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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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spring hence his Sin is charged upon his whole Posterity By Adam 's Sin were many made Sinners c. Christ the sec●nd Adam Rom. 5.12 14. is a common or publick Person representing all his true Seed or spiritual Off-spring So that as Adam's in was imputed to all his Children Verse 19. so is Christ's Righteousness imputed to all his Children through Faith The first Adam merited Death for his Seed the second Adam merited Life for his Seed Noah a Type of Christ Parallels NOah was a Saviour nay in a good sence the Saviour of the World for it was through him and by his Means and Righteousness there was a Seed preserved from the Flo●d c. Christ is a Saviour the great Saviour the only Saviour of the World hence called Jesus II. Noah was a Preacher of Righteousness and invited Sinners to Repentance Christ was a Preacher of Righteousness and came on purpose to call Sinners to Repentance Noah's Ministry was despised by the Ungodly so was the Preaching and Ministry of Jesus Christ by the unbelieving Jews and others Those that refused and rebelled against Noah and his Ministry were destroyed by Water and those that refuse and rebell against Christ shall be destroyed by Fire III. Noah built an Ark So Christ builds his Church 2. Noah built the Ark according to the Commandment of God So Christ in building his Church did every thing according to the Commandment received from his Father 3. Noah took many Trees to build the Ark So Christ takes many Believers called Trees of Righteousness to build his Church IV. Some clean and some unclean Beasts were received into Noah's Ark So some holy and sanctified Persons and some unsanctified Ones are received into Christ's Church tho not by Christ's Appointment V. All that were not received into the Ark perished So all who get not spiritually by Faith into Jesus Christ or are not true Members of the visible or invisible Church shall be damned and perish eternally VI. Noah's Ark was toss'd upen the rough Waves and yet was preserved So the Church of Christ is toss'd upon the rough Waves of a tempestuous World and yet preserved VII Noah was the great Repairer of the World from him descended all the Inhabitants of the Earth Christ is the great and glorious Repairer of the World and from him proceed all the Inhabitants of Heaven VIII Noah sent a Dove out of the Ark to see whether or no the Waters were abated who returned with an Olive-Branch in her Mouth So Christ sends forth the Spirit called a Dove or in the likeness of a Dove who brings Tidings to believing Souls that the Wrath of God is appeased c. Melchisedeck a Type of Christ Heb. 7.3 Made like unto the Son of God c. Parallels THe Notation of his Name Melchisedeck signifieth King of Righteousness Christ Jesus is the only King of Righteousness II. In his Office he was a Type of Christ 1. He was King of Salem King of Peace Isa 9.6 So Christ was called the Prince of Peace not only a peaceable Prince but Prince of Peace one that commands Peace at his Pleasure in the World in the Church and in the Souls of Men. 2. Christ is not only Prince of the World but peculiarly Prince of Salem Prince of Jerusalem viz. the true Church of God 3. Melchisedeck was not only a King but also a Priest yea a Priest of the Most High God So Christ is both King and Priest III. Melchisedeck was a Type of Christ in his Original Without Father without Mother without Descent Heb 7.3 having neither Beginning of Days nor End of Life That is there is no mention of these things concerning him in the holy Scripture we have not his Genealogy or Story of his Life tho none doubt but he had both Father and Mother and Descent c. But God on purpose would have all these concealed that he might be a more express Type of Christ who was truly without Father in respect of his Manhood or human Nature and without Mother Isa 53. in respect of his Godhead And who can declare his Generation c. IV. Melchisedeck blessed Abraham and doubtless the lesser is blessed of the greater he was a most eminent and renowned Person Some do conclude he was the Patriarch Shem who was without beginning of days in resp●ct of the World after the Flood and without end of days in respect of the World before the Flood but since God hath concealed who he was let us be satisfied But in this doubtless he was a Type of Christ who is greater than all that went before him great in Power Office and Sovereignty and is sent to bless his People 't is he alone that blesseth all the true Seed and Heirs of Promise V. Melchisedeck was a Priest not after the Order of Aaron he was not anointed with material Oil nor received his Priesthood from any other but only so declared by the Mouth of God His Priesthood passed not to other Men for as he received it from none so he passed it not to any other nor did any as we read of succeed him So Christ received his Priesthood from none but God himself and was not anointed with material Oil but with the Oil of Gladness only And as he received his Priesthood from none so he passeth it not to any other He hath none that can succeed him but abideth a Priest for ever in his own Person in Heaven Abraham a Type of Christ Parallels ABram and Abraham signify an high Father and a Father of a Multitude So is Christ an high and heavenly Father called the everlasting Father Father of all the Faithful c. II. To Abraham and to his Seed was the Promise made So to Christ and to his true Seed is the Promise made Guild Heb. 9.13 III. Abraham was King Priest and Prophet in his own Family So is Jesus Christ in his Church IV. Abraham put Hagar and Ishmael out of his House Gal. 4. So Jesus Christ cast out the Legal Covenant and fleshly Seed out of his Church Hagar being a Figure of the one and Ishmael of the other V. Abraham is called the Heir of the World Jesus Christ is so most properly and truly Rom. 4.13 Isaac a Type of Christ Parallels ISaac was the Son of Abraham the Father of the Faithful a promised Seed long before he was born and so strange was his Birth that tho he was born by the St●ength of Nature y●t of Sarah's dead Womb Gen. 18.12 when it ceased to be with her as with other Child-bearing Women insomuch that when the Angel foretold it to her she thought it impossible So Jesus Christ is often called the Son of Abraham yet the only begotten Son of God by Nature who is the Father of all that are taught and can say in truth Our Father c. the only true promised Seed who was long prophesied of and expected by all Believers
moment II. It may raise our Hearts to admire the Grace and Goodness of God in sending Christ to satisfy for our Sins III. Let us also from hence be stirred up to cry for Pardon and Forgiveness of our Sins Forgive us our Debts Quest What is it we desire of God in this Petition Answ 1. We pray that God would not require or exact Payment and Satisfaction for our Sins of us for if he should pass by Millions of Sins and set down but one hundred nay come so low as to charge but ten nay forgive us all save only one that one would sink us down to the lowest Hell Should God require us to make satisfaction but for one evil Thought we should be utterly undone 2. We pray saith Mr. Burges that God would lay our Sins upon Christ or accept of Satisfaction in and through him for seeing saith he God hath declared his Will that Man shall die for Sin if we should pray that he would absolutely forgive our Sins it would be to pray that he might be unjust Therefore in this Prayer thus we may argue O Lord we call not upon thee to repeal any Threatning to nullify thy Word to become unjust but thy Wisdom hath so found out a way that we may be pardoned and thou satisfied c. 3. We pray that through Christ's Atonement or the Propitiation of his Blood our daily Sins and Infirmities may be forgiven us and we kept in a State of Justification for if our former Sins should be forgiven and not our present and future our Case would be desperate for Sin like Sampson's Hair tho cut it will grow again And as we sin daily so we ought to pray for Pardon through Christ's Mediation for Sin is not actually forgiven before committed nor before we have the true Sense and Sorrow of it upon our Hearts Where God gives Remission he gives a broken Heart Acts 5.31 4. We pray that God would account or impute Christ's Righteousness unto us for Pardon 5. We pray for the sense and feeling of the Grace and Blessing of Pardon in our own Sou●s for it is one thing to be pardoned and another thing to know or have the feeling sense of it our selves We are in this Case saith an eminent Person like some Heir or Prince that hath many temporal Dignities but by reason of his infancy doth not understand it We pray principally 1. For the real Exhibition of Pardon and 2. For the Declaration and Manifestation of it in our Consciences Some say That God from all Eternity hath pardoned Sins past present and to come and that when we believe or repent our Sins are pardoned declaratively only to our Consciences but now I say We pray not only for Assurance and Manifestation of Pardon but for Pardon it self The Reasons are 1. We might by the same Rule interpret all the other Petitions in regard of Declaration only and not of Exhibition When we pray for Sanctification and Glorification in that Petition Thy Kingdom come it might be as well said that we are sanctified and glorified from all Eternity and therefore when we are saved and glorified in Heaven this is but to our sense and feeling And thus Men make the Decrees of God to be from Eternity with the Execution of them in Time How ridiculous would it be to expound that Petition Give us this day our daily Bread thus viz. Not that God should give us our daily Bread but make us to see and feel that he hath given it to us 2. A second is from the Nature of Forgiveness it self When Sin is pardoned it is said to be blotted out now can any think that blotting out is only in a Man 's own Conscience and Feeling It is more immediatly out of God's Book it being a Metaphor taken from blotting or crossing Debts out of a Book of Accounts c. and not only the Guilt that lies upon our Hearts therefore these are very separable the one from the other A Man may feel no Weight or Burthen of Sin upon him and yet it stand in red Characters in God's Book and on the contrary a Sin may be blotted out there yet be very heavy and terrible in a Man's feeling and apprehension So Sin pardoned is said to be covered or hid not in respect of us as if it were taken from our Sight but from God's Sight and he is said to cast our Sins behind his Back 3. This Explication as the whole Sence of the Petition would overthrow all other Scriptures which make no Pardon of Sin to be but where the Subject hath such Qualifications as this in the Text viz. forgiving others c. 4. This which these Men say would make no difference between Sins repented of and Sins not repented Where do we read that God doth like the Pope antedate his Pardon before the Sin be committed or repented of Burges 6. We pray That as God doth forgive Sin so also he would release the Punishment and take away all the Wrath that doth belong to it It is but a Mockery which Papists make about Pardon as if indeed God did pardon the Sin but not the Punishment that that abides still and we must work out a Release from that by our own selves It is true God tho he doth pardon Sin yet he may grievously afflict but these are only fatherly Chastisements and not judicial Punishments But in this Prayer we desire as the Sin is removed so also whatsoever Troubles Afflictions or Chastisements do remain that they likewise may be taken away that as the Gulf of Hell is removed so every Cloud also may be dispelled 7. We pray not only for Pardon but also for the gracious Concomitants and Effects of it which are Peace with God and Joy in the Holy-Ghost c. Rom. 1.5 From the Whole we may infer I. That Man is a guilty Sinner nay that Believers are not without Sin as they are in themselves Man as considered in his fallen State is accused and charged by the Law and must plead and he cannot plead Not guilty being under the Impeachment of his own Conscience Ille noscens se damnat quo peccat die This might have been the Plea of Adam before his Fall but none else 1 Kings 8.46 There is no Man that sinneth not Eccles 7.20 1 John 1.8 Our Plea then must be Guilty and in this Case we must plead Mercy for the sake of Mercy or Mercy for the sake of Christ or upon the account of the Satisfaction he hath made II. There is ro pleading Mercy for the sake of Mercy for as one well observes that were not to plead but to beg nor were it at all to be justified but meerly pardoned it were to be dealt with alone upon the Score of Grace and not at all upon the Score of Righteousness whereas Justification is an Act of Justice rather than Mercy tho it is true in the Salvation of Sinners both Grace and Justice as hath been shewed
Paul determined to know nothing so much as Christ and him crucified When we know Christ better we shall understand this Mystery better Christ is the Mystery wrapt up in all the Gospel he is the Scope of all the Scripture the Pearl hid in the Field every Line is drawn to him as the proper Center all the Types and Shadows pointed to him and all the Promises run in him Jesus Christ is really and truly God and yet very Man God and Man in one Person and is not this a Mystery 1. Is it not a Wonder that a Woman should compass a Man 2. That he that made the World should be born of a Woman 3. That the Ancient of Days should become a Child of a Day old 4. That Blessedness it self should be brought under a Curse for Sinners Christ was made a Curse for us Gal. 3.13 as it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree 5. That he that was the Heir of all things Heir of both Worlds should be laid in a Manger 6. That he who was God over all should have no where to lay his Head 7. That he should become poor who was so rich and by his Poverty make others rich is not this a Mystery 8. He by dying destroyed Death and unless he had died we could not live and by Death he brought us to Life 9. And is it not a Mystery that a Person should be capable to die and yet by his own Power raise himself up again from the Dead 10. Is not this a Mystery that the Physician should die to cure his Patient nay and unless he die the Sin-sick Soul could not live and that his Blood should be the Balsam Is it not a great Mystery that the offended Saviour should suffer to free the offending Sinner 11. Is it not a Mystery that the Nature of Man should be so joined to the Divine Nature of God that both should make but one Christ and that our Nature should be exalted above the Nature of the Angels that Man should sit at God's right hand that Man should be very God and God very Man in one Person O how great is ●he Mystery of Godliness Acts 2.23 chap. 4.28 12. Is it not a Mystery that Christ suffered according to the Decree and determined Counsel of God and yet the Jews did wickedly in putting him to Death Secondly The Mystery of Christianity appears to be great 1. in God's casting off the Jews who followed after Righteousness and in calling the Gentiles who followed not after Righteousness That God should not be found of them that sought him and be found of them that sought him not 2. That God should chuse poor and contemptible Ones into his Service and reject the Wise the Noble and the Learned and that by weak Things he overcame the Mighty and by Folly confounded the Wisdom of this World Thirdly There is a great Mystery in Election in Justification in Sanctification in Renovation c. Nay what Branch or Part of the Doctrine of Godliness is not full of Mystery Fourthly There is a Mystery in every Grace 1. In Faith As 1. That a Sinner should believe i. e. go out of himself and be carried above himself to believe Things impossible to Man's Sense and above his Reason that he should seek for Justification by the Righteousness and Obedience of another for a Man as one would think to have a great deal of Holiness and good Works and yet to throw it as it were all away and be dead to it in point of Trust and Dependence is not this a Mystery 2. To believe when every thing is opposite to it To work for Life and to oppose some Sin a natural Man is ready to do but to believe in Christ for Life and Holiness to relie upon his Doings his Works and Merits this the Heart of Map is averse to nay and Satan opposeth it the World mocks at it and accounts it Foolishness 3. That a Man should believe and not see nay believe as Abraham did in hope against hope 2. There is a Mystery in Love that a Man should love him with an endeared Affection with a superlative Love whom the World can see no beauty in nay thus to love him whom their natural Eyes never beheld nay love him who is able to make great and save from all Misery and yet suffers his People and best beloved Ones to lie amongst the Pots and to be hated and persecuted in the World and to appearance to be of all Men the most miserable A Saint knows the Reason of these Things but 't is a Mystery to others The Love of Christ turns the Affections another way it drives as it were Jordan back it makes the Waters ascend and run up hill Is it not a Mystery to see a Saint who hath a Hundred nay it may be Five Hundred a Year a gracious Wife many sweet and lovely Children enjoying much Health and living in all Prosperity yet if he hath lost the Light of God's Countenance or Christ be withdrawn from him he is cast down and greatly distressed and afflicted in his Spirit and crying out Ah! what is all that I possess sith I want the Love of Christ the Presence of Christ what 's an Estate and no Christ Wife and Children and no sight of Christ Christ saith he is all to me and all is nothing without him This is a Mystery to carnal Hearts they wonder at it Nay to see a Man that hath all the Comforts of the World expose himself to cruel Mockings Loss of Goods to Imprisonment and Death it self for Christ's sake is a strange thing to worldly Men they think the Man is mad 't is a Mystery to them c. Fourthly The Effects and Operations of Grace and Godliness are a Mystery 1. That God should make Men wise by teaching them to become Fools 1 Cor. 3.18 2. That the way to become rich very rich eternally rich is to become poor This is a Mystery yet this Mystery is taught us in the Person of Christ David was a King and very rich yet cries out I am poor he was poor in Spirit This poor Man cried There is that maketh himself rich yet hath nothing there is that maketh himself poor Prov. 13.7 and yet hath great Riches 3. That the way to have all is to lose all and that a Man gains most when he loses most Is not this a Mystery 4. That Men must die to live or that the way to live is to die nay that God kills by making Souls alive and yet by that killing and death brings them to life And is not this a Mystery Sin must die and we must die to Sin Sin revived and I died Rom. 7.11 yet by that Death he revived and lived A Man must die to Self or he can never live himself 5. God makes Men blind by giving Sight and turns that Darkness into Light and is not this a Mystery 6. The way
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
of the Mind Will and Counsel of God as is sufficient by the Blessing of God upon a consciencious reading thereof to acquaint a Man with the Mysteries of Salvation to work in him a true Faith and bring him to live godly righteously and soberly in this present World and to Salvation in the next The Translators generally as they have been Men of Learning so likewise have they been honest and for the most part godly Men and th●refore would not for their own Honours sake and much more for Conscience sake abuse the World with any wilful false Versions to lead Souls into Error in a Matter of that importance Or if some shoul● have ●een so wicked others as learned and of better Principles would soon have discovered the Imposture Nor if we consider how many Men of different Persuasions have translated the Bible and harmoniously agree in all things of moment is it possible to imagine they should all combine so impertinently as well as wickedly to put a Fallacy on Mankind which everry one that has but bestowed a very few Years in the Study of the Languages can presently detect Object 5. How can we think the whole Bible to be of divine Inspiration when some parts of it contradict others The Divine Spirit cannot be contrary to it self yet is there any thing more opposite than the two Evangelists in reckoning up our Saviour's Genealogy St. Matth●w (o) Mat. 1.16 says Jacob begat Joseph the Husband of Mary (p) Luk. 3.23 and St. Luke says Joseph the Son of Eli. Answ The seeming Contradictions of Scripture for they are really no more are an Argument that in the writing of this Book there was no corrupt Design or Confederacy to engage the Opinions of Men and upon a due Scrutiny there will appear in them a deep and unthought of Concord and an unanimous Tendency towards the great End of the Whole 'T is our Inad●ertency or shallow Apprehension makes us think the Scripture is at variance with it self In the two Texts cited a natural Father is one thing a legal Father another For you must know that Joseph and Mary were both of one House and Family he descended from David by Solomon she by Nathan but in the Posterity of Zerobabel they were divided into two several Families whereof one was the Royal Race and that Linage Joseph was of which Matthew follows The other Family Luke follows whereof Mary was whom Joseph marries and by that means is called the Son of her Father Eli. So that here is no Contradiction but on the contrary an excellent Discovery of our Saviour's Line drawn down on b●th sides whereby it appears that as he was Joseph 's reputed Son so he had a Title to be King of the Jews and as he was born of Mary so likewise on her Side he descended from David as was promised of the M●ssias But for reconciling all such seeming Contradictions see Mr. Streat 's Book entitled The dividing of the Hoof a very useful Piece and worthy Perusal I have but one Argument more to add from a very learned Author and then I shall close up all with the Testimony of the Reverend and Learned Mr. John Calvin 17. The internal Evidence of the Spi●it XVII And now it may not be amiss to add one Thing more which I could not pass by i. e. Notwithstanding the great Force and Strength of external Arguments and Motives to evince the Divine Authority of the Holy Scripture yet it is absolutely necessary to the stability and assurance of our Faith in order to eternal Life to have the internal Testimony of the Holy Spirit upon our Hearts or the effectual Operations thereof for if he does no otherwise work in and upon our Hearts but by the common Communication of spiritual Light unto our Minds enabling us to discern the Evidences that are in the Scripture of its own divine Original we should be often shaken in our Assent and moved from our Stability Therefore considering the great Darkness and Blindness which remains upon the Minds of Men all Things believed having some sort of Obscurity attending them besides the manifold Temptations of Satan who strives to disturb our Peace and weaken our Faith and cause Doubtings Happy are such who can experience the powerful Establishment and Assurance of the Holy-Ghost who gives them a spiritual sense of the Power and Reality of those Things believed whereby their Faith is greatly confirmed This is that which brings us unto the Riches of the full Assurance of Understanding (a) Col 2 2● 1 Thess 1.5 and on the account of this spiritual Experience is our Perception of spiritual Things so often expressed by Acts of Sense as Tasting Seeing Feeling c. which are the greatest Evidences of the Property of Things natural 'T is the Holy Spirit that assists helps and relieves us against Temptations that may arise in us so that they shall not be prevalent And indeed without this our first prime Assent unto the Divine Authority of the Scriptures will not secure us but the Influence and Assistance of the Spirit in the midst of Dangers so strengthens the sincere Christian that it makes him stand as firm as a Rock who has no skill to defend the Truth by force of Arguments against those subtil and sophistical Artificers who on all occasions strive to insinuate Objections against it from its Obscurity Imperfection Want of Order Difficulties and seeming Contradictions contained therein c. Moreover there are other special and gracious Actings of the Holy-Ghost on the Minds of Believers which belong also to this internal Testimony whereby their Faith is established viz. his anointing and sealing of them his witnessing with them and his being an Earnest in them Wherefore altho no internal Work of the Spirit can be the format Reason of of our Faith or that which it is resolved into yet it is such as without it we can never sincerely believe as we ought nor be established in believing against the Temptations of the Devil and Objections of evil Men. It hath been already declared Dr. Owen saith a Reverend Divine that it is the Authority and Veracity of God revealing themselves in the Scripture and by it that is the formal Reason of our Faith or supernatural Assent unto it as it is the Word of God It remains only that we enquire in the second place into the Way and Means whereby they evidence themselves unto us and the Scriptures thereby to be of God so as that we may undoubtedly and infallibly believe them so to be Now because Faith as we have shewed is an Assent upon Testimony and consequently Divine Faith is an Assent upon Divine Testimony There must be some Testimony or Witness in this Case whereon Faith doth rest and this we say is the Testimony of the Holy-Ghost the Author of the Scriptures And this Work and Testimony of the Spirit may be reduced unto two Heads c. 1. The Impressions
and by when he is come from the Field Go and sit down and will not rather say Gird thy self and serve me c. From hence we may see Girding is preparatory to Serving or Waiting It also denotes Preparation for our Labour or Work VIII Truth and Sincerity prepares and fits the Mind for Christ's Work and Service Let your Loins be girt about Luk. 12.35 and your Lights burning and ye your selves like unto Men that wait for their Lord. He is always well girt with Truth and Uprightness that is ready to wait upon or do Work for the Lord Jesus Careless slothful and unsound Persons are ungirt and so unbless'd A Saint in doing of his Work whether it be Heart-Work or Hand-Work ought to be well-girt viz. perform all in Truth and Uprightness Ministers must preach nothing but Truth and as they must preach nothing but Truth so they must preach in Truth or in Sincerity of Heart Some preach Christ saith the Apostle but not sincerely Phil. 1.16 Their Minds were not girt with Truth All our Prayers ought to be put up in Truth God is near to all that call upon him in Truth Psal 145.18 All Works of Charity ought to flow from a pure Heart viz. to be done in Uprightness and Simplicity according to the Direction given by the Lord in his Word both for matter and manner IX A Girdle is a great Ornament used to be put on uppermost to cover the Joints of the Armor which if seen would cause some uncomeliness for tho the Armor was closely knit and clasped together yet some gaping was subject to be betwixt piece and piece and therefore they used to put over these parts a broad Belt or Girdle which did serve not only to fasten the other Armor together but it made the Souldier appear more comely in his Harness and Accoutrements IX Sincerity is a glorious Ornament A Christian hereby appears very comely in the sight of God and it greatly tends to hide and cover all the Infirmities of his Life for the Saints Graces are not so close nor their Lives so exact but in the best are found Defects and Weaknesses which are as so many Gaps or Clifts in his Armor but Sincerity covers all so that he is not put to shame by them 1. Sincerity covers all outward Blemishes or want of outward Beauty that great Idol of the World Sincere Persons if they be not so fair and comely as some others yet being holy and upright sincere and vertuous Ones how amiable are they rendred hereby in the sight of all good Men It covers all things that seems to render a Saint dishonourable or uncomely 2. Mean Parentage or a low Descent is much despised in the World but how base soever the Stock and ignoble the Birth be when true Grace and Sincerity comes it makes the House and Person illustrious and very glorious Since thou wert precious in mine eyes thou hast been honourable Isa 43.4 Sincerity sets a Mark of Honour upon a Person or a People If you see this flourishing tho in a mean Cottage it tells you a great Prince nay an Heir of Heaven dwells there Sincerity brings the Creature into Alliance with the most high and glorious King of Heaven and Earth Who dares say a Child of God the Spouse of Christ and Heir of Heaven is of an ignoble Birth and Pedigree 3. It covers Poverty which exposeth to great Contempt There 's none so rich as a godly sincere Person he is daily let into God's Treasury Christ's Storehouse is always open unto him All is yours 1 Cor. 3.22 4. To want Parts and to be a Person of no Name and of small Endowments exposeth to disdain none are more contemptible in the eye of the wise and vain-glorious World than such But alas an honest Heart one that is sincere excells beyond all comparison the proudest most renowned and applauded for human Wisdom Parts and Elegancy in the World 5. It covers all sinful Uncomeliness and all the Godly Man's Failings whether they be Sins of Omission or Commission for Sincerity is that excellent quality to which pardoning Mercy is annexed 'T is Christ in a proper sence that covers all Sin but he will cover the Sins and Failings of none but such as are sincere Psal 32.2 Blessed is the Man whose Sins are covered c. The upright Man's Righteousness is accepted through Christ tho he be never so infirm or attended with Miscarriages Tho God doth not like his Sin for his Sincerity yet God will not un-saint him because of his Sin Ainsworth X. The Priest under the Law wore a Girdle which was made of fine Linnen and of Blew Purple and Scarlet the Hebrew Doctors say it was about three fingers broad it was curiously woven as Josephus observes Josephus Antiquit. Book 8. cap. 2. with Pictures of Flowers This Girdle saith Ainsworth signified the girding up the Loins of our Minds with Strength Justice and Vertue Eph. 6.15 Also we read of Christ's being girt with a Golden Girdle Rev. 1.13 X. Truth and Sincerity is not only an Ornament but a most glorious Ornament being that which was figured out by the Priest's Girdle rarely made with curious Flowers This is as a choice Golden Girdle curiously wrought by the Spirit of God 1 Pet. 2.5 which all the Priesthood of Christ have on It is made of a Complication of every Grace Sincerity is not alone many choice Divine Flowers are interwoven together in making of the Girdle of Truth Metaphor Disparity BEsides other great Disparities betweeen other Girdles and the Girdle of Truth this is one viz. Other Girdles may be lost or be corrupted they may rot and pass away like that which Jeremiah had Jer. 13.1 2 c. which was marred and profitable for nothing BUt the Girdle of Truth can never be lost Sincerity in the Heart of a Believer is so fast tied to him or twisted about him that he can never lose it I never yet read of a Man that was perfect and upright in Heart and Life in the sight of God that ever lost his Sincerity so as to die an Hypocrite tho he may in some things be guilty of Hypocrisy yet he cannot absolutely become an Hypocrite This Girdle cannot rot or be corrupted II. Other Girdles are only made for the Body II. But Truth and Sincerity is a Girdle for the Soul by which the Mind is stayed and strengthned Inferences THis should teach every Professor to labour after if they have not yet got the Girdle of Truth 1. Because the Design of Satan is to corrupt Men in their Judgments and make them zealous for false Ways Paul's Jealousy of the Corinthians was 2 Cor. 11.1 2 3. lest the Old Serpent should beguile them through his Subtilty and corrupt their Minds from the Simplicity of the Truth 2. Because of the damning Nature of Heresy and Hypocrisy which our Saviour 2 Joh. 9 10 2 Thess 2.10 2
and abstain from it from right Principles and not only to leave it but to loath it Again it consisteth in keeping up all holy and religious Duties viz. Reading Hearing Praying Distributing to the Poor Conforming to all moral and positive Precepts to be holy at home in the Family in the Church in the World to exercise a good Conscience towards God Acts 24.16 and towards Men. This is to put on the Breast-plate of Righteousness I might give many Directions about putting it on and also shew some of Satan's cunning Stratagems in endeavouring to make useless this blessed Piece of the Christian's Armor in laying Discouragements in the way of true Piety or by persuading Persons they have this Breast-plate on when 't is a counterfeit one He persuades Men that Moral Righteousness will serve their turn and sufficiently preserve them from eternal Death But this shall suffice in this place The Shield of Faith Ephes 6.16 Above all take the Shield of Faith c. FAith is a Grace a most precious and excellent Grace of the Spirit of God whereby the Soul is enabled to believe or go out of it self and wholly to rely and rest upon Christ crucified or on his active and passive Obedience upon the Warrant of the Promise for Justification and eternal Life Metaphor Parallel A Shield is a Piece of Armor that Souldiers were wont to carry with them into the Field when they were to engage their Enemies FAith is a part of a Christian's spiritual Armor All Christ's Souldiers ought to carry this Weapon into the Field with them when they engage the Enemy of their Souls Above all take the Shield of Faith II. A Shield is a Piece of Armor made for Defence II. Faith is of excellent use to defend the Soul from all spiritual Dangers of Sin and Satan and other Enemies III. A Shield is not for the Defence of any particular part of the Body as almost all other Pieces are The Helmet is fitted for the Head the Breast-plate is designed for the Breast so others have their several Parts which they are fastened to But a Shield is a Piece that is intended for the Defence of the whole Body It was wont to be made very large for its broadness called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gurnal a Door because so long and large as in a manner to cover the whole Body to which that place alludes Psal 4.12 Thou Lord wilt bless the Righteous with Favour thou wilt compass him about as with a Shield III. So the Grace of Faith defends the whole Man every part of a Christian 1. Sometimes Satan's ●emptations are levell'd against his Head and if he can hit him there he wounds sorely He will be disputing against this Truth and that Truth and make a Christian doubt concerning them if possible because his own Reason cannot comprehend them As perhaps it may be about the Deity of Christ or the Holy Trinity how they can be three and yet but one or about Satisfaction How the Debt is paid and yet the Sinner freely pardoned c. Now Faith is as a Shield to a Saint at this time and interposeth between a Christian and this Arrow of Satan it comes in to the relief of the Saints weak Understanding as seasonable as Zerviah did to David when the Giant Ishbibenob thought to have slain him I 'le trust the Word of God saith the Soul rather than my own purblind Reason what I cannot comprehend I will believe Thus Abraham not being weak in Faith Rom. 4.19 considered not his own Body now dead c. Sense and Reason would have made sad work at such a dead Lift but Faith brought him off victoriously Secondly Sometimes Satan strives to hit the Conscience all his Assaults and fiery Darts are at another season aimed at that to wound that to cause Horror and Terror within by setting the Evil of Sin and of his own Heart and the Infirmities of his Life before him Satan sets our Sins before us not to humble us but to wound us he shews our Sins to us but hides a Saviour from us Satan hath sometimes tempted gracious Persons to lay violent hands upon themselves when the heinous Nature of their Sin hath appeared to them and the Danger they are in thereby as it was with the poor Jailor Acts 16. Acts 16. But now Faith prevents and keeps off all the Danger and quencheth this fiery Dart. Christ died for Sinners for the chiefest of Sinners and tho thou art a Sinner a great Sinner the worst of Sinners yet saith Faith Thou art but a Sinner and there is Mercy for such Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved if thou canst believe and throw thy self on Christ thy Sins shall not be thy Ruin Thirdly He labours to ensnare the Affections of the Soul or deaden its fervent Love to Jesus Christ by presenting the Pleasures and Profits of this World to it Thus he served our Saviour himself But now Faith shields off this Dart also by shewing the Excellency of the Lord Jesus to the Soul and that all things without him and in comparison of him are nothing nay less than nothing and also by setting the World to come and the Glory thereof before the Eyes of the Soul Heb. 11.1 Faith is the Substance of things hoped for and the Evidence of things not seen IV. A Shield tho heavy and somewhat unwieldy to such as have not skill and strength to use it yet it is a moveable Piece of Armor which an expert Souldier with a watchful eye can turn this way and that way to stop a Dart or Blow from lighting on any part that they were directed to by the Enemy IV. Faith is a piece of Christian Armor which unskilful Professors are not ready to use but an experienced Soul can turn it any way to keep off the Arrow and fiery Darts of Satan from hurting or wounding him He observes what part the Enemy aims to hit or how the Temptation is laid It is a great point of Christian Wisdom rightly to exercise the Shield of Faith A Man must be sure to have a watchful Eye upon his Adversary or else for all his Shield he may soon be wounded V. A Shield doth not only defend the whole Body but it is a Defence to other parts of a Souldier's Armor also it keeps off the Dart from the Helmet and Breast-plate likewise V. Faith doth not only defend the whole Soul but also 't is a Safeguard to all the other parts of a Christian's Armor it is that which secures Hope the Helmet of Salvation for without Faith Hope would soon be broken in pieces Also it secures the Breast-plate of Righteousness for neither Christ's Righteousness nor any inherent Holiness in the Soul will avail any thing without Faith VI. A Shield hath been of wonderful advantage to Souldiers in former Times when it was in use it hath preserved them in the
in the way of Obedience But a strong Faith in all it doth is kept up by Christ's doing by Christ's Obedience he sees his Acceptation comes in through the Lord Jesus's Undertaking for him 5. A weak Faith is subject to rest too much upon the Means and outward Ordinances He performs Duty and is found in the Appointments of Christ because of the Fat and Sweet of them or some present Comforts of the Spirit in the performance of them rather than because commanded of God and to manifest his Obedience and Subjection unto him and if he meets not with his expectation he is ready presently to faint and be discouraged and concludes the Ordinances do not belong to him or he is not a converted Person c. or else thinks wholly to neglect them for time to come 6. A weak Believer is ready to judg of his Justification by his inward Sanctification When he finds eminent Power over Sin then he begins to conclude he may be in a saved State tho I do not say that a Man is actually justified before he is in some measure or degree made holy where the one is the other will follow as the Effect the Cause Quest How may a weak Faith or Hand be strengthned and feeble Knees confirmed Answ 1. Consider a weak Faith is precious a little Gold is Gold a little Water is Water Thou art a Believer though thou art but a weak Believer 2. A weak Faith being true may in time prove strong and grow to be a great Faith 3. Tho thou hast but a weak Faith it will save doubtless some weak Eyes beheld the Brazen Serpent and were healed 4. Weak Faith if it be true shall never fail totally nor be taken away He that is the Author of it will likewise be the Finisher Phil. 1.6 Being confident of this very thing that he which hath begun a good Work in you will perform it to the Day of Jesus Christ Hope compared to an Helmet Ephes 6.17 And take the Helmet of Salvation c. 1 Thess 5.8 And for an Helmet the Hope of Salvation AN Helmet is a Piece of Armor for the Head commonly called a Head-Piece Hope the Word is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Havah which signifieth to expect or wait and it notes a very vehement Intention both of Body and Mind in waiting expecting or hoping when a Man waits as it were stretching forth his Spirit or his Mind putting himself out exceedingly to hope or wait for a thing Hope is a Divine and Super-natural Grace or Fruit of the holy Spirit and may be thus described First 'T is a patient and well-grounded Expectation of whatsoever God hath promised God is the Author of it called the Hope of Israel and the God of Hope The Believer is the Subject of this Hope The Object in a strict sence is God who comprehends all the Good that Saints dwell in the Faith and expectation of Psal 39.7 What wait I for my Hope is in thee In a large sence it is the Good of the Promise not in hand Rom. 8.24 or already accomplish'd but to be performed hereafter Hope that is seen is not Hope for what a Man seeth why doth he yet hope for it Futurity is intrinsecal to Hope's Object and distinguisheth it from Faith which gives a present Being to the Promise Heb. 11 1. and is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Substance of things hoped for The Good of the Promise hath a kind of Substance by Faith in the Soul it is in Heaven as it were in an Interview it brings the Christian and Heaven together as if he were there already Why Hope is compared to an Helmet will appear in the following Parallel Metaphor Parallel THe Helmet defends the Head that eminent part of the Body from the Dint of Bullet or Sword HOpe of Heaven defends the principal Parts and Faculties of the Soul from the dangerous Assaults of Sin and Satan particularly the Judgment which most Expositors understand is intended by the Head What avails that Faith which Men have without a well-grounded Hope of future Life Devils have a kind of Faith they believe but have no Hope Faith eyes the Promises and Hope preserves the Soul from Satan's Wounds keeping it in a faithful and stedfast expectation of the fulfilling of them By which means a Saint is help'd chearfully to suffer the Loss of all other things and that in Judgment hoping it will be made up again to him in another World Like as Hope causeth the Husband-man to cast his choice and precious Seed into the Earth He that ploweth ploweth in Hope 1 Cor. 9.10 he hopes for a greater Increase at Harvest So a Merchant ventures much Treasure to Sea as far as the Indies in Hope for had he not good Hopes of advantagious Returns all would account him a Fool so to do II. The Helmet maketh a Souldier fearless and very couragious in the Day of Battel for if his Head and Heart be well defended he is in no great danger of his Life II. In like manner Hope of Heaven makes a Saint very couragious for Christ and his blessed Interest Rom. 5.5 Hope maketh not ashamed 'T is the Hope of Heaven that causeth Saints to endure Afflictions and Persecutions with Patience and not to fear the Faces of their Enemies for if the Judgment Will Affection and Conscience of a Believer be preserved from the mortal Wounds of the Adversary he is safe and out of Danger which is all done by this part of the Christian's Armor How confidently and daringly did Goliah come forth against Israel with his Helmet of Brass and other Furniture as if he had been so enclosed in his Armor that it was impossible any one should prevail against him This made him carry his Crest so high and to defy a whole Host Tho he was mistaken in his Armor Isa 49.23 yet here is an Helmet c. that whosoever wears it shall never be put to shame for his holy Boasting God himself allows him so to do and will bear him out in the rejoycing of his Hope Psal 27.3 They shall not be ashamed that wait for me Therefore saith David Tho an Host should encamp against me my Heart shall not fear c. My Head shall be lifted above mine Enemies Two things make the Head hang down Fear and Shame now Hope easeth the Christian's Heart of both these and so forbids him to give any sign of a desponding Mind by a dejected Countenance in the worst of Times Luk. 21.28 When these things come to pass then lift up your Heads for your Redemption draweth nigh III. An Helmet tends to the compleat harnessing and setting out of a Souldier to meet his Enemy by which means he is terrible to behold as Experience shews for how fierce doth an Army of Souldiers look when armed Cap-a-pe And especially the Head-piece tends to do it Many have been struck with great trembling by
their Pasture X. Cant. 1 7 So the Saints and Church of God have a blessed Resting-place in the Time of the greatest Heat Temptation Affliction and Persecution or whatsoever may cause Disquiet and grieve them in the midst of which saith Mr. Ainsworth Christ giveth sweet Repose unto his Sheep they have Peace in Him tho Tribulation in the World Joh. 16.33 Isa 47.10 Psal 57.1 Isa 33.2 They shall not hunger nor thirst neither shall the Heat nor Sun smite them c. Vnder the Shadow of thy Wings will I make my Refuge until these Calamities be over-past Hence Christ is said to be as the Shadow of a great Rock in a weary Land XI Sheep have many Enemies as Lions Wolves Bears Dogs Foxes and the like and all their Safety stands only in the Care of their Shepherd otherwise these cruel Beasts besides Men who kill many in a Night would soon tear them to pieces XI So God's poor Flock have many strong and cruel Adversaries who would soon tear them in pieces and utterly destroy them were it not for the precious Love and Care of Jesus Christ Rom. 8.36 We are killed all the day long and accounted as Sheep for the Slaughter Zech. 11.4 hence called the Flock of Slaughter XII A Flock of Sheep love to feed and lie down together it is a difficult thing to scatter and divide them If they are frighted by an Enemy or pursued by Dogs Foxes or Wolves and should be separated they would soon get together again XII So the Saints of God do greatly love to assemble together Mal. 3.16 They that feared the Lord spake often one to another c. They that fear thee saith David Psal 119.74 will be glad when they see me because I have hoped in thy Word It is a hard thing to divide Christ's choice Sheep their Hearts are knit one to another as Jonathan's was to David's And if wicked Men like Dogs and Wolves do endeavour to scatter them by Persecution they will soon get together again as is signified Acts 4.23 And being let go they went to their own Company c. XIII A Flock of Sheep are subject to take Soil and Filth and therefore have need of washing XIII So the Godly and Faithful in Christ Jesus are very subject as they are in themselves to contract much Guilt and Pollution Sin being of a defiling Nature and therefore it is they are washed by their Shepherd If I wash thee not Joh. 13. thou hast no part in me The believing Corinthians are said to be washed they were before very unclean and filthy Such were some of you but ye are washed 1 Cor. 6.11 but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the Name of our Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God who hath loved us and washed us from our Sins in his own Blood Rev. 1.5 XIV Sheep will live where other Beasts cannot they will live upon very hard and barren Commons where the Grass is exceeding short and yet seem very well contented XIV So the sincere and truly gracious Soul can live by Faith in a Time of Want and Scarcity when the Hopes of other Men die and pine away And tho the World frown upon them and they cannot see which way by an Eye of Sense they should subsist yet they make a good Shift to live upon the Providence of God who careth for them and are very contented and satisfied with such Pasture that God is pleased to put them into Altho the Fig-Tree shall not blossom Hab. 3.17 18. neither shall Fruit be on the Vine the Labour of the Olive shall fail and the Fields shall yield no Meat the Flocks shall be cut off from the Fold and there shall be no Herd in the Stall Yet will I rejoyce in the Lord and joy in the God of my Salvation XV. There are oftentimes in a Flock of Sheep some Goats XV. So in the Church of Christ are some evil and corrupt Members Mat. 13.47 or such who are none of Christ's Sheep Hypocrites such as are unsound at Heart who are also called Goats XVI Sheep are very fruitful they multiply in a little Time exceedingly tho many are killed by Butchers XVI So the Church of God is fruitful Acts 12.40 41. from a few they have often encreased to a great Multitude Nay tho they have been many of them slaughtered by the persecuting Butchers of Babylon yet they have rather multiplied the more from whence that Maxim grew The Blood of the Martyrs is the Seed of the Church VII In a Flock of Sheep are likely some fat and strong and some lean Ones and the strong are sometimes observed to run upon and abuse the weak being grown very wanton these sometimes leap over the Fold and the Shepherd hath much trouble with them XVII So amongst the Flock of Christ are some fat and rich Saints and some poor and lean Ones who do not thrive you may take it both in a temporal and spiritual Sence There are also some whom God rebukes and threatens who are grown so head-strong that they are waxed wanton and haughty that they oppress and abuse the Poor and these God saith he will destroy Ezek 34.16 they being grown fat like Jeshurun kick against the Lord and will not live in subjection to his Church nor abide in the Fold XVIII Sheep are sometimes separated from the Goats for some special occasion known to the Shepherd XVIII So the Sheep of Christ in the last Day shall be separated from the Goats Mat. 25.32 33. by the Lord Jesus Before him shall be gathered all Nations and he shall separate them one from another as a Shepherd divideth his Sheep from the Goats and he shall set the Sheep on his Right-hand and the Goats on his Left Metaphor Disparity SHeep may be lost and torn in pieces and utterly destroyed by Lions Bears c. BUt none of Christ's Sheep can be lost nor perish Mat. 10.28 Joh. 10.27 28. tho the Enemy may kill or destroy their Bodies yet they cannot destroy their Souls My Sheep hear my Voice and I know them and they follow me and I give 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 Touching other Properties and Things relating to Christ's Sheep see the Metaphor Christ the good Shepherd The Church compared to a House 1 Tim. 3.15 But if I tarry long that thou mayest know how thou oughtest to behave thy self in the House of God which is the Church of the Living God c. Heb. 3.6 But Christ over his own House whose House are we c. THe Church of Christ is compared to an House the great God whose Throne is above hath also a Dwelling-place here below Metaphor Parallel See Vartue's Parallels p. 400. A House
Wickedness tho an Apostle he is not so far changed since to be fond of a wicked Pope as to make him immediate Deputy to Christ and to impose a Wolf as Shepherd upon the Universal Church 2. Who saith That he is an infallible Judg to determine Articles of Faith and impose them upon great Penalties so that as a Lord he hath Dominion over Mens Faith and Souls too which the Apostles disclaimed 3. Who saith The Church cannot err tho God and the World knows there are not such great Errors in Principles nor such villanous Enormities cursed Actions cruel and immoral Practices in the World besides which the poor Multitude believes and kill others that oppose it and venture Body and Soul upon it 4. That says that a Priest tho he be a treacherous Villain a Contriver of Murther an abominable Adulterer hath Power to absolve his equal and Fellow-Sinner from all his Offences if he come to Confession tho the pretended Penitent keep his old Habit of Wickedness still contrary to what God and Jesus Christ say That the Dauber with untempered Mortar and the Daubed the Layer of the Pillow under sinful Elbows and the Leaner thereon the blind Leader as well as the blind Follower shall all fall together 5. That saith There is a Purgatory that is no part of Heaven or Hell and that Men may be redeemed thence for Money Tho God saith The Redemption of Mens Souls is precious and ceaseth for ever after the Offering of the Body of Jesus once for all that Redemption is not with corruptible Things as Silver and Gold but with the precious Blood of Christ as a Lamb slain without spot 6. That saith That the Hands and Mouth of a filthy unclean Priest can make not only the Bread and Wine sacred but turn both into the real Body and Blood of the Son of God make whole Christ of a pitiful Wafer-Cake that after it is eaten turns to Corruption and before it is earen is a fit Feast for Rats and Mice not only contrary to Reason but the full Verdict of all our Senses 7. That saith That no Person how good and pious soever he be can be saved out of the Pale of their polluted ungodly and devilish Church tho the Scripture plainly affirms That in every Nation he that fears God and worketh Righteousness is accepted with him 8. That says 'T is no Sin to lie swear and forswear to kill slay and murther such as they call Hereticks tho never so good if it be for the Cause of the Church with a thousand Things of the like Import which the People do verily believe And as they dare not gainsay upon their Salvation so will they embrace and use all Opportunities to fight and make Wars overcome Cities and lay waste Countries and Kingdoms to kill and slay by Massacre and all manner of murthering ways all Ranks and Degrees of Men that oppose the horrid Principles and Practices of those cursed Children Nay they will go boldly to their own Death when convict and condemned for Villanies and deny that to day that they were convicted of but yesterday and tho never so notoriously guilty yet will take it upon their Death and Salvation that they are as innocent as the Child unborn What can this be tho they drink it down for most sweet and pleasant Wine but an Infusion of the rankest and most deadly Poyson that the lowest Celler of the Bottomless Pit can afford the very Wine of Fornications and the most dangerous Drunkenness and Intoxication in the World Which is attended with this Aggravation that the best prepared Medicines of the wisest Physician will not recover them for Babylon having made the Multitude drunk with this sort of poysoned Wine how rare is it to have any come to themselves to their right Mind again And to shut up this Head take this Argument Argument If no People in the Christian World hath made the Multitude or common Sort of People drunk corrupted and intoxicated their Minds by wicked Lies and false Doctrine such as before-mentioned as Rome Papal or Church of Rome hath done Then Rome Papal or Church of Rome is this Babylon treated of But no People in the Christian World hath made the Multitude or common Sort of People drunk corrupted and intoxicated their Minds by wicked Lies and false Doctrine such as before-mentioned as Rome hath done Ergo Rome Papal or Church of Rome is this Babylon treated of IX Mystery Babylon is such ill Company as to let Kings be dishonestly familiar with her and make the lower and ruder Sort of her Associates drunk She is said to sit drunk upon a Scarlet-colour'd Beast and this Beast is full of the Names of Blasphemy Rev. 17.3 And I saw a Woman sit upon a Scarlet-coloured Beast full of the Names of Blasphemy c. So that the Woman and the Beast are distinct the Woman the Church the Beast the Secular Power or Civil State This appears evident from divers Considerations arising 1. From other Prophecies relating to the same Thing 2. From the Letter of the Text. 3. From Arguments in Reason 4. From the Confession of the Woman Babylon or the Whore her self Dan. 2. 1. From many Prophecies the latter part of the Image is partly Iron and partly Clay two States really distinct that could never so incorporate as to become one 2. From the Letter of the Text I saw a Woman sit upon a Scarlet-coloured Beast Rev. 17.3 full of the Names of Blasphemy The Colours of the Royal and Imperial Vestments the Angel in the next Words declares distinct and the Apostle in the Vision beheld them distinct 3. They appear to be distinct from Arguments in Reason For 1. The Beast is in the Masculine the Whore in the Feminine Gender Ver. 11 2 4 6 16. compared 2. The Whore else did sit and ride upon her self an high Absurdity 3. The Horns being of the Beast shall hate the Whore if not distinct the Whore must hate her self even to Ruine and Desolation which is nonsensical 4. The Beast shall abide tho in Captivity after the Whore is thrown down or destroyed 4. From the plain Confession of the Woman or Whore her self who saith I sit a Queen I am no Widow Ergo she hath a Head or Husband which is the Beast little Horn or Man of Sin that Paul declared should rise after the removal of the then present Power which did lett which the Primitive Fathers as Tertullian Cyprian Jerome and others understood to be the Imperial Power in its pure civil iron or unmixed State IX Rome Papal or Church of Rome hath not only been ill Company to the Kings and great Men of the Earth in drawing them into her Idol●try Abuse of God his blessed Son the Christian Religion and blessed Books of the Old and New Testament but she hath made the lower and ruder Sort of People drunk too And 't is no Wonder she thinks she may do any thing
Beauty and Perfection in Christ is all fulness of Light Beauty and Perfection 2. There use was to receive by them answer from God in difficult Cases when the Priest consulted with him the Oracle by Vrim gave certain Direction So Christ is the most perfect Rule and Direction shadowed by that Heb. 1.1 2. As God spake then by Vrim to the Priest so now by his own Son Those who would have their Doubts resolved must go to the Vrim go to Christ and to his Ordinances c. But to return back and speak a little further to the Robe of the Ephod and Bonnet on the Skirts of the Ephod Exod. 28.31 were fastned the Pomegranets of blew Silk and Purple and Scarlet round about this Fruit had a most pleasant smell sweet in it self and sweetning other things and is full of precious Juice and Liquor 2. Bells of Gold between them round about a Golden Bell and a Pomegranate c. this Vesture or Garment might signify the Righteousness of Christ's Human Nature and by the sweet Pomgranates the most excellent savour of his Righteousness and Obedience in the Nostrils of God the Father in the behalf of Man which also in a Spiritual Sense was full of precious Juice and Virtue to qualify and abate the raging heat of God's Wrath as the Juice of Pomgranates doth allay the burning heat of an Ague or Feaver as also they might signify what a sweet savour Christ's Righteousness doth cast upon us when wrapped as it were therein who by Nature are in a stinking and loathsome Condition 2. As to the golden Bells they might figure forth the blessed sound of the Gospel or as some understand Christ's visible owning of us now in Heaven and our publick owning of him on Earth which must be Sincere we must not only make a sound but also have good Fruit we must not on●y have a Word for God but a Work for God a Bell a Pomegranate a Word and a Work 6. The High Priest must be heard when he goeth into the Sanctuary signifying saith Dr. Taylor the Power of Christ our High Priest's perpetual Intercession being entered into the true Sanctuary viz. Heaven it self for us As touching the Miter or Bonnet upon the Priest's Head made of blew Silk and fine Linnen like to an half Coronet beautified with a Golden Plate on which was written Holiness to the Lord. 1. The Miter might not only signify God's covering and protecting our Head the Lord Jesus and us in him but also his Kingly Dignity 2. The Golden Plate in which was written Holiness to the Lord figured forth in a most conspicuous manner that most divine and perfect Holiness of the Lord our Righteousness the Holiness of his Person the Holiness of his Nature the Holiness of all his Actions and Passions his Holiness who is the Cause Stream and Original of all our Holiness that is accepted of God Fourthly The Priest was a Type of Christ in the Execution of his Office 1. The Priest must kill the Sacrifices and none but he signifying Jesus Christ's vo●untary Action Joh. 10.18 in laying down his Life for us none could take it away from him he was as well the Priest as the Sacrifice 2. The Priest offered the Blood of the Sacrifices to God and sprinkled it on the Alter no Man might offer his ●wn Sacrifice but he must bring it to the Priest Lev. 7.4 figuring there was no coming to God but by Christ who offered up his own Blood to atone for our Sins no other can offer any Sacrifice to take away Sin but him alone 3. The Priest prepared the Body of the Sacrifice fley'd it divided it into several parts Lev. 1.6 washed the Intrails put Fire unto the Burnt-Offerings consumed the Fat cast the Filth and Dung into the pl●ce of Ashes c. signifying that Christ alone did the whole work of our Redemption he suffered the heat of God's Wrath and Justice he puts away all our Filth and covers it in his own Grave and washeth us in the Fountain of his own Blood c. 4. The Priest was to teach the People The Priest's Lips must preserve Knowledg Mal. 2.7 and thou shalt seek the Law at his Mouth this figured forth Christ in his Prophetical Office who is the great Doctor and Teacher of God's Mind and Will to the Children of Men 't is he who hath the Tongue of the L●arned so that never Man spake like him Psal 45.2 it is he who hath the Words of everlasting Life 5. The Priests were to preserve the Oyl for Lights and the Incense Luk. 24.50 and for the daily Meat-Offering and the anointing Oyl c. signifying that Jesus Christ is the Preserver of all Grace in and for his Church he only watcheth for the safety of his People he preserves the light of Grace and good Works in us and the Oyl of Gladness from decaying in our Lamps and Vessels There were some Actions more peculiar to the High Priest 1. He must daily dress the holy Lamps and Lights Morning and Evening Lev. 24.2 3. before the Lord to preserve the Lights from going out So Christ preserves the Light of his Word and Gospel from being put out tho Men and Devils with all their Might have endeavoured to do it 2. He must week●y make the Shew-Bread and set it before the Lord continually and Exod. 25.30 more expresly every Sabbath he must set on the Table twelve Loaves according to the number of the Tribes of Israel and take the old away c. In this he was a Type of Christ who sets himself continually in the Ministry of the Word as the Substance and Anti-type of the Shew-Bread before the Children of Men especially to feed and strengthen his own Children nay an● brings forth fresh Food new Bread for them every Sabbath 3. He must yearly and that in the day of Expiation go into the Holy of Holies Exod. 30.10 Lev. 16.2 to make an Atonement for himself for his House and for all the People but not without Blood signifyi●g that Christ by one alone Sacrifice of hims●lf hath opened the Sanctuary of H●aven and by his Ascension hath made entrance into it on our behalf and there appears be●ore God once for all to make Intercession for us The Priest went alone without any Attendants Heb. 10.12 19 So Christ hath trod the Wine-Press alone no Competitor no Companion h●th he in this work and now pleads alone as our own and only Mediator by virtue of his own Blood at the Father's right Hand There is one that is but one Mediator between God and Man c. 4. The High Priest continually was to decide the highest Controversies he must judg between the cl●an and the unclean he must put the one out and receive the other into the Congregation signifying that Christ only Christ alone is the Supream judg of all Controversies 't is his Word only that can
are as goads by which Men are prick'd forward to their Duty as Oxen are prick'd forward to go on or labour And as Nails which keep Men within the bounds of Duty as Planks are fixt when they are nail'd through fastened by the Masters of Assemblies he speaks Metaphorically of Divine Preaching as 1 Cor. 3.6 Jam. 1.21 For the Masters of Assemblies are such as founded or instituted Colledges or such as in the publick Assemblies of the Church taught the Word of God as the Prophets and Priests in the Old Testament did which are given from one Shepherd that is God the only Pastor of his People Psal 23.1 that is the supream Governour and Protector He alone is the Author of his written Word speaking immediately by his Prophets c. More especially and by way of brief Analogy Citations of the Old Test in the New we will make some Observations of the Quotations of the Old Testament quoted in the New 1. Quoad formam internam with respect to the internal Form which is the sense of Scripture Oracles 2. The external Form which is the Manner or Character of speaking and the Mode or Way of Allegation 1. The internal or inward Form with respect to which the Allegation is made either according to the sense intended by the Holy Spirit or its Analogical Accommodation 1. The Sense intended by the Holy Spirit is either literal or typical and mystical In an immediate literal Sense there are frequent Quotations which concern Christ of whom the Prophets prophesied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word for word as Esa 7.14 Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and thou shalt call his Name Emanuel which in the proper and proximate sense is cited with respect to Christ Mat. 1.23 compare also Deut. 18.15 with Act. 3.22 Psal 2.7 with Act. 13.33 Heb. 1.5 5.5 Psal 8.2 with Mat. 21.16 Psal 22.18 with Mat. 27.35 John 19.24 Psal 40.6 7 8. with Heb. 10.5 c. and Psal 45.6 7 with Heb. 1.8 9 and Psal 68.18 with Eph. 4.8 and Psal 69.9 with Rom. 15.3 and Psal 102.25 with Heb. 1.10 and Psal 110.1 with Mat. 22.24 45. Mark 12.36 Luke 20.42 43 44. Acts 2.34 35. 1 Cor. 15.25 Heb. 1.13 Psal 110.4 Heb. 5.6 and 7.17 Psal 110.22 with Mat. 21.42 Mark 12.10 Acts 4.11 1. Pet. 2.7 So Esa 11.10 with Rom. 15.12 and Isa 28.16 with 1 Pet. 2.6 and Isa 42.1 c. with Mat. 12.17 c. and Isa 45.23 with Rom. 14.11 and Esa 61.1 with Luke 4.18 21. and Amos 9.11 with Acts 15.15 16. Mic. 5.2 with Mat. 2.6 and Zech. 9.9 with Mat. 21.5 John 12.14 15. and Zech. 11.12 with Mat. 27.9 and Zech. 12.10 with John 19.37 and Zech. 13.7 with Mat. 25.31 Mal. 3.1 with Mat. 11.10 Mark 1.2 c. Junius and Tremellius Tarnovius and Rivet refer to this place Hos 11.1 Out of Egypt have I called my Son which Mat. 2.15 is cited and applied to Christ 2. There are Citations in a mediate and typical Sense out of the Old Testament respecting Christ and his Mystical Body the Church As Exod. 12.46 about the Paschal Lamb applied to Christ John 19.26 the Brazen Serpent Numb 21.8 9. with John 3.14 15. Jonas Chap. 2.1 11. with Mat. 12.39 Adam and Eve Gen. 2.23 24. with Eph. 5.31 32 c. To this Head also may be reduced those Allegations which are Expositions of an Allegorical Speech as in Phil. Sacr. p. 375. An Analogical Accommodation which Cajetan called a transumptive sense is when the words of the Old Testament are used in the New and accommodated to the Event and for Conveniency or Similitude are attributed to a Person or some certain thing extending it beyond the scope the first holy Writer as Mat. 13.35 the saying Psal 78.2 I will open my Mouth in a Parable I will utter dark Sayings of old is analogically said to be fulfilled in Christ For as God the Father by the Prophets opened the Mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven to his People at all times so Christ who was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the hypostatical Word of the Father thought meet to express himself in Parables Yet in the 78 Psalm true Examples are given but Christ uses feigned Narrations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both which agree in this that they are called Parables that is Similitudes viz. such as are brought in by Christ and recited by the Psalmist on purpose to admonish the People by those Examples of what they were to expect from God by their Perseverance in or Apostacy from the Faith See 1 Cor. 10.6 11 c. The words Esa 53.4 viz. He hath born our Griefs or Infirmities and carried our Sorrows or Diseases are cited Mat. 8.17 Now if you respect the Person or adequate Subject of whom the Prophet speaks the Allegation or Citation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the word or literally to be understood but if you will have respect to the thing of which Matthew treats it must be only by way of Analogy and Accommodation For here there is an account given of Christ with respect to his healing divers Diseases in which he is said to accomplish what was foretold by the Prophetical Oracle and in a literal sense to bear our Spiritual Infirmities in his Passion and Death as it is expounded 1 Pet. 2.24 25. More Citations you may find Deut. 30.11 with Rom. 10.6 in the description of the Righteousness of Faith see also Esa 43.19 compared with Rev. 21.5 Mat. 2.17 18. with Jer. 31.15 Mat. 13.14 with Esa 6.9 Mat. 15.8 with Esa 29.13 Luke 23.30 Rev. 6.16 with Hos 8.10 Acts 13.40 41. with Habak 1.5 Rom. 9.27 28. with Esa 10.22 Rom. 9.29 with Isa 1.9 1 Cor. 1.19 20. with Isa 29.14 33.18 Rev. 1.7 with Zech. 12.10 Rev. 11.4 with Zech. 4.14 c. 2. As to the exernal Form As to the external Form or the kind of speaking or the manner of Citation the following things are observable 1. The frequent Quotation of the Septuagint or the ancient Greek Translation of the Old Testament of which as Hierom notes * In quest Heb. super Gen. To. 4. fol. 102. Hoc generaliter observandum quod ubicunque sancti Apostoli aut Apostolici viri loquantur ad Populos his plerumque Testimoniis abutuntur quae per Translationem Septuagint Interpretum jam fuerant in Gentibus divulgatae that is This is to be generally noted that wheresoever the holy Apostles or Apostolical Men spoke to the People they did for the most part use these Testimonies which that is the Translation of the Seventy Interpreters were now published to the Gentiles And that even in those things where there is a manifest difference between that Translation and the Original Hebrew Text as Luke 3.36 wherein the Genealogy of Christ the Name Cainan is put in which is not in the Original Hebrew but in the version of the Seventy of which more hereafter The words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
have a Typical Description of the Temple and City The Antitype of which is not the City and Temple rebuilt by Zerubbabel and Nehemiah after the Captivity as the Hebrew Rabbies and others have dreamed but the Mystical Temple of God his true Church and the heavenly and spiritual City as the Learned Doctor Haffenrefferus most learnedly expounds it Lastly the Revelations of John in which the future State of the Church by divers Visions both symbolical and typical is represented the Explication or fulfilling of which the Event must shew is properly reduced under this Head So much for Prophetical Types Article V. Of an Historical Type and its first Division AN Historical Type is the mystical Sense of Scripture whereby things acted or done in the Old Testament especially what respected the Priesthood and Worship of the Jews prefigured and adumbrated things acted in the New Testament-times with respect especially to Christ the Antitype who is as it were the Kernel inclosed in all those Shells of Old-Testament-Ceremonies Types or Actions c. This may be thus distinguished 1. that like an Allegory it is either innate or natural or inferr'd The Innate is that which is expresly delivered in the Scriptures or when the Scripture it self shews or intimates that some Ceremony or thing transacted does adumbrate the things related or done in the New-Testament especially Christ in a mystical sense This is done either expresly and implicitely or tacitely and implicitely or which is all one the Scripture either shews it expresly or tacitely insinuates the thing transacted to be a Type of Christ Of the first kind we have many Examples Examples of Types The Prophet Jonas was swallowed into the Whales Belly and vomited out after three days as Jonah 1.17 and 2.10 this is a Type of Christ who lay three days in the Grave and of his glorious Resurrection as Christ himself expresly says Matth. 12.40 16.4 Luke 11.29 30. The Brazen Serpent which Moses by Divine Command lifted up in the Desart against the bitings of Serpents as Numb 21.8 9. is expresly said to be a Type of Christ who was lifted up upon the Cross and healing Believers of the biting of the Infernal Serpent John 3.14 15. The Constiution and Sacrifice-Offerings of the Levitical Priesthood in the Old Testament did typically prefigure Christ the High-Priest as Heb. 5. and the following More Examples may be found upon a diligent search and Meditation of the Scripture Examples of the latter sort are these The Mercy-Seat Mercy-Seat or the Covering of the Ark of the Covenant Exod. 25.17 which typified Christ Rom. 3.25 so you may compare Josh 1 c. with Heb. 4.8 that the Manna Manna was a Type of Christ is told us John 6.32.33 c. The Paschal Lamb Pascal Lamb. Exod. 12.3 c. was a Type of Christ as 1 Cor. 5.7 John 19.36 The Scape-Goat Lev. 16.10 21. was a Type of Christ as John 1.29 1 Pet. 2.24 So was Isaac Gen. 22.2 12. with Rom. 8.32 and Heb. 11.19 So Sampson Judg. 13 c. compared with Matth. 2.23 where that which is spoken of Sampson Judg. 13.5 is accommodated to Christ the Antitype Yet the Phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall be called a Nazarene not used as some say respecting the words concerning Sampson but to other Sayings of the Prophets Isa 60.21 c. * Isa 11.1 Zech. 6.12 in which the Messias is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Netzer Surculus a Branch whence Narareth is derived hence the Syriack has it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Natzerath or Notrath † See Piscator upon the place and Junius in Parallellis Solomon First-born Son Matth. 2.23 and the Reason they give is that it is said it was written 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the Prophets in the plural Number c. That King Solomon the Son of David was a Type of Christ appears Heb. 1.5 Acts 2.30 13.12 where the Promise made to David spoken in a literal sense of Solomon 2 Sam. 7.12 1 Chron. 17.11 is referred to Christ The first-born Son of the Lord as the People of Israel are called Exod. 4.23 when they were to go out of Egypt is a Type of Christ the only begotten Son of God Mat. 3.17 who is said to be called from his Exile in that Nation Mat. 2.15 where that which is literally said of the Israelites Hos 11.1 is accommodated to Christ the Antitype c. An illated or inferr'd Type is that which is conseqentially gathered to be such by Interpreters this is either by fair Probabilities agreeable to the Analogy of Faith or extorted and without any Foundation in or shadow of Sense from the literal Sense of the Text. Judg. 13.14 15 16 Chapters Of the first sort the Homily-writers and Expositors produce a great many As the doings of Sampson in marrying a strange Wife and destroying his Enemies by his Death altho no where in Scripture applied to Christ yet it is expounded as a Type of Christ who was spiritually as it were married to the Gentiles and conquered his Enemies by Dying More Examples are Gen. 37 c. respecting Joseph Numb 16.47 respecting Aaron See Isa 59.2 Gen. 2.22 23. Dan. 6.22 Judg. 16.2 3. 1 Sam. 17.49 1 Sam. 22.2 with Luke 15 1 c. Of the latter sort are the wild fantastical Conceits of Papists and some others who make Types where there are none For Instance * Lib. 1. summae cap. 90. Turrecremata makes the Son of David yea Christ himself a Type of the Pope of Rome For he expounds the words 2 Kings 7.13 thus I will establish the Throne of his Kingdom for ever that is says he I will cause the Supremacy or Kingdom of the Pope always to endure with several other things of the same ridiculous Tenor which we omit as useless to our undertaking Article VI. Other Divisions of an Historical Type ANother Division of an Historical Type is this some immediately respect Christ and some the Things that belong to Christ Of the first Sort are such Things as prefigure and lively set forth his most holy Life his most bitter Death his most glorious Resurrection and Exaltation as in the Examples before recited Of the latter Sort are the universal Flood in which by the peculiar Blessing of God Noah Noah and his Family were saved which is called a Figure or Type of Baptism 1 Pet. 3.21 to which Psal 29.10 may be applied which by the Power and Efficacy of the most precious Blood of Christ saves Men and is to them the Laver of Regeneration and Renovation of the Holy Spirit The Parallel of this Type with the Antitype may be read in the learned Gerhard Tom. 4. loc de Bapt. Sect. 8. The Bodily Circumcision Circumcision is a Type of Heart Circumcision the former is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Circumcision made without Hands the latter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Circumcision of Christ Col. 2.11 So