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B25425 Troposchēmalogia: Tropes and figures; or, A treatise of the metaphors, allegories, and express similitudes, &c. contained in the Bible of the Old and New Testament To which is prefixed, divers arguments to prove the divine authority of the Holy Scriptures wherein also 'tis largely evinced, that by the great whore, mystery Babylon is meant the Papal hierarchy, or present state and church of Rome. Philologia sacra, the second part. Wherein the schemes, or figures in Scripture, are reduced under their proper heads, with a brief explication of each. Together with a treatise of types, parables, &c. with an improvement of them parallel-wise. By B. K; Tropologia. Book 4. Keach, Benjamin, 1640-1704.; De Laune, Thomas, d. 1685. Tropologia. aut 1682 (1682) Wing K101A; ESTC R7039 690,855 608

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Death Secondly the Grave Thirdly Coals and Flames of Fire Which shew forth the vehement Power and Force of Divine Love to Jesus Christ Which cannot be quenched First Love is compared to Death and the Grave Metaphor Parallel DEath and the Grave overcome the strongest Men it prevails over the most powerful wise and learned in the World neither can the most mighty Monarch encounter Death or stand before it there is no discharge in that War SO Love that is in the Heart of a sincere Christian prevails against all Difficulties and Oppositions Temptations Afflictions and most cruel Sufferings and Torments that can be exercised upon them as appeared by the blessed Martyrs Nothing is too hard for Love it cannot be subdued it overcomes all Sin and Suffering whatsoever II. Death and the Grave seize upon every part of the corporal or mortal Body II. So Love when shed abroad in the Heart seizeth upon all the Faculties of the Soul Hence it is that true Christians are said to love Christ with all their Hearts and with all their Souls Metaphor Disparity DEath and the Grave put an end to natural Life and so cause all Motions or Actions from thence to cease BUt Love hath that Virtue as it is a Grace of the Spirit that it sets all the Faculties of the Soul upon Acts of a spiritual Life None are so lively as those that truly love Jesus Christ II. Death overcomes and destroys that which we would if possible keep viz. our Lives that are most dear to us II. Love only overcomes that which is offensive and contrary to us or that stands in opposition to the Soul's Union with Christ making that which would be injurious to Flesh and Blood to become profitable and advantagious yea tho it be to the Loss of Life yet Love takes away the Fear of Death and makes the Soul willing to part with Life for Christ's sake Love is also compared to Coals and Flames of Fire Metaphor Parallel COals and Flames of Fire are of a burning and consuming Quality THe Grace of Love kindled in the Soul of a Believer burns up and consumes that inordinate Desire which is naturally in the Heart after the Things and Vanities of this World it eats up and consumes all carnal and sensual Lusts whatsoever all fleshly and combustible Stuff or Things that stand in the way are burnt up and destroyed by it II. Coals and Flames of Fire are of a purging and purifying quality II. So the Grace of Love purgeth cleanseth and purifieth the Soul the Dross and Filth of the Heart and Life being wasted away a Christian is made holy sanctified and heavenly thereby III. Coals and Flames of Fire are of a melting and softning Nature they make things tender and pliable meet to receive the Impression of a Seal c. III. So the Grace of Love softens the Heart and melts it making it pliable and very fit and capable to receive the Impression and Divine Image of God IV. Some Fire is so vehement that Water thrown upon it will not quench it but rather cause it to burn more fierce and vehemently IV. The Grace of Love is of such a strong and vehement Nature th●t it is impossible utterly to quench or extinguish it in the Soul tho the Devil daily useth all his Strength and Skill to do it Many ways he continually assaults Believers when Temptations of one sort fail he trieth others he offers worldly Pleasures Honours Riches yea all the Goods as I may say of his House but all is in vain nothing will quench this Divine Flame the true Christian utterly contemns him with all he hath The grand Design of Satan's courting a Man with all his Offers All this will I give thee c. is to gain his Love or draw off his Affections from Jesus Christ If this Way will not do he tries another and brings Afflictions and Crosses upon the Soul but over these likewise is a Saint a Conqueror Which makes the Apostle break forth into this holy Triumph Who shall separate us from the Love of Christ Shall Tribulation or Distress Rom. 8.35 36 37 38. or Persecution or Famine or Nakedness or Peril or Sword No none of these things can For I am persuaded that neither Death nor Life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers nor Things present nor Things to come nor Height nor Depth nor any other Creature shall be able to separate us from the Love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord. V. Fire hath Light with it V. So the Grace of Love is attended with the Knowledg of Christ who is the Object of Love Ignoti enim nulla cupido VI. Coals and Flames of Fire afford Heat they are of a warming and reviving Nature VI. So the Grace of Love heats our cold and frozen Hearts it warms and revives them with sweet and blessed Love and Zeal for God and his Glory VII Flames of Fire ascend or tend continually upwards See more of the Nature and Quality of Fire where the Word of God is compared to it VII So the Grace of Love darts the Desires of the Soul Heavenwards Such have their Affections set on Things above Col. 3.1 2. Metaphor Disparity FIre is from beneath it is earthy and one of the four Elements THe Grace of Love is from above it is a supernatural Grace it grows not in Natures Garden But the Fruit of the Spirit is Love c. II. A violent Fire may be quenched and all natural and elementary Fire shall be put out Mount Aetna shall not burn always II. But the Grace of Love this Divine Fire can never be quenched it shall burn to Eternity Charity never faileth c. Inference BY these Things Works and Operations we may try whether we have true Love to Jesus Christ or no. And for a further Help therein see the following Metaphor Christ's Love compared to Wine Cant. 1.2 For his Love is better than Wine WHereas Christ's Love is preferred to Wine it is to be understood Synecdochically so Ainsworth Wine here is put for the most pleasant joyful refreshing and cordial Things as Bread by the same Figure is frequently put for such things as strengthen c. The Love of Jesus Christ is better than Wine or whatsoever Men esteem to be good or to excell in Nature and Virtue Metaphor Parallel VVIne is the Fruit of a good Tree a choice and precious Plant and 't is the best of natural Liquors THe Love of Christ is the Fruit of the choicest Plant that ever was planted Men and Angels are not to be compared to him See Vine And his Love is the best and choicest of Love Wine is natural but his Love is Divine and supernatural None ever loved as Christ loved II. Wine is pleasant delectable and sweet to the Taste II. There is nothing so pleasant and delectable to a believing Soul as the Manifestation of Christ's Love it excells all things for sweetness III. Wine is to be
stead beyond any other thing to make us happy 2. A longing Desire after it There is always so much Desire of that we hope for that the thi●g hoped for is sometimes expressed by the Desire Prov. 13.12 Hope deferred maketh the Heart sick but when the Desire that is the thing hoped for cometh it is a ●ree of Life 3. Utmost and unwearied Endeavours to obtain it That which a Man makes his Hope he will make his Work and never ceaseth working till he hath attained it or is convinced there is no possibility of attaining it 4. To make Gold our Hope implieth much Trouble and Anxiety of Mind when once we see our Endeavours ineffectual and unsuccessful about the attaining of it If Hope deferred makes the Heart sick as was hinted before then when Hope dies or as Zophar speaks chap. 11.20 is as the giving up of the Ghost the Heart must needs die too 2. It is not Hope of Length of Days If I wait the Grave is my House c. But then 2. Positively it is a patient and well-grounded Expectation of the Accomplishment of what God hath promised Faith sees the Promise and beholds it tho afar off Abraham saw my Day saith Christ But then in comes Hope and keeps the Soul alive in a well-grounded expectation of the fulfilling and accomplishment of it See the Description of it where Faith is compared to an Helmet Why Hope is compared to an Anchor may appear by what followeth Metaphor Parallel AN Anchor is a good Stay and Security to a Ship in a Storm What would the Mariner do had he not an Anchor to cast out of the Ship when he is in danger of Rocks and Sands SO Hope in God through Christ is a most excellent Stay for the Soul of a Believer in a Day of Trouble and Persecution Heb. 10.34 They suffered joyfully the spoiling of their Goods knowing in themselves they had in Heaven a better and enduring Substance We are saved by Hope c. It stays the Soul as an Anchor does the Ship II. An Anchor takes hold of something which is out of sight II. So Hope the Anchor of the Soul takes hold of something which is not seen with carnal Eyes which is within the Vail c. III. An Anchor when it takes hold of a Rock or firm Ground fastens and stays a Ship more steadily preserving it from suffering Shipwrack III. So Hope the Anchor of the Soul taking hold of Christ who is called a Rock stays the Soul in a perilous Time most firm and steadily so that it is safe from spiritual Shipwrack IV. An Anchor would be of no use without the Cable to which it is fastened IV. So Hope without Faith is of no use nor can avail the Soul any thing in time of Need those two Graces always co-operate and work together for the help and succour of a Believer V. An Anchor that it may be of advantage to a Ship requires Skill rightly to cast it V. Hope the Anchor of the Soul must be rightly cast or else it will not profit a Saint any thing in the Day of Trouble It must be cast within the Vail Heb. 6. whither the Fore-runner is for us entred even Jesus c. Metaphor Disparity AN Anchor is cast down into the Sea River c. HOpe the Anchor of the Soul is cast upward the Saint's Hope is in Heaven II. An Anchor may let go its hold or be broke and so become useless to a Ship by which means the Ship may be lost II. Hope the Anchor of the Soul is both sure and stedfast hence it is said Hope maketh not ashamed If their Hope was not firm or were there any danger of its being lost or broke the Saints of God were in a sad Condition and they might turn away with their Faces ashamed If their Hope should fail them they would have no Refuge left If Hope holds all holds but it Hope be gone all is gone Neither is it to be thought that the Hope of holy Job Heman and others who in Trouble spake of their Hope being gone and perished from the Lord was indeed utterly lost and perished but that it was only so in their own Apprehension they being in great depths of Despondency and under sad Desertion of Spirit Like as the Church was when she said My God hath forsaken me my God hath forgotten me which God himself graciously answers It was not so nor could be so A Saint's standing in Christ is firm the Covenant is ordered in all things and sure But to confirm this glorious Truth and make it yet more clear and that I may leave no room for an Objection that Hope is both sure and stedfast c. Consider the many strong Bars that are cemented together as so many Bars of Iron hammered by the Spirit to the making of this blessed Anchor of the Soul both sure and stedfast First The Love of God is a sure Ground of the Saints Hope Jer. 31.3 Psal 89.30 31 32 33. I have loved thee with an everlasting Love c. If his Children forsake my Law and walk not in my Judgments if they break my Statutes and keep not my Commandments Then will I visit their Transgressions with the Rod and their Iniquity with Stripes Nevertheless my Loving-kindness will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my Faithfulness to fail My Covenant will I not break nor alter the thing which is gone out of my Lips Zeph. 3.17 The Lord thy God in the midst of thee is mighty he will save he will rejoyce over thee with joy he will rest in his Love he will joy over thee with singing I am persuaded that neither Death nor Life Rom. 8.38 39. nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers nor Things present nor Things to come nor Height nor Depth nor any other Creature shall be able to separate us from the Love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. If the Love of God be from everlasting to everlasting to them that fear him if he rests in his Love if he will not remove his Loving-kindness from them notwithstanding their Sins and Infirmities if nothing can separate them from the Love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord then the Hope that Believers have in God is both sure and stedfast Secondly God hath chosen elected and predestinated Believers in Christ unto eternal Life For whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate Rom. 8.29 30. to be conformed to the Image of his Son Moreover whom he did predestinate them he also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified The same Persons that are predestinated are called and the very same that are called are justified and the very same who are justified are or shall be glorified Therefore the Hope that Believers have is both sure and stedfast Thirdly Christ's Death is a sure Ground of Hope Who is be that
of their safe and first standing in Christ and of their Assurance of Heaven nothing is Therefore the Saints Hope is both sure and stedfast Tenthly That Relation which Believers stand in unto God is a sure Ground of Hope He is their Father and they are his dear Children he is their Husband they his Spouse Will a dear Father suffer his dear Children to perish and be torn in pieces if he hath Power to help them or the dear Husband his dear Wife The Love of God to his Saints exceeds the Love and Pity of either Father or Husband therefore Hope the Anchor of the Soul is both sure and stedfast Joh. ●0 27 28 29. Eleventhly The Power of God is a sure Ground of Hope My Sheep hear my Voice and follow me and I give to them eternal Life and they shall never perish neither shall any pluck them out of my Hand My Father that gave them me is greater than all and none is able to pluck them out of my Father's hand who are kept by the Power of God through Faith unto Salvation If the Power of God be sufficient to keep Believers from falling and to preserve them to his heavenly Kingdom then their Hope is both sure and stedfast Object But it is through Faith they stand and their Faith may fail Answ Christ as I shewed before hath prayed that their Faith fail not and besides Phil. 1.6 he is the Author Increaser and Finisher of it He that hath begun a good Work in you will perform it unto the Day of Christ John 3.6 1 Pet. 1 23. Twelfthly Regeneration is a sure Ground of Hope That which is born of the Flesh is Flesh that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit Being born again not of corruptible Seed but of incorruptible c. Such as is the Seed such is the Product of it The Seed being immortal by which the Saints are regenerated sure this may be sure Ground of Hope that they shall not perish There is in them an holy and Divine Principle so that they cannot sin unto Death or lose eternal Life Let us now put all these together and then doubtless we shall conclude that the Saints Hope of Heaven is no Fancy but like an Anchor that is both sure and stedfast Inferences FIrst Examine your selves what Hope you have there is a false Hope as well as a true What is the Ground of thy Hope 1. Some Men ground their Hope of Heaven upon outward Prosperity This is the Worldlings Hope They conclude God loves them and will give Heaven to them because he hath given them so much of the Earth not remembring that God gives some Men their Portion in this Life Psal 17. Luke 16. Remember Son thou in thy Life time receivedst thy good Things c. 2. Some ground their Hopes of Heaven upon Civility and external Righteousness They live sober and honest Lives and are not guilty of any gross Sins This is the moral Man's Hope the Pharisee's the young Man 's in the Gospel the foolish Virgins had this Hope and yet lost Heaven 3. Some ground their Hopes of Heaven upon the Merits of their own Works This is the Papists Hope for tho they place some Hope in Christ yet they put Confidence in their own Works Now this is to cast Anchor on the Sands First That which merits must be our own but none of our good Works are our own They are our own subjective because wrought in us and they are ours in regard of the Benefit of them but in respect of the Original they are none of ours they are the Fruits of the Spirit 't is God hath wrought all our Works in us Secondly They must be compleat and perfect or not meritorious but the best Works performed by us are both impure and imperfect more Dross than Gold Thirdly That which merits must not be due upon any other account paying Debts is not meritorious Now there is nothing that we do or can do but it is due 't is a Debt we owe to God we owe him all we have are or can perform Therefore saith Christ When you have done all say you are unprofitable Servants Secondly It shews that the Hope of Believers is a glorious Hope the Apostle saith a blessed Hope that is the Stay or Anchor of the Soul c. Tit. 2.13 Thirdly All those that have not this precious Grace are at present in a hopeless Condition Quest How may a Man know whether he hath a true and well-grounded Hope 1. If thou hast a lively Hope thou art born again the new Birth entitles to a new Hope What Hope can a Man have of Heaven if he be not converted 1 Pet. 1.3 John 3.3 Vnless a Man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God 2. A true and well-grounded Hope is attended with a Train of other Graces Tribulation worketh Patience and Patience Experience and Experience Hope Rom. 5.3 4 5. and Hope maketh not ashamed why because the Love of God is shed abroad in our Hearts by the Holy-Ghost Those that have the Grace of Hope have the Graces of Faith and Love and all other Fruits of the Spirit more or less in them 3. Hope purifies the Heart He that hath this Hope in him purifieth himself 1 John 3.3 even as he is pure If thou hast an unsanctified Heart never boast of thy Hope it makes not only the Heart holy but the Life also 4. Hope of Salvation is grounded upon the Promises of God The Promises give Interest and upon Interest ariseth Hope therefore he that hath not took hold of God's Promise by Faith is destitute of Hope the Anchor of the Soul Psal 11● 49 Remember thy Word unto thy Servant upon which thou hast caused me to hope 5. Hope keeps the Soul in a steady and sure expectation of the Good of Promises under Affliction and Sufferings a Saint is hereby stayed and quieted whilst he is exposed to the Loss of all other things for Christ's sake Heb. 10.34 They took patiently the spoiling of their Goods knowing in themselves they had in Heaven a better and more enduring Substance 6. True Hope makes a Christian very lively and valiant for Christ and his Truth It fills the Soul full of spiritual Activity it is called a lively Hope it makes him bold and not ashamed of the Cross c. Love compared to Death and the Grave and to Coals and Flames of Fire Cant. 8.6 Love is strong as Death Jealousy is as cruel as the Grave The Coals thereof are Coals of Fire which have a most vehement Flame Verse 7. Many Waters cannot quench Love neither can the Floods drown it c. THe Grace of Love which Christ hath infused into the Heart of his Spouse and all gracious Ones is compared by the Holy-Ghost in these Scriptures to three things which are of a mighty powerful and prevailing Nature against whom there is no standing First
due Preparation which doth consist in these four or five Particulars 1. A sincere Confession of those Sins which we find out upon diligent Search and Examination 2. Godly Sorrow for the same manifested by putting away the Filth of the Flesh We must come with clean hands and a pure Heart 3. We oughtt to forgive those who have offended us Christ commands us to be reconciled to our Brother The Apostle exhorteth us to lay aside all Malice We must not eat with the ●●leavened Bread of Malice and Wickedness 1 Cor. 5.8 4. Faith in the Death and Blood-shedding of Jesus Christ 5. We ought to do it in remembrance of his Death 1. With an affectionate Remembrance The Sight of our Eyes ought to affect our Hearts 2 A sorrowful Remembrance in contemplaton of what our Sins brought upon our dear Saviour They were the Thorns as I may say that crowned him and the Nails that fastened him to the Cross 3. With a Sin-loathing and self-abhorring Remembrance 4. With a thankful Remembrance Tho we have cause of Sorrow considering the Nature of our Sin and horrid Evil thereof yet there is great cause of Joy and Thanksgiving to behold a Saviour who in Bowels of Love died to redeem and save us from them Quest How may a Christian with much comfort upon examination receive the Lord's Supper Answ 1. If there is no Sin in thy Heart or Life which thou regardest or doest allow thy self in bearest with or connivest at 2. If thou dost loath Sin as well as leave it when 't is not only out of thy Conversation but out of thy Affection also To hate and loath Sin is more than to leave it Persons never willingly leave or forsake that they love 3. If thou canst say in truth that thou wouldest be made holy and doest labour after it as well as to be made happy to be throughly sanctified as well as to be saved live to God here as well as live with God hereafter to have Sin mortified as well as pardoned 4. If Christ is most precious to thee and hath the chiefest Room in thy Heart If upon Trial thou findest these things are in very deed wrought in thee thon mayest with much comfort come to the Sacrament Quest Of what Vse is the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper to us Answ 1. It shews the horrid Nature and Evil of Sin in that nothing could expiate it nor satisfy the Justice of God or make a Compensation for it but the Blood of Jesus Christ 2. It shews the wonderful Love of God to poor Sinners in giving up his own dear Son to die the cursed Death of the Cross for us 3. It shews the wonderful Love of Jesus Christ who freely laid down his Life for our sakes Greater Love hath no Man than this Joh. 15.13 Rom. 5.8 10. that a Man lay down his Life for his Friend but Christ hath laid down his Life for us when we were Enemies to him by wicked Works 4. It tends to encrease our Love to Christ and our Faith in him 5. It shews us that Christ is our Life and how and by what means we come to be saved 6. It seals the Covenant of Grace to us giveth us in the right use of it much assurance that Christ is ours 7. There is a mystical Conveyance or Communication of all Christ's blessed Merits to our Souls through Faith held forth hereby and in a glorious manner received in the right participation of it 8. It may animate and encourage us to suffer Martyrdom when called to it for his sake Christ our Passeover 1 Cor. 5.7 For Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us THe Passeover or Paschal Lamb being a most eminent Type of the Messiah of which see our Sacred Philology in the Chapter of Sacred Rites where you have the Reason of its Typical and Metaphorical Representation we shall here run an apt Parallel betwixt that illustrious Type and the most holy Anti-type Type Parallel THe Paschal Lamb must be without blemish entire whole sound not blind nor broken not sick nor bruised SHadowing forth the Perfection and Innocency of Christ in whose Lips were found no Guile As a Lamb without blemish and without spot II. He was to be a Year old II. Signifying the Experience Christ should have of our Miseries whereof even a Day 's continuance yields sufficient proof as also that Perfection of Christ in like sort And that in fulness of time he should come and suffer a Year being a perfect Revolution of the Sun's Course Guild III. It was to be taken out of the Flock III. Christ was taken from amongst Mankind Heb. 2.14 Forasmuch then as the Children are Partakers of Flesh and Blood He also himself likewise took part of the same c. IV. It was to be separated from the Flock IV. Christ was separate from Sinners V. It was to be slain and that in the Evening V. So Christ died saith Mr. Ainsworth in that season viz. in the Evening of the Day also in the Evening of Time in the latter Age of the World VI. The Blood was to be sprinkled on the Lintel Exod. 12.7 and Door-Posts that the Angel seeing the same might pass by VI. Signifying that Christ's Blood must be applied by us and where Christ is received 1 Cor. 1.30 and the Soul sprinkled by Faith Sanctification outwardly will appear in the Practice of the Life VII The Lamb was to be roasted with Fire Vers 8. VII Moses unvailed p. 62. Signifying saith Mr. Guild the Agony of Christ in the Garden and the Wrath of his Father which he did endure both in Soul and Body It was a Sign either of the Spirit of God which is compared to Fire through which Christ offered himself or of the Fire of God's Wrath Heb. 9.14 which he suffered when he was made a Curse for us VIII It was to be roasted with Head and Legs and the Appurtenances thereof that is it must be roasted all and whole not cut in pieces VIII This signifies our full Communion with Christ whole and undivided Ainsworth 1 Cor. 13. Gal. 2.20 IX No Bone of the Lamb was to be broken IX Os nullum illius Agni frangi voluit Deus c It signifies that not a Bone of Christ should be broken as it was prophesied of him X. The Lamb was to be eaten X. Christ is spiritually to be received and fed upon Joh. 6.55 My Flesh is Meat indeed c. Verse 9. XI It was not to be eaten raw XI Noting that we should be well prepared when we come to the Sacrament Guild XII It was to be eaten all and with unleavened Bread XII Signifying that in Christ nothing is unprofitable or to be rejected and that we ought to eat with the unleavened Bread of Sincerity and Truth XIII It was to be eaten with bitter Herbs XIII Which typified forth the bitter Sorrows and Sufferings of Christ and that we should eat
Legis praestatio See also Mat. 5.17 18. Think not saith Christ that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy but to fulfil For verily I say unto you till Heaven and Earth pass away one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled As all the Predictions of the Prophets were fulfilled by him and in him so was the whole Law in his keeping the Precepts of it and teaching others to do the like and in his bearing the Penalty of it and fulfilling the Types of it The Gospel is so far from repealing the Penalty of the Law that the very Gospel it self is founded on Christ's undertaking to bear the Penalty of it Heb. 9.15 16. There could have been no Testament but in and through the Death of the Testator There could have been no such thing as a Gospel or a Tender of glad Tidings and Mercy to us but through Christ's undertaking as our Surety to bear the Curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 And so much for the Argument from the Truth of God's Threatning The Sum of what we say and believe about this great Truth is this 1. That by the Sin of our first Parents all Men are brought into a State of Sin and Apostacy from God and of an Enmity to him Gen. 6.5 Psal 51.5 Rom. 3.23 8.7 Eph. 4.18 Col. 2.13 2. That in this State all Men naturally continue sinning against God nor of themselves can do otherwise Rom. 3.10 11 12. 3. That the Justice and Holiness of God as he is the Supreme Governor and Judg of all the World requires that Sin be punished Exod. 34.7 Josh 24.19 Psal 5.4 5 6 c. 4. That God hath also engaged his Veracity and Faithfulness in the Sanction of the Law not to leave Sin unpunished Gen. 2.17 Deut. 27.26 Cursed be he that confirmeth not all the Words of this Law to do them In this State and Condition all Mankind had they been left without Divine Help and Aid must have perished for ever 5. That God out of his infinite Grace and Goodness sent his Son the Lord Jesus Christ to deliver them 6. That this Love was the same in Father and Son The Father could not be more gracious and kind than the Son nor the Son in Bowels exceed the Father but both alike loving gracious and compassionate 7. That the Way in general whereby the Son of God being incarnate was to save lo●t Sinners was by a Substitution of himself according to the Decree and Appointment of God in the Sinner's room according to 2 Cor. 5.21 He hath made him to be Sin for us who knew no Sin that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him Compared with Gal. 3.17 Rom. 5.7 8. 8.3 1 Pet. 2.24 3.18 8. That Christ in his saving Sinners hath 1. Offered himself a Sacrifice to God to make Atonement for Sins Isa 53.10 Eph. 3.2 Heb. 2.17 9.11 12 13 14. 2. That he redeemed us by paying a Price a Ransom for our Redemption Mark 10.45 1 Cor. 6.20 1 Tim. 2.6 1 Pet. 1.18 3. That he bore our Sins that is the Punishment due for them Isa 53.5 1 Pet. 2.24 4. That he answered the Law and the Penalty thereof Rom. 8.3 Gal. 3.13 4.4 5. 5 That he died for Sin and Sinners to expiate the one and in the stead of the other Rom. 4.25 5.10 6. And that God upon Christ's voluntary Susception of his Office as Mediator and Condescension to the Work did so lay our Sins in and by the Sentence of the Law upon him that he made full Satisfaction for whatsoever legally could be charged upon them for whom he thus suffered 7. And all this that the Justice of God being satisfied and the Law fulfilled Mankind might be freed from the Wrath to come Rom. 3.25 III. Among Men that Debt that is paid or full Compensation made for it either by the Debtor or his Surety cannot be said to be forgiven III. But that Remission of Sins is wholly through the free Love and Grace of God is evident yet not without respect had to the Atonement or Propitiation through Faith in Christ's Blood For without shedding of Blood there is no Remission Eph. 1.7 We have Redemption through his Blood even the Remission of Sins chap 4. v. 32. As God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you God hath set him forth to be a Propitiation through Faith in his Blood to declare his Righteousness for the Remission of Sins Rom. 3. It is absolutely free in respect of all immediate Transactions between God and Sinners free on the part of God 1. In the eternal Purpose of it when he might justly have suffered all Men to have perished under the Guilt of their Sins 2. Free in the Means that he used to effect it 1. In the sending of his own Son 2. In laying the Punishment of our Sins upon him 3. In his Covenant with him that it should be accepted on our behalf 4. In his free Tender and Proposal of it by the Gospel without Money and without Price 5. In the actual Condonation and Pardon of them Secondly It is free on the part of the Persons that are forgiven in that 1. It is given and granted to them without any Satisfaction made by them or a Surety of their procurement they being not able to find any 2. Without any Merit to purchase or procure it 3. Without any penal satisfactory Suffering here or hereafter 4. Without any expectation of a future Recompence or being once pardoned they should make or give any Satisfaction for what they had done before And as none none of those Things would so nothing else can impeach the Freedom of Pardon and Forgiveness Whether then we respect the Pardoner or the Pardoned Pardon is every way free namely on the part of God who forgives and on the part of Sinners that are forgiven If God hath now besides all this provided himself a Lamb for a Sacrifice if he hath in infinite Wisdom and Grace found out a way thus freely to forgive us our Debts to the Praise and Glory of his own Holiness Righteousness and Severity against Sin as well as to the magnifying of his Grace Goodness and rich Bounty which he immediatly exerciseth in the Pardon of Sin Are any Mans Eyes evil because he is good Will they not be contented to be pardoned unless they may have it at the rate of spoiling or robbing God of his Holiness Truth Righteousness and Faithfulness Dr. Owen Object But doth not this Doctrine set forth God to be severe to his own Son to substitute him in the Sinners room to bear his Wrath and suffer for their Sins Answ God laid nothing upon his blessed Son but what Christ offered himself freely to undergo for Man's sake and had it not every way consisted with his own Glory thus to deliver up the Lord Jesus to satisfy both Law and Justice doubtless he
see Corruption XIII The Fire which consumed the Burnt-Offering came down from Heaven signifying that that Wrath which seized on Jesus Christ in the Garden and on the Cross came from Heaven or that it was God's Wrath due to us for our Sins that consumed him Or as others it may be on better reason give it that that which moved Christ to suffer for Mankind was wholly his heavenly sacred and divine Love XIV This Fire was to be continually upon the Altar signifying the Unchangeableness of Christ's Love to his Elect and rec●nt Virtue of his Death and Merits The Burnt-Offering of Fowls Levit. 1.14 a Type of Christ THe Fowls that were appointed for Burnt-Offerings were to be Turtles or Pigeons signifying the Meekness and Innocency of Christ II. The Neck of the Fowl was to be pinched with the Nail that the Blood might go out but not that the Head should be pluck'd off from the Body signifying how Christ should die and shed his Blood yet thereby his Deity as the Head or principal Part should not be divided from his Humanity nor yet by his Death should he who is our Head Joh. 14. be taken from his Church but should rise again and be with them by his Spirit forever III. The Blood thereof was strained or pressed out at the side of the Altar before it was pluck'd and laid upon the Altar to be burned signifying thereby the straining or pressing out of Christ's Blood in his grievous Agony in the Garden before he was taken Luke 24.44 and stripp'd to be crucified c. The Daily Sacrifice a Type of Christ THe Daily Sacrifice was a Lamb So our Saviour not daily but once for all was offered unto the Father himself as a Lamb without spot II. It was slain in the Morning and in the Evening to shew that Christ was a Lamb slain from the Morning of the Creation or in the Decree of God from the Foundation of the World tho not actually till the Evening of the World or latter Days III. It was to be offered up with fine Flower beaten Oil and Wine to shew that Christ by his Death and Oblation becomes not only a Redemption for us but also spiritual Food Gladness and cheering Comfort IV. Where this Sacrifice was offered Exod. 24.42 the Lord promised and appointed to speak unto Israel and shew himself signifying that in Christ and through his Death and Bloodshed the new Appointment or Covenant of his Grace and Manifestation of his Love and Favour is established to his Church and faithful People The Sin-Offering a Type of Christ THe Blood of the Sin-Offering was to be poured out shewing how the Blood of Jesus Christ our true Sin-Offering should be poured forth II. The Priest saith the Lord shall dip his Finger in the Blood of the Beast and sprinkle thereof seven times before the Lord shadowing the Perfection of that Expiation and Satisfaction for Sin which Christ should make in the virtue quality and perpetuity thereof the Number of Seven being the Number of Perfection Heb 9.29 III. The Priest shall bring in the Blood of the Bullock into the Tabernacle of the Congregation shewing thereby how Christ should enter into Heaven by his own Blood Heb. 9 1● having obtained eternal Redemption for us IV. The Priest was to take some of the Blood Mark 16.15 Mat. 28. and put it upon the four Horns of the Altar signifying thereby that the preaching Remission of Sins by the Atonement of Christ's Blood should be proclaimed to the four Corners of the Earth V. The Bodies of those Beasts whose Blood was brought into the Sanctuary by the High-Priest was burnt without the Host or Camp signifying that Christ should suffer without the Gate teaching us also to go forth into a publick Profession Heb. 13.11 12. and bear his Reproach VI. The Priest was to eat the Sin-Offering in the holy Place whose Blood was not brought into the Tabernacle of the Congregation signifying that Jesus Christ doth not only reconcile us to God but also feed and nourish the Souls of all his Royal Priesthood unto eternal Life VII The Priest shall make Atonement still this is repeated always signifying that 't is Christ our High-Priest and his Sacrifice only that makes a real Atonement and Reconciliation for our Sins The Meat-Offering Lev. 2. what it was a Type of THe Meat-Offerings as Ainsworth observes were nine and all of them came to the Altar 1. The poor Man's Meat-Off●ring Lev. 5.11 2. The Jealousy-Offering Numb 5.15 3. The Meat Offering of Initiation which every Priest offered when he first entred into his Service Levit. 8.26 28. 4. The Meat-Offering which the High-Priest offered every day Lev. 6.20 5. The Meat-Offering of fine Flower 6. The Meat-Offering baked on a Plate 7. In a Frying-Pan 8. In an Oven 9. Wafers 1. The Minchah or Meat-Offering saith he was primarily a Figure of Christ's Oblation Eph. 5.2 who gave himself for us an Oblation and Sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling Sav●ur Sacrifice and Oblation Minchah thou wouldest not but a Body hast thou prepared me c. Above Heb. 10.5 8 9 10. when he said Sacrifice and Oblation and Burnt-Offerings for Sin thou wouldest not c. Then said he Lo I come to do thy Will O God c. by which Will we are sanctified through the Offering of Christ once for all So that in the Oblation of Christ's Body this Legal Service was accomplished and ended 2. It figured saith he the Persons of Christians who through him are cleansed and sanctified to be pure Oblations unto God 3. It figured saith he the Fruits of Grace and good Works that Christians are to perform both towards God and Men. 1. Towards God Let the lifting up of my Hands saith David Psal 141.2 be as the Evening Minchah or Oblation So when God told the Jews I will not accept a Minchah or Meat-Offering at your Hands he addeth For from the rising of the Sun Mal. 1.10 11. even to the going down of the same my Name shall be great among the Gentiles and in every Place Incense shall be off●red unto my Name and a pure Meat-Offering Which is fulfilled when Men pray every where lifting up holy Hands c. 2. Towards Men see Heb. 13.16 Phil. 4.18 4. All the Meat Offerings were of Wheaten Flower except the Jealousy-Offering and the waved Sheaf yea and ought to be of fine Flower signifying the Purity and Perfection of Christ as also that we should offer our best Things to the Lord. Eph. 5 2. Rom. 12.1 5. Oil and Incense was put thereon The Oil saith he signified the Graces and Comforts of the Holy-Ghost and the Incense or Frankincense shewed how acceptable Saints and their Services are unto the Lord. 6. It must be brought to the Priest and he shall bring it to the Altar shadowing that 't is by Christ and his Oblation that we and our Works and Duties are
first it seems to bear no such thing So Mat. 13. Christ expounds that Parable or Allegory for tho Rhetoricians make a difference between Metaphors Similes Parables and Allegories yet in Divinity there is none but that Allegories are more large and continued calling the Seed the Word and the Sower the Son of Man c. This way of expounding such dark Scriptures is both useful and necessary and was often used as edifying by our Lord Jesus to his Disciples Now 't is this we speak of which teacheth how to draw plain Doctrines out of Metaphors Allegories c. and not to draw Allegories out of plain Histories Secondly it may be asked When we are to account a Place of Scripture figurative or allegorick and seek some other meaning than what at first appears Answ 1. When the literal proper meaning looks absurd-like or is empty nothing to Edification as when 't is said Unless ye eat the Flesh of the Son of Man c. This is my Body c. And so those Scriptures that command to pluck out the right Eye and cut off the right Hand take up our Cross c. All which if literally understood were absurd and ridiculous and therefore the mistaking such Scriptures hath occasioned many grievous Errors as that of the Anthropomorphites attributing Members viz. Head Hands Feet c to God and Passions yea Infirmities as Anger Repenting c. because the Scriptures in such places speaking after the manner of Men metaphorically attribute such things to him 2. Those Places of Scripture are to be accounted Metaphorical or Allegorick which reach not the Scope of Edification intended by them if literally understood as when Christ spoke of Sowing Mat. 13. the Disciples thought something more was intended than at first appeared for his Aim could not be to discourse of Husbandry to them 3. When a literal Sence would obtrude some Falsity on the Scripture then such Places are to be taken Allegorically as when Christ said Destroy this Temple and I will build it up again in three Days Which if understood of the Material Temple Christ's Words would not have had their Accomplishment But he spoke figuratively of his Body So when Christ said Except a Man eat my Flesh and drink my Blood he cannot live it cannot be understood literally because many who have obtained Life never did so eat his Flesh c. 4. Any Scripture is to be accounted Figurative or Allegorical when the literal Sence agrees not with other Scriptures and is repugnant to the Analogy of Faith or Rules of good Manners as when we are comman●ed to heap Coals of Fire upon the Head of our Enemy now we being required not to avenge our selves it followeth clearly this Scripture is not properly or literally understood 5. When a literal Sence answers not to the present Scope of the Speaker and the Speaker would be thought impertinent if his Words were properly taken then it ought to be expounded in a figurative Sence So Mat. 3.10 when John is pressing Repentance he saith Now is the Ax laid to the Root of the Tree c. And the Parable of Christ Luk. 13.7 If these Places were only properly to be understood they would not enforce Repentance And now Reader had we not had good Encouragement from divers worthy Ministers in this City this as well as the former had never seen the Sun but the readiness of divers Persons upon the coming out of the First to subscribe for this hath midwiv'd it into the World where we expect it will meet with different Entertainment but I hope by this time through the Grace of God I have learned not to be concerned either about the Praise of some on the one hand or Dispraise and Contempt of others on the other hand not doubting but that this or the succeeding Age may receive Advantage by it and many bless God for it And if it bring Glory to God and Profit to his Church I have my chief End and shall be content tho I pass under the Censures of captious Men c. I must confess it is not all of my own compiling I have made use of some help from others partly to expedite the Work and partly for want of some Literature And now Reader that I may not retain thee longer at the Door I shall commit Thee and the Work to the Blessing of the Lord heartily begging an Interest in thy Prayers engaging not to forget thee in this evil and perilous Hour subscribe my self Thy Servant for Jesus's sake BENj KEACH London August 9. 1682. A TABLE OF The Heads of those Metaphors Similes borrowed Terms Types Figures and other chief Things insisted upon in this Book THe Divine Authority of the Holy Scripture asserted and vindicated Page j to xvj The Fifth HEAD of Metaphors Similes c. GRace compared to Salt Page 1 Truth compared to a Girdle Page 3 Righteousness a Breast-plate Page 9 Faith a Shield Page 13 Faith more precious than Gold Page 15 Hope an Helmet Page 22 Hope an Anchor Page 25 Love compared to Death and the Grave and to Flames of Fire Page 30 31 Love compared to Wine Page 32 Baptism a Burial Page 35 The Lord's Supper Page 38 Christ our Passeover Page 45 The Sixth HEAD c. concerning Angels and the Soul of Man Angels Watchers Page 50 Angels Morning-Stars Page 52 Angels Sons of God Page 53 Angels God's Host Page 55 Angels compared to the Face of a Man a Lion an Ox and an Eagle Page 57 Angels compared to the Wind and Flames of Fire Page 61 Angels called Horses red white speckled c. Page 63 64 Soul of Man compared to a Ship Page 64 Spirit of Man a Candle Page 67 Conscience a Witness Page 69 The Seventh HEAD c. concerning God's Church CHurch a City Page 76 to 85 Church compared to the Moon Page 86 Church the Temple of God or the Anti-type of Solomon's Temple Page 87 Church the Anti-type of the Second Temple Page 89 Church called an Olive-Tree Page 91 Church compared to an Inn Page 92 Church a Vine Page 93 Church compared to a Dove Page 94 Church compared to the Body natural Page 97 Church a Vineyard Page 99 Church called a Virgin Page 102 Church a Wife Page 103 Church compared to a Bush on fire Page 106 Church compared to a Mother Page 109 Church a Garden Page 112 Church a Lilly among Thorns Page 115 Church compared to a Merchant-Ship Page 118 Church a Golden Candlestick Page 120 Church called a Flock of Sheep Page 121 Church compared to an House Page 123 Church a Family Page 128 The Eighth HEAD c. concerning 1. Men in general 2. Good Men 3. Wicked Men. MAn compared to Earth Page 133 Man compared to a Worm Page 135 Man compared to a Flower Page 138 Concerning the Saints or Good Men. Saints called Babes Page 140 Saints Children Page 142 Saints Heirs Page 145 Saints Eagles Page 146 Saints Souldiers Page 148 to 161 Saints Runners
Sacrifice of the Bullock and He-Goat a Type of Christ opened in nine Things Page 432 The Scape Goat a Type of Christ ibid The red Heifer a Type of Christ Page 433 Circumcision what it was a Type of ibid The Rock that was smitten a Type of Christ Page 434 Pillar of Cloud and Fire a Type of Christ ibid Passeover a Type of Christ Page 435 PHILOLOGIA SACRA The Second Part. The Schemes or Figures in Scripture opened OF the Figures of a Word Page 1 Of a Paranomasia Page 3 Of Antanaclasis Page 4 Of the Figures of a Sentence in Logism Page 5 to 11 Of an Erotesis or Interrogation Page 12 Of Figures of a Sentence in Dialogism Page 14 Of other Schemes of Sentences and Amplifications Page 15 to 25 A Learned Discourse of TYPES PARABLES c. wherein you have 1. The Definition of a Type Page 25 to 28 2. The Division of Types Page 28 3. Prophetical Types and typical and symbolical actions ibid. 4. Prophetical and Typical Visions Page 29 5. An Historical Type and its first Division Page 31 6. Other Divisions of an Historical Type Page 41 7. Nine Canons or Rules expounding Types Page 41 to 45 Of PARABLES Wherein shall be given 1. The Definition of the Word and Thing 2. It s Division 3. Canons respecting it Page 46 c. ERRATA PAge 25. line 35. for Faith read Hope P. 27. l. 29. for he undertook read he hath undertaken P. 269. l. 2. dele for P. 336. l. 27. dele viz. Tropes and Figures OR A TREATISE of the METAPHORS ALLEGORIES TYPES c. contained in the Holy Bible of the Old and New Testament The Divine Authority of the Holy Scriptures asserted and vindicated and the groundless Cavils against the same detected and confuted THE main Scope of this Work being to offer some Assistance towards the explaining and finding out the true Sense and Meaning of the Holy Scriptures it will be convenient according to our Promise in our Specimen of this Undertaking to premise something touching the Divine Authority of that blessed Book For tho it be commonly own'd by Christians to be the Word of God yet since on the one Hand there are especially in this Atheistical Age too many amongst us whose Love of Sin and Resolutions to continue therein tempt them to seek for shelter in bold Contempt of or subtile Cavils against those Heavenly Oracles and on the other hand not a few poor Souls are sometimes shaken with Temptations and know not how to discharge themselves from the ensnaring Questions that they are often attaqued with touching the Divine Original and Authority of those Sacred Records Not so much for want of Assent thereunto as of a right Understanding or Consideration of the Grounds of that Assent and the true formal Reason thereof Therefore that with a perfect Security to our present and future Wellfare we may rely on that Book as the infallible Store-house of Heavenly Verities that great and only Revelation whereby God does Inform Rule and will Judg the World we shall set forth some Considerations evincing this most important Truth But finding that divers able and worthy Men have of late wrote most learnedly and excellently upon this Subject we shall upon that account be the more concise and tho we have said but little yet we hope enough to satisfy any rational considering Man and confute the vain Cavils of the Adversary for all along in this Essay we strive to join Perspicuity with Brevity and to speak so plainly and familiarly that the weakest Capacity may with ease gather it up the neglect hereof having rendred the Labours of some others on the same Subject less serviceable to the vulgar unlearned Reader It being our great Design to endeavour the Help and Establishment of the Unskilful and to assist weak Christians knowing that if Satan can once bring them into a diffidence of the Truth and Authority of God's Word he at the same Instant shakes the very Foundation of all their Hope and Religion And if the Foundations fail what shall the Righteous do Psal 11.3 That the Scripture or Book called the Bible is of Divine Original Inspired by the Spirit of God and therefore of infallible Truth and Authority Appears 1. The sublime Matter of the Scriptures shew them to be Divine I. By the Contents or Matters therein discovered and treated of which are so transcendently sublime and mysterious that they could never be the product of Human Invention or Discovery and therefore tho written by Men as Instruments must needs be revealed from above for what Human Brain could ever have imagined a * Ma● 28.19 1 Joh. 5.7 Trinity in the Deity or such an Existence of one simple Essence as this Book acquaints us withal It describes the Person of Christ so plainly fitly and excellently that if the Mind of Man consider it attentively of necessity it must needs acknowledg it doth far exceed the reach of a finite Understanding It discovers unto us the Misery and Corruption of Man by Nature together with that general defect of the whole Creation which tho some of the Heathen had some glimpse of yet could never find out the Cause nor how it came to pass No finite Intellect could ever have travell'd into such Heights and Depths touching the Nature of God and his Eternal Counsels that stupendious Contrivement for the Salvation of Man that the second Person should descend from Heaven and assume Human Nature into a Conjunction with the Divine take upon him in his own Person the Sin of Mankind and die for the World thereby making a satisfaction proportionate to infinite Justice so that God may show the utmost Act of Mercy in a Conjunction with the highest Exercise of Justice Nothing less than an Infinite Understanding could have found out Expedients to reconcile those two infinite Attributes in his dealings with an Apostate Creature It unfolds the Covenant of Grace which God made after the Fall all which can be drawn from no other Fountain but Divine * 1 Cor. 2.7 Eph. 3 4 5. Revelation it contains the Law of God which is wise and just the Gentiles themselves being † Dan 4 5 6 7. Judges In its Precepts shines forth its Divinity 1. The surpassing Excellency of the Act requiring that we should deny our selves in all those things which the corrupt Nature of Man cleaveth to and hateth to forego 2. The wonderful Equity that doth appear in every Command 3. The admirable strangeness of some Acts which a natural Man would account Foolishness and yet prescribed as absolutely necessary ‖ Joh. 3 36. 8.24 shews its Divine Original 4. The manner how Obedience is required viz. that it proceed from a pure Heart a good Conscience and Faith unfeigned * Deut. 6.5 1 Cor. 13.1 1 Tim. 1.4 5. Take a view of the Ten Commandments are they not plain brief perfect just extending to all binding the Conscience and reaching to the very
corruptible things as Silver and Gold which perish FAith is a divine and precious Grace or a supernatural thing 't is from above wrought in the Soul by the Operation of the Spirit of God and therefore incorruptible an heavenly Principle or Seed that shall never fail till we receive the end of our Faith the Salvation of our Souls II. Tried Gold may make a Man renowned and great on Earth and adorn the Body or Habitation where he dwells but it avails not the Soul any thing it will not enrich or make honourable or beautify that c. II. Faith true Faith Faith tried in the Fire makes Believing Men and Women renowned in Grace and Godliness and adorns the Soul Church and People where it is None shine forth in that Beauty and Splendor as those do who have much Faith III. Tried Gold may be utterly lost a Man may have much of it to day and none to morrow Thieves may rob him of it c. III. True Faith cannot be utterly lost A Man may lose somewhat of the Strength of it he may decay in this Grace as well as in others but he can never lose the Habit the Seed or Truth of Faith it self I have prayed for thee Luk. 22.31 32. that thy Faith fail not Inferences FIrst Information How greatly are some mistaken about this precious and most noble Grace For we may infer from hence 1. That true Faith is not a simple or bare believing there is a God the Devils have this kind of Faith they also believe and tremble 2. That it is not a meer or bare believing the Truth of the holy Scriptures The Jews believed the Scriptures and thought by them to have eternal Life and yet were Enemies to Jesus Christ 3. That it is not a bare believing Christ died for Sinners most ungodly People in England believe that 4. That cannot be a true Faith which Swearers Drunkards Whoremongers and all other ungodly and prophane Persons have 5. That a Man may leave all gross Sins and assent to many Truths of the Gospel and yet have no true Faith 6. Nay that a Man may be baptized take upon him the Profession of the Gospel and suffer many things and yet not have one dram of saving Faith as appears by the foolish Virgins Judas and Simon the Sorcerer and many others 7. Nay a Man may seem to hear the Word with Joy and yet have no true Faith A temporary Faith is not the Faith of God's Elect or that Faith that is more precious than Gold c. Quest How may a Man know true Faith from that which is common and meer counterfeit Answ 1. There is in that Person who savingly believes in Christ a true Knowledg of God and of Jesus Christ the true Saviour it takes hold on the right Object Dost thou believe on the Son of God Joh. 9.24 9.35 Rom. 10.14 Who is he Lord c. How shall they believe on him of whom they have not heard 2. There must be a true Knowledg of and a free and full Assent and Consent to the Truth of that which is contained in the Holy Scriptures concerning God Christ and Salvation and all other essential Principles of true Religion It is not enough to believe as the Church believes as some ignorantly teach and affirm 3. He that hath obtained true Faith hath had his Understanding enlightned to see what his State and Condition was by Nature Acts 2.37 2 Cor. 7. he hath been under Humiliation for Sin 4. He seeth also that all his own Righteousness will avail him nothing in point of Justification and Acceptation with God Without Christ his Prayers Tears Reading Hearing and Alms-deeds will not save him To trust to any of these he sees is the way to make Faith void Rom. 3.8 Rom. 10.2 3. The Jews built upon this Foundation and thereby missed of Salvation 5. There is in that Soul where true Faith is wrought or where the Seed of it is sowed a desire after Christ not simply after his Merits but also after Union and intimate Acquaintance with him Yea doubtless I account all things but Loss Phil. 3.8 for the Excellency of the Knowledg of Jesus Christ my Lord for whom I have suffered the Loss of all things and do account them but Dung that I may win Christ c. A true enlightned Soul looks first to Christ's Person as being affected with his Beauty and Sweetness of his Love and then to the Goods and Riches he possesseth As a Woman newly married looks first to her Husband and then to the Inheritance or else is little better than an Harlot 6. But did I say a Desire after Christ Be not mistaken to think that every Desire after him is a Sign of true Faith 1. It is a fervent Desire such desire him more than all the World That Soul pants after him and Union with him Psal 75.25 more than after Heaven and Glory It greatly endears Christ to the Soul He is the chiefest of Ten Thousand 2. 'T is such a Desire as in a hungry Man nothing will satisfy him but Bread so nothing will satisfy a true Believer but Christ the Bread of Life 7. If a Man hath true Faith he knoweth the Time when he was without it he knoweth he was once blind and without God and Christ I will not say he knows the very Instant when God wrought it in his Soul but he can say with the Man whose Eyes Christ opened Whereas I was blind I now see Jon. 9.25 8. And not only so but he knows the Way and Means by which he obtained it viz. either by Hearing or Reading or Meditating on the Word of God either in the free Tender of Christ to Sinners in general or to dejected burthened and heavy-laden Sinners in particular 9. Faith is usually obtained of God in a constant and laborious seeking and crying to him for it What Pains hath it cost you Sirs Precious Faith is not easily obtained to What Conflicts have you found within Satan ever makes strong Resistance there is nothing he strives to obstruct or hinder more 10. What Love to God hath thy Faith wrought in thee True Faith works by Love Mary believed and loved much 11. Hath thy Faith purified thy Heart Hast thou seen its horrid Filth and Pollution and dost thou long after Purity not only to have thy Sins pardoned but also purged away and the Power and Dominion thereof destroyed 12. What Alteration in the Course of thy Life hath Faith wrought Faith made Jordan go back There is a Turning the whole Man to God a glorious Change in every Faculty in Heart and also in Life Half my Goods saith Zacheus Luk. 19.8 Act. 19.19 I give to the Poor And in the Acts 't is said Those that used unlawful Arts burned their Books If any Man be in Christ he is a new Creature 13. Faith leads the Soul to receive Christ in all his Offices not only as
had only in some particular Countries some People never taste of it as long as they live III. Christ's Love is not known to many that live in the World divers never tasted of it do not know how good it is died without any sight or assurance of Christ's Love IV. Wine is highly esteemed and valued when the excellent Virtue thereof is known IV. Christ's Love is esteemed by all that know his Worth they value him above Wine or Gold or the best of earthly things V. Men will not part with Store of the best Wine for Toys and Trifles V. Saints will not part with the Love of Christ for all the good things of this World they are but Trifles and Vanity in comparison of his Love If a Man would give all the Goods of his House to a Saint so that he would part with Christ's Love Cant. 8.7 it would be contemned VI. Wine is of a singular use to revive and make glad the disconsolate Spirit Vina parant animos Ovid. Give Wine to him that is of an heavy Heart VI. The Love of Christ is the most sovereign thing in the World in the Manifestations of it to revive and comfort poor disconsolate Souls Thou hast put more Gladness in my Heart Psal 4.7 than in the Time when their Corn and Wine encreased VII Wine causes a Man if he drinks freely of it Cura fugit dilueturque Mero Ovid. to forget his Sorrows VII The Evidence or Manifestation of Christ's Love to a poor Soul doth cause it to forget all its former Bitterness Terror of the Law Rom. 7.10 15 18 24 25. and Horror of Conscience for Sin which possibly for a great while it lay under VIII Wine Naturalists tell us repairs decayed Nature A Man may faint by some sudden Qualm and need a Cordial and that which may revive the Spirit may not recover a Man out of a Consumption or one brought by a languishing Distemper almost to the Grave VIII The Grace and Love of Christ will recover Strength that hath been lost A Saint may faint and need a Cordial by means of a Temptation when Grace is not much decayed in him A Draught of Christ's Love I mean the Manifestations of it will recover in a spiritual sence a Christian that has been a great while consumptive whose Vitals are impaired and he almost dead IX Wine was used in Legal Sacrifices in time of the Law IX The Grace of Love that Fruit of the Spirit which flows from Christ is the only Ingredient to stir up our Devotion We can perform no Services acceptably without Love Let all your Works be done in Charity And when the Soul hath sweet Manifestations of Chrst's Love to it how sweetly doth it go on in God's Worship X. Wine is good as it may be used to heal some sorts of Wounds X. The Love of Christ will heal a broken Heart There is no Salve both in the Nature and Effects thereof to cure a wounded Spirit like Assurance of Christ's Love XI Wine is good to stir up Courage in hostile Encounters it makes a Man brisk and valiant XI The Love of Christ breaking in upon the Soul makes a Christian couragious and very valiant in that spiritual Warfare he is engaged in he is hereby animated to endure all manner of Hardness and over all is more than a Conqueror Nothing shall separate us from the Love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. XII Wine is used at Marriage-Feasts and in great Banquets XII The Love of Christ is more than a Banquet of the greatest Varieties to a gracious Soul it affords choice Food a Feast of fat things of Wines upon the Lees of fat things full of Marrow of Wines upon their Lees well refined XIII Wine may be taken to excess XIII But none can have too much of Christ's Love XIV Wine daily drunk without fresh Supplies will not hold out long XIV Christ's Love is like a Fountain of living Water or an inexhaustible Treasure XV. Wine will decay by long keeping it will wax sour and become nauseous and unsavoury XV. Christ's Love the longer we enjoy it the sweeter it is and sweetest of all 't will be at the last Inferences BUt from whence is it that Believers do thus prize and esteem Jesus Christ and his Love First From the Excellency of his Person See Rose of Sharon and Lilly of the Vallies He is fairer than the Children of Men. Secondly From the sence of his great Love to them We love him because he first loved us Thirdly From the Consideration of those hard things he suffered for their sakes Fourthly Because of the Savour of his good Ointment He hath shed his Love abroad in their Hearts Rom 5 5. by the Holy Ghost Fifthly Saints value Christ's Love above Wine because his Love is beyond all comparison most sweet and consolatory 1. His Love was in him early betimes before ever the Earth was formed or the Foundations thereof laid Prov. 8 31. his Hearts Desire and Love was first set upon us 2. His Love is of an attracting Nature that the Spouse knew well enough He is like the Loadstone Jer. 31.3 1 John 4.19 he draws all Hearts after him that have a taste or touch of him 3. 'T is boundless like Nilus it overflows all Banks and Bounds it knows no Limits Prov. 8.30 4. It is a delighting Love His Delight was with the Sons of Men. He takes complacency in the Soul he loves Hos 14.4 Ezek 16.3 4 5 6 9. Cant. 8.6 7. 5. It is a free Love without foreseen Merit or Worth in the Object When Man lay weltring in his Blood loathsom and filthy Christ loved him 6. Christ's Love is hot and fervent much Water cannot quench it It hath a vehement Flame 7. 'T is a matchless Love far beyond the Love of Jacob to Rachel or Jonathan to David 8. 'T is an incomprehensible Love it passeth Knowledg You may sooner find out the Depth of the Sea the Heighth of Heaven tell the Stars or accompt the Sands of the Sea-shore than find out or measure the Love of Christ It is a lasting abiding and eternal Love His loving-kindness he will never take away This makes the Church so much to desire the Manifestations of the Love of Christ and in this is his Love better than Wine But who are they that thus prize and esteem the Love of Christ Take some brief Notes of them 1. Such cannot tell how to praise Christ nor set forth his Excellency as they would they cannot sufficiently exalt him 2. Such are in a longing and languishing Condition till they see him 3. Cannot be satisfied till they get to some good and well-grounded Assurance of an Interest in him 4. Christ runs much in their Minds 5. Such love Christ what State soever they are in 6. Such keep his Word 7. They love Christ above Husband Wife Children c. nay more than Life it self 8. They
our Passeover with a sense of and bitter sorrow for our Sins wherein we were captivated XIV It was to be eaten in every Family and each Family to this purpose had a Lamb. XIV Shewing the Unity that ought to be among God's People they being all Fellow-Commoners in and Partakers of the Privileges and Blessings of Christ Every Church and Family of the Faithful yea each particular Soul hath a whole Christ XV. The House was to be prepared XV. To signify how we should prepare our Hearts 1 Cor. 11.28 XVI If the House was too little the Neighbour's House was to be assumed yea the Strangers were to partake if they were circumcised XVI To signify first the superabundant Virtue of Christ's Death for the House may be too little for the Lamb but not the Lamb for the House as also the sweet Communion of the Saints in Love the joyful Vocation also of the Neighbour-Gentiles and their Admission into the Fellowship of the Faith being inwardly circumcised c. XVII They were to eat it with their Loins girded XVII This signifies the girding the Loins of our Minds with Justice Strength and Verity XVIII They were to have their Shooes on XVIII This was to figure out the Preparation of the Gospel of Peace wherewith our Feet should be always shod XIX They were to eat it in haste The original word signifies to haste away as with fear and amazement XIX They that come to Christ must be ready to walk in the way of Salvation with the Staff of true Faith in their hands as Strangers and Pilgrims to make a daily progress towards the Land of everlasting Happiness XX. Lastly In that the Blood of the Lamb was first sprinkled on them XX. It shews that first Christ was made a Sacrifice to God and then a Sacrament to us Guild Type Disparity THe Passeover signified Christ was to come OUr Passeover shews he is come and hath been crucified for us II. The Passeover only fed the Body II. Christ spiritually feeds the Soul III. The Lamb being slain and eaten perished and nothing of it remains III. But Christ tho he was slain and became thereby spiritual Food for our Souls yet he is no whit impaired thereby but liveth and abideth for ever in perfect Bliss and Happiness and remaineth as perpetual Nourishment to his Chosen IV. That was a Type or Shadow IV. Christ is the Antitype and Substance of it Inferences GOd gave special Charge to the Israelites concerning their eating the Passeover He was greatly provoked by the Neglect of it Numb 9.13 But that Man that is clean and is not in a Journey and forbeareth to keep the Passeover even that Man shall be cut off from his People c. What then will become of them who refuse to come to Christ and eat of this spiritual Passeover Also it may stir up such sincere and godly Souls to look about them and cause them to tremble who live in the great Neglect of coming to the holy Supper of our Lord. Surely there is as good Ground and Reason for you to obey the Lord Jesus in this Ordinance as there was for Israel to obey Moses in keeping the Passeover nay I may shew much greater 1. From the consideration of what the one was a Sign of and what the other shews forth and is a Sign of 2. From the consideration of the Excellency of Christ whose Law this is above Moses who received that Law and delivered it to Israel 3. From the Threats that are denounced against those who refuse to hear Christ in whatsoever he shall say to them If the Word spoken by Angels was stedfast c. If they escaped not that refused him that spake on Earth how shall we escape if we turn away from him that speaketh from Heaven And for further Motives consider 1. The strict and positive Injunction of Christ Do this in remembrance of me He that said Do not steal do not commit Adultery Repent believe pray always be holy c. said Do this c. 2. It is a perpetual Ordinance till Christ comes the second time Paul received it from Christ after his coming in Spirit according to his Promise c. And the Primitive Saints continued in it after that time likewise therefore the Coming he spake of must intend his second Coming at the last Day 3. Consider the great Need there is to remember Christ's Death and of those profitable Instructions and Blessings comprehended in this Ordinance 4. Is not the Neglect of a known Duty a great Sin 5. Is not this in effect to set light by Christ and to cast contempt upon his Commands and in effect to say there is no need of them What signifies say some the eating a little Bread and drinking a little Wine Wilt thou take upon thee to teach Christ and exalt thy own Wisdom above his who is the most wise God 6. Consider how faithful and ready the Saints in former Ages were to walk in the Commandments of God and is it not left upon Record to their everlasting Commendation Moses did all things according to the Pattern shewed him in the Mount c. Zachary and Elizabeth walked in all the Commandments of the Lord blameless 7. Dost thou know what spiritual Blessings thou losest by thy Neglect hereof Is not Loss of Communion with Christ a great Loss Psal 119.6 Joh. 14.15 8. Is not universal Obedience a Demonstration of Grace Then shall I not be ashamed when I have respect to all thy Commandments If ye love me keep my Commandments 9. Will not the Thoughts of a wilful Neglect of known and indispensible Duties be bad Death-bed Companions 10. This preacheth the Gospel to the very Sight of your Eyes is it not necessary to make use of all Means God hath ordained for your Establishment in the Truth of the Gospel 11. Will not Omission of known Duties exclude Men and Women the Kingdom of Heaven Read Mat. 25. Is it not for Sins of Omission that Christ will condemn and sentence many Souls to eternal Burnings in the great Day THE Sixth HEAD OF METAPHORS SIMILES And other Borrowed TERMS Mentioned in the SACRED SCRIPTURES Relating to the Holy Angels of GOD AND THE Soul Spirit of Man Wherein the Nature Order Office and Ministration of Angels is opened THe Creatures of God are divided into Invisible and Visible The Invisible are Spirits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 asomatoi without Bodies and by them we understand Angels because being in their Nature incorporeal they cannot be seen by humane Eyes The Visible are whatsoever things have existence in the visible World whether simple or mix'd Bodies In what Notions Metaphors are taken from Good and Evil Angels see our Sacred Philology Book 1. p. 101. 1. Angels then in their Natures are Spirits created of God 2. Called Ministers or Angels to shew their Office Take Mr. Ainsworth's Description of Angels Gen. 16.17 Angels so named of the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angelos in
Eagles Note In some Things the Saints are likened to Eagles Simile Parallel AN Eagle is the chief amongst the Fowls of the Air as a Lion is the King or chief among all the Beasts of the Earth SO the Saints are the chief of Men the Excellent as David calls them Thou art my Lord Psal 16.2 3. my Goodness extendeth not to thee but to the Saints that are in the Earth and to the Excellent in whom is all my Delight The Righteous are said to be more excellent than their Neighbour Prov. 12.26 1 Chron. 4.9 The World is not worthy of them Hence Jabez that holy and gracious Man is said to be more honourable than his Brethren A godly Man is of a more noble Extraction than the Men of the Earth Saints have an honourable Pedigree and Descent they are born of God are as it were of the Blood-Royal of Heaven and nearly related to the Prince of the Kings of the Earth They daily converse have Communion and Fellowship with the Father and the Son the glorious Sovereign of all the World They are delicately and most splendidly fed every day Others live and feed upon the empty Things of this World nay on the Dust of the Earth on Ashes Husks and Gravel as the Holy-Ghost declares They feed upon the Wind Hos 12.1 and snuff in the East Wind Whilst Believers feed on hidden Manna He eats that which is good and his Soul delights it self in Fatness He is often had into the King's Wine-Cellar he is richly cloathed hath more noble and honourable Titles than any Men on Earth He hath a most glorious Retinue viz. the heavenly Angels to attend him every day Never was King if ungodly so attended as the poorest Saint in the World is Saints are the chief of all the Children of Men as Eagles are chief of all the Fowls of the Air. II. Eagles are quick-sighted they behold afar off They have not only a quick and clear Sight but a very strong Sight able to look fully upon the Sun shining in his Strength Hence the Proverb is A Man that hath a clear and strong Sight is Eagle-ey'd II. The Saints are very clear and quick-sighted they can see afar off even from Earth to Heaven They through Christ can behold the Glory of God with open Face 2 Cor. 3.18 They can see and do pry into the secret and hidden Mysteries of the Gospel and Covenant of Grace Psal 25.14 The Secrets of the Lord are with them that fear him and he will shew them his Covenant They see the Evil that is in the least Sin and can discern what the End of the Wicked will be III. Eagles are very swift Creatures they have long Wings by which means they flie with great Swiftness Therefore Solomon calling upon us not to set our Hearts upon Riches saith They make themselves Wings Prov. 27.5 and flie away as an Eagle The Scriptures often express the more than ordinary Swiftness of Men by the Swiftness of an Eagle David lamenting the Death of Saul and Jonathan gives them this Character 2 Sam. 1.23 They were stronger than Lions and swifter than Eagles III. The Saints are very swift and speedy in their Motions when under the powerful Operation of the Spirit or upon the Wings of Faith and Love Psal 119.59 60. I made haste c. saith David They are said to run nay flie like Eagles or as Doves to the Windows they are many times carried swiftly along in the way of their Duties as upon Eagles Wings The Ministers of the Gospel are set forth by an Angel flying in the midst of Heaven Rev. 14.6 having the everlasting Gospel to preach unto them that dwell upon the Earth When God's People are assaulted and persecuted they flie to God for Shelter so David Psal 143.9 I flie unto thee to hide me IV. The Eagles mount up on high The Word in the Hebrew signifies to get high and therefore as it is noted by Mr. Caryl it is used in the Noun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sublimis elatus fuit eminuit per Metaphoram supervivit to set forth the Highness of God Job 11.8 Psal 113.6 Isa 5.16 52.13 Scripture as well as Naturalists tell us that the Eagle's Motion and mounting up is wonderful she flies quite out of Sight One of the Ancients says The Eagle soars above the * Doubtless he means the lower Region Air as if she would visit the Starry Heavens The common Epithetes of an Eagle are high flying swift c. IV. The Saints of God mount up on high Phil 3.20 Our Conversation saith Paul is in Heaven Men of the World are like Moles and Worms always digging and tumbling in the Earth and Muck of this World but Believers those who are truly risen with Christ Col. 3.1 2 3. seek those things that are above they soar aloft nothing will satisfy them but Communion with God They mount up by Prayer as also by fresh Acts of Faith they mount up by divine Meditation They are said to dwell on high Earth and earthly Things will not satisfy them they are of a more heroick and sublime Spirit V. Eagles are unweary in their Flight they faint not tho they flie high and are long before they rest V. So the Saints should never grow weary nay and the Promise is Gal. 6. Isa 40.31 They shall mount up as with Eagles Wings they shall run and not be weary they shall walk and not faint Tho it be long before they come to Heaven their everlasting Resting-place they are held up and therefore they hold out in all their Service and Sufferings Faith and Love are two such strong and excellent Graces that they like Eagle's Wings keep them from tiring and fainting in their Minds tho their Work be hard and their Flight towards Heaven long Psal 27.13 I had fainted unless I had believed c. VI. An Eagle saith one hath a high Spirit she flies high and aims at high things she will not catch Flies she scorns to stoop to such low Game VI. So a Saint hath a noble high and excellent Spirit Low things are not for high and heavenly-born Souls they catch not at the Flies Toyes and Trifles of the Profits Honour and Pleasures of the World as others do VII Eagles make their Nests on high She dwelleth and abideth on the Rocks Job 39.28 upon the Crag of the Rock and strong Place VII So the Saints dwell on high Their Place of Defence shall be the Munition of Rocks Isa 33.16 They make their Nests in the Rock of Ages they dwell in God He is their strong Dwelling-Place VIII Eagles renew their Strength by changing their Feathers tho old they seem young and lively again and are very long-lived VIII The Saints renew their Strength When any Oldness as Mr. Caryl words it is coming upon the new Creature they renew their Strength by looking to Jesus
puts off his upper Clothes and gets meet and necessary Garments for the purpose because the Clothes that a Man usually wears would much encumber him in his Running III. So a Man that would set out in the spiritual Race or in a speedy Course towards Salvation must cast off the Rags of his own Righteousness and put on the Righteousness of Jesus Christ by Faith for that Garment with the Garment of Holiness and Humility is only necessary Rom. 13.14 and must be put on by all that would run the Race set before them so as to obtain the Prize IV. A Man that would run in a Race so as to obtain the Prize must lay aside all Weights whatsoever For all know that if a Man have a Weight or Burden on him it will greatly hinder or obstruct him in his running nay if he doth not cast it off it will soon cause him to be weary and faint in the Way IV. So a Christian that would run in this heavenly Race must cast off every spiritual Weight This the Apostle directly counsels the Saints to do Let us lay aside every Weight Heb. 12 1. and the Sin that doth so easily beset us and let us run with Patience the Race set before us Now these Weights are 1. The inordinate Affections Our Hearts must not be set upon Things below Col 3.2 3 not inordinately upon Father or Mother Son or Daughter House or Land for he whose Heart runs out in a covetous manner after the World as the Prophet shews Hab. 2.6 is like a Man that is laden with thick Clay It is impossible for a Man to run this Race with the World upon his Back What was it that weighed down the young Man in the Gospel that came running to Christ who seemed to be in a full speed towards eternal Life Was it not the inordinate Love to the World 2. Sin Sin is a Weight That Sin that doth so easily beset us Some understand the Sin of Unbelief is meant hereby others a Man's Constitution-Sin or the Sin of his Nature that which he is most easily overtaken with whether it be Pride Passion c. Sin yea every Sin must be cast off take it how you will tho I rather adhere to the latter if a Man would so run as to obtain for nothing like Guilt tends to make a Christian grow weary and faint in his Mind V. A Man that would run so as to obtain the Prize must not be overcharged with inordinate Eating and Drinking for Experience shews how that unfits a Man for running a Race or for any other Enterprize whatever And a Man that striveth for Mastery is temperate in all things V. So a Christian must take heed he be not overcharged in a spiritual Sence there is spiritual Gluttony and Drunkenness spoken of in Scripture Hence saith our Saviour Take heed to your selves Luke 21.24 lest at any time your Hearts be overcharged with Surfeiting Drunkenness and the Cares of this Life and so that Day come upon you unawares What is meant by Surfeiting Drunkenness c. but all kind of loose Living 1 Thess 5.7 wanton Riotousness excessive Delight in or Desire after the Pleasures of this World c. Or on the other hand being overwhelmed and sorely afflicted or perplexed with inordinate Cares about earthly Matters All these things must be avoided by those who would run the spiritual Race so as to obtain the Prize VI. A Man that would run in a Race so as to obtain the Prize must see he doth not lessen his Pace he must run swiftly and run constantly if he loyter or grow careless and idle no wonder if he lose the Prize VI. So a Christian must run with speed he must be very diligent swift-footed which is signified by running and also he must be even in his Course He must not be like the Galatians Gal. 5.7 only run well for a Time but continue always to the end the same Pace i. e. keep in a constant Course of godly Zeal and Holiness according to that of the Apostle We desire that every one of you do shew the same Diligence to the full assurance of Hope to the end Heb. 6 11. Some Men seem very zealous in a Fit they are all on a Flame as it were none more forward and lively in God's Ways and in his holy Worship than they but on a sudden oft-times as hath been observed they flag and grow weary It may be as the Proverb is a zealous Apprentice a lukewarm Journey-man and a quite cold Master VII A Man that would run so as to obtain the Prize ought to be strong and healthy A distempered Person or one that falls sick in the Way is not likely to obtain the Prize a consumptive Man or one that hath feeble Knees or a distempered Heart is not likely to hold out VII So a Christian that runs the heavenly Race ought to labour after spiritual Strength Be strong in the Lord Eph. 6 10. 2 Tim. 2.1 and in the Power of his Might Thou therefore my Son be strong in the Grace that is in Christ Jesus Distempers are as subject to seize upon the Soul as upon the Body viz. the Tympany of Pride the Feaver of Passion the Trembling of the Heart through slavish Fear the Stone of a hard Heart the spiritual Consumption or Decay of Grace Want of Breath or Difficulty in breathing out constant and fervent Prayers and Desires to God or any other Decay of the inward Man or Disease of the Soul If any of these seize upon a Christian in his Course to eternal Life without sp●edy Cure they will cause him to faint and fall short of the blessed Prize VIII A Man that runs in a Race if he falls lame in the Way is not likely to obtain the Prize VIII So that Christian that falleth lame in a spiritual Sence in the Race to Glory is in danger of miscarrying Make strait Paths for your Feet Heb. 12.13 lest that which is lame be turned out of the Way but rather let it be healed Some by Lameness understand Want of Sincerity when there is a Work upon one Faculty of the Soul and not upon another i. e. When the Conscience is awakened and the Understanding somewhat enlightned and yet the Will and Affection is for Sin and the World This Man is lame he is no sound Man he goes limping as it were along he will not run long as he runs not well Others by Lameness understand more directly a wavering Mind about some main Truths of the Gospel or about the publick and visible owning and professing of Christ and the Gospel in respect of those Truths that are most opposed by Men in the Day and Generation in which we live Some are like those in the Prophet Elijah's Time they halt between two Opinions 1 King 18.21 stand wavering between God and Baal and know not which to cleave to whether to the Protestant or
any should take it away from him VII So a covetous Man doth not enjoy what he hath without fear he is afraid of every one lest they should rob him or lest by one means or another his worldly Pelf should be wasted or taken away VIII The Hog tho he should be washed yet in a little time he will turn again to his wallowing in the Mire and become as filthy as ever he was VIII So if an unregenerate Man should by the Light of Nature or other Helps that God is pleased to afford escape many great Pollutions and reform in many things and seem to be a true Convert and to be clean washed from his Filthiness yet for want of a thorough Work of Grace upon his Heart he will at last turn again to his former Course and be as vile and wicked as ever he was nay oftentimes much worse Mat. 12.43 Luk. 11.25 as our Saviour intimates by the unclean Spirit 's going out of a Man c. And in him is that Word made good The Sow that was washed is turned to her wallowing in the Mire again IX A Swine cries out exceedingly or makes a great Noise when he is took hold of and had away to be killed IX So wicked Men when God takes hold of them by Sickness and they come to have Apprehensions of Death upon them they cry out unless their Consciences are asleep or seared being afraid of Death and Hell X. The Wild-Boar is of a more stubborn and mischievous Nature and commonly doth more hurt being very strong than any other Swine Naturalists tell us that the Wild-Boar is almost as strong and cruel as a Lion and that he will often whet and sharpen his Teeth and run upon the Huntsman X. So Antichrist who may fitly be compared to a Wild-Boar I mean his Un-holiness that First-born of Satan is and hath been more mischievous than any other of the Herd he having got a great degree of Power which he hath from time to time exercised against God's People to the wasting and spoiling of his spiritual Vine and Vineyard Psal 80 1● The Boar out of the Wood doth waste it and the wild Beast out of the Field doth devour it XI The Swine under the Tree in a greedy manner eat up the Acorns but never look up to the Tree or Oak from whence they fall XI So wicked and graceless Men tho they enjoy all this World 's Good never look up in a due manner to God who is the Tree of Life and is the Author and Giver of it XII Swine will refuse Pearl for Pease if ye cast Pearls before them they will tread them under their Feet XII So wicked Men will refuse Grace for Gold give them but this World and let who will take the Pearl of great Price the Love and Favour of God Give them Counsel to leave their Sins or cast the Pearl of good Instruction before them and they will tread it under their Feet they will cast that at their Heels which they should apply to their Hearts Mat. 7.6 and revile you if they do not tear and rend you into the Bargain Metaphor Disparity SWine were created such they were Swine from the beginning MAn was created holy and upright at first this swinish and brutish Nature came in by the Fall II. Swine retain their own Nature and it is impossible for them to cease being Swine II. But wicked Men may be changed and become gracious it is possible for them to become Sheep and Lambs of Jesus Christ so as to hate that which they once loved Grace when infused into the Soul makes a real and wonderful Change Inferences THis shews the brutish and base Nature of sinful Man what is more contemptible in our Eyes than a Swine 2. It shews what a vast difference there is between a true converted Soul and a brutish Sinner God esteems of the one as of his choicest Treasure but ungodly Men are meer Swine and brutish Creatures in his Sight Wicked Men Debtors Mat. 5.25 26. Agree with thine Adversary quickly whilst thou art in the way with him lest any time the Adversary deliver thee to the Judg and the Judg deliver the to thee Officer and thou be cast into Prison Vers 26. Verily I say unto thee Thou shalt by no means come out thence till thou hast paid the uttermost Farthing Mat. 18.24 And when he had begun to reckon one was brought unto him which ought him ten thousand Talents IN both these Places Sin is called a Debt and the Sinner a Debtor The Reason of which is shewed under the Head of Metaphors concerning Sin where Sin is compared to a Debt unto which we refer you Metaphor Parallel A Debtor is one that oweth Money Duty c. to his Neighbour also one that is a Trespasser an Offender or guilty Person A Man may be a Debtor by Office Gal. 5.3 by Duty Rom. 8.12 by the Law of Charity Rom. 15.27 by trespassing or offending whether God or Man Mat. 6.12 MAn oweth all that he is hath or can do unto God he having received his very Being and all other good Things that he enjoys from God as so many Talents lent him which he must be accountable to God for in the great Day c. Man is a Trespasser Mat. 25.19 an Offender or a guilty Person having broken the Law the Penalty of which is eternal Death so that as a Traitor or flagitious Person by his hainous Crimes he is become a Debtor to everlasting Punishment II. An evil Debtor is unwilling to be called to an Accompt nothing is worse to him than to hear the News Give an account of thy Stewardship Mat. 18.24 Hence 't is said One was brought that owed ten thousand Talents as if it were by Force he was haled before his Master to reckon with him II. So wicked Men do not love to think upon the Day of Judgment care not to hear of those large Bills and Hand-writings that are against them How grievous will that Voice from Heaven be to ungodly Men Luk. 16.2 Give an Account of your Stewardship Arise ye Dead and come to Judgment Give an Account of all the Oaths you have sworn the Lies you have told the Times you have been drunk the Days of Grace you have neglected give an Account of all the hard and reproachful Words you have spoken against your godly Neighbours and of all the Wrongs and Injuries you have done them give an Account of all those Talents that were lent you what Improvement have you made of your Knowledg and Parts your Seasons and Sabbaths and of those many Years you have had in the World This I say is grievous to wicked Men to think upon They shall be brought forth in the Day of Wrath they will not come willingly Job 21.30 but shall therefore be as it were haled before the Judg of Heaven and Earth III. Ill Debtors are attended with Shame Ambrose speaketh
Destruction o● Jerusalem For as the Guilt of all the Blood shed from righteous Abel to the Death of Zacharias is by our Saviour fix'd upon Jerusalem and cannot be removed to another People so the Blood of all the Martyrs and Followers of Jesus is by this Revelation ●●x'd upon the last Babylon R●v 17.6 And I saw the Woman drunk with the Blood of the Saints and of the Martyrs of Jesus Chap. 18. v. 24. And in her was found the Blood of the Prophets and of Saints and of ALL that were slain upon the Earth But Rome Heathen was not guilty of all the Christian Blood that was shed upon Earth by Murthers Massacres and Martyrdom since the Destruction of Jerusalem For to look back but for six hundred Years last past in which Time we shall find Hundreds of Thousands of profest Christians most butcherly and barbarously put to Death for their Zeal and Love to the Christian Religion in the respective Nations of Europe before which the Heathenish State of Rome was gone off about the space of six hundred Years So that if we will regard the full satisfying of this Prediction about My●●ery Babylon we must of necessity bring her down lower than the Heathenish State of Rome 6. Rome Heathen cannot be this Babylon under Consideration because the Discoveries of other Prophecies relating to the same State no way agrees to the Power of Rome Heathen 1. This State of Babylon is called the Mystery of Iniquity This no way agrees to Rome Heathen but fully agrees to Rome Papal Compare 2 Thess 2.7 with Rev. 17.7 viz. For the Mystery of Iniquity doth already work The Angel said unto me Wherefore didst thou marvel I will tell thee the Mystery of the Woman and of the Beast that carrieth her 2. The Head of this State of Mystery Babylon is called the Man of Sin by way of Eminency 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not only beyond the common Rank of Men but beyond the highest Sons of Wickedness that went before him And there is a great Truth in this for if we consider the Pope in respect of Pride Hypocrisy Idolatry and Blood he is the most unparallel'd Man of Sin 3. This State or Mystery of Iniquity began to work in the Apostle's Days which is no ways applicable to the Power of Rome Heathen for that did not then begin it being at that time in the very Meridian of its Greatness and universal Sovereignty Luke 2.1 And it came to pass in those Days that there came out a Decree from Caesar Augustus that all the World should be taxed 4. This Man of Sin Mystery of Iniquity or Head of this Babylonish State is saie to be let or hindred in his Designs He that now letteth will let until he be taken out of the Way 2 Thess 2.7 But now Rome Heathen had no Lett or Hindrance either from the Word of God for that declared it as it was a Civil Magistracy to be God's Ordinance nor from any opposite Power either Civil or Military they giving Laws to the greatest Part of the World and enjoying the Supreme Government of the best Kingdoms in the Universe none being able to cope with them at that Time 5. This Head of the Babylonish State is said to sit in the Temple of God which the Power of Rome Heathen did not do neither in the Temple of Jerusalem nor in the Church wh●ch is more properly the Temple of God For the Jews kept the Possession of the Literal Temple till it was destroyed and for the Church of God the Heathen Emperors never loved it so well at to make their Residence in it But the Bishop of Rome before he shewed himself to be that wicked One viz. the Man of Sin d●d evidently sit in the Church or Temple of God and so fulfilled this Prophecy in the very Letter of it 6. He that is the Man of Sin or Head of this Babylonish State was to rise by Apostacy or falling away from the Christian Religion 2 Thess 2.3 There shall come a falling away first exactly agreeing with another Prophecy to the same purpose 1 Tim. 4.1 Now the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the latter Times some shall depart from the Faith c. But Rome Heathen did not rise by Apostacy from the Christian Religion or a departing from the Faith which they never profess'd as is evident to the whole World Ergo Rome Heathen cannot be this Babylonish State 7. This Man of Sin or Head of Mystery Babylon lay hid in the Apostle's Time and was not revealed 2 Thess 2.3 Rev. 17.9 but the Power of Rome Heathen did not then lie hid or wanted to be revealed for it stood visible and high upon a Hill even upon seven Hills according to the Roman Poet Ovid who lived about the very Time of Christ's being on Earth in Lib. de Tristibus Sed quae de septem totum circumspicit Orbem Montibus Imperii Roma Deûmque Locus That is But Rome which from her seven Hills the whole Earth views around the Place of Gods and Rule c. Ergo Rome Heathen cannot be this Babylonish State 8. This Mystery of Iniquity is said to oppose and exalt himself above all that is called God or that is worshipped 2 Thess 2.4 But this the Power of Rome in its Heathen State did not do for they worshipped offered Sacrifices and bore a Reverence to their Gods which by Nature indeed were no Gods and 't is only the Head of Rome P●pal that runs down all Gods but those of his own making Ergo Rome Papal and not Rome Heathen must of necessity be this Mystery of Iniquity 9. The Rise or Coming of this Mystery of Iniquity is after the working of Satan 2 Thess 2.9 But the Rise of the Romish Greatness and Power when Heathen was not after the working of Satan Dan 7.2 3 but was said by Daniel to be produced by the Providence of God or the four Winds of Heaven and by the Apostle to be Powers ordained of God Rom. 13.1 Therefore Rome Heathen cannot be the Mystery of Iniquity c. here meant 10. This Mystery of Iniquity is not only said to come after the working of Satan 2 Thess 2.9 but also with All Power c. But the Rise of Rome Heathen was not after that manner Ergo c. To illustrate the first Proposition note That the Term All Power marks out the Romish Pope so notoriously that whosoever runs may read it for if we do but impartially consider his impudent Usurpations upon Crowned Heads and his Pretences of Supremacy over the whole Christian World his proud imperious Decrees Bulls c. his Disposal of the Kingdoms of Princes and the Inheritances yea the very Lives of private Persons of any Rank that dare disobey him his Pretences to shut and open Heaven Hell and his feigned Purgatory his carrying a Symbol of that vast and God-like Power viz. a Brace of Keys hanging at his Girdle All these will appear
and nothing that is given him will go down neither Food nor Physick or if he doth take it yet it will not stay with him 't is a very bad sign so when a Sinner refuseth all good Counsel that is given him and instead of vomiting up by true Repentance his Sin he vomiteth up the Physick and Food of his Soul that should do him good and despises all Reproof Prov. 28.1 hardning himself against it he is near to Destruction 6. And Lastly When a Man is wounded and that Balsam Means or Medicine that seldom fails to work a Cure in others yet will do him no good but contrary-wise whilst in Cure and under the best Means he grows worse and worse there is little hopes of him so when a Sinner under a powerful and Soul-saving Ministry and divers sore Afflictions is not at all reformed but grows worse and worse his Condition is bad it may be that Sermon that works no change at all in him hath tended through the Mercy of God to the Conversion of several Souls who were as sorely wounded as he If a Physician gives the best Medicine he has and lays on a most Soveraign Plaister and yet the Patient saith Sir that which you prescribed hath done me no good I wonder saith he it seldom fails me I fear your Condition I must give up I have done what I can for you the Lord pitty your Soul you are no Man for this World 't is an Argument that Wound or Sickness will be unto Death when the best Preaching the best Means that can be made use of will not work upon a Man's Heart he is under Losses and Affliction and divers melting Providences but nothing will do Inferences IS Sin a Wound or doth it wound the Soul wound the State Nation and Church of God We may then infer from hence the Folly of Men and Women who love and hug their Sin Wilt thou O Sinner hug a Serpent in thy Bosom that strives to sting thee to Death what Fools are wicked Men 2. Let us learn from hence to bewail the Condition of our sinful Relations let the Husband mourn over his unbelieving Wife and the Wife mourn over the unbelieving Husband Fathers grieve for their unconverted and wounded Children and Children grieve for their wounded and unconverted Parents c. What are they that thou lovest so dearly and who lye in thy Bosom mortally wounded and wilt thou not be troubled for them what not one Sigh nor Tear come from thee for them be astonished O Heavens what a hard Heart hast thou 3. Seek out for help you that are unconverted delay not and let such who are healed do what they can to get help and Cure for their Friends if a Husband a Wife a Father a Child or Brother be dangerously sick or wounded externally how ready are you to enquire for some skilful Physician or Chyrurgion and what speed will you make and will you not be as tender and as careful of their Souls 4. Take heed you do not draw others into Sin What not only wound thy own Soul but be cruel also to the Souls of others wilt thou murther thy self and murther thy Friend too 5. What blind Wretches are they that make a mock at Sin See Fools 6. Let it be also matter of caution to all to take heed they rest not satisfied with slight healing Jer. 8.11 They have healed the hurt of the Daughter of my People slightly c. This may be done many ways 1. Some rest satisfied and lick themselves whole with the thoughts of federal Holiness think they are in Covenant with God through the Faith of their Parents thus the Jews Mat. 3.9 We are Abraham 's Seed we have Abraham to our Father my Parents were Godly and so they might and yet thou a Child of the Devil and be damned for all that 2. Some fly to their Godly Education but that will never heal their Wounds 't is not what a Godly Family thou wast brought up in and what good Instruction thou hadst but what thou art and what a change there is in thee what Faith and Fear of God is there wrought in thy Soul 3. Others apply the Mercy of God when they begin to feel Conscience to terrify them Exod 34.6 and their Wounds appear but never consider his Justice remember God is graci●us and merciful c. but will in no wise clear the Guilty 4. Others trust to a partial Reformation of Life they are other Men to what they were once Soul 't is not Reformation or leaving all manner of gross scandalous Sins but a change of Heart and Regeneration thou must seek after 5. Some apply the Promises of God to Sinners before their Wounds were ever lanced or their Sores laid open and the Corruption let out this is but skinning over the Sore and to leave it to fester and rancle inwardly the proud Flesh must with some corroding Plaister be taken down thou wantest through Humiliation for Sin 6. Many satisfy themselves because they are not such great Sinners as some are Remember Luk. 13 3 5. I tell ye nay except ye repent ye shall all likewise perish 7. Some fly to their Duties they sin and are wounded and they think Prayer will make them whole 8. Some boast of their Knowledg and Experiences c. they can discourse and talk well nay and will tell you they are Members of the Church too and this may be and yet they die of their Wounds and go to Hell O take heed you are not slightly healed Quest Well but it may be you will say What should we do to be throughly healed Answ There is but one Physician can heal these Wounds none but the Lord Christ only has the healing Medicine his Blood is the Balsam which thou must apply by Faith And if thou wouldest have a perfect Cure thou must be put to pain He that would be healed must suffer his Wounds to be lanced and searched to the bottom 2. Take the Physician 's Counsel and carefully follow his Directions come to him presently whilst it is to day or thou art a dead Man 3. If it be so that he says thy right Hand must be cut off bear the Pain or thy right Eye must be pulled out submit to him Whatsoever is dear to thee that hinders the Cure thou must deny thy self of 4. A Purge thou must take or thy Wounds cannot be healed the evil Humors or the Filth and Corruption that is in thy Heart must by the Spirit of Grace be purged out John 3.3 5. Thou must become a new Creature Except a Man be born again he cannot see the Kingdom of God Sin a Plague 1 Kings 8.38 What Prayer and Supplication soever be made by any Man or by all thy People Israel which shall know every Man the Plague of his own Heart c. Levit. 13.2 3 4 5 6. And it be in the Skin of the Flesh like the Plague of
corrupted the whole Lump of Mankind Adam had no sooner sinned against God but the spiritual Poyson and Venom thereof struck to his Heart corrupting every Faculty of his Soul and not only so but also the Souls of all his Posterity See Wounds IV. 'T is noted by Plutarch that when an Asp stings a Man it doth first tickle him and makes him laugh till the Poyson by little and little gets to the Heart and then it pains and torments him more than ever it delighted him before So doth Sin it may please a little at first Though Wickedness be sweet in his Mouth Job 20 12 tho he hide it under his Tongue though he spare it and forsake it not but keepeth it still within his Mouth Yet his Meat in his Bowels is turned it is the Gall of Asps within him Forbidden Profits and Pleasures are very delightful to carnal Men and many love to be medling with these poysoning Morsels of Sin Many eat that on Earth which they digest in Hell Men must not think to dine and dance with the Devil and then to sup with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in God's Kingdom V. Poyson in a Toad or Serpent suits and agrees well with their Nature but Poyson in a Man's Stomach makes fearful Work it being of a contrary Nature So Sin in a wicked Man one that hath no spark of true Grace in him seems to be suitable and agree well with him his whole Nature being so grievously corrupted and changed into the evil Nature thereof he having used himself so long in sinful Ways that Sin viz. open Prophaneness Superstition and Error is habitual and become natural to him as Poyson to a Toad Naturalists say That if a Man take a little quantity of Poyson at a time and so accustom himself to it ☜ it will at length become so natural to him that he may take it as Food Even so wicked Men by a continual Course and evil Custom in Sin drink it down as pleasant Liquor like as the Fish drinks Water But now Sin to a true Christian is like much Poyson in a Man's Stomach 't is contrary to that new Nature and divine Principle which is wrought in him by the Spirit of God he cannot bear nor endure it he hates every false Way Rom. 7. That which I hate that do I. VI. Poyson is deadly in its own Nature and of a killing and destroying Quality if not timely vomited up by taking some fit and proper Antidote c. So Sin whether fleshly or spiritual viz. sensual Debauchery or Heresy will kill and destroy all where-ever it is both Body and Soul eternally except by true Repentance it be vomited up Tho Men take it down as sweet Wine Prov. 23.31 and are not presently sensible of any harm yet at last it will bite like a Serpent and sting like an Adder VII Oil will expel Poyson and it is often given to Persons who have taken it to cause them to vomit it up So the Oil of Gladness viz. the Spirit of God is the best Antidote in the World to expel and work out the Poyson of Sin in the Soul See Oil of Gladness in the First Volume Book 2. Inferences WHat do Sinners mean will they poyson themselves are they void of Understanding to take down the Poyson of Dragons Will they wilfully murther themselves What Blindness and Folly is in their Hearts II. O how should this stir up the Godly to pity wicked Men and to strive as much as lieth in their Power to prevent their sinning and endeavour to turn away their Wrath III. It may also caution Believers to take heed of Sin and of the Venom of an evil Tongue as also of the Poyson of Heresy and Error IV. Let Sinners also learn from hence timely to look out for Help O get a fit Antidote to save you from this Poyson Ah! what is Sin 't is Poyson in a Cup That 's gilt without and Men do drink it up Most earnestly with joy and much delight Being pleasant to the carnal Appetite Sin 's sweet to him whose Soul is out of taste But long alas its Sweetness will not last Sin 's sweet to th' Flesh that does it dearly love But to the Soul it doth rank Poyson prove Hast thou suck'd this most deadly Venome in And dost not see thy vital Parts begin To swell Art poyson'd Soul Look look about To get an Antidote to work it out Before it be too late the Poyson 's strong Don't stay a Week twelve Hours is too long One drachm of Grace mix'd with repenting Tears The Grace of perfect Love that casts out Fears Mix'd with that Faith which kills all Unbelief Took down with speed will ease thee of thy Grief 'T will purge the Soul and work by Vomit well And all vile Dregs of Venome 't will expell Unless thou vomit up each Dreg be sure No hope of Life one Sin will Death procure Eternal Death Repentance is not right 'Till Sin nay every Sin 's forsaken quite Not only left but as a poysonous Cup Thou must it loath 't is hateful spue it up Sin a Sickness Isa 1.5 The whole Head is sick and the whole Heart faint c. Mat. 9.12 The whole need not a Physician but they that are sick SPiritual Sickness is twofold 1. To be sick with Sin 2. To be sick of Sin as Sin wounds the Soul so it makes sick and this is Man's Misery but to be sick of Sin viz. to be sensible of the Evil and cursed Nature thereof this is a Mercy Parallels THE Causes of Natural Sickness are divers sometimes it arises from some inward and sometimes from some outward Cause to know from whence the Distemper grew or did arise is very necessary whether it be Chronical or Acute i. e. that which hath seized on the Patient on a sudden by Heats Cold or from the Corruption of the Blood by an infectious Air c. which an able Physician is diligent to pry and search into Now as touching the Sickness of the Soul 't is evident the Original Cause thereof was by eating of the forbidden Fruit which surfeited the whole Lump of Mankind or if you please it was occasioned by Poyson by the Poyson of the old Serpent Deadly Poyson makes a Man very sick and corrupts the whole Mass of Blood And as 't is needful to find out if possible the Cause of Sickness so 't is as necessary to find out the Cause of Spiritual Sickness the Cause being discovered the Cure is easy If a Man doth not see what his state is as considered in the first Adam nor the evil and damning Nature of Sin in general nor the particular Plague of his own Heart he is in no hopeful way of help and healing II. Some Sicknesses or Diseases are Epidemical Sin is a Sickness or Disease so universal and a Contagion so catching that none have escaped nor are totally free from it III. Some are so sick that they have
no place free Sin is a Disease that afflicts every part Isa 5. the whole Head is sick and the whole Heart faint IV. The Distemper which we call the Sickness or Pestilence is very mortal and sweeps away thousands Sin is such a Sickness no Pestilence like it Sin is the Plague of Plagues That which is most opposite to God is the greatest Evil but Sin is most opposite and contrary to God and therefore the greatest Evil. That which separates Man from and deprives him of the greatest Good must needs be the greatest Evil or the Plague of Plagues but Sin doth this therefore the greatest Evil. That which is the greatest Judgment to be left unto is the worst of Evils but 't is the greatest Judgment in the World to be left or given up to the Lusts of our own Hearts Ergo c. When God designs to bring his severest Wrath upon a People or a particular Soul when he resolves to afflict them to the uttermost he doth not say I will bring Plague or Sickness or Famine upon them but I will deliver them up to their Sins Israel would have none of me c. and what then Psal 81.11 Rom. 1.26 ●8 So I gave them up to their own Hearts Lusts c. Thus he gave up the Gentiles to vile Affections That Sickness Plague or Pestilence that destroys most that kills Millions which is so infectious that none amongst Thousands nay Millions of Thousands can escape is the Plague of Plagues but such a Sickness is Sin More shall be damned than shall be saved nay but few comparatively enter in at the strait Gate and so find Life Now all that are damned are damned or destroyed by Sin and therefore it is the worst of Evils That which kills or destroys Body and Soul too is the Plague of Plagues but Sin destroys Body and Soul too Ergo Sin is the Plague of Plagues V. Many of those who have the Disease we call the Sickness have Spots upon them which are of two sorts one of which are called the Tokens and when they appear they look upon themselves as dead Men So Sin this spiritual Plague and Sickness of the Soul Deut. 31.4 marks some Men out for eternal Death Their Spot saith the Lord is not the Spot of my Children that is their Sin is not a Sin of Infirmity such as appear upon the Children of God Any Spot is bad but some are worse very bad they are deadly Spots they have the Tokens of Death and Wrath upon them 1. The Sin or Spot of a godly Man is rather a Scar or Wound that is healed or almost healed But Sin in some of the Ungodly is like a rotten putrifying Sore in the Flesh 2. The Spots of the Godly are not so contagious or infectious as the Sins or Spots of the Wicked The Sins of the Ungodly make their very Persons and Prayers loathed and hateful in God's sight now God tho he hates the Sins of his own Children Psal 109.7 yet he loves their Persons 3. Sin in a Saint is his Sorrow 't is that which he hates it wounds and grieves his Soul Rom. 7.3 he is sick of his Sin but the Wicked love their Sin Sin is in a godly Man's Conversation and that is his Trouble but Sin is in a wicked Man's Affection which renders it to be a deadly Spot 4. Sin reigns and predominates in the Hearts of the Wicked But Sin tho it may sometimes tyrannize in a Saint yet he obeys it not he is not the Subject or Servant of Sin The one yields and subjects to Sin the other opposes and resists it every Faculty of his Soul is set against it and not only so but against every Sin VI. Sickness brings oft-times utter Weakness upon the Body So Sin brings Weakness upon the Soul I am feeble c. It makes a Christian very faint See Leprosy VII Some Sickness is very grievous to be born So Sin is grievous to a true Christian who is made sensible of it VIII A Man that finds himself very sick and like to die will soon look out for Help or send to a Physician So the Soul that is sin-sick will seek for Help viz. hasten to Jesus Christ for none else can cure the Sickness of the Soul Inferences ARt thou sick and ready to die and insensible of any Illness doth nothing ail thee This is sad II. Art thou sick and greatly afflicted is thy Soul weary of its Groanings Haste to the Physician go to Christ 1. The more sick the more need of Physick the greater Sinner thou art the more need of a Saviour thou hast 2. The longer thou delayest the more hard and difficult will thy Cure be besides the Danger thou runnest Death may be at thy Door 3. Consider you must have a Cure and be freed from this Sickness this Stone in the Heart this Unbelief or what-ever else the Disease be or else be damned 4. Christ came from Heaven on purpose to be thy Physician He came not to call the Righteous but Sinners to Repentance 5. Soul let me tell thee as it was once said to blind Bartimeus Be of good cheer Mat. 11.28 29. Christ calls thee Come to me all ye that are weary c. Luke 10.30 6. Thou mayest have Physick and Cure very cheap Tho thou hast no Money Christ will do all freely if thou wilt cast thy self upon him 7. Christ is able to cure all Diseases Tho thou art never so sick he is able to make thee whole Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God by him 8. Christ is willing as well as able See Mat. 8.2 Mark 1.41 9. Christ can do the Work when all other Means fail Mark 5.26 when Purposes fail good Desires fail Prayers fail and good Works and Moral Righteousness fails c. 10. Christ is such a Physician that rather than thou shouldest go without Cure he hath shed his own Blood to make thee whole and free thee from thy Sickness 11. If Christ undertakes the Cure he will never leave thee till he hath perfectly restored thee to Health again But remember there is no Cure but by his precious Blood He died that we might live Canst thou be sick and such a Doctor by Thou canst not live unless thy Doctor die Strange kind of Grief that finds no Med'cine good T' asswage the Pain but the Physician 's Blood Fr. Quarles Sin compared to Vomit Jer. 48.26 Moab also shall wallow in his own Vomit c. 2 Pet. 2.22 The Dog is turned to his Vomit again c. A Wicked Man or one who turns to his old evil and wicked Courses is compared to a Dog and Sin to Vomit which a Dog licketh up Parallels A Vomit is a very loathsom Thing but a Dog's Vomit is most detestable So Sin is a very loathsom Thing but Apostacy is the worst of Sins no Sin is more abominable in God's
shie of and ready at all turns to flie from and avoid any external horrible Uncleanness But Sin is a bewitching and ensnaring Uncleanness All the bodily Beauty in the World did never entice so many as the Deformity and foul Face of Sin hath Beauty and Comeliness are the Attractives the Loadstone of Love Christ was not loved by many because he did not appear beautiful he vail'd his glorious Beauty Lust is loved tho it be altogether unbeautiful Christ is the Mirror of Beauty tho some see no Comeliness in him he is fairer than the Children of Men But there is no Form or Comeliness in Sin nothing indeed why it should be desired yet how is it admired and esteemed by all Sorts of Men They dote upon it and run mad with love to it 't is so bewitching as the choicest Beauty in the World III. Wh●t Filth Uncleanness or Pollution is of such a murthering killing and destroying Nature as Sin It is true some horrid Pollution is of a corrupting poysonous and destroying Quality but not like Sin This Venom this Uncleanness is worse than any more mortal than any it kills both Body and Soul too it destroys eternally O there is no finding out the cursed Nature of it there is nothing can save from the killing Power of it nor cleanse from its Pollution but Christ's Blood Inferences O What a woful Condition is Man in by Nature how unclean in God's sight Well might Eliphaz say Job 15.16 How abominable and filthy is Man who drinketh in Iniquity like Water The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notes that which is most abhorring to the Nature of Man that which is not only so nauseous that the Stomach cannot digest it but so base that the Mind is burthened to think upon it yea the Word imports that which is rejected by all the Senses that which the Eye cannot endure to look upon that which the Ear cannot endure to hear of that which is a Stink in the Nostrils and which the Hand will not touch such a a thing is Man in God's Sight by reason of Sin Filthy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word is derived from a Root that signifies Caryl on Job 15.16 corrupt rotten putrified the Scum of a Pot the Rust of Metals the Dung or Excrement of Man and Beasts There are no Words saith Caryl filthy enough to express the Filthiness of Man The Word is found saith he but three times in Scripture in this Construction and in all of them 't is applied to shew the abominable Wickedness of Man The first is this Job 15.16 Psal 14 3. Psal 53.3 as if this were a Word pick'd out on purpose as a Glass to shew Man his Face and natural Complexion in c. Job 7.17 II. O what is Man that God should be mindful of him What Beauty is there in him that the Almighty should set his Heart upon him III. What little reason have wicked Men to be proud And how sadly are they mistaken who think to adorn themselves with Sin How do Sinners pride themselves in their filthy Garments and Cloak of Unrighteousness He is no Gallant now a days unless he can swear and curse and cry Damn-him and Sink-him Lord what an Age is this They shew their Sin as Sodom and hide it not they glory in their Shame IV. Let us learn from hence to be fully sensible of our Birth-Pollution I mean Original Sin Job 25.5 Job 14.4 that which we brought into the World with us Can he be clean that is born of a Woman Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean not one Can the Stream be clean when the Fountain is so unclean All that are born by natural Generation are unclean Adam's particular Act or Breach of the Law of God was ours we being in him he stood as the common Root of all his Posterity 't is also by the Almighty imputed to us The natural Pravity or Corruption which issueth from thence passeth from Generation to Generation V. We may infer from hence that every Man and Woman hath need of washing say not therefore with Peter Thou shalt never wash my Feet when every part is defiled c. VI. Go polluted Soul go to the Fountain 'T is the Blood of Jesus Christ that cleanseth us from all Sin VII Bless God there is a Fountain to wash in a Fountain opened for Sin and Uncleanness See Fountain in the First Volume VIII You that are clean praise the Almighty Ye were as filthy as others Such were some of you c. Saints may be said to be clean four manner of Ways 1. Clean meritoriously by the Blood of the Lord Jesus 2. Efficaciously by the Spirit uniting them to Christ and sanctifying their Hearts 3. Clean instrumentally by the Word Now are you clean through the Word which I have spoken unto you 4. Clean impulsively and attractively by Faith Purifying their Hearts by Faith Sin compared to Gray-Hairs Hos 7.9 Yea gray Hairs are here and there upon him and he knoweth it not HE knoweth it not that is Israel or Ephraim viz. the ten Tribes Hos 1.4 Amos 9.8 Ephraim may be considered as a Kingdom I am against the sinful Kingdom or as a Church They were a People in Covenant with God or in a National Church-State and once youthful and beautiful but now they are become old and gray-headed i. e. they had Symptoms of Decay and Ruine upon them Gray Hairs Some by gray Hairs understand heavy Judgments others some prevailing Evils or Sins which were Signs of Destruction c. There may be Truth in both Note Symptoms of Ruine oft-times appear upon a People before their Ruine comes Parallels GRay Hairs are a Sign that a Man's best Days his youthful Days are gone So some Sins and Judgments upon a People are a Sign that their best Days are past away that their Youth and Glory is departing II. Gray Hairs are a Sign of old Age So some Sins and Judgments upon a People shew forth that they are old in Wickedness III. Gray Hairs come oft-times by great Grief Scaliger tells us of a young Man Burroughs who through the extreme Trouble of his Spirit was turned gray in one Night So the Judgments and Miseries of a People because of their Sins make them gray-headed and thereby look old and withered c. IV. When gray Hairs come upon a Man they bring oftentimes with them feeble Knees and Stiffness of the Limbs So Sin makes feeble the Heat of Zeal and Vigour of Spirit is thereby abated V. Gray Hairs are Symptoms and Fore-runners of Death and Mortality So some Sins and Miseries upon a People are the clear Symptoms of spiritual Death or Night of Darkness VI. Some Men have gray Hairs here and there and they know not of them So a Soul Nation or Church may have sad Symptoms of Ruine upon them and they be ignorant of them He knows it not Quest What were those gray Hairs that
Gentleness Goodness Meekness Temperance Pardon of Sin Communion with God Joy in the Holy-Ghost c. Now he ought to know all these Things the true from the counterfeit And next unto the Graces of the Spirit and the other excellent and rare Things he deals in there are the Ordinances of the Gospel the Nature and Usefulness of which he ought also to understand and not to be deceived about them lest he take the Traditions of Men for Christ's Institutions IV. A Man who sets up a Trade ought also to know who he is to deal or trade with So ought every Christian and that is God through the Mediator Jesus Christ for without him there is no trading to Heaven 'T is by him we believe in God by him we come to the Father Christ is a Saint's only Correspondent he receives all our Prayers and Duties and makes Returns of Mercies V. A Man who begins a Trade ought to be well instructed and to know every particular Art and Mystery in it Some Trades or Professions are hard to learn they are full of Mystery and very intricate and if they understand them not or are not Crafts-masters therein they will never live comfortably of them as Experience commonly sheweth So every Christian ought to learn the Mystery of Godliness this heavenly Calling is not easily learned there is no Trade that is more mysterious than the Trade or Art of Godliness as we shall fully evince and make appear 1. By plain Texts of Scripture 2. By Arguments and Demonstrations drawn there-from As to the First see these Scriptures 1 Cor. 2.7 But we speak the Wisdom of God in a Mystery even the hidden Wisdom c. Compared with Rom. 16.25 Eph. 1.9 3.3 4. Col. 1.26 1 Tim. 3.16 Without Controversy great is the Mystery of Godliness God manifest in the Flesh c. Godliness is twofold 1. The Doctrinal Part. 2. The Practical Part. A Mystery is a Thing hidden hard to find out that which few understand Godliness a Mystery which lies not open to the Sight and Apprehension of Men. Many Arts used amongst Men are full of Mystery If a Man go into a Chymist's Shop possibly he may see there several Extractions of Minerals but he may not know how he extracted those Spirits nor doth he understand the Nature and Operation of them that is a Mystery There are divers other curious Arts and Devices very hard to learn they are so mysterious but all come short of these heavenly Mysteries The Mysteries of Godliness are exceeding great 1. These Things are hidden Things from the Eyes of Men. See Mat. 11.25 The Gospel is read daily every Man hath the History of it in his House but alas very few understand it 't is a Mystery 't is not known but by such only who feel its Power and blessed Effects and Operations of it upon their Hearts 2. The Gospel and great Things of Christianity and Godliness are the rare Contrivance of God's eternal Wisdom 1 Cor. 8.1 and therefore full of Mystery If any Man thinks he knows any thing he knoweth nothing as he ought to know These things are not easily found out 3. The History of the Gospel and Principles of Christianity and Godliness could not be known without Revelation had not God afforded us the written Word what should we John 20.31 Rom. 16.25 26. or could we have known of these Mysteries What do the Heathen know of them that have not the Holy Scripture Doth the Light within discover the Incarnation Birth Life Death Resurrection Ascension and Intercession of Jesus Christ Doth that teach the Mystery of Faith and Regeneration 'T is true some have affirmed that they should have known all Things the Gospel reveals if they had never had the written Word But how false that is appears to all and they themselves have been silenced by putting one Question to them John 20 30. which is this 'T is said in John 20. Many other Signs did Jesus in the presence of his Disciples which are not written c. Now let them shew us what those other Signs were But alas they can tell us nothing but what the Scripture relates neither had we or they known them but by the Record thereof That which we have the History of and yet cannot understand or make our own unless the Spirit of God opens and explains it to us is a great Mystery But we cannot understand the Mystery of Religion and Godliness without the Spirit 's Teaching and Explanation Ergo c. As the History must be revealed by the written Word so the Mystery must be revealed by the Spirit For what Man knoweth the Things of a Man save the Spirit of a Man 1 Cor. 2.11 which is in him even so the Things of God knoweth no Man but the Spirit of God 4. That which needs or requires several Gradations and Mediums to open and explain it from time to time is a great Mystery But the Gospel or Mystery of Godliness requires such several Gradations and Mediums to open it unto the Children of Men. 1. God under the Law revealed these Things by divers Sacrifices Washings and other Rites whilst Persons remained in their Non-age 2. It requires the Use of divers earthly Similitudes to open and explain it to the Understanding of Men. God is compared to a Father to an Husband-man to a Judg to a Creditor to a Portion to an Housholder c. Christ to a Lamb to Light to an Husband to a Vine to a Shepherd c. The Spirit is compared to the Wind to Oil to Water and Grace to Seed to Gold tried in the Fire c. The Mysteries of Religion and Godliness are so hard to understand in their own Nature that God condescends to open them to us by earthly Things In this God shews what Children we are and how difficult 't is for us to understand these Things And tho they are thus explained yet how little is it that we are able to understand of them Now that which the Children of Men are not able fully to take in or comprehend tho God makes use of the best Mediums he in his Wisdom sees good to make use of is a great Mystery But the Children of Men are able to take in but little of the Mysteries of the Gospel notwithstanding these gracious Mediums God is pleased to make use of Ergo c. 5. That which the Children of Men are not able to take in or receive the knowledg of at once but when God fees necessary to discover by degrees by little and little notwithstanding all those proper and fit Mediums he condescends to make use of is a great Mystery But the Mysteries of the Gospel and Godliness God sees the Children of Men notwithstanding all those Mediums he is pleased to make use of cannot take in or receive at once but that there is need for him to open and discover them by degrees by little and little Ergo 't is
our Divines propose some Types of the Lord's Supper as the Tree of Life Tree of Life in the midst of Paradise Gen. 2.9 see Rev. 22.14 John 6.53 54 55. The Bread and Wine Brea● and Wine brought forth by Melchizedek and given to Abraham Gen. 14.18 19. The Paschal Lamb eaten yearly in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Commemoration of the Deliverance of the Israelites from literal Egypt Exod. 12.27 with 1 Cor. 5.7 1.26 the Manna Manna Exod. 16.15 the Water that came out of the Rock Numb 20.11 the Blood of the Covenant Exod. 24.8 Heb. 9.20 the Shew-bread Exod. 25.30 the live Coal Isa 6.6 the Explication of which amongst other Types may be read in Gerhard tom 5. de sacr Euch. sect 12. The Types of the New Testament Church as learned Men say are Paradise Gen. 2.8 Noah's Ark Gen. 6.14 c. the Calling of Abraham Gen. 12.1 Joshua 24.2 See more Examples Exod. 26.1 Josh 2.18 6.23 Psal 87.1 Gal. 4.22 Mal. 3.3 Yet some of these are reputed Allegories rather than Types Types are either of Things or of Ceremonies the Types of Things done are when some Actions of holy Men in the Old Testament prefigured some Things done in the New Thus Abraham's offering his Son in Obedience to God's Command and Love to him typified God the Father delivering his Son to Death for the Love of Mankind Rom. 5.8 8.32 So Joseph's being sold into Egypt and afterwards advanced typified the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ Phil. 2.6 c. Ceremonial Types are when the Ceremonies and whole Constitution of the Levitical Worship in the Old Testament prefigured Things in the New an evident Explication of which the Epistle to the Hebrews gives Article VII Canons or Rules expounding Types Canon I. IN Prophetical Types we must exactly take notice where Christ manifests himself with respect to his Office and Merit and where he sets forth other Divine Things as Judgments and Blessings The Reason of the Canon is Because the Son of God before the Fulness of Time was come Gal. 4.4 did at sundry Times and in divers Manners 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adumbrated and made himself manifest with his Merit and Passion to the Fathers and Prophets of the Old Testament partly by plain Promises and partly by Typical Visions and thus he rejoyced in the habitable Parts of the Earth Prov. 8.31 In which respect he is said to be a Lamb slain from the Foundation of the World Rev. 13.8 For the general Understanding of these Types the Learned give this Rule Whatsoever Text of the Old Testament treats of the Grace of God of Propitiation Redemption Benediction and Destruction of Enemies so that the Light and Explication of it may be found in the New Testament or that the Circumstances and Emphasis of the Words the●selves discover it that Text is to be expounded of Christ together with his Merit and Passion Gen. 28. Thus the Vision of Jacob's Ladder prefigures Christ the true Ladder by which the Saints ascend into Heaven as appears by the Circumstances of the Text which treats of the Propitiation of God his Divine Protection and his Blessings upon the faithful Posterity of Believers Besides Christ applies this to himself John 1.51 Isa 63. ● Isa 63.1 2 3 4 5 6. There is a Prophetical Colloquy which respects not only Christ but also his most bitter Passion and most glorious Victory for 1 the Text discourses of the Propitiation of God the Redemption of Men and the Destruction of Enemies 2 The three foregoing Chapters expresly treat of the Merits and Blessings of Christ 3 'T is expounded of Christ Rev. 19.11 13 15. 4 The Circumstances of the Text and the Emphasis of the Words clearly evidence i● to be as before expounded of which more in another Place Canon II. There is oftentimes more in the Type than in the Antitype IRenaeus lib. 2. chap. 40. says thus A Type and Image of a Thing is sometimes different from the Truth according to its Materiality and Substance But according to the Habit and Lineament it ought to keep a Similitude and to shew by Things present Things which are not present The Reason of the Canon you have Art 6. God designed one Person or Thing in the Old Testament to be a Type or shadow of Things to come not in all Things but with respect to some particular Thing or Things only hence we find many Things in the Type which are not to be applied to the Antitype which it typifies in some certain Thing only not in all especially the Failings and Sins of the Saints of the Old Testament who did typify Christ are by no means neither ought they to be attributed to the most holy and unspotted Jesus For as a Picture may represent all the Lineaments of the Party pictur'd exactly altho there may be some accidental Spot in it that is not in the Person So the Life of the Saints may be a Type and Image of Christ altho they are lyable to Frailties and Infirmities incident to humane Nature which are no Representations of any thing in Christ The Use of this Canon is shewn in the Epistle to the Hebrews where the Priesthood and ritual Sacrifices of the Old Testament are fairly accommodated to Christ the Antitype yet that there were many Things in that Priesthood which do not quadrate as that the Priest was to sacrifice for his own Sins Chap. 5.3 which does not quadrate with Christ Chap. 7.27 that Priesthood was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 weak and unprofitable Chap. 7.18 and there were many Priests neither of which can be apply'd to Christ who made all perfect and unchangeable Chap. 7.24 25. Canon III. There is oftentimes more in the Antitype than in the Type Oportet Figuram minus habere quam Veritatem quia c. CHrysostom Homil. 61. on Gen. says It is necessary that the Figure have less in it than the Truth because otherwise it would not be a Figure of Things to come The Reason of this Canon is the same with the foregoing For since no one Type can express the Life and particular Actions of Christ therefore there is altogether more in the Antitype or other Thing adumbrated than can be found in Types And when we say that there is more in the Antitype than the Type it is to be understood not only with respect to the Thing but also with respect to the Manner Of this Moses and Joshua were Examples each of which was a Type of Christ Moses typified Christ as a Redeemer and Joshua typified him as he brings his People to Heaven their true Country But the Manner varies in both Places and in that respect there is much more in the Antitype than in the Type In the Type there is only a bodily or humane Deliverance in the Antitype an heavenly and a spiritual In the Type there is only a simple or single Redemption in the Antitype such a Redemption as is made
a Crown of Life Page 409 Hell Hell why called a Furnace of Fire Page 410 Heat Affliction compared to great Heat in 8 Things Page 387 Horn. The little Horn Dan. 7. proved to be the Pope Page 361 Hunter Satan why called a Hunter and what kind of Hunter he is opened in eight Partic. Page 361 Hope Hope a Helmet why so called Page 22 23 A Definition of Hope Page 22 I. Jewels SAints why called God's Jewels together with the Nature of Jewels opened in seven Things Page 198 Imitate Saints imitate God in five Things Page 144 Judgment-Day Judgment-Day compared to an Assize in eight Particulars Page 406 L. Lambs WHat meant by Lambs in a large Place Page 192 193 Labourers Ministers why called Labourers in 6 things Page 259 Christ's Labourers ought to be sufficiently provided for largely proved Page 260 261 Lilly The excellent Nature of the Lilly and why the Church is compared to it in 8 things Page 115 116 Light Light sown for the Righteous in five respects Page 384 Life Life of Man compared to a swift Post Page 393 To a swift Ship ibid To a Weavers Shuttle and to the Wind Page 394 To a Cloud and to a Flower Page 395 How we may know a Man who hath a Principle of spiritual Life in him Page 229 Lions Why Saints are compared to Lions shewed in five Things Page 188 189 Why wicked Men are compared to Lions Page 237 Locusts What meant by the Locusts out of the Bottomless Pit Page 137 Love Why Love is compared to Death and the Grave Page 30 Why to Coals and Flames of Fire Page 31 Christ's Love why compared to Wine opened in eight Things Page 34 M. Man WHy Man is compared to Earth opened in seven Things Page 133 134 Man why called a Worm and how fitly he may be compared thereto opened in ten Par. Page 136 Man like a Flower of the Field Page 138 139 Wicked Men mad or besides themselves opened in six Things Page 234 Marriage-Day The Resurrection-Day the Saints Marriage-Day and Coronation-Day Page 404 405 Merchants Saints spiritual Merchants in ten things Page 168 169 Ministers Ministers why called Angels Page 258 Work of a Minister hard in five Things Page 289 Who is a true Minister and how to be chosen and ordained Page 289 The Necessity of a Gospel Ministry Page 290 Mother Why the Church of God is called a Mother Page 110 The Church compared to the Moon Page 86 Morning The Resurrection compared to the Morning in nine Particulars Page 402 Mountains Why wicked Men are called Mountains Page 225 226 Myrtle-Trees The Nature of the Myrtle-Tree and what Fruit it bears and why the Godly are compared to it in seven Things Page 184 N. WIcked Men naked Page 247 O. Olive-Tree THe Nature of the Olive-Tree and why the Church is compared thereto Page 91 P. Palm-Tree WHat the Nature of it is and why the Godly are compared to it opened in nine Particulars Page 175 176 The Godly like the Palm-Tree flourish under heavy Pressures Page 177 Papists Papists confuted about Transubstantiation Page 38 39 Papists spiritual Thieves Page 246 Pilgrims Saints compared to Pilgrims opened Page 175 Priests Why the Saints are called Priests Page 200 Prince The Devil why called Prince of Darkness Page 360 Planters Ministers Planters why so called opened in fourteen Particulars Page 275 276 Plague Sin a Plague Page 349 The Plague of the Leprosy a Figure of Sin shewed in seven Things Page 344 Poyson Sin compared to Poyson in seven things Page 350 351 Poor Wicked Men poor and miserable shewed in seven Things Page 250 Providence Providence of God wonderful in preserving of his People in these Days Page 108 Providence of God compared to Clouds and Darkness Page 377 383 Prayer Saints must pray always what meant thereby Page 160 Special Seasons for extraordinary Prayer Page 160 Prayer a great Ordinance in six Things Page 160 161 What hinders the Saints Prayer Page 161 R. Race WHat a Man must do who would run the spiritual Race opened Page 162 to 165 Rod. Wicked Men the Rod of God in five Things Page 201 Afflictions called a Rod Page 379 What Voice is in the Rod Page 380 Rock The Heart of a Sinner compared to a Rock in seven Things Page 251 How to know a hard and rockie Heart shewed in five Things Page 252 Rulers Good Rulers their Qualifications and how chosen and govern Page 287 Ministers of the Gospel why called Rulers Page 287 S. Salt GRace compared to Salt in seven things Page 1 2 Saints compared to Salt Page 166 Satan Satan's Subtilty in warring against the Soul Page 153 Saints Saints Joynt-heirs and yet every one shall have Possession of the whole Inheritance Page 145 Sepulchre Hypocrites why compared to a Sepulchre in four Things Page 115 116 Sickness Sin a Sickness Page 352 What a Sickness Sin is opened Page 352 353 Sin The evil and abominable Nature of Sin largely opened by divers Metaphors Page 331 to 350 Singing Singing of Psalms an Ordinance of God Page 107 Spirit The Spirit of a Man why called the Candle of the Lord shewed in four Things Page 68 Ship Why the Church is compared to a Ship Page 118 Shepherds Ministers compared to Shepherds in 8 things Page 280 Sluggards Wicked Men called Sluggards Page 207 to 210 Stewards Every Saint a Steward why so called Page 195 Why Ministers are called Stewards Page 272 273 Souldiers Saints Souldiers of Jesus Christ largely opened in twenty two Particulars Page 149 to 157 Spokesmen Ministers Christ's Spokesmen opened in six Things Page 268 269 Swine The Nature of Swine and why wicked Men are compared to them in many Partic. Page 216 217 Sleep Death why called a Sleep Page 394 The Difference between the Sleep of the Godly and the Vngodly Page 394 Summer Day of Grace called Summer in 5 things Page 369 T. Tares WIcked Men compared to Tares Page 222 223 Thieves Thief Wicked Men called Thieves Page 245 Sin why called a Thief Page 331 Thorns Wicked Men why compared to Thorns Page 124 Trade Godliness a Trade opened in thirteen Particulars Page 371 to 376 The excellent Trade of the City of God Page 84 85 Truth The Excellency of Truth Page 7 8 Truth taken variously Page 3 Trumpeters Ministers why called Trumpeters Page 263 to 267 Types A Treatise of Types Page 413 to the End V. Vessels SAints compared to Vessels Page 186 187 Vipers The Nature of Vipers and why wicked Men are so called Page 248 Vineyard The Church compared to a Vineyard Page 99 100 Virgin The Church compared to a Virgin Page 103 104 Vomit What meant by turning to the old Vomit Page 354 Uncleanness Sin an unclean Thing nothing so unclean as Sin opened in five Things Page 355 The woful Uncleanness of Man by Nature Page 356 W. Watchmen MInisters why called Watchmen Page 263 264 Wells Why False-Teachers are called Wells with-Water Page 293 Willow-Trees Why Saints are compared to Willow-Trees Page 183 Winter Afflictions compared to Winter in 8 things Page 382 Wilderness This World a Wilderness in eight respects Page 341 Wheat Saints compared to Wheat Page 178 179 A Trial of Wheat from Tares Page 177 Wormwood Afflictions compared to Worm in 3 things Page 388 Wounds What a kind of Wound Sin is opened in ten Particulars Page 346 When a Wound may be said to be deadly or incurable Page 345 346 World The End of the World why called Harvest Page 392 FINIS
or Life it self in his Cause but he can restore it with great Advantage Joh. 12.25 He that loveth his Life shall lose it but he that hateth his Life in this World shall keep it unto Life eternal III. Souldiers are armed with carnal Weapons and fight with Men like themselves and yet many times are overcome and lose the Victory III. But Saints fight with spiritual Weapons and not only with Men like themselves but with the Devil and his infernal Crew and yet through Christ their Captain they get the Victory For the Weapons of our Warfare are not carnal Eph. 6. but mighty through God c. For we wrestle not against Flesh and Blood but against Principalities and Powers c. Inferences THese things being so let all true Christians take Heart and be valiant and fear not the Face of Enemies 1. Consider the Worth and Dignity of your Captain Christians have the best Captain and Leader in the World 1. He is of a most honourable Extraction of a most high and noble Descent the Heir of all things the Father's First-born the express Image of his Person He is King of Kings and Lord of Lords and he is saith one Generalissimo of all his Majesty's Forces in Heaven and Earth 2. Consider his Strength and Valour He hath an Omnipotent Arm and is of a most valiant undaunted couragious and heroick Spirit What was Sampson Gideon David Alexander Julius Caesar Scanderbeg or any other mighty Warrior to the Lord Jesus This is he who cuts in pieces the Gates of Brass and breaks asunder the Bars of Iron that hath the Keys of Death and Hell that flew Rahab Isa 51.9 and wounded the Dragon who is terrible to the Kings of the Earth and will come upon Princes as upon Mortar This is He that is the Terror of Devils the Dread of Mortals who will make other Captains tremble and cry out to the Rocks and Mountains to hide them in the Day of his Wrath. 3. Consider his Wisdom His Skill and Policy far exceeds the Craft and Subtilty of all the Machiavellian Politicians in the World He knows how to assault and harm his Enemies and to carry on and bring off to preserve and defend his People and faithful Souldiers Let Men and Devils be never so skilful and politick Christ knows how to outwit them and over-reach them all He knows where all their Mines are digged where all their Forces Flankers and Ambuscadoes do lie He knows their Plot and how laid this day against his Interest Gospel and Covenant-People in this and other Nations He knows how to confound them and catch them in their own Craftiness and to bring them to Shame He is wonderful in Counsel and mighty in Working He hath an Omniscient Eye as well as an Omnipotent Hand He makes his Countermines and blows them up or burieth them in the Pit they have digged He outshoots the Devil and the Wicked in their own Bow He will bring down the Beast and Whore and all their Abettors and make them ashamed of their Hope Mark the Issue of this present Dispensation See Captain in the First Volume and God a Man of War 2. Consider the Excellency of your Cause which is just and righteous 3. The Goodness of your Call against which nothing can be objected 4. For your further Encouragement consider the Strength of your Fortifications They are all impregnable and impenetrable of most invincible Strength Your Out-Works your Walls your Bulwarks your Forts and Towers all your Defence is admirable The Name of the Lord is a Strong-Tower Prov. 18.10 Isa 26.1 Salvation will God appoint for Walls and Bulwarks O how formidable and terrible are the Attributes and Threatnings of God to his Enemies 5. Consider Tho your Number be the fewest yet your Side is the strongest God is for us and on our Side With them is the Arm of Flesh but with us the Lord our God to fight for us How many said Antigonor will you reckon me for Poor Mortal How many then may we reckon God Christ the Holy Ghost for The whole Trinity is engaged for us 6. Consider Tho your Service be hard and Conflict sharp yet it will be short It is but a little while and your Enemy shall trouble you no more 2 Cor. 4.17 Our light Afflictions which are but for a moment c. 7. Consider the Devils and all other Enemies tho never so potent cruel and malicious yet they are all conquered and spoiled Col. 2.15 Having spoiled Principalities and Powers he made a Shew of them openly triumphing over them in it The Romans were wont in a triumphant manner to carry those they had conquered about with them and to brandish their Swords and display their Colours and carry their Arms in open View as Trophies and Emblems of Victory So the Lord Jesus having conquered Satan and the Powers of Hell rode as it were in Triumph through their Kingdom the Air and made a Shew of them openly as a glorious Victor 2. Again the World is subdued Be of good cheer saith Christ Joh. 16. Rom 8. I have overcome the World And we through him are hereby made more than Conquerors Come Tribulation Distress Persecution c. with all their Blackness Darkness Threats and Terror what will they do Who shall separate us from the Love of Christ Rom. 8.35 or hinder us of eternal Life 3. Death is subdued Christ hath got the Victory over that What Joy and Comfort is this to Believers to hear that all their Enemies are conquered your Captain-General hath broken them all to pieces 6. The Enemy cannot hurt you Rom. 8.28 the worst you can meet with will work for your Good 9. Consider Tho you meet with hard Things Christ can and will make them easy to you All your Wounds he can heal and all your broken Bones he can set The more you suffer for Christ the greater your Reward will be 10. Consider what great and glorious Pay you shall have in the end Is not a Kingdom a Crown of Glory that fadeth not away worth fighting and striving for 11. Look to Christ remember what he hath done and suffered for you and consider what many Saints have endured for his sake before you that were most precious in God's sight Is it not better to suffer here than to suffer in Hell What is the Pain and Sorrow of the Godly in this Life to the everlasting Pains and Torments of the Damned in the World to come Get much Faith and provide your selves with all your Armor and the right Use of it the Nature of which is opened under the Fifth Head Get your Hearts loose from the World No Man that warreth 2 Tim. 2.4 entangleth himself with the Affairs of this Life Labour for much Love to God It was a notable Saying of Mr. Bland the Martyr when he was at the Stake This Death saith he is more dear to me than Thousands of Gold
and Silver such Love O Lord hast thou laid up in my Breast that I hunger for thee Take heed you consult not with carnal Reason rely wholly upon Christ and never consult thy present Strength with thy future Sufferings Take heed you do not overvalue your Lives Alas you cannot live long what if you die a little sooner than you might do according to the Course of Nature Also consider is it not better if God calls you to it to glorify him by dying than to die otherwise Remember You are not your own let God therefore make what Improvement of you he pleases Lastly Pray continually pray always for this is the way to overcome Prayer hath done wonderfully And this is one great Thing that is enjoined on the Christian Souldier Ephes 6.18 Praying always with all Prayer and Supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all Perseverance and Supplication for all Saints and for me c. HEre are two Things to be noted 1. A Duty enjoyned Prayer 2. Blessed Directions about it Viz. 1. The Time Always 2. The Kinds All Prayer and Supplication 3. How viz. 1. In the Spirit 2. With Diligence 3. Constantly 4. For whom 1. For all Saints 2. More particularly for the Preachers of the Gospel Note Souldiers of Christ ought to pray to be much in Prayer to pray always to pray in the Spirit to pray for themselves and to pray for others also First Tho we are to pray always Yet there are some special Times for this Duty Prayer is twofold 1. Ordinary 2. Extraordinary We must in some Seasons more especially be at this Duty to pray hard to pray mightily c. Quest What is meant by praying always Answ 1. It is as much as to say Pray in every thing according to that Word Phil. 4.6 In every thing by Prayer and Supplication let your Requests be made known to the Lord. Some pray in nothing they do In all thy Ways acknowledge him 2. In all Conditions in a full State in a naked State in Poverty in Plenty in Sickness in Health in Prosperity and in Adversity 3. For every Thing we need for Spirituals for Temporals so far as God seeth them good for us 4. Daily frequently Morning and Evening David said to Mephihosheth Thou shalt eat Bread at my Table continually 2 ●am 7 7 He cannot mean thou shalt do dothing but eat he would not have him to be such a Cormorant but commonly every day c. 5. To have a Heart always for this Duty to be always fit and ready for this sacred Ordinance Quest What are those special Times and Seasons for Prayer Or when is extraordinary Prayer to be made Ans 1. When a Saint hath any great Work to do for God or eminent Business and Service for his Church See Nehem. 1.5 Acts 4.2 9. When Abraham's Servant had special Work to do for his Master he was much in Prayer 2. When a Saint is in the dark concerning any one Truth of God and cannot get Satisfaction Dan. 9.1 2 3 c. then 't is a Time for extraordinary Prayer When Daniel was at a loss about the Time of Deliverance out of Captivity how much did he give himself to Prayer 3. When a gracious Soul is under any sore and grievous Affliction David in his Distress and Affliction cried mightily to God Is any afflicted let him pray that is let him be more abundantly in that Duty James 5.13 4. When Sin abounds or in a Day of great Rebuke and Blasphemy When Hell seems to be let loose or the Flood-gates of Wickedness opened wide in a Nation then it is a Time for the Godly to be much in Prayer Jer. 13.19 Isa 37.23 5. In Times of great Distress upon the Church when the Danger is imminent as at this Day this is a Time for extraordinary Prayer See Isa 22. When many Nations came up against Judah then Jehoshaphat cried mightily to Heaven 2 Chron. 20.12 When Haman plotted to destroy all the Jews and cut off Israel at once and the Writings were sealed and sent forth then Esther and the godly Ones pray mightily Thus did Jacob when his Brother was coming to meet him fearing he would cut off the Mother with the Child Gen. 33. how did he then wrestle with God! 6. In Times of Temptation When Christ was assaulted and his Hour was come he prayed hard he spent a whole Night in Prayer Mat. 26.44 And what saith he to his Disciples Mat. 26.40 41. 2 Cor. 12. Watch and pray that ye enter not into Temptation When Paul had that Thorn in the Flesh the Messenger of Satan to buffet him he besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from him That three times as some conclude might be threescore times 7. Lastly In a Time of great Expectation when great Things are near and much look'd for When Daniel expected great Things understanding by Books Deliverance to the Church was at hand he set himself to seek God Dan. 9.2 Secondly Consider Prayer is a great Ordinance And that doth appear 1. In respect of God it gives him the Glory of three great Attributes 1. Of his Omnisciency We hereby acknowledg that he knows our Wants and Necessities Psal 39 9. All my Desires are before thee and my Groanings are not hid from thee 2. His Omnipotency We acknowledg in our crying to God and relying upon him in this Duty that he is able to help us and supply all our Wants 3. It gives him the Glory of his Goodness O thou that hearest Prayer A Saint knows and confesseth hereby if he pray aright that God is willing and ready to help and save him 2. Prayer is a great Ordinance if we consider the Power and Prevalency of it Luther ascribed to Prayer a kind of Omnipotency It hath prevailed over Fire Water and Earth it hath stopp'd the Sun in its Course It hath prevailed over evil Angels it hath cast the Devil out and broke his Kingdom down It hath had Power over the good Angels as appears in the Case of Elisha it fetched them from Heaven to be his Guard and Protection 2 King 9.6 17. Nay it hath prevailed with Christ himself the Angel of the Covenant as appears in Jacob's Case As a Prince thou hast wrestled with God and hast prevailed It hath healed the Sick raised the Dead stopp'd the Lion's Mouth and hath subdued and put to flight the Armies of Aliens Heb. 11. hath opened Prison-Doors and broke in pieces Chains Gates and Bars of Iron and Brass There is none of the battering Rams or Artillery of Hell can stand against it 'T is like an Engine as one observes that makes the Persecutors tremble and wo to them that are the Buts and Marks that it is levell'd at when it is fired with the Fire of the Spirit and discharged in the Strength of Faith 'T is said Mary Queen of Scots dreaded more the Prayers of Mr. Knox than an Army of Twenty Thousand
plentiful manner do abound amongst us how do the Saints flourish their Graces flourish O what Beauty and Greenness is there upon all sincere Christians V. He that is slothful and idle in Summer as he brings Shame upon himself 't is a Sign of Folly c. so he suffers wants Bread and is exposed to great Straits in Winter He that gathereth in Summer is a wise Son but he that sleepeth in Harvest Prov. 10.5 is a Son that causeth Shame So he that is idle and negligent in the Time of Gospel-Grace or improves not the Means God affords for the Good of his Soul as 't is a Reproach and Shame to him so he exposeth himself to Ruine thereby What will he do when Death and Judgment comes Then he will want and suffer Hunger c. The Means of Grace compared to Harvest Mat. 9.37 The Harvest is great but the Labourers are few c. NOte The Time of Gospel-Grace wherein Work is to be done and many Souls are prepared and made willing to hear the Word of God is compared to Harvest Parallels HArvest is the Time to work and do business in and it behoveth Men to labour hard then So whilst there is an open Door for the Gospel or God is pleased to continue the Means of Grace Christ's Ministers ought to labour hard II. Harvest greatly tends to the relief of the Poor they in Harvest-time gather in and lay up against a Time of Want and Scarcity So do the Saints whilst the Day of Grace lasts provide and lay up for their Souls III. Sometimes there is bad Weather in Harvest which doth hinder and discourage the painful and laborious Husband-man So Storms arise and very bad Weather as it were often attends Christ's faithful Labourers which greatly hinders them in their Ministry IV. The Harvest is sometimes great and the Labourers but few so that the Work lies very heavy upon some Men So in a spiritual sence the Harvest is great i. e. many People are willing to hear God's Word but there are but few painful Preachers and by this means the Work lies heavy upon them and when it is thus we are enjoined to pray to the Lord of the Harvest Mat. 9 37. to send more Labourers into his Harvest V. The Harvest sometimes proves thin and comes into a little Room or it may seem much in Bulk and yet but a little Grain So 't is sometimes in the spiritual Harvest there are many Multitudes hear the Word attend upon the Means they flock into the Assemblies but alas but few are converted the Corn is little A small Room will hold them were they severed from the Straw and Chaff of the fruitless and unprofitable Multitude VI. When the Harvest is like to be catching or the Husband-man sees Clouds begin to gather and grow black or they hear it thunder mightily they work very hard and hurry in the Corn not knowing when they may have fair Weather again So Christ's Servants when they perceive a dismal Day approaching upon them labour hard and bring in what Souls they can into his Barn VII The Harvest sometimes is very long and sometimes but short So God lengthens or shortens the Day of Grace as he pleases The old World had an hundred and twenty Years others but a short Season O that thou hadst known in this thy Day the Things that belong to thy Peace but now they are hid from thine Eyes Christ seems to be quick with them And so it fared with those Acts 13.46 VIII In Harvest the Husbandman will not neglect a fit Opportunity of gathering in his Hay and Corn upon presumption of much fair Weather to come So a wise Christian will not lose the present Season for his Soul upon hopes of much Time to come but rather says Now is the Time c. Observe in Summer's soultry Heat How in the hottest Day The Husband-man doth toil and sweat About his Corn and Hay If then he should not reap and mow And gather in his Store How should he live when for the Snow He can't move out of Door The little Ants and painful Bees by Nature's Instinct led These have their Summer-Granaries For Winter furnished But thou my Soul whose Summer's Day Is almost past and gone What Soul-Provision dost thou lay In Stock to feed upon If Nature teacheth to prepare For temporal Life much rather Grace should provoke to greater Care Soul-Food in time to gather Days of Affliction and Distress Are hasting on apace If now I live in Carelesness How sad will be my Case Vnworthy of the Name of Man Who for that Soul of thine Wilt not do that which others can Do for their very Kine Think frugal Farmers when you see Your Mows of Corn and Hay What a Conviction this will be To you another day Who ne're were up before the Sun Nor broke an Hour's Rest For your poor Souls as you have done So often for a Beast Learn once to see the Difference Betwixt eternal Things And these poor transient Things of Sense That fly with Eagles Wings J. F. Godliness compared to a Trade Heb. 3.1 Wherefore holy Brethren Partakers of the Heavenly Calling consider the Apostle and High-Priest of our Profession Christ Jesus THe Profession of Godliness is in this and divers other Scriptures compared to a Trade or Calling and 't is a very fruitful and profitable Metaphor Parallels A Trade or Calling properly is that Art Craft or Occupation whereunto one hath been trained or wherein he exerciseth and employeth himself whatever it be whether Handicraft or Merchandizing c. Now Godliness is the Occupation of every true Christian 't is that which he hath been trained up in 't is that which he exerciseth and daily employeth himself about Herein do I exercise my self c. Actt 24.16 Rather exercise thy self unto Godliness c. II. A Man when he first sets up a Trade hath or ought to have a Stock suitable to what it doth require in order to the well-managing of it or otherwise he is not like to do good of it for the Want of a convenient Stock hath ruined and utterly undone many new Beginners So every Christian ought to see when he first begins to profess Godliness what Stock he hath I mean what Grace what Faith what Love to God and to his Neighbour what Experiences of a thorow Change for without a Stock of the Truth of Grace and Work of Regeneration no Man can follow the Trade of Godliness to make any saving Earnings of it III. A Man that sets up a Trade ought to know the Nature Worth and Value of those Goods and Commodities his Calling leads him to trade or deal in or else he may be quickly cheated and run out of all by buying counterfeit Goods or bad Ware So every Christian must know what Goods he is to trade spiritually in as also the Nature and Excellency of them Now the heavenly Commodities are these Faith Love Peace Long-suffering