupiscence and begin to boile over stay the issue with all expedition Quest. How Answ. 1. Covenant with all thy parts that none of them shall fulfill the lusts of the flesh Specially covenant with thine eye as Job with thy tongue not to name any filthinesse as it becommeth Saints Eph. 5. 3. With thy hand not to execute any inordinate desires 2. Threaten thy members that thou wilt pluck out thine eye cut off thy hand and foot rather than by them offend God and thy conscience If this will not serve beat down thy rebellious members as Paul with labour 3. Direction Avoid occasions of defilements by the unclean issues of others so did the Jews As 1. Come not near unclean persons 2 Cor. 6. 17. Avoid swearers drunkards gamesters wantons Proverb 4. 14. 2. Avoid the seat they sit on A place of shorter rest Psal. 1. 1. Blessed is he that sits not in the seat of wicked men Lev. 15. 6. 3. Shunne the bed they lye on Lev. 15. 5. A place of longer rest with them as one delighting in their fellowship and tumbling with them in filthinesse 4. Beware of their spittle v. 8. words are cast out of the mouth spittle Neither assent to their speeches and perswasions which are still against God nor be dismaied from good things by their threats and reproaches This filthy froth and spittle daily pollutes many that are carelesse to avoid it Object Alas it is impossible then to avoide unclean issues I cannot but daily and hourly touch some filthinesse unlesse I run out of the world and from my selfe Sol. 1. Therefore as the woman having the bloody issue thrust in daily to touch the hemme of Christs garment Mar. 5. that his bloud may heal thy bloudy issues 2. As seeing need of daily mercy to true watch joyne prayer as Hezekiah 2 Chron. 30. 18 19 20. The good Lord be mercifull to him that is sanctified although net according to the purification of the Sanctuary And the Lord heard him So will he thee where he findes a true endeavour after
is the same in both and the faith of believers the same in substance onely differing in the manner of exhibition and publication A man that superficially looks over the books of Moses and sees so great an heape of ceremonies and ordinances would wonder what the Lord meant to enjoyne so many and as reason would judge so needlesse institutions to his own people of which they can make nothing by cursory scarce by considerate reading and hence whereas the Jews were so superstitiously observant of the books of Moses as that they had at their fingers ends a great number not of the precepts onely but of the letters and pricks of every book and chapter Christians unlesse it be in point of history almost reject the books of Moses not for their credit and truth but for their utility and use as not touching them But to him that readeth and considereth will appear 1. How truely our Saviour affirmeth Joh. 5. 46. that Moses wrote of him partly by promises and prophecies and partly describing him in figures and shadowes so as had the Jewes believed Moses they had also believed in him but rejecting Moses not in the generall for generally they believed him and magnified him as their greatest Prophet but in the special prophecies and promises concerning the individual person of Christ therefore they could not believe in Jesus Christ. 2. How aptly and wisely the most wise God did accommodate himselfe to this people in loading them with so many burthensome ceremoniall constitutions and yet not one of them in vaine For 1. Consider the nature of the people it was rude and dull and needed corporall and externall elements and rudiments to help them Besides it was not onely naturally superstitious and addicted to idolatry but had lived some Centuries of yeares in Egypt and was infected with Egyptian rites And further they were now to go into the land of the Canaanites and were in danger to learn their fashions Deut. 4. 16. And therefore the Lord would prescribe to their whole life both in sacred and civill things abundance of Ceremonies whereby their senses should be exercised their faith excited their obedience preserved and themselves restrained from devising on their own heads or appointing to themselves any other worship or form of service than that of the Lords owne prescribing which should find them work enough and take up their minds sufficiently 2. If we look on the many kindes of rites and ordinances and compare them with the many ends which the Lo●d had in ordaining them we shall conclude none of them were idle or superfluous For 1. God would have the glory of Christs Kingdome shadowed and his own religion gloriously propounded and reverently received not exposed to any contempt and therefore appoints the erection and sanctification of a stately Tabernacle with all the costly vessells and holy persons garments 2. He would traine up that people in piety and stirre up in their hearts an earnest sence of sinne and hunger after mercy and this he will do by appointing so many kinds of sacrifices and rites about them 3. He would frame them to purity and sanctimony of heart and life and will help them hereto by the many lavers purifications cleansings and sanctifications of which we have heard in part 4. He would nourish naturall love among his people and for this end appointes many feasts meat and drink offerings and many solemnities to appear and rejoyce before God 5. He would have them testifie their thankfullnesse for his great bounty and acknowledge themselves homagers as was fit And therefore ordaines a number of oblations first fruits tithes vowes first-born and many moe institutions to testifie their gratitude 6. Many of Gods great works must be held in their eyes and must not be suffered to slip out of memory And for this purpose served many of those institutions As Deut. 6. 20. when thy sonne shall aske thee in time to come c. For this end the Passeover must be yearely celebrated Exod. 12. 14. and Chap. 13. 14. So also the feast of Tabernacles Lev. 23. 42 43. 7 The Lord so ordered as the Jewes could not cast their eyes any way within doors or without but some shadow or other should meet them and preach unto them either Christ or some grace by Christ or some duty unto Christ. In the fields they had first fruites first borne of cattell In their houses the lintels must have the Law written In their bodies Circumcision was a teacher on their cloathes fringes If at their tables choyce of meats If on their children the first borne a type of Christ. So for times places and the rest But that we may propound to our selves some good order and familiar method in which we must bound our discourse We must know that all the holy things in the old Testament pointing at Christ were 1. Substantiall 2. Circumstantiall Substantiall are such as concern the parts and substance of Gods worship Circumstantiall are such as concerne some inferiour things about that worship The former may be referred to two heads 1. Sacraments 2. Sacrifices The difference In Sacraments we see God giving us all good things in Jesus Christ. In Sacrifices we present all our duty to God by Jesus Christ. Now for the Sacraments of the old and new Testament in generall we must in one word know that they are outward signes seales and confirmations of Gods word and promise of grace For the Lord knowing and tendering the weaknesse of man would informe him of his good will and pleasure two waies 1. He would speake to his minde and understanding by his word and promise 2. To his outward sences by externall signes and Sacraments called by some of the Fathers visible words He is not contented by his word to declare his will but also by Sacraments to witnesse and signe that word for our more full instruction If before the fall he covenanteth by his word life upon condition of works he addeth a twofold signe to the sences of Adam the tree of life and the tree of knowledge If after the fall he give a promise of the blessed seed Gen. 3. 15. he enjoyneth to Adam outward sacrifices and signes of that his Word If to antient believers before Christ he promise deliverance from sinne death and hell on condition of faith in the Messiah to come he sealeth up this promise by two standing Sacraments Circumcision and the Passeover If to believers of the new Testament he accomplish in his Sonne all those ancient promises and now preach salvation to all that believe in the name of Christ crucified dead buried raised ascended and sitting at the right hand of his Father as Joh. 3. 16. This promise he confirmeth with two Sacraments Baptisme and the Lords Supper as speciall seales of his grace Thus is the Lord still like himselfe in all ages and provideth fully for our direction and consolation for our strength and assurance in
upon the Crosse wherein the Circumcision of Christ was fully accomplished 3. Was shadowed their duty also that having shed the first fruits of their bloud in Circumcision in obedience to God they should be ready to shed all their bloud for him whom they expected to shed all his bloud for them 3. A distinguishing signe of the Jewes from all other people who were without God without Christ and they onely a chosen seed in that blessed seed in whom all their prerogatives were conferred and established 4. A demonstrative signe 1. Of the naturall sinne and disease of man and therefore it was placed in the generative part to admonish Abraham and his posterity of their uncleannesse for things clean need no Circumcision nor ablution Abraham and his seed must be led out of themselves 2. To demonstrate the cure and remedy by the Messiah to come cleansing our natures two waies 1. By bearing upon himselfe the imputation of our impurities 2. By healing them in us partly by his merit and bloudy death bestowing a perfect righteousnesse upon us partly by his Spirit daily sanctifying and circumcising our hearts thus hath this Sacrament preached Christ unto us Now the observations to make it usefull 1. Take notice of our own estate to humble us both in state of nature and in state of grace 1. In our nature we are all sprung out of a corrupted seed which although we would forget yet the Lord in this Sacrament took care that his people should carry upon their bodies the signe of sinne and death seizing upon their whole nature In place of which comes our Baptisme presently after our birth shewing that a man in his very first frame is filthily polluted and goeth astray even from the womb Psal. 58. 3. Whence also it is called Originall sin 1. Because it hath been from the beginning of the world 2. Because it is the originall and beginner of all sinne in us it is the first of all our sinnes 3. From our beginning even from our conception Psal. 51. I was conceived in iniquity and we from it called the childeren of wrath that is laid under wrath even from our childhood Eph. 2. 3. 2. After grace received see the weaknesse of our faith Abraham the father of the faithfull needed this pledge and seale to support his weak and shaking faith Who can say my faith is strong enough which is ever imperfect in the best who know but in part and believe but in part Why else did the Lord appoint the use of Sacraments to the strongest believers and that all their life long but to put them in mind of the weaknesse of their faith which needeth such continuall props and supports Neither is it marvel that men are so heavy to the reverent receiving of the Sacrament because they see no want no need no benefit of faith they feel not the weaknesse of faith which would breed desire of strength and drive them to the diligent use of the meanes II. If Christ be the truth of Circumcision then every Christian in the new Testament must be circumcised as necessarily as the Jewes in the old And though the ceremony and act of Circumcision be worn out yet the truth of circumcision as neerly belongs to us now a dayes as of old it did unto them In whom we are circumcised through the circumcision of Christ speaking of the Gentiles converted unto Christ. In which words the Apostle plainly distinguisheth between Jewish circumcision and Christian between Legall circumcision and Evangelicall between Moses his circumcision and Christs Here 1. What this Evangelicall circumcision is 2. The difference from Legall 3. The marks and notes of it 4. The motives This Christian Circumcision is described Col. 2. 11. to bee a putting off the sinfull body of the flesh that is in plaine tearmes the mortification of the body of sinnes that are in the flesh For the truth and kernell of Circumcision never stood in the cutting off a piece of skin that was but the shell of it but in cutting off the lusts of the heart life parting from corruptions of nature which rebell against the Spirit And this we have in Christ alone being as farre beyond the Circumcision of the old Testament as the truth useth to excell the type as farre as Christ is beyond Moses or heaven above earth This renovation of mind was 1. Signified by that Ceremony 2. Promised by every Circumcised person The difference between this Evangelicall and that Legall Circumcision is 1. In the efficient That was appointed by God to be made with hands but this is a wonderfull work without hands done by the finger of God himselfe The mortification of sinne is so honourable a work as the hand of man and Angels cannot do it 2. In the subject That was wrought upon the seed of Abraham according to the flesh this onely upon Abrahams seed according to the faith upon believeres and members of Christ. That upon the Jew without this upon the Jew within That upon Ismael as well as Isaac here no Ismaelite is circumcised That was Circumcision of the naturally born and males onely of Jewes onely this is of the supernaturally born againe male or female Jew or Gentile for in Christ all are one 3. In the proper seat That was ceremoniall in the flesh this morall in the heart In that a natural part was wounded in this the very corruption of nature That dealt with flesh in substance this with the body of flesh in quality 4. In the end In that every man was circumcised in himselfe and his bloud shed to fulfill the rite of the Law In this all believers men and women are in Christs bloud once circumcised to fulfil the rigour of the Law 5. In the effect By that the person was received into the society of Gods people according to externall profession by this the sinner is received into inward and eternall fellowship with God and into communion with Gods people 6. In the latitude or extent In that the Priest circumcised in one part of the body in this Christ our high Priest circumciseth the whole man In that one beloved part was cast away with griefe and sorrow in this the whole corruption of nature and all beloved sinnes with no lesse griefe and sorrow of heart for them 7. In the durance and continuance That was temporary but till the coming of Christ who razed the type and raised the truth but this is to continue for ever till the second coming of Christ and is most perfectly finished and consummate in heaven The notes or markes to know inward circumcision attained by Christ are these 1. The party to be circumcised was presented and offered to this ordinance of God as willing and contenttd to part with his flesh and bloud in obedience to God so here thou hast begun thy circumcision if thou hast offered up thy soul body and all a
reasonable sacrifice to God Rom. 12. 1. willingly mortifying all the deeds of the flesh and denying and renouncing all fleshly lusts and affections which are as neat and as dear unto thee as the parts of the body So Col. 2. 11. it must be a putting off the sinnefull body implying not a suffering it onely to be violently taken and cut away but a voluntary putting away and parting with it Indeed in legall Circumcision the infant could not cut away the flesh of his body but in Evangelicall Circumcision thy selfe must put off this sinnefull body of flesh and be more than a meer patient 2. As there the whole body was wounded in one part so see the whole body of sinne be wounded in all parts not one member spared Col. 2. 11. put off the sinnefull body No sinne must raigne none unresisted And therefore 1. Labour for an heart circumcised There the Lord begins this work Deut. 30. 6. and Chap. 10. 16. there see thou hast begun See thy desires be sanctified that the thoughts of thy heart and inward affections be watched and guarded not suffered to be earthly wanton impious disordered or unfruitfull This purging of carnall affections and fastning them on the right object is a note of inward circumcision Deut. 30. 6. 2. See thine eare be circumcised Act. 7. 51. the Jewes are reproved for uncircumcised eares All sinnes of the eare must be circumcised and that is done in opening them to hear God and good instruction and shutting them against slanders false tales wicked counsels doctrines of liberty and the like 3. Circumcise thy lips which then are so when they are able to speak for God Moses in Exod. 6. 12. complaines that his lips were not enough circumcised All the sinnes of the tongue must be cut off This circumcision admits not a lie an oath a slander a deceitfull or filthy or unclean speech unmortified 4. All sinnes of the eye must be circumcised by making Covenant with this member not suffering the eye to be envious covetous wanton scornfull adulterous And so examine all the parts that no sinne be peaceably admitted without drawing bloud upon it as was in circumcision 3. As in that Circumcision was sence of much paine and griefe in the body as we see in the Shechemits Gen. 34. 25. So in this where ever it is is affliction of conscience pain of spirit pricking in the heart as in the Converts Act. 2. 37. which makes the circumcised mourn and cry out of himselfe judging himselfe and breaking his heart with godly sorrow for sinne The Priest could not take the knife and cut off the piece of flesh without paine and sorrow of the child Neither can the Minister take the sharpe weapon of the Law to wound and cut the body of flesh in any part but it will be painfull and sorrowfull to the child of God who will judge and condemne himselfe and dares not stand out the threats of the Law as many contemptuous rebels do An hard and secure heart is an uncircumcised heart good Josiah will tremble at the word but all Gods words and plagues stirre not Pharaoh 4. As that part cut off was never set to the body againe but was taken quite away for ever So in this circumcision of Christ is not a parting with sinne onely for a time but a ceasing of sinne that is a constant endeavour to forsake all sinnes inward outward secret open A parting from pleasing profitable deare and bosome sinnes saying to them as Ephraim to his idols Hos. 14. 9. get ye hence what have ye to do here with resolute purpose never to give them entrance or entertainment more Those that fall to their former sinnes as who forget they were washed like dogs and swine were never circumcised The skin once cut off died for ever such a dying to sinne must be in this circumcision 5. In that was a joyning to Gods people and a receiving of the party into the Church and family of God See if thou beest joyned to Gods people not in outward profession but in sincere affection embracing them that feare God delighting in their society giving them the right hand of fellowship and with the hand the heart separating from the fellowship of the uncircumcised and prophane as the Jewes medled not with the Samaritanes Doest thou professe circumcision and grace by Christ but oppose and pursue the professours of Christian religion as Ismael him that was born after the promise A plaine signe all thy circumcision was made with hands Thy body was washed with water of Baptisme but thy heart is unwashed untouched with any water of saving grace 6. In that was a joyning and admittance to the outward worship of God and externall communion in all holy things so here thou art become a true worshiper not outwardly in the letter and ceremony but inwardly in spirit and truth A Jew within Rom. 2. 29. Phil. 3. 3. We are the circumcision which worship God in the spirit He that worships formally for fashion for Law and in the mean time can contemne the power of godlinesse cannot away with inward watchfullnesse sincerity strictnesse though by Baptisme he be brought to the externall communion of the Church in holy things all is but in the letter without all circumcision of the heart 7. In that was much rejoycing as in a great priviledge and the Jew did much boast and beare himselfe upon this prerogative partly upon the externall worke partly on their distinction by it partly because it manifested them sonnes of Abraham according to the flesh and much was their praise among men But true circumcision rejoyceth not in Abraham but in Christ hath no confidence in the flesh but renounceth all outward things and settles his rejoycing in Christ alone and his merits counting all other things dross and dung in comparison of him Let the Jew trust in Circumcision by the work wrought as our Judaizing Papists do in their Sacraments Let him glory of Abraham his father Joh. 8. 33. that he is beloved because the seed of Abraham We are chosen in Christ not in Abraham In him we have atonement and become a beloved people and not in Abraham In him we come boldly to the Throne of grace and speed in our suits In him we glory all day long We trust not in good meanings as simple ignorant persons nor in merits as wilfull blinded Papists nor in any thing within us nor without us nor without Christ. All our joy and trust is in himselfe alone And this is the true inward Circumcision Phil. 3. 3. The Motives are 1. All outward service and Ceremony without this is rejected as preaching hearing praying fasting weeping All thy service and labour is lost if by the Spirit of God thy mind be not renewed and faith and conversion wrought in the heart For as the Jewes being circumcised were chalenged to be uncircumcised though they had the fore-skinne of the flesh cut off and had the
Because he covered himself with a Serpent when he first stung and deceived mankind 2. He is more subtle than any Serpent crafty to insinuate and deceive 2 Cor. 11. 3. 14. 3. As a Serpent dwels and lies among thornes bushes bryars and feeds upon dust so the devill reigns in the thickets and bushes of worldly cares and lusts and feeds upon worldings exercising his chief power against them 4. As a Serpent casts out of his mouth venome and poyson so the devill casts out nothing but virulent words against God and his Saints and spewes out after the Church a flood of poyson to drown her How he blasphemed Job how he is the accuser of the brethren how of the head Christ himself the Scripture declares 5. As a Serpent is cursed above all beasts so is the devill The first cursed creature in the world was this Serpent and hath ever since remained the cursed head of all cursed rebels and wicked ones to whose custody and condemnation they shall all be gathered in the last day Mat. 25. 41. goe yee cursed c. 2. Why called fiery Serpents Answ. 1. From their colour Through abundance of poyson they had a shining and glistering skinne and they seemed as if they had been made of fire A resemblance we have in our Snakes that seem to shine and sparkle against the Sun 2. From their effect For with their sting they infused such poyson into the bodies of the Israelites as stirred up in them an outragious heat and fire Now these diseases are most painful and so tormentful as if a wild-fire were in the bowels feeding upon the bones marrow and members 3. From their end 1. Because they were appointed by God and after a sort inflamed and kindled with desire of revenge of the Lords wrongs and they so fiercely assaulted the Israelites as if a raging and devouring fire had seised upon them which no way they could avoid 2. That in their punishment they might be admonished both what a fearful fire of Gods wrath they had kindled by their sin against themselves as also that they had deserved a more fearful fire in hell to seize upon their whole man everlastingly 3. Why stinging Serpents Answ. To imply unto us 1. That sin is the sting of this old Serpent even a poysoned sting that he hath thrust into all mankind But with this difference in that this poyson is far more general and the wounds infinitely more mischievous than were those of the fiery Serpents For 1. They stung a few Israelites but not all but this Serpent hath stung all mankind none excepted 2. They stung the bodies onely but these souls and bodies also 3. They stung one part of the body this Serpent all parts and whole man 4. They to a temporal death this to an eternal 2. To imply that sin is the sting of a fiery Serpent 1. Set on fire with wrath and cruelty and desire to poyson and destroy us Rev. 12. 17. 2. Setting on us with fiery darts For so his temptations are called Ephes. 6. 16. for three reasons 1. From the manner and custome of souldiers in times past which cast poysoned darts the poyson of which inflamed the wounded bodies and made the wounds incurable As now many out of desperate malice poyson their weapons and bullets to make sure with their enemy So doth Satan by all meanes poyson his darts to speed the Christians soul. 2. Because as fiery darts they inflame and kindle in the heart all manner of burning lusts and sinnes one of them being but as a spark or firebrand to kindle another 3. Because they leave for most part a cauterized and seared conscience behind them as if they were burnt with an hot iron which makes the sinner stung senslesse of his wound Whence is another miserable difference between the stung Israelite and the stung sinner The former was alwayes felt with grief and pain but this often not felt and so more desperate 3. The effect of this stinging was death in many And so the effect of sin is death in all The stung Israelite had death in his bosome and no other could be expected so the guilty sinner is stung to death In his nature is every man the son of death and can expect nothing but death every moment And as the stung person in the wildernesse had no meanes in himself nor from others to avoid either the Serpent or death from it till God appointed them the brazen Serpent So the poor sinner was destitute of all help in himself and others till the Lord appointed Jesus Christ the promised seed to break the Serpents head There is given no name else whereby we must be saved Act. 4. 12. First Note hence how deceitful are the pleasures of sin It is as a sweet poyson Job 20. 12. sweet in the mouth but poyson in the bowels What wise man would drink a draught of poyson for the sweet taste of it Wicked men hold sin as a sweet morsel but sour sauce follows it Secondly What little cause we have to love our sinnes for that is to love our own bane Prov. 8. 35. He that sinneth against me hurteth his own soul and all that hate me love death No sin but the more pleasing the more poysoning the more delicate the more deadly Sin never so much disguised never the lesse deadly Thirdly That sinners are but dead men while they live 1 Tim. 5. 6. An Israelite stung was but a dead man So although the reasonable soul in a sinner makes him a man yet the want of the Spirit of grace makes him a dead man Death waits upon sin as the wages on the work and hell upon death that comes before repentance Fourthly A fool he is that makes a mock of sin Who would play with a deadly Serpent or make a jest of his own death or drink up the poyson of a Serpent in merriment or cast darts and fire-brands about him to burn himself and others and say Am I not in sport See Prov. 26. 18. and 10. 23. and 14. 9. Oh that we could discern our wounds as sensibly as we are certainly stung It would make us run to God and get Moses to goe to God for us and pray that these Serpemts and painful wounds might be removed If we saw death as present and as ghastly in our sins as Israel did in their stinging we would hasten our repentance and seek after meanes of cure Sect. II. The Remedy is First prescribed Numb 21. 8. Secondly applied vers 9. Thirdly in the same verse is the effect they recovered and lived So then in the Remedy are 1. Ordination 2. Application 3. Sanation or Cure I. The appointing hath First the person appointing which was God himself who devised it and prescribed it to Moses for God will save onely in his own meanes So God himself so loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son c. Joh. 3. 16.
Superiour suppose it never so mischievous they must fly up on it without question asked So as if one of them were talking with an Angel if his Superiour call him he must instantly come away Yea if the blessed Virgin vouchsafe her presence to one of the brethren if his Superiour call him he must presently break away from her and obey him as he writes to the brethren of Lusitania and a thousand such To what end name I these follies but by Popish and wicked superstition to condemn our heavinesse in Gods Commandements They must shut their eyes of reason and discretion to obey their Superious We must dispute all in our obedience which ought to be absolute Their wicked commandements must not be laid in any scales to be weighed We will weigh all Gods Commandements in our own false ballances and so they become too light and unworthy of obedience 4. There is not the most heretical doctrine or opinion that ever was that found not Patronage and protection in the corrupt reason of man Not to speak of damnable Arrians or Nestorians or mad Manichees come to the heresie that now reignes and see the truth hereof in it Quest. Why hath the leaven of Popery spread and soured the whole lump of the Christian world and enlarged and fixed it self in all Countries for so many hundred yeares that even in Countries above a hundred yeares reformed it gets round and neither severe Lawes can master it nor time cast it out Answ. Surely because it is a devise of humane reason upholding humane reason and upheld by corrupt reason which first set it up See it in parts and in whole First for the parts 1. Seemes it not good reason to choose defend and stick unto our forefathers religion for so the old Idolaters thought Jer. 44. 17. they would still sacrifice to the Queen of heaven because their fathers did so But Paul would not consult with flesh and bloud in matter of religion nor Abraham with humane reason This their reason also is as absurd in true reason as if a sonne were bound to put out his eyes because his father was blind or never to enjoy liberty because his father was in prison or dyed in a dungeon 2. The doctrine of merit and justification by workes runs with nature as Luke 18. 18. in the young Pharisee Master what good thing c. for fain would it finde some goodnesse in it self to demerit God whereas the second Commandement saith God shewes mercie to thousands in them that love him and keep his Commandements The Lords Prayer also teacheth us to pray for daily bread A likely thing that he can merit life eternal that cannot merit a crum of bread 3. The Intercession of Saints and worshipping Images stands onely on the legs of humane reason against divine wisdome Carnal men would see their god and turn his glory into the similitude of a calf or other creature And is it not reason we should have Mediators For why should every rude fellow thrust into the Kings presence and not first make way by some of his Court But divine wisdome saith there is but one Mediator and that we must come to the King by the Prince onely and it is high treason to come by any other 4. Carnal reason teacheth that every man is full of doubting and therefore no man can certainly believe the remission of sinnes or be assured of his own salvation But divine reason teacheth us that this doubting destroyes not faith but exerciseth it and in our Creed we believe remission of sinnes and eternal life which is more than to believe in general as devils doe Secondly for the whole doctrine and religion of Popery how plausible is it to the natural man For 1. What easier faith than to believe as the Church doth no matter what without any knowledge or faith of their own How at one blow cut they off all paines in getting assurance holding or increasing of faith 2. What an easie principle is it that to be ignorant is to be devout and that it is vain labour which is spent in the Scriptures as Hosius saith and that they are the books of Hereticks and they Hereticks that read them What need we be at any paines to read study and meditate in the book of God night and day as the Saints have done How was the Holy Ghost deceived yea and holy men who have studied in Gods Law night and day 3. How pleasing i● it to nature to deny it to be so corrupt as it is to say it is but half dead and being a little helped can keep the Law and come out of Gods debt whereas Eph. 2. 1 and 5. what can a dead man doe but rot 4. How pleaseth it nature to offer release from sin from hell from p●rgatory for money Who would not whore swear prophane the Sabbath resist Magistracy riot c. if for a little money he may have licence What hypocrite would not give thousands of Rams yea the first-born of his body for the sin of his soul Mic. 6. 7 5. Whereas the Word layes a continual care of keeping the heart and thoughts how doth that doctrine please nature that unlooseth it from this care that requires no pain to keep the heart or to keep out the first motions of sin which they say is no sin Which makes many sinnes venial in their nature put away with a light sigh a knock on the brest or an Ave Mary that a man may lye in sport or officiously by equivocation that to 〈◊〉 a small thing is but a venial sin S●lomon saith a fool makes a mock of sin To conclude that must be a natural and sens●el religion which any thing but Gods Word sets up and holds up but this is neither set up nor held up by it for where Gods Word comes down goes Popery It could never ●bide the breath of Gods mouth which blasts and destroyes it 5. Where doctrine is truly taught and believed natural reason raiseth strong ramparts against the practise of it Fo● else why doe many Protestants walk after the lusts of their hearts as the Gentiles Eph. 2. 3. but because they captivate the Commandement to their own reason and limit and confine the wisdome of God within the bounds of their own carnal wisdome 1. Our Gentry have reason to say that the word in general is the rule of good life but bring this rule close home unto them to reform their fashions to leave their strange apparel and painting their vain discourses their idle complements their gaming their service of pleasure and unfruitful spending of their times Oh now they have reason to scorn and chafe against the rule and him that holds it before them What reason he should be so strict lesse reason they should be as strict as he They know how to put on their clothes how to behave themselves every where and are wiser than to follow such rules as would make