1 Srom f ^e feifirari? of (profesBor ^cttnuef (gftiffer in (UXemori? of Sub^e ^amuef (QttfPer Q^tecftinribge (pteeenfeb 6l? ^amuef (Btiffer (grecftinribge &on^ fo f^e &i6rare of (Princeton C^eofogtcaf ^eminarj? w '»Wr- t^ 1 ^ ' "■"•'■-' 7- HISTORY REDEMPTION, ON A PLAN ENTIRELY ORIGINAL: EXHIBITING THE GRADUAL DISCOVERY AND ACCOMPLISHMENT OF THE DIVINE PURPOSES IN THE SALVATION OF MANj INCLUDING A COMPREHENSIVE VIEW OF CHURCH HISTORY, AND THE FULFILMENT OF SCRIPTURE PROPHECIES. BY THE LATE R^EREND JONATHAN EDWARDS, PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE OF NEW JERSEY. TO WHICH ARE HOW ADDED NOTES, HISTORICAL, CRITICAL, and T H E O L O G I C A L, WITH THE LIFE AND EXPERIENCE OF THE AUTHOR. Whofo is wife, and ivill confider thefe things, even they Jhall underjland the loving kindnefs of the Lord. Pfa. evil. N E W- - Y O R K: Printed by T. and J. Swords, for the Editor, M,DCC,XCIII. ADVERTISEMENT To ihefirji American Edition of EDWARDS's History of Redemption, wiih Notes, X HE following edition of this in.'valuahle work is humbly dedicated to the patronage of the Mini- fters and Churches of every Chriltian denomination throughout thefe United States, and throughout the world : — And the Editor cannot think of any thing better calculated to give energy to the reputation which this work has already acquired; or to quicken the attention of the Chriflian world to the careful peru- fal and ftudy of it; than to fay — In this volume the reader will find a full and well authenticated Journal of the Ark of God; of that Ark in which we now fail, and on which we depend for a fafe and fpeedy paflage to glory. The Ark, by Noah, is confidered as a ftriking emblem — a lively figure of our Lord Jefus Chrift, whilft he bears, in fafety, from generation to gene- ration, through the tempefts of time, his myftical body, the Church. Perufing this Hiftory of Redemption — this Jour- nal of the Ark of God, v/ho can fail to admire the wifdom of the Great Master-Builder in the A 2 original IV ADVERTISEMENT. original defign — the fteadinefs of his hand — the ftabihty of the purpofes of Heaven in the regular courfe of this Mighty Fabric ! — Who, but muft be aflonifhed at the power of that arm, which, not- withflanding the tempefluous weather with which the Ark has been aflailed — the rocks and fhoals to which file has been often expofed — the ignorance, contradiction and mutiny of thofe to whom, under God, its navigation has been committed;— and laft of all, notwithftanding the unceafmg machinations of the Prince of the Power of the Air, who, I fay, but mufl be aftonifhed, and admire that the Ark flill fails ; that flill fhe makes good her courfe ; — ftill, flie receives paffengers for the Haven of Celeftial Glory! Though, to the eye of unbelief, the Ark may feem, now, to be involved in tempefluous weather, and foon to be foundered through the probable fai- lure of borrowed llrength;* yet, to the joy of the paffengers there are thofe, who, looking through the mifts of human or infernal jars, do hail the approach of Millennial Day! On the Ocean of the Millennium — the foon ap- proaching feventh-thoufand years, it is predicted, that * It is a remark, not unworthy of obfervation, that the Chrif- tian reb'gion has never had opportunity to fliew what its efFefts would he, uiifupported, or unoppofed by human power — that now, bsoinning with the Civil and Religious liberty of thefe United States, trial is to be had; whether, depending on its own bafis, it will ftand or fall — whether it be of God, or whether it will come to nought. The idea, no doubt, may be of ufe to thofe who are ftiled — workers together with God. ADVERTISEMENT. v that the Ark fliall fafely and uninterruptedly fail; and, in her courfe around the globe, receive a thou- fand-fold more paflengers, for the port of her def- tiny, than have ever, before this period, lived upon the earth: — that, after thefe profperous gales, tem- pefts fhall arife, as the laft efforts of expiring Hell : — but through the fkilful management of him who fits at helm, no danger fliall be fuftained; but fafety to the Ark, and vi6lory to the Zion of God, fhall welcome the invaluable treafure into the Haven of Eternal Reft !— To fupport the faith of the called of God, and to quicken the exertions of thofe, through whofe management, under God, the Ark now fails, is the defign of the publication of this firft American edition of Edwards's Hiftory of Redemption, with Notes. That the defign may meet the good wiflies of all friends to Zion, and, efpecially, that it may receive the patronage of Heaven, is the ardent prayer of one, whofe profeifed ambition it is, to approve himfelf as an induftrious hewer of wood, and dravv^er of v/ater, for the Church of God. Elizabeth-Town, 1 Dec. I, 1793. j" DAVID AUSTIN. PREFACE PREFACE To the First Edition. XT has long been defired by the friends of Mr. Edwards, that a number of his manufcripts fhould be publifhed ; but the difadvantages under which all pofthumous publications muft neceffarily appear, and the difficulty of getting any confiderable work printed in this infant country hitherto, have proved fufficient obftacles to the execution of fuch a propofal. The firfl: of thefe obftacles made me doubt, for a confi- derable time after thefe manufcripts came into my hands, whether I could, confiftently with that regard which I owe to the honour of fo worthy a parent, fuffer any of them to appear in the world. However, being diffident of my own fentiments, and doubtful whether I were not over-jealous in this matter, I de- termined to fubmit to the opinion of gentlemen who are friends both to the character of Mr. Edwards and to the caufe of truth. The confequence was, that they gave their advice for publilhing them. The other obftacle was removed by a gentleman in the church of Scotland, who was formerly a cor- refpondent of Mr. Edwards.* He engaged a book- feller to undertake the work, and alfo fignified his defire that thefe following difcourfes in particular might be made public. Mr. *Dr. Erskinh, of Edinbui-o:!). viii PREFACE Mr. Edwards had planned a body of divinity, in a new method, and in the form of a hiftory ; in which he was firil to fhew, how the moft remarkable events in all ages, from the fall to the prefent times, recorded in facred and profane hiftory, were adapted to pro- mote the work of redemption ; and then to trace, by the light of fcripture-prophecy, how the fame work fliould be yet farther carried on even to the end of the world. His heart was fo much fet on executing this plan, that he was confiderably averfe to accept the prefidentlliip of Prince-town college, left the du- ties of that office fhould put it out of his power. The outlines of that work are now offered to the public, as contained in a feries of fermons preached at Northampton in 1739,* without any view to pub- lication. On that account, the reader cannot rea- fonably expert all that from them, v/hich he might juftly have expefted, had they been written with fuch a view, and prepared by the Author's own hand for the prefs. As to elegance of compofition, which is now efteemed fo elTential to all publications, it is well known that the Author did not make that his chief ftudy. However, his other writings, though defti- tute of the ornaments of fine language, have, it feems, that iolid merit which has procured, both to them- felves and to him, a confiderable reputation in the world, and with many an high efteem. It is hoped that * This is necefTary to be remembered by the reader, in order to underftand fome chronological obfervations in the following work. TO THE FIRST EDITION. Ix that the reader will find in thefe difcourfes many traces of plain good fenfe, found reafoning, and thorough knowledge of the facred oracles, and real unfeigned piety : and that as the plan is new, and many of the fentiments uncommon, they may afford entertainment and improvement to the ingenious, the inquintive, and the pious reader ; may confirni their faitli in God's government of the world, in our holy Chrilbr .; religion in general, and in many of its peculiar doc- trines ; may affift in fludying with greater pleafure and advantage the hiftorical and prophetical books of fcripture ; and excite to a converfation becoming the gofpel. That this volume may produce thefe happy effefts in all who fhall perufe it, is the hearty defire and prayer of The reader's mofl humble fervant, Jonathan Edwards. New Haven, Feb, 2^, I yy^^. B ADVER- ADVERTISEMENT TO THIS EDITION. X HE preceding Preface, by Dr. Jonathan Ed- wards of NewHaven, (fon of President Edwards, and Member of the Connecllcut Society of Arts and Sciences) has fufficiently apprized the reader of the nature of the following Work ; we have only to add, that the original papers, being remitted to Dr. Er- SKINE, were by him reduced from the form of Ser- mons to that of a Treatife, and publifhed at Edinburgh. Two material defeats were, however, complained of in that edition : Firft, that only mere hints were fometimes dropt of an important idea, which the Author would doubtlefs have enlarged on, had he pre- pared the work for publication : and fecondly, that many of the hiflorical and critical obfervations were not fupported with proper authorities, v/hich in pulpit difcourfes v/ould have been impertinent, but became highly neceffary in a pubhcation. For thefe defe(Sls there appeared no remedy, but fupplying, in the form of notes, what, probably the Author would for the moft part have inferted in the body of the work. The celebrity of the Author, from whom many of the notes are felefted, will (lamp thcjn with fufficient credit : for the others, the publiflier has to confefs his obligations to Gentlemen, whofe names he would be proud to mention if permitted. The Life and Experience of the Author, the Syllabus, General Index, Table of Texts explained, and other improvements of this Edition, will, it is hoped, alfo contribute to render it more generally acceptable and ufeful. LONDON, DTC. 27, 1788. Authors ( xi ) Authors cited in the following Work. Addifon. Ainfvvorth. Allen, Dr. Allix, Dr. Bacon, Lord. Barnabas, St. Baxter, R. Bede. Bennett, B. Bingham. Blackwell. Blair, Dr. Burnett, Dr. Calvin. Cave, Dr. Celfus. Claude. Clemens Roman. Cofins, Bp. Cruden. De Laune. De Lolme. Diodorus. Dryden. Dupin. Edwards, Prei". Eliezer. Eufebius. Fergufon. Findlay. Flavel. Fox. Faulke, Dr. Fuller, Dr. Geddes, Dr Oerundenfis. Geffner. Gibbon, E. Gill, Dr. Glynn, Dr. Glruterus. Guife, Dr. Hammond, Dr. Heidegger. Harris, Dr. Helvicus. Henry, M. Herodotus. Hervey. Homer. Howe. Hurd, Bp. Hunter, Dr. H. Hutchinfon, J. Jamblicus, Jarchi. Jenyns, Soamc. Ignatius, St. Jofephus. Juflia Martyr. Kennett. Kimchi. La6lantius. Lardner. Le Pluche, Abbe. Le Clerc. Levi. Lightfoot, Dr. Lipfius. Locke. Xll ) Lowman. Lowth, Bp. M'Ewen. Maimonides. JM'fher. Mede. Menrichem. Michaelis. Middleton, Dr. Milton. Moore, Dr. Newcome, Bp. Newton, Sir Kaac. Bp. Mr. Owen, Dr. Parklunft. Patrick, Bp. Pearfon, Bp. Pike. Platina. Pliny. Plutarch. Pope, A. Prideaux, Dr. Poole. Potter, Abp. Rapin. Reader. Reinerus. Robinlon, R. RoUin. Roufleau. Rowe, Mrs. Saurin. Schindler. Scott, Dr. Serces. Shakefpeare. Sherlock, Bp. Shuckford, Dr. South, Dr. Stackhoufe. Tacitus. Targums. Taylor, J. Tertullian. Thuanus. Tacitus. Tennifon, Abp, Toplady. Turner, D. Tertullian. Virgil. Un'tverfal Hiji. Watts, Dr. Warburton, Bp.- Ward, Dr. Whitby, Dr. Whitfield. Winter, R. WolHus. Young, A. Dr. E. THE THE LIFE AND EXPERIENCE OF THE REVEREND JONATHAN EDWARDS. B lOGRAPHY is confeflcdly a very agreeable ftudy, and when eminent and good men are the fubjc6i:s of it, no lefs inftru6live and improving. We contemplate with pleafure thofe who have attained degrees of virtue or knowledge which ourfelves are feeking; and there is a voice in a£l:s of piety and benevolence, like that of the Redeemer, ' Go thou and do likewife:' but Christian Biography has another end in view; we are taught to confider believers as ' The workmanfliip of Chrift fefus, * created anew unto good works :' and certainly the freenefs and power of divine grace are no lefs confpicuous in thefe, than are the other attributes of Deity in the works of na- ture and providence. Or, to borrow another metaphor of infpiration, they are the living Epiftles of Jefus Chrift, and have thefe particular advantages over thofe infcribed with ink and pen, that they are both more durable and more legible— they are living and as durable as eternal life ; they are ' feen and read of all men :' for the moft illiterate can read the language of a holy life, though they may not be able to read a line or a letter of the infpired volume. President Edwards, the author of the enfuing Hif- tory, was one of the wifeft, bcft, and moft ufeful preachers this 4 THELIFEOFTHE this age lias produced ; his writings exhibit a remarkable ftrength of intellect ; the pcrfpicuity of thought and depth of penetration difcovered in his vindication of the great dodtrines of Chriftianity, prove him to be a good fcholar, a bright genius, and a great divine. This learned and moft excellent man was born at Wind- for, in the province of Conne6licut, 0£l:ober ^th, 1703; was entered at Yale College in 17 16, and made bachelor of arts in 1720, before he was feventeen years of age. His mental powers opened themfelves fo early and fo vigoroufly, that he read Locke's Effay upon Human Underftanding with uncommon delight at thirteen years of age : even at that period difcovering a depth, folidity, and penetration of mind, which found nothing fo pleafant to itfclf as the exercife of its own powers. He lived at college near two years after taking this firil degree, preparing himfelf, principally, for the facred func- tion. After paffing the ufual trials, he was licenfed, ac- cording to the cuflom of the college and the form of religion in the province, to preach the gofpel as a candidate. In Auguft 1722, he received a calico preach to the Englirti Prelbyterians at New York, where he continued with approbation above eight months. This fociety was then too fmall to maintain a minifter; and therefore, in the fpring of the year 1723, he returned to his father's houfe in Conne6licut, where, during the following fum- mer, he followed his ftudies with the clofell application. It appears, however, that he had a deep fenfe of the chriftian and miniflerial profcffion upon his mind during his abode at New York, that the people he watched over became very dear to him, and that he left them at laft with great regret. In the fpring of the year 1724, having taken his mafter's degree in the year before, he was chofen tutor of Yale College, and he followed this duty above two years. It muft be owned, that this was an engagement of great confequence for a young man of twenty-one, who, by his early introdu£tion into the minillry, and other avocations, could not have fouod too many oppor- tunities REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 5 tunltles for his own improvement; but the ftrength of his mind overcame what are ufually infuperable difficul- ties in the way of the generahty ; and perhaps his genius a6led more forcibly from its not being confined with aca- demical fetters, which elevated geniufes can feldom en- dure. In September, 1726, he refigned his tutorfliip, in con- fequence of the invitation of the people at Northampton, in Conne£licut, for afliflance to his mother's father, Mr. Stoddard, who was the fettled minifter of the town. He was ordained colleague on the x 5th of February, 1727, in the twenty-fourth year of his age, and conti- nued in the minifterial fervice there till the 22d of June, 1750, when he was difmifled for attempting to reform the church. What feems at firft to have rendered Mr. Edwards an obje6l of hatred, was a circumftance, which fliould have made him, and certainly would, among perfons tru- ly religious, an obje6t of love. Some young perfons of his flock had procured fome obfcene publications, which they commented upon among themfelves for their ow» proficiency in lafcivioufnefs, and propagated, with the ufual decency of fuch perfons, for the infe6tion of others. This came in a fhort time to Mr. Edwards's ears ; and therefore taking cccafion after a fermon upon Heb. xii. 15, 16. preached for the purpofe, to call the leading members of his charge together, he informed them of what he had heard, and procured a confent that the matter ihould be examined. A committee was appoint- ed for this purpofe, and to affill: the paftor. When this was done, Mr. Edwards appointed a time of meeting; and then read a lift of the names of young perfons, ac- cufmg and accufed, without fpecifying under which pre- dicament they ftood, who were defired to come together at his houfe. Upon the declaration of names, it appeared tliat al- moft all the families in the town had fome relation or other concerned in the matter : and therefore a great number of the heads of families not only altered their minds 6 THELIFEOFTHE minds about examination, but declared, that their cliil- dren, &c. fhould not be called to account for fuch things as thefe. The town was immediately in a blaze: and this fo ftrengthened the hands, or hardened the faces of the guilty, that they fet their Paftor at defiance with the greateft infolence and contempt. Thus Mr. Edwards's hands were weakened ; and we are told, that he afterwards had but little fuccefs in his miniftry ; but, on the contrary, that fecurity and carnality much increafed among his people, and the youth in parti- cular became more wanton and dilTolute. All this paved the way for fomething more. It had been a ftanding opinion among this people for fome time, countenanced alfo by their late paftor, " That uncon- verted perfons," known to be fuch by the ungodlinefs of their lives, or their ignorance of divine truth, " had not- "withftanding a right in the fight of God to tlie facrament of the Lord's fupper ; and that, therefore, it was their duty to partake of it, even though they had no appear- ance of the grace and holinefs, which the gofpel ftates to be infeparable from true believers. It was fufE- cient if they were outward and vifible members ; fo that they, who really rejeiled Jefus Chrifl:, and difliked the gofpel-way of falvation in their hearts, and knew that this was true of themfelves, might (inconceivable as it appears) make the profeffion without lying and hypocrify." To the common inconveniences always attending a national church, where it is impoflible to examine every man's profeffion, or to keep him from difgracing it, here is an addition becoming the difciples of Ignatius of Loyola, by which men may be hypocrites without the guilt of hy- pocrify, and lyars without the imputation of fm. A convenient fort of principle indeed to men of a certain caft ; but by no means to thofe, who are never to forget, that ' Fornication and all uncleannefs, filthinefs, orfoolidi * talking, Ihould not be even named amongft them, as be- ' cometh faints.' [See Eph. v. 3— 7-'] Mr REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 7 Mr. Edwards had long been uneafy upon the preva- lence of this principle, (one of the moft ftrange that ever any church of Chrifl avowed) and upon his own yield- in'^ to the example of his predeceffor and to a pra6lice fettled before he came thither. His doubts and uneail- nefs, as might be expelled from fo good a man, increafcd upon him, and drove him at length to a thorough in- veftio-ation of the fubje6l ; the rcfult of which was a clear convi6tion of the error, and a firm determination to ex- pofe it. He was convinced, that " To be a v'lfible Chrif- tian was to put on the appearance of a real one ; tliat the profeffion of chrilHanity was a profeffion of that, in w-hich real chiSftianity confifts;" and that, therefore, as the Lord's fupper was intended for real Chriftians, none ought to come to it, who were not at Icafl profefibrs of real chriflianity, and to whom no imputation of allowed ungod- liuefs could juftly be made. The declaration of his mind upon this head, among fuch a kind of men, raifed an immediate clamour, and put the town into as great a ferment as the preaching of an holy apoftle had long before occafioned at Ephelus. They were all in an uproar : and ' Difmifs him, difniiis ' him,' was the unlverfal cry of men, women, and eiders. He had touched a favourite fin, and a favourite principle which protedted it : and (what was a very great truth, though not in their fenfe of it) he was no longer fit to be their pallor. He attempted to reafon with them calmly ; but it was oppofing his breath to the winds, the general cry was to have him difmiffed. Mr. Edwards, when they would not hear him, wiihed to refer thg matter to fome neighbouring miniders ; but this being rejedted, he attempted to difcufs the matter in a courfe of ledfures, which he began for the purpofe ; but although numbers came from the adjoining parts, very few of his own congregation would attend. So intoxicat- ing is the nature of human prejudice, when once indulged, that men v/ill rather renounce their reafon than refume their temper. C He 8 THELIFEOFTHE He ufed all means in his power to reduce them at leaft to a calm, if not a charitable, temper; to hear and weigh, with a little attention, what he had to fay for himfelf; and not to condemn him, were it only for their own fakes, without fome fliadow of a reafon ! But his meeknefs and modefty were treated as conceffions againft himfelf, and only raifed the infolence and fury of his adverfaries, inftead of foftening them into peace. Nothing would ferve their turn (how plainly foever againft their fpiritual and real intereft) but an abfolute feparation. Mr. Edwards, finding all methods ineffedlual to re- flrain the torrent of virulence, flander, and falihood rolling upon him, at length yielded to the artifice of thefe men in packing a council, compofed chiefly of their own friends; thefe, after fome unavailing attempts for a reconciliation, pafled a refolve, by the majority of one voice onlv, to this effeil, That it was expedient that the paftoral relation between Mr. Edwards and his church fhould be diffolved, if they perfifted in requiring it. This being reported to the people, they immediately voted his difmiffion by a majority of two hundred againft twenty, and he was accordingly difmiffed June 22, 1750. Thus had thefe people the infamy of endeavouring to ruin the moft able and celebrated divine, who hath as yet been born in America. But they knew not their own mercies ; fuch a man as Mr. Edwards would im- part honour to any coimtry or profeffion, and be readily embraced by the wife and good in all. The few abhor- rers of this atrocious a6l entered an unavailing proteft againft it. The good man, fliocked rather for his ene- mies than for himfelf, preached a moft folemn and af- fcdling farewell difcourfe, which was "afterwards publiih- ed, on 2 Cor. i. 4. on which he raifed this dodlrinc, " That minifters, and the people who have been under their care, muft meet one another at ihe tribunal of Chrift." The malice of his enemies did not ftop here ; for when at times there was no preacher to fupply the pulpit, he cheerfully gave them his fervice, rather than it fhould be empty. REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 9 empty. This kindnefs, which would have conciliated more ingenuous minds, only increafed the unhappy flame kindled in theirs, inlomuch that they called the town to- gether and voted that he iliould preach among them no more. And fo they frequently went without preaching, rather than have the free miniftrations of a man, of whom the world Itfelf was not tvorthy. Thus ended his fervice of near four-and-twenty years to an undifcerning and ungrateful people, who had been much upon his heart, and for whom he had always ex- prefled a very tender concern. " For their good he was always writing, contriving, and labouring ; for them he had poured out ten thoufand fervent prayers ; and in their welfare he had rejoiced as one that findeth great fpoil." Yet all their deteftable conducL did not alter the frame of his mind. " He was calm, fedate and humble under the moft injurious treatment; his refolution and con- du61: in the whole affair were wonderful, and cannot be fet in fo beautiful and afFe6ling a light by any de- fcription, as they appeared in to his friends who were eye- witnefles." This incomparable man was now in the decline of life, with little or no income befidcs his Itipend : and this throws the greateft light upon his faithfulnefs and fincerity : nor had he any view of fupport from another appointment ; for he knew not how far the malice of his people might extend to prevent it, or the prejudice of his difmiflion operate againft him elfewhere: neither was he capable (alas, what pity he ihould be driven to think of it!) to take up any other bufmcfs for a fupport. Thus poverty and difgrace were before him. But he knew that he had a good Mafter. He had divine comfort in his foul ; and in a lliort time Providence provided for both him and his family. Aihamed of this unparalleled bafenefs to fo excel- lent a man, his friends, or rather the friends of god- linefs, adminiftered to his relief: and he was foon after appointed to the miifion at Stockbridge ; but not before C 2 fome lo THE LIFE OFTHE fome other infolent and bitter attempts had been made to ruin his reputation, as well as to deprive him of bread. It may not be improper here to add, that one of the ringleaders in this iniquitous bufmefs was fo flung with his condu6l towards Mr. Edwards, that he afterwards made a public confcffion of his guilt, in a letter to the Rev. Mr. Hall, of Sutton, which letter, after having enu- ^r.erated the particulars of his oppofition to that good man, concludes thus, " In thefe inflances. Sir, of my condutSl, and others (to which you was not privv) in the courfe of that moft melancholy contention with Mr. Edwards, wherein I now fee that I was very much influenced by vafl: pride, felf-fufficiency, ambition, and vanity, I ap- pear to myfelf vile ; and doubtlefs much more fo to others vi'ho are more impartial ; and do, in the re- view thereof, abhor myfelf, and repent forely : and if my own heart condemns me, it behoves me folemnly to remember, that God is greater, and knoweth all things ; and I hereby own, Sir, that fuch treatment of Mr. Edwards, as is herein before mentioned, wherein I was fo deeply concerned and a61:ive, was particularly and very aggravatedly finfui and ungrateful in me, be- caufe I was not only under the common obligations of each individual of the fociety to him, as a moft able, diligent, and faithful pafior ; but I had alfo received many inftances of his tendernefs, goodnefs, and gene- rofity to me, as a young kinfman, whom he was dif- pofed to treat in a moft friendly manner. Indeed, Sir, I muft own, that by my conduct in confulting and a6t- ing againft Mr. Edwards, within the time of our moft unhappy difputes with him, and efpccially in and about that abominable rcmonitrance, I have fo far fymbolized with Balaam, Ahithophel, and Judas, that I am con- founded and filled with terror oftentimes when I attend to the moft painful fimilitude. And I freely confefs, that en account of my conduct above mentioned, I have the grcateft reafon to tremble'at thofe moft folcmn and awful words of our Saviour, Matt, xviii. 6. and thofe REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. n ihofe in Luke xth, at the i6th : And I am moft forely fcnfible that nothing but that infinite grace and mercy, which faved fome of the betrayers and murderers of our blefled Lord and the pcrfecutors of his martyrs, can pardon me : in which alone I hope for pardon, for the fake of Chrif!:, whofe blood (blefTed be God) cleanfeth from all fin. And I moft heartily wiih and pray, that the town and church of Northampton would ferioufly and carefully examine whether they have not abundant caufe to judge, that they are now lying under great guilt in the fight of God . and whether thofe of us, who were concerned in that moft awful contention with Mr. Edwards, can ever more reafonably expect God's favour and bleffing, until our eyes are opened, and we become thoroughly convinced that wc have greatly provoked the moft High, and been injurious to one of the beft of men ; and until we ihall be thoroughly convinced that we have dreadfully perfecuted Chrift by perfecuting and vexing that jufl man and fervant of ChrilT; ; until we fliall be humble as in the dull therefore, and till we openly in full terms, and without baulking the matter, confefs the fame before the world, and mofl humbly and carneftly feek forgivenefs of God, and do what we can to honour tiie memory of Mr. Edwards, and clear it of all the afperfions which are unjuflly cafl upon him ; fince God has been pleafed to put it beyond our power to afk his forgivenefs. Such terms I am perfuaded the great and righteous God will hold us to, and that it will be in vain for us to hope to efcape with impunity in any other way. This I am convinced of with regard to ray- felf, and this way I moft folemnly propofe to take to myfelf (if God in his mercy ihall give me opportu- nity) that fo by making free confcflion to God and man of my fin and guilt, and publickly taking fhame to my- felf therefore, I may give glory to the God> of Ifrael, and do what in me lies, to clear the memory of that ve- nerable man from the wrongs and injuries I was fo ac- tive in bringing on his rcp\itation and character ; and I thank 12 THELIFEOFTHE. thank God that he has been pleafed to fpare my life and op- portunity therefore to this time, and am forry that I have delayed the affair fo long." Mr. Edwards, who was able to fliine in the feats of learning, and fome time hence was called to prefide over one, was now delegated to the inftruftion of favage In- dians at Stockbridge. This place is in the weflern part of Maflachufctts Bay, and about fix miles from Mr. Edwards's former refidence at Northampton. He was fixed here on the 8th of Augufl, 1751 ; and here he con- tinued his labours, in more peace and quietnefs than he had ever known before, for fix years. In this interval, though much in years, he made greater attainments in knowledge, and wrote more for the church of God, than he had ever been able to do, within the fame fpace of time, during the former part of his life. In this retirement, he compofed his deeped and mofi; valuable works ; fo that when, in his own judgment, as well as that of others, his ufefulnefs feemed to be cut off, he found greater opportu- nities of fervice than ever. A pleafing calm, after fo grie- vous a florm, to his troubled mind ! On the death of Mr. Aaron Burr, prefide nt of New Jerfey College, which was on the 24th of September, 1757, the truftees of that feminary unfoHcIted cliofe Mr. Edwards to fuccced him : but our excellent author was witli difficulty prevailed upon to accept it ; modeflly alledging his own infufficiency, ill health, and difufe to that kind of life. At length, upon the arguments and, perfualions of his brethren in the miniftry, he accepted of this prefidency, and went from Stockbridge to Prince Town in January, 1758. But the end of his labours was ajiproaching ; he had only preached two or three fer- mons, and had not entered fully upon the duties of his new office, when he was called to glory. The fmall pox, which has always been unufually fatal in America, had infefted Prince Town, which, induced the phyfician of the place to advifc him to be ^inoculated, with tlie confent of the corporation. Accordingly he was inocu- » lated REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 13 lated on the 13th of February, and his diforder at firft feemed to be favourable; but a fever coming on, and the puftules laying much in his throat, noproper medicines could be adminiltered, and therefore the violence of it raged, till it put an end to his ufeful life, on the 22d of March, 1 758, in the iifty-fifth year of his age. When he was fenfible that death was approacliing, he called his daughter (who was the only part of his family which had yet removed with him,) and addreffed her in the following words: ' Dear Lucy, it feems to me to be * the will of God, that I muft fliortly leave you : there- * fore, give my kindeft love to my dear wife, and tell her, * that the uncommon union, which has fo long fubfifted * between us, has been of fuch a nature, as 1 truft is fpi- * ritual, and therefore will continue for ever. I hope * fhe will be fupported under fo great a trial, and fubmit * cheerfully to the will of God. And as to my children, * you are now like to be left fatherlefs, which I hope will * be an inducement to you all to feek a father, who will * never fail you.' He defired that his funeral might not be attended with parade (as is ufual in America,) but ra- ther fomething be given to the poor. He could fay but little in his ficknefs, owing to the nature and feat of his diforder ; but jufl: at the laft, when furrounded by friends lamenting their own lofs and that of fhe church and col- lege, he faid, to their great furprize, as they did not ima- gine he heard them or was able to fpeak, ' Trull in God, * and ye need not fear:' and then, almoft literally, fell alleep in Jefus. We are perfuaded our readers will be abundantly gra- tified with the account of our author's experience as written by himfelf ; and therefore fhall make no apology for fub- joining almoft the whole of it. In this narrative we find our great and celebrated me- taphyfician relating the manner of God's dealings with his foul, in a ftile that breathes all the humility and fimplicity of a little child. " It is peculiarly fwect to obferve," fays an evangelical writer, «« that in matters of fpiritual 14 T H E L I F E O F T H E fplritual concern, the philofopher and the ploughman, if truly regenerated, have the fame feelings, and fpenk the fame langiiage : they all ' eat of the fame fpiritual meat, and drink of the fame fpiritiaal rock, which follows them, and that rock is Chrift.' Hence that fimilitude of expe- rience or (to fpeak figuratively) that llrong and flriking family likenefs, which obtjiins among the converted people of God, in every period of time, and in every nation un- der heaven. They all without exception feel thcmfelves totally ruined by original fm ; they all without exception take refuge in the righteoufnefs and crcfs of Chrift ; and unite in afcribing the whole praife of their falvation to the alone free grace and fovereign mercy of Father, Son, and Spirit." " I had," fays Mr. Edwards, " a variety of concerns and exercifcs about my foul from my childhood ; but had two more remarkable feafons of awakening, before I met with that change by which I was brought to thofe new difpoiitions, and that new fenfe of things, that I have fince had. The firft time was when I was a boy, fome years before I went to college, at a time of remark- able awakening in my father's congregation. I was then very much affected for many months, and concerned about the things of religion, and ray foul's falvation i and was abundant in duties. I ufed to pray five times a day in fecret, and to fpend much time in religious talk with other boys ; and ufed to meet with them to pray to- gether. I experienced I know not what kind of delight in religion ; my mind was much engaged in it, and had much felf-righteous plcafure ; and it was my delight to abound in religious duties. I, with fome of my fchool- mates, joined together and built a booth in a uvamp, in a very fecret and retired place, for a place of prayer. And, befides, I had particular fecret places of my own in the woods, wliere I ufed to retire by myfelf, and ufed to be, from time to time, much affected. My affeilions feemed to be lively and enfily moved, and 1 feemed to be in my clement, when I engaged in religious duties : and I am ready to think, many are de'ccived with fuch affec- tions, REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 15 lions, and fuch a kind of delight, as I then had in religion, and iniftake it for grace. " But in pvocefs of time, my convi6lions and affections wore off, and I entirely lofl all thofe affe6lions and delights, and left oiF fecret prayer, at lead: as to any conllant per- formance of it: and returned like a dog to his vomit, and went on in ways of iin. " Indeed I was at fome times very uneafy, efpecialiy towards the latter part of the time of my being at colleo-e. Till it pleafed God, in my lafl: year at college, at a time when I was in the midft of many uneafy thoughts about the ftate of my foul, to feize me with a pleurifv ; in which he brought me nigh to the grave, and fliook me over the pit of hell. " But yet, it was not long after my recovery, before I fell again into my old ways of fm. But God would not fufFer me to go on with any quietnefs ; for I had great and violent inward ftrugglcs : till after many conflids with, wicked inclinations, and repeated refolutions, and bonds that I laid myfelf under by a kind of vows to God, I was brought wholly to break off all former wicked ways, and all ways of known outvs^ard fm, and to apply myfelf to fcek my falvntion and pradife the duties of religion ; but without that kind of affe6lion and delight that I had for- merly experienced. My concern now wrought more by inward ftruggles and confiids, and felf-refle6lions : I made feeking my falvation the main bufmefs of my life ; but yet it feems to me, I fought after a miferable manner ; which has made me fometimes fmce to queftion, whether ever it iffued in that which was faving ; being ready to doubt, whether fuch miferable feeking was ever fucceeded. But yet I was brought to feek falvation in a manner that I never was before ; I felt a fpirit to part with all things in the world for an intereft in Chrift. My concern continued and pre- vailed, with many exercifing thoughts and inward ftruggles ; but yet it never feemed to be proper to exprefs my concern that I had, by the name of terror. *' From my childhood up, my mind had been wont to be full of objeaions againft the doarine of God's D fove- i6 THE LIFE OFTHE fovereignty, in choofing whom he would to eternal life, and rejeiting v/hom he pleafed; leaving them eternally to periih It ufed to ap- pear like a horrible do6lrine to me ; but I remember the time very well, when I feemed to be convinced, and fully fatisfied, as to this fovereignty of God, and his juf- tice in thus eternally difpofing of men according to his fovereign pleafure ; but never could give an account how, or by what means, I was thus convinced ; not in the leaft imagining, in the time ot it, nor a long time after, that there was any extraordinary influence of God's Spi- rit in it ; but only that now I faw farther, and my reafon apprehended the jufticc and reafonablenefs of it. How- ever, my mind relied in it ; and it put an end to all thofe cavils and obje6lions that had till then abode with me all the preceding part of my life. But I have oftentimes, lince that firft conviftion, had quite another kind of fenfe of God's fovereignty than I had tlien. I have often fince, not only had a conviction, but a dellghtfiil con- yiftion. The do6lrine cf God's fovereignty has very often appeared an exceeding pleafant, bright, and fweet do6lrine to me ; and abfolute fovereignty is what I love to afcribe to God. But my firfl conviction was not with this." Tills part of our excellent Author's experience reminds us of the feventeeth Article of the Church' of England, which afferts, that " The godly confideration ot prcdef- tination, and of our ele6llon in Chrill:, is full of fweet, pleafant, and tmfpeakable comfort to godly perfons." Such indeed liave many found it; but let it be remem- bered, it is only the godly conjidcration of predeftination that is thus comfortable; that this mufl: be conne6led with the evidence of our ele5l'ion in Chrift, and that to godly perfons only is this contemplation fweet and profit- able; to others it may be dangerous, and it mull be pain- ful. An amiable divine has obferved, " That none fliould go to the unlverfity of Predeflinatlon, until they have been at the grammar fchool" of Faith and Repent- ance." '« The REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 17 '' The firfl: that I remember that ever I found any thing of that fort of inward fvveet dehght in God and divine things, that I have lived much in fmce, was on reading thofe words, [i Tim. i. 17.] ' Now unto the King etcr- * nal, immortal, invifihle, the only wife God, be honour * and glory for ever and ever. Amen.' As I read the words, there came into my foul, and was as it were dif- fufed through it, a fenfe of the glory of the Divine Being ; quite different from any thing I ever expe- rienced before. Never any words of fcripture feemcd to me as thefe words did. I thought with myfelf, how ex- cellent a Being that was, and how happy I fliould be, if I might enjoy that God, and be wrapt up to God in heaven, and be as it were fwallowed up in him, I kept faying, and as it were fmging over thefe words of fcripture to myfelf; and went to prayer, to pray to God that I might enjoy him •, and prayed in a manner quite different from what I ufed to do; with a new fort of affe6lion ; but it never came into my thought that there was any thing fpi ri- tual or of a faving nature in this. *' From about that time, I began to have a new kind of apprehenfions and ideas of Chrift, and the work of re- demption, and the glorious way of falvation by him. I had an inward fweet fenfe of thefe things, that at times came into my heart, and my foul was led away in plea- fant views and contemplations of them ; and my mind was greatly engaged to fpend my time in reading and me- ditating on Chrift, and the beauty and excellency of his perfon, and the lovely way of falvation by free grace in him. I found no books fo delightful to me, as thofe that treated of thefe fubje6ls. Thofe words, [Cant, ii, i,] * ufed to be abundantly with me, ' I am the rofe of Sharon, ' and the lily of the vallies.' The words feemed to me fweetly to reprefent the lovelinefs and beauty of Jefus Chrift. And the whole book of Canticles ufed to be plea- iant to me, and I ufed to be much in reading it about that time ; and found, from time to time, an inward Iweetnefs that ufed, as if were, to carry me away in my contemplations. The fenfe I had of divine things, D 2 would i8 THE LIFE OFTHE would often of a fudden, as it were, kindle up a fwect burning in my heart, an ardour of my foul, that I know not how to exprefs. " After this my fenfe of divine tilings gradually in- creafed, and became more and more lively, and had more, of that inward fweetnefs. The appearance of every thing was altered; there feemed to be, as it were, a calm, fweet cafl: or appearance of divine glory, in almoft every thing. God's excellency, his wifdom, his purity and love, feemed to appear in every thing ; in the fun, moon, and flats ; in the clouds, and blue iky ; in the gtafs, flowers, trees ; in the water, and all nature ; which ufed greatly to fix my mind. I often ufed to fit and view the moon for a long time : and fo in the day-time fpent much time in viewing the clouds and iky, to behold the fweet glory of God in thefe things ; in the mean time fmging forth, with a low voice, my contemplations of the Creator and Redeemer : and fcarce any thing, among all the works of nature, was fo fweet to me as thunder and lightning; formerly, nothing had been fo terrible to me. I ufed to be a perfon uncommonly terrified with thunder, and it ufed to ftrike me with terror when I faw a thunder-ftorm rifing: but now, on the contrary, it rejoiced me. I felt God at the firft appearance of a thunder-ftorm, and uled to take the opportunity, at fuch tiiues, to fix myfelf to view the clouds, and fee the lightnings play, and hear, the majeftic and av^^ful voice of God's thunder, which often- times was exceedingly entertaining, leading me to Iweet contemplations of my great and glorious God ; and while I viewed, ufed to fpend my time, as it always feemed natural to me, to ling or chant forth my meditations; to fpeak my thoughts in foliloquies, and fpeak with a fmging voice. " I felt tlicn a great fatisfaflion as to my good eftate ; but that did not content me. I had vehement longings of foul al"tcr God and Chrift, anxl after more holinefs, wherewith my heart feemed to be full, and ready to break ; which often brought to my mind the words of the Pfalmift, [Pfa. cxix. 28.] * My foul brcaketh for the ' lonoing REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 19 ♦ longing it hath.' I often felt a mourning and lament- ing in my heart, that I had not turned to God fooner, that I might have had more time to grow in grace. My mind was greatly fixed on divine things ; I was almofi: perpetually in the contemplation of them : fpent moft ot my time in thinking of divine things, year after year; and ufed to fpend abundance of my time in walking alone in the woods and folitary places for meditation, folilo- quy, and prayer, and converfe with God : and it was al- ways my manner, at fuch times, to fing forth my con- templations ; and was almoft conftantly in ejaculatory prayer wherever I was. Prayer feemed to be natural to me, as the breath by which the inward burnings of my heart had vent. " The delights which I now felt in things of religion were of an exceeding different kind from thofe fore-men- tioned, that I had when I was a boy; they were totally of another kind ; and what I then had no more notion or idea of, than one born blind has of pleafant and beau- tiful colours: they were of a more inwaid, pure, foul- animatino; and refreflrins: nature. Thofe former delights never reached the heart ; and did not arife from any fight of the divine excellency of the things of God; or any tafte of the foul-fatisfying, and life-giving good, there is in them." Mr. Edwards mull certainly be the befl: judge of his own feelings ; but we have fometimes queried whether our author and fomc other excellent men have not erred in imputing their hrft convi6tion and early experience in religion to fome other caufe, which ought rather to be attributed to the agency of the Divine S{)irit. It certainly does not follow, that becaufe our firft views of divine things are lefs clear, and our firft religious affecllons lefs ipirltual, than afterwards, that they do not proceed from the famecauie. The early beamings of the dawn, and the noon-tide fun beams, though they differ immenfely in their degree ot light and heat, are certainly of the fame nature, and proceed from the fame caufe. When our Lord ilrft anointed the eyes of the blind man, [Mark viii. 24.I he 30 THELIFEOFTHE he faw * Men as trees walking ;' but when he put his hands on him again, ' he faw every man clearly ;' yet bv the fame hands were both effe6ls prodviced, and to the fame Redeemer was the glory of both due. ** My fenfe of divine things feemed gradually to in- creafe, till I went to preach at New York, which was about a year and a half after they began. While I was there, I felt them, very fenfibly, in a much higher de- gree than I had done before : my longings after God and holinefs were much increafed ; pure and humble, holy and heavenly chriftianity, appeared exceeding amiable to me. I felt in me a burning defire to be in every thing a complete Cliriflian ; and conformed to the bleffed image of Chrift ; and that I might live in all things according to the pure, fwcet, and bleffed rules of the gofpel. I had an eager thirfting after progrefs in thefe things ; my long- ings after it put me upon purfuing and preffing after tbem. It was my continual ftrife day and night, and conflant inquiry, how I fliould be more holy, and live more ho- lily, and more becoming a child of God, and difciple of Chrift. I fought an increafe of prace and holinefs, and that I might live an holy life, with vaftly more earneft- nefs than ever I fought grace, before I had it. I ufed to be continually examining myfelf, and ftudying and contriving for likely ways and means how' I Jhould live holily, with far greater diligence and earneftnefs than ever I purfued any thing in my life ; but with too great a dependence on my own ftrength, which afterwards proved a great damage to me. My experience had not then taught me, as it has done fmce, my extreme fecblcnefs and impotence, every manner of way ; and the innumer- able and bottomlefs depths of fccret corruption and deceit that there were in my heart. Hov>ever, I went on with my eager purfuit after more holinefs, and fweet confor- mity to Chrift. " The heaven I deftred was a heaven of holinets ; to be with God, and to fpend my eternity in divine love, and holy communion with Chrift. My mind was very much taken up with contemplations on heaven, and the enjoy- ments REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 21 ments of thofc there ; and living there in perfe6l holinefs, humiHty. and love. And it ufed at that time to appear a great part of the happinefs of heaven, that there the faints could exprefs their love to Chrift. It appeared to me a great clog and hindrance, and burden to mc that what J felt within, I could not exprefs to God, and give vent to, as I defired: the inward ardour of my foul feemed to be hindered and pent up, and could not freely flame out as it would. I ufed often to think how in heaven this fweet principle fhould freely and fully vent and exprefs itfelf. Heaven appeared to me exceeding delightful as a world of love. It appeared to me that all happinefs confified in living in pvire, humble, heavenly, divine love. *' I remember the thoughts I ufed then to have of ho- linefs. I remember I then faid fometimes to myfelf, I do certainly know that I love holinefs, fuch as the gofpel pre- fcribcs ; it appeared to me, there was nothing in it but what was ravifhingly lovely : it appeared to me to be the highefl: beauty and amiablenefs, above all other beauties, that it was a divine beauty, far purer than any thing here upon earth ; and that every thing elfe was like mire, filth, and defilement, in comparifon of it. *' Holinefs, as I then wrote down fomc of my con- templations on it, appeared to me to be of a fweet, pleafant, charming, ferene, calm nature ; it feemed to me, it brouphr an inexpreflible purity, brightnefs, peacefulnefs, and ra- vifhment, to the foul ; and that it made the foul like a field or garden of God, with all manner of pleafant flow- ers, that is all pleafant, delightful, and undiflurbed ; en- joying a fweet calm, and the gentle vivifying beams of the fun. The foul of a true Chriflian, as I then wrote my meditations, appeared like fuch a little white flower as we fee in the fpring of the year, low and humble on the ground, opening its bofora to receive the pleafant beams of the fun's glory ; rejoicing, as it were, in a calm rap- ture, difFufing around a fvv^eet fragrancy, flanding peace- fully and lovingly in the midfi: of other flowers round about ; all in like mamier opening their bofoms to drink in the light of the fun. " There 23 THE LIFE OFTHE " There was no part of creature-holinefs that I then,' and at other times, had fo great a fenfe of the lovelincfs of, as humility, brokennefs of heart, and poverty of fpi- rit ; and there was nothing that I had fuch a fpirit to long for. My heart, as it were, panted after this, to lie low before God, and in the dull:, tliat I might be no- thing, and that God mig];t be all ; that I might become as a little child. " While I was there, at New York, I fometimes was" much affected with refledlions on my paft life, confider- ing how late it was before I began to be truly religious, and how wickedly I had lived till then ; and once fo, as to weep abundantly, and for a conluierable time toge- ther. " On January 12, 1722-3, I made a folemn dedica- tion of myfelf to God ; and wrote it down ; giving up myfelf and ail that I had to God; to be for the future in no refpe6t my own ; to adl as one that had no right to himfelf in any refpecl ; and folemnly vowed to take God for my whole portion and felicity ; looking on nothing elfe as any part of my happinefs, nor a6ling as if it were ; and his law for the conflant rule of my obedience, en- gaging to fight with all my might againft the world, the fiefh, and the devil, to the end of my life. But have reafon to be infinitely humbled, when I confider how much I have failed of anfwcring my obligation. " I had then abundance of fweet religious converfation In the family where I lived, with Mr. John Smith, and his pious mother. My heart was knit in affection ro thofe, in whom were appearances of true piety ; and I could bear the thoughts of no other companions, but fuch as were holy, and the difciples of the bleifed Jefus. *' I had great longings for the advancement of Chrift's kingdom in the world; mv fecret prayer ufed to be in great part taken up in praying for it. If I heard the leaft hint of any thing that happened in any part of the world, that appeared to me, in fome refpe6l or other, to have a favourable afpeft on the iutereft of Chrifl's king- dom, my foul eagerly catchcd at it. and it would much animate REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 23 animate and refrefli me. I ufed to be carneft to read pub- lic news letters, mainly for that end, to fee if I could not find fome news favourable to the intereft of religion in the world. *' I very frequently ufed to retire into a folitary place on the banks of Hudfon's River, at fome diflance from the city, for contemplation on divine things, and fecret con- verfe with God ; and had many fvveet hours there. Some- times Mr. Smith and T walked there together, to converfe of the things of God ; and our converfation ufed much to turn on the advancement of Chrift's kingdom in the world, and the glorious things that God would accomplish for his church in the latter days. *' I had then, and at other times, the greateft delight in the holy fcriptures of any book whatfoever; often- times in reading it, every word feemed to touch my heart, I felt a harmony between fomething in my heart, and thofe fweet and powerful words : I feemed often to fee fo much light exhibited by every fentence, and fuch a refrefliing ravifhing food communicated, that I could not get along in reading: ufed oftentimes to dwell long on one fentence, to fee the wonders contained in it ; and yet almoft every fentence feemed to be full of won- ders. " I came away from New York in the month of April 1723, and had a mofi: bitter parting with Madam Smith and her fon : my heart feemed to fink within me^ at leaving the family and city, where I had enjoyed fo many fweet and pleafant days. I went from New York to Weathersfield by water. As I failed away, I kept fight of the city as long as I could, and when I was out of fight of it, it would affeS: me much to look that way, with a kind of melancholly mixed with fweetnefs. How- ever that night, after this forrowful parting, I was greatly comforted in God at Welkhefter, where we went aihore to lodge, and had a pleafant time of it all the voyage to Saybrook. It was fweet to me to think of meeting dear Chrillians in heaven, where we Ihould never part more. At Saybrook went aOiore to lodge on Saturday, and there E kept- 24 THELIFEOFTHE kept Sabbath ; where I had a fweet and refreihing feafon, walking alone in the fields. *' After I came home to Windfor, remained much in a like frame of mind as I had been in at New York, but only fometimes felt my heart ready to fink, with the thoughts of my friends at New York ; and my refuge and fupport was in contemplations on the heavenly ftate, as I find in my Diary, of May i, 1723. It was my comfort to think of that ftate, where there is fulnefs of joy ; where reigns heavenly, fweet, calm, and delightful love, without alloy ; where there are continually the deareft expreffions of this love ; where is the enjoyment of the perfons loved, without ever parting; where thefe perfons that appear fo lovely in this world, will really be inexprcfllbly more lovely, and full of love to us. And how fweetly will the mutual lovers join together to fing the praifes of God and the Lamb ! How full will it fill us with joy to think that this enjoyment, thefe fweet exercifes, will never ceafe or come to an end, but will lafl to all eternity ! " Continued much in the fame frame in the general, that I had been in at New York, till I went to New Haven, to live there as tutor of the college ; having one fpecial feafon of uncommon fweetnefs, particularly once at Bolton, in a journey from Bofl:on, walking out alone in the fields. After J. went to New Haven I funk in religion, my mind being diverted from my eager and violent pur- fuits after holinefs, by fome affairs that greatly perplexed and diftrailed my mind. " In September 1725, was taken ill at New Haven, and endeavouring to go home to Windfor, was fo ill at the North Village, that I could go no further ; where I lay fick for about a quarter of a year. And, in this fick- nefs, God was pleafed to vifit me again with the fweet influences of his Spirit. My mind was greatly engaged there on divine, pleafant contemplations, and longings of foul. I obferved, that thofe who watched with mc would often be looking out for the morning, and feemed to wiili for it J which brought to my mind thofe words of REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 25 of the Pfalmift, which my foul with fweetnefs made its own language, ' My foul waiteth for the Lord, more than < they that watch for the morning, I fay, more than they « that watch for the morning.' And when the light of the morning came, and the beams of the fun came in at the windows, it refrellied my foul from one morning to another : it feemed to me to be fome image of the fweet light of God's glory. «« I remember, about that time, I nfed greatly to long for the converfion of fome that I was concerned with. It feemed to me I could gladly honour them, and with delight be a fervant to them, 'and lie at their feet, if they were but truly holy. *' But fome time after this, I was again greatly diverted in my mind with fome temporal concerns, that exceedingly took up my thoughts, greatly to the wounding of my foul ; and went on through various exercifes, that it would be tedious to relate ; that gave mc much more experience of my own heart than ever I had before. << Since I came to this town,* I have often had fweet complacency in God, in views of his glorious perfeaions, and the excellency of Jefus Chrift. God has appeared to me, a glorious and lovely being, chiefly on the account of his holinefs. The holinefs of God has always appeared to me the moft lovely of all his attributes. The dodrines of God's abfolute fovereignty- and free grace, in Ihewing mercy to whom he would lliew mercy, and man's abfolute dependence on the operations of God's Holy Spirit, have very often appeared to me as fweet and glorious dodrines. Thefc doftrines have been much my delight : God's fo- vereignty has ever appeared to me as great part of his glory i it has often been fweet to me to go to God, and adore him as a fovereign God, and alk fovereign mercy of him. «' I have loved the dodrines of the gofpel; they have been to my foul like green paftures : the gofpel has feemed to me to be the richefl treafure ; the treafure that I have E 2 moft * Northampton. 26 THELIFEOFTHE moildefired, and longed that it might dwell richly in me. The wav of falvation by Chrill has appeared in a general way, glorious and excellent, and moft pleafant and moft beautiful. It has often feemed to me that it would, in a great meafure, fpoil heaven, to receive it in any other way* That text has often been afFe6ling and delightful to me, [Ifa. xxxii. 2.] ' A man fhall be an hiding place from the ' wind, and a covert from the tempeft,' &c. " It has often appeared fweet to me to be united to Chrlft; to have him for my head, and to be a member of his body; and alfo to have Chrift for my teacher and prophet. I very often think, with fweetnefs and long- ings, and pantings of foul, of being a little child, taking hold of Chrift, to be led by him through the wildernefs of this world. That text, [Matt, xviii.] at the beginning, has often been fweet to me, ' Except ye be converted, and < become as little children,' &c. I love to think of com- ing to Chrift to receive falvation of him, poor in fpirit, and quite empty of felf ; humbly exalting him alone ; cut entirely off from my own root, and to grow into, and out of Chrift : to have God in Chrift to be all in all ; and to live by faith on the Son of God, a life of humble, unfeigned confidence in him. That fcripture has often been fweet to me, [Pfa. cxv. i.] ' Not unto us, O Lord, ' not unto us, but unto thy name give glory, -for thy mercy ' and for thy truth's fake.' And thofe words of Chrift, [Luke x. 21.] ' In that hour Jefus rejoiced in fpirit, and * faid, I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, ' that thou haft hid thefe things from the wife and pru- ' dent, and haft revealed them unto babes ; even fo, Fa- ' ther, for fo it feemed good in thy fight.' That fove- leignty of God that Chrift rejoiced in, feemed to me to be worthy to be rejoiced in ; and that rejoicing of Chrift feemed to me to Ihew the excellency of Chrift, and the fpirit that he was oi. " The fweeteft joys and delights I have experienced, have not been thofe that have arifen from a hope of my own good eftate, but in a diredl* view of the glorious things of the gofpel. When I enjoy this fweetnefs, it fcems REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 27 fecms to carry mc above the thoughts of my own fafc cftate : it feems at fuch times a lofs that I cannot bear to take off my eye from the glorious, pleafant objedl I behold without me, to turn my eye in upon mylelf, and my own good eftate." Such remarks abound in the writings of the New Eng- land divines ; and we have no right to deny what they affert upon their own experience. But when this attainment is made the teft of Chriftianity, and the criterion of true grace, we muft oppofe it. It is ' the love of God ilied ' abroad in our hearts' that muft enkindle our firft affec- tions to him. And the moft dear and affe6lionate apoftle afferts, that ' We love him becaufe he firft loved us.' [i John iv. 19.] " My heart has been much on the advancement of Chrift's kingdom in the world ; the hiftories of the paft advancement of Chrift's kingdom have been fweet to me. When I have read hiftories of paft ages, the pleafanteft thing in all my reading has been, to read of the kingdom of Chrift being promoted : and when I have expe6led in my reading to come to any fuch thing, I have lotted upon it all the way as I read ; and my mind has been much en- tertained and delighted with the fcripture promifes and prophecies of the future glorious advancement of Chrift's kingdom on earth. *' I have fomctimcs had a fenfe of the excellent ful- ncfs of Chrift, and his meetnefs and fuitablenefs as a Saviour, whereby he has appeared to me, far above all, the chiet of ten thoufands : and his blood and atonement has appeared fweet, and his righteoufnefs fweet ; which is always accompanied with an ardency of fpirit, and inward ftrugglings, and breathings, and groanings, that cannot be uttered, to be emptied of myfelf, and fwallowcd up in Chrift. " Once, as I rode out in the woods for my health, Anno 1737, and having lighted from my horfe in a re- tired place, as my manner commonly has been, to walk for divine contemplation and prayer, J. had a view, that for me was extraordinary, of the glory of the Son of God, 28 THELIFEOFTHE God, as mediator between God and man ; and his won- derful, great, full, pure, and fvveet grace and love, and meek and gentle condefcenfion. This grace, that ap- peared to me fo calm and fweet, appeared great above the heavens : the perfon of Chrift appeared ineffably excel- lent, with an excellency great enough to fwallow up all thought and conception, which continued, as near as I can judge, about an hour, which kept me the bigger part of the time in a flood of tears, and weeping aloud. I felt withal an ardency of foul to be, what I know not other- wife how to cxprefs, than to be emptied and annihilated, to lie in the duft, and to be full of Chrift alone ; to love him with a holy and pure love ; to truft in him ; to live upon him ; to ferve and follow him ; and to be totally wrapt up in the fulnefs of Chrift ; and to be perfe6lly faudified and made pure, with a divine and heavenly pu- rity. T have feveral other times had views very much of the fame nature, and that have had the fame effeds. " I have many times had a fenfe of the glory of the third perfon in the Trinity, in his office of San6lifier, in his holy operations communicating divine light and life to the foul. God, in the communications of his Holy Spirit, has appeared as an infinite fountain of divine glory and fweetnefs ; being full and fufficient to fill and fatisfy the foul; pouring forth itfelf in fweet communications, like the fun in its glory, fweetly and pleafantly diffufing light and life. <« I have fometimes had an affe6tlng fenfe of the excel- lency of the word of God, as a word of life ; as the light of life ; a fweet, ericellent, life-giving word ; accompanied with a thirfting after that word, that it might dwell richly in my heart. " I have often, fince 1 lived in this town, had very affeding views of my own finfulnefs and vilenefs; very frequently fo as to hold me in a kind of loud weeping, fometimes for a confiderable time together : fo that I have often been forced to fnut myfelf up. I have had a vaftly greater fenfe of my own wickednefs, and the badnels of my heart, fmce my converfion, than ever I had before. REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 29 It has often appeared to me, that if God fhoiild mark iniquity againft me, I (hould appear the very worfl of all mankind, of all that have been fmce the beginning of the world to this time ; and that I Ihould have by far the loweft place in hell. " And yet I am not in the leafl: inclined to think, that I have a greater convidlion of fm than ordinary : 1 know certainly, that I have very little fenfe of my fmfulnefs ; that my fms appear to me fo great, don't feem to me to be, becaufe I have fo much more conviftion of fin than other Chriftians, but becaufe I am fo much worfe, and have fo much more wickednefs to be convinced of. *' I have greatly longed of late for a broken heart, and to lie low before God. And when I afk for humility of God, I can't bear the thoughts of being no more humble than other Chriftians. It feems to me, that though their degrees of humility may be fuitable for them, yet it would be a vile fclf-exaltation in me, not to be the loweft in hu- mility of all mankind. Others fpeak of their longing to be humbled to the duft : though that may be a proper expreffion of them, I always think for myfelf, that I ought to be humbled down below hell. It is an expreffion that it has long been natural for me to ufe in prayer to God. I ought to lie infinitely low before God." On this fubjedl Mr. Edwards feems to delight in hyper- boles: and may teach us this remark, that true grace is ex- ceedingly humbling. It taught the great apoftle to efteem himfelf the ' chief of fmners,' and ' lefs than the leaft of « all faints.' It is poffible, however, to ufe extravagant expreffions on any fubjeft, and " to be humbled below hell," or " infinitely low," may be thought fuch. The humble and amiable Dr. Watts defined humility to confill in a man's having " a juft opinion of himfelf," not a degrading one. Wc are all fo much indebted to divine mercy, that there feems little danger of hyperboles on that lubje£l ; there is no occafion however to fmk our language below the poffibility of a meaning. *« I have vaftly a greater fenfe of my univerfU exceed- ing dependence on God's grace and ftrengtth, and mere eood 30 THE LIFE OFTHE good pleafure, of late, than I ufed formerly to h.ive ; and have experienced more of an abhorrence of my own righteoufnefs. The thought of any comfort or joy arif- ing in me, on any confideration, or refledHon on my own amiablenefs, or any of my performances or expe- riences, or any goodnefs of heart or life, is naufeous and deteftable to me ; and yet I am greatly affli6led with a proud and felf-righteous fpirit, much more fenfibly than I ufed to be formerly: I fee that ferpent rifing and put- ting forth its head continually, everywhere, all around me. *' Though it feems to me, that in fome refpe6ls, I was a far better Chriftian for two or three years after my lirft converfion than I am now, and lived in a more conftant delight and pleafure ; yet of late years I have had a more full and conftant fenfe of the abfolute fovereignty of God, and a delight in that fovereignty ; and have had more of a fenfe of the glory of Chrift, as a mediator, as revealed in the gofpel. On one Saturday night, in particular, had a peculiar difcovery of the excellency of the gofpel ot Chrift, above all other do6lrines, fo that I could not but fay to myfelf, ' This is my chofen light, my chofen doc- * trine :' and of Chrift, ' This is my chofen prophet.' Another Saturday night .... had fuch a fenfe how fweet and blefled a thing it was, to walk in the way of duty, that it caufed me to cry out, < How happy are ' they which do that which is right in the fight of God ! ' They are bleffed indeed, they are the happy ones !' I had at the fame time a very affecting fenfe, how meet and fuitable it was that God ihould govern the world, and order all things according to his own pleafure ; and 1 rejoiced in it, that God reigned, and that his will was done." Thus clofes the extraordinary experience of 6ur Au- thor, and by way of caution to fincere but inferior Chriftians, we beg it be confidered that it was extraordi- nary \ that few Chriftians have arrived to equal attain- meiits in the divine life, particularly as to a fettled ac- quiefcence in the divine will, and a devotednefs of heart to REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 31 to the Redeemer. But let us not confider his, or any man's experience, as an abfolute criterion to try the fafety of our ftate, or the truth of our converfion. The word of God is our rule, and the only one on which we can rely with certainty. There are as many degrees of growth in grace, as in nature ; the beloved apoftle wrote to chil- dren, young men, and fathers in Chrift. And there is no lefs variety in the manner of the Holy Spirit's operation. * The wind bloweth where it lifteth,' faith our divine teacher, [John iii. 8.] ' and thou heareft the found * thereof, but canft not tell whence it cometh, and whi- * ther it goeth ; fo is every one that is born of the Spirit.' So free, fo fovereign, fo multiform and incomprehcnfiblc, are the operations of divine grace ; but this remark is not intended to induce any to relt fatisfied in their prefent at- tainments. It is not only the duty but one of the befl criteria, of a true Chrillian, ' to go on unto perfedlion.' [Heb. vi. I.] We (hall detain the reader with only one other remark on the preceding narrative, viz. That the fubjeiSl of the fubfequent work [the Hiftory of Redemption] was long one of our author's moft favourite topic's of reflection, *' When I have read," faith he, " hiftories of pail: ages, the pleafanteft thing in all my reading has been, to read of the kingdom of Chrifl being promoted, .... and my mind has been much entertained and delighted with the fcripture promifes and prophecies of the future glo- rious advancement of Chrift's kingdom on earth." And, what is very obfervable, he even objedVed at firfl: to ac- cept the piefidentihip of New Jerfey College for this among other reafons— " I have had on my mind and heart, which I long ago began, not with any view to pub- lication, a great work, which J call, aHiJiory of the Work of Redemption," 6cc. [See his letter to the truftees of the above college, dated 061. 19, 1757, in the life pre- fixed to his fcrmons, p. 95.] which circumftance is alfo remarked in a letter of his fon, the Rev. Jonathan Ed- wards, of New Haven, Feb. 25, 1773- F We 32 THELIFEOFTHE We (hall clofe our account of Piefident Edwards with the following particulars of his habit of life, and cha- ra6ler : Though he was of a tender and delicate conftitution, yet few ftudents were capable of more clofe application than he was. He commonly fpent thirteen hours every day in his fludy. His moffc ufual diverfions in the fum- mer were riding on horfeback and walking ; he would commonly, unlefs diverted by company, ride two or three miles after dinner to fome lonely grove, where he would difmount and walk a while. At which times he generally carried his pen and ink with him, to note any thought that fliould be fuggefled, which he chofe to retain and purfue. In the winter he was wont, almoll: daily, to take an axe and chop wood moderately for the fpace of half an hour or more. He had an uncommon thirft for know- ledge, in the purfuit of which he fpared neither coft nor pains. He read all the books, efpecially books of divi- nity, that he could come at, from which he could hope to get any help in his purfuit of knowledge. And, in this, he confined not himfelf to authors of any particu- lar feet or denomination ; but took much pains to come at the books of the mofl; celebrated writers whofe fcheme of divinity was moft contrary to his ovim principles : but he fludled the Bible more than all other books, and more than moft other divines do. His uncommon acquintancc with it appears in his fermons, and in moft of his publi- cations : and his great pains in lludying it are manifeft in liis manufcript notes upon it. He was thought by Ibmc, wlio had but a flight acquaintance with him, to be ftiff and unfociable ; but this was owin^ to want of better acquaintance. He was not a man of many words indeed, and w-as fomewhat referved among ftrangers ; but among fucli whofe candour and friendfliip he had experienced, he threw off that referve, and was molt open and free ; and remarkably patient of contradiction. He was not ufed to fpend his time in fcandal, evil fpeaking, and backbiting, or in foolifa jelling and idle cliat ; but his mouth was that REV. JONATHAN EDWARDS. 33 that of the juR, which bringeth forth wifdom, and his lips difperfed knowledge ; fo that none of his friends could enjoy his company without inftru6lion and profit, unlefs it was by tlieir own fault : he kept himfclf quite tree trom worldly cares; and left the dire6tion of the temporal con- cerns of his family almofl: entirely to Mrs. Edwards ; who was better able than moft of her fax, to take the whole care of them on her hands. Thus ornamental to the chriftian name and chara£ler lived the excellent fubject of thefe memoirs ; and his death perfe£Hy harmonized with the tenor of his life: «' Never did any mortal man," fays his phyfician, in a letter to Mrs. Edwards, " more fully and clearly evidence the fin- cerity of his profeflion, by one continued, univerfal calm, cheerful refignation, and patient fubmiffion, to the divine will, through every ftage of his difeafe, than he : not (o much as one difcontented expreffion, nor the leaft appear- ance of murmuring through the whole." Prefident Edwards left the following works, befides fun- dry MSS. yetunpublifhed, which will doubtlcfs perpetuate his memory to remote ages of the church. I. A Narrative of the furprifing Work of God in the Converfion of feveral hundred Souls in Northampton, New England. 1737. IT. Five Sermons— on Juftification by Faith alone : — Preffing into the Kingdom of God— Ruth's Refolu- tion— The Juftice of God in the Damnation of Sinners —and the Excellency of Jefus Chrift. 1738. III. Thoughts en the Revival of Religion in New ~i~ England. 1742. IV. A Treatife on religious AiFe£lion. 1746. -^ V. An Attempt to promote the Union of God' People in extraordinary Prayer for the Revival of Reli -h i- +■ gion. 1747. VI. The Life of Mr. David Brainerd, Miffionary. ~H '7^'-'^' ... ^ Vi[. An Inquiry into the Qualification for full Com- \ munion, 2cc. 1749- F 2 VIII. A 34 THE LIFE OF, &c. -4- VIII. A Reply to the Rev. Mr. William's Anfwer to this Inquiry. 1752. ~f^ IX. An Inquiry into the Freedom of the Will. 1754. X. A Number of fingle Sermons, on various SubjevSls and different Occafions. --j-^ XL The Chriftian Doftrine of original Sin. 1758. A^. B. This was in the prefs when he died ; the follow- ing works were pollhumous. -f- XII. A Hiftory of Redemption. [The fubfequeat work] 1774. XIII. His Life and eighteen Sermons. 1785- SYLLABUS C 35 ] SYLLABUS OF THE- HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. GENERAL INTRODUCTION. Text [Ifa. li. 8.] explained. Obferve, i. How fliort the profperity of the church's enemies. 2. The happy and eternal portion of God's people. Doctrine. The work of Redemption is a work which God carries on from the fall of man to the end of the world. Premife, i. An explanation of the terms. /* 2. God's deligns in this work, were / To triumph over his enemies ; \ To rcftore the ruins of the fall ; \ To gather all the ele6l in Chrift ; ! To complete their happinefs ; ! To glorify the blefled Trinity. Thefuhje^ divided into three Periods. / PERIOD I. From the Fall to the Incarnation. § I. From the Fall to the Flood. ,^ I. Chrift began his office immediately on the fall. ,^2. The firft promife.- .««3. The origin of facrifices. 4. Salvation of Abel. 5. Revival of Religion. 6. Holy life of Enoch. 7. His prophecy. 8. His tranflation. o. Prefervation of religion in Noah's family. § II. 36 SYLLABUS. § II. From th« FLOOD to the Call of Abraham. I- The Flood. a. Noah's prefervation in tho ark. 3. New grant to Noah. 4. Renewal of the covenant with him. 5. Deflrinflion of Babel. 6. The confequent difperfion. § III, From the Call of Abraham to Moses. I The Call of Abraliam. 2. Farther difcovery of the covenant of grace. 3. Prefervation of the ancient Patriarchs. Deflru6lion of Sodom. 5. Covenant renewed with Ifaac and Jacob. 6. Fliftory of Jofeph. 7. Jacob's prophecy. f IV. From Moses to David. 1. Ilrael's redemption from Egypt. 2. Other nations given up to heathenifm. 3. The law given at Sinai. 4. The Jewifli typical law. '— ^'"'^ 5. The Pentateuch written by Mofes. 6. Tfrael's paffage through the wildernefs, typical. 7. Human life Ihortened. 8. Miracles in the wildernefs. 9. Prophecies of Balaam and Mofes. 10. God's Spirit poured out on the rifmg generation. 1 1. Ifrael brought into Canaan. ^f^\i. The tabernacle pitched at Shiloh. 13. The land preferved while Ifrael went up \o Jerufalem. 14. Ifrael preferved during their frequent apoflafies. 15 Their repeated deliverances from captiviiy, 16. The appearances of Chrill: vmder the Old Teila- ment. -- — — 17. The fchool of the prophets iuflitutcd by Samuel. § V. From David to the Babylonilli Captivity. 1. David anointed. 2. His life wonderfully preferved. 3. Samuel's -writings. 4. David's infpiration. 5. David crowned. 6. Jerufalem chofen by God. 7. God's covenant renewed with David. 8. Ifrael 6rll pofl'els the whole promifed land. 9. Jewith SYLLABUS. 37 9. Jewiili worlhip perfe6^ed. 10. "Writings of Nathan and Gad. 1 1. Kingdo;n of Judah preferved in David's family. 12. The building of Solomon's temple. 13. The Jewiili church at its higheft glory in his time. 14. God's Work carried on during the fubfcquent decline. Obfcrve, this prepared the way for Chrift's coming. 15. The canon of Scripture enlarged. 16. The church kept in times of general apoftafy. 17. The book of the law wonderfully preferved. 18. The tribe of Judah preferved. 19. A fucceffion of Prophets from Samuel. "s^--' § VL From the Babyloniih Captivity to the Incarna- tion. Premife, (i.) This period more the fubjed of Prophecy than Hiltory. (2.) Full of remarkable revolutions. -■ (3.) The church preferved in the midfl: of theni all. ' \ 1 . The captivity in Babylon — its ufe to the Jews. 2. Additions to the canon of Scripture. 3. Babylon deflroyed by Cyrus. 4. The Jews return. ^. The prophecies of Haggai and Zachariah. 6. The Spirit of God remarkably with Esra. 7. The book of Ezra written. 8. The canon of Scripture compiled. 9. The public reading of the law. 10. The Jews preferved from Haman's cruelty. 11. The books of Nehemiah and Efther writteu. 12. IMalachi's prophecy. 13. The Spirit of Prophecy ceafed. 14. The Perfian Empire deftroyed, «m!i. 15. The Sept^iagint tranflation. """ 16. The church preferved during the Greek Em- pire. 17. The erection of the Roman Empire. ■- 18. Learning and philofophy at their height. 19. Roman Empire in peace and glory. Improvemfnt, r. Jefus the true Mefliah. 5 2. The Old Teftament infpired. . ^ 3. An objedlion anfwered. 4. God's 38 SYLLABUS. 4. God's wifdom difplayed in divine rC' velation. 5. Chrift the grand fubjeft of the Bible. 6. The ufefuhiefs of the Old Teftament. 7. Folly of neglefting the Bible. 8. Grandeur of ChriiVs character and miffion. P E R I O D 11. From Christ's Incarnation to his Resurrection. § L The Incarnation— why neceffary. 1. Included Chrift's conception and birth. 2. Accomplifhed in the fulnefs of time. 3. The greatnefs of this event. 4. Poverty of Chrift. _^^ 5. Several concomitants of this event ; as The return of God's Spirit ; ' ' Notice taken of the Incarnation both in heaven and earth •, Circumcifion of Chrift ; Chrift's appearance in the fecond temple ; The fceptre's departing from Judah. § II. The Purchase of Redemption. 1. The term explained. 2. General Obfervations ; viz. (i.) Chrift's fatisfa6tion confifted inhis lutFerings. (2.) Duiing the whole of his humiliation. (3.) By the fame things Chrift fatislied for fin, and purchafed eternal happinefs. 3. Confider Chrift's obedience, as to (i.) The laws he obeyed— as a Man, a Jew, and as a Mediator. A^ B. Obferve the excellency of this obedience, (2.) The different periods of his obcdieiK;c ; In his private life ; In his public miniftry ; concerning which, Obferve, Chrift's forerunner ; His baptifm ; His public works ; preacliing, working mira- cles, and calling his.difciples; His miniliry hnilhed, by counfelling his dif- ciples, inftituting his fupper, and offering himfelf a facritice. (3.) The SYLLABUS. 39 (3.) The virtues heexercifed; with refpeft to God, himfelf, and other men. 4. Confider Chrift's futFerings: (i.) In his infancy ; (2.) private h'fe; (3.] public miniflry; (4.) death. Improvement, i. Reproof, Of unbelief; Self righteoufnefs ; Negledl of falvation. 2. Encouragement; Completenefs of Chrift's purchafe ; Chrift reje6ts none who come to him. PERIOD III. Introduction, i. The times of this period called the latter days. 2. end of the world. q. ■ defcribed as a creation of a new heaven and eartli called the kingdom of God. Ohfcrve, God's defign to exhibit his wifdom and victories over Satan. § I. Thofe things WHEREBY Christ was capacitated for this work. 1. His refurre6tion. . 2. His afcenfion. ^ IT. Dispensation of Providence, by which the means of the fuccefs of it were eftablilhed, viz 1 . The end of the Jewifh difpenfation. ,^-— ' 2. The Chriftian Sabbath. --»^ 3. The inftitutiou of a gofpel miniftry. '"^ 4. The gift of the Holy Ghoft. ....■*'— 5. The full revelation of gofpel truth. ^""^ 6. The appointment of deacons. 7. The miffion of St. Paul. 8. The inftitution of ecclefiaftical councils. q. Committing the New Teftamentto writing. G § in- 40 SYLLABUS. §in. This SUCCESS CARRIED ON ill a SUFFERING ftatC. I. From Chriffs refurrcBion to the dcjiruttmi of Jerufalcm. (i.) Its fuccefs among the Jews, Samaritans, and Gentiles. (2.) Oppoiition made to it. (3.) God's judgments on the oppofers. 2. From the deJiruSl'ion of Jerufalem to Conjlantine. (i.) Oppofition made by writing and perfecution. (2.) Succefs of the gofpel notwithftanding. (3.) Particvilar circumftances of diftrefs jufl be- fore Conftantine. (4.) Revolution in Conftantine's time. Chriftians delivered from perfecution. Terrible judgments on their enemies. Heathen ilm in a great meafure abolifhed. Peace of the church. Improvement.— 77/ The ^z SYLLABUS. 2. The dead fhall be raifed ; 3. The faints ihall meet the Lord in the air; 4. The righteoufnefs of the church and wickednefs of her enemies fhall be manifeft ; ^. Final fentence pafs on all men ; 6. Chrift and his church afcend to glory ; J. This world be burnt; 8. The church made completely and eternally happy. General Improvement. 1 . How great the work of redemption ! 2. God the Alpha and Omega in it. 3. Chrift in all things hath the pre-eminence. 4. The harmony of divine Providence, c. The truth of the Scriptures. 6. Difplay of the divine power and glory, wifdom. mercy and faithfulnefs. 7' 9. Happinefs of the church. 10. Mifery of wicked men. HISTORY HISTORY O F REDEMPTION. Isaiah, li 8. FOR THE MOTH SHALL EAT THEM UP LIKE A GAR- MENT, AND THE WORM SHALL EAT THEM LIKE WOOL : BUT MY RIGHTEOUSNESS SHALL BE FOR EVER, AND MY SALVATION FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION. T H E defign of this chapter is to comfort the church under her fufFerings, and the perfecutions of her enemies; and the argument of confolation infifted on, is, the con- ftancy and perpetuity of God's mercy and faithfulnefs, which fhall be manifeft in continuing to work falvation ; prote6ling her againft all affaults of her enemies, and car- rying her through all the changes of the world, and finally crowning her with vi(Story and deliverance. In the text, this happinefs of the church of God is fet forth by comparing it with the contrary fate of her enemies that opprefs her. And therein we may obferve, I. How fhort-lived the power and profperity of the church's enemies is : ' The moth fliall eat them up like ' a garment, and the worm fhall. eat them like wool;' (a) i. e. (a) The MOTH — and the VJ ov.vi JJjall eat them.~\ There is a flight inaccuracy in this rendering which is worth correcting, becaufc it 44 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. i.e. however great their profperity, and however great their prefent glory, they {hall by degrees confume and vanifh away by a fecret curfe of God, till they come to nothing ; and their power and glory, and confequently their perfe- cutions, eteinally ceafe ; and thenifelves be finally and ir- recoverably ruined : as the fined and moll glorious apparel v/ill in time wear away, and be confumed by moth and rottennefs. We learn who thofe are that iliall thus con- fume away, by the foregoing verfc, viz. thofe that are the enemies of God's people : ' Hearken unto me, ye that ' know righteoufnefs, the people in whofe heart is my law, * fear ye not the reproach of men, (b) neither be ye afraid * of THEIR revilings. Obfcrve, i. The contrary happy lot and portion of God's church, cxprelfcd in thefe words, ' My righteoufnefs fhall <■ be it will throw a fartlier beauty on the text. It fliould feem that the word [l^'l^] gnajlj, rendered moth, ftrI6lly fignifies, not the moth-Jly, but the moth-worm, or caterpillar, and receives its name from its corroding and d-^roy'ing the texture of cloth. [Park hurst Lex. Heb. in Verb, and Scott in Job.] " The young moth," [or moth-worm] fays the ingenious Abbe Le Pluche, " upon leaving the ^'g'gi which a papiHo [or moth] has lodged upon a piece of ftuff .... commodious for her purpofe, finds a habita- tion and food .... it grows and lives upon the nap, and likewife builds v/ith it its apartment. . . . The whole is well faftencd to the ground of the ftuff with fcveral cords and a little glue. The moth [worm] . . . devours and demoliflics all about her ; . . . and when ihe has cleared the place . . . . flie draws out all the ftakes of this tent, after which flie carries it to fome little diflance, and then fixes it with flender cords in a new fituation. In this manner Oie continues to live at our expence till fne is fatlated with her food, at which period fiie is firit transformed into a nymph, and then changed mio zpapU'io, or raoth. [Nature Difplayed, vol. i. p. 35.] And this Is what is intended to be exprefied by the latter word [do] fas, whicli is the proper name oi the moth itfelf, from its agility. [vSo the LXX render it S/^tsj, and the Vulgate, Tinea. And hence is derived 2-/^-, ufed in the Greek and Syriac of Matt, vi. 20.] We would read the text thus, * The moth-worm fhall eat them like a garment, and the moth fhall devour them like ■wool.' So fecret, rapid, and complete fliall be the deftruftion of the church's enemies ! (b) * Reproach of men. ^'\ BIfliopLowTH [inloc,] renders tiic latter word [iLMJ^j] fomewhat more elegantly and literally, " R.e- proach of WRETCHED MAN," HISTORY OF P.EDEMPTION. 45 < be for ever, and my falvation from generation to gcne- * ration.' Alfo who thofe are that fhall have the benefit of this, by the preceding verfe, namely, ' They that know * righteoufnefs, and the people in whofe heart is God's ' law ;' or, in one word, the church of God. And con- cerning this tlieir happinefs wc may obferve two things, wherein its conlills, and its continuance. (i.) Wherein it conilfts, viz. In God's righteoufnefs and falvation towards them. Ey God's righteoufnefs here, is meant his faithfulnefs and fulfilling his covenant pro- mifes to his church, or his faithfulnefs towards his church and people, in bellowing the benefits of the covenant of grace upon them ; (c) which benefits, though they are bellowed of free and fovereign grace, and are altoprcther undcferved ; yet as God has been pleafed, by the promifes of the covenant of grace, to bind himfelf to bellow them, fo they arc beflowed in the exercife of God's righteoufnefs or juftice. And therefore the apoftle fays [Heb. vi. 10.] * God is not unrighteous, to forget your work and labour * of love.' And the Evangelift [i John i. g.] ' If we * confefs our fins, he is faithful and juft to forgive us our * fins, and to cleanfe xis from all unrighteoufnefs.' So the word righteoufnefs is very often ufed in fcripture for God's covenant faithfulnefs; as in Nehem. ix. 8. ' Thou haft performed thy words, for thou art righteous.' So we are often to undcrftand righteoufnefs and covenant mercy for the fame, as [Pfa. xxiv. 5.] ' He fliall receive the bleffing * from the Lord, and righteoufnefs from the God of his * falvation.' [Pfa. xxxvi. 10.] ' Continue thy loving ' kindncfs to them that know thee, and thy righteoufnefs * to the upright in heart.' [Pfa. li. 14.] ' Deliver me * from blood guiltinefs, O God, thou God of my falva- « tion, and my tongue fliall fing aloud of thy righteouf- nefs.' [Dan. ix. 16.] ' O Lord, according to thy righ- ' teoufnefs, (c) God's righteoufnefs. 2 " The word [pTy] righteoufnefs is ufed in fuch a great l4tltude of fignification . . . that it is noteafy fometimcs to give the precife meaning of it; .... it means here the faithful completion of God's promifes to deliver his people." ^Bp. LowTH, in ver. 5. J 46 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. ' teoufnefs, I befeech thee, let thine anger and thy fury ' be turned away.'— And fo in innumerable other places. The other word here uJfed is falvation. Of thefe, God's righteoufnefs and his falvation, the one is the caufe, of which the other is the efFecl. God's righteoufnefs, or covenant mercy, is the root, of which his falvation is the fruit. Both of them relate to the covenant of grace. The cue is God's covenant mercy and faitlifulnefs, the other ititends that work by which this covenant mercy is accom- plillied. For falvation is the fum of all"thofe works of God, bv which the benefits of the covenant of grace are procured and beiliowed. (2.) We may obferve its continuance, fignified here by two expreffions ; for ever, and from generation to generation. The latter feems to be explanatory of the former. The phrafe for ever, is varioufly nfed in fcrip- ture. (d) Sometimes thereby is meant as long as a man lives. (d) The phrife for ever is imr'toujly ufed in fcrlpture.^ The meaning of this and the like expreffions is fo intimately connected with feveral controverfies, particularly the perpetuity of the law of Mofes, the duration of future torments, and the divinity of Chrift, that it is of confiderable confequencc to afcertain it. Schind- LERUS fays of the original tenn in Hebrew, ^^ JEvum, feculum, certum temporis fpacium : longum tempus pr^teritum aut futu- rum : tempus, cujus duratio ell abfcondita : duratio finita juxta fubjeftam materiam, de qui agitur." Parkkurst [Lex. in CD/J^] whofe words perfeftly correfpo.nd, interprets it of " Time, hiddeti or concealed ixom man, as well indefinite and eternal, as finite ; as well paft as future. It feems to be much more frequently ufed for an indefinite than for an infinite time." And even Mr. Levi explains it by " Perpetual ; everlafting ; Jigurativelyt a certain num.ber of years.' [Heb. Dift. in Cd'?]^.] We think the moll accurate method of explaining the different meanings of this phrafe would be, to reduce them to a general term, and none feenns to promife fo fair, or has been fo generally applied to it, as age (sevum, feculum) which we fhall therefore tr)', and apply to the inftances quoted by our author. I. Forever^ everlafting, and the like terms, are fometimes ap- plied to the age of human life, as in i Sam. xxviii. 2. ' And Achifh ' faid to David, I will make thee keeper of mine head for ever ;' i. e. as long as I live. So our author underftands Exod. xxi. 6. as above cited; but many refer this to the next fenl'c. 2. For HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. 47 lives. Thus it is faid, [Exod. xxl. 6.] The fervant that had his ear bored through with aa awl to the door of his mafter Hiould ferve him for ever.— Sometimes thereby is meant during the continuance of the Jewifli ilate. So of many of the ceremonial and Livitical laws it is faid, that they fhould be ftatutesyir ever. — Sometimes it means as Ions as the world fhall ftand, or to the end of the (je- neraiionsof men. Thus [Ecclef. i. 4.] ' One generation * paffeth away and another cometh ; but the earth abideth H '>• 2. For ever means to the year of jubilee, as Levi [ut fupra] and others. The fa£t is, if no jubilee intervened, the fervant whofc ear was bored was to ferve as long as he lived, but the ju- bilee roleafed him. And the term age might be applied to the pe- riod of the jubilee, which was fifty years, with as much propriety, as to that of a century. Seculuni has been differently explained of periods of thirty, one hundred, and even a thoufand years. 3. We frequently reft ri£l the term /or ever to the ye-wifj age^ or difpcnfation, and thus account for the abolition of thofe ftatuteS which, as above obferved, were commanded to be kept ybr ever. The tim.e of the Jewilh difpenfation may be with as much pro- priety called an age, as are the periods of other difpenfations : — thus we fay, the Antideluvian age, the Patriarchal age, the Mil- lennial age. So the heathens divided the different periods of the world into the Golden age, the Silver age, the Iron age, &c. 4. The fame term may be extended to the period of the Gofpel difpenfation, or the Gofpel age, the lall which the fcripture war- rants us to expeft, the termination of which therefore will be coeval with the end of the world ; and in this view, it will be the fame thing whether we refer the term_/b/- ever to the end of the gofpel difpenfation, or of the world, as our author does. 5. The expreflionybr ever muft certainly be fometimes taken in its utmoft extent, as reaching to eternity, /. e. the age of God and fpiritual beings ; and we may obferve, that wlien the term is re- peated (for ever arid ever) it is generally fo to be underftood. 6. The \.tixm for ever is frequently taken in a figurative view, as above hinted, for any long period, pafl or future. ' [See in the Heb. Ecclef. i. 10. — xii. 5.] Thus we ufe the term age when we fay, fuch a thing has been an age in doing — fuch a perfon is an age in coming — or fucli an event happened an age ago. But the moft important thing is to eaftblifh a criterion to deter- mine its full import in any text required. The i-emark of Schind- lerus above cited is certainly juit, namely, that the fuhjed vnijl de- termine it % may we not venture then to fay, that the termsybr every ^verhiftiug, 3cc. are always to be taken in the utinofl latitude the fub~ jecl ivdl admit of, and therefore to be extended to a proper eternity, when there is nothing dtecLfive to forbid it ? — [I. N.] 48 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. ' for ever.'' Sometimes thereby is meant to all eternity. Soitisfaid, ' God is bleffed/cr iz. God's elefting love, and the covenant of re- demption, never had a beginning; fo the fruits of this work, which lliall be after the end of the world, will never have an end. And therefore, (3.) When it is faid in the do6lrine, that this is a work that God is carrying on from the fall of man to the end of the world, what I mean, is, that thofe things which belong to the work itielf, and are parts of this fcheme, are all this while accomplilhing. There were fome things done preparatory to its beginning, and the fruits of it will remain after it is finiflied. But the work itfelf was begun immediately upon the fall, and will con- tinue to the end of the world, and then be finifhed : the various difpenfations of God in this fpace belong to the fame work, and to the fame defign, and have all one iiTue ; and therefore are all to be reckoned but as feveral parts of one work, as it were, feveral fucceiTive motions of one machine, to bring about, in the conclufion, one great event. And here alfo we muft diftinguifli between the parts of redemption itfelf, and the parts of that work by which redemption is wrought out. There is a difFerence be- tween the parts of the benefits procured and beftowed, and the parts of that work of God by which thofe bene- fits were procured and beftowed. As, for example, there is a difFerence between the parts of the benefit that the children of Ifrael received, in their redemption out of Egypt, and the parts of that work of God by which this was wrought. The redemption of the children of Ifrael out of Egypt, confidered as tire benefit which they en- joyed, conlifled of two parts, viz. their deliverance from their forrtier Egyptian bondage and mifery, and their be- ing brought into a more happy ftate, as the fervants of God, and heirs of Canaan. But there are many more things which are parts of that work of God which is called his work of redeeming Ifrael out of Egvpt. • To this 54 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. this belong his calling of Mofes, his fending him to Pha- raoh, the figns and wonders he wrought in Egypt, and his bringing fuch terrible judgments on the Egyptians, and many other things. Such is the work by which God effe6ls the redemption we arefpeaking of: and it is carried on from the fall of man to the end of the world, in two refpects. (i.) With refpeft to the effect wrought on the fouls of the redeemed, Vv^hich is common to all ages. This efteft is the application of redemption with refpedl to the fouls of particular perfons, in converting, juftifying, fanctify- ing, and glorifying them. Thus linners are a6lually re- deemed ; and receive the benefit of the work of redemption in its efFe£l upon their fouls. And in this fcnfe the work of redemption is carried on from the fall of man to the end of the world. The work of God in converting fouls, opening blind eyes, unftopping deaf ears, raifing the fpi- ritually dead to life, and refcuing miferable captives out of the hands of Satan, was begun foon after tire fall of man, has been carried on ever fmce, and will be to the end. God has always, ever fince the firll: eredlion of the church of the redeeuicd after the fall, liad fuch a church in the world. Though oftentimes it has been reduced to a very narrow compafs, and to low circurailances ; yet it lias never wholly failed. And as God carries on the work of converting the fouls of fallen men through all ages, fo he goes on to juftify them, to blot out their fins, to accept them as righteous in his fight, through the righteoufnefs of Chrifi, and adopt and receive them from being the children of Satan, to be his own children ; thus alfo he goes on to fan6lify, and complete the work of his grace, begun in them, to comfort thcnr with the confolations of his Spirit, and to beftow upon them, wlien their bodies die, that eternal glory wliich is the fruit of the purchafe of Chriff. What is faid, [Rom. viii. 30.] ' Whom he did predeftinate, * them he alfo called ; and who!>-i lie called, them he alfo ' jufiified ; and wliom he jufiined, them he alfo glorified ;' is INTRODUCTION. SS k applicable to all ages, from the fall, to the end of the world. The way that the work of redemption, with refpeck to thefc effects of it on the fouls of the redeemed, is thus car- ried on, is by repeating and continually efFedliug the fame work over again, though in ditferent perfons, from age to age. But, [2.] The work of redemption with refped to the grand defign in general, as it refpeds the univerfal fub- je6l and end, is carried on in a different manner, not merely by repeating or renewing the fame efFeft in the different fubjefts of it, but bv many fucceffive works and difpenfations of God, all tending to one great end, all united as the feveral parts of one fcheme, and all toge- ther making up one great work. Like as when an houle or temple is being built ; firft, the workmen are engaged, then the materials are colle6led, the ground prepared, the foundation laid, the fuperftruilure ere6led, one part after another, till at length the top-flone is laid, and all is £niflied. Now the work of redemption in that exten- five fenfe which has been explained, may be compared to fuch a building. God began it immediately after the fall, as may be Ihown hereafter, and has proceeded, as it were, colle6ling materials, and building, ever fince ; and fo will continue to the end of the world; and then (liall the top- ftone be brought forth, and the whole appear complete and glorious. This work is carried on in the former refpedl, as to the cffe6\ on the fouls of particular perfons, by its bein^^ an effedl that is common to all ages: the work is carried in this latter refpc61:, as it concerns the church of God, and tbe grand delign in general, not only by that which is common to all ages, but by fucceffive works wrought in ditTcrent ages, all parts of one great fcheme. It is this carrying on of the work of redemption that I fliall chiefly infill: upon, tliough not exclufively of the former ; for one neceffarily fuppofes the other. Having thus explained what I mean by the terms of the dodlrine; that you may the more cleiruly fee how ilie I great r^6 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. great defign and work of redemption is carried on from tbc5' fall of man to the end of the world, (2.) I now proceed, to (how what is the defign of this p-reat work, or what things are intended to be accomplifh- ed by it. In order to fee how a defign is carried on, we muft firfl: know what It is r to know how a workman proceeds, and to tinderfland the various fteps he tal^es in order to accomplifh a piece of work, we mull: be inform- ed what he is about, and wliat it is he intends to do ; otherwife we may Hand by, and fee him do one thing after another, and be quite puzzled and in the dark ; fee nothing of his fcheme, and underfland nothing of what he means by it. If an architect, with a great number of hands, were building fome great palace, and one that was a ftranger to fuch things ihould ftand by, and iee fome men digging in the eartli, others bringing timber, others hewing flones, and the like, he might fee that there was a great deal done ; but if he knew not the de- fign, it would all appear to him confufion. And there- fore, that the great works and difpenfations of God which belong to this great affair ot redemption may not appear like confufion to you, I flrall fet before you briefly the main things defigned to be accompliflied in this great work, to accomplifh which God began to work fo early after the fall, and will continue working until the whole fliall be completely finillied. Now the main things defigned arc thefe that follow. (i.) To put all God's etiomies under his feet, and that the goodnefs of God may finally triumph over all evil. Soon after the world was created, evil entered into the world in the fall of the angels and man. Prefently after God had made rational creatures, there were enemies who rofe up againft him from among them ; and in the fall of man evil entered into this world, and God's enemies rofe up againft him here. Satan rofe up againft God, en- deavouring to fruftrate his defign in the creation of this world, to dcllroy his workmanihip here, to wreft the government out of his hands, to \ifurp the throne, and fet up himfelf as god of this world, inftead of tlic God that INTRODUCTION. 57 that made it. For thefc ends he introduced Cm into it, and having made man God's enemy, he brought guilt, death, and the nioft extreme and dreadful mifery, into the world. Now one grand dellgn of God in the affair of redemp- tion was, to reduce and fubdue thofe his enemies till they ihould all be put under his feet; [i Cor. xv. 25.] ' He * mufl reign till he hath put all enemies under his feet.' Things were originally fo planned, that he might dlfap- point, confound, and triumph over Satan, and that he might be bruifed under Chrift's feet. [Gen. iii. 15.] The promife was given, that the feed of the woman /hould bruife the ferpent's head. It was a part of God's original defjgn in this work, to deftroy the work of tlie devil, and confound him in all his purpofes : [i John iii. 8.] ' For ' this purp fe was the Son of God manifeflcd, that he ' might dellroy the works of the devil,' It was a part of his defign, to triumph over lin, and over the corruptions of men, and to root them out of the hearts of his people, by conforming them to himfelf. He deligned alio, that his grace ihould triumph over m.an's guilt, and the infinite demerit which is in fin. (c) Again, it was a part of his defign to triumph over death ; and however this is the lafi; enemy that fhall be overcome, yet that Ihall finally be vanquiilied and deftroyed. Tiius God will appear glorious above all evil, and tri- umphant over all his enemies, whicii was one grand thin-^ intended by the work of redemption. (2.) God's defign was perfectly to refiorc the ruins of the tall, fo far as coilcerns the elect part of the world. I 2 by (g) God tldfgned that his grace JhouJd triumph overman's guilt.] " Though the guilt of man was like the great mountains, whofe heads are lifted up to the heavens ; yet his [Chrid's] dying love, and hi^ merits in this, appeared as a mighty dehtge that ovei flowed the highell mountains ; or, like a boundlefs ocean that fwallows them up ; or, like an immenfe fountain of light, that with the fulnefs and redundance of its brightnefs, fwallows up men's greateft iins, as little rnotes are fwallowed up and hidden in the dilk of the fuu." [Pref, Edwards's Poilhumous Serm. p. 138.] 58 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. by his Son; (h) and therefore we read of the reftitution of all things, [Afks iii. 21.] ' Whom the heaven muft * receive, until the times of the reftitution of all things;' and of the times of refrefhing from the prefence of the Lord Jefus. [A6ts iii. 19.] ' Repent ye therefore and be ^ converted, that your fins may be blotted out, when the ' time of refrefliing fhall come from the prefence of the « Lord.' Man'sy&tt/ was ruined by the fall ; the image of God was defaced ; man's nature was corrupted, and he became dead in fin. The defign of God was, to reflore the foul of man ; to reflore life, and the image of God, in conver- fion ; and to carry on this work in fandlification, until he fhould perfedl it in glory. Man's body was ruined; by the fall it became fubjedl to death. The defign of God was to reftore it from this ruin, and not only to deliver it from death, by the refurredlion, but to deliver it from "mortality itlelf, in making it like unto Chrift's glorious body. The it'5r/(^ was ruined, as to m::n, as effedlually as if it had been reduced to chaos again ; all heaven and earth were overthrown. But the delign of God was, to reftore all, and as it were to create a new heaven and a new earth: [Ifa. Ixv. ly.] ' Behold I create new heavens, and a new * earth ; and the former fliall not be remembered, nor * come into mind.' [2 Pet. iii. 13.] ' Neverthelefs we, ' according to his promife, look for new heavens, and a ' new earth, wherein dwelleth righteoufnefs.' The work by which this was to be done, was begun immediately after the fall, and fo is carried on till all is iiniihed at the end, when the whole world, heaven and earth, fliall be reftored ; and there fliall be, as it were, new (h) God's defign luas to rejlore the ruins of the fall as far as con- eerns the z-L's.CT.'l Some have carried the propofition farther, and extended it to not only all mankind, but even the fallen angds; and have fiippofed that the very being of moral and penal evil will ceafe. But it will appear in the fequcl of this work, that God's plan does not extend fo far : ' the reftitution,' or rather ' regu- lation of all things,' feems to refer to the general judgment. [See Park HURST, Lex. in A7r&;K«Tar«7if, and Doddridge i.i loc.] [N. N.l INTRODUCTION. 59 new heavens, and a new earth, in a fpiritual and fublime fenfe, at the end of the world. Thus it is reprefented, [ Rev . xxi . I . ] ' And I faw anew heaven and a new earth ; ' for the firtt heaven and the firll: earth were paffed away.' (3.) Another great defign of God in the work of redemp- tion was to gather together in one, all things in Chrift, both in heaven and in earth, i. e. all elecSl creatures, (i) in heaven and in earth, to an union in one body, under one head; and to unite all together in one body to God the Father. This was begun foon after the fall, and is carried on throughout all ages, and fnall be finiihed at the end of the world. (4.) God dcfigns by this work to perfe6l and complete the glory of all the ele6t of Ciirifl:. To advance them to an exceeding pitch of glory, ' fuch as eye hath not feen, ' nor ear heard, nor has ever entered into the heart of ' man.' He intends to bring them to pcrfe6l excellency and beauty in his image, and in holinefs, which is the proper beauty of fpiritual beings; and to advance them to a glorious degree of honour, an ineffable height of pleafare ( I ) Another defign of God was to gather together in Chrifl all eha treatures ; i. e. Angels as well as men, ' That in the difpenfa- * tion of the fuliiefs of times, he might gather together all things * in Chrift, both which are in heaven and which are in earth, even * in him, .... who is the head of all principality and power.' [Eph. i. 10. — Col. ii. 10.] " That Chrift, God-man, fliould be made the head of the angels, is greatly to their benefit. 1. Be- caufe they thereby become more nearly related to fo glorious a pcrfon. . . .. He is theirs : though not their faviour, yet he is their head of government and head of influence. — 2. They, here- by, are under advantages for a far more intimate converfe with God. The divine nature is at an infinite diftance from the nature of angels, as well as from the nature of man. It is thei-efore a great advantage to the angels that God is come down to them in a created nature, and in that nature is become their head. 3. Men are brought in to join with angels ... in their work of praif- ing God. The angels greatly rejoice at this. [Luke xv. 10.] The vacancy by the fall of angels is filled up. 4. It tends to make the angels the more to prize their happinefs, when they fee how much it coll; to purchafe the fame happinefs for man." [Pref. Edwards's Pofthumous Sermons, p. 320.] 6o HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. pleafure and joy, and thus to glorify the whole church of ele6t men in foul and body; and with them to bring the •o-lory of the eleft angels to its highefl elevation under on« head. (5.) In all this God defigned to accompliih the glory of the blefled Trinity in an eminent degree. God had a deiign from eternity to glorify each perfon in the God- head. The end mufl: be confidered as iirfl in order of nature, and then the means ; and therefore we muft con- ceive, that God having profeffed this end, had then, as it were, the means to chufe ; and the principal mean that he pitched upon was this great work of redemption which we are fpeaking of. It was his defign in this work to glorify his only begotten fon, Jefus Chrift ; (k) and by the Son to glorify the Father; [John xiii. 31, 32.] ' Now is the < Son of man glorified, and God is glorified in him. If * God be gloritied in him, God alfo fliall glorify him ' in himfeif, and fliall ftraightway glorify him.' It was his defign that the Son fhould thus be glorified, and fliould glorify the Father by what fhould be accomplifhed by the Spirit, to the glory of the Spirit; that the whole Trinity conjunftly, and each perfon di6linclly, might be exceedingly gloritied. The work which was the appoint- ed mean of this was begun immediately after the fall, and is carried on till, and finiihed at, the end of the world, when ail this intended glory iliall be fully accom- pllflied. Having thus explained the terms made ufe of in the dodlrine, and fliown what things are to be accomplilhed by this- great work of God, I proceed now to the propo- fed Hiftory ; that is, to Ihow how the defjgns of God by the (k) // luas God's defign to glorify his Son.] " Look round on the fhifting fcenes of glory, which have been exhibited in the thea- tre of this world; and fee the fuccefs of mighty conquerors, the policy of ftates, the dcftiny of empires, depend on the fccret pur- pofe of God in his Son Jefus ; before whom all the atchlevemcnts and imaginations of men nuift bow down; and to vvhofe honour, all the myllerious workings of his providence are now, liuve hi- therto been, and will for ever be, direfted."- [Bp. Hurd's Serm, Jsefore Society for the Propagation of the Gofpel.^ INTRODUCTION. 6i the work of ledemption have been and rtiallbe accomplilh- ed, in the various fteps of this work, from the fall of man to the end of tlie world. In order to this, I fhall divide this whole fpace of time into three periods :— The I. Reaching from the fall of Man to the incarnation of Chrift ;— The IT. From Chrift's incarnation till his refurredlion ; — The III. From thence to the end of the world. Some may be ready to think this a very unequal divi- fion ; and it is fo indeed in fome refpedls. It is fo, be- caufe the fecond period is fo much the greatefl: : for al- though it be much fhorter than either of the other, (being but between thirty and forty years, whereas both the other contain thoufands;) yet in the affair we are now upon, it is more than both the others ; I would therefore proceed to fhew diftindlly how the work of redemption is carried on from the fall of man to the end of the world, through each of thefe periods in their order; which I fl:iall do under three propofitions ; one concerning each period : I. From the fall of man to the incarnation OF CHRIST, GOD WAS DOING THOSE THINGS WHICH WERE PREPARATORY TO HIS COMING, AND EAR- NESTS OF HIS REDEMPTION. II. That the time from Christ's incarnation, TO HIS RESUPvRECTION, WAS EMPLOYED IN PRO- CURING AND PURCHASING REDEMPTION. HI. That the space of time from the resur- rection OF CHRIST to the END OF THE WORLD IS ALL ENGAGED IN BRINGING ABOUT THE GREAT EFFECT, OR SUCCESS, OF THAT PURCHASE. In a particular confidcration of thefe three propofitions, the great truth contained in the do6lrine may perhaps ap- pear in a clear light, and we may fee how the work of redemption is carried on from the fall of man to the end of the world, PERIOD 6z HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. PERIOD I. FROM THE FALL TO THE INCARNATION. M ,Y firfl tafl<. is, to (how how the work of redem])tioo is carried on from the fall of man to the incarnation of Chr'ijl under thtfirf propofitioHy viz. That from the fall of man to the incarna- tion OF CHRIST, GOD WAS DOING THOSE THINGS which WERE PREPARATORY TO HIS COMING, AND EARNESTS OF HIS REDEMPTION. The great works of God in the world, during this whole fpace of time, were all preparatory to this. There were many great changes and revolutions in the world, but they were only the turning of the wheels of provi- dence in order to make way for the coming of Chrift, and what he was to do in the world. They were all pointed hither, and all iffued here. Hither tended, ef- pecially, all God's great works towards his church. The church w-as under various difpenfations and in various circumilances, before Chrift came; but all thefe difpen- fations were to prepare the way for his coming. God wrought falvation for the fouls of men through all that fpace of time, though the number was very fmall to what it was afterwards ; (l) and all his falvation was, as it ( L ) The number of fouls faved before Chrift' s coining, comparal'tvely^ very few.] There is no fiibjeft on which our fpeculatioiis have lefs certainty than that of the comparative number of the faved. Among angels forae have fuppofed thofe who fell to form at leaft one third of the whole; and other confign over a great majo- rity of mankind to the fame awful condemnation. But ' God's thoughts are not our thoughts, neither his ways as our ways.' As to the antient Jews, althougli their difpenfation was compa- ratively dark, and their temper naturally rebellious, we have rca- fon to believe an innumerable multitude was faved from among them. If in times of o-encval idolatrv and liccntioufnefs, when a holy I rJ T R O D U C T I O N. 63 It were, by way of anticipation. All the fouls that were faved before Chiiil; came, were only, as it were, the ear- ned: of the future harvcft. God wrought many leffer falv'ations and deliverances for his church and people before Chrilt came. Thefe falvations were all but fo many images and forerunners of the great faJvation Chrift was to work out when he fliould come. God revealed himfelf of old, from time to time, from the fall of man to the coming of Chrifl:. The church during that fpace of time enjoyed the light of divine revelation, and, in a degree, the light of the gofpel. But all thefe revelations were only earnefts of the great light that he ihould bring who came to be ' the light ' of the world ;' that whole fpace of time was, as it were, the time of night, wherein the church of God was not indeed wholly in darknefs, but it was like the light of the moon and ftars, and not to be compared with the light of the fun. It ' had no glory, by reafon of the glory that excelieth.' [2. Cor. iii. 10.] The church had indeed the light of the fun, but it was only as refleiSled from the moon and flars. The church all that while may be con- fidcred as a minor; this the apoflle evidently teaches [in Gal. iv. I, 2, 3.] * Now I fay, that the heir as long as ' he is a child, dIfFereth nothing from a fervant, tlioun-Ji ■^ he be lord of all ; bat is under tutors and c:overnors, ' until the time appointed of the Father. Even fo wc, » when We were children, were in bondage under the ele- ' lYients of the world.' K But holy prophet bewailed himfelf as the only fervant of the true God left : if, in fuch a time God had referved to himfelf fcven thoufand faithful worfhippers, [i. Kings xix. 10.] doubtlcfs at other times, when religion fiouriihed, their number mull be confidcrably greater. But the Heathen nations are by many totally given up, except here and there a perfon faved by miracle, * God's ways, however, ♦ are not as our ways,' and it was as pofflble for God to fave them without the ufual means of grace, as to fave infants without any external means at all. After all, had God fuffered our whole world to periih, what is It to the innumerable globes that float in his prefence ? Probably not more than tlie deftruftlon of an ant hill, or a bee hive, to the whole fpccies of ants or bees [N. U.] 64 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. But here, for the greater clearnefs and diftindtnefs, I fhall fubdivide this period from the fall of man to the com- ing of Chrift, into fix leffer periods. I. From the fall to the flood ; — II. From the flood to the calling of Abraham ; — III. From the calling of Abraham to Mofes ;— IV. From Mofes to David ; — V. From David to the Babylonifli captivity ;— and the VL From thence to the Incarnation of Chrifl:. § I. From the FALL to the flood. THIS was a period farthefl: of all dift:ant from Chrifl's incarnation ; yet then was this great work begun, this glorious building which will not be finiflied till the end of the world ; and this is what I am now to fiievv you : to this purpofe I would obferve, I. As foon as man fell, Chrifl: entered on his media- torial work. Then it was that he firfl: began to execute the work and oflice of a mediator. He had undertaken it before the world was made. He fl;ood_ engaged with the Father from eternity to appear as man's mediator, when there ihould be occafion : and now the time was come. When man fell, Chrift immediately entered on his work, and a6tually took upon him that office. Then Chrift, the eternal Son of God, cloathed himfelf witli the mediatorial characfVer, and therein prefented himfelf before the Father. He immediately ftepped in between an holy, infinite, oflcndcd majefty, and offending man- kind ; and was accepted in his interpofition ; and thus wrath was prevented from going forth in tlie full exe- cution of that curie which man had brought upon him- felf. It is manifeft that Chrift began to exercife the office of mediator between God and man as foon as man fell, be- caufe mercy began to be exercifcd towards man immedi- ately. FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD. 6s ately. There was mercy In the forbearance of God, (m) that he did not deftroy him, as he did the angels when they fell:- but there is no mercy excrcifed toward fallen man, but through a mediator. If God had not in mer- cy reftrained Satan, he would have immediately feized on his prey. Chrift began to dp the part of an interceflbr for man, as foon as he tell. There is no mercy exercifed towards man, but what is obtained through Chrifl's in- tcrceffion ; fo that now Chrift entered on that work which he was to continue throughout all ages of the world. From that day. forward Chrift took upon him the care of the church, in the exerclfe of all his offices ; from thence he undertook to teacli mankind in the exercife of his pro- phetical office; to intercede for them, in his prieftly of- fice ; alfo he took upon him the government of the church, and of the world. He from that time took upon him the defence of his eleft from all their enemies. When Satan, the grand enemy, had conquered and overthrown man, the bufinefs of refifting and conquering him was conimitted to Chrift ; and he undertook to manage that fubtle powerful adverfary. He was then appointed the captain of the Lord's hofts, and the captain of their fal- vation, and ever after a6fed, and will continue to act, as fuch to the end of the world. Thenceforward this world, with all its concerns, was, as it were, devolved upon the Son of God: for when man had fmned, God the Father would have no more to do with man immediately , but K .2 only (m) There ivas mercy hithe forbearance of God.~\ Milton, with whom our author frequently coincides, puts this fentimcnt into the mouth of Adam, in his confolatory addrefs to Eve. " Remember with what mild And gracious temper he both heard and judg'd, Without wrath or reviling : we expefted Immediate difTolution, which we thought Was meant by death that day ; when lo, to thee *> Pains only in child bearing were foretold. And bringing forth, foon recompens'd with joy, Fruit of thy womb: on me the ciufe aflope Glanc'd on the ground" . . . [Par. Loft, Book x.] This fubjed, and Milton's beautiful iiliiftratlun of it, we ihali have occafion lo refume In the fequel of this feftion. 66 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. only through a mediatoi'; either in teaching, in govern- ing, or in beflowing any beneiits upon him. And therefore, when we read in facred hiflory what God did from time to time for his church and people, and liow he revealed himfelf to them, we are to underftand it efpecially of the fecond perfon of the Trinity. When we read of God's appearing after the fall, frequently in fome vifible form, or outward lymbol of his pretence, wc are ordinarily, if not univerfally, to underftand it of the Son of God. (n) This may be argued from John i. i8. * No man hath feen God at any time; the only begotten *^ Son, which is in tlie bofom of the Father, he hath de- * clared him.' He is therefore called ' the image of the * invifible God,' [Col. i. 15.] intimating, that though God the Father be invifible, yet Chrift is his image, or re- prefentation, by which he is feen. Yea, not only this world devolved on Chrifl:, that he might have the care and government of it, and order it agreeably to his defign of redemption, but alfo in fome refpecl, the whole univerfe. The angels from that time were given unto liim, to be miniflering fpirits in this grand buhnefs ; and accordingly were fo from this time, as is manifeft by the fcripture hiftory, wherein we have accounts of their acting as fuch in the affairs of the church of Chrift, from time to timq. And therefore we may fuppofe, that immediately on the fall, it was made known in heaven (o) that God had a defi'in (n) IVhen nuc read of God's appearing after tJ>e fall, ive are to underflatid it of the Son of God.'} The principal appearances here alluded to, and the perfon thus appearing, will be coniidered under § VI. of this period. (o) God's defign of mercy made knoivn in heaven immediately on the fall. } Milton, with, at leaft, equal beauty and probability, fuppofcs this diicovcry to have preceded the fall. He reprefents the eternal Father as viewing Satan flying tovvards this world, and foretelling his fucccfs, and his own purpofes of grace in the ilTue. The pafTage, as it is extremely -beautiful and will illuftratc not only this, but feveral other of our author's obfcivations under ihis fetiion, we Ihall in part tranfciibc ; « Him FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD. 6^ ■A defign of redemption with refpcft to man ; that Chrift had now taken upon him the office and work of a mediator between *' Him [Satan] God beholding from his profpeft high, Wherein pad, prefent, future, he beholds, Thus to his only Son forefeeing fpake : " Only begotten Son, feed thou what rage Tranfpovts our adverfary ? ■ And now Through all reftraints broke loofe, he v/ings his way Not far off heaven, in the precinfts of light, Direftly towards the new-created world ; And man there plac'd, with purpofe to effay, If him by force he can deftroy, or worfe, By fome falfe guile pervert : and fliall pervert, For man will hearken to his glozing lies, And cafily tranfgrefs the fole command, Sole pledge of his obedience ; fo will fall He and his faithlefs progeny Man falls, deceiv'd By th'othcr firfl : man therefore fhall find grace, The other none : in mercy and juftice both, Through heav'n and earth, fo fliall my glory excell ; But mercy, firft and laft, fhall brighteft fliine. " Thus while God fpake, ambrofial fragrance hll'd All heav'n, and in the bleffed fpirits eleft Senfe of new joy ineffable difFus'd : Beyond compare the §on of God was fecn Mod glorious ; in him all his Father fhone Subftantially exprefs'd ; and in his face Divine compafTion viiibly appear'd, Love without end, and without meafure, grace ; Which uttering, thus he to his Father fpake : " O Father, gracious was that word which clos'd Thy fov'reign fentcnce, that man fliould find grace ; For which both heaven and earth fhall high extoll Thy praifes. ... - " To whom the great Creator thus reply'd ; O Son, in whom my foul hath chief delight. But all is not yet done ; man difobeying. He, with his whole poUerity, mufl die ; Die he or juflice mull ; unlefs for him Some able, and as willing, pay The rigid fatisfacliun, death for death, 'Sav, 6$ HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. between God and man ; and that the angels were hence- forward to be fubfervient to him in that ofl&ce : and as Chrift has been, fince that time, as God-man, exalted King of heaven ; and is thenceforward a Mediator, the Light, and the Sun of heaven, (agreeable to Rev. xxi. 23. ' And the * city had no need of the fun, neither of the moon, to fhine ' in it ; for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb * is the light thereof ;') fo the revelation now made in hea- ven among the angels, was, as it were, the firft dawning of this light tliere. When Chrift afcended into glory after his paffion, and was folemnly enthroned, then this fun arofc in heaven ; but the light began to dawn immediately after the fall. 2. Pre- Say, heav'nly pow'rs, where fhaU we find fuch love ? < He aflc'd ; but all the heav'nly choir flood mute. And iileiice was in heav'n : on man's behalf patron or interceffor none appear'd. Had not the Son of God, In whom the fulnefs dvv'ells of love divine, His deareft mediation thus renew'd. ** Father, thy word is paft, man fhall find grace ; And fliall not grace find means ? Behold Me then ; Me for him, life for life I offer ; on me let all thine anger fall. Admiration feiz'd All heav'n, what this might mean, and whither tend, Wond'ring." [Par. Loit, b. ill.] But the idea of Mr. Gessner exaftly coincides with our au- thor's. He introduces an angel addrcfTing our firil parents in the following elegant language : " Know then, Adam ! on thy tranfgrefling the divine command, God faid to the happy fplrits who worfhip before him, ' Man hath * difobeyed me ; he fhall die.' A denfe cloud fuddenly encom- pafTed the eternal throne, and a deep file nee reigned through the whole expanfe of heaven. . . . The adoring angels were in eager cxpeftafion of v/hat was to follow this nnufual pomp, when the majeilic voice of God founded . . . thcfe words of benignity and grace — ' I will not withdraw my favour from the finncr. To my * infinite mercy the earth fiiall bear v/itncfs. Of the woman fliall * he born an avenger, who fhall bruifc the head of the ferpent. * Hell ihall not rejoice in this vidory ; denth Ihall lofe its prey ; ye * heavens, (hew forth your gladntfs ! — Thus fpake the EtcrnaL" [Death of Abel, b. il.l— -[N. U.} FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD. 69 2. Prefendy upon this the gofpel was firft revealed on earth, in thefe words, [Gen. iii. 15.] < And I will put * enmity between thee [the ferpent] and tlie woman, and * between thy feed and her feed : it fliall brulfe thy head, ' and thou flialt bruife his heel.' We may fuppofe, that God's intention of redeeming fallen man was hrft fignified in heaven before it was fignified on earth, becaufe the bu- fniefs of the angels as miniftering fpirits required it that they might be ready immediately to ferve him in that office: fo that the light firft dawned in heaven ; but very foon after was feen on earth. In thofe words of God there was an intimation of another furety to be appointed for man, after the firll had failed. This was the firft revelation of the covenant of grace, the firft dawn of light of the gofpel upon earth. This world before the fall enjoyed noon-day light ; the light of the knowledge of God, of his glory, and of his favour : but when man fell, all this light was at once extinguiflied, and the world reduced again to total darknefs ; a darknefs worfe than that which was in the beginning of the world. [Gen. i. 2.] Neither men nor angels could find out any way whereby this mip^ht be fcattered. The blacknefs of this darknefs appeared when Adam and his wife knew that they were naked, and fewed fig leaves ; when they heard tlie voice of God walkincp in the garden, and hid themfelves among the trees, when God firft called them to an account, and fald to Adam, * What is this that thou haft done ? Haft tliou eaten of the ' tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou fliouldeft not * eatr' Then we may fuppofe that their hearts were filled with ftiame and terror, (p) But thofe words of God, (p) ^ilam and Ins 6 Gor/.] Infinite pains ha^e been taken to decorate the charadters of ancient philofophers and heroes, and too frequently their own vanity, the adulation of their dependents, or the partiality of their heirs, has purehafed eulogiums, where eternal infamy was merited. But what is the praife of men to the praife of God ! How mean are the Iplcndid epithets of great, wife, and learned — puiffant, brave, and magnanimous — compared with the charafterof our holy prophet, as drawn by the infpired hillo- rian, ' He walked with God.' The phrafe is metaphorical, after the eaftern manner, and is explained by an infallible expohtor to mean — * He p'eafed God :' but the metaphorical term is, perhaps, more expreffive than any purely literal, even in the fublime language of the Greeks. To ivalk 'with God implies, lirft, a Hate of reconciliation w^itli him ; ' Can two walk together unlefs they are agreed :' Certainly not, with any degree of pleafure. But Enoch (any more than Abram) was not born the ' friend of God ;' but rather at enmity with him, a * child of wrath, even as others ;' and it was donbt- lefs the fame atoning blood, the fame divine grace, that reconciled him FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD. 93 7. In Enoch's tiine God more exprefsly revealed the coming of Chrifl: than he had beiore done. We have aif" account of the prophecy of Enoch In the 14th and 15th verfes of Jude: ' And Enoch alfo the feventh from Adam, * propheficd of thefe, laying. Behold, tlie Lord cometh * with ten thoufand of liis faints, to execute judgment ' upon all, and to convince all that are ungodly among ' them, for their ungodly deeds which they have ungodly ' committed, and of all their hard fpeeches which ungod- ' ly fmners have fpoken againfl him.' (s) This prophecy does him to God, which has in all ages brought near * them that were * afar off.' Then being reconciled, he enjoyed peace and com- munion with God. His name implies dedication, and perhaps, like Samuel, he might be early devoted to the Lord, and initiated betimes into his fervice. But he reftcd not in this ; unfatisfied with any prcfent attainments, he lludied, as the term implies, to xm^e. d^ progrefs in religion, he ' walked with God.' Tradition, very ancient and extenfive, has celebrated his attain- ments in atironomy, the mathematics, and other fciences, [See Univ. Hid. Vol. i. p. 162.] and it is not improbable that the fludy of nature might be a favourite employment to one who could con- template the divine glory in all its objeifls ; nor is it unlikely that fuch exemplary piety was rewarded with confiderable difcoveries in natural, as well as divine things : but this was the fmalleft part of his character ; his mind, doubtlefs, foared above the (tars, and fought an acquaintance with eternal objects — fought the felicity of angels — the image of God. And he iought not in vain ; preffmg towards the mark, he gained the prize, he received his crown, at an age when many, in that period of longevity, had not pafFed half their mortal pilgrimage. " Him the mod High, Wrapt in a balmy cloud with winged deeds, Receiv'd to walk with God, High in falvation and the climes of blifs. Exempt from death." [Par. Lod. Book xi.]. [U. U.] (b) lue PROPHECY of Enoch] — Is mere conedlly rendered thus ; ' And Enoch alfo, the feventh from Adam, prophefied ' againd them, when he faid, Echo'd, the Lord comi's with my- * riads of his holy ones, to eXv:L-utJ judgricnt up m all, and to ' conviv'^ all the ungodly among th^m 01' their impious works * which they have impioufly committed ; and of all the hard ihings * which impious fmne/s have fpoken againd him.' ♦' A prceio'js fragment of antidihivian hidory is here [in the Epidle cf Jude j preferved to us, as it feem:- by the fpecial -provi- dence 94 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. does not fecm to be confined to any particular coming of Chrill: ; but it lias refpe6l in general to his coming in his kingdom, and is fulfilled, in a degree, in every re- markable manifeftation Chrift has inade of himfelf in the world, for the falvation of his people, and the deftrudlion of his enemies. It is very parallel in this refpe6t with many other prophecies given under the Old Teftament; and, in particular, with that in the yth chapter of Da- niel, whence the Jews principally took their notion of the kingdom of heaven, [ver. lo.] ' A fiery flream iflfued, * and came forth from before him : thoufand thoufands * miniftered unto him, and ten thoufand times ten thou- * fand llood before him ; the judgment was fet, and the ' books were opened.' And [ver. 13, 14.] ' I faw in the ' night-vifion, and behold one like the fon of man came * with the clouds of heaven, and came to the antient of ' days, and they brought him near before him. And ' there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kins;- ' dom, that all people, nations, and languages Ihould ' ferve him : his dominion is an everlafting dominion, ' which fiiall not pafs away, and his kingdom that which * fhall not be deflroyed.' And though it is not unlikely that Enoch might have a more immediate refpedl, in this prophecy, to the approaching deltrudlicn of the old world by the flood, wliich was a remarkable s'efemblance of Chrifl's deil:ru6lion of all his enemies at" his fecond coming, yet it doubtlefs looked beyond the type to the antitype. And as this prophecy of Chrift's coming is more ex- preffed than any preceding it ; fo it is an inftance of the increafe of that gofpel-Iight which began to dawn prefently after the fall, or of tliat building which is the fubjea denceof God, who taught the apolllc Jude to didinguifli between what was gsnuine and fpurious in the tradition. It can by no means be proved that this h 3. quoiation_ (roin. that fooliHi book called Enoch's Prophecy, ris Bp. Sherlock has very rightly urged ; nor would it prove the infplration of the book from whence it was takeq, but only that j&(^r//ni/a/' paffage." — -[Doddridge's Fam. Exppf. ill loc.J FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD. 95 lubjeot of our prefent difcourfe, being farther carried on, and built up higher than it had been before. And here, by tlie way, I would obfervc, that the in- creafe of gofpel light, and the progrefs of the work of redemption, as it refpefts the church in general, from its erection to the end of the world, is very limilar to the progrefs of the fiune work, and the fame light, in a particular foul, from the time of its converfion, till it is perfe6ted and crowned in glory. Sometimes the lio-ht ihines brighter, and at others more obfcurely ; fometimes grace prevails, and at other times it feems to languilli for a great while together. But in general, grace is grow- ing: from its iirfi: eredlion till it is completed in glory, the kingdom of Chrift is building up in the foul. So it is with refpecfl; to the great affair in general, as it relates to the univerfal fubjedl of it, and as it is carried on from its hrll: beginning to the end of the world. 8. The next remarkable thing in carrying on t]\is work, was the trnaflation of Enoch into heaven. [Gen. V. 24.] ' And Enoch wall'cd with God, and he was not; ' for God took him.' Mofcs, in giving an account of tlie genealogy of thofe that were of the line of Noah, does not fay concerning Enoch, he lived fo long and he died, as he does of the rcll:; but, ' lie was not, for God ' took him;' i. c. he tranflated him; in body and foul carried him to heaven without dying, as it is explained, [in Heb. ix 5.] ' By faith Enoch was tranflated, that he ' fhonld not fee death.' (c) By this wonderful work of God, tlic work of redemption was carried to a greater height in feveral rcfpecls, than it had been before. You may remember, that when 1 {hewed you what were the great things that God intended in the work of redemp- i3 (c) Enoch tuas translated.] For this we have divine au- thority, as above (hewn, and need not much regard uncei tain tra- ditions. They will, however, in this cafe furnifh us with an in- ftrudivc obftrvatiun, viz. that human traditions generally either oppofe divine truths, or deprave them. In this inllance, many of the Jews, thole mailers of tradition, will not believe but that Enoch died like other men j and others, who admit his tranfla- O tioD, 96 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. redemption; among other things I mentioned (p. 57) the perfe6t reftoration of the ruins of the fall, with refpeft to the ele6l, both in foul and body. Now this tranflation of Enoch, was the firfl inftance of this reftoration with refpe6t to the body. There had been many inftances of reftoring the foul of man by Chrift's redemption, but none of the body, until now. At the end of the world, all the bodies of the faints ihall a6lual]y be redeemed; the dead in Chrift by a refurredlion ; and them that fhall remain alive by a glorious change. A number of the bodies of the faints were raifed at the refurre£lion of Chrift ; and before then there was an inftance of a body glorified in Elijah: but the firft inftance was this of Enoch, of which we are now fpeaking. Now the work of redemption in this inftance was car- ried on ftill farther; as thereby was a great increafe of gofpel light, and the church had a clearer manifeftation of a future ftate, and of the glorious reward of the faints in heaven. We are told, [2 Tim. i. 10.] ' That life and ' immortality are brought to light by the gofpel.' And the more of this gofpel is revealed, the more clearly does the light of life and immortality appear. What was faid in the Old Teftament of a future ftate, is very obfcure, in coniparifon with the more full, plain, and abundant revelation given of it in the New. But yet even in thofc early days, the church of God, in this inftance, was fa- voured with an evidence of it fet before their eyes, in that one of their brethren was a£lually taken up to heaven without dying; which we have reafon to think the church of God knew then, as they afterwards knew Elijah's tranf- lalion. And as this was a clearer manifeftation of a fu- ture ftate than the church had had before ; fo it was a pledge or earneft of that future glorification of all the faints, which God intended through the redemption of [efus Chrift. 9. The tion, add to it, that he was taken by a ■whirlwind to the terreftrlal Paradife, where God (hewed him the tree of life in the midlt of it. [See Univ. Hift. Vol. i. p. 163, and Ainfworth's Ann. in loc] [N. U.] FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD. 97 9. The next thing that I fliall obferve, was the up- holding the church of God in that family of which Chrifl: was to come, in the time of the great and general defedlion before the flood. The church, in all probability, was fmall, in comparifon with the reft of the world, from the time that mankind firft began to multiply on the face of the earth, or from the time of Cain's defec- tion, and departing from among the people of God ; [Gen. iv. 16.] ' When Cain went out from the prefence ' of the Lord, (d) and dwelt in the land of Nod;' (e) which being interpreted, is the land of bamfiment ; I fay, from this time of Cain's departure and feparation from the church of God, it is probable that the church of God was fmall in comparifon with the reft of the world. The O 2 church (d) The VK'Et'E'HCi. of the Lord.'] " L'tghtfoot, Heidegger, zrA Le Clerc [to whom many more might be added j feem to be of opinion, that what we render * i\\t prefence oi the Lord,' was the proper name of that particular place where Adam, after his expul- fion from Paradife, dwelt ; and accordingly we find that part of the country which lies contiguous to the fuppofed fituation of Pa- radife, [/. e. near Tripoli, in Syria] called by Strabo, * tht pre- fence of God.' However this be, it is agreed by all interpreters, that there was a divine glory, called by the Jews Schechinah, which appeared from the beginning, and from which Cain, being now banifhed, never enjoyed the fight of it again." — [Patrick's Comment, and Gill's Expof.] (e) Cain dnvelt in the land of Nod.] " It Is the fame word which is rendered in the twelfth and fourteenth verfe a vagabond. Why our tranflators In the two former verfes give the meaning of the word, and in the fixteenth verfe the letters of It merely. Is not eafily comprehenfible. Let It be tranflated throughout, the fenfe Is perfedlly clear, and all ground of Idle Inquiry taken away. In the twelfth verfe, God denounces his punlfliment, ' thou fiialt ' not die, but be Nod, a vagabond In the earth.' In the fourteenth verfe, Cain recognizes the juftlce of the fentence, and bewails It, * I (hall be Nod, a vagabond In the earth :' and In the fixteenth, Mofes gives us the hlftory of Its being put In execution ; * he went * from the prefence of the Lord, and dwelt In the land,' Nod, a vagabond, flying from place to place, fliulklng In corners, fiiun- ning the haunts of men, purfued Inceflantly by the rcmorfclcfs pangs and tormenting apprehenfions of an 111 confclence. Remove all external danger, ' and the wicked Is as the troubled fea, which * cannot reft, whofe waters caft up mire and dirt." — [Hunter's Sac. Biog. Led. v.] 98 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. church feems to have been kept up chiefly in the pofte- rity of Seth; for this was the feed that God appointed inftead of Abel, whom Cain flew. But we cannot rea- fonably fuppofe, that Seth's poflerity was one fiftieth part of the world: " for Adam was one liundicd and thirty years old when Seth was born." But Cain, who feems to have been the leader of thofe that were not of the church, was Adam's eldeft child, and probably was born foon after the fall, which doubtlefs was foon after Adam's creation ; fo that there was time for Cain to have many fons before Seth was born : befules other children that probably Adam and Eve had before this time, (agreeable to God's blefiing. ' Be fruitful, and multiply, and reple- * nifli the earth ;') and many of thefe children might alfo have children. The hift:ory of Cain, before Seth's birth, feems to imply that there were great numbers of men (f) on (f) Great numbers of men on the earth at this time.'] It is ge- nerally conjeftured [from Gen. iv. 25.] that Abel was murdered a year or two before Seth was born, which was in the year 130. " Now though we fhould fuppofe that Adam and Eve had no other fons in the year of the world one hundred and twenty -eight, but Cain and Abel, it mull be allowed that they had daughters, who might early marry with thofe two fons. I require no more than the defcendants of thefe two, to make a veiy confiderable number of men upon the esrth in the faid year one hundred and twenty-eight; for, fuppofing them to have been married, in the nineteenth year of the world, they might eafily have had each of them eight children in the twenty-fifth year. In twenty-five years more, the fiftieth of the world, their defcendants in a diredt line would be fixty-four perfons. In the feventy-fifth year, at the fame rate, they would amount to five hundred and twelve. In the hundredth year, to four thoufand and ninety-fix ; and in the hun- dred and twenty-fifth year, to thirty-two tlioufand feven hundred and fixty-eight." — [Uiflert. Chronol. Gcog. Cvitiq. fur la Journal de Paris, Tom. li. p. 6.] " Now if to this calculation we add the high degree of proba- bility that Adam had many more fons befides thofe mentioned in the record ; that families were generally more numerous than the fuppofitlon Hates ; that fimple manners, rural employments, tem- perature of climate, and largenefs of room, arc circumftances in- conceiveably more favourable to population, than modern fads, and European cuftoms, give us any idea of, we fliall not think it ilrange that Cain, under the prefiure of confcious guilt, and har- rowed FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD. 99 on the earth: [Gen. iv. 14, 15.] ' Behold, thou hafl ' driven me out this day from the face of the eartli ; and * from thy face ihall I be hid, and I Ihall be a fugitive and * a vagabond in the earth ; and it fliall come to pafs, that * every one that findeth me fhall flay me. And the Lord ' faid \into him, Therefore \vhofoe\er flayetli Cain, vcn- ' geance fliall he taken on him feven-fold. And the ' Lord fet a mark upon Cain, led: any finding him ihould * kill him.' (g) And thofe that were in being when Seth was born, muft be fuppofed to ftand in equal cnpacity of multiplying their poilerity with him ; and therefore, as I faid, Seth's pofterity were but a fmall part of the inhabit- ants of the world. But after the days of Enos and Enoch, (for Enoch was tranflated before Enos died ; I fay, after their days) the church of God greatly diminiHied, in proportion as mul- titudes that were of the line of Scrh, and had been born in the church of God, fell away, and joined with the wicked world, principally by means of intermarriages with rovi'ed with fear, which always both multiplies and magnifies ob- jects far beyond their real number and fize, fhould be alarmed and intimidated at the numbers of mankind, who he fuppofed were ready, and were concerned, to execute vengeance upon him." — [Hunter's Sac. Biog. Vol. i* left. 5.] (g) The Lord Jet a mark upon Cain.~\ " Almoft all the ver- fions have committed a miflake in tranflating ver. 15, tliat God had * put a mark Vi^ow Cain,' left any fuddenly fliould kill him. The original fays no fuch thing ; and the LXX have very well rendered it thus — * God fet a fign before Cain, to purfuade him that whoever fliould find him fliould not kill him.' This is al- moft the fame with what is faid in Exod. x. i. that ' God did fet * fjgns before the Egyptians ;' and Ifa. Ixvi. 15. that ' he would fet ' a^^« before the heathen ;' where it is evident that God did not mean any particular marh which (hould be fet on their bodies, but only thofe figns and wonders which he wrought in Egypt, to oblige Pharaoh to let his people go ; and the miraculous manner where- in he delivered them from the Babylonifti captivity. This expo- fition is natural and agreeable to the methods of Divine Provi- dence, which is wont to convince the incredulous by figns and wonders ; nor could any thing elfe convince Cain, in the fear he was under, that the firft who met liim fliould not kill him, after what God had faid to him in exprobration of his crim.e." [Patrick's Comment, and Saurin's DifFert.] loo HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. with them ; [as Gen. vi. 1,2, and 4.] ' And it came to * pafs, when men began to multiply on the face of the * earth, and daughters were born unto them, that the fons * of God faw the daughters of men, that they were fair ; * and they took them wives of all which they chofe. — * There were giants in the earth in thofe days ; and alfo * after that, when the fons of God came in unto the * daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the * fame became mighty men, which were of old, men of * renown.' (h) By the fons of God here, are doubtlefs meant the children of the church : it is a denomination often given them in the fcripture. They intermarried with (h) There were giants oh the earth in thofe dnys.'] Here are two inquiries which prefent thcmfelves ; i . What is meant by the fons of GoJintermanylng with the daughters of men ? And what were thefe giants here mentioned ? As to the former, the expofition of our author is generally ac- quiefced in, and there is but little doubt that is the true one. There is another, however, efpoiifed by fome of the beft Jewlfli writers, as Ben Uzziel, S. Jarchi, Aben Ezra, and the Tar- gums, and which therefore may defervc mentioning, viz. that the fons of God were princes, magiftrates, and great-men ; and daughters of men, thofe of the inferior and poor people, which they took by violence, as the word fometimes means, and de- bauched. [See Univ. Hiil. Vol. i. p. 175.] As to the other inquiry, there is no doubt, if we credit hif- tory, either facred or prophane, but there were formerly men of extraordinary ftature, as, indeed, to this day v;e meet with fome accidental inftances ; not to mention the Patagonians, a nation of fuch men, if we may credit the relations in Mr. Pennant's traft. f See the Analytical Review, No. i.] — But however fome critics have thought that the paffage before us does not refer to fuch. Some tranflate the Hebrew word v.ephmm, npo/Iatcs, thofe who have fell from the truth ; fo Jofephus : bat Symmachus and Aquila underftand it more literally of ruffians, men of 'v'lclence, men ivho attaclif who fall upon others. [See Cruden's Concord, in Giant. 2 The abfurd notion that the fons of God were angels, either fallen or guardian, is too abfurd to deferve refutation. It is fupr pofed, however, that this notion originntedfrom an error in fome old copies of the LXX, which read, the angels, inflead of the fons of God ; and it was in great meafure propagated by the book of the pretended prophecies of Enoch. [See Unir. Hid. Vol. i. p. 172, and feq.J FROM THE FALL TO THE FLOOD, ice with the wicked world, and fo their hearts were led away liom God ; and there was a great and continual defec- tion : and the cliurch of God, which ufed to be a reftraint on tlie wicked world, diniiniflied exceedingly, and fo wickednefs went on uncontrolled. Satan, that old ferpent, the devil, that tempted our tirft parents, and fet up him- lelf as God of this world, raged exceedingly ; and every Imagination of the thoughts of man's heart was only evil continually, (i) and the earth was filled with violence. It feems to be deluged with wickednefs now, as it was with water afterwards : and mankind in general were fwallowed up in this deluge. And now Satan made a mod violent and potent attempt to deflroy the church of God ; and had almoft done it : but God reftored it in the midft of all this flood of wickednefs and violence. He kept it up in the line of which Chrift was to proceed. He would not fuffer it to be deftroyed, for a blefling was in it. There was a particular family, a root whence ' the branch ' of righteoufnefs' was afterwards to flioot forth. And therefore, however the branches were lopped off, and the tree feemed to be deftroyed; yet God, in the midft of all, kept alive this root, by his wonderful redeeming power and grace. Thus I have flievvn how God carried on the great affair of redemption ; how the building went on during the firft period of the Old Teftament, viz. from the fall of man, till God brought the flood upon the earth. And I would here remark, that though the hiftory which Mofes gives us of the great works of God during that fpace be very fliort ; (k) yet it is exceedingly comprehen- 11 ve (i) Man* s heart only evil.]] " The original [text] is very ex-' aft in its ftrufture, as well as very emphatical in its meaning. — The /jeart, or the grand principle, the thoughts of the heart, or the various aftings of that principle, the imaginations of the thoughts, or the produce and refult of thofe aftings ; namely, de- fires and affeftions, counfels and purpofea : of which, not one, not a few pnly, or the greateft part, but a/I thefc are evil." . [Hervev's Ther. and Afp. vol. ii. dial, ii.] ( K ) The hijiory of this period very short.] How few chapters contain the hiitory of our world before the flood, although a pe- riod I02 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. five and inflru6tive. And It may alfo be profitable to obferve, the efficacy of that purchafe of redemption that had fuch great effefts, even many ages before Chrifl appeared to purchafe redemption, by the lliedding of his blood. § II. From the flood to the calling of Abraham. I PROCEED now to fhew how the fame work was carried on through the fecond part of this period, from the beginning of the flood till the calling of Abraham : for though that vmiverfal deluge of waters overthrew the world ; yet it did not overthrow tliis building of God, the work of redemption. This went on yet, and continued to be built up to a farther preparation for the great Saviour's coming into the world, and working out redemption for his people. And here obferve, I. The flood itfelf was a work of God that belonged to this great affair, and tended to promote it. All the great works of God, from the tall to the end of the world, rightly viewed, will appear as parts of this grand work ; and as fo many fleps that God has taken in order to its being carried on : and doubtlefs fo great a work, fo remarkable a cataf- trophc, as the deluge was, cannot be excepted. It was wrought in order to remove out of the way, enemies that were ready to overthrow it. Satan feems to have been in a dreadful rage juft before the flood ; and his rage then doubtlefs was, as it always has been, chiefly againfl: the church of God. He had drawn alrnofl: all the world to be enlifted under his ban- ner. riod of near fcventeen hundred years ; and including no lefs events than the creation of the world — the fall of man — and bringing us to the eve of the world's deftruftiori. What are the memoirs of the oldeft patriarchs, but that thi'y were born — propagated their fpecies — and then died ? — Sic tranfit gloria mundi. ' Thus the * fafliion of this world paffeth away.' [i Cor. vii. 31.] [I. N.J FROM THE FLOOD TO ABRAHAM'* CALL. 103 ncr. ' We read that the earth was filled with violence ;' and doubtlefs that violence was chiefly againft the church, in fulfilment of what was foretold, ' I will put enmity ' between thy feed and her feed.' And their enmity and violence was fo great, and the enemies of the church fo numerous, the whole world being againft it, that it was come to the lafl: extremity. Noah's reproofs and his preaching of righteoufnefs were utterly difregarded. God's fpirit had ftriven with them an hundred and twenty years, but in vain ; (l) the church was reduced to fuch narrow- limits, as to be confined to one family. Neither was there a profpccl of any thing elfe but of their totally fwallowing it up in a very little time ; and fo wholly deftroying that fmall root that had the bleffing in it, from whence the Redeemer was to proceed. And therefore, God's deftroying thofe enemies of the church by the flood, belongs to this affair of redemption ; for it was one thing that was done in fulfilment of the covenant of grace, as it was revealed to Adam : ' I ' will put enmity between thee and the woman, and be- ' tweea thy feed and her feed ; it fiiall bruife thy head.' P Thus (l) God's fpirit had striven nvilh them in vain.'] " The word here traiiflated to llrive, fignilies to litigate a point or reafon in a caufc, before it is ripe for judgment " It is now eafy to difcern in what fenfe the Spirit of God may be oppofcd and rcfiltcd, and ftrive to no purpofe, and in what fenfe not. The things of the Spirit of God are difagreeable to a natural man : it is no wonder that the external miniftry of the word and ordinances are defpifed, oppofed, and refiiled. The ex- ternal caufe may be rejefted ; yea, fome inward inotions and con- viftions may be over-ruled, ftiflcd, and come to nothing ; nay, it will be granted, that there may be, and is an oppofition and re- fiftancc to the work of the Spirit of God in converfion ; but then the Spirit cannot be fo refilled in the operations of his grace as to be obliged to ceafe from his work, or to be overcome or hindered In it ; for he ac^s with a defign which cannot be fruftrated, and with a power which is uncontroulable ; were It otherwife, the re- generation and converfion of every one muft be precarious ; and where the grace of the Spirit is effeftual, according to the doc- ti Ine of free-will, It would be more owing to the will of man than to the Spirit of God." [Gill's Caufe of God and Truth, Part T. No. 2.1 T04 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. Thus w.-TS the feed of the ferpent, in the midft of tlieir moft violent rage, difappointed, and the church delivered when in the utmoft peril. We read of fcarce any great deftrutlion of nations in the Scripture, but one grand reafon given for it is, their enmity and injuries againft God's people ; and doubtlels this was one main reafon of the defl:ru6lion of all nations by the flood. The giants that were in thofe days, in all likelihood, got themfelves their renown by their great ex- ploits againft Heaven, and the remaining fons of God that had not corrupted themfelves. We read that jtift befc^e the world Ihall be deftroyed by nre, ' the nations that are in the four quarters of the ' earth, fhall gather together againft the church as the fand ' of tlie fea, and fliall go up on the breadth of the earth, • and compafs the camp of the faints about, and the be- • lovdd city ; and then fire ftiall come down from God out ' of heaven, and devour them.' [Rev. xx. 8, 9.] And it feems there was that which was very parallel to it, juft before the world was deftroyed by water. And therefore their deftru6lion was a work of God that did as much belong to the work of redemption, as the deftruction of the Egyptians belonged to the redemption of the children of lirael out of Egypt ; or as the deftru6lion of Senna- cherib's mighty arm.y, that had compafled about Jerufalem to deftroy it, belonged to God's redemption of that city from them. By means of this flood, all the enemies of God's church, againft wliom that little handful had no ftrength, were fwept off at once, (m) God took their part, and appeared for them againft their enemies, drowned tliofe of whom they had been atraid in this flood, as he.drowned the enemies of Ifrael that purfucd them in the Red Sea. Indeed (m) Tl)e enemies of the church all Jivept off at once by the flood.] Well, faith the apoftle, [Heb. x. 31.] ' It is a fearful thing to fall < into the hands of the living God.' Dreadful judgments follow abufed mercies. One hundred and twenty years had the divine patience waited — one liundredand twenty years liad the holy pro- phet FROM THE FLOOD TO ABRAHAM'S CALL. lo^ Indeed God could have taken other methods to deliver his church : he could have converted all the world, inftead of drowning it ; and fo he could have taken another method than drowning the Egyptians in the Red Sea. But that is no argument, that the method that he did take, was not a method to fliow his redeeming mercy to his people. By the deluge the enemies of God's people were d'if- pofTcffed, and the whole earth given to Noah and his family to enjov in quiet ; as God made room for the Ifraelites in Canaan, hy cafting out their enemies from before them. And God's thus taking the poflefhon of the enemies of the church, and giving it all to his church, was agreeable to that promife ot the covenant of grace : [Pfal. xxxvii. 9, lO, ii.] ' For evil doers fliall be cut ' off; but thofe that wait upon the Lord, they fliall inherit * the earth. For yet a little while and the wicked Ihal! * not be: yea, thou Ihalt diligently confider his place. ' and it fliall not be. But the meek Ihall inherit tlic ' earth, and Ihall delight themfeives in the abundance of * peace.' 2. Another thing belonging to the fame work, Vv'as God's fo wonderfully prcferving that family of which P 2 the phct warned that perverfe generation ; but in vain. Imagination is too weak to conceive, as well as language to paint, the av/ful event winch follows — while " With black wings Wide hovering, all the clouds together drove From under heaven And now the thicken'd flvy Like a dark ceiling flood ; down rufli'd the rain Impetuous, and continued, till the earth No more was feen ; the floating veffcl fwam Uplifted, and fecure with beaked prow Rode tilting o'er the waves ; all dwellings elfe Flood overwhelm'd, and them, with all their pomp, Deep under water roU'd ; fea covet 'd fea, Sea without fliore ; and in their palaces, Where luxury late rcign'd, fea monfters whelp'd And ftabled ; of mankind, fo numerous late, All left, in one fmall bottom fwam embark'd." — [Par. Loft. Book :;i.] [U. U.J io6 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. the Redeemer was to proceed, when all tke reft of the world was drowned. God's drowning the world, au4 faving Noah and his family, were both^ reducible to this great work. The faving Noah and his family belonged to it two ways ; as that was the family of which the Re- deemer was to proceed, and as it was the church that he had redeemed. It was the myftical body of Chrift that Avas there faved. The manner of God's faving thofe perfons, when all the world befides was fo overthrown, was very wonderful and remarkable. It was a wonder- ful and remarkable type of the redemption of Chrift, of that redemption that is fealed by the baptifm of water, and is fo fpoken of in the New Teftament, [as i Pet. iii. 20,21.] ' Which fometimes were difobedieot, when ' once the long-fuftering of God waited in the days of * Noah, while the ark was a preparing, wherein few, ' that is, eight fouls, were faved by water. The like ' figure whereunto, even baptifm, doth alfo now fave us, ' (not the putting away the filth of the ^eih, but the ' anfwer of a good confcience towards God,) by the ° refurre6tion of Jefus Chrift.' (n) That water which w a (lied (n) Which fomethne tverc difobedlent, idc.~] At prefent we fliall only fubjoin the tranfiatlon and paraphrafe of this text (including part of the context) from Dr. Doddridge, which perfe-ftly coio' cides with the fenfe of our author, and we think with the truth. But as many have fuppofed it to refer to another period, viz. to Chrift's preaching in the invifible world, v/c Hiall in the proper place reconfider the text with that interpretation of it. I. Peter iii. i8 — 22. " I have already obferved, that if it be the will of God you fliould fuiTer, it is better it fhould be for do- ing well than for doing evil ; and it is very evidently fo, becavfe hereby we are made conformable to Chr'ijl our head and leader, whom it cannot but be our glory and happinefs to refemble ; for he alfo once fuffired for Jins ; he, who was fo eminently and pcr- feftly the jtifl, fufFered for the twjuji, for our benefit, and in our Head, that he might introduce us to God, and fix us in a ftate cf acceptance a-nd favourable intereourfe with him, being indeed put to death in thejlejlj, by thofe enemies whom God permitted for a while to triumph over him ; but quickened by the Spirit of God, which foon re-animated his body, and raifed it to an immortal life: f ytn that Spirit by the infpiration of ivhich granted to his faithful fervant FROM THE FLOOD TO ABRAHAM'S CALL. 107 wafhed away the filth of the world, and ciearetl the world of wicked men, was a type of the blood of Chrift which takes away onr fins. That water which delivered Noah and his fens from their enemies, is a type of the blood that delivers God's church from their fpiritual enemies. That water which was fo plentiful, that it filled the woild, and reached above the tops of the higheft mountains, was a type of that blood, tlie efficacy of which is fo abundant, that it is'fufficient for the whole world ; fufficient to bury the highefi: mountains of fin. The ark, that was the refuge and hiding-place of the church in this time of ftorm and flood, was a type of Chrill, the true hiding- fervant Noah, going forth as it Vv ere, in that progrefs in which he employed him, he preached to thofe notorious finners, who for their difobedience, have fince experienced the juft feverity of the divine vengeance, and are now in the condition of feparate^/W/j, referved as it were in prifoti, to the feverer judgment at the great day. I fpeak of thofe, 'who ivere /ongjtttce difobedient, \t{XcA.hQ Shem, as he faid, Curfed be Canaan ; for mens' evil fpringcth of themfelves, but their good from God : and therefore in a llrain of devotion breaking forth into thankfgiving to God as the author of all good to Shem : nei- ther doth he fay the fame to Japheth : for God certainly may dlf- penfe his particular favours according to his good pleafure, and falvation was to be derived to mankind through Shem and his pof- terity. God prefers Shem to his elder brother Japheth, as Jacob was afterwards preferred to Efau, and David to iiis elder brothers, to (how that the order of grace is not always the fame as the order of nature. The Lord being called the God of Shem particularly, it ii6 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. was their pride. Being funk into a dil'pofition to forfake the true God, the lirft idol they fet up in his room, was It IS plainly intimated that the Lord would be his God in a parti- cular manner. And accordingly the church of God was among the pofterity of Shem for feveral generations ; and of them [Rom. ix. 5.] ' As concerning the flefli Chrift came.' " But ftill Japheth was not difmiffed without a promife, (ver. 47.) ' God ihall enlarge Japheth, and he fhall dwell in the tents of * Shem ; and Canaan fhall be fervant to them, or their fervant.' God fliall enlarge Japheth. Some render the word, (it is fo ren- dered in the margin of our bibles) God fhall pcrjuade or allure Japheth, fo that he fhall come over to the true religion, and dwell in the tents of Shem. Bat the belt critics in the language have remarked, befides other reafons, that they who tranflate the word by perfuade or allure, did not confider, that when it is fo taken, it* is ufed in a bad fenfe, and governs an accufative cafe, and not a dative, as in this place. God fhall enlarge Japheth, or unto Ja-' pheth, is the beft rendering ; and in the original there is a mahifeft allufion to Japheth's name, fuch as is familiar to the Hebrew wa- ters. As it was faid of Noah, [Gen. v. 29.] this fame fhall com- fort us, the name of Noah being thought to fgnify comfort: So it is faid here God fhall enlarge Japheth, and the name of Japheth fignifies enlargement. Was Japheth then more enlarged than the reft ? Yes, he was, both in territory and children : the terri- tories of Japheth's pofterity were indeed very large ; for, befides all Europe, great and extenfive ^as it is, they poflefled the Lefler Afia, Media, and part of Armenia, Iberia, Albania, and thofe vaft rep-ions towards the north, which anciently the Scythians in- habited, and now the Tartars inhabit ; and it is not improbable, that the new world was peopled by fome of his northern defcen- dents palling thither by the ftraits of Anian. The enlargement of Japheth may alfo denote a numerous progeny as well as ample territory : and if you confult the genealogies of the three brothers comprifed in the following chapter, you will find that Japheth had feven fons, whereas Ham had only four, arid Shem only five : and the northern hive (as Sir William Temple denominates it) was always remarkable for its fecundity, a.id hath been continually pouring forth fwarms, and fending out colonies into the more fouthern parts, both in Enrope and in Afia, both in former and in later times. " The following claufe, ' and he fliall du-el1 in the tents of « Shem,' is capable of a double conftru6tion ; for thereby may be meant either that God or that ^ Japheth ^^^■:^\ dwell in the tents ' of Shem :' in the tents of Shem, faith he, fpeaking according to the fimplicity of thofe times, when men dwelt in tents and not in houfes. They who prefer the former conllruftion, feem to have the authority of the original test on their fide ; for there is no other noun FROM THE FLOOD TO ABRAHAM'S CALL. 117 was themfelves, their own glory and fame. And as this city and tower had its foundation laid in the pride and va- nity of men ; fo it was built on a foundation exceedingly contrary to the nature of the foundation of the kingdom of Chrift, and his redeemed city, which has its foundation •laid in humility. Therefore God faw that it tended to fruftrate the de- fign of that great building which was founded, not in the haughtinefs of men but in the purpofes of God: thus the thing that they did difpleafed the Lord, and he confounded the defign, net fuffering them fo bring it to perfeclion ; as he will fruftrate all other defigns fet up in oppolition to the great building of the work of redemption. In noun to govern the verbs in the period, but God ; there is no pro- noun in the Hebrew, anfwcring to the he which is inferted in our Englifh tranflation : and the whole fentence would run thus, ' God will enlarge Japheth, and will dwell in the tents of Shem :' and the Chaldee of Onkelos alfo thus paraphrafeth it, ' and v/ill make * his glory to dwell in the tabernacles of Shem.' Thofe who pre- fer the latter conftruftion, feem to have done it, that they might refer this 27th verfe wholly to Japheth, as they refer the 26th wholly to Shem ; but the other appears to me the more natural and eafy conftrucftion. Taken in either fenfe, the prophecy hath been moft punftually fulfilled. In the former fenfe it was fullilled literally, when the Shechinah, or divine prefence, refted in the ark, and dwelt in the tabernacle and temple of the Jews ; and when * the Word who was with God and was God, [John 1. i. * £o-x»iw«rev,] pitched his tent, and dwelt among us.' [ver. 14.] Li the latter fenfe it was fulfilled firft, when the Greeks and Romans, who fprung originally from Japheth, fubdued and poflefied Judea, and other countries of Afia, belonging to Shem ; and again fpi- ritually, when they were profelyted to the true religion, and they who were not Ifraelites by birth, became Ifraelltes by faith, and lived, as we and many other of Japheth's pofterity do at this day, within the pale of the church of Chrift. " What think you now ? Is not this a moft extraordinary pro- phecy \ A prophecy that was delivered near four thoufand years ago, and yet hath been fulfilling through the feveral periods of time to this day ! It is both wonderful and inilruftive. It is the hiftory of the world as it were in epitome." [Differt. on the Prophecies, vol. i. Dif. 1.3 [The laft remark vvfill, we hope, fulBciently apologize for the length of this quotation.] [G. E.] iiS HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. In liie fecond chapter of Ifaiali, where the prophet is ilcfcribing God's fttting up the kingdom of Chrift in the world, he foretells that he will, in order to it, bring down the haughtinefs of men, and how the day of the Lord fliall be on every high tower, and upon every fenced wall, 6cc. Chrift's kingdom is eftabliflied by bringing down every high thing to make way for it, [2 Cor. X. 4, 5.] ' For the weapons of our warfare are * mighty through God to the pulling down of flrong * holds, cafting down imaginations, and every high thing * that exalreth itfelf againft the knowledge of God.' What is done in a particiilar foul, to make way for the fetting up of Chrift's kingdom, is to dcftroy Babel in that foul. They intended to have built Babel up to heaven. That building which is the fubjedl we are now upon, is intend- ed to be built fo high, that its top fliall reach to heaven indeed, as it will to the higheft heavens at the end of the world, when it fliall be finiihed : and therefore God would not fuffer the building of his enemies, that they defigned to build up to heaven in oppofition to it, to profper. (q^) If they had gone on and profpered in building that city and tower, it might have kept the world of wicked men, the enemies of the church, together, as was their defign. They might have remained united in one vaft, powerful city, and fo have been too powerful for the city of God, and quite fwallowed it up. This city of Babel is the fame with the city of Baby- lon ,- for Babylon in the original is Babel: but Babylon was a city that is always fpoken of in fcripture as chiefly oppofite to the city of God. Babylon and Jerufalem, or Zion, are often oppofcd to each other, both in the Old and New Teftament. This city was a powerful and terrible ( Q^) God fritjlrated their defign m lu'illing Babe L.J Their dc' Jign and tl)e inetliod in which God frujlrated it are two very im- portant lubjcfts of inquiry, and for brevity fake we fliall coniider them in connedlion ; firll flating the principal hypoihefts of the learned, and then, comparing them with the fcripture account, at- tempt to tlirow fome new light on this very compHcated fubjed. FROM THE FLOOD TO ABRAHAM'S CALL. 1 19 terrible enemy to the city of God afterwards, notwith- ftanding this great check put to the building of it in the beo;in^ We have not only the authority of Mofes for the exiftence of this tower, but (which unhappily is of more weight with fome) the concurrent teftimonies of fevcral heathen writers, particularly Herodotus, who dcfcribes the remains of it in his time; and even fome modern travellers, as RauivoJf and Delia Valle, have feen im- menfe heaps of ruins which they conceived to be thofe of Babel, though they are not well agreed in its fituation. [See Univ. Hilt, vol. i. p. 334—337.] It is however not fo evident, what induced ' the children of men' to ereft this edifice. Mofes has indeed mentioned their motive, but then the learned are not well agreed as to the import of his, or ratheir of /i'c'/r words ; [Gen. xi. 4.] * And they faid, Go to, let * us build a city and a tower whofe top may reach unto heaven, * \j. £. very high] and let us make us a name, left we be fcattered * abroad upon the face of the whole earth.' But how fliould the making them a name prevent their being fcattered? The anfwer to this is not, perhaps, fo difficult as fome have thought. The ereftion of a city and a tower, and forming themfelves into a compadi body, a powerful corporation, as we fhould fay, was the moft natural means to preferve themfelves together, as well as to perpetuate their memory to pofterlty. Nor is this all; their making them- felves a name, impUes the atchievement of fomething deferving one; and certainly the more firm, powerful, and great they were, the lefs danger remained of their being fcattered. Not to fa)--, that in fuch a body, men might enjoy many conveniences and advantages, which a ftate of folitary v.'andering would not admit. Some learned men, however, not aware of this, or not feeing it in the fame point of view, have, to avoid the difficulty, rendered the words in a different manner. Dr. G. Sharp [Origin of Lang, p. 29.] takes the word [iZDIi'] for a particle of place, and tranflateg it — ' Let us prepare — iLwi-h, i^c. for ourfelves there;' and it can- not be denied that the words (without regarding the vowel points) may befo tranflated; but then, as the phrafe to make onefelf a name is perfeftly fcriptural [fee 2 Sam. viii. 13. — If. Ixiii. 12, 14. — Jer. xxxii. 20. — Dan. ix. 15.] and familiar, and we hope has been ex- plained in a rational and intelligible fenfe, there feems to be no iieceffity for departing from it. Some critics, perticularly Dr. Tennison and Mr. Hutchin- son, from the circumilance of the tower being in after times ufed for idolatrous purpofes, have conceived that fuch was its original deiign ; and therefore have fuppofcd this word to be the name ;)f the idol to which it was eredfted : but as this is mere conjecture, little ftrefs can be laid on it. Nor does the erection of an iilol give any reafon why tlicy H^ould not be fcattered. This, however, is a R verv 120 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. beginmng. But it might, and probably would have been vaftly more powerful, and able to vex and deftroy the cliurch of God, if it had not been thus checked. Thus very ancient tradition, being found in the Targums both of Jona- than and Jerufalem, befides a Samaritan one; and if it could be proved to be well founded, would perfeftly agree with the expofi- tion above given, and give the cleared reafon of the divine inter- polition, which is the next circumftance to be confidered. ' And the Lord came down to fee the city and the tower which * the children of men builded. And the Lord faid [or ' had faid'] * Behold, the people is one, [united in one defign] and they have ' all one language ; and tliis they begin to do ; and now nothing * will be reftrained from them, which they have imagined to do,* that is, without a divine interference. ' Go to, let us go down * [Comp. Gen. i. 26.] and there confoumi their /anguage, that they * may not underftand one another's fpeech. So the Lord fcattered ' them abroad from thence upon the face of all the earth; and they * left off to build the city, and [as the Samaritan adds] the tower. * Therefore is the name of it called Bale/, [i. e. ConfufionJ becaufe ' the Lord did there confound the language of all the earth.' The common hypothefis fuppofes that, on this occafion, God caufed the builders to forget their former language, and each fa- mily to fpeak a new tongue, whence originated the various lan- guages at prefent in the world. [See Gill in loc] To this, however, it has been objeAed, that to confound a lan- guage, and to form new ones, are very diftinft and different ideas* Nor is there any fimilar phrafeology to countenance this in other parts of fcripture. Mr. Hutchinson, who feems to have been fond of novel and iingular ideas, will have the univerfality of language, or rather Up, as the Hebrew is, to denote a univerfality of religion and re- ligious rites, and that the variety afterward introduced was not of tongues, but of religious principles and confejfions; but this, befide that it wants fupport, has the misfortune to intimate, that God was the author of the different religions extant, the falfe as well as the true — which be far from the Molt High! Dr. G. Sharp, unfatisfted with either of thefe explications, conceives, that neither a divifion of tongues or religions is intended; but only that in fome vifible and extraordinary manner the Deity came down to earth, and confounded their purpofes, fcattering thern over the face of the earth; and that the different languages were rather the effcEl, than the caufe^ of this difperfion. [See Origin of Lang. p. 24 — 30.] A full inveftigation of this fubjedl would lead us back to the origin of the firft langu;ige, and to a variety of inquiries, which would FROM THE FLOOD TO ABRAHAM'S CALL. 121 Thus it was in kindiiefs to his church in the world, and in profecution of the great defign of redemption, that God would fwell this note to a vohime; but we wifli to be as concife as poflible, and fhall therefore only drop hints to be puifued and im- proved by the refleftions of our readers. And, I. It appears that God not only created man with a capa- city of fpeech, and acquainted him with his powers; but calle4 them into exercife by bringing the animals to him, that he might name them. 2. Yet, that there is no neceflity for fuppofing that God fur- niflied our firft parent miraculoufly with all the words he had oc- cafion for, at once; a thoufand circumftances would daily occur for giving him opportunity and occafion, to enlarge his llock of words, as his ideas increafed. 3. We conceive, that while mankind continued to refide in one climate, and to have communication together, there would be little dlverfity in their language, and this was probably the cafe before the flood, and for fome time afterwards, till the period we are now confidering. 4. Though we fhould not be able exaftly to afcertain the mo- tives on which this building was erefted ; yet, as we find it offen- live to God, it was certainly finful; if not in the a8 itfelf, at leafl in the moiive, which, doubtlefs, originated in vanity and ambition. 5. From the expreflion ' the Lord came down,' it fliould feem there was fome vifible appearance of the divine Majefty; the ear- lieft heathen writers who mention this event, unanimoufly afcribe the deftruftion of Babel to the winds, and as the Lord * rides * upon the whirlwind,' there feems no abfurdity in fuppofing that the tempeft which attended his prefence, might overthrow it, and thus eonfound and terrify the builders. 6. But as the language was confounded, it does not fcem fuffi- clent to confine the text to this: may v/e not therefore fuppofe, that God afFetlied the organs of their fpeech in fome fuch extraor- dinary manner, as to render certain founds extremely difficult (if not impoffible) to certain perfons, and confequently to occafion a material difference in pronunciation ? As we fee to this day, ho\v feldora foreigners can attain the true found of TH — how vari^- oufly, even in England, (as formerly in Judea) different countries pronounce the fame letter. And this, taken in connexion with the terror occafioned by the divine prefence, was, certainly, abun- dantly fuflicient to create a raifunderltanding, and make thefe builders defilt from their enterprize. [See Slackhcitfi'i Hlft. of the Bible, vol. i. b. 2.] 7. That after the dlfperfion, this difference would naturally incrcafe — that accident would invent many, neccITity perhaps more, R z new" 122 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. God put a flop to the building of the city and tower of Babel. 6. The difperfion of the nations, and dividing the earth among its inhabitants, immediately after God had caufcd the building of Babel to ceafe. This was done fo ^s moft to fuit that great defign of redemption; and parti- cularly, God therein had an eye to the future propaga- tion of the gofpel among the nations. [Deut. xxxii. 8-] ' When the Moit High divided to the nations their inhe- * ritance, when he feparated the fons of Adam, he fet the ' bounds of the people according to the number of the * children of Ifrael.' (r) ' And hath made of one blood ' all new words; and the learned and ingenious modify them to their own tafte: and we (hould not defpair being able to fiiew, did the occafion fuit, the poffibility of all languages being in this manner derived from one original. 8. The inquiry, whether among all thefe changes any one na- tion preferved the primitive dialeft, is more curious than ufcful, and chiefly depends on one circumftance, whether Shem and his family had any concern in building of Babel, a circumllance that is not eafily demonftrated either way. Tlie learned authors of the Univerfal Hiftory think nothing can be plainer, than that he was confederated with the reft of mankind. [Vol. i. p. 327, &c.] But Dr. Gill, [in loc] and the Jewifli expofitors in general, will by no means admit this ; but fuppofe the phrafe- children of men, muft be here taken, as a fimilar one in a preceding chapter, [vi. 4]. for the reft of the world, exclufive of God's people. If this notion be right, (as we think it might be juftified) in all pro- bability the original language might be preferved in the family of Shem, and be eflentially the fame which was afterward denomi- nated Hebrew. But this controverfy we mull: wave. [G. E.] (r.) He fet the bounds of the people according to the mimler of the CHILDREN of IsRAEL.] " The fenfe is, that fuch a country was meafured out and bounded, as would be fufiicient to hold the twelve tribes of Ifrael, when numerous, and their time was come to inhabit it ; and which, in the meanwhile, was put into the hands of Canaan and his eleven fons to poffefs, not as their pro- per inheritance, but as tenants at will, until the proper heirs ex- ifted, and were at an age, and of fufficient number to inherit. In which may be obferved the wife difpofiticjn of Divine Providence, to put it into the hands of a people corfed of God, fo that to take it from t])em at any time could have no appearance of any injuftice in it; and their enjoying it fo long as they did was a mercy to them. FROM THE FLOOD TO ABRAHAM'S CALL. 123 ' all nations of men, for to dwell on all the face of the ' earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, * and the bounds of their habitations ; that they Ihould * feek the Lord if haply they might feel after him, and * find him.' [A6ts xvii. 26, 27.] The land of Canaan was the moft conveniently fituated of any place in the world for the purpofe of fpreading the light of the gofpel thence them, for fo long they had a reprieve. Now here was an early inftance of the goodncfs of God to Ifrael, that he fhould make fuch an early provifion of the land flowing with milk and honey for them. — [Gill in loc] *• For ' Children of Ifrael,' the Greek tranflation reads ' Angels * of God ;' fo the LXX tranflated this place purpofely, left the heathens fhould here take offence, that Ifrael fhould be matched with the fevcnty nations, that is, with all the people of the world : and the Jews fuppofed, there weie fevcnty angels, rulers of the fe- venty nations ; and therefore they fay, according to the number of the angels of God, whereby they mean feventy. Their opinion is to be feen in Rab. Menachem [on Gen. xlvi.] where he faith, * It is generally a rule that there is one [degree of] glory above * another, and they that are beneath are a fecret fignification of * thofe that are above ; and the feventy fouls [Gen. xlvi. 27.] * fignify the feventy angels that are round about the throne of * [God's] glory, which are fet over the nations.' But we are warned to beware how we intrude ourfelves into the things which we have not feen." [Col. ii. iS.] [Ainsvv'ORTh in loc] God * hath made of one blood all nations of men, for to dwell * upon the face of the earth, and hath determined, or " hath marhedout in his eternal and unerring counfel, the times fore-allotted \_toeach'\ in their refpeftivc order ; ^« J appointed //>? feveral boun- daries of their different habitations : all things in the difpofition of his providence centering in this one great end, that they might be excited to feei after tjfje Lord thdr maker. If poJfAly amidft all the darknefs which their own degeneracy and prejudice have brought upon their minds, they might feel after him and be fo happy as to Jind him out, in the knowledge of whom their fupreme hap- pinefs confifts ; who indeed, though he be fo little known, Is not far from every one of us : for In him ould be difcouraging to him. But it is pleafant to him to think that fo mucii of the way is gone, that he is now nearer home ; and that he FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 133 ■fcparatcd trom the reft of the world till now ; but were wont to dwell \ . them, without any bar or fence to 'keep them feparate ; the milchievous confequence of which had been found repeatedly. The effc6l l^cfore the ^00// of God's people living intermingled with the wicked world, without any remarkable wall of feparation, was, that the Ions of God joined in marriage with others, and thereby foon became infe6fed, and the church was alraoft brought to nothing. The method that God then took was to drown the wicked world, and fave the church in the ark. And now the world, before Abraham was called, was become corrupt again. But here God took another me- thod. He did not deftroy the world, and fave Abraham, and his wife, and Lot in an ark ; but he calls thefe perfons to go and live feparate from the refl. This was a new and a s^eat thins, that God did toward the work of redemption. It was about the middle of the fpace of time between the fall of man and the coming of Chrifl ; about two thoufand ye.-^.rs before his incarna- tion. But by this calling of Abraham, the anceftor of Chrift, he fhall prefently be there ; and the toil and fatigue of his journey will be over. " So riiould we thus defue heaven fo much more than the com- forts and enjoyments of this life, that we fhould long to change thefe things for heaven. We fliould wait with an earntil defire for the time, when we fliall arrive at our journey's end. The apoftle mentions it as an encouraging, comfortable confideratlon to Chrif- tians, when they draw nigh their happinefs. ' Now is our falva- * tion nearer than when we believed.' [Rom. xiii. 11.] " Our hearts ought to be loofe to thefe things, as it is with a man that is on a journey. However comfortable enjoyments arc, yet we ought to keep our hearts fo loofe from them, as cheerfully to part with them whenever God calls. ' But this I fay, brethren, * the time is fliott, it remaineth, that both they that have wives, ' be as though they had none ; and they that weep, as though they * wept not ; and they that rejoice, as though they rejoiced not ; * and they that buy, as though they pofieffed not ; and they that * ufe thi'S world, as not abuhng it ; for the fafliion of this world * paffeth away.' [i. Cor. vii. 29, 30.] " We ought to look upon thefe things, as only lent to us for a little while, to ferve a prefent turn ; but we fliould fet our hearts on heaven as our inheritance for ever." [Pref. Edward's Pofth. Sermon, p. 371.] 134 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. Chrlll, a foundation was laid for the upholding the church in the world, till Chrill: fliould come. For the world hav- ing become idolatrous, there was a neceffity that the feed of the woman Ihould be thus feparated from the idolatrous world in order thereunto. It was alfo needful chat there fhould be a particular na- tion feparated from the reft of the world, to receive the types and prophecies that were to be given of Chrift, to prepare the way for his coming : that to them might be committed the oracles of God ; that by them the hiftory of God's great work of creation and providence miglit be preferved ; that fo Chrift might be born of this na- tion ; and from hence the light of the gofpel ftiine forth to the reft of the world. Thefe ends could not well be obtained, if God's people, through all thefe two thoufand years, had lived intermixed with the heathen world. So that this calling of Abraham may be looked upon as a kind of a new foundation laid for the viftble church of God, in a more diftind: and regular ftate, to be built on this foundation from henceforward, till Chrift Ihould avflually come, and then through him to be propagated to all na- tions. So that Abraham being the perfon in whom this foundation is laid, is reprefented in fcripture as though he were tlie father of all the church, the father of all them that believe ; as it were a root whence the vifiblc church rcfe as a tree diftin6l from all others'; of which tree Chrift was the branch of righteoufnefs ; and from which, after Chrift came, the natural branches were bro- ken off", and the Gentiles were grafted in. So that Abra- ham ftill remains (through Chrift) the father of the church. It is the fame tree which from that fmall be- ginning in Abraham's time, has in thefe days of the gof- pel fpread its branches over a great part 'of the earth, and will till the whole in due time, and at the end of the world be tranfplanted from an earthly foil into the Para- dife of God. 2. There accompanied this a more particular and full revelation and confirmation of the .covenant of grace than ever before had been. There were before this two par- ticular FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 13S ticular and folemn editions or confirmations of this co- venant ; one whereby it wac revealed to our firrt parents, foon after the fall; the other whereby God folemnly re- newed the fame covenant witli Noah and his family foon after the flood ; and now a third, at the calling of Abra-^ ham, which being much nearer the time of the coming of Chriil than either of the former, it was much more full and particular. It was now revealed, not only that Chrift {hould come, but that he fhould be Abraham s leed ; and tliat all the families of the earth fliould be bleffed m him God repeatedly promifed this to Abraham. Firfl, when he HrR called him, [Gen. xii. 2.] ' And I will <- make of thee a great nation, and I will blefs thee, and ' make thv name great: and thou ihak be a bleffing.' The fame'promife was renewed after he came into the Jand of Canaan, [chap. xiii. 14, &c.] Again alter Abra- ham returned from the flaughter of the kings, [chap.^v. 5, 6.] And a fourth time, after his otFering up liaac, [ch. xxii. 16, 17, 18] • , Au In this renewal of the covenant of grace with Abra- ham, feveral particulars concerning it were revealed more fullv than before ; not only that Chrift was to be of Abra- ham's feed; but alfo, the calling of the Gentiles, and the brin-lng all nations into the church, that all the families of the earth might be bleffed, was now made known. And •:he great condition of the covenant of grace, which is "-faitht was now more fully revealed. [Gen. xv. 5, 6.] ' /,nd he faid unto him, So Ihall thy feed be. And Abra- ^ ham believed God, and It was counted unto him for < rbhteoufnefs.' Which is much taken notice of in the \Tew Teftament, and from thence Abraham was called ^ the father of them tliat believe.' [Rom. iv. 2— 1 1-] And as there was now a farther revelation ot the co- venant of grace, fo there was a farther confirmation ot it bv feals and pledges, than ever had been before; as, particularly, God did now inftitute a certain facrament, to be a ftanding feal of this covenant in the vihble churcn, till Chrift fhould come, viz. circumclfion. Circumci- fion was a foal of this covenant of grace, as appears by T "^ 136 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. its firft inftitution, in the xviith chapter of Genefis. (\v) It there nppears to be a feal of that covenant by which God (w) God now wjl'tiuted circiimc'ifion.~\ " This was the firfl inftitution of circumciiion, and it was an inllltution of God, and not of man. Indeed Herodotus fays, that ' the Colchi, Egyptians * and Ethiopians only of all men circumcifed from the beginning ; * and the Phoenicians and Syrians, which are in Paleiline, learnt it * of the Egyptians, as they themfelves confefs.' So D'lochrus Si- culiis fpeaks of circumcifion as an Egyptian rite, and fays there are fome who make the nation of the Colchi, and of the Jews, to come from the Egyptians ; hence he obfcrves, that with thefc na- tions there is an ancient tradition to circumcifc their new-born in- fants, which rite was derived from the Egyptians: but as the ori- ginal of the Jewifh nation is miftaken, fo likewife the original of this rite. And they may as well be thought to be miftaken in the one as in the other. Thofe in Paleftine that were circumcifed were the Jews only, as Jofephus obferves ; but they did not learn this rite from the Egyptians, nor do they ever confefs it, but on the contrary fnggeft, that the Egyptians learnt it from them in the times of Jolcph ; for their principal lexicographer fays, the Egyp- tians were circumcifed in the times of Jofeph, and when Jofeph died they drew over the foreflcin of the flefli. The Colchi indeed, who were a colony of the Egyptians, might learn it from them; And fo the Ethiopians, who were their neighbours likewife, and agreed with them in many things. Artapamis, an heathen writer, fays indeed, that the Ethiopians, though enemies, had fuch a re- gard for Mofes, that they learned from him the rite of circumci- iion ; and not only they, but all the priefts, that is, in Egypt ; and indeed the Egyptian priefts only, and not the people, were cir- cumcifed. It is not very difficult to account for it, how other na- tions bcfides the Jews ftiould receive circumcifion, which was firft enjoined Abraham and his feed ; the Iftimaelites had it from Ifti- mael the Son of Abraham ; from them the old Arabs ; from the Arabs, the Saracens; and fiom the Saracens, the Turks to this d^y : other Arabian nations, as the Midianites, and others, had it from the fons of Abraham by Keturah ; and perhaps the Egyp- tians and Ethiopians from them, if the former had it not from the Ifraelites ; and the Edomites had it from Edcm or Efau, the fon of Ifaac, the fen of Abraham; fo that all originally had it from Abraham, and he by a divine command. It is not fo much to be wondered at, that Herodotus and Diodorus Siculus, men either impofed upon by the Egyptian priefts, as the former, or wrote in favour of that nation, as the latter, and \\'holly ignorant of divine revelation, fliould affert what they have done; but that Chriftian writers, who have the advantage of divine revelation, and have read the hiftory of the Bible, fuch as Mar/Jjatn, Spencer, and Le Clerc, Ihould incline to -the fame fentiment, is amazing ; and efpc- cially FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 137 God proniifed to make Abraham a father of many na- tions, compare the 5th with the 9th and loth verfes. And we are exprcfsly taught, that it was a feal of the righteoufuefs of faith, [Rom iv. u.] Speaking of Abra- ham, the apoftle fays, ' He received the fign of circum- * cifion, a feal of the righteoufnefs of faith.' And this facrament chiefly diftinguiflied Abraham's feed from the world, and kept up a feparation between them more than any other particular obfervance whatever. And befides this, there were other occafional feals, and confirmations, that Abraham had of this covenant; as, ^particularly, (i.) God gave Abraham a remarkable pledge of the ftilfilment of the promife he had made him, in his vi61:ory over Chedorlaomer and the kings that were with him. Chedorlaomer feems to have reigned over a great part of the world at that day: and though he had his feat at Elam, which was not much if any thing fnort of a thoufand miles from the land of Canaan, yet he ex- tended his empire fo as to reign over many parts of that land, as appears by chap. xiv. 4 — y. It is fuppofed by learned men, that he was a king of the AlTyrian empire, which had been begun by Nimrod at Babel.* And as it: was the honour of kings in thofe days to build new cites to be made the feats of empire, [Gen. x. 10—12.] fo it is conjeftured, that he had built him a city in Elam, and made that his feat ; and that the other kings, who came with him, were his deputies in the fevcral cities and coun- tries where they reigned. But yet as mighty an empire as T 2 he -cially when our blciTed Lord has cxprefsly fald, that circumcifion is of the fathers, [John vii. 22.] Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob; firfl; given to them, and praciifed by them. Even Tbeodotus, an hea- then writer, agrees with this facred teftimony of Mofes, when fpcaking of the circumcifion of Shcchem, in the times of Jacob, he traces this rite to its original, and obferves, that when Abraham was brought out of his own country, he was ordered yro??z ksavcn to circumcife every man in his houfe. It may indeed feeni ftrangc how it fliould obtain in the iflands of the Weft Indies, as in Jucu- tana, Sanfta Crux, and others, where the Spaniards fouad in the beginning of the fixteenth century thofe illcs inhabited by idolaterSs S?ho were circumcifed." [Gill on Gen. xvii. 10.] * See Sbuchford' s Connex. vol. ii, b. 6. 138 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. he had, and as great an army as he now came with, Abra- ham, only with his trained fervants that were born in his own lioufe, conquered and fubdued them all. This vic- toiy he received of God as a pledge cf the viclory that Chrift, his feed, ihould obtain over the nations of the earth, whereby he fhould poflefs the gates of his enemies. It is plainly fpoken of as fuch in the xlift Ifaiah. In that chapter is foretold the future glorious vi6iory the church fhall obtain over the nations of the world ; as you inay fee in verfes i, 10, 15, &c. But in verfes 2, and 3, this victory of Abraham is fpoken of as a pledge and earneft of the vi6lory of the church. ' Who raifed * up the righteous man from the eafl, called him to his * foot, gave the nations before him, and made him rule * over kings ? He gave them as the dufi: to tire fvvord, and * as driven ftubble to his bow. He purfued them, and * paffed fafely ; even by the way that he had not gone * with his feet.' (x) (2.) Another remarkable confirmation Abraham re- ceived of the covenant of grace, was when he returned from the flaughter of the kings ; when Mekhifedec the king of Salem, the prieft ot the mofi: high God, that great type of Chrifi:, met him, and bleffed Ijini, and brought forth bread and wine, (y) The bread and wine figni- (x) The righteous man from the east. 3 Some explain this of Abraham, others of Cytus ; " I rather think (fays an eminent pre- late) that the former is meant, becaufe the charafttr of the righ- teous man .... agrees better with Abraham than with Cyrus. Befides, immediately after the defcription of the fuccefs given by God to Abraham and his pofterity, (who, I prefume, arc to be taken into the account) the idolaters are introduced, as greatly alarmed at this event. Abraham was called out of the ealt ; and his pofterity were introduced into the land of Canaan, in order to deftroy the idolaters cf tliat country; and they were ellablifiied there on purpofe to ftaad as a barrier againit idolatry then prevail- ing, and threatening to over-run the whole face of the earth. Cy- rus, though not properly an idolater, or worfhipper of images, yet had nothing in hio chai after to cauic. fuch an alarm among the idolaters," ver. 5 — 7. [Bp. Lowth on ver. 2.] (y) Melchisedfc, /'W^'? of the mcjt high God.'] Many and oppofite have been the opinions, both of Jewifh and Chrillian writers, FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 139 fjgnifieth the fame bleflings of the covenant of grace, that the bread aiid wine does in the lacrament of the Lord's flipper. writers, on this extraordinary character ; but we fhall only recite the three principal : 1. Moft of the Jews, and many very learned Chrillians, under- fland it of Shem, who it fliould fcem by the facred chronology, was ftill living. — But to this it has been replied, that Melchifedec was not of that family, ' His defcent is not counted from them ;' [Heb. vii. 6.] — nor could Shem be faid to be ' without father and ' mother,' [Heb. vii. 3. J when we have his genealogy from Adani — nor could Levi be faid with any more propriety to pay tithes in Abraham, than to receive them in Shem, hnce he v^as as truly in the loins of Shem, as in thofe of Abraham — not to fay, that Abra- ham could hardly be faid to fojourn there, ' as in a llrange coun- * try,' if his anceltor Shem were king of it. 2. Many expofitor^, to avoid thefe ditliculties, have fuppofed that Melchifedec and Chrill were the fame perfon, and that this appearance mull be accounted for in the fame manner as feveral others under the Old Teilamcnt. But the apolHe feems evi- dently to diflinguifh the perfons, in making the former a type of the latter, [Heb. vii. throughout] and in affertiag [ver. 6. J that Chrift was a prieft ' after the order of Melchifedec' 3. We therefore think it fafcll:, with our author, and many other very refpeftable divines, to underltand the paffage literally, of a great prince, perhaps a defcendar.t of Canaan, who reigned ia Salem, [not Jerufalem, as fome think, but rather a tov.-n in the neighbourhood of Sodom, perhaps the fame called Shalem, in Gen. xxxili. 18. — See Gill on Gen. xiv. 18.] and who was both a king and prieft, as was not unufual under the patriarchal difpen- fation ; and yet more diftlngulflied by his piety than his rank. * Now' faith the apoftle, [Heb. vii. i — 5.] ' conlider how great * this man was,' — ' for this Melchifedec [was] king of Salem, * [and] prieft of the moft high God . . . Without fatiier, without 'mother, without defcent, having neither beginning of days nor * end of life, but made like unto tlic Son of God, [v/ho] abidctli * a prieft for ever ;' /'. e. " Of whofe father, mother, or pedigree, there is no mention .... (which notes him to be no prieft by de- fcent, as the Levitical priefts were, and accordingly their geneaolo- gies were preferved cxatily) as neither of his birth nor death . . . and fo ftands In the ftory^ as a kind of immortal prieft without any fucceftbr . . . (perhaps the laft prieft of the true God In Phrenlcla) this Melchifedec, I fay, was in all this an emblem of Cinift . . . • the King of Rightcoufnefs, and Prince of Pc;;ce." [Hammond in loc. See alfo D'jddn(lge.'\ The fa6l feems to be, that Melehliedec is in the hiftory intro- duced In fo abrupt and auguft a manner, that he might be tiie more fuitable tvpe, and In manv refpe<5ts prefigure our Lord jefus Chrift, 540 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. fupper. So that as Abraham had a fcal of the covenant in circun^cifion that was equivalent to baptifm, fo now he had a feal of it equivalent to the Lord's fupper. And Mel- chifedec's coming to meet him with fuch a feal of the co- venant of grace, on the occafion of this vi6lory, evinces ihat it was a pledge of God's fulfilment of the fame cove- nant ; for that is the mercy which Melchifedec takes notice of. [Gen. xiv. 19, 20.] (3.) Another was, the vifion that he had in the deep ileep that fell upon Abraham, of the fmoaking furnace and burning lamp, that pafTed between the parts of the facri- fice, [Gen. xv.] (z) That facrifice, as all facrifices do, figni- Chrift, of whom tLefe things were true, in a fenfe far more grand and important. — Infinite Redeemer ! How numberlefs are the rays of glory that form thy mediatorial crown ! How are all the excel- lencies of the moll illullrious charafters blended to fhadow thy fuperior dignity! [U. S.J (z) The VISION of the fmoaking funince.~\ "The order and •form of Abram's facrifice dcfcribed in the ninth and tenth vei fes 3S a full illuflration of the meaning of the words ; ' And he faid * unto him, Take me a heifer of three years old, and a fhe goat * of three years old, and a ram of tliree years old, and a turtle * dove and a young pigeon. And he took unto him all thefe, and * divided them in the midft, and laid each piece one againft ano- "* ther : but the birds divided he net.' And ' the Loid made a * covenant,' /. e. he cut afunder or divided a purifying victim. [See Note (o) p. 109.] Abram according to God's .comnland took an heifer, a flie goat, and a ram, each of three years old, flew them ; ■divided each into equal parts ; placed the feparated limbs oppofite to each other, leaving a paffage between ; paffed between the parts himfelf, according to the cuftom of tlie facrifice ; and when the fun was down, that the appearance might be more vifible and ftrik- ing, the JJ^echinah, or vifible taken of God's prefencc, paiFcd alfo between the divided limbs of the viftims, as a fmoaking furnace, and a burning lamp ; tlie final ratification of. this new treaty be- tween God and Abram ; whereby God gracioully became bound to give Abram a fon of his own bowels, who ftiould become the father of a great nation, and the progenitor, after the flefh, of the great Saviour and deliverer of the human race; and Abram on his part bound himfelf to a firm reliance upon all God's promifes, and cheerful obedience to all his commands. Such were the awful folemnitics of this important tranfactien They were evi- dently of divine inllitution, for God honoured them with his pre- feuce. \ FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 141' fignified the facrifice of Chrift. The fmoaking furnace that paffcd through the midlT: of that facrifice fignified the fence, approbation, and acceptance : they apparently had been long in ufc before this period, for Abram, without any particular inftrucllon, prepares and performs the facrifice ; and they certainly continued long in the church of God after this : for we find the practice as far down as the times of Jeremiah, that is, about the period of the diffolution of the Jewifli monarchy. The paiTage ftrikingly illuftrates and fupports the hiflory of Abram's cove- nant and facrifice [J^r. xxxiv. 18 — 20.] ' And * I will give the men that have tranfgrcfled my covenant, which * have not performed the words of the covenant which they had * made before me, when they cut the calf in twain, and pafled be- * tween the parts thereof, the princes of Judali, and the princes of * Jerufalcm, the eunuchs, and the prieils, and all the people of * the land, which pafleth between the parts of the calf ; I will even ' give them into the hand of their enemies, and into the hand of * them that feek their life ; and their dead bodies fiiall be for meat ' unto the fowls of the heaven, and the beafts of the earth.' Now the expreflions here employed, of ' polluting ,God's name, tranf- ' grefiing his covenant, and not performing it,' [fee the preceding context,] and the threatened puniihment of this violation, * their * dead bodies fliall be for meat unto the fowls of the heaven, and ' to the beafts of the earth,' explain to us in fome meafure, the meaning of thofe folemn ceremonies with which covenants were executed. And here furely it is not unlawful to employ the lights which are thrown on this fubjeft, by the practice of the Gentile nations, and the writings of profane authors. From them we learn, that on fuch occafions the cuftom was, that the contrafting party or parties, having pafled between the divided limbs of the facrifice, and exprcffed their full afient to the ftipulated terms of the agreement or covenant, in folemn words, pronounced with an audible voice, imprecated upon themlelves a bitter curfe, if they ever fliould break it. ' As I ftrike down this heifer, or ram, fo ' may God ftrike me with death, if I tranfgrefs my word and oath.' ' As the limbs of tliis animal are divided afunder, fo may my body * be torn in pieces, if I prove perfidious.' To give one inftance of many, from the two nations alluded to. The Greeks and the Trojans, according to Homer, having agreed to determine the great quarrel between them, by the iffuc of a fingle combat be- tween the two rivals, Menelaus and Paris, the terms being folemnly adjufted and confcntcd to on .both fides, the ratification of the covenant is thus defcribed, [Ilialf^ lib. iii. 268.] ' The Grecian * prince drew the facrcd knife, cut off a lock of wool from each of •' the heads of the devoted lambs, which being diftrlbuted among * the princes of the contending paities, he thus, with hands lifted -* and in a loud voice praved, * O firil 142 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. the fufferings of Chrift ; but the burning lamp tliat fal- lowed, which Ihone with a clear bright light, fignities the glory ' O firft and greatefl: Pow'r ! whom all obey, * Who high on Ida's holy mountain fway, * Eternal Jove ! and you bright orb that roll * From eatl to weft, and view from pole to pole ; * Thou mother earth ! and all ye living floods ! * Infernal furies, and Tartarean gods, * Who rule the dead, and horrid woes prepare * For perjur'd kings, and all who falfely fwear ! * Hear and be witnefs. If, [Pope.] *' Then, having repeated the words of it [the covenant] in tht audience of all, he cleft afunder the heads of the confecrated lambs, placed their palpitating limbs oppofite to each other on the ground, poured facred wine upon them, and again prayed, or rather im- precated : ' Hear, mighty Jove ! and hear, ye gods on high ! ' * And niay their blood, who hrft the league confound, * Shed like this wine, diftain the thirfty ground : * May all their conforts ferve promifcuous luft, ' And all their race be fcattered as the duft !' [Pope.] *' Thus when it was agreed to fettle the conteft for empire be- tween Rome and Alba by the combat of three youths, biothers, on either fide ; after the interpofition of ceremonies fimilar to thofe which have been defcribed, the Roman prieil who prefided, ad- dreffed a prayer to heaven to this effect ; ' Hear, Father Jupiter, * hear. Prince of Alba, and ye whole Alban nation. Whatever * has been read from that waxen tablet, from firft to laft, according * to the plain meaning of the words, without any refervation what- ' ever, the Roman people engage to ftand to, and will not be the ' firft to violate. If with a fraudulent intention, and by an aft of * the ftate, they fliall firft tranfgrefs, that very day, O Jupiter, ftrike * the Roman people, as I to-day fliall ftrike this hog, and fo much * the more heavily, as you are more mighty and more powerful * than me.' And having thus fpoken, with a fliarp flint, hedaftied out the brains of the animal. " Thus in the three moil illuftrious nations that ever exifted, we find the origin of their greatnefs, in fimilar ceremonies ; empire founded in religion, and good faith fecured by the fanction of fo- lemn facred rites. And is it not pleafing to find the living and true God, as in refpetl of maiefty and dignity, fo in priority of time, taking the lead in all tliat is great and venerable among men ? We find Mofcs, the prince of facred writers, defcribing a religious iacrifice, performed by Abram one thoufand nine hundred and thirteen years before Chrift, which the prince ot heathen poets fo exaclly defcribes as the praftice of liis own country upwards of one FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 143 glory that followed ChrilVs fuffcrings, and was procured by them. (4.) Another pledge thai God gave Abraham of the ful- filment of the covenant of grace, was his gift of that child of whom Chrifl: was to come, in his old age. This is fpoken of as fuch in fcripture ; Heb. xi. 11, 12. and al£b Rom. iv 18, &c. (5.) Again, in his delivering Ifiac, after he was laid upon the wood of the facritice to be flain, (a) God gave Abraham one thoufand years later : and which the great Rdman hiftorian relates as in ufe among his countrymen, in the time of Tulius Hoftilius, the third king of Rome, before Chrift about fix hun- dred and fixty-elght years." [Hunter's Sac. Biogr. vol. i. lee. xiii.] (a) Ifaac laid upon the wood . . . . fo be sLAiy}.^ "Abraham (fays Mr. Hervey) was an eminent and diiringuifhed fervant of the Moll High God. Favoured with peculiar manifeftations of the divine will, and dignified with the honourable title of his Maker's friend. Yet even this man is harralfed vvith a long fuc- ceffion of troubles ; and, which was reckoned in thofc ages the mod deplorable calamity, goes childlefs. Long he waits, worfhipping God with the moli patient refignation. At length, an oracle from the Lord gives him . . . affurance of a fon. Joyfully he receives the promife, and rcfts in humble expeftation of its accomplifhment. .... At lad the handmaid becomes pregnant. But . . . this is the fon of the bondwoman, not of the free. " How afflicting the cafe of this excellent perfon ! His kinsfolk and acquaintance fee their olive branches flourifhlng round about their tables. Even his ungodly neighbours have children at their delire, and leave the refidue ofthelr fubilance for their babes. But Abraham, the v/orfliipper of Jehovah, the favourite of heaven — this Abraham is dcilitute of an heir, to fupport his name, to pro- pagate his family, or to inherit the bl>;fling. . . God is pleafcd to renew the grant, and alfure him more explicitly, that Sarah fhall have a fon. But this notice comes at a very- late period in life ; when Sarah is advanced in years, and too old, according to the courfe of nature, to conceive. Flowever, the pious patriarch * daggers not through unbelief ; but hopes even agaiad hope.* £Rom. iv. 18 — 20.] " At lad, the gift, fo earnedly dcfircd, is vouchfafed. Sarah has a child — 2^ Jon — an Ij'aac. One who ihould be a fource of con- folation and delight to his parents; 'Ihould fill their mouth with * laughter, and ihelr tongue with joy.' With tender care, doubt- lefs, this pleafant plant is reared. Many prayers are put up, for his long life and great happinefs. The fond parents v.atch over U ■ him. 14+ HISTORY OF RE D E MPT I O IST. Abraham another confirmation of liis faith in the pro- mi fe him, as over the apple of their own eye. Their life is bound up in the life of the lad. He grows in grace, as lie grows in ftature. Now, mcthinks, we are ready to congratulate the happy Sire ; and flatter ourfelves, that his tribulations have an end .... But ' let not him that girdcth on his liarnefs, boall himfelf, as he * that putteth it off.' Our warfare on earth is never accomplifhed, till we bow our head, and give up the ghoft. The fliarpeft, the fevereft trial is Hill behind. " Abraham ; fays God — Abraham knows the voice. It is the voice of condefcending goodnefs. He had often heard it with a rapture of delight. Inftantly he replies, ' Here I am. Speak, ' Lord ; for thy fervant is all attention.' Hoping, no doubt, to receive fome frefn manifellatiou of the divine good-will to himfelf and his family ; or fome new difcovery of the method, in which the divine "Wifdom would accomplini the prcmlfes — ' I will mul- * tiply thy feed — I uIU make thy feed as the duit of the earth. — ' In thy feed fliall all the families of the earth be bleffed.' " Take thy fon ; adds God. And might net Abraham rea- fonably expedf , that, iince his fon was arrived to years of maturity, he fliould be direfced now to, fettle him in the world with honour and advantage ? . . . He is commanded, not barely to take \\\^fon, but his only fon ; his fon Ifaac, whavahs Icveil . . . Mull not fuch an introdu6lion, fo remarkably endearing, heighten his expecta- tion of lome fi-gnal mercy to be conferred on the beloved youth ? And would it not render the blefiing . . . more than doubly wel- come ? " V\7^as he not then ftartled ? Was he not horribly am.azed ? When, indead of feme renewed expreffion of the Divine favour, he received the following orders : ' Take now thy fon, thy only ion, 'Ifaac, whom thou lovelt, and get thee into the land of Moriah, * and offer hmi there for a burnt offering, upon one of the moun- ' tains which I will tell thee of.' Was ever defcriptioft fo affeft- ing, or meffage fo alarming ! . . . . Every word in this injunftion foftens and entenders the parent's heart, and at the fam.c time fliarpens tlie arrow, that mxUc pierce it through and through. " Abiaham, take thy fon,' — Who, but Abraham, could have forborti remonllrating and pleading on fuch an occafion ? — Ana- nias, being charged with a commifTion to Saul tlie perfecutor, takes upon him to argue the cafe v^'itll his Almighty Sovereign. — * Lord, I have heard by many concerning this man, how much * evil he hath done to l.hy faints at Jerufalem ; and here he hath ' authoiity from the chi=ef priefts to bind all that call upon thy 'name.' [At'f s ix. 13, 14.] Thus Ananias. With how much greater appearance of reafon might Abrajiam have replied? ' L,ord, have I not already left my country ; left my kindred, ' and, at thy command, left my father's houfe ? And wilt thou ' now FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 145 ■mife that God had made of Chrlfl:, tliat lie fl\ould he oF Ifaac's now bereave me of my child ? Mud I part, not with fomc ad- mired folly or darling vanity, but witli the moft worthy objeft of a rational affeftion ; indeed with my only remaining confo- lation ? — Shall I be deprived of my child, almoft as fmn as I have received him ? Didfl: thou give him only to tantalize thy fervant ? Remember, gracious God ! the name he bears. How fhall he anfwer its cheering import i* How fhall he be a fourcc of fatisfaftion to his parents, or the father of many nations, if thou takefthim away in his unmarried ftate, and the very prime of his years ? * If fin lies at the door, let me expiate the guilt. Let th.ou- fands of rams, let erery bullock in my ftalls bleed at thy altar. My wealth, moft mightv Lord, and all my goods, are nothing- in comparifon of my Ifaac. Command me to be fl ripped of my poffcllions ; command me to roam as a fugitive and a vaga- bond in the earth, and I will blefs thy holy name. Only !>.t my child, my dear child, be fpared. * Or, if nothing will appeafe thy indignation but human blood, let my death be the facrifice ; upon me be the vengeance. I am old and grey-headed. The beft of my days are pall:, and the bell: of my ferviccs done. If this tottering wall tumbles, there will belittle, or no can fe for regret. But, if the pillar of my houfe, and the fupport of my family — if he be fnatched from me, what good will my life do rae ? * 0 my Son ! my Son ! ivouJd God I might die for thee. ^ \_z Sam. xviii. 33.] ' If it mufc be a blooming youth, in the flower of his days, be pleafed, moft merciful God, to fcleft the vicftim from fome fruit- ful family. There are thofe, who abound in Children. Chil- dren are multiplied unto them ; and though many were removed, yet would their table be full. There art thofe, who have flocks and herds ; whereas, I have «nly this one little lamb ; the very folace of my foul, and the ftay of my declining years. And fliall this be taken away, while all tly^fe are left ? [2 Sam. xii. 3.] * Yet, if he mujl die, and there is no remedy ; may he not at leaft expire by a natural difTolution ? May not fom.e common dif- temper unloofe the cords of life, and lay him down gently in the tomb ? May not his fond mother and mvfelf feal his clofing eyes, and foften his dying pangs by our tender ofHces V No, Abraham. Thy fon muft be flauglitertd on the altar. . . . The facrihcing knife, and not any common difeafe, ftiall bring him to his end It is the liOrd's will, tliat he be cut in pieces ; cinfumed to aflies ; and made a burnt offering ' But rf * all muft be executed ; God forbid, that I fnould behold the dif- -* mal tragcdv ! .... O! let it be far, far from tlie f:ght of thcfe ' eyes!' U 2 " Even 146 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION, Ifaac's polterity ; and was a representation of the refur- red:ion *' Even this mitigation cannot be granted. Thou, Abraham, rnuft fee him flain. — Nay ; thou muR be the executioner of thy Ifaac= Is not the wretched father ftunned and thnnderftruck ? . . . " Nature recoils at the very thought ! How then can the bell of fathers perform the deed ? — How lliall he anfwer it to the wife ofhisbofom, the mother of the lovely youth ? .... Will flie not have leafon to reproach Abraham, and fay in the anguifla of lier fpirit, * A bloody huiband haft thou been to me. — [Exod, iv. i<^-'\ How can he juftify it to the ivorla? They will never be perfuaded that the God of goodnefs can delight in cruelty, or authorize fo horrid an action. Might not thoufands of fuch confide- rations crowd into his thoughts, and rack his very foul ? " But God is unchangeable. Pofitive is his word, and muft be obeyed. Obeyed immediately too. Take wow thy fon. The Lord's command requireth fpeed. . . . This the patriarch knew. Therefore he waits not for a fecond injunftion. He confults not With flefli and blood But, without a murmuring word, without a moment's delay, fets forward on his journey. '■^ And canft thou, Abraham, canft thou perlill in thy purpofe ? Is not this child the heir of the prom ifes, both tempo- ral, and fpiritual, and eternal \ — Is not the great MefTiah, whofe day thou haft fo paffionately defired to fee ; whofe perfon is the hope of all the ends of the earth ; is not that great Mefliah to fpring from his loins? From /w loins, whom thou art about to kill; — The bk'fimg, thou knoweft, is appropriated to him. The grand entail is fettled upon him — upon Ifaac by name — upon Ifaac alone, if he perifii, all is loft. — Canft thou, then, alone blow, deftroy the life of thy fon ; facrifice all thy earthly joys ; and cut oft' the hopes of the whole world: — Will none of thefe confide - rations difcourage, difliiade, deter thee ? " Moft triumphant faith indeed ! defervcdly art thou ftyled, The Father of the Faithful. Thy faith is ftroiiger tlian all the ties ofaffeftion; ftronger than all the pleas of nature; ftronger than all the terrors of death — of a death, in its circumftances and in its confequenceg, incomparably more dreadful than thv own. " Now muft he travel during three tedious, and, one would think, moft melancholy d-nys. . . ' On the third day, Abraham * lift up his eyes, and law the place afar off"!' — Doleful fight ! , . . Does not the profpedl alarm all his tender paffions ? No, it only awakens hiscircumfpedlion. The fervants are commanded to ad- vance no farther . . . . He himfelf, with" the fire and the knife in his hands ; and his fon, with the burden of wood on his Ihouldcrs, went both of them together. — Who docs not pity the dear devoted youth, toihng under that load which muft foon reek with his blood, and foon reduce him to alhes ? — Mean while the intended vidxim, wondering to fee ail theie preparations rnadc, ar.d no proper ani- mal FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 147 reilion of Chrill; ; [fee Heb. xi. 17--19.] And becaufc this was given as a confirmation of the covenant of grace, therefore nial near, afl a muil beautiful diiplay of the communication opened between heaven and earth, tlnough the medium of a Redeemer. Its extending from eaitli to heaven, points out a way of accefs to God for fallen man. The various ileps mark the progrefs of the divine life, and the walk of a be- liever, every ilcp of which approaches nearer heaven and gloiy- The angel's afcending and delcending iliews the office of thole mi- nillering fpirits, in performing embaifies of.kindnefs for us. And the Lord fianding above, and renewing hir> covenant, may teach us, that all its bleliingR r.re beilowed in that means of communica- tion, namely, througl; the nxxliation of the Son of God. [U. S.] FROM ABRAHAiMs CALL TO MOSES. 157 And Jacob liaJ anorher remavlcable confirmation of this covenant at Pcnuel, where he wiefilcd with God, and prevailed ; (e) where Chrift appeared to him in a human form ; in the form of that nature which he was af- terwards to receive into a perfonal union with his divine nature. And God renewed his covenant with him again, after he was come out of Padan-aram, and was come up to Be- thel, and the rtone that he had refted on ; and where he had the vifion of the ladder. [Gen. xxxv. 10. &c.] Thus the covenant of grace was now often renewed, much oftener than it had been before. The light of tlie gofpel now began to fiilne much brighter, as the time drew nearer that Chrift ihould come. 6. The next thing I would obfcrve, is God's remark- ably preferving the family of which Chrift was to proceed from perilhing by famine, by the inftrumentality of Jo- seph, (f) When there was a feven-years famine approach- ing, God was pleafed by a wonderful providence, to fend Jqfeph into Egypt, there to provide for, and feed Jacob and his family, and to keep the holy feed alive, which otherwife would have perifhed. Jofepli was fent into Egypt (e) Jacob WRESTLED iv'ith the nnge/.^ " Jacob was now paf- fing with his whole family into the land of Canaan, to take feizure of it, by virtue of the promife on the behalf of his poltcrity. At the very entrance of it, he is met by his greatcfl: adverfary, with whom he had a fevere conteft about the promife and the inheri- tance itfelf. This was his brother Efau, who, coming againll him with a power which he was no ways able to withftand, he fear- ed that he would utterly deftroy both his perfon and pofterity. .... Wherefore to fettle Jacob's right, to preferve him with \m title and intcrcfl, /v who was principally concerned in t'le whole matter, doth here appear unto him." [Dr. Owen's Exerclta- tions on the Hebrews, vol. i. p. 118.] But this and the other extraordinary appearances of a divine perfon under the OldTefta- ment, will be colleftively confidered under a future fe(5lion. (f) JofcJ)//s hijlory remarlal'Ic;.] Few lives in the Old Tefta- ment hillory ate fo interclling as that of Jofeph ; in which the mod obfervable feature is its frequent, fudden, and important vi- ciflitudes. And v.e may truly fay, his life was of as many colours ,83 his coat. Li youth the darling or his parents ;— but the envy 158 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. Egypt for that end, as he obferves, [Gen. 1. 20.] ' But ' as for you, ye thought evil againft me ; but God meant ' it unto good to f;ve much people alive.' How often had this holy root, that had the future branch of r,ighteoufnefs, the glorious Redeemer, in it, been in danger of being de- flroved ! But God wonderfully prcferved it. This falvation of the houfe of Ifrael by the hand of Jofeph, was upon feme accounts very much a refem- blance of his brethren. Sold into Egypt for a flave ; made fteward of hismafter's houfe ; thrown into prifon on a falfe but criminal ac- ciifation ; raifed from a prifon to a throne ; honoured as the father even of Pharaoh, the faviour of Egypt, and the favourite of hea- ven ; he faves the lives and raifcs the fortunes of his father, and of thofe very brethren who hated and fold him ; and clofes his life with honour, happinefs, and tranquility. But among the many incidents of his life, no one is more re- markable or inftruftive than that of his temptation to inchaftity, and the manner in which he refifted it. On this our author has clfewhere the following obfervations : " We may obferve, how great the temptation was, that lie was under. It is to be confidered, Jofeph was now in his youth ; a feafon of life, when perfons are moft liable to be overcome by temp- tations of tin's nature. And he was in a ftate of unexpe6led prof- perity in Potiphar's houfe ; which has a tendency to hft perfons up, efpeciallv young ones, whereby commonly they more eafily fall before temptations. *' And then the fuperiority of the perfon that laid the tempta- tion before him, rendered it much the greater. She was his inif- trefs, and he a fervant under her. And the manner of her tempt- ing him. She did not only carry herfelf fo to Jofeph, as to give him caufe to fufpeft that he might be admitted to fuch criminal converfe with her, that yet might be accompanied with fome ap- prehenfion, that poflibly he might be miftaken, and fo deter him from adventuring on inch a propofal ; but flie directly propofed it to him ; plainly manifelling her difpofition to it. . . . Yea, fhe appeared greatly engaged in the matter. And there was net only her dcfne manifefted to entice him, but her authority over him to enforce the temptation. She was his miftrefs, and he might well imagine, that it he utterly refufed a compliance, he fliould incur her difpleafure ; and flie, being his mailer's wife, had power to do much to his difadvantage, and to render his circumftanccs more uncomfortable in the family. And the temptation was the greater, in that ftie did not only tempt him once, but frequently, day by day, [Gen. xxxix. 10.] And at lad became more violent with FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 159 blance of the falvation of Chrift. The children of Tf- rael were faved by Jofeph their kinfman and brother, from with him. She caught him by his garment, faying, * Lie with me :' as in the verfe of the text. []Gcn. xxxix. 1 2.] " His behaviour was very remarkable under thefe terfiptationS. He complied in no degree, either to the grofs act fhe propofed, or any thing tending towards it, or that fhould in a lefTer degree be gratifying to her wicked inclination. And he pcrfilled refolute and unfhaken under her continual folicitations. ' And it came to * pafs as Ihe fpake to Jofeph day by day, that he hearkened not * unto her, to lie by her, or to be with her.' He, to his utmoft^ avoided fo much as being where (lie was. And the motives and principles from which he aifhed, manifclled by his reply to her fo- licitations, are remarkable. " He tirll fets before her, how injurioufly he fhould aft againfl his mafter, if he fhould comply with her propofal : * Behold my * mailer — hath committed all that he hath in my hand : there is * none greater in this houfe than I ; neither hath he kept back * any thing from me, but thee, becaufe thou art his wife.' But he then proceeded to inform her of that, which above all things, deterred him from a compliance, viz. that it would be great wick- ednefs, and fm againft God. — ' How (hall I do this, and fin * againft God!' He would not do any fuch thing, as he would not injure his mafter; but that which influenced more than all on this occafion, was the fear of finning againft God. *' In the text we have an account of his behaviour under the laft and greateft temptation that he had fiom her. This temptation was great, as we are told it was at a time when there was no body in the houfe, but he and his miftrefs, [ver. 1 1.] there was an opportunity to commit the fa6f with the greateft fecrecy. And at this time it feems that fhe was more violent than ever be- fore. She ' caught him by the garment' — ftie laid hold on him, as though (he were refolute to attain her purpofe of him. " Under thefe circnmftances he not only refufed her, but fied from her, as he would have done from one that was going to affaf- finate or murder him ; he efcaped, as for his life. He not only would not be guilty of fuch a faft, but neither would he by any means be in the houfe with her, where he fhould be in the way of her temptation. " This behaviour of Jofeph is doubtlefs recorded for the in- ftruftion of all. Therefore from the words I fliall obferve this dodrine — ' It is our duty, not only to avoid thefe things that are * themfelves finful, but alfo, as far as may be, thofe things that * lead and expofe to fin.' " Thus did Jofeph : he not only refufed aftually to commit uncleannefs witli his miilrefs, who inticedhim; but refufed .... to lie bv her, or be with her. And in the text we are told, * he y « fled i6o HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. from peiifliing by famine ; as he that faves the fouls of the fpi ritual Ifrael from fpiritual famine is their near kinf- man, and one that is not alhamed to call them brethren. Jofeph was a brother, that they had hated, and fold, and as it v.ere killed; for they had defigned to kill him; So Chrift is one that we naturally hate, and by our wicked lives, have fold for the vain things of the world, and that we have flain by our fms. Jofeph was iirfl; in a ftate of humiliation ; he was a fervant, as Chrift ap- peared in the form of a fervant ; and then was caft into a dungeon, as Chrift defcended into the grave ; and then, when he rofe out of the dungeon, he was in a ftate of great exaltation, at the kings riglu hand as his depu- ty, to reign over all his kingdom, to provide food, to preferve life ; as Chrift was exalted at God's right hand to be a prince and faviour to his brethren, and received gifts for men, even for the rebellious, and them that hated and had fold him. f n. After this there was a prophecy given forth of Chrift, on fome accounts, more particular than ever any had been before, even that which was in Jacob's bleffing his fon Judah, this was more particular in Ihew- \x\o- of whofe pofterity he was to be. When God called Abraham, it was revealed that he was to be of Abraham's pofteritv- Before we have no account of any revelation concerning Chrift's pedigree confined to narrower limits than the pofterity of Noah : atter this it was conlined to limits ' fied and got him out ;' would by no means be in her company. Though it was no fm in itfelf, for Jofeph to be in the houle where his miltrefs was ; but under tliefe ciicumllances it would expofe him to fin. Jofeph was fenfible he had naturally a corrupt heart, that tended to betray him to fin ; and therefore he would by no means be in the way of temptation ; but with hade he fled, he ran from the dangerous place. Inafmuch as he was expofed to fin in that houfe where he was, he fled out of it with as much haile as if the houfe had been all a light of fire ; or full of enemies, wha ftood ready witli drawn fwords to ftab him to the very heart. When {lie took him by the garment, he left his garment in her hands : he had rather lofe his garment than Hay a moment where he was in fuch danger of lofing his chaftity." [P^ef. Edwakds's Poftli. Serm. p. 150, kc.'\ FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. i6i llmifs ftill more narrow ; for though Abraham had many fons, yet it was to be revealed that Chrill: was to be of Ifaac's pofterity. And then it was Hmited more ftill : for when Ifaac had two fons, it was revealed that Chrift was to be of Ifracl's pofterity. And now, though Ifrael had twelve fons, yet it is revealed that Chrift was to be of Ju- dah's pofterity: Chrift is ' the lion of the tribe of Judah.' Refpedt is chiefly had to his great a£ls, when it is faid, [Gen. xlix. 8,9.] ' Judah, thou art he whom thy brethren ' fhall praife ; thine hand ftiall be in the neck of thine * enemies ; thy father's cliildren Ihall bow down before ' thee. Judah is a lion's whelp ; from the prey, my fon, * thou art gone up: he ftooped down, he couched as a lion, ' and as an old lion; who I'hall roufe him up ?' And then this predi6lion is more particularly concerning the time of Chrift's coming, [verfe 10.] * The fceptre fhall not de- * part from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, * iintil Shiloh come ; and unto him ihall the gntherinpr of ' liie people be.' The prophecy here, of the calling of the Gentiles confequent on Chrift's coming, feems to be more plain than had yet been, in the exprefliion, ' to him fliall * the gathering of the people be.' (g) Thus (g) "Jacob's prophecy 0/" Shiloh.] " This remarkable pafTage (fays Mr. Toplady) is a link of that grand chain of prophecv, which was delivered by the patriarch Jacob, on his dying bed. Such are the faithfulnefs and the condefcending grace of God, that he frequently brightens the laft hours of his people, with the richcfl; difplays of his power and prefence : nor does any thing, fhort of heaven itfelf, afford a nobler hght, than that of a believer (landing on the verge of eternity, filled with the faith which cafls out fear, happy in the aflured poffeffion of grace, and h)nging for the completion of that grace in glory. " For we find him [chap, xlviii. 21.] fpeaking of his own ap- proaching death, with as much eafe and complacency, as if he was only fetting out on a journey of pleafure : ' Ifrael faid unto * Joleph, Behold, I die.' He perceived the fymptoms of advanc- ing diffolution : and the profpccl conduced, not to alarm his fears, not to rivet aim clofer to the world; but operated like the fliining of the fun, or the breathings of zephyr, on a flower. It expanded his hone ; enlarged his defire for heaven ; and dif- Y 2- fufed i62 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. Thus you fee how that gofpel-Iight which dawned imr mediately after the fall of man, gradually increafed. 8. The fiifed the fragrance of his faith, on all within the fphere of his donverfation. " Ae, greatly as this ertiinent faint longed to be diffblved, and to be with Chrift; he would not die, until he had taken a folemn leave of his family, by bleffing them in the name of the Lord, and by predicting the fate of their pofterities. At prefent, I fiiall only confider his laft addrefs to Jydah, his fourth fon. ' Judah, thou art ' he, whom thy brethren fhall praife;' i. e. thy tribe fhall be the moft confpicuous and diftinguifhed, on various accounts. In that portion of Canaan, which fliall fall to thy defcendants and to thofe of Benjamin, the city of Jerufalem fhall be built, and the temple of God fhall ftand. But chiefly fhalt thou be celebrated, as the proge- nitor of that fpotlefs mother, from whom the Son of God fhall derive his inferior nature: and, within the near neighbourhood of thy ter- ritory fhall he fuffer and expire, for the falvation of his people. " But the moft valuable part of the prophecy is that which re- lates to the incarnation of Jefus Chrift : ' The fceptre fhall not * depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until * Shiloh came; and to him fhall the gathering of the people be.' " Of all regal ornaments, the fceptre is faid to be the moft an- cient. And, probably, its OTigin was extremely fimple. It feems to have taken its rife from the crook, wielded, in earlieit times, by the harmlefs hand of a fhepherd. The Greek word \_'ZKr,Tp.^ov~\ (from whence the Latin fceptrum, and the Englifh fceptre,) pro- perly denotes a ftafF, or wand, of fufficient length for a perfon to lean upon : and the Hebrew [tD^IZ/] is in ftridtnefs a ftaff made of a fhoot or ftrait bough of a tree. Such as were the ftaves of the primitive fhepherds and herdfmen. " By that fceptre, which, for a given time, was not to depart from Judah, is undoubtedly meant, the adminiftration of tempo- ral power. Hence the Septuagint render the pafTage, A fupreme governor fhall not fail out of Judah; .... till the MefTiah's ad- vent. The words, fceptre, and lawgiver, are here explicatory of each other; and mutually denote, a ferles of native governors, who fhould rule the Jewifh nation according to its own law. And the fenfe of the whole is, that Judah fhould continue a diftinft tribe by itfelf; and that its civil jurIfdi(R:ion fhould, under fome form or other, and with a greater or lefs degree of authority, remain in Jewifh hands, till the incarnation of God the Son *' On this illuftrions prophecy, uttered almoft eighteen hun- dred years before the birth of Chrift, prophrne hiftory may be confidered as the beft commentary. We-thcre find, that the fcep- tre did (not adlually depart, but) begin to depart from Judah, or verge towards a departure, within little more than half a century prior FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 163 8. The work of redemption was carried on in this period, in God's wonderfully preferving the children of Ifrael prior to our Lord's nativity, when Jerufalem was beficged and taken by Pompey ; and Ariftobulus II. then king of Judea, was fent prifoner to Rome. " As the manifeftation of God in human flefh drew nearer, the fymptoms of the departing fceptrc grew ftill more vifible. The fucceflive expeditions of Gabinius, of Craffus, and of CaiTius, againft this devoted people, contributed to prepare the way for the fulfilment of Jacob's prediftion ; and, in fad, proclaimed, that Shiloh would fomi appear. " The fceptre, however, was not, hitherto, departed from Ju- dah : their civil power and independency, though checked, were not extinguifhed. They were ftill governed by maglftrates of their own ; and were even treated, on various occafions, not as depen- dents, but as friends and allies of the Roman Itate. " A few years lower, when Herod (flatteringly furnamed, the great,) a native of Edom, was appointed Tetrarch, and (foon after King) of Judea, chiefly by his intereft with Mark Antony ; the prophecy drew nearer to its accomplifliment. But though the throne was now, for the firfl; time, filled by a foreigner ; ftill, that foreigner was a profefibr of Judaifm.. Herod revered, or at Icafl; affefted to revere, the Mofaic inftitutions ; and even rebuilt [or rather repaired] the temple, at a vaft expence. The fubordinate magiftracy, alfo, confifted of Jews : as did the fanhedrim, which was their higheft court of judicature. The fceptre, therefore, though departing faft, was not entirely gone from Judah, ere Shiloh came. Chrift was born towards the clofe of this Herod's reign ; /. e. while the political and ecclefiaftical conftitution of Judea were fubfifting. Herod, indeed, was in fome fenfe tribu- tary to the Roman empire : but the Jews tliemfelves were, for the moft part, in full pofleffion of their civil and religious rights. " When our blefled Saviour was about twelve years of age, the fceptre totally departed fram Judah. For, Herod (who died while our Lord was yet an infant) was fucceeded by his fon Ar- chelaiis ; which Archelaiis, after reigning about ten years, was depofed and baniflied by the emperor Auguftus. From thence- forward, the tribe of Judah, which hud fo long been diilinguiflied by its dignity and pre-eminence, was reduced to a Roman pro- vince, and became an appendage to the empire. Quirinius, pre- feft of Syria, ys-as commiftioned to take poflTeffion of the country in the emperor's name ; and Coponius, a Roman knight, was fent to prefide over it, as lieutenant governor. " Thus did the fceptre, at length, depart from Judah, and a lawgiver from between h.is feet. Auguftus drove the nail to the head ; and Titus clenched it, within forty years after our Lord's urucifixion ; when the city and temple were utterly deftroyed, and thofc i64 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. Ifrael in Egypt, when the power of Egypt was engaged utterly to deftroy them. They feemed to be wliolly in the thofe of the Jews, who efcaped immediate death, were fold for flavesinto every part of tiie known world. " It is certain, therefore, that the promifed Shiloh is come : and Jefus Chriti the righteous, in whofe childhood the fceptre de- parted, is both the Son of the mod high God, and likewife the true MelTiah, of whom Mofes in the law, and the prophets, did write. " Shiloh, may be rendered the Son ; alfo the Saviour ; like- wife, the peaceable, and the profperous one. The Septuagint tranflates, or rather paraphrafes it, by, ' He for whom [all] things * are laid up, or kept in ilore.' In his adorable perfon, and moft v/onderful ofiices and tranfaftions, Jcfus exhaiifts every one of thofe fignifications. He is, the Son of God ; the only Saviour, the peace-maker between God and men. He profpered and prevailed, to the uttermoft, in the whole and in every branch of his media- torial undertaking. And, for him, all things are referved. " To him fl->all the gathering of the people be. It is plain, from this claufe of t-he text before us, that redemption by Chrill is not a random and precarious thing. . . . He was born, and fhed his blood, ' for a peculiar people, whom his own fanftifying grace * was to make zealous of good works ;' [Tit. ii. 14.] and that he might ' gather together into one glorified company, all the chil- * dren of God that were fcattered abroad.' [John xi. ^2."] [Gofpel Mag. Dec. 1776.] The latter might be rendered, with a flight variation, ' until * Shiloh come, and the people be gathered unto him,' which flill more exaSly correfponded with the event; for great multitudes, both of Jews and Gentiles, were aftually gathered to Chrifl, befoie the fceptre tofaily departed, by the dellruftion of the Jewiih flate ; and this indeed our Lord liimfelf predifted. [Matt. xxiv. 14.] But it fliould not be concealed, that a learned Jew of the prefent age (Mr. Levi) has offered another tranflation of part of this verfe, which, if admitted, would overturn the whole of this expo- fition, anel turn the tables on us completely : ' The fceptre fhall .' not depart from Judah, nor the lawgiver from between his feet * for ever, hecaufe Shiloh \j.e. MefRah] fliall come,' l^c. And in fupport of this tranflation he adds, " I fliall juft mention, that ac- cording to the common tranflation, which all the Chriilian writers feem lio have adopted, the adverb, bccavfe, flands for a cypher in the text, as no word is given for it ; and wliich, I think, is a de- monlbation of the truth of my expofition, and the fallity of the common tranflation ; whether defignedly or not, is not now before me." But fuppofe for a moment tliat his interpretation were the .Chriflian one, and fav(>ia'ablc to our caufe, would he not have faid, ' VV^hat FROM ABRAHAM'S CALL TO MOSES. 165 the hands of the Egyptians ; they were their fervants, and were fubje6V to the power of Pharaoh, who fet himfelf to weaken them by hard bondage. And when he faw that did not do, he fet himfelf to extirpate the race of them, by commanding that every male child ihould be drowned. But after all that Pharaoh could do, God wonderfully pre- ferved them ; and not only fo, but increafed them exceed- ingly ; fo tf^^t inflead of being extirpated, they greatly multiplied. 0. Here is to be obferved, not only the prcfervation of the nation, but God's wonderfully preferving and uphold- ing his iuvifiiile cb.urch in that nation, when in danger of being overwhelmed in the idolatry of Egypt. The chil- dren of Ifrael being long among the Egyptians, and beirg lervants * What a grofs combination is here of ignorance, prevarication, ' and falfhood ?' At leall he might have faid fo with more appear- ance of reafon than the ccnfure he has above infinuated ; for in printing the Hebrew text he has artfully divided the words, or rather ivurd, in difpnte, not only by ovditting the makkaph [a kind of hyphen] but by inferting feveral lines of Englifli between. But to this evafion we reply, 1. Though the adverb [li/'3 fometimes ^ignx^ts for ever, yet it doth not, when joined with the particle ['D] as in the text. Compare Gen. xxvi. 13. — xli. 49 — 2 Sam. xxiii. 10. — 2 Cliron. xxvi. 15. All which are omitted in /.fw's diftionary. [See T^jy- /cr's Concordance in ly p. 6^.] Some, indeed, (as R. Bechari) pretend that the accent jcthib feparates the words, and makes a paufe upon tlic former ; " But this tliey can give no inilance of, efpecially when it hath a/Ziwfli- immediately pieceding it as in thi,> place." [Owen's Exercit. on the Heb. vol. i. p. 149. and Pali Syn. in loc. To which may be added, that the adverb does not fignlfy for ever, abfohitely put without fome antecedent noun or particle. [Gill in loc] 2. We have on our lide thetlu'e,.' Taigumsand the moll ancient and learned rabbies. So the Chaldce paiaphrafe faith, ' He that ' hath dominion fhall not be taken away until Meffiah * come.' The Jerufaicm Targum, ' Kings Ihall not ceafe until ' Meffiah come.' The other Targum, D. Kimchi, AbentEzia, and R. Sol. Jarchi to the fame effeft. [See the authorities referred to in the authors above cited ; alio Ainf'Lv. in loc] 3. if we mult give two words inftead of one in the Engliflt tranllation, (which is a childiih notion) the moft exa6t will be UNTIL Vv-HEN [fo the LXX St'.; Sici] Shiloli ihail come. i66 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. fervants under them, and (o not having the advantage of keeping God's ordinances among themfelves, or maintain- ing any public worfhip or inftruclion, whereby the true religion might be upheld ; and there being now no written word of God, they, by degrees, in a great meafure loft the true religion, and borrowed the idolatry of Egypt ; and the greater part of the people fell away to the worfhip of their gods. [See Ezck. xx. 6, 8.— xxiii. 8.] This now was the third time that God's church was almoft fwallowed up and carried away with the wicked- nefs of the world ; once before the flood ; a fecond time before the calling of Abraham ; and now in Egypt. But yet God did not fuffer his church to be quite overwhelmed ; he ftill faved it, like the ark in the flood, and as he faved Mofes in the midft of the waters, in an ark of bulrullies, ^vhere he was in the utmolT: danger of being fwallowed up. The true religion was ftill kept up with fome ; and God had ftill a people among them, even in this miierable, cor- rupt, and dark time. The parents of Mofes were true fer- vants of God, [Heb. xi. 23.] ' By faith Mofes, when he * was born, was hid three months of his parents, becaufe ' they faw that he was a proper child, and they were not ' afraid of the king's commandment.' I have now gone through the third part of the Old Tef- tament period ; and have iliown how the work of redemp- tion was carried on from the calling of Abraham to Mofes ; in which we have feen many great things done towards this work, and a great advancement of this building, beyond what had been before. § IV. From MosEs to David. I PROCEED to \h^ fourth period, which reaches from Moles to David. — To ftiow how the work of redemption was carried on through this alfo. The firft thing that offers itfelf to be confidered is the redemption of the church of God out of Egypt ; the moft remark- FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 167 1-emarkable of all the Old Tcftament deliverances, and that which was the greateft pledge and type of the fu- ture redemption of Chrift ; and is much more infifted on in fcripture than any other. This was by Jefus Chrift, who appeared to Mofes in the bu(h ; fent him to redeem that people ; as is evident, becaufe he is called the angel of the Lord; [Exod. iii. 2, 3.] The bufh reprefented the human nature of Chrifi:, who is called the branch. This bu^li grew on mount Sinai or Horeb, (h) which laft name fignifies a dry place, as the human nature of Chrift was a * root out of dry ground.' The bufh burning with fire reprefented the fulFerings of Chrift, in the tire of God's wrath, (i) It burned, and was not confumed ; fo Chrifi:, thoueh he fufFered extremely, yet periihed not » but overcame at laft, and rofe from his fufferings. Be- caufe this great myAery of the incarnation and furferings qf Chrift was here reprefented, therefore Mofes fays, ' I < will turn afide, and behold this great fight.* A great fight he might well call it, when there was reprefented, God manifeft in the iiefli, fufFering a dreadful death, and rifing from the dead. It was this glorious perfon that redeemed Ifrael out ot Egypt from under the hand of Pharaoh ; as afterward, by his death and fufferings, he redeemed his ele6l from Satan, Z the. (h) Horeb or Si/mr.^ " Horeb is a mountain in Arabia Pe- traea, at fo fmall a diltance from mount Sinai, that they feem to be no more than two tops belonging to the fame mountain. Sinai lies to the eaft, and Horeb to the well; but we find them fre- quently in fcripture ufedpromifcuoufly." [Stackhouse's Hiit. of the Bible, vol. I. b. iii. chap. 5. note.] (i) T/je burning bu/h typified Ckrijl's sufferings.] That fomething typical was intended by this vifion, we liave no doubt; but rather apprehend that tlie then ftate of the Jewifh churcli was the objeA intended ; fo the Heb. doflors, '* God dwelt" (fays R. Eliezer) "in the bramble bufh, and the bramble buOi was \j. e. fignificd] afflic'tion and anguifli, and all thorns and briars. And why dwelt he in the midft of affliftion and anguifli ? bur becaufe he faw Ifrael in great affliction, he alfo dwelt with them in the midft of affiiftion, to confirm that which is faid in Ifa. Ixiii. 9. * In all their afflictions he was a/Bided." [See Amfuiorth ia loc] 168 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. the fpiihual Pharaoh.-— Thcfe, he delivered them from hard lervice and cruel drudgery; thefe, from the cruel flavery of fin and Satan.— Thofe he redeemed from the iron furnace ; thefe fi'om everlafting burnings. — Thofe he redeemed with a ftrong hand and out-flretched arm, and oreat and terrible judgments on their enemies ; thefe with mighty grace triumphing over principalities, and powers, and executing terrible judgments on their ene- mies.— Thofe he faved when others were deftroyed, by the fprinkling of the blood of the pafchal lamb ; thefe from death and hell by the fprinkling of his own blood. Thofe he brought torth forely againft the will of the Egyptians, when they could not bear to let them go; thei'e he refcues out of the hands of the devil, when his proud Ireart cannot bear to be overcome. Tn that redemption, Chrifl did not only deliver the people from the Egyptians, but he redeemed them from the devils, their gods ; for before, they had been in a flate of fcrvitude to the gods of Egypt, as well as to the Egyptians. And Chrifl, the feed of the woman, did now, in a very remarkable manner, fulfil the curfe on the ferpent, in bruil'ing his head: [Exod. xii. 12.] ' For ' I will pafs through the land of Egypt this night, and ' will fmitc all the lirfl-born in the land of Egypt, ' both man and beaii, and againft all the gods, of Egypt ' will I execute judgment.' Hell was as much, and more, engaged in that affair, than Egypt was. The pride and cruelty of Satan, that old ferpent, was more concerned in it ' than Pharaoh's. He did his worll: againfl: the people, and to his utmoll: oppofed their re- demption. But it is faid that when God redeemed his peo- ple out of Egypt, he broke the heads of the dragons in the waters, and broke the head of leviathan in pieces, and gave him to be meat for the people inhabiting the wiider- nefs, [Pfal. Ixxiv. 12 ---14.] God forced their enemies to let them go, that they might ferve him ; as alfo Zacha- rias obferves with refpe6i to the church under the gofpel. ("Luke i. 74, 75.] Tlie FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 169 The people of Ifiael went out with an high hand, and Chiift went before them in a pillar of cloud and fire, (k) There was a glorious triumph over earth and hell in that deliverance. And when Pharaoh and his hoft, and Satan by them, purfued the people, Chrift overthrew them in the Red Sea ; ' the Lord triumphed glorioufly ; the horfe ' and his rider he cait into the lea,' and there they fiept their laft fleep, and never followed the children of Ifrael any more ; as all Chrift's enemies are overthrown in his blood, Z 2 which (k) The pillar of cloud and fire. ']^ There is no doubt but the grand defign of this phcenomenon was to be a guide to the camp of Ifrael in their journies both by night and day; it was alfo a /hade from the burning fun-beams in the defert they were to pafs : and the vehicle of the divine prefence the Shechhiah from which ora- cles were delivered. A fancy, but moderately lively, will recollect a multitude of objects of which, if this miglit be typical, Clirifl himfelf, the holy fcriptures, but above all the mylleries of divine Providence, are therein beautifully reprefented. Was it alternately luminous and opaque? fo are the providences of God, at one time bright and promifuig ; at another dark and infcrutable. Was it dark to the purfuing Egyptians while it illumined the fleeing If- raehtes? So often has the fame event that has brought falvatlon and glory to God's people, been confufion and deftruftion to their ene- mies. Was this cloud the guide of Ifrael through all their pIU grimage In the defert? Thus doth God lead his people through all the viclflitudes of this mortal life, and every providence, wbethci light or dark, whether profperous or adverfe, will Inlalllbly for- ward his people to the heavenly Canaan. But above all be it re- membered that God was in the cloud ; yes, believer, and In thy every trial, as well as comfort, may God be found. He inhabits and direfts all the clouds that attend this way ; and though, like Ifrael, ye may be baptlfed In the cloud or in the fea, ye fliall not be overwhelmed. " Ye fearful faints frefh courage take ; The clouds ye fo much dread. Are big with mercy, and fhall break In bleflings on your heads." [Cooper.] Some learned men have conje^liired that this appearance was not altogether new; but that the fame Shechinah had guided Abra- ham [and doubtlefs then, others,] \n his travels to the promlfed land, and had direfted him to Mount Moriah ; that thi j appearance fatisfied Ifaac, as well as Abraham, of the divine will; and that therefrom, the angel of the covenant who Inhabited it, called to Abraham. This Is certainly no more than a conjefture, but It is a conjetlure that will account for many difficulties, and feems no wa^- inconfillent with revelation. [See Biblioth. Biblica, voh i.] 17© HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. which by its abundant fufficiency, and the greatnefs of the fufFerings with which it was flied, may well be reprefented by a fea. The Red Sea might reprelent Chrift's blood, as is evident, becaufe the apofllc compares the children of Ifrael's pafiage through it, to baptifm, [i Cor. x. i, 2.] and we know that the water of baptifm reprefents the blood of Chrifl. Thus Chrift, the angel of God's prefence, in his love and in his pity, redeemed his people, and carried them in the days of old as on eagle's wings, fo that none of their proud and malicious enemies could touch them. This was another new thing that God did towards this great work of redemption. God never had done any thing like it before. [Deut. iv. 32—34.] This was the greateft advancement of the work of redemption, that had been begun and carried on from the fall of man ; a great ftep taken in divine providence towards a preparation for Chrifl's coming; into the v^'orld, and working out his great and eternal redemption : for this was the people of whom Chrifl: was to come, And now we may fee how that plant flouriflied that God had planted in Abraliam. Though the family of which Chrift was to come, had been in a degree feparated from the vefl of the world before, in the calling of Abraham, yet that feparation appeared not to be fufKcient. For though by that they were kept as llrangers and fojourners, and from being- united with other people in the fame political focieties ; yet they remained mixed among them, by which means, as it had proved, they were in danger of wholly loling the true religion, and of being over-run with the idolatry of their neighbours. God now, therefore, by his redemp- tion, feparated tiicm as a nation from all other nations, to fubfiil by tliemfeives in their own political and ecclefiaf- tical ftate, without having any concern with the heathen nations, that they might fo be kept fcparate till Chrifl; fhould come ; and fo that the church of Chrill: might be upheld, and might keep the oracles of God, till that time ; that in them might be e>ihibited thofe types and prophecies of Chrifl:, and thclb hiftories, and other divine inftruC" FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 171 inflnnSlions, that were neceflary to prepare the way for Chrift's coming. 2. As this people were feparated to be God's peculiar people, fo all other people upon the face of the whole earth were wholly reje^led and given over to heathenifm. This, fo far as the providence of God was concerned in it, belongs to the great affair we are now upon, and was one thing that God ordered in his providence to prepare the way for Chrift's coming, and the great falvation he was to accomplifh : it was to prepare the way for the more glorious and fignal viilory and triumph of Chrift's power and grace over the wicked and miferable world, and that Clirift's falvation of the world of mankind might become the more fenfible. This is the account the fcrip- ture itfelf gives us of the matter. [Rom. xi. 30-— 32.] The apoftlc there fpeaking to the Gentiles that had formerly been heathens, fays, ' As ye in times paft have not believed ' God, yet have now obtained mercy through their tin- ' belief ; even fo have thefe alfo now not believed, that ' through your mercy they may alfo obtain mercy. For ' God hath concluded them all in unbelief that he might ' have mercy upon all.' i. c. It was the will of God, that the whole world, Jews and Gentiles, fhould be concluded in vilible and profefled unbelief, that fo God's mercy and Chrift's falvation towards them all might be vihble and fenfible. For the apoftle is not fpeaking only of that un- belief which is natural to all God's profeftlng people as well as others, but of that which is apparent and vifible ; fuch as the Jews fell into, wh&n they openly rejedted Chrift. The apoftle obfcrvcs, how that firft the Gentile nations were included in a profeffed unbelief and open oppoution to the true religion, before Chrift came, to prepare the way tor the calling of the Gentiles, which was fopn after, that God's mercy might be the more confpicuous to them ; and that the Jews were reje6ied from the viftble church, to prepare the way for the calling of the Jews, which fhall be in the latter days : fo that it may be feen of all nations, Jews and Gentiles, that they are evidently re- (leemed by Chrift, from their being vilibly aliens from the 172 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. the commonwealth of Ifrael, without hope, and without God in the world. We cannot with certainty precifely determine at what time the apoftafy of the Gentile nations became univerfal. It was a gradual thing, as we have already obferved. It was general in "Abraham's time, but not univerfal : for then we find Melchizedec, one of the kings of Canaan, was prieft of the moft high God. [See note (y) p. 138.] And after this the true religion was kept up for a while among fome of the reft of Abraham's poflerity, befides the family of Jacob and alfo in fome of the pofterity of Nahor, of which ■we have inftances in Job, his three friends, and Elihu. 'The land of Uz, where Job lived, was a land poffeffed by the pofterity of Uz, or Huz the fon of Nahor, Abraham's brother, of whom we read, [Gen. xxii. 21.] Bildad the Shuhite was of the offspring of Shuah, Abraham's fon by Keturah, [Gen, xxv. 1,2.] and Elihu the Buzite, was of Buz, the foH of Nahor, the brother of Abraham. So the true religion lafted among fome other people, befides the Ifraelites, fome time after Abraham, but not long: and it is probable that the time of their rejeilion, and being given up to idolatry, was about the time wlien God fepa- rated the children of Ifrael from Egypt to ferve him ; for they are often pat in mind on that occalion, that God had now feparated them to be his peculiar people ; or to be diflinguiflicd from all other people upon earth, to be his people alone ; to be his portion, when others were rejec- ted. This feem-s to imply that God now chofe them in fuch a manner, that his vihble choice of them was accom- panied with a vifiblc rejection of all other nations in the world ; that God came, and took up his refidence with them, as it were, forfaking all other nations. And as the firft calling of the Gentiles after Chriftcame, was accompanied with a rejection of the Jews ; fo the firft railing of the Jews to be God's people, when they were railed out of Egypt, was accompanied with a rcjeiftion of the Gentiles. Thus all the nations throughout* the wliole world, ex- (Cept the Ifraelites, and thofc th.it embodied themlelvcs with them. FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 173 them, were left to idolatry ; and fo continued a great many ages, even from this time till Chi i ft came, which was about fifteen hundred years. They were concluded fo long a time in unhelief, that they might be a thorough proof of the ncceflity of a faviour ; that it might evidently appear by fo long a trial, that mankind were utterly infufficient to deliver themfelves from that grofs darknefs and mifery, and fubjcition to the devil, that they had fallen under ; that it might appear that all the wifdom of the-philofophers, and the fages that the heathen had among them, could not deliver them from their darknefs, for the greater glory to Jefus Chrift, who when he came, enlightened and deli- vered them by his glorious gofpel. Herein the wonderful wifdom of God appeared, in thus preparing the way for Chrift's redemption. This the fcripture teaches us, [as in I Cor. i. 21 ] * For after that, in the wifdom of God, * the world by wifdom knew not God, it pleafed God ' by the fooliflmefs of preaching to fave them that be- ' lieve.' 3. The next thing done towards the work of redemp- tion is God's giving the moral law in fo awful a manner at mount Sinai. This was another new thing that God did, a new ftep taken in this great affair. [Deut. iv. 33.] ' Did ever a people hear the voice of God fpcaking out ' of the midft of iire, as thou haft heard, and live ?' And it was a great thing, whether we conllder it as a new ex- hibition of the covenant of works, or given as a rule of life. The covenant of works was here exhibited to be as a fchoolmafter to lead to Chrift, not only for the ufe of that nation in the ages of the Old Teftamcnt, but for the ufe of God's church tiiroughout all ages of the world, as an inftrument that the great Redeemer makes ufe of to con- vince men of their fin and mifery, and helplefs ftate, and of God's awful and tremendous majefty and juftice as a lawgiver, and to make men fcnllble of the neceffity of Chrift as a faviour. The work of redemption, in its fav- ing effecl on men's fouls, in all the progrefs of it, is not carried on without the ufe of this law. It J74 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. It was given in an awful manner, with a terrible voicey fo exceedingly loud, that all the people which were in the camp trembled ; and Mofes himfelf, though fo intimate a friend of God, yet faid, ' I exceedingly fear and quake ;' [Heb. xii. 21.] the voice being accompanied with thun- ders and lightnings, the mountain burning with fire and the earth itfslf fhaking and trembling ; (l) to make all fenfible how great that authority, power, and juflice was, that flood engaged to exatSl the fulfilment of this law, and how terrible his wrath will be againft every breaker of it ; that men, being fenfible of thefe things, might have a thorough trial of themfelves ; prove their own hearts , know how impoffible it is for them to have falvation by the ( L ) The law accompanied 'wUh thunders.] *' Thus while the labouring angel fwell'd the found. And rent the llcies, and (hook the ground, Up rofe th' Almighty ; round his fapphire feat Adoring thrones in order fell ; The leffer powers at diftance dwell, And cad their glories down fiicceflive at his feet : Gabriel the great prepares his way, * Lift up your heads, eternal doors,' he cries ; Th' eternal doors his word obey, Open and flioot celeftial day Upon the lower flcies. Heav'n's mighty pillars bow'd their head, • As their Creator bid. And down Jehovah rode from the fuperior fphere, A thoufand guards before, and myriads in the rear. His chariot was a pitchy cloud. The wheels befet with burning gems ; The winds in harnefs with the flames Flew o'er th' ethereal road : Down thro' his magazines he pad Of hail, and ice, and fleecy fnow. Swift roll'd the triumph, and as fail Did hail, and ice, in melted rivers flovi'. The day was mingled with the niglit, His feet on folid darknefs trod. His radiant eyes proclaim'd the God, And fcatter'd dreadful light ; He breath'd, and fulphur ran, a fiery fl:ream : He fpoke, and (tho' with unknown fpeed he came) Chid the flow tempcft, and the lagging flame." [Watts' Horse Lyr. p. 35.3 FROM M.OSES TO DAVID. ty^ the works of the law, and fee the abfolute ncceflity they flood in of a mediator. ^ If we regard this law not as the covenant of works, but as a rule of life ; fo it is made ufe of by the Redeem- er, from that time to the end of the world, as a dire6tcry to his people, to lliew rhem the way in which tliey muft walk, if they would go to heaven: for a way of iincere and univerfal obedience to this law is the narrow wav tliat leads to life, (m) 4. The next thing obfervable in this period, was God's giving the typical law, in which I fuppofe to he included moll: of thofe precepts which were given by Mofes, that did not pi'operly belong to the moral: not only thofe laws that are commonly called ceremonial, which are the laws prefcribing the ceremonies and cir- cumftances of the Jewiili worlhip, and their ecclefiaftical Hate; but alfo many, if not all thofe divine laws that were political, and for regulating the Jewifli common- wealth, commonly called judicial ; thefe were many of them typical. The giving this typical law was another great thing that God did in tliis period, tending to build up this glorious llrufture of redemption that he had been carrying on from the beginning of the world. There A a had (m) The laiu not a covenant of works.] " The decalogue or ten commandments uttered by the voice of God himfclf, is an abftraft of that original law under which man was created, but publifhed in a prohibitory form, the Ifraelites, like the reft of mankind, being depraved by fin, and ftrongly inclined to the com- miffion of c\t\-y evil. This law could not be defigned as a cove- nant, by obedience to which man (hould be juftified,- for long be- fore this the gofpel had been preached to Abraham, [Gal. iii. 8.] ♦ bu.t the law entered that fin might abound,' [Rom. v. 20.] that the extent, evil, and the defert of fin might be known ; for it reaches to the moft hidden thoughts of the heart, requires abfo- lute and perpetual obedience, and denounces a curfe upon all who continue not therein .... Believers of old were relieved from the moral law by the facrifices which pointed to Chrift ; believers un- der the gofpel are relieved by a direft application of * the blood of ' the covenant.' Both renounce any dependance on the moral law for juftification, and both accept it as a ride of life, in the hands of a Mediator, and arc enabled to yield a fincere, though not a perfeft obedience." [Vjgil.] 176 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. had been many typical events of providence before, that reprefented Chrift and his redemption ; and fome typical ordinances, as particularly thofe two of facrifices and cir- cumcillon: but now, inrtead of reprefenting the great Re- deemer in a few inftitutions, God gives fortli a law full of nothing elfe buf various and innumerable typical repre- fentations of good things to come, by which that nation were diredled how, every year, month, and day, in their religious a6lions, and in their condu6l of themfelves, in all that appertained to their ecclefiaftical and civil ftate, to ihow forth fomething of Chrilt ; one obfervance fliowing one thing, exhibiting one do6lrine, or one benefit , ano- ther, another : fo that the whole nation by this law was, as it were, conftituted in a typical ftate. Thus tlie gofpcl was abundantly held forth to that nation ; fo that there is fcarce any do6lrine of it, but is particularly taught and exhibited by fome obfervance of this law ; though it was in lliadows, and under a vail, as Mofes put a vail on his face when it ihone. (n) To (n) The go/pel revealed in the T-^v'e.s.'] We have already con- fidered feveral of the types, and fhall conlider others as they occur. This note is intended to prove that the ancient Jews themfelves confidered them in the fame point of view. 1. It muft occur to every thinking perfon, ihafmere ceremonies could not of themfelves ever form any very acceptable fervices to that ' God who is a fpirit, and who loves to be worfliipped in fpirit ' and in truth;' and that, unlefs fomething farther was defigned, many parts of the Jewilh ritual muft appear very childifli, others very ridiculous, and fome very cruel. There feems nothing in the wearing of fringes or ringing of bells ; in waters of purification or perfumes of incenfe ; much lefs in the flaughtering of hundreds or thoufands of harmlefs animals ; I fay, there feems nothing in thefe, in themfelves confidered, that appears worthy the appoint- ment of a wife and holy God, or the obfervation of great and good men. Thefe refleftions would naturally lead them to fufpeft fome- thing typical muft be intended. 2. This idea would be confirmed by confidering the particular cxaftnefs required in thefe fervices ; with the penalties inflifted on tranfgreflion. Upon any other hypGthefis it would be difficult, if not impoffible to account for fo many being flain for looking into the ark, afpiring to the priefthood, &c. or for Mofes being fo ftriaiy FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 177 To this typical law belong all the precepts that relate to building the tabernacle, which was fet up in the wildernefs, and all the form, circumftances, and utenfils of It. c. About this time was given to the church the firll written word of God for the regulation of the faith, wor- fhip, and pradi' e of his church in all ages, which was incrcafcd f;oiri rnne to time till it was finiOied, and the canon of fcripture completed, by the apoflle John. It is A a 2 not ftriftly charged to make * all things according to the pattern exhi- ' bited in the mount.' [Heb. viii. 5.] 3. We have already feen in fome inflances, as in Abraham's offering up his fon Ifaac, and long before, in the facrifice of Abel, that the Old Teftament faints really had fuch views ; and other inflances will occur in the profecutien of our fubjeft. 4. Agreeable to this idea we find the piophets commonly fpoke in figurative language, and accompanied it by typical and fymbo- lical aftions ; as we fee in Ifaiah [xx.] Jeremiah [xiii. i — 11. J Ezekiel [iii. i — 4.] and others. This mull encourage and con» firm fuch a method of interpretation. 5. We Chriflians have the mofl unequivocal alTertions of this in the New Tellament. The law is called a ' fhadow of good things ' to come.' [Heb. x. i.] And the whole Epiflle to the Hebrews, and great part of that to the Galatians, is written to piove and il- lullrate this very point. 6. We are particularly told that the law was ' a fchoolmafler to * kad unto,' to point out the neceffity, excellency, and fuitable- nefs of ' Chrift,' [Gal. iii. 24.] And that the Jewifh church under this difpenfation, is to be confidered as a minor under tutors and governors. [Gal. iv. 2.] We have a method of teaching our chil- dren their letters by the ufe of certain pictures affixed to them, the more flrongly to imprefs them on their minds : [as A, an Apple, B, a Book, Sec. So probably the old Hebrews K an Ox, 3 a Houfc, &c. See Sharp^s Origin of Languages.] A method fomewhat fimilar to this the Lord feems to have taken with his ancient people. Now, as he would not be thought a wife inftruclor who taught his little pupils the pictures without the letters, how fiiall wejullify the wifdom of God in teaching the Jews thefc ceremonies, without their meaning and defign ? 7. Some even of the modern Jews have dropt hints of fuch a defign, particularly Rab. Mniachem on the pafchal lamb, though they acknowledore tlieir ignorance of the myilery, " until the fpirit from above fluill Ixe poured out upon thc-m." [Ainfw. in Lev. i. 2.] The typical import of the tabernacle and itu furniture, and how- far believers might fee tht fufferings of ChriR in the ancient facri- fices, will be confidered in a fubfcqnent note, [L N-l lyg HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. not very material whether the firft written word was the ten commandments written on the tables of ftone with the finger of God, or the book of Job ; nor whether the book of Job was written by Mofes, as fome fuppofe, or by Elihu, as others, (o) If it was written by Elihu, it was written before this period ; but yet could not be far from it, as ap- pears by confidering whofe pofterity the perfons were that are fpoken of in it, [fee above, p. 172.] together with Job's great age, which was paft before this was written. The written word of God is the main inftrument Chrift has made ufe of to carry on this work of redemp- tion in all ages fmce it was given. There was a necef- fity now for the word of God being committed to writing as a ftanding rule to his church. Before this, the church had the word of God by tradition, either immediately from eminent men that were infpired, who were then living, or elfe by tradition from former generations, which might be had with tolerable certainty in ages pre- ceding this, by reafon of the long lives of men. Noah might converie with Adam, and receive traditions from him ; and Noah lived till about Abraham's time : and the fons of Jacob lived a conliderable time to deliver the revelations made to Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob, to their poflerity in Egypt, (p) But the diftance from the begin- ning (o) Whether the booh of Job tuas 'ujntien ^^ Moses.] The learned feem now pretty well fatisficd that the book of Job is an Hebrew poem, written in a dramatic or colloquial form, (as ir. So- lomon's fong) and generally give it to Mofes, as the moft probable author: but whether he wrote it from a facl within his obfervation daring his exile from Egypt, whether from traditional records, or had the fafts, as well as afTiftance to record them, immediately from God, is not fo generally agreed, [See Bp. Lo'wthh PrKleft. de Sacra Poefi Heb. praeleft. xix. PoU. Syr.. Crit. in ch. i. — Theo- leg. Rcpof vol. i. page 70.] [U. S.] (p) The LONGEVITY of the patriarchs. '\ Our author's general remaik of the few hands that might convey traditions through a great number of years is certainly juil : 'but here is a fmall mif- take in the chronology, which in all probability would never have been printed, had our author lived to have been his own editor. He FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 179 nlng was now become fo great, and the lives of men fo fliortencd, (being brought down to tlie prefent ftandard about He alTerts that * Noah might converfc with Adam ; but it appears from the following table, and the authorities there referred to, that Adam died above an hundred years before Noah was bom. I'ears of the luorld. I, Adam created. 130, Gen. V. 3. at 130 years old Adam begat Seth, 235, 6. at 105 Seth begat Enos. 325, 9. at 90 Enos begat Cainan. 39 J, 12. at 70 Cainan begat Mahalaleel. 460, 15. at 65 Mahalaleel begat Jared. 622, 18. at 162 Jared begat Enoch. 687, 21. at 65 Enoch begat Methufelah. 874, 25. at 187 Methufelah begat Lamech. 930, 5. Adam died. 1056, 28. at 182 years old Lamech begat Noah. The above calculation is according to the Hebrew text : if, In- deed, we admit the Samaritan readings, the fa6l may be granted, [fee Univ. Hiit. vol. i. page 146.] but as our author has every where elfe followed the Hebrew copies, it is very unlikely he meant hereto deviate from them, without giving any intimation of it. Let us now indulge a reflexion or two on the faft thus ftated. Though not with Noah, yet Adam might converfe with Lamech, Noah's /ather, — Lamech, with Shem, his own grandfon, — and Shem, (though not Noah) with his defcendant Abram, and even Ifaac. Thus four perfons might by tradition convey the fubftance of divine revelation through more than two thoufand years, which would, at the prefent ftandard of human life, on a moderate com- putation, require forty. Now as the lives of men decreafed, tra- dition would naturally become more corrupted and uncertain, the more hands it pafFed through ; therefore to prevent the confe- quences of this, God was pleafed by Mofes to give a written reve- lation. In this we may admire the wifdom and goodnefs of God, who fuits his favours to our circumftanccs and neceflities. There is fomething venerable in ago, and the grey hairs of four- fcore or an hundred years command refpedl and attention. And in the few inftances in which mr.nkind exceed that age, with the prefervation of their memory and other faculties, how inflru£cive is their converfation ! With what plcafurc, then, might Lamech hear from Adam the ftory of his eai ly life, the hiftory of his firft fons, and the various revolutions of almcft a thoufand years ; and with no lefs fatisfaftion, poffibly, might Abraham receive from 81iem the wonderful hiitory of the flood and re-peopling of the earth ; i8o HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. about Mofes's time,) that God having now feparated a na- tion to be a peculiar people, partly for that end to be the keepers of his oracles, faw it to be a needful and conve- nient time now to commit his word to writing, to remain throughout all ages, (q^) And therefore, befides the book of Job, God wrote the ten commandments on tables of flone, with his own finger ; and after this the whole law, as containing the fubflance of the five books of Mofes, was by his fpecial command committed to writing, which was called the book of the law, and was laid up in the taber- nacle, to be kept there for the ufe of the church. [Deut. xxxi. 24— -26.] 6. God was pleafed now wonderfully to reprefent the progrefs of his redeemed church through the world to their eternal inheritance, by the journey of the children ot Ifrael through the wiidernefs, from Egypt to Canaan. Here earth : but the grand fubjeft of their inquiiy would doubtlefs be, the gradual and increafing difcoveries of the divine will : the facrcd vifions, prediftions, and types ; the inveftigation of which muft afford, to fanftified minds, peculiar delight and comfort. One of the moft barren parts of facred writ, (if we may fo fpeak) feems to be the lift of lives and deaths in fome of the firft chap- ters of Genefis ; hut this is owing to our own inattention and fupinenefs ; as appears from the following anecdote, mentioned by Mr. Hervey : " A certain libertine, of a moft abandoned charafter, happened accidentally to ftroU into a church, where he heard the 5th chap- ter of Genefis, importing that fo long lived fuch and fuch perfons, and yet the conclufion was they died — ' Enos lived 905 years, and ' he died — Seth, 912, and he died — Methufelah, 969, and he died.' The frequent repetition of the words, he died, notwithftanding the great length of years they had lived, ftruck- him fo deeply with the thought of death and eternity, that (through divine grace) he became of an infamous libertine, a moft exemplary Chriftian." llfervey's Letters, No. 147.] [N. U.] (q^) God's tvord comimHed to 'Loriiing.'] Our author alludes here to the pentateuch, or five firft books of the Old Teftament, which are nowuniverfally afcribed to Mofes on the moft fatisfaftory evi- dence. The enemies of revelation have indeed objefted to fome pafTages which fpeak of the death and charafter of Mofes, but thefe may eaiily be fuppofed the fuppleijient of a later prophet (perhaps Ezra) without afteding the general queftion. [U. S.J FROM MOSES TO DAVID. iSi Here all the various fteps of the redemption of the church by Chrirt were reprefentcd, from the beginning to its confummation in glory. — The ftate they arc redeemed from, is reprefentcd by Egypt, and their bondage there, which they left.— The purchafe of their redemption, was reprefentcd by the facrifice of the pafchal lamb, which was offered up the night that God flew all the firft-bonl of Egypt.— The beginning of the application of the re- demption of Chrift's church in their converfion, was re- prefentcd by Ifrael's going out of Egypt, and paflTmg through the Red Sea in fo extraordinary and miraculous a manner.— The travel of the church through this evil world, and the various changes through which the church paffes, in the different ftages of it, was reprefentcd by the journey of the Ifraelitcs through the wildernefs. — The manner of their being condu£ted by ChrilT:, was re- prefentcd by the Ifraelitcs being led by the pillar of cloud by day, and the pillar of fire by night.— The manner of the church's .being fupported in their progrcfs, and fup- plied from the beginning to the end of it, with fpiritual food, and continual daily communications from God, was reprefentcd by God's fupplying tlie cliildren of Ifrael with bread, or manna, from heaven, and water out of the rock.— The dangers that the faints m.uft meet with in their courlc through the world, were reprefentcd by the fiery flying ferpents which the children of Ifrael met with in the wildernefs. — The conflicts the cimrch has with her enemies, were reprefentcd by their battle with the Amalekites, and others they met with there.— And fo innumerable other things might be mentioned, wherein the things they met with were lively images of things which the church and faints meet with in all ages of the world. That thefe were typical of things that pertain to the Chrifl;ian church, is manifefl: from i Cor. x. ii. * Now all thefe things happened unto them for enfamplcs^ ' and they were written for our admonition, upon whom * the ends of the world are come.' Here the apoftle is fpeaking of thofe very things which we have now con- fidercd, i82 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. fidered, and he fays expreffly, that they happened unto them for types ; fo it is in the original. y, Another thing muft not be omitted, which was a great and remarkable difpenfation of Providence, viz, the fhortening the days of man's life, whereby it was brought down from being between nine hundred and a thoufand years, to but about feventy or eighty. The life of man began to be ihortened immediately after the flood : it was brought down the firft generation to fix hundred years, and the next to between four and five hundred years ; and fo the life of hiain gradually grew fliorter and fliorter, till about the time of the great mortality that was in the con- gregation of Ifrael, after they hid murmured at the report of the fpies, and their carcafes fell in the wildernefs, whereby all the men of war died ; and then the life of man was reduced to its prefent flandard, as Mofes obferves in that pfalm that he wrote on occafion of that mortality : [Pfalm. xc. 10.] ' The days of our years are threefcore * years and ten ; and if by reafon of ftrength they be four- * fcore years, yet is their ftrength labour and forrow : for * it is foon cut off, and we fly away.' This great difpenfation of God tended to promote the grand defign of the redemption of Chrift. Man's life being cut fo very Ihort in this world, prepared the way for poor, mortal, Hiort-lived men, the more joyfully to entertain the glad tidings of everlafting life in another world, and more readily to embrace a Saviour, who pur- chafes and offers fach a bleflSng. If men's lives were dill commonly about nine hundred years, how much lefs would they have to move them to regard the proffers of a future life ; how much greater temptations would they have to reft in the things of this world, they being of fuch long continuance, and to negle6l any other life but this ? This probably contributed greatly to the wicked- nefs of the antediluvians. But now how much greater motives have men to feek redemption, and a better life than this, by the great Redeemer,- fmce the life of man is not one twelfth part of what it. ufed to be, and men now FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 183 now univerfally die at the age when men formerly ufed to he but, as it were, fetting out in the world ? 8. The fame work was carried on in preferving that people, of whom Chrift was to come, from totally pe- rilliing in the wildernefs, by a conftant miracle of forty years continuance. I obferved before many times, how God prelerved thofe of whom the Redeemer was to pro- ceed in a very wondertul manner; but this prefervation of the children of Ifrael for fo long a time in the wilder- nefs was, on fome accounts, more remarkable than any of them. There was, as may be fairly computed, at hrft two millions of fouls in that congregation, which muft have perillicd in Icfs tlian one month's time, had they not been miraculoully lupplied. But yet this vafl; multitude fubfifted for forty years together, in a dry barren wilder- nefs, without fo-vving or reaping, or tilling any land, having their bread daily rained down to them out of hea- ven, and being furnifhcd with water to fatisfy them all, out of a rock ; and the fame cloaths with which they came out of Egypt, lailing, without wearing out all that time. [Deut. viii. iv.] Never was an inflance like this of a nation being thus fupporied and fupplied. (rj Bb 9. God (r) Never ivas an tnjlance like this.'] Wonderful providence In- deed ! But not lefs wonderful is the gracious provifion that the Lord has made for all his people. Had they manna rained from the ficies ? We have the true bread v/h.\c\\ came down from heaven. Were they alfo miraculouOy fupplied •w'lihjlejh ? The Son of God feeds us with his oivn, infinitely more precious, flefh and blood. Did the rock fupply their drink ? So doth the rock of ages ours. Did not their raiment wear old? Behold, the bell, the everlalling robe of righteoufnefs with which the Lord cloaths his elect peo- ple! Finally, did not their feet fwcll, fo as to impede their jour- ney ? The Lord has provided us with fandals which the thorns of the wildernefs cannot penetrate ; and prepared with the gofpel of peace, we need not fear our journey being impeded. But, to de- fcend to temporal concerns; doth not the Lord ilill feed and cloath his people, and afford them every neceffary fupply? And is net the promife Hill faithful and true, < They that feek the Lord Ihall • not wantany good thing?' [Pf. xxxiv. 10.] Let the timorous believer be then encouraged and joyfully fing on his way : " Guide me, O thou great Jehovah, *' Pilgrim, through this barren land," Sec. [U.U.] i84 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. g. God was pleafed during this time, to give a farther revelation of Chrift the Redeemer in the predi6lions of him, than had been before. Here arc three propliecies given at this time that I wouJd take notice of. The firiT: is that of Balaam. [Numb. xxiv. 17 — 19.] ' I ihall fee * him, but not now; I ihall behold him, but not nigh ; * there fhall come a ftar out of Jacob, and a fceptre fhall ' rife out of Ifrael, and fhall fmite the corners of Moab, ' and deftroy all the children of Sheth. And Edom ihall * be a poiTeiTion, Seir alfo fliall be a pofTeiTion for his ' enemies, and Ifrael fliall do valiantly. Out of Jacob ' ihall come he that ihall have dominion, and fliall de- ' flroy him that remaineth of the city.' (s) This is a plainer (s) The prophecy of "Q Ah A k^i.'] "Wonderful as the gift of prophecy is, it was not always (as Bp. Newton obferves) con- fined to the chofen feed, nor yet always imparted to the heft of men." Balaam is a proof of this, who was neither an Ifraelite nor a good man; however, he acknowledged the God of Ifrael, and profefTed to be his fervant; [Numb. xxii. 8 — 18.] his worihip was debafed v/ith fiiperftition and enchantments; [Numb. xxiv. i. — xxxii. 12.] and his heart loted * the wages of unrighteoufnefs.' [2 Pet. ii. 15.] And when the Lord would not fuffer him to curfe his people, he contrived to pervert them to idolatry and unclcan- nefs. [Rev. ii. 14.] It is obfervable, that it was a cuilom among the heathens to de- vote their enemies to deftruftion at the commencement of their wars ; and Balaam being a prophet of great note, Balak fuppofed him to have peculiar intereil with heaven. — ' I wot that he whom ' thou bleCTeft is bleiTed, and he whom thou curfeft is curfed.* [Numb. xxii. 6.] But the ilrangeft part of the hiftory is that of Balaam's afs fpeaking with a man's voice. Stories of this kind have been current among the heathen, and might probably originate from a tradition of this event. But however extraordinary tlie fafi:, the fcripture attributes it to a fufficient caufe : ' The Loid opened the mouth * of the afs.' [Numb. xxii. 28.] There is no neceiTity, however, to give the animal a human underftanding, without that he might utter the found of words (as parrots may be taught to do,) and this is all the facred hiilorian afferts. But we are to contemplate a greater miracle than this : the ani- mal fpake unconfcioufly, but Balaam tvas over-ruled to blefs where he gladly would have curfcd. And the preceding miracle was probably defigned to teacli how much the mouth and tongue were wnder God's direflion, and the folly of oppofing the divine will. But FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 185 plainer prophecy of Chrift, efpecially with regard to his kingly office, than any that had been before. But we B b 2 have But to advert to the prophecy itfelf ; of which we fhall only con- fider the paflage quoted by our author : ' I fhall fee him, but not * now ; I fliall behold him, bat not nigh.' This Bp. Newton trandates in the prefent tenfe, and refers to Moab ; but with de- ference to fo great an authority, we fhould rather adhere to the prefent tranflation, which is more literal, and refer it, with the following claufcs, to the Meffiah, [t^?, Ainjtvorth and Dr. GiU do) whom at his fecond coming ' every eye fhall fee.' [Rev. i. 7. Compare Job xix. 26.] ' There fhall come a (lar out of Jacob, and a fceptre fhall arife * out of Ifrael.' The ftar and fceptre were probably hieroglyphics of a prince and of a god, as we fliall fee prefently. ' And fliall ' fmite the corners (or princes) of Moab.' This was fulfilled by David, who * fmote Moab and the Moabites became * David's fervants.' [2 Sam. viii. 2.] * And deflroy all the children of Sheth :' If by Sheth is here intended the fon of Adam, it includes all mankind, this being the only line preferved at the flood ; and thofe who fo underftand it, tranflate tlie words * he fhall uniuall, fubdue, or rule over all the ' children of Sheth.' But the conflruftion of the paffage, and the rules of Hebrew poetry, which abounds In parallel fentences, [fee Bp. Lowth's Prelim. Dif. to his Tranf. of Ifaiah] flrongly incline us to believe, that Sheth might be the name of fome town or prince of Moab, whofe memory is now loft. This was the opinion of Mr. Poole, and is defended by Bp. Ncivton. * And Edom fliall be a poffcflion.' ' David put garrifons .... * throughout all Edom,' [2 Sam. viii. 14.] * Seir [the mountains ■* of Edom] alfo fhall be a poffeflion for his enemies ;' that is, for the Ifraelltes. ' And Ifrael fhall do valiantly,' as in the inftanccs jufl hinted. * Out of Jacob fliall come he that fhall have dominion, * and fhall deflroy him that rcmaineth of the city ;' not only defeat them in the field, but purfue and deilroy them in their flrongefl holds: * Joab fmote every male in Edom.' [i Kings xi. 15,16.3 Thus was the prophecy fulfilled in David : but mofl Jewifh as well as Chriflian expofitors, ancient and modern, refer thefe predidtions, in a more fublime and exalted fenfe, to the Meffiah, David's Son and Lord. And Bp. Warburton [Divine Leg. book iv. § 4.J obferves, that as t\\t fceptre was a popular emblem of a king, fo a Jlar was a more myflerious hieroglypliic of tlve divinity, [fee Amos V. 25,26.] and doubtlefs pointed to him who was both ' the mighty * God and Prince of Peace;' [Ifa. ix. 6.] who bore the fceptre of Judah, [fee page 161, note g] ' and is the bright and morning ftar.' {Rev. xxii. 16.] [See Bp. Newton on the Prophecies, vol. i. dif. 5. from whom the above is chiefly taken.] [G. E.] jB6 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. have another, that God gave by Mofes, which is plainer flill, efpecially with regard to his prophetical office, [Deut. xviii. 1 8, &c.] ' I will raife up a prophet from among * ' their brethren, like unto thee, and will put my words ' in his mouth, and he Ihall fpeak unto them all that I ' command him,' &c. This is a plainer prophecy of Chrift than any that had been before, in this refpedV, that all the former prophecies were in figurative, myflical language, The firfl:, ' That the feed of the woman ihould break the ? ferpent's head.' — The promifes made to Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob, ' That in their feed all the families of the earth ' fhould be bleffed.' — The prophecy of Jacob in bleffing Judah;— and that of Balaam, which fpeaks of Chrill: under the figurative expreffion of ay?(7r,— were all myflical. But this is a plain literal prophecy. There are feveral things contained in this prophecy of Chrift, and his mediatorial office, [ver. 16.]— Here it is revealed that he ihould be a middle perfon between tliem and God, a being of fuch awful majefty, holinefs, and juftice, that they could not come to him, and en- joy intercourfe with him immediately, without a medi- ator to fland between them ; becaufe, if they came to fuch a dreadful fin-revenging God immediately, they fhould die; God would prove ' a confuming fire' to them. And here is alfo a particular revelation of Chrift with refpe6l to his prophetical office: ' I will raife them up a ' prophet from among their brethren, like unto thee,' &c. And farther, it is revealed what kind of a prophet he fhould be, a prophet like Mofes, who was the head and leader of all the people, and who, under God, had been their redeemer, to bring them out of the houfe of bond- age, who was, as it were, their fhepherd by whom God led them through the Red Sea and wildernefs, and was an intercefTor for them with God, and both a prophet and a king in the congregation : for Mofes had the power of a king among them. [Deut. xxxiii. 5.] He was alfo the prophet by whom God built up his church, and delivered his inftru6lions of worfhip. Thus Chrift was to be a prophet like unto Moles ; fo that this is both the plaineft and FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 187 and fullefl: prophecy of Chrifl that ever had been from the beginning of the world to this time, (t) The next prophecy that I fliall take notice of, refpe6ts only the calling of the Gentiles, which fliould be after Chrift's coining, of which God gave a very plain prophecy by Mofes in the wildernefs, [Deut. xxxii. 21.] They moved God to jealoufy, by that which was not a god, by carting him off, and taking other gods, that were no gods, in his room. So God declares that he will move them to jealoufy in the like manner, by cafting them off, and taking other people, that had not been his people, in their room. The apolUe Paul takes notice of this prophecy, as fore- telling the calling of the Gentiles, [in Rom. x. 19, 20.] « But I fay, did not Ifrael know ? Firft, Mofes faith, I ' will provoke you to jealoufy by them that are no peo- ' pie, and by a foolifh nation I will anger you. But ' Efaias is very bold, and faith, T was found of them that ' fought me not ; I was made manifeft to them that a{ked ' not after me.' Thus you fee how the light of the gofpel, which firfl: began to dawn immediately after the fall, gradually in- creafes the nearer we come to Chrifi's time. 10. Another tiling by which God carried on his work at this time, was a remarkable pouring out of his fpirit on the young generation in the wildernefs. The genera- tion which was grown up when they came out of Egypt, from twenty years old and upward, was very fro ward and perverfe. They were tainted with the idolatry and wick- ednefs (t) j4 prophet Me unto MosEs.] Some Jewifli writers have re- ferred this to Jofluia, but though we are told Jofliua was full of the fpirit of vfifdom, yet the fame text [Deut. xxxiv. 9.] informs us, ' there arofe not a prophet fince in Ifrael like unto Mofes, * whom the Lord knew face to face ;' confequcntly Jofhua was not fo. And in another paffage [Numb. xii. 2.] The Lord puts a ftriking difference between Mofes, and all other prophets : The Jews themfelves veiy ftrongly confirm this idea ; and in the New Teftament, this prophecy is exprefsly applied to the Son of God. [A(Ss iii. 22, 23.] * For Mofes truly faid, a prophet will the * Lord your God raife up,' &c. [See Nciuton on the Proph. vol. i. dif. 6.1 i88 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. ednefs of Egypt, and were not weaned from it, as the prophet takes notice, [Ezek. xx. 6—8.] Hence they made the golden calf in imitation of the idolatry of Egvpt, that was wont to worihip a bull or an ox ; and therefore cattle are called ' the abomination of the Egyptians,' i. e. their idol. [Exod. viii. 26.] This generation God was exceed- ing angry with, and fwore in his wrath, that they fhould not enter into his reft. But the younger generations were not fo ; thofe who were under twenty years old when they came out of Egypt, and thofe born in the wildernefs, the generation fpoken of, [Numb. xiv. 31.] ' But your little ' ones, whom ye faid fliould be a prey, them will I bring * in ; and they fhall know the land that ye have defpifed.' This was the generation with whom the covenant was re- newed, (of which we have an account in Deuteronomy,) and that entered into the land of Canaan. Thefe God was pleafed to m.ake a generation to his praife, and they were eminent for piety ; as appears by many things faid in fcripture about them; as, particularly, [Jer. ii. 2, 3.] * I remember thee, the kindnefs of thy youth, the love * of thine efpoufals, when thou wenteft after me in the ' wildernefs, in a land that was not fown. Ifrael was ' holinels to the Lord, and the firft fruits of his increafe.' Here the generation that went after God in the wilder- nefs is fpoken of with very high commendations, as emi- nent for holinefs : ' Ifrael was holinefs to the Lord, and ' the tirft fruits of his increafe.' And their love to God is fpoken of as diftinguiihed like the love of a bride at her efpoufals. The going after God in the wildernefs here fpoken of, is not the going of the children of Ifrael out of Egypt inro the wildernefs of Sinai, but their fol- lowing God through that dreadful wildernefs, that the congregation long wandered in, atter they went back from Kadelh-Barnea, [Dcut. viii. 15. j ' Who led thee through > the great and terrible wildernefs, wherein were fiery fer- * pcnts and fcorpions, and drought, where there was no « water.' Though this generation had a much greater trial, than their fathers had before they «came to Kadefh-Barnea, yet they never mr.rmured againft God in any wife, as their fathers FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 189 fathers had done : but their trials liad a contrary effecl upon them, to awaken, convince, and humble them, and fit them for great mercy. They were awakened by the awful judgments of God infli6led on their fathers, where- by their carcales fell in the wildernefs. And God pour- ed out his fpirit with thofe awakening providences to- wards their fathers, and their own travel in the wilder- nefs, and the word preached to them by Mofes ; whereby they were made to fee the badnefs of their own hearts, and were humbled, and at length multitudes of them favingly converted ; [as Dcut. viii. 2, 3.] ' And thou ' flialt remember the way which the Lord thy God led ' thee thefe forty years in the wildernefs, to humble thee * and to prove thee, to know what was in thine heart, ' whether thou wouldft keep his commandments or no.' And [ver. 15.] ' Who led thee through tliat great and * terrible wildernefs,— that he might humble thee, and * that he might prove thee, to do thee good at the latter * end.' (u) And therefore it is faid, Hof. xiii. 5. ' I ' did (u) If rael led through the nv'ildernefs to do them good.~\ Here is the great fecret of Divine Providence. Infinite wifdom and good- nefs is the fource of all the vicifiitudes and trials believers are called to experience. Ifrael was led through the wildernefs, and had many bitter trials there, but it was ' to do them good.' Obferve, i. That pride is natural to the human heart ; and no degree of meannefs, wretchednefs, or dependence, can exclude it. Like fome difgufting animals, who extraiil polfon from the moil harmlefs vegetables ; pride inflates itfelf from circumllances the moft humiliating. Would one fuppofe that a people, after forty years flavery at the brick kilns — after being treated as the off- fcouring of the earth, and degraded to the very lowed degree — fhould need the thorns of the wildernefs to humble them ? But fuch is man ! 2. The beft things are not always the pleafanteft ; but the moft efficacious medicines are often the moft unpalatable. Ifrael, as we have obferved, met with many painful and mortifying circum- ftances in the defcrt, but it was to do them good. Humbling providences are often our greateft mercies. 3. Mercies are doubly fweet when intermingled with trials. Contrafts produce great effefts in nature ; and it is by comparilon with other objetts we form our mofl correifl ideas of the excellent and beautiful. So pain and ficknefs teach the value of health and eafe ; 190 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. ' did know thee in the wildernefs, in the land of great • drought.' God allured them, and hrought them into the wildernefs, and fpake comfortably to them, as it was fore- told that he would do afterwards. [Hof. ii. 14.] Thofe terrible judgments that were executed in the congregation after their turning back from Kadefh-Barnea, in the matter of Korah, and Peor, were chiefly on the old generation, whom God confumed in the wildernefs. Thofe rebellions were chiefly among the elders of the con- gregation, that God had given up to their hearts luft ; and they walked in their own counfels, and God was grieved with their manners forty years in the wildernefs. ' But that this younger congregation were eminent for piety, appears by all their hiftory. The former generation were wicked, and were followed with curfes ; but this was holy, and wonderful bleffings followed them. God did great things for them ; he fought for them, and gave them the polTeffion of Canaan. And it is God's manner, when he hath any fpecial mercy to beflow on a vifible people, firll:, to fit them for, and then to bellow it on them. So here, they believed in God, and by faith overcame Sihon and Og, and the giants of Canaan ; and are commended for cleaving to the Lord: [Jo(h. xxiii. 8.] Jolhua fays unto them, ' Cleave unto the Lord, as ye have done unto * this day.' And fo Ifrael did all the while that genera- tion lived. But when Jolhua and all that generation were dead, there arofe another that knew not the Lord. This pious generation fliowed a laudable and fervent zeal for God in feveral inflances ; as on occafion of Achan's hn ; but efpecially when they fufpe6led the two tribes and a half had fet up an altar in oppofition to the altar of burnt-offering. There never was any generation of Ifrael of which fo much good and fo little evil is mentioned as eafe ; and to hunger and thirft we principally owe our rclifli for food. Therefore it is, that the Lord mingled the cup of his peo- ple with a contrariety of ingredients. Let us then receive it thank- fully, with this confolation, that the fweetnefs of our comforts will remain when every tafte of bitternefs is loll and forgot for ever. [U. U.] FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 191 as this. It is farther obfervablc, that in the time of this generation was the fccond general circumcifion, whereby the reproach of Ifrael was fully rolled away, and they be- came pure ; and when afterwards they were polluted by Achan, they purged themfelves again. [Jolh. vii. 19— 26.] (\v) The men of the former generation being dead, and God having fanftified this to himfelf, he folemnly renew- ed his covenant with them, [Deut. xxix.] We find that fuch renovations of the covenant commonly ac- companied any remarkable pouring-out of the Spirit, which caufed a general reformation ; fo we i^nd it was in Hezekiah's and Jofiah's times. But it is queftionable whether there ever was a time when religion fo flouriilied in the Ifraelitifli church, as in that generation; and as, in the Chriitian church, religion was in its moft flouriihing circumilances in the day of its efpoufals, in the apolIJe's time, fo it feems to have been with the Jewifli church in the days of its hrft eftabliihment in Mofes and Joihua's. Thus God at this time did glorioufly advance the work of redemption, both by his word and Spirit. By tins out-pouring of the Spirit of God, the work of redemption was promoted, not only as it was in itfclf a glorious in- ftance of the application of it, but as this was what God made ufe of as a means of eftablifliing the church of Ifrael at its firil beginning, when it was fettled in the regular obfervance of God's ordinances in Canaan : even as the out-pouring of the fpirit, in the beginning of tin". Chriftian ciiurch, was a great means God made ufe of for the well eflabliihing it in the world in all fucceeding ages. C c II. The (w) Theywere polluted by Ac H.\}i.'] Obfcrve here the dange- rous nature of fin, \vhicli not only brings deftruftion on indivi- duals, but on whole nations and communities ; and no fin has pro- duced more awful confequcnccs than this of covetoufnefs, which, indeed, is the parent of moll others. Whence flowed the blood that has llained families — encrimfoned towns — and deluged na- tions? From this curfed principle, which brings raifery on the poffeffor, and ruin on all around him. [U.S.] 192 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. 1 1 . The next thing I would obferve, was God's bring- ing the people of Tfrael \inder the hand of Jofhua, and fettling them in that land where Chrift was to be born, and which was the great type of the heavenly Canaan, which Chrift has purchafed. This was done by Jofliua, who was of Jofeph's poftcrity, and was an eminent type of Chrift, and is therefore called ' the lliepherd, the ftone ' of Ifrael,' in Jacob's bleffing of Jofeph. [Gen. xlix. 24.] (x) Being fuch a type of Chrift, he bore the name of Chrift. JoJJiua and jefus are the fame name, only the one is Hebrew, the other Greek ; and therefore, in the New Teftament, which was originally written in Greek, Joihua is called Jefns. [A6l:s vii. 4^.] ' Which alfo our fathers ' brought in with Jefus,' i.e. JoJJiua; [Heb. iv. 8.] ' If ' Jefus, i. e. if JoJIiua had given them reft, he would not ' have fpoken of another day.' God wonderfully poffefled his people of this land, con- quering the former inhabitants of it, and the mighty giants, as Chrift conquered the devil ; firft fubduing the gieat kings of that part of the land that was on the eaftern fide of Jordan, Sihon king of the Amorites, and Og king of Balhan ; and then dividing the river Jordan, as before he had done the Red Sea ; caufmg the walls of Jericho to fall down at the found of the trumpets of the priefts ; (that typifying the found of the gofjtel by the preaching of gofpel minifters, and the walls of the accurfed city Jericho, the walls of Satan's kingdom ;) and after thus wonderfully de- ftroying the mighty hoft of the Amorites under the five kings, caufmg the fun and moon to ftand ftill, to help the people againft their enemies, at the prayer of the typical Jefus ; (x) Shepherd, the Jione of Ifrael,] i.e. From Jacob defcended Jofeph ; or, from the God of Jacob it was that Jofeph, through Divine Providence, was fent into Eg-ypt, to be a ihepherd to feed his father's family, and as a ftone to uphold and fupport it ; in which he was a type of Chriit, the great and good (hepherd of the flock, and the ftone that is laid in Zion, on which the whole fpiritual Ifrael of God is built ; the foundation ftone on which they aie laid and are fafe, and the corner ftone which knits them together. [Pf. cxviii. 22.] — [Gill in loc] FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 193 Jefus ; [ Jof. X. 12.] plainly fignifying this, that God would make the whole courfe of nature to be fubfervient to the affair of redemption ; fo that every thing Ihould yield to the purpofes of that work, and give place to the welfare of God's redeemed people. Thus did Chriffc ihow his great love to his eleft, that he would make the courfe of nature to give place to their happinefs and profperity ; and fliowed that the fun and moon, and all things vifd')le and invilible, were theirs by his purchafe. (y) At the fame time, Chrift fought as the captain of their hoft, and call down great hailftones upon their enemies, by which more were flain than by the fvvord of the children of Ifrael. And after this he gave (y) All things are ovv.s.'] " Chriftians, God has created all things in the world of nature with this defign, that you Hiould derive fome benefit from them, as far as they can come within your reach, or notice, your fervice or ufe. He appointed all things in the couniels of his providence, to bear fome bleffing for you. He has ordained all things in his kingdom of grace for your advantage ; and there are unknown regions of light and glory which he has provided for you. His elefL were ever nearell to his heart, next to the man Chrift Jefus, next to * his only begotten Son ;' for they were all ' chofen in him before the foundation of the world.' [Eph. i. 4.] Whether creation or providence, whether nature, grace, or glory, * all things are for youi fakes.' [2 Cor. iv. 15.] *' I would caution you .... not to underftand it in fuch an incredible fenfe, as though God made every particular creature in the upper and the lower worlds, only to give the pofTeffion of them to the faints ; or that he manages all his providential kingdom merely for the fake of his own people, without any other view. No, this is flretching the words into an extent too large and un- reafonable ; for there arc millions of creatures, millions of plants and animals in earth and fea, that are born, and grow, and live, and die again, which the faints of God never favv, nor knew, nor fliall know ; nor can they receive any immediate benefit from them. But the meaning Is this, that all things whatfoever the faints can or fliall have to do within this or other worlds, were intended to yield fome profit to them ; and efpeclally while they maintain their charafter as the children of God, and walk as be- comes their dignity and tlieir profeflion. In all God's general counfels of creation, and providence, and grace, he kept his eye (as I may fay) ftlU upon his faints ; he defigned their good in ten thoufand inllances, in his great and glorious works, and rcfolved C c 2 that 194 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. gzve the people a mighty victory over a yet greater army in the northern part ot the land, that were gathered to- gether that nothing in all his kingdoms fhould interfere with their laft and beft intereft. *' Though what he has written down in the book of his decrees, is read only at large by his Son Jefus Chrift, yet he has written out a fweet abftraci: of it in the book of his promifes, that the faints on earth might read and know it. [Rom. viii. 28.] ' And v/e know * that all things work together for good to them that love God ; * to them, who are the called according to his purpofe.' It was for their fakes the promifes were written, that they might not only have a prefent relifh of divine bleflings, but a fweet foretaftc of joys long to come. " The bleflings of the children of God were numbered up, and written down originally for them, in the book of God's everlafting counfels : and in the book of his word has he copied out of them ; * the bleflings of heaven from above, and of the deep from beneath ; ' the precious things brought forth by the fun,' and under the in- fluence of the moon ; ' the chief things of the ancient mountains' on earth, fo far as is needful for them here ; ' and the precious ' things of the everlafting hills' of paradife hereafter. [Deut. xxxiii. 13, 14.] " Does the great Creator and Lord of all keep the wheels of nature in their fettled courfes? It is for the people's good ; ' The * liars in their courfes fhall fight for Ifrael:' or does he countermand nature in any of its motions, and bid the ' fun fl:and ftill in Gibeon, ' and the moon in the valley of Ajalon?' It is, that the armies of his people may have long day-light to fiibduc their enemies. Hail- ftones and thunder fliall break out of the clouds to deftroy the Ca- naanites, when Ifrael is at war with them : but if Ifrael want bread in the wildernefs, the clouds fliall drop down manna, and give them bread from heaven." [Watts's Sermons, vol. iii. fer. 38.] With refpeft to the miracle wrought by Jofliua, we beg leave to add, there is no neceflity, from the text, to fuppofe any real eff"e6l wrought on the bodies of the fun or moon, nor perhaps of the eaith itfelf ; the moll natural interpretation feems to he, that the light of the fun, and perhaps alfo of the moon blended with it, was miraculoufly protrafted, not, it may be, on the whole he- mifphere, but from Gibeon to Ajalon, and on the adjacent coun- try. This is confirmed by the obfervation of fome learned men, that the Hebrew words [ii'Di:' and m'] are never ufed flridly for the orbs themfelves, (the language haying other words forthefe) but for the light emitted from them. So that, in fa6^, the light might be continued all night, and thus two days blended together, or, as the fon of Sirach exprefles it, [Ecclef. xlvi. 4.] ' one day * as long as two.' [Sec Pike's Phil. Sac. p. 47. and Gill on jofli. X. 13.] • [i.N.:i FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 195 gcther at the waters of Merom, as the fand of the fea (hore, [Jofh. xi. 4.] 12- Another thing that God did towards carrying on this affair, was his adlually fetting up his ftated worftiip among the people, as it liad been before inflituted in the wilderncfs. This worfhip was appointed at Mount Sinai, wholly in fubferviency to this great affair of redemp- tion. It was to make way for tlie coming of Chrifl ; and the innumerable ceremonial obfervances of it were typical of him and his redemption. This worfliip was chiefly inftituted at Mount Sinai ; but it was gradually put in pradtice. It was partly fet up in the wildernefs, where the tabernacle and its vefTels were made ; but there were many parts of this inflituted worfhip that could not be obferved in the wildernefs, by reafon of their unlet- tled, itinerant ftate there : and then there were many pre- cepts that refpe61:ed the land of Canaan, and their cities and places of habitation there ; which therefore could not be put in pradlice, till thev came into the land. But pow, when this was brought to pafs, God fet up his tabernacle in the midft of his people, as he had before promifed them, [Lev. xxiv. 11.] ' I will fet my taber- ' nacle amongft you.* The tabernacle was fet up at Shi- loh, [Jolh. xviii. j.J and the priefls and Levites had their offices appointed them, and the cities of refuge were alio appointed ; and now the people were in condition to cbferve their feafts of the firft fruits, and their feaft of ingathering, and to bring all the tithes and offerings to the Lord ; and moft parts of God's worlhip were now obferved, though f:here were fome things that were not jill afterwards. 13. The next thing I would take notice of, is God's wonderfully preferving the people, from this time for- ward, when all the lualcs went up, three times in the year, to the place where the ark was. The people of If- rael were generally furrounded with enemies, that fought all opportunities to deflroy, anj difpoffefs them of their land ; and till David's time there were great numbers in the land of the remains of the Canaanites, and the other former 196 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. former inhabitants, that were bitter enemies to the people of Ifrael : and thefe had from year to year, three times in the year, a fair opportunity of over-running their coun- try, and getting poflefTion of their cities, when all the rnales were gone, and only the women and thofe who were not able to go up, were left behind : yet they were remarkably preferved throughout all generations at fuch feafons, agreeable to the promife that God had made, [Exod. xxxiv. 24.] ' Neither fliall any man defire thy ' land, when thou ihalt go up to appear before the Lord * thy God thrice in the year.' So wonderfully did God order affairs, and influence the hearts of their enemies, that though they were fo full of enmity againft Ifrael, and defired to difpofTefs them of their land, and had frequently fo fair an opportunity ; yet we never read, in all their hiflorv, of any of their enemies taking thefe opportunities againft them. This was furely a wonderful difpenfation of divine Providence ; to maintain and promote God's great defign of redemption. 14. God's preferving his church and the true religion from being wholly extindl in the frequent apoftafies of the Ifraeliies in the time of tlie Judges. How prone was that people to forfake the true God, who had done fuch wonderful things for them, and to fall into idolatry i And how did the land, from time to time, feem to be almoft over-run with it ! But vet God never futFered. his true worfhip to be totally rooted out : his tabernacle ftood, the ark was preferved, the book of the law was kept from being deftroyed, God's pricfthood was upheld, and God flill had a church among the people ; and time after time, when religion was come to the laft extremity, then God granted a revival, and fent fome angel, or raifed up fome eminent perfon, to be an inftrument of their reformation. i^. God's preferving that nation from being deftroyed? and delivering them from time to time, although they were fo often fubdued and broi'ght under the dominion of their enemies. It is a wonder, not only that the true religion was not wholly rooted out, and fo the church deftroyed that FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 197 tliat way ; but alfo that the very nation in which that church was, was not utterly deftroyed. One while they were fubdued by Chuflian-riihataim king of Mefopotamia, another while under the Moabites; they were fold into the hand of Jabin king of Canaan ; they were brought under the dominion of the Midianites ; were forely dif- trefled by the children of Ammon; and afterward by the Philillines. But yet God, in all thefe dangers, prefcrved them from being wholly overthrown ; and from time to time, when it was come to extremity, and they were upon the very brink of ruin, God raifed up a deliverer, [Deut. xxxii. 36.] ' For the Lord ihall judge his people, and * repent himfelf for his fervants ; when he feeth their * power is gone, and there is none fluU up or left.' Thefe remarkable difpenfations of Providence are fet forth in a lively and elegant manner in the cvith Pfalm. Thefe deliverers that God raifed up from time to time were all types of Chrift, the great Redeemer of his church ; and fome of them very remarkably fo ; as, particularly, Barak, Jephthah, Gideon, Samfon, in many particulars ; efpecially in the a6ts of Samfon, as might be ihown, were it not that this would take up too much time, (z) 16. It ( z ) Inftead of running through the various particulars in which thefe worthies may be fuppofcd to have typified the Redeemer, it may be more ufeful to fubjoin the following remarks on typical charaftcrs in general : ** I. In order to conftitute a proper type it is by no means necefTary, that the perfon who anfwers tliis important purpofc fliould poflefs perfect moral qualities ; were this requifite, who ever was worthy to rcprefent the Son of God ? .... It will follow, " 2. That the comparifon is not to be ftatcd and purfued through every particular incident of the life, and every feature of the perfon typifying. . . . ** 3. Scripture by direft application, or by fair unftrained ana- logy, ought therefore to lead, to regulate, and to correft all our inquiries of this fort. . . . " 4. ... It is of importance to inquire, whether or not the refemblance we mean to purfue, has a tendency to promote foms moral, praftical, pious purpofe." [Hunter's Sac. 13Iog. vol. ii. Iecl.5.J 198 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. 16. It is obfervable, that when Chrift came to manage the affairs of his church in this period, he often appeared in the form of that nature that he took upon him in his incarnation. So he feems to have appeared to Mofes from time to time, and particularly at that time when God fpakc to him face to face, as a man fpeaketh to his friend, and he beheld the fimilitude of the Lord [Numb. xii. 8.] after he had befought him to (how him his glory ; which was the mofl remarkable vifion that ever he had of Chrift. There was a twofold difcovery that Mofes had of Chrift : . one was fpiritual, when he proclaimed his name, ' The * Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, long-fuf- * fering, and abundant in goodnefs and truth, keeping * mercy for thoufands, forgiving iniquity and tranfgreflion * and fni, and that will by no means clear the guilty ; vi- < fiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and ' upon the childrens children, unto the third and to the * fourth generation.' [Exod. xxxiv. 6, &c.] Another was external ; which was that which Mofes faw, when Chrift paffed by, and put him in a cleft of the rock, and covered him with his hand, fo that Mofes faw his back-parts. What he faw was doubtlefs the back-parts of a glorious human form, in which Chrift appeared to him, and in all likelihood the form of his glorified human nature, in which he fliould afterwards appear. He faw not his face ; for it is not to be fuppofed that any man could fubfift under a fight of the glory of Chrift's human nature as it now appears. So it was an human form in which Chrift appeared to the feventy elders. [Exod. xxiv. 9 — 11.] ' Then went up Mofes and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and feventy of the elders of Ifrael. And they faw the God of If- rael : and there was under his feet, as it were a paved work of a fapphire-ftone, and as it weie the body of heaven in his clearnefs. And upon the nobles of the children of Ifrael he laid not ' his hand : alfo they faw God, and did eat and drink.*' So Chrift appeared afterwards to Jofhua in the form of the human nature, [Jolh. v, 13, 14.] ' And it came to pafs when Jolhua ' was FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 199 * was by Jericlio, he life up his eyes, and looked, and be- * hold, there ftood a man over againft him, with a fword ' drawn in his hand: and Jolhua went unto him, and ' laid unto him, Art thou for us, or for our advcrfaries ? ' And he faid. Nay, but as captain of the hoft of the * Lord am I now come.' And fo he appeared to Gideon, [Judg. vi. II, &c.] and fo alio to Manoah, [chap, xiii, 17—21.] ilere Chrift appeared to !Manoah in a repre- fentation botli of his incarnation and death ; of his in- carnation, in that he appeared in a human form ; and of his deatii and fullcrings, reprefented by his afcending up in the flame of the facrifice ; intimating thereby, that lie was to be tlie great facritice, that mull: be offered up to God for a fweet favour, in the fire of his wrath, as that kid was burned and alcended up in the flame. Chriic thus appeared, time after time, in the torm of that nature lie was afterwards to afiume, becaufehe now came on the fame delign, and to carry on the fame work, that he was to finilh in that nature, (a) Another thing I would men- tion, (a) Quvi^i^T appeared 'in the human f'jrm.~\ Having repeatedly intimated an intention of coniidciing thefe appearances in a col- lected view, we fhall now attempt it. But to lave repetition, we muft beg the reader to review our author's obfervations on the Di- vine appearance to Jacob, (p. 157) and to Mofes, (p. 167) as well as thofe mentioned under thit head, and then he will be pre- pared to accompany us in the following remarks : I. The divine Perlon who appears, is frequently called by the auguit names of 'Jehovah and Elohlni, Lord and God. This is parti- cularly obfervable in the appearances to Jacob and Mofes; we flidll only inftance in the former. We are told, [Gen. xxxii. 24, &:c.3 * Jacob was left alone, and there wreilled a man with him until * the breaking of the day:' whatever is the meaning of this ex- traordinary circumilance, it is certain that Jacob was aware of his viiltor, by his fo earnellly entreating his blefling, but more cfpecially by his calling the name of that place Penuel, (/. e. the face of God) becaufe he had ' feen God facj to face.' Jacob feems to advert to this circumftance in the lall (lage of his life, for, blefiing the fons of Jofcph, he fays, ' The angel that re- * deemed me blcfs the lads.' But mod remarkable is a paflagc in the Proph'-t Hofca, [ch. xii. 4.] relating to ihis circumilance; * He had power over the angel, and prevailed:' tliis refers to his wrelUing, which was doubtlcls a fymbolical action: 'He wept, D d * and 200 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. tiim, clone in tliis period towards the work of redemp- tion, is the beginning of tlie fuccefiion of prophets, and eredling * and made fiipplication unto him;' when he would not let him go without a blcflir/g ; ' He found him in Bethel ; there he fpake * with us. Even the Lord God \ Jehovah Elohiml of hofts; the * Lord \_j'eJxjvah] is his memorial;' /. e. the name by which he will be known. [See Otven on the Hebrews, vol. i. p. 1 18.] And it is obfervable, that the perfon appearing in moft of thefe vifions feems to be called promifcuoufly both the Lord and the angel of the Lord. 2. The manner in which this angel fpeaks is very obfervable, and fuch as no created being ought to afliime. The angel that appeared to Hagar faid, ' I will multiply thy feed exceedingly ;' [Gen. xvi. ic] To Abraham, ' Thou haft not withheld thy fon ' from. me\^ [Gen. xxii. 12.] And to Mofes, [Exod. iii. 4.] * I * am the God of Abraham, Haac, and Jacob,' 5:c. 3. The perfon thus appearing receives divine honours — ' Put * the flioes from off thy feet,' faid he to Mofes and Joftiua, ' for ' the place whereon thou ftandeft is holy ground.' The latter, we are exprefsly told, did ivorJl.i'ip the captain of the Lord's hoft. [See Dr. AU'ix, Judgment of the Jewifli Church, p. 234. and Bp. Patrkh on Jofh. v. 14, 15.] Though we do not conceive, (as fome have done) that Gideon's prcfcnt was a facrifice, yet the reafon of the angel refufmg a facrifice from Manoah is very fingular, and pertinent to our point, viz. that Manoah knew him not. [Judges xiii. 16.3 4. It is very remarkable that God has fo repeatedly revealed himfelf as a jealous God, and declared that he will not give his glory to another. [Exod. xx. 5. Ifa. xlii. 8.] It therefore follows, 5. That this could not be a created angel. — In the angelic ap- pearances in the Neiv Teftament we find no fuch language ; none of the names of God are applied to them, nor do they aflume any of his prerogatives ; and when the apoflle John offered to worfliip one of thefe, though, it is probable, he did not intend fupreme adoration, yet the angel refufed and forbad him. [Rev. xix. lo.j Or if we fuppofe the apoftle meant to adore him, it muft be on a fuppofition, that he was the Son of God, which, if it could be proved, would very much ftrengthen our hypothefis. Nor, 6. By the angel of the Lord mult we underftand any mere external form in which the Deity refided, and fpake as a cloud or flame, &c. becaufe he is called * the c'aptain of falvation,' and generally appeared in a human form. Neither, 7. Muft we underftand God the Father himfelf, for our Lord exprefsly tells the Jews, that they had not at any time either ' heard his voice, or feen hisfhape,' [John v. 37.] And hecaufc FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 201 erefting a fchool of the prophets, in Samuel's time. There was fomething ot this fpirit of prophecy in Uracl after Mofes, becaufe the fcilptiires never rcprefent the Father in any delegated or inferior charafter. But, 8. Thefe reprefentations perfectly agree with the account given in fcripture of the Son of God, who is called the ' angel ' of the covenant,' [Mai. iii. i. in the Hebrew,] and perhaps the * angel of God's prefence.' [Ifa. Ixiii. 9.] 9. It appears, that of the patriarchs and others to whom this angel appeared, fome knew him immediately to be God himfelf, and in general all were convinced of it after he was departed; hence many of them faid, * We fliall die, for we have feen God.' 10. This was the univerfal opinion of the Chriilian fathers, as has been fhewn at large by Bp. Bull, Dr. JVaterlaucI, and others ; a fmgle palfage therefore, full to our purpofe, fhall fuffice. *' It was Chrill who defcended into communion v.ith men, from Adam unto the patriarchs and prophets in vifions, dreams and appearances or reprefentations of himfelf, inilrucling them in his future condition from the beginning: and God who converfed with men on earth, was no other than the Word who was to be made flefli." [Tkr- TULLiAN. See Owen on the Heb. vol. i. p. 121.3 11. Even fome of the moft eminent Jewifli writers have made confeflions to this purpofe. So Rab. M. N. Gerundensis, of the 13th century; " This angel, if we fpcak cxaftly, is the angel the redeemer, concerning whom it is written, * My name is in him,' that angel who faid to Jacob, * I am the God of Bethel,' &c. \_0'wen on the Heb. vol. i. p. 122.] 12. Moft of thefe remarks, as they go to prove that thefe ap- pearances were of the Son of God, they no lefs prove tlie divinity of his perfon and chara<^ler; which is the principal i"eafon of our infifting fo largely on this fubjeft. 13. We are not however from any of thefe propofitions to Infer, that in all the inftances of God's fpeaking under the Old Teftament, the Son only, as diftinguiflied from the Father, was intended: this notion would involve almoft as great difficulties as the oppoiite one of there being a created angel, as will appear from the following remarkable text, [Exod. xxiii. 20, 21.] ' Behold, I fend an angel * before thee, to keep thee in the way, and to bring thee into the * place which I have prepared. Beware of him, and obey his voice ; * provoke him not; for he will not pardon your tranfgrcffions: for * my name is in him.' Thefe are evidently the wordr, of the Father promifmg that the angel of the covenant (hould go bciore to be the guide of Ifrael; in which we cannot but obferve, that this angel has the peculiar attributes and prerogatives of Deity afcribcd to him. 14. To this it may be objecled, [from Exod. xxxiii. 2 — 4.] That when God promifed to fend an angel before them, the Lord D d 2 thveatened 20Z HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. ]Mofes, before Samuel. Jofhua and many of the judges had a degree of it. Deborah was a prophetefs : and fome of tlie high priefls were infpired with this fpirit ; particularly Eli : and tliat fpace of time was not wholly without in- flances of thofe that were fet apart of God efpecially to this office, and fo were called prophets. Such an one we read of, [Judg. vi.8.] ' The Lord fent a prophet unto the chil- ' dren of Ifrael, which faid unto them,' &c. Such an one he feems to have been that ^^'e read of, [i Sam. ii. 27.] ' And there came a man of God to Eli,' &c. But there was no fuch order of men upheld in Ifrael for any conftancy, before Samuel ; the want of it is ta- ken notice of, [i Sam. iii. i.] ' And the word of the ' Lord was precious in thofe days ; there was no open J vilion.' (b) But in Samaiel there was begun a fuccef- fion threatened that he would not go up himfelf, on which occafion the people mourned : but the Jevvifli dotlors will furnifli us with an caiy folutlon of this difficuhy ; for Aben Ezra obferves, [fee GUI in loc] that this was not the angel promifed before, [chap, xxiii.j but an in'erior one, which the Lord threatened to fend with them Inllead of the former ; though afterwards he relented and promifed his own prefence, which feems to be the fame as in- tended in Ifaiah by the ' angtl of his prefence.' So Rab. Mena- CHEM faith, " This angel is not the angel of the covenant, of whom he fpake in the time of favourable acceptance, ' My prefence fliall ' gc; :' for now the holy bleifed God had taken away his divine prefence from among them, and would have led them by the hand of another angel." [-^i'-f- in Ex. xxxii. 34.] 15. Upon the whole, whenever we re.id of a divine appearance under the Old Teftament, in which a human or angelic form was exhibited, or fome delegated and inferior charadtcr iuilained, and yet combined with fom.e circumftances that forbid our underftand- ing it of a mere angel, we may fafely interpret it of the Son of God, who thus anticipated his future humiliation, and ' whofe delights f from the beginning were with the fons of men.' [G. E.J ( B ) The ivord of the Lord was precious /// ihof days.] " That is, a word from the Lord in a dream or vifion directing, informing, inllrufting, or reproving, this was very rarely had ; of late there had been but very fcv,' inftances, and which accounts for it, why not only the child Sanuiel knew not it was the voice of the Lord that called to him, but £/: himfelf thought nothing of it until he l.ad calbd a third time, fo rare and fcarce was any iullance of this kind; and FkOM MOSES TO DAVID. 203 fion of prophets, that was maintained continnallv from tliat time, at leaft with very little interruption, till the fpirit of prophecy ceafed, abo\it IMalachi's time ; and therefore Samuel is fpoken of in the New Teflamcnt as the beginning of the fucceflion of prophets, [A6ls iii. 24.] • And all the prophets from Samuel, and thofe that follow * after, as many have fpoken, have foretold of thefc days/ After Samuel was Nathan, and Gad, and Iddo, and He- man, and Afaph, and others. And in the latter end of Solomon's reign, we read of Ahijah ; and in Jeroboam and Rehoboam's time we read of prophets ; and fo con- tinually one prophet fucceetling another till the captivity. We read of prophets as being a conllant order of men upheld in the land in thofe days: and in the time of the captivity there were Ezekiel and Daniel ; and after the captivity there weie Zechariah, Haggai, and Malachi. And becaufe God intended a conftant fucceffion of prophets from Samuel's time, therefore now was begun a fchool of the prophets ; that is, a fchool of young men, that were trained up under fome great prophet, who was their mailer and teacher in the fludy of divine things, and the pradUce of liolinefs, to fit them for this office, as God fliould call them to it. Thofe yo\mg men that be- longed to thele fchools, were called the fons of the pro- phets ; and oftentimes they are called prophets. Thefe at firft were under the tuition of Samuel. [Sam. xix. 20.] ' And , . . and as every thing that is fcarce and rare, is generally precious, fo the word of God in this way alfo v.as ; and fo it is confidcred in every view of it, as the written word of God : when there was but little of it penned, as at this time, and few or none to teach and inftrufl in it, Eli being old and liis fons fo vile ; or when it is forbidden to be read, or the copies of it dcRroyed and become fcarce, as it was in the times of Dioclefian : or when there are but very few faithful evangelical miniitcrs of the word ; which though it is always precious to them that have precious faith in it, the promifcs of it being exceeding great and precious, and the truths of it more precious than fine gold, and the grand fubjeft of it, a precious Saviour, who is fo in his perfon, offices, blood, righteouf- ncfs and facrifice : yet it is generally more precious when there is a fcarcity of it, when God makes a man, a gofpel minillcr, m.cnre precious than fine gold. [See Ifa. xiii. 12.] [Gill in loc.] 304 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. * And when they faw the company of prophets prophe- ' fying, and Sajnuel {landing as appointed over them.' The company of the prophets that we read of i Sam. x. 5. were the fame. Afterwards we read of their being under Elijah. Elifha was one of his fons ; but he dehred to have a double portion of his fpirit, as his fucceflbr, as his firfl born : as the cldell; fon was wont to have a double portion of the eftate of his fluher ; and therefore the other ions of the prophets, when they perceived that the fpirit of Elijah refled on Eliflia, fubmitted themfelves to him, and owned him for their mafter, as they had done Elijah before; [2 Kings ii. 15.] ' And when the fons of the * prophets which were to view at Jericho, faw him, they ' faid, the fpirit of Elijah doth reft on Elilha. And they * bowed themfelves to the ground before him.' [See alfo 2 Kings iv. 38.] In Elijah's and Eliflia's time, there were feveral places where there refuled companies of thefe fons of the pro- phets ; as there was one at Bethel, another at Jericho, and another at Gilgal, unlefs tliat at Gilgal and Jericho were the fame ; and poiTibly that wliicli is called the college, where the prophetels Huldah refided, was another at jeru- falem ; [fee 2 Kings xxii. 14.] It is there faid of Huldah the prophetefs, that ' fhe dwelt in Jerufalem, in the col- * lep'c.' (c) They had houfes built, where thev ufed to dwell together ; and therefore thofe at Jericho being mul- tiplied, and finding their houfe too little for them, defired leave of their mafter Eli (ha, that they might go and hew timber to build a larger. [2 King vi. i, 2.] At fome times there were numbers of thefe fons of the prophets in Ifrael ; for when Jezebel cut oft' the prophets of the Lord, it is faid that Obadiaii took an hundred of them, and hid them by fifty in a cave, [i Kings xviii. 4.] Thefe fchoois of the proplicts being fet up by Samuel, and afterwards kept up by fuch propliets as Elijah and Eliftia, (c) Huldah dnvelt in the college.] " In the college of the prophets ; in the houfc of inftnidlon, as 'the Targum ; the fchool where the yoiuig prophets were inllrucfed and trained up." — fGiLL in loc.] FROM MOSES TO DAVID. 205 EHlha, mud be of divine appointment : and accordingly we find, tliat thofe fons o( the prophets were often fa- voured with a degree of infpiration, while they continued under tuition in the fchools of the prophets ; and God commonly, when he called any prophet to the conftant exercife of the prophetical office, and to fome extraordi- nary fervice, took them outof thefe Ichools ;— though not univerfally. Hence the prophet Amos, fpeaking of his being called to the prophetical office, fays, that he was one that had }?ot been educated in the fchools of the pro- phets, and was not one of the fons of the prophets. [Amos vii. 15.] But Amos's taking notice of it as remark- able, that he Ihould be called to be a prophet that had not been educated at the fchools of the prophets, flaows that it was God's ordinary manner to take his prophets out of thefe fchools ; for therein he did but blefs his own inftitution. Now this remarkable difpenfation of Providence, viz. God's beginning a conftant fucceffion of prophets in Sa- muel's time, that was to laft for many ages ; and to thai end, eftabliHiing a fchool of the prophets under Samuel, thenceforward to be continued in Ifrael, was in order to promote that great affair of redemption which we are upon. For the main bufmefs of this fucceffion of pro- phets was to forefhow Chrift, and the glorious redemption that he was to acconjplifh, and fo prepare the way for hii coming. [A6ts iii. 18, 24.-— x. 43.] As I obfcrved before, [fee p. 82.] the Old Teftament time was like a time of night, wherein the church was not wholly without light, but had not the light of the fun directly, but as refle61:ed from the ftars. Now thefe prophets were the ftars that reflected the light of the fun ; and accordingly they fpoke abundantly of Jefus Chrift, as appears by what we have of their prophecies in writing. And they made it very much their bufmefs, when they ftudied in their fchools or colleges, and elfc where, to fearch out the work of redemption ; agreeable to what the apoftle Peter fays of them, [i Pet. i. 10, ii-] ' Of ' which falvation the prophets have inquired, and fearch- ' ed 2o6 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. ' ed diligently, who prophefied of the grace that fliould * come iinto you ; fearching what, or what manner of * time the Spirit of Chrift that was in them did hgnify, ' when it teftitied beforehand the fufFerings of Chrift, and * the glory that fliould follow.' (d) We are told that the church of the Redeemer is ' built on the foundation * of the prophets and apoftles, himfelf being the chief cor- * ncr-ftone.' [Eph. ii. 20.] This was the firft thing of the nature tiiat ever was done in the world ; and it was a great thing that God did to- Avards farther advancing this great building of redemption. There liad been before occafional prophecies of Chrift, as was fhovvn ; but now the time drawing nearer when the Redeemer Ihould come, it pieafed God to appoint a certain order of men, in conftant fuccefllon, whofe main buhnefs it ftiould be, to foreflicw Chrift and his redemption, and as his forerunners to prepare the way for his coming ; and God eftablilhed fchools, wherein multitudes were inftru6l- ed and trained up to that end. [Rev. xix. 10.] ' I am thy * fellow fervant, and of thy brethren that have the tefti- ' mony of Jefus ; for the teftimony of Jefus is the fpirit * of prophecy.' § V. (d) Of ivh'ich fal'uation the prophets have inquired, y^.] This paflage prefents us with the following important truths : 1. That the fpirit which infplred the antient prophets was the fpirit of Chrill ; an irrefragable argument of his pre-exiilence and divinity. 2. That as Chrift was the author, fo was he the grand fubjeft of their prediftions ; the alpha and omega of the Bible, * The tef- * timony of Jefus is the fpirit of prophecy', or, as fome invert the words, ' The fpirit of prophecy is the teftimony of Jefus ;' [fo Doddridge and Bp. Hurd.~\ ' To him give all the prophets witnefs,* [Ads X. 43.] ' both as to his fufFerings and the glory that fliould * follow.' 3. That the prophets had only t partial acquaintance with the meaning of their own prediftions. It Avas not neceftary, nor in many cafes expedient, that they fliould ftdly comprehend them, efpecially as to the time of their accomplifhment. 4. That they eftcemed the fubjeft worthy their inquir)' and ar- dent ftudy : * Prophets and Kings defired' to fee and hear the thin'-'s revealed to us, [Luke x. 24.] How highly then fliould we efteem — how deeply venerate — how ineftlniably prize thefe difcoveries ! ' Blefled are our eyes, if they fee — and our ears, if * they fuitably attend to them.' [J. N.] [ 207 ] § V. From David to the BahyloniJJi captivity. I COME now to the fifth period of the times of the Old Teftament, beginning with David, and extending to the Babylonifli captivity ; and would now proceed to fliow how the work of redemption was therein carried en.— And here, The firft thing to be taken notice of, is God's anoint- int^ that perfon who was to be the anceftor of Chrift, to be king over his people. The difpenfations of Providence which have been taken notice of through the lafi: period, from Mofes to this time, refpeft the notion, but now the fcripture-hiftory leads u:- to confider God's providence towards that particular perfon whence Chrill: was to pro- ceed, viz. David. It pleated God at this time remarkably to feleft out this perfon from all the thoufands of Ifrael, and to put a mofl honourable mark of diftinilion upon him, by anointing him to be king over his people. It was only God that could find him out. His father's houfc is Ipoken of as being little in Ifrael, and he was the voungefi: of all the fons of his father, and was leaft ex- pedled to be the man that God had chofen, by Samuel, (e) God had before, in the former ages of the world, remark- ably diftinguifhed the perfons from whom Chrift was to come ; as Seth, Noah, Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob. The laft inftance of this was in Jacob's blcffing his fon Judah ; unlefs we reckon Nahflion's advancement in the wilder- nefs to be the head of the tribe of Judah. [Numb. i. 7.] But this dilfindion in the perfon of David was very ho- E e nourablc : ( E ) David /Z>f kajl likely to be Gael's chofen.'} " God feeih not * as ' tnanfeeth.' — Samuel was fent to choofe a king among tbe fons of Jefle. [i Sam. xvi. 6.] When he faw Eliab, he faid, ' Surely the ' Lord's anointed is before him ;' but the Lord faid to Samuel, [ver. 7.] ' Look not on his countenance, nor on the height ot his * itature, becaufc I have refufed him.* Old Jefle, it may be, was ready to look on his eldell fon too, being pleal'ed with hi* tall and comely figure, and to fay within himfelf, ' It is a pity that Eliab * was not made a king !' But David was God's beloved." — [Watts's Sermons, vol. i. for. 7.] 2o8 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. nourable : for it was God's anointing liini to be king over his people. And thereby -was fomething farther denoted than in the anointing of Saul. God anointed Saul to be king perfonally ; but God intended fomething farther bv fending Samuel to anoint David, viz. to ertablifli the crown of Ifrael in him and in his family, as long as Ifrael con- tinued to be a kingdom ; and not only fo, but what was infinitely more, eftablifliing the crown of his univerfal church, his fpiritual Ifrael, in his feed, to the end of the v/orld, and throughout eternity. This was a great difpenfation of God, and a great ftep taken towards a farther advancing of the work of redemp- tion, according as the time grew near wherein Chrift was lb come. David, as he was the anceftor of Chrift, fo he was the greateft perfonal type of Chrift under the Old Tef- tament. The types of Chrift were of three forts ; inftituted, providential, and perfonal. (f) The ordinance of facri- iicing was the greateft of the injlituted types ; the redemp- tion out of Egypt was the greateft of the providential ; and David the greateft of the perfonal ones. Hence Chrilt is often called David in the prophecies of fcripture ; [Ezek. xxxiv. 23, 24.] ' And I will fet up one fliepherd over them, * and he fliall feed them, even my fervant David ; my ' fervant David a prince among them ;' and fo in many other places : and he is very often fpokcn of as the feed or fon of David. David being the anceftor and great type of Chrift, his being folcmnly anointed by God to be king over his peo- ple, that the kingdom of his church might be continued in (f) The Tyve.% of Chrift of three forts. ~\ So, Dr. Owen diflin- guillies types into, i. Such as were directly appointed for that end, (which our author calls inftituted) as the facrifices ; 2. Such as had only a providential ordination to that end, as the ftory of Jacob and Efau ; and, 3. Things that fell out of old, fo as to il- luftrate prefent things from a fimilitude between them, as the alle- gory of Hagar and Sarah. Others diltinguifli them into nW and perfonal ; by the former, intending the tobernacle, temples, and religious inftitutlons ; and under the latter, including what our author calls providential and perfonal types. \_Mather on the Types, p. 6i.~\ — Thefe latter we have noticed as they occurred, and the former will be confidered in a proper place. [N. V.] FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 209 in his family for ever, may in fotne refpe6ls be looked on as an anointing of Chrift himfelf. Chrift was as it were anointed in him ; and therefore Chrift's anointing and David's anointing are fpoken of under one in fcripture, [Pfal. Ixxxix. 20.] * I have fomid David my fcrvant ; * with my holy oil have I anointed him.' And David's throne and Chrift's are fpoken of as one : [Luke i. 32.] ' And the Lord Ihall give him the throne of his father ' David.' [Acls ii. 30.] ' David— knowing that God ' had fworn with an oath to him, that of the fruit of his ' loins, according to the flelh, he would raife up Chrift to ' lit on his throne.' Thus God's beginning of the kingdom of his church in the houfe of David, was a new eftablifliing of the kinf^dom of Chrift ; the beginning of it in a ftate of fuch vilibility as it thenceforward continued in. It was God's planting the root, whence that branch of rightcoufnefs was afterwards to fpring up, which was to be the everlaft- ing king of his church ; and therefore this everlafting king is called the branch from tlie ftem of Jeffe. [Tla. xi. I.] ' And there Ihall come forth a rod out of the ftem of « Jefie, and a branch ftiall grow out of his roots.' (g) [Jer. xxiii. 5.] ' Behold, the days come, faith the Lord, * that I will raife up unto David a righteous brancli, and E e 2 'a king (g) yl rod from theficm of Jesse.] In the preceding chapter "•' the prophet had defcribed the Affyrian army under the image of a mio^hty foreft . . . cut down to the ground, by the ax weilded by the hand of fome powerful and iliullrious agent : in oppofition to this image he reprefents the great peifon, who makes the fubjedl of this chapter, as a flender twig, fliooting out from the trunk of an old tree, cut down, lopped to the very root, and decayed; which tender plant, fo weak in appearance, fhould neverthelefs become fruitful and profper We have here a remarkable inllance of that method fo common with the prophets, and particularly with Ilaiah, of taking occaiion from the meution of fome great temporal deliverance, to launch out into the difplay of the fpiritual deliver- ance of God's people by the Meffiah ; for that this prophecy relates to the Meffiah, we have the exprefs authority of St. Paul, Rom. XV. 12." [Bp. LowTH in Ifa. xi. \. — His Lordfliip adds a paflage from KiMCHi, who alfo applies this text to the Meffiah, as other eminent Rabbins have done, as may be feen in Poll Syn. Crit. 'v\ loci ZIP HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. * a king fliall reign and profper.' [Chap, xxxiii. 15.] * In * thofe days, and at that time, I will caufe the branch of - ' righteoufnefs to grow up unto David, and he (hall exe- * cute judgment and righteoufnefs in the land.' So Chrift, in the New Teftament, is called the root and offspring of David. [Rev. xxii. 16.] it is obfervable, that God anointed David after Saul to reign in his room. He took away the crown from him, who was higher in flature than any of his people, and was in their eyes fittefl: to bear rule, to give it to David, who was low of flature, and in comparifon, of defpicable ap- pearance : fo God was pleafed to fhow how Chrift, who appeared without form or comelinefs, and was defpifed and reje(fled of men, fliould take the kingdom from the great ones of the earth. And alfo it is obfervable, that David was the youngeft of JefTe's fons, as Jacob the younger bro- ther fupplanted Efau, and got birthright and blcffing from him : and as Pharez, brother of Chrift's anceftor, fup- planted Zarah in his birth ; and as Ifaac, another of the anceflors of Chrifl, call out his elder brother lihmael : thus was that frequent faying of Chrift fulfilled, ' The laft ' fhall be firft, and the firft laft.' 2. The next thing I would obferve, is God's pre- ferving David's life, by a feries of wonderful providences till Saul's death. I have above taken notice of the won- derful prefervation of other anceftors of Chrift ; as Noah, Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob ; and have obfcrved how, in that Chrift the great Redeemer was to proceed from them, that in their prefervation, the work of redemption itfelf may be looked upon as preferved from being defeated, and the whole church, which is redeemed through him, from being overthrown. But the prefervation of David '^was not lefs remarkable than that of any others already taken notice of. Plow often was there but a ftep between him and death ? The firft inftance of it we have in his encountering a lion and a bear, (ii) wliich, without mi- raculous (h) His encountering a lion and a bear.] Or — " a lion OR i a bear j' the meaning can only be, that at different times they would FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. tii raculous afliftance, could at o-.ice have rent this young ftripling in pieces, as eafily as they could the Iamb which he delivered from them : fo afterwards the root and ofF- fpring of David was preferved from the roaring lion that foes about feeking whom he may devour ; who was con- quered, and the fouls of men refcued as lambs out of the mouth of this lion. Another remarkable deliverance was from that mighty giant Goliath, who was ftrong enough to have given his flelh to the bealls of the field, and to the fowls of the air, as he threatened : but God preferved David and gave him the victory, fo that he cut ofF his head with his own fword. Chiifi: flew the fpiritual Go- liath with his own weapon, the crofs, and io delivered his people. And h6w remarkably did God preferve him from being flain by Saul, when he flrft fought his life, by giving his daughter to be a fnare to him, that the hand of the Philiftines might be upon him : and afterwards, when Saul fpake to Jonathan, and to all his fervants, to kill him ; alfo in inclining Jonathan, inftead of murder- ing, to love him as his own foul, and to be a great inftru- nient of his prefcrvation, even at the hazard of his own life, though one would have thought that none would have been more wiUing to have David killed than Jonathan, feeing that he was competitor with him for the crown. Again the Lord wonderfully preferved him, when Saul threw a javelin to fmite him to the wall ; and when he fent mefTcngers to his houfe, to watch for and to kill him, when Michal, Saul's daughter, let him down through a window ; likcwife when he afterwards fent meiTengers once and again, to Naioth in Ramah, to take him, and they were remarkably prevented by being fcized with miracu- lous impreffions of the fpirit of God ; and even when Saui^ik being refolute in the affair, went himfelf, he aUo wcR^^ among the prophets. Again after this, how wonJcrfalh was David's life preferved at Gath among the Pliililliue-. when he went to Achilh, the king of Gath, and was there would come and take a lamb, a lion at one time, and a boar at another." [Gill in f Sam. xvii. 34,] m ziz HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. there in the hands of the Phlliftlnes, who one would have thought, would have difpatched him at once, he having fo much provoked them by his exploits againll: them. How wonderfully did God deliver them at Keilah, when he had entered into a fenced town, where Saul thought he was fure of him I When he purfued and hunted him in the mountains ; when the army encompafied him in the wilderneis of Maon ! How was he delivered in the cave of Engedi, when inftead of Saul's killing David, God delivered Saul into his hands in the cave, and cut off his fkirt, and might aseafily have cut off his head , and afterwards alfo in the wildcrnefs of Ziph ; and again ,a fccond time in the land of the Philiftines, though David had conquered them at Keilah, fuice he was laft among them ! which, one would think, would have been fuf- iicient warning to them not to truft him, or let him ef- cape a fecond time ; but yet now, God wonderfully turned their hearts to him to befriend and protedt, jnftead of de- flroyinghim. Thus was the precious feed that virtually contained the Redeemer, and all the bleffings of his redemption, won- derfully preferved, when hell and earth were confpired againft it to deftroy it. How often does David himielf take notice of this, with praife and admiraiion, in the book of Pfalms r 3 About this time, the written word of God was enlarged by Samuel. I have before obfervcd that the canon of fcripture w'as begun, and the tirfl: written word of God was given to the church about Mofes's time : and many, and I know not but mod: divines, think it was added to by Jofliua, and that he wrote the laft cliapter Deuteronomy, and moll of the book oi Jolliua. (i) Others (i) J OSH V. \ ivrok' moj} of the booh of ]Qi>HV A."^ " This book bears the name of JoHuia, either bccaufe it is concerning hira, his aftions and exploits in the land of Canaan, or bccaufe it was writ- ten by him, or both ; though fome afcribe it to Ezra, and others to Ifaiah : but it mull: have been written before the times of Ahab, as appears from i Kings xvi. 34. and even before the times of David, as is clear from chap. xv. 69. compared with 2 Sam. v. 6. for FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 213 Others think that Jofhua, Judges, Ruth, and part of the fir/1: book of Samuel, were written by Samuel. However that was, this we have good evidence of, that Samuel made an addition to the canon of fcripture ; for he is manifeftly mentioned in the New Teftament, as one of the prophets whofe writings we have in the fcriptures, [A6ts iii. 24.] ' Yea and all the prophets from Samuel, * and tliofe that follow after, as many as have fpoken, have ' likewife foretold of thefe days.' By that expreffion, ' as many as have fpoken,' cannot be meant, as many as have fpoken by word of mouth ; for every prophet did that : but the meaning muft be, as many as have fpoken by writing, fo that what they have fpoken has come down to us. And the way that Samuel fpoke of thefe times of Chrift and the gofpel, was by giving the hiftcry of the things that typified and pointed to them, particularly thofe con- cerning David. The Spirit of God moved him to commit thofe things to writing, chiefly for that reafon, and, as was faid before, this was the main bufniefs of all that fucceflloi> of prophets, that began in Samuel. That for though mention is made in it of the mountains of Judah and of Ifrael, from whence fome have concluded, that the writer nuifl have lived after the times of Rehoboam, in whofc days the king- dom was divided ; yet we find the dHUnAion of Ifrael and Judah took place before, even in the times of David and Afaph, [Pfalm Ixxvi. i.j It is moll likely that this book was written by Jolhua himfelf, as the Jews in their Talmud afiert ; and, indeed, who more fit for it than himfelf? And if written or put together by another, it is moll probable that it was taken out of his "diary, an- nals, or memoirs : and though there are fome things recorded in - it which were done after his deatli, thefe might be inferted un- der a divine direftion and influence by Eleazar, or Phinehas, oir Samutl .... jull as JoOuia is fuppofed to add fome verfes con- cerning Moles at the end of the Pentateuch ; however, be it wrote by whom it may, there is no doubt to be made of the divine Infpi- ration and authenticity of it by us Cliriftians, fince fome hillories recorded in it are taken from it, or referred to in Hcb. xi. 30, 31. and the promifc made to Jofliua is quoted, and applied to every believer, chap. xiii. 5. and the apolile James refers to thecaufe of Rahah, her charafter and conduft in it." [Jam. ii. 25.] — [Gill's Comment.] 214 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. That Samuel added to the csnon of the fcriptures feems farther to appear from i Chron. xxix. 29. ' Now the afts ' of David the king, firft and lafl, behold, they are writ- ' ten in the book of Samuel the feer.' Whether the book of Jofhua was written by Samuel or not, yet it is the general opinion of divines, that the books of Judges, and Ruth, and part of the hrft book of Samuel, were penned by him. (k) The book of Ruth was penned for that reafon, becaufe though it feemed to treat (k) Samuel tvrote the bools of Jvtjges, Ruth, and part of I Samuel.] The book of Judges — " This book is called Judges, becaufe it treats principally of the great things done by thofe il- lultrious perfons Vi^ho were raifed up by God, upon fpecial occa- fions, after the death of Jofliua till the time of making a King, to judge, that is, to rule the people of Ifrael, and to deliver them from their oppreffions. " It is but conjedlured who was the writer of It ; fome think Ezra ; but it is more probable the prophet Samuel, who was the lail of the judges, and by the direction of God brought down their hiftory unto his own days ; when they defired a king to be fet over them. The Talmudifts (in Bava Bathra, cap. i.) are X>£ this opinion ; which Kimchi, Abarbinel, and other great authors follow. And indeed there is reafon to think, that he who wrote the concluiion of the book of Jofhua, waj the writer of this book alfo ; in the fecond chapter of which he inferts part of that which is written there. Certain it is, it was written before David's reign ; for the Jebufites were poffefled of Jerufalem, when this author lived, [ver. 21. of this firit chapter] who were driven out of it by David, [2 Sam. v. 6.] and therefore this book was written before." [Bp. Patrick's Comment.] The book of Ruth — " This book is a kind of appendix to the book of Judges, and a manuduftion to the book of Samuel ; and there fitly placed between them. It has its title from the perfon > whofe itory is here piincipaliy related, which indeed is wonderful. " It is very probable, the, fame perfon who wrote the book of Judges, was the author of this alfo, viz. Samuel ; who, by add- ing this to the end of that book, brought down the hillory unto his own times ; and gave us withal the genealogy of David from Pharcz, the Ion of Judah, that it might evidently appear, Chriil fprang out of that tribe, according to Jacob's prophecy, [Gen. xlix. 10.] but by a Gentile woman (tliat all nations might hope in his mercy) full of faith, and of earneit defire to enter into that family; which made her defpife the pride of her own nation, and chufe to live defpicabiv among the people of Gt'd." [Ibid.] Tbc FROM DAVID to THE CAPTIVITY. 215 treat of private affairs, yet the perfons chiefly fpokcn of In it were of the family whence Davitl and Chrift pro- ceeded, and fo pointed to what the apoftle Peter obferved of Samftel and the other prophets, in the iiid chapter of A£ts. Thefe additions to the canon of fcripture, the great and main inftrument of the application of redemp- tion, are to be confidered as a farther continuation of that work, and an addition made to that great building. 4. Another thing God did towards this work, at that time, was his infpiring David to fhovv fofth Chrifl: and his redemption, in divine fongs ; which ihould be for the ufe of the church, in public worlhip, throughout all ages. Da- vid was himfelf endued with the fpirit of prophecy. [Acfls ii. 26, 30.] ' Let me freely fpeak to you of the patriarcli * David, that he is both dead and buried, and his fepulchre * is with us unto this day: therefore being 2. prophet, and * knowing that God had fworn with an oath,' &c. So that herein he was a type of Chrift, that he was both a pro- phet and a king. The oil tliat was ufed in anointing Da- vid was a type of the Spirit of God; and the type and the antitype were given together; [i Sam. xvi. 13.] ' Then ' Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him in the ' midft of his brethren ; and the Spirit of the Lord came ' upon David from that day forward,' One way that this Spirit influenced him was, by infpir- ihg him to fhow forth Chrift, and the glorious things ot his redemption in divine fongs, fweetly exprelFing the breathings of a piou? foul, full of admiration of the glori- ous things of the Redeemer, inflamed with divine love, and elevated with praife ; and therefore he is called the fvveet pfalmiji o{ Ifrael. [2 Sam. xxiii. i.] ' Now thefe * be the laft words of David ; David the ion of JeiTe laid, Ff ' and The FiasT book of Samuel — " This book . . . has the name of Samuel, becaufe it contains the hiflory of his life and times ; and therefore the Jews fay it was written by him ; and as it maj well enough be thought to be to the end of the xxivth chapter ; and the rell might be written by Nathan and Gad, [i Chron. xxix. 29.] as alfo the following book that bears his name." [Gill'j Comment.] 2i6 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. * and the man who was raifcd up on high, the anointed oi ' the God of Jacob, and the fweet pfalmift of Ifrael.' The main fubje6ls of thefe fweet fongs were the glorious things of the gofpel ; as is evident by the interpretation given and the ufe made of them in the New Teftament : for there is no one book of the Old Teftament that is fo often quoted in the New, as the book of Pfalms. (l) Joyfully did this holy m.an fmg of thofc great things of Chrift's redemption, that had been the hope and expeftation of God's church and people from the beginning, and as joyfully did others follow him in it, viz. Afaph, Heman, Ethan, and others ; for the book of Pfalms was not all penned by David, though the greater part of it was. Hereby the canon of fcripture was farther increafed, and an excellent portion of divine writ added to it This was a great advancement that God made in this building ; and the light of the gofpel, which had been gradually brightening ever fmce the tall, was now exceed- ingly increafed by it ; for whereas before there was but here and there a propliecy given of Chrift in feveral ages, now David, in a variety of fongs, fpeaks of his incar- nation, life, death, relurre61ion, afcenfion into heaven, fatisfadlion, and intercefiion : his prophetical, kingly, and prieftly office ; his glorious benefits in this life and that which is to come ; his union with the church, and the bleffedncfs of the church in him ; the calling of the Gentiles, tlie future glory of the church near the end of the world, and Chrift coming to the final judgment. All thefe things, and many more, concerning Chrift and his redemption, are abundantly fpoken of in the book of Pfahns. This was alfo a glorious advancement of the affair of redemption, as God hereby gave his church a book of divine fongs for their ufe in that part of their public wor- (hip, viz. llnging his praifes, throughout all ages to the end (l) The Psalms often quoted hi the New Tfjlament.'] About eighty times in the whole, and the greater part of thofe quota- tions is applied to Chrifl and the thinp-s of the gofpel. [J-N.] FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 217 end of the world. It is manifeft the book of Pfalms was given of God for this end. It was \ifed in the church. of Ifrael by God's appointment ; as appears by the title ol many of them, in which they are infcribed ' to the chief * mufician,* i. e, to the man that was appointed to be the leader of divine fongs in the temple, in the public worfhip of Ifrael. So David is called the fvveet pfalmift of Ifrael, becaufe he penned pfalms for the ufe of the church of Ifrael ; and accordingly we have an account that they were fung in the church for that end ages after David was dead; [2 Chron. xxix. 30.] ' Moreover Hezekiah the * king, and the princes, commanded the Levites to fing < praifes unto the Lord, with the words of David, and of * Afaph the feer.' And v/e find that the fame were ap- pointed in the New Teftament to be made ufe of in the Chriflian church, in their worHiip : [Ephef. v. 19.] * Speaking to yourfelves in pfalms^ hymns, and fpiritual * fongs.' [Col. iii. 16.] ' Admoniihing one another in < pfalms^ hymns, and fpiritual fongs.' And lo they have been, and will, to the end of the world, be ufed in the churcli to celebrate the praifes of God. The people of God before this were wont to worfliip him by hnging fongs to his praife, as they did at the Red Sea ; and they had Mofes's fong [Deuteronomy xxxii.] committed to them for that end ; and Deborah, and Barak, and Hannah fung praifes to God : but now firi't did God com- mit to his church a hook of divine fongs for their con- ftant ufe. 5. The next thing I would take notice of, is God's a6lually exalting David to the throne of Ifrael, notwith- Aanding all the oppofition made to it. God was de- termined to do it, and he made every thing give place that flood in the way of it. He removed Saul and his fons out of the way ; and firfl: fet David over the tribe of Judah ; and then, having removed lihbodieth, fet him over all Ifrael. Thus did God fulfil his word to David. He took him from the Iheep-cote, and made him king over his people Ifrael. [Pfalm Ixxviii. 70, 71.] And now the throne of Ifrael was eflabliflrcd in that fa- F f 2 milv 2i8 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. jnily in which he was to continue for ever, even for ewer and ever. 6. Now God firft chofe a particular city of all the tribes of Ifrael to place his name in it.. There is feveral times mention made in the law of Mofes, of the children of Jfrael's bringing their oblations to the place which God ilionld chvfe ; [as in Deut. xii. 5—7. and other places ;] but God had never proceeded to do it till now. The ta- bernacle and ark were never fixed, but removed fometimes to one place and fometimes to another. The city of Je- rufalem was never thoroughly conquered, or taken out of the hands of the Jebufites, till David's time. It is faid in Jofhua, [xv. 63.] ' As for the Jebufites, the inhabitants f of Jerufalem, the children of Judah could not drive f them out : but tlie Jebufites dwell with the children of ' Judah at Jerufalem unto this day.' But now David wholly fubdued it, [2 Sam. v.] and God chofe that city to place his name there, as appears by David's bringing up the ark thither foon after; and therefore this is mentioned afterwards, as the firft time God chofe a city to place his name therein. [2 Chron. vi, ^, 6. and chap. xii. 13. 1 Afterwards God Hiowed David the verv place where he would have his temple built, viz. in the threfliing-flqor of Araunah the Jebufite. The city of Jerufalem h therefore called tlie /loly city ; and it was the grenteft type of the^ church of Chrift in all the Old Teftament. It was redeem.ed by David, the cap- tain of the hofis oi' Ifiael, out of the hands of the Jebu- fites, to be God's city, the holy place of his reft for ever, where he would dwell ; as Chrift, the captain of his peo- ple's falvation, redeems his church out of tlie hands of devils, to be his holy and beloved city. And therefore how often does the fcripture, when fpeaking of Chrift's redemption of his church, call it by the names of Zion and Jerufalem ? This was the city that God had ap- pointed to be the place of the firft gathering of converts after Chrift's refurre6lion, of that- remarkable eiTiifion of the Spirit of God on the apoftles and primitive Chriftians, and the place whence the gofpel was to found forth into all the world; the place of the firft Chriftian church, that FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 219 that was to be, as it were, the mother of all other churches through the world; agreeable to that prophecy, [If. ii. 3,4.] ' Out of Zion /liall go forth the law, and the word * of the Lord from Jerufalem ; and he Ihall judge among ' the nations, and fliall rebuke many people,' &c. Thus God chofe Mount Sion, whence the gofpel >vas to be publifhed, as the law had been from Mount Sinai. y. The next thing to be obferved here, is God's folemnly renewing the covenant of grace with David, and proniif- ing that the Mcffialj fhould be of his feed. We have an account of it in the viith chapter of the fecond book of Samuel. It was on occafion of the thoughts David enter- tained of building God an houfe, that God fent Nathan the prophet to him, with the glorious promifes of the covenant of grace. It is efpecially contained in thefe words, [ver. 16.] ' And thy houfe and thy kingdom (liall be eftabliHied ' for ever before thee ; thy throne /hall be eflabliilied foi ' ever.' Which promife has refpeiSl to Chrifl^, the feed of David, and is fulfilled in him only ; for the kingdom of David has long fmce cenfed, any otherwife than as it is upheld in Chrift. The temporal kingdom of the houfe of David has now ccafed for a great many ages ; even more than ever it flood. That this covenant that God now eflabliflied with David by Nathan the prophet, was the covenant of grace, is evi- dent by the plain teftimony of fcripture, in Ifa. Iv. i — 3. There we have Chrift inviting fmners to come to the wa- ters, &c. And in tlie third verfe, he fays, ' Incline your * ear, come unto me ; hear, and yonr fouls ihall live ; and * I will make with you an everlafting covenant, even the * fure mercies of David.' Here Chrift offers to convinced fmners, an interefl: in the fame everlafting covenant that he made with David, conveying to them the fame furc mercies. But what is that covenant that fmners obtain an intereft in, when they come to ChriH;, but the covenant of grace ? This was the fifth folemn ratification of the covenant of grace with the church after the fall. The firll: was with Adam ; the fecond with Noah ; the third v/ith the patriarchs, Abraham, Ifaac, and Jacob ; the fourth -was in the 220 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. the wildernefs by Mofes, and now the fifth is this made to David. This eftabliihment of the covenant of grace with Da- vid, he always efteemed the greateft favour of God to him, the greatefl: honour that God had conferred upon him ; he prized and rejoiced in it above all the other bleffings of his reign. You may fee how joyfully and thankfully he received it, when Nathan came to him with the glorious mefTage, in 2 Sam. vii. 18, &c. And fo David, in his laft words, declares this to be all his falva- tion, and all his defire ; [2 Sam. xxiii. 5.] ' He hath * made with me an everlafting covenant, ordered in all * things and fure : for this is all my ialvation, and all my * defirc.' (m) 8. It was by David that God firft gave his people Ifrael the poireflion of the whole promifed land. I have before fhown, how God's giving the poffeflion of the promifed land belonged to the covenant of grace. This was done in a great meafure by Jofliua, but not fully. Jofhua did not wholly fubdue that part of the promifed land that was ftri61:ly called the land of Canaan, and that was di- vided by lot to the leveral tribes ; but there were great numbers of the old inhabitants left unfubdued, as we read in the books of Jofliua and Judges ; and there were many left to prove Ilrael, and to be ' thorns in their' fides, and * pricks in their eyes.' There were the Jebufites in Jeru- falem, and many of the Canaanites, and the whole nation of (m) David pn-zed the cavT.tixm.'] The leading trait in Da- vid's character feems to have been pietyy which we apprehend to be the exaft import of that exprciTion, [1 Sam. xiii. 14.] * A ' man after God's own heart,' /. e. a man eminently devoted to God, and full of zeal for his glory. And it is obfervable, that notwithftandinr his many and great fins (and far be it from us, to diflfemble that many and great thcv were) lie never appears to have countenanced idolatry, the befetting fin of Ifrael, The book of Pfalms, which were written at many different times, and in a great variety of circumftanccs, evinces a mind coliverfant with the divine attributes, and much engaged in contemplation on the blcflings of the covenant of redemption, and the glories of the MtHiah, of whom he was both a type and anceftor. [N. U.] FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 231 of the Philiftiues, who all dwelt In that part of the land that was divided hy lot, and chiefly in that which belonged to the tribes of Judah and Ephraim. And thus thefe remains of the old inhabitants of Canaan continued till David's time ; but he wholly fubducd them. This is agreeable to what St. Stephen obferves, [Adls vii. 4^-] ' Which alfo our fathers brought in with Jefus (/. e. ' Jofliua) into the poffeflion of the Gentiles, whom God * drove out before the face of our fathers, unto the days * of David.' Tliey were till the days of David in driving them out ; but David entirely brought them under. He fubdued the Jcbuiitcs, the whole nation of the Philiflines, and all the remains of the feven nations of Canaan ; [i Chron. xviii. i.] ' Now after this it came to pafs, * that David fmote the Philiftincs, and fubdued them, * and took Gath and her tov/ns out of the hands of the ' Philiftines.' After this, ail the remains of the former inhabitants of Canaan were made bond-fervants to the Ifraelites. Before this the pofterity of the Gibeonites were hewers of vi'ood, and drawers of water, for the houfe of God. But Solo- mon, David's fon and fucceffor, put all the remains of the other feven nations of Canaan to bond-fervice, or at leaft made them pay a tribute of bond-fervice. [i Kings ix. 20—22.] And hence we read of the children cf Solomon's fervants, after the return from the Babylonifh captivity, [Ezra ii. 55. and Neh. xi. 3.] They were the children or porterity of the feven nations of Canaan, that Solomon had fubjeiSed to bond-fervice. Thus David fubdued the whole land of Canaan, (Iridl- ly fo called. But then that was not one half, nor quar- ter, of what God had promifed to their fathers. The land promifed to their fathers included all the countries* from the river of Egypt to the river Euphrates. Thefe were the bounds of the land promifed to Abraham, [Gen. XV. i8.] * In that fame day the Lord made a covenant * with Abram, faying, Unto thy feed have I given this * land, from the river of Egypt, unto the great river, the * river Euphrates.' So again God promifed at Mount Si- nai, 22i History of redemption. nai, [Exod. xxiii. 31.] ' And I will fet thy bounds from * the Red Sea even unto the fea of the Philiftines, and * from the defert unto the river: for I will deliver the in- * habitants of the land into your hand ; and thou fhalt * drive them out before thee.' So again, [Deut. xi. 24.] * Every place whereon the foles of your feet {hall tread, * fhall be yours : from the wildernefs and Lebanon, from * the river, the river Euphrates, even unto the uttermoft ' fea, fhall your coaft be.' Again, the fame promife is made to Jofhua : [Jofh. i. 3,4-] ' Every place that the ' fole of your feet ihall tread upon, have I given unto * vou, as I faid unto Mofes ; from the wildernefs and this * Lebanon, even unto the great river, the river Euphra- * tes, all the land of the Hittites, and unto the great fea, ' towards the going down of the fun, fliall be your coaft.' But what Jofhua gave the people the pofleflion of, was but a fmall part of this land. And the people never had had the poffeffion of it, till God gave it them by David. This lar^c country not only included that Canaan which was divided by lot to thofe who came in with Jofhua, but the land of the Moabites and Ammonites, tlie land of the Amalekites, and the reft of the Edomites, and the country of Zobah. All thefe nations were fubdued and brought under the children of Ifrael by David. And he put gar- rifons into the feveral countries, and they became David's fervants, as we have a particular account in the viiith chap- ter of the fecond book of Samuel ; and David extended their border to the river Euphrates, as was promifed ; [fee the 3d verfe;] ' and David fmote alfo Hadadezer the fon * of Rehob, king of Zobah, as he went to recover his * border at the river Euphrates.' And accordingly we read, that Solomon his fon [i Kings iv. 24.] * had domi- * nion over all the region on this fide the river, from ' Tiphfah even unto Azzah, over all the kings on this ' fule the river.' This Artaxerxes, king of Perfia, takes notice of long after: [Ezra iv. 20'.] ' There have been ' mighty kings alfo over Jerufalem, which have niled over * all FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 249 Jiiid. chap, of his prophecy, (u) There is icarce a chapter in the New Teftament itfelf more full of it. And how much, and in what a flrain, does the fame prophet fpeak from (u) Ifdiah prediBed Chrl/Fs sufferings.] The glorious pro- phecy here referred to commences with the 1 3th verfe of chap. lii. and includes the whole of chap. liii. It is fo important and ex- cellent a prophecy, that we are perfuaded our readers will admit the propriety of reviewing at leaft the principal verfes in it. We begin, for brevity fake, with chap. liii. 4. ' Surely he hath ' borne our griefs, and carried our forrows,' not only by fympa- thy in, fupport under, and a miraculous deliverance from them; [Matt. viii. 16, 17.] but as Handing in our place, he bare our fins in his own body, [i Pet. ii. 24.] * Yet we efteemed him [judi- * cially] flricken, fmitten of God and afflifted.' He was treated by his own people, the Jews, as an impoftor, a blafphemer, and accurfed of God. Ver. V. * But he was wounded for our tranfgreflions ; he was * bruifed for our iniquities: the chaftifement of our peace (by * which our peace is effe6led) was laid upon him ; and with his * ftripes (or by hisbruifes) are we healed.' Wonderful Redeemer! by what extraordinary methods of love and grace doll thou effeft the falvation of thy people ! Ver. 6. ' All we, like fheep have gone aftray ; we have turned * every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid (hath made * to light) upon him the iniquity of us all.' As the fins of Ifrael were laid on the fcape-goat, and fent into the land of oblivion ; fo were our fins, in all their aggravated and complicated heinoufnefs, made to meet by imputation upon him ; and he fuffered ' the juil * for the unjuft,' to bring us unto God ! [i Peter iii. 18.] Ver. 7. ' He was oppreffed, and he was afflifted' — Bp. Lotuth^s tranflation is more elegant and pointed ; ' It [/. e. the punlfhment of finj was exacted, and he was made anfwerable,' juft as a furety when a debtor becomes infolvent: but whether this verfioii be more exaft and dcfenfible, we mull not now ftop to inquire. — The prophet goes on, ' Yet he opened not his mouth; he is * brought as a lamb to the flaughter, and as a fheep before her * fhearers is dumb, fo he opened not his mouth.' How literally was this fulfilled in the behaviour of the lamb of God! Ver. 8. ' He was taken from prifon and from judgment :' but the word [llfy] does not appear to fignify a prifon, nor was our Lord ever confined in one; we therefore here again prefer the rendering of Bp. Loivth, " By an opprefTive judgment was he taken off, and who fhail declare his generation ?" ;. e. as his Loidfhip has largely and fatisfa£lorily proved, ' Who would de- * claie hjs manner of life ?' v.-:io fhall witnefs the purity uf iiis K k conducl iSO HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. from time to rime of the glorious benefits of Chrlft, the unfpeakable bleffings which fliall redound to his church through his redemption ! Jcfus Chrift, the perfon that this conduft and chara'9:er ? — Peter, where art thou P — Alas! he has denied his Mailer, and the reft of his difciples have all forfaken him and fled. Nor would his enemies have admitted evidence, had it appeared, * For he was cut off from the land of the living ; * for the tranfgrefTion of my people was he ftricken.' Ver. 9. ' And he made his grave,' — or rather, ' His grave was * appointed with the wicked, and with the rich,' — not ' in his * death,' but ' with the rich man was his tomb;' — So Schindler, Drnfius, Drs. Hunt, Gr. Sharp, yuhh, Bp. Lotuth, &c. which ex- actly correfponds with the event recorded by the evangelift. [Matt, xxvii. 57 — 60. j — * Bccaufe (or although) he had done no * violence, neither was guile found in his mouth ; [ver. 10.] yet * it pleafed the Lord to bruife him, he hath put [him] to grief.' ' — ' When thou fhalt make his foul an offering for fin,' i. e, as Bp. Loivih, ' a propitiatory facrifice,' — ' He fliall fee (his) feed, * he fliall prolong (his) days,' — or, ' which fliall prolong their * days, — and the pleafure of the Lord fliall profper in his hand.' This and the following verfes plainly predicted not only the fuf- fcrings of Chriil, and the caufe and nature of them, as an atone- ment for our fins, but alfo the glory that was to follow, when he fliould fee of the travail of his foul and be fatisfied, which was accompliflied when Jcfus arofe from the dead, afcended up on high, and befliowcd that copious efFufion of the Spirit, by which thoufands were converted at a fermon. But what fay the Jews to this prophecy ? Some refer it to Je- remiah, others to tlie people of Ifrael ; it is hard to fay which of thefe is moll abfurd, but fome have honefl;ly confefled, " The Rabbins of blefled memory with one lip, according to received tradition, declare that thefe words arc fpoken of Melliah the King." — Arfd when the Spirit fliall be poured out again from on high, then fliall they l)ehold him whom they have pierced, and mourn, and believe in him. We fliall only add, that by this remarkable prophecy the eu- nuch was converted to Chriftianity in the apoilolic age, [Adts viii. 27 — 40.] and near our own times, a noble, but profligate earl, [Lord Rochefter] owed his converfion to the fame means. His lordfliip confefled, that as he heard this chapter read, " He felt an inward force upon him, which did fi) enlighten his mind, and convince him, that he could refifl; it no longer ; for the words had an authority, which did flioot like rays into his mind, .... which did fo cflTeftually confl:rain him, that he did ever after as firmly believe in liis Saviour, as if he had feen him in the clouds." [See Bp. Loiuth's, Ifaiah, and Dr. Gr. Sharps Arg. from the Pro- phecies, p. 222, iScc. from whom the fubftance of the above is chiefly taken.] [1. N.] FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 251 this prophet fpoke fo much of, once appeared to Ifaiah in the form of the human nature, the nature that he Ihould after- wards take upon him. [Ch.vi. i.] ' I faw alfo the Lord * fitting on a throne, high and lifted up, and his train filled * the temple,' &c. It was Chrifk that Ifaiah now faw, as we are cxprefsly told in the New Teftament. [John xii. 39—41.] And if we confider the abundant prophecies of this and the other prophets, what a great increafe was there of the light of the gofpel ? How plentiful are the revelations and prophecies of Chrift now, to what they were in the firfl: period of the Old Tcftament, from Adam to Noah? or in the fecond, from Noah to Abraham ? or to what they were before Mofes, or in tiie time of Mofes, Jolhua and the Judges ? Great part of the Old Teftament was written now from the days of Uzziah to the captivity into Babylon. And how excellent are thofe portions of it ! V/hat a precious treafure have thofe prophets committed to the church of God, tending greatly to confirm the gofpel of Chrift ! and which has been of great comfort and benefit to God's church in all ages fmce, and doubtlefs will be to the end of the world. § VI. From the Babylonish captivity to the coming of Christ. I COME now to the laft period of the Old Teftament, viz. that which begins witJi the Babylonifli captivity, and extends to the coming of Chrifr, being the greateft part of fix hundred years, to Ihow how the work of redemption was carried on through this time.— But before I enter upon particulars, I would obferve three things wherein this is diftinguilhed from the preceding. (i.) Though we have no account of a great part of this period in the fcripture hiftory, yet the events of it are more the fubjeft of fcripture prophecy, than any of the preceding. There are two ways wherein the fcripturcs give account of the events by which the work of redemp- K k 2 tlon 252 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. tion is carried on, viz. hiftory, and prophecy : and in one or the other of thefe ways, we have, in the fcriptures, an account how the work of redemption is carried on from the beginning. Although they are not a proper hiftory of the whole, yet therein is contained the chain of all the great events bv which this affair hath been carried on from the fall to the end of the world, either in hiftory or prophecy. And it is to be obferved, that where the fcripture is want- ing in one of thefe ways, it is made up in the other. Where fcripture hiflory fails, there prophecy takes place ; fo that the account is flill carried on, and the chain is not broken, till we come to the very lafl: link of it in the confummatiori of all things. And accordingly it is obfervable of tlie period or fpace of time thatwc are upon, that though it is fo much lefs the fubjeft of fcripture hiftory, than moft of the preceding, fo that tliere is above four hundred years of which the fcrip- ture gives us no hiftory, yet the events of this period are more the fubje6l of prophecy tlian all the preceding toge- ther. Moft of thofe remarkable prophecies of the book of Daniel ; alfo moft of thofe in Ifaiali, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, againft Babylon, Tyrus, Egypt, and many other nations, were fuHilled jn this period. Thus the reafon why the fcriptures give us no hiftory of fo great a part of this period, is not becaufe the events of this period were not fo important, or lefs worthy to be taken notice of, than the events of the foregoing; but there are feveral other reafons which may be given of it. One is, that it was the will of God that the fpirit of pro- phecy fhould ceafe in this period, (for reafons that may be given hereafter) ; fo that there were no prophets to write the hiftory of thefe times ; and therefore God de- figning this, took care that the great events of this period fhould not be without, mention in his word. It is ob- fervable, that that fet of writing prophets that God raifed lip in Ifrael, were raifed up at the latter end of the fore- going period, and at the beginning of this ; which it is iikcly was partly for that reafon, ^that the time was now approaching, of which, the fpirit of prophecy having ceafed. FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 253 ceafed, there was to be no fcripture hiftory, and therefore no other fcripture account than what was given in pro- phecy. Another reafon that may be given why there was fo great a part of this period left without an hiftorical ac- count in fcripture, is, that God in his providence took care, that there Ihould be authentic and full accounts of the events of this period prefervcd in profane hiftory. It is remarkable, that with refpeil to the events of the five preceding periods, of which the fcriptures give the hif- tory, profane hiftory gives us no account, or at leaft of but very few of them. There are many fabulous and uncertain accounts of things that happened before ; but the beginning of the times of authentic profane hiftory is judged to be but little more than an hundred years before Nebuchadnezzar's time. The learned men among the Greeks and Romans ufed to call the ages before that the fabulous age ; but the times after that they called the hijio- rlcal age. And from about that time to the coming of Chrift, we have undoubted accounts in profane hiftory of the principal events ; accounts that wonderfully agree with the many prophecies that we have in fcripture of thofe times. Thus did the great God, that difpofes all things, take care to give an hiftorical account of things from the be- ginning of the world, through all thofe former ages which profane hiftory docs not reach, and ceafed not till he came to tliofe later ages in which profane hiftory related things with fome certainty : and concerning thofe times, he gives us abundant account in prophecy, that by comparing profane hiftory with thofe prophecies, we might fee their agreement. (2.) This being the laft period of the Old Teftament, and the next to the coming of Chrift, feems to have been remarkably diftinguiftied from all others in the great re- volutions that were among the nations of the earth, to make way for his kingdom. The time now drawing nigh, wherein Chrift, the great King and Saviour of the world, was to come, great arid mighty were the changes that were brought 254 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. brought to pafs in order to it. The way had been prepar- ing for his coming, from the fall of man, through all the foregoing periods ; but now the time drawing nigh, things began to ripen apace, and Divine Providence wrought wonderfully now. The greateft revolutions that any hif- tory whatfoever gives an account of, fell out in this pe- riod. Almoft all the then known world, i. e. all the nations tliat were round about the land of Canaan, far and near, that were within the reach of their knowledge, were overturned again and again. All lands were in their turns fubdued, captivated, and as it were, emptied, and turned upfide down, and tliat moft of them repeatedly, in this period; agreeable to that prophecy, [Ifa. xxiv. i.] ' Be- * hold, the Lord maketh the earth empty ; he maketh it ' warte, and turneth it upfide down, and fcattcreth abroad '' the inhabitants thereof.' This ernptying, and turning upfide down, began with God's vifible church, in their captivity by the king of Babylon. And tlien the cup from them went round to all other nations^ agreeable to what God revealed to the prophet Jeremiah, [xxv. i^ — 27.] Here fpecial refpe£l feems to be had to the great revolutions that there were on the face of the earth in the times of the Babylonilh empire. But, after that, there were three general over- turnings of the world before Chriil: came, in the fuccefllon of the three great monarchies of the world that arofe after the Babylonilh empire. The king of Babylon is repre- fented in fcripture as overturning the world ; but after that the Babylonilh empire was overthrown by Cyrus, who founded the Perfian empire in the room of it ; which was of much greater extent than the Babylonifh empire in its greateft glory. Thus the world was overturned the fccond time. And then, after that, the Perfian empire was overthrown by Alexander, and the Grecian fet up upon the ruins of it ; which was ftill of much greater extent than the Perfian : and thus there was a general overturning of the world a third time. And then, after that, the Grecian empire was overthrown by the Romans, and the Roman on it eftablilhed ; 'which vaftly exceeded all FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 255 all the foregoing empires in power and extent of domi- nion. And fo the world was overturned the fourth time. Thefe feveral monarchies, and the great revolutions of the world under them, are abundantly fpoken of in the proplrecies of Daniel. They are reprefentcd in Nebu- chadnezzar's image of gold, filver, brafs, and iron, and Daniel's interpretation of it in the fecond chapter, and the vifion of the four beads, and the angel's interpretation of it in chap. vii. And the fucceffion of the Perfian and Grecian monarchies is more particularly reprefented in the viith chap, in the viiion of the ram and the he-goat, and again in chap. xi. And befide thefe four general overturnings of the world, the world was kept in a conftant tumult between whiles ; and indeed was as it were in a continual convulfion through this whole period till Chrift came. But before this period, the face of the earth was comparatively in quietnefs : though there were many great wars, yet we read of no fuch mighty and univerfal convulfions as there were in this period. The nations of the world, mofl of them, had long remained on their lees, as it were, without be- ing emptied from veflTel to vefTel, as is faid of Moab, [ Jer. xlviii. II.] Now thefe great overturnings were becaufc the time of the great Meffiah drew nigh. [Ezek. xxi. 27.] ' J will overturn, overturn, overturn it, audit fliall ' be no more, until he come whofe riglit it is, and I will * give it him.' The prophet, by repeating the word over- turn three times, has refpe6l to three overturnings, as in the Revelation, [viii. 13.] The repetition of the word woe three times, fignifies three diftin6l woes ; aS appears by what follows, [ix. 12.] ' One woe is pafl: ;' and again [xi. 14.] ' The fecond woe is pail:, and behold the third ' woe com.eth quickly.' It muft be noted, that Ezekiel prophefied in the time of the Babylonifh captivity ; and therefore there were three great and general overturnings of the world to come after this prophecy, before Chrift came ; the firft by the Perfians, the fecond by the Grecians, the third by the Romans ; 256 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. Romnns ; and then after that, Chrift, whofe right it was to take the diadem and reign, fhould come. Here thefe great revolutions are evidently ipoken of as preparatory to the coming and kingdom of Chrifi:. But to underftand the words right, we mull: note the particular expreffion, ' I * will overturn, overturn, overturn /'/,' /. e. the diadem and crown of lirael, or the fuprerae temporal dominion over God's vifible people. This God faid fhould be no more, i. c. the crown iliould be taken off, and the diadem removed, as it is faid in the foregoing verfe. The fupreme power over Ifrael fliould be no more in the royal line of David, to which it properly belonged, but fhould be re- moved away, and given to others, and overturned from one to another : firft the fupreme power over Ifrael iliould be in the hands of the Perlians ; and then it fliould be over- turned again, and come into the hands of the Grecians ; and then it ihould be overturned again, and come into the hands of the Romans, and fhould be no more in the line of David, till that very perfon Ihould come, that was the fon of David, whofe proper right it was, and to whom God would give it. (w) That thofe great revolutions were all to prepare the way for Chrift's coming, and eredting his kingdom in the world, is farther manifeft by Haggai, [ii. 6, 7.] ' For '■ thus faid the Lord of hofts, Yet once it is a little while, ' and I will fhake the heavens, and the earth, arid the ' fea, (\v) TTiif CROWN of If7-ael overturned.'] In a preceding Note, (g, p. 161.) we have fhewn, that the fceptre was not to depart until Shiloh came ; here we fee the crown was to be taken away, and not rejlored till the Meffiah's coming. Thefe aflertions may appear at firft fight inconfillent ; but are to be reconciled by a very obvious dittinftion between the. fceptre of the tribe, and the diadem of the kingdom. It is certain, as our author has fiiewn, that long before Chrift's incarnation the Jews became fubjeft to the heathen empires, and yet were not wholly Ih-ipt of temporal power till afterward. They preferved a form of civil, as well as ecclefiaftical government of their own ; yet were in a ttate of vaf- falage and lubjeftion to other crowns. In a word, they had a power, but not the fupreme power, among themfelves. This makes the accomplilliment of thefe prophecies much more re- markable. [I- N.J FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 225 * all countries beyond the river ; and toll, tribute and cuf- * torn was paid unto them.' So that Jofliua, that type of Chrifl:, did but begin the work of giving Ifrael the poffeffion of the promifed land ; and left it' to be finlflied by that much greater type and an- ceftor of Chrift, even David, who fubdued far more of that land than ever Jofhua had done. And in this ex- tent of his and Solomon's dominion was fome refem- blance of the great extent of Chrift's kingdom, and thcre- tfbre the extent of Chrift's kingdom is thus exprefied, [Pfal. Ixxii. 8.] ' He fhall have dominion alfo from fea * to fea, and from the river unto the ends of the earth.' [See alfo i Kings viii. 56.] 9. God by David perfefted the Jewirti worfliip, and added to it feveral new inftitutions. The law was given by Mofes, but yet all the inllitutions of the Jewifh wor- fliip were not; fome were afterwards added by divine di- retiion. So this great type of Chrift did not only per- fe6l Jodiua's work, in giving Tfrael the poffeffion of the promifed land, but he alfo finiihed Mofes's work, in per- fe«Sl:ing the inflituted worfhip of Ifrael. Thus there mufl; be a number of typical prophets, priefts, and princes, to complete one figure or fliadow of Chrift the antitype, he being the fubftance of all the types and fliadows. Of fo much more glory was Chrift accounted worthy, than Mo- fes, Jofliua, David, Solomon, and all the propliets, priefts, and princes, judges, and faviours of tlie Old Teftament. The ordinances of David are mentioned as of equal validity with thofe of Mofes, [2 Chron. xxiii. 18.] * Alfo Jehoiada appointed the offices of the houfe of the ' Lotd by the hand of the priefts the Levites, whom Da- * vid had diftributed in the houfe of the Lord, to offer ' the burnt-offerings of the Lord, as it is written in the * law of Mofes, with rejoicing and with ftnging, as it was ' ordained by David.' The worlhip of Ifrael was per- fe6ted by David, by the addition that he made to the ce- remonial law, which we have an account of from the xxiiid to the xxvith chapters of the hrft book of Chro- nicles, confifting in the feveral orders and courfes into G g which 226 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. which David divided the Levites, and the work and bufi- nefs to which he appointed them, different from what Mofes had done ; and alfo In the divUlons of the priefts the fons of Ap.ron into four and twenty courfes, affigning to every courfe their hufinefs in the houfe of the Lord, and their particular flated times of attendance there ; and appointing fome of the Levites to a new office, which was that of fingers ; and particularly ordering and regulating them in that office, as you may fee in the xxvth chapter of the ift of Chronicles ; and appointing others of the Levites by law to the feveral fervices of porters, treafurers, officers, and judges: and thefe ordinances of David were kept up henceforth in the church of Ifrael, as long as it remained. Thus we find the feveral orders of priefts, and the Levites, the porters, and fingers, after the captivity. So we find the courfes of the priefts appointed by David ftill continu- ing in the Tew Tefiament ; Zacharias the father of Joha the Baptift was a prieit of the courfe of Abia ; whicli is the fame with the courfe of Abijah appointed by David, [i Chron. xxiv. lo.] Thus David as well as Mofes was like Chrifl in this refpeil, that by him God gave in fome degree a new ec- clefiaftical eilablifhment, and new inftitution of worfliip. Not only i'o, but by thofe additions David abolilhcd fome of the old inftitutions of Mofes that had been in force till that time ; particularly thofe laws that appointed the hufinefs of the Levites, which we have in the iiid and ivth chapters of Numbers, which very much confifted in their charges of the feveral parts and utenfils of the taber- nacle there affigned to them, and in carrying thofe feveral parts of the tabernacle. But thofe laws were now aboliflied by David;' and they were no more to carry thofe things, as they had been ufed to do. But David appointed them to other work inftead of it; [i Chron. xxiii. 26.] ' And ' alfo unto the Levites, they Ihall no more carry the taber- ' nacle, nor any vefTels of it for the fervice thereof:' a furc evidence that the ceremonial law given by Mofes is not perpetual, as the jews fuppofe ; but might be wholly abo- liihed by Chrift : for if David, a type of the Meffiah, might abolifli FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 227 abolifh the law of Mofes in part, much more might the Mefliah himfelf aholifh the whole. David, by God's appointment, abollfhed all ufe of the tabernacle tiiat was built by Mofes, and of which he had the pattern from God: for God now revealed it to David to be his will, that a temple fhould be built, that fliould be inftead of the tabernacle, A prefage of what Chrift, the fon of David, would do, when he fhould come, viz. abolifh the whole Jewifh eccle- ilaftical conftitution, which was but as a moveable ta- bernacle, to fet up the fpiritual gofpel-tcmple, which was to be far more glorious, and of greater extent, and was to laft for ever. David had the pattern of all things pertaining to the temple fliown him, even in like manner as Mofes had the pattern of the tabernacle : and Solomon built the temple according to that pattern which he had from his father David, which he received from God. [i Chron. xxviii. 11, 12, 19.] ' Then David gave to So- * lomon his fon the pattern of the porch, and of the * houfes thereof, and of the treafuries thereof, and of the * upper chambers thereof, and of the inner parlours there- * of, and of the place of the mercy-feat, and the pattern * of all that he had by tlie Spirit, of the courts of all the * houfe of the Lord, and of all the chambers round about, * of the treafuries of the houfe of God, and of the trea- * furies of the dedicated things All this, * (faid David,) the Lord made me undcrfland in writing * by his hand upon me, even all the works of this * pattern.' 10. The canon' of fcripture fcems about the clofe of David's reign to have been farther enlarged by the pro- phets Nathan and Gad. It appears probable by the fcrip- tures, that they carried on the hillory of the two books of Samuel from the place where Samuel tirft left it, and finilhcd them. Thefe feem to be the book that in fciip- ture is called the book of Samuel the feer, and Nathan the prophet, and Gad the feer. [i Chron. xxix. 29.] ' Now * the ads of David the king, hrfl and laft, behold they G g 2 ' are zzn- HiStOI^Y 6t REDEMPTION. * are written in the book of Nathan the prophet, and in *■ the book of Gad the fe^r.'* 1 1 . The next thing I would take notice of, is God's wonderfully continuing the kingdom of his vifible people m the line of Chrift's legal anreftors, as long as they re- mained an independent kingdom. Thus it was without any interruption worth notice. Indeed, the kingdom of all the tribes was not kept in that line ; but the dominion of that part of Ifrael in which the true worflvip of God was upheld, and which were God's vifible people, was always kept in the family of David, as long as there was any fuch thing as an independent king of Ifrael, according to his promife to David : and not only iji the family of David, but always in that part of David's pollerity that was the line whence Chrift legally defcended ; fo that the very perfon that was Chrift's legal anceftor, was always in the throne, excepting Jehoahaz, who reigned three months, and Zedekiah ; as you may fee in Matthew's genealogy of Chrift. Chrift Was legally defcended from the kings of Judah, though not naturally. He was both legally and naturally defcended from David. He was naturally defcended from Nathan the fon of David ; for Mary his mother was one of the pofterity of David by Nathan, as you may fee in Luke's genealogy : (n) but Jofeph, the reputed and legaf father of Chrilt, was naturally defcended of Solomon ancf his * See Note (k) p. 215. (n) Mary defcended from Nathan.'] *' I am av\^are that Mr. L.e Cleic, and many other learned men, have thought that Jofeph was begotten by Hell, and adopted by Jacob : but I much rathcF conclude, that he was adopted by Hell, or rather taken by hinl for his fon upon the marriage of his daughter, and that Heli wai the father of Mary ; becaufe an ancient Jewifh rabbi exprefsly calls her * the daughter of Heli,' and chiefly becaufe elfe we have indeed no true genealogy of Chrift at all, but only two different views of the line of Jofeph, his reputed father, which would by no means prove that Chrift, who was only by adoption his fon, was of the feed of Abraham, and of the hou{~e of David. Yet the apoftle fpeaks of it as evident, that Chrift was defcended from Judah, ^Heb. vii. 14.J in which, if this gofpel were (as antiquity affures us) written by the direction of Paul, perhaps he may refer to this very table before us." — [Doddridge's Fam. Expof. § 9.] FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 229 his fuccefTois, as we have an account in Matthew's gene- alogy. Jefus Chrift, though he was not the natural fon of Jofeph, yet, by the law and conftitution of the Jews, he was Jofeph's heir, becaufe he was the lawful fon of Jo- feph's lawful wife, conceived while fhe was his legally efpoufed wife. The Holy Ghoft raifed up feed to him. A perfon, by the law of Mofes, might be the legal fon and heir of another, whofe natural fon he was not ; as fome- times a man raifed up feed to his brother : a brother, in fonic cafes, was to build up a brother's houfe ; fo the Holy Ghoft built up Jofeph's houfe, And Jofeph being in the dire(£l line of the kings of Judah, of the houfe of David, he was the legal heir of the crown of David; and Chrift being legally his iirft-born fon, he ■was his heir ; and fo Chrift, by the law, was the proper heir of the crown of David, and is therefore faid to fit upon the throne of his father David. The crown of God's people was wonderfully kept in the line of Chrift's legal anceftors. When David was old, and not able any longer to manage the affairs of the king- dom, Adonijah, one of his fons, fct up to be king, and feemed to have obtained his purpcfe : but Adonijah was not that fon of David which was the anceftor of Jofeph, the legal father of Chrift ; and therefore how wonderfully did Providence work here ! what a ftrange and fudden revo- lution ! All Adonijah's kingdom and glory vanifticd away as foon as it was begun, and Solomon, the legal anceftor of Chrift, was eftabliftied in the throne. And after Solomon's death, when Jeroboam had con- fpired againft the family, and Rehoboam carried himfelf fo that it was a wonder all Ifrael was not provoked to for- fake him, and ten tribes did ailuallv forfake him, and fet up Jeroboam iri oppofttion to him ; and though Rehoboam was a wicked man, and deferved to have been rejected ?ltoget]ier from being king, yet he being the legal anceftor of Chrift, God kept the kingdom of the two tribes, in which the true religion was upheld, in his pofleflion ; and notwithftanding liis fon Abijam was another wicked prince, yet they being Ic^ial anceftors of Chpft, God ftill continued the 230 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. the crown in the family, and gave it to Abijam's fon Afa. And afterwards, though many of the kings of Judah were very wicked, and horridly provoked God, as parti- cularly Jehoram, Ahaziah, Ahaz, Manaffeh, and Amon ; yet God did not take away the crown from their family, but gave it to their fons for the fame reafon. So fpeak- ing of Abijam, it is faid, [i Kings xv. 4.] ' Ne^erthe- * lefs, for David's fake did the Lord his God give him * a lamp in Jerufalem, to fet up his fon after him, and * to eftablifh Jerufalem :' alfo, [2 Chron. xxi. 7.] fpeak- ing of Jehoram's great wickcdnefs, it is faid, ' Howbeit * the Lord would not deftroy the houfe of David, becaufc * of the covenant that he had made with David, and as he *■ had promifed to give a light unto him, and to his fons * for ever.' The crown of the ten tribes was changed from one fa- mily to another continually. Firft, Jeroboam took it ; but the crown remained in his family only one generation after his deatli, it only defcended to his fon Nadab ; and then Baaflia, who was of another family, took it, and it re- mained in his pofleritv but one generation alfo after his death; and then Zimri, who was his fervant, took it; and then, without defcending at all to his pollerity, Omri took it, and the crown continued in his family for three fuccefTions ; next Jehu, that was of another family, took it, and the crown continued in his family for three or four fucccflions ; and then Shallum, who was of another family, took it ; and the crown did not defcend at all to his pofterity, but Menahem took it, and it remained in his family but one generation after him ; and then Pekah, of another family, took it, and after him Hofhea, who was of flill another family ;—-ro great, a ditterence was there between the crown of Ifiael, and the crown of Ju- dah; the one was continued evermore in the fame family, and with very little interruption, in one right line ; the other was continually tolled about from one family to another, as if it were the fport of fortune. The reafon was not, becaufe the kings of Judak, many of them, were better than the kings of Ifracl, but the one h;'d the bleffing in FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 231 in tliem ; they were the anceftors of Chrift, whofe right it was to fit on the throne of Ifrael : hut with the kings oflfrael it was not fo ; and therefore Divine Providence cxercifed a continual care, through all the changes that happened in fo many generations, and fuch a long fpace of time, to keep the crown of Judah in one diredl line, in fulfilment of the everlafting covenant he had made with David, the mercies of which covenant were fure mercies : but in the other cafe, there was no fuch covenant, and fo no fuch care of Providence. And here it muft not be omitted, that there was once a very ftrong confpiracy of the kings of Syria and Ifrael, in the time of that wicked king of Judah, Ahaz, to difpof- fefs him and his family of the throne of Judah, and to fct one of another family, even the fon of Tabeal on it , [Ifa. vii. 6.] ' Let us go up againfl: Judah, and vex it, * and let us make a breach therein for us, and fet a king * in the midft of it, even the fon of Tabeal.' And they feemed very likely to accomplifli their purpofe ; infomuch that it is faid, [ver. 2.] ' The heart of Ahaz and his * people was moved as the trees of the wood are moved ' with the wind.' On this occafion God fent the prophet Ifaiah to encourage the people, and tell them that it fhould not come to pafs. And becaiife the cafe feemed fo def- pcrate that Ahaz and the people would very hardly be- lieve, therefore God direils the prophet to give them this fign, viz. that Chrill: ihould be born of the legal feed of Ahaz ; [as Ifa. vii. 14.] ' Therefore the Lord himfelif ' (hall give you a fign : Behold, a virgin fliall conceive, ' and bear a fon, and fliall call his name Immanuel.* (o) This (0) A VIRGIN ^rt// conceive, Iffc.'] That this text referred to Jefus Chrift might be fhown from a variety of arguments ; as, that this cliild was to be born of a virgin — that he was to be Imrna- nucl, Lord oi yudea, [Ifa. viii. 8.] — that this ciicumllance is introduced as a wonderful event, Bthold I — that it was confillent with previous intimations in earlier prophecies, [as Gen. iii. 15. J — that it was fo underftood by a cotemporary prophet, [Micah v. 3.] and is exprefsly applied to this event in the New Teilaraent, where the fad is afcertained. [Matt. i. 18 — 22.] But 232 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. This was a good fign, and a great confirmation of the truth ■of what God promifed by Ifaiah, viz. that the kings of Syria and Ifrael fhould never accompliili their purpofe of difpofleffing the family of Ahaz of the crown of Judah, for Chrift the Immanuel was to be of them. I have mentioned this difpenfation of Providence in this place, becaufe though it was continued for fo long a time, yet it began in Solomon's fucceffion to the throne of his father David. 12. The next thing I would take notice of is, the building of the temple : a great type of three things, viz. of the human nature of Chrill, of the church, and of heaven, (p) The tabernacle feemed rather to reprefenc the church in its moveable, changeable flate, here in this world. But that beautiful, glorious, coftly firudlure of the temple that fucceeded the tabernacle, and was im- moveably fixed, feems efpecially to reprefent the church in its glorified ftate in heaven. This temple was built according to the pattern fliewn by the Holy Ghcft to David, and by divine diredtion given to David, in the place But the confideration of thefe would lead us beyond the limits of a note, we fliall therefore only obferve that the principal ob- jeftion to this interpretation (which is formed from the context) might be obviated by a flight variation in rendering the following words, * Butter and honey will he eat that hnoiveth to refufe the * evil and to chufe the good ; but before this child' — not Imma- nuel, but Sheer-Jafhub, whom the prophet had in his hand, [ver. 3.] before this child — ' fliall know,' &:c. This however we fubmit to the confideration of the learned. Our author has very happily fliewn how the birth of the Mefliah was a fign of Ifrael's deliverance In Ahaz's time ; to confirm this and obviate any objeftlon drawn therefrom jt might be added, I. That this fign was not given to Ahaz pcrfonally, but to the houfe bf David, [ver. 13.] and, 2. That wc have feveral other Inftanccs in fcrlpture of diftant events being mentioned as the fign of prefent deliverance, one of whicli occurs In this very prophet. [Ch. xxxvil. 30.] And, 3. That it Is cuftomary for the prophets, and in particular Ifaiah, to conneft with the' predltllon of temporal de- liverance the promlfes of the fplrltual iredcmption to be effefted by the Mefliah. [See Note G. p. 209.] (p) The TEMPLE rt /j;^^ (t/" the human nature of Christ.] This our author has fliown. [See alfo John I. 14.—- Col. ii. 7.] But this temple FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 233 place where was the thre(hing-floor of Oman the Jebufite, in Mount Moriah, [2 Chron. iii. i.] in the fame moun- tain, and tloubtlefs in the very fame place, whete Abra- ham offered up his fon Ifaac ; for that is faid to be a moun- temple, (as formerly the tabernacle) was divided into two parts, the Holy and Moft Holy place ; the former pointing at what Chrift ivas and did in his ftate of incarnation below, the latter at what he is and does in his prefent ftate of exalted glory; as will appear by an induction of particulars : (i.) The candleftick reprefents him as " the true light which", coming into the world, enlightencth every man;" [John i. 9. — See Doddridge] and the feven lamps of it reprefent " the feven fpirito, or the fulnefs of the fpirit with which he was endued." [Ifa. xi. 2, 3. Rev. i. 4.] (2.) The fiiewbread alfo prefigured Chrift as 'the true bread * which came down from heaven,' [John vi. 5.] and its divifion might point out his having a fnfficiency of bleffing for all the tribes of Ifrael, to whom in a particular manner he was fent. [Matt. XV. 24.] (3.) The vail itfelf was a type of his mortal flefli, [Heb. x. 20.] which was rent, to admit us to a ftate of communion with him in his ftate of exalted glory. We now come to the fecond part of the tabernacle, prefiguring the human nature alfo, or at Icaft the complex perfon, of Chrift, in his prefent exalted ftate. ( I.) Herein was contained the golden cenler, which by an eafy figure may reprefent the incenfe therein offered; and that his power- ful and acceptable interceffion at God's right hand, wherein he pleads the atonement once offered, the memorial of which is to God his Father as a fweet fmclling favour. [Eph, v. 2. Rev. viii. 3.] (2.) The ark of the covenant, which has been confidered as a type of the Redeemer, from the incorruptibility of its materials, and the glory of its ornaments; thofe circumftanccs(to omit others) pointing to his prefent ftate of immortality and glory. (3.) The cover of this ark was the mercy-feat or propitiatory, v/hich term is cxprefsly applied to Jefus Chrift, [Rom. iii. 2^. — I John ii. 2.] becaufe Jehovah beheld the blood hereon fprinkled with fatisfaition and favour to the Ifraelitcs. Thus the lamb, as if it had been flain, (in the language of St. John) with the bloody memorial of his facrifice, appears continually in the Divi;;e Pre- fence on our behalf. [Rev. v. 6.] (4.) To omit Aaron's rod, the pot of manna, &c. as not the proper furniture of the ark, though therein depofited : the tables of the law being placed within the ark, has been confidered by divines 3s reprcfenting the moral law written in the heart of the Redeemer; H h and 234 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. mountain in the land of Moriah, [Gen. xxii. 2.] which mountain was called the mountain of the Lord, as this mountain of the temple was, [Gen. xxii. 14.] ' And < Abraham called the name of that place jehovah-jireh ; ' as it is faid to tliis day, In the mount of the Lord it Ihall * be feen.' That the human nature of Chrift was the antitype of this temple, appears, becaufe ChriiT: being fliown the temple of Jerufalem, fays, ' Deftroy this temple, and in * three days I will raife it up,' fpeaking of the temple of his body. [John ii. 19, 20.] This houfe, or an houfe built in this place, continued to be the houfe of God, where his church worlhipped till Chrift came. Here was the place that God chofe, where all their facrifices were offer- ed up till the great facritice came, and all others ceafed. (q^) Into this temple, or rather the texaiple afterwards built and the mercy-feat upon them, as indicating that our tranfgreflions of that law are covered by the true propitiatory. (5. ) The cherubims, whether they reprefented the complacency and fatisfaftion with which the Deity beheld the blood of fprink- ling, or rather the pleafure and earneftnefs with which angels con- template the work of redemption, as St. Peter feems to intimate, [i Pet. i. 12, gr.] were certainly a glorious part of the furniture of the mod holy place; but thefe inquiries would lead us too far: all, however, within the vail reprefented what pafled in heaven, when our great High Prieft entered there with his own mofl precious blood. [Heb. ix. 24.] [I. N.] (q^) Sacrifices offered till the great sacrifice came.~\ We have already fhewn that the facrifices and other ceremonial inftltutions were typical, and mufl have been fo underltood by the Old Tefta- ment believers themfelves ; [p. 176, note n] but fome who have acknowledged this, have doubted whether they had any knowledge that the Meffiah was to offer himfelf a lacrifice for fin. That they hacl^ we infer from the following arguments : 1. That it appears to have been the current dodlrine of the Old Teftament, that without fiiedding of blood was no reraiffion of fin. The apoftle reprefents it as a very abfurd notion, that the blood of bulls and goats could take away fin; then what other facrlficc could avail but human? And what man but the Meffiah himfelf? j^SeeHeb.ix. throughout.] 2. The prophetic writings frequently introduce the Divine Be- ing as cenfuring the legal facrifices, and thofc who offered them; — ml-, as fome have miltakeniy fuppofed, as not of his own ap- pointment, FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 235 built in this place, the Lord came, ' even the meflenger of ' the covenant.' Here he often delivered his heavenly do6lrine, and wrought miracles ; here his church was pa- rhered by the pouring out of the Spirit, after his afccnfion. [Luke xxiv. 53.] Speaking of the difciples, after Chrift's afcenfion, it is faid, ' And they were continually in the * temple, praifuig and bleffing God.' And, [ A61s ii. 46.] fpeaking of the multitude that were converted by tliat great out-pouring of the Spirit that was on the day of Pentecoft, it is faid, ' And they continued daily with one accord in * the temple.' Alfo, [Ads v. 42.] fpeaking of the apoftles, ' And daily in the temple, and in every houfe, they ceafed * not to teach and preach Jefus ChrilL' And hence the found of the do(?lrine went forth, and the church fpread, into all the world. 13. It is here worthy to be obferved, that at this time, in Solomon's reign, after the temple was linifhed, the Jew- ifli church was raifed to its highefl: external glory. The Jewirii church (or the ordinances and conftitution of it) is compared to the moon, [Rev. xii. i.] ' And there ap- ' peared a great wonder in heaven, a woman cloathed with H h 2 ' the pointment, but becaiife the carnal Jews relied and confided in them without looking forward to their great antitype. It is particularly foretold, that in the days of the Mefliah fome more efficacious facrifice fliould be offered. [Pf. li. 19."! It is in other paffages cxprefsly declared that he fliould fuffer many things. [See Luke xxiv. 26,27,45,46.] Even in the firft promife this was hinted, the ferpent fliould bruife his heel. The 2 2d Pfahn is a clear and exprefs prophecy of thefe fufferings, which however is exceeded by the 53d of Ifaiah, and Daniel ix. 24 — 27. where it is exprefsly added, that under thefe circumftances he fliould bear the fin of many — our iniquities fliould meet on him (as on the fcape goat;) nay, that he fliould make his foul, (or himfelf) an offering for fin, [Ifa. liii. 10.] yet that after this he fliould fee his feed, prolong his days, and the pleafure of the Lord fliould prof- per in his hand. 3. So exprefs arc thefe paffages, that our Lord calls fome of his difciples ' fools, and flow of heart to believe' the law and the prophets, becaufe they did not underlland them; and many of the rnodern Jews can find no way to account for them, but by inven- tion of /wo Mcffiahs ; the fon of Jofepli to faffcr and die, and the foa of David to yeUrn, [G. E.] 236 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. ' the fun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head ' a crown of twelve ftars/ As this church was like the moon in many other refpe6is, fo it was in this, that it wexed and wanned like it. From the firft foundation of it, in the covenant made w^ith Abraham, when this moon was now beginning to appear, it had to this time been gradually increafmg in its glory. This time, wherein the temple was finilhed and dedicated, was about the middle between the calling of Abraham and the coming of Chrift, and now it was full moon. After this the glory of the JewiOi church gradually decreafed, till Chrill came ; as I ihail have occafion more particularly to obferve prefently. Now the church of Ifrael was in its higheft external glory : Now Ifrael was multiplied exceedingly, fo that they feemed to have become like the fand on the fea fliore, [i Kings iv. 20.] Now tlie kingd )m of Ifrael was firmly eftabliihed in the family of which Chrift was to come : Now God had chofen the city where he would place his name : Now God had fully given his people the poflfef- lion of the promifed land, in quietnefs and peace, even from the river of Egypt, to the great river Euphrates ; and all thofe nations that had formerly been their enemies, quietly fubmitted to them ; none pretended to rebel againft them:— -Now ^he Jewifh worfhip in all its ordinances ■was fully fettled:— Now, inftead of a moveable tent and tabernacle, they had a glorious temple ; the moft magni- ficent, beautiful, and coftly ftruclure, that then was, ever had been, or has been fince.— -Now the people enjoyed peace and plenty, and fat every man under his vine and fig-tree, eating and drinking, and making merry, [i Kings iv. 20.]— Now they were in the higheft pitch of earthly profperity, filver being as plenty as ftones, and the land full of gold and precious ftones, and other precious foreign commodities, which were brought by Solomon's Ihips from Ophir, and which came from other parts of the world: Now they had a king reigning Over them who was the Vifeft of men, and pro- bably the greatell earthly prince tliat ever was: — -Now their FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 237 their fame went abroad into all the earth, fo that many- came from the utmoft parts of the earth to fee their glory and their happinefs. Thus God was pleafed, in one of the anceftors of Chrift, remarkably to fliadow forth the kingdom of Chrift reigning in his glory. David, who was the man of war, a man who had flied much blood, and whofe life was full of troubles and confli6ls, was more of a rcpre- fcntation of Chrift in his ftate of humiliation, his mi- litant ftate, wherein he was conflidling with his enemies. But Solomon, who was a man of peace, was a repre- fentation more efpecially of Chrift exalted, triumphing, and reigning in his kingdom of peace. And the happy glorious ftate of the Jewilh church at that time did re- markably reprefent two things ; i. That glorious ftate of the church on earth, that fhall be in the latter ages of the world ; thofe days of peace, when nation fhall not lift fword againft nation, nor learn war any more. 2. The future glorified ftate of the church in heaven : the earthly Canaan was never fo lively a type of the heavenly Canaan as it was then, when the happy people of Ifrael did indeed enjoy it as a land flowing with milk and honey. 14. After this the glory of the Jewifti church gradually declined more and more till Chrift came ; yet not fo but that the work of redemption ftill went on. Wliatfoever failed or declined, God ftill carried on this work from age to age ; this building was ftill advancing higher and higher. It ftill went on during the decline of the Jewiili church, towards a further preparation for the coming of Chrift, as well as during its increafe ; for fo wonderfully were things ordered by the infinitely wife governor of the world, that whatever happened was ordered for good to this general defign, and made a means of promoting it. When the people of the Jews flourilhed, and were in prof- perity, he made that to contribute to the promoting this defign ; and when they were in adverfity, God made this alfo to contribute to the carrying on of the fame. While the Jewiili church was in its increaling ftate, the work of 238 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. of redemption was carried on by their increafe ; and when they came to their declining ftate, {which they were in from Solomon's time till Chrift:,) God carried on the work of redemption by that. Which decline itfelf was one thing that God made ufe of as a farther preparation for Chrifl's coming. As the moon, trom the time of its full, is approach- ing nearer and nearer to her conjunction with the fun ; fo her light is ftill more and more decreafing, till at length, when the conjunction comes, it is wholly fwallowed up in the light thereof. So it was with the Jewiih church from the time of its highefl glory in Solcmon's time. In the latter end of Solomon's reign, the ftate of things began to darken, by Solomon's corrupting himfelf with idolatry, which much obfcured the glory of this mighty and wife prince ; now it was, troubles began to arife in his kingdom ; and after his death it was divided, and the ten tribes withdrew from the true worlhip of God, and fet up the golden calves at Bethel and Dan. Prefently after this the number of the ten tribes was greatly dimi- niflied in the battle of Jeroboam with Abijah, wherein there fell down {lain of Ifrael fiye hundred thoufand cho- fen men ; which lofs the kingdom of Ifrael never entirely recovered. Now alfo the kingdom of Judah was greatly, corrupted. In Ahab's time the kingdom of Ifrael did not only wor- fliip the calves of Bethel and Dan, but the worlhip of Baal was introduced. Before, they pretended to worihip the true God by thefe images, the calves of Jeroboam ; but now Ahab introduced grofs idolatry, and the diiect woriliip of falfe gcds in the room of the true God ; (r) and (r) Many learned men have conjcftured (as perhaps our au- thor) that the goldeu calves originated from the cherubic figures, one animal in which was a calf or young bull ; fome liave even fuppofed, that this part of the Egyptian idolatry fprang from the fame fource ; and that at firft they were- only ufed as the medium of worfhip and emblems of the Deity : [Stackhoufe, Book vi. ch. I.] But as the nature of fin is progrellivc, fo one degree of ido- latry leads to another ; and when men once conceived the Deity tx) refemble calves, it was but one ftcp farther to worfhip thefc calves themfelvcs. FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 239 and foon after the worfliip of Baal was introduced into the kingdom of Judah, viz. in Jehoram's reign, by his mar- rying Athaliah, the daughter of Ahab. After this God began to cut Ifrael ihort, by finally deftroying and fending; into captivity that part of the people that dwelt beyond Jordan. [2 Kings x. 32, &c.] And then Tiglath-Pilezer fubdued and captivated all tliofe of the northern parts of the land; [2 Kings xv, 29.] at laft all the ten tribes were fubdued by Salmanefer, and finally carried captive out of their own land. After this alfo the kingdom of Judah was carried captive into Babylon, and a great part of the nation never returned. Thofe that returned were but a fmall nuunber, compared with what had been carried captive ; and for the mofi: part after this they were dependent on the power of other ftates, being fubje6l one while to the kings of Perfia, then to the monarchy of the Grecians, afterwards to the Romans. And before Chrift's tim.e, the church of the Jews was become exceeding corrupt, over-run with fuperftition and felf-righteoufnefs. How Imall a flock was the church of Chrill: in the days of his incarnation ! God, by his gradual decline of the Jewifn ftate and church from Solomon's time, prepared the way for the coming of Chrifl fevcral ways. (i.) The decline of the glory of this legal difpenfa- tion made way for the introdudion of the more glorious difpenfation of the gofpel. The ancient difpenfarion, fuch as it was in Solomon's time, had no glorv, when compared with the fpiritual difpenfation introduced by Chrifl. The church, under the Old Teftament, was a child under tutors and governors, and God dealt with it as a child. Thofe pompous externals are called by the aportle, weak and beggarly elements. It was fit that thofe things fhould be diminiflied as Chrifl approached ; as John the Baptid, his forerunner, fpeaking of him fays, ' He mufl: increafe, but I muft decreafe.' [John iii. 30.] It is fit that the twinkling fiars fliould gradually with- (t) Tci ioei cf tin ^-3 i:j^'j The cnesdes of rCTdatioa would be gUd to prove, and icwne of then hsxe attempted it, that the book - " ' -s^s die coly remaiaing copy of the law, and have evea 1 -. that this tnijht be in great zicifare fabricated by the rrieis. But the ihcrec hlftonan gives no gnKmd for fuch fufpicic" " : " '. fippcaag that niaay ccpies might have 34+ HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. 1 8. God's preferving the tribe of which Chrift was to proceed, from being ruined through the many and great dangers of this period. The vifible church of Chrift from Solomon's reign was chiefly in the ten tribes of Judah, The tribe of Benjamin, which was annexed to tliem, was but very fmall, and that of Judah exceeding large ; as Judah took Benjamin under his covert when be went into Egypt to bring corn, fo the tribe of Benjamin feemed to be under the covert of Judah ever after : and though, on occaficn of Jeroboam's fetting up the calves at Bethel and Dan, the Levites reforted to Judah out of all the tribes of Ifrael, [2 Chron. xi, 13.] ; yet they were alfo fmall, and not reckoned among the tribes ; and though many of the ten tribes did alfo on that occafion, for the fake of the worfhip of God in the temple, leave their inhe- ritances in their feveral tribes, and removed and fettled in Judah, and fo were incorporated with them, as [2 Chron. xi. 16.] yet the tribe of Judah was fo much the prevailing part, that they were all called by one name, they were called Judah ; therefore God faid to Solomon, [ 1 Kings xi. 13.] ' I will not rend away all the kingdom ; * but will give one tribe to thy fon, for David my fer- ' vant's fake and for Jerufalem's fake, which I have cho- ' fen ;' [alfo ver. 32, 36.] So when the ten tribes were carried captive, it is faid, there was none left but the tribe of Judah only : [2 Kings xvii. 18.] Whence they were called Jev/s. This was the tribe of whicli Chrill: was to come : and of this chiefly did God's vifible churcii confifl:, from So- lomon's been deftroyed or loft in the preceding apoftafy, yet the Lord al- ways referved himfelf a people to whom his word was precious, and who would never part from it, but with their lives. The fail here feems to be, that the ftudy of the Bible had been miferably neglefted ; and that the king who was commanded to write out a copy himfelf, [Deut. xvii. 18.] had been brought up in ignorance of it — that the copy now found was a very ancient and valuable manufcript — perhaps, (as the Hebrew phrafe Is, in or by the hand of Mo/ls) the very original iX.{tAi — the difcovery of which might well be fuppofed to occafion great jov among them. [2 Chron, xxxiv. 14.] [See G/7/'s Comment.] [U. S.J FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY, 24.5 lomon's time : this was the people over whom the Kings which were legal anceftors of Chrift, and of the houfe of David, reigned. The people were wonderfully prc- ferved from defl:ru6tion during this period, when they often feemed to be upon the brink of it, and jufl ready to be fwallowed up. So it was in Rehoboam's time, when Shilhak, king of Egypt, came againft Judah with fuch ^ vaft force ; yet then God manifeftly preferved them from being deftroyed. [2 Chron. xii. 2, &c.] So again in Abijali's time, when Jeroboam fet the battle in array againft him with eight hundred thoufand chofen men ; a mighty army indeed I [2 Chron. xiii. 3.] Then God wrought deliverances to Judah, out of regard to the co- venant of grace cflablilhed witli David, as is evident by ver. 4, 5 ; and the vi6tory they obtained was becaufe the Lord was on their fide, [ver. 12.] Again in Afa's time, when Zerah the Ethiopian came againft him with a yet larger army of a thoufand thoufand and three hun- dred cliariots. [2 Chron. xiv. 9.] On this occalion Afa cried to the Lord and trufted in him ; being fenfible that it was nothing with him to help thofe that had no povi'er: [ver. II.] ' And Afa cried unto the Lord his God, and ^ faid, Lord, it is nothing with thee to help, whether ' witii many, or with thofe that have no power.' And accordingly God gave them a glorious vi6lory over this mighty hoft. So again it was in Jehofhaphat's time, Avhen the chiL dren of Moab, of Ammon, and the inhabitants of Mount Seir, combined together againft Judah, with a mighty army, a force vaftly fuperior to any that Jehofliaphat could raife ; who, with his people, was greatly afraid; yet they fet themfelves to feek God on this occahon ; trufted in him, and were told by one of his prophets, that they need not fear, nor Ihould they have any occafton to fight in this battle, but only to ftand ftill and fee the fal- vation of the Lord. Accordingly they only ftood ftill, and fang praifes to God, who made their enemies do the work themfelves, by killing one another ; while the children of Judah had nothing to do, bat to gather the Ipoil, 246 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. fpoll, which was more than they could carry away. [2 Chron. XX.] So it was in Ahaz's time, of which we have fpoken al- ready. Again in Hezekiah's, when Sennacherib, king of Aflyria, the greateft monarchy that was then in the world, came up againfl: all the fenced cities of Judah, after he had conquered moft of the neighbouring countries, and fent Rabfhakeh, the captain of his hoft, againiT: Jerufa- lem, who in a very proud and fcornful manner infulted Hezekiah and his people, as being fure of vi6lory; and the people were trembling for fear, like lambs before a lion. Then God fent Ifaiah the prophet to comfort them, and affure them that they Ihould not prevail ; as a token of which he gave them this fign, viz. that the earth, for two years fucceffively, fhould bring forth food of itfelf, from the roots of the old ftalks, without their plowing or fowing ; and then the third year they fhould fow and reap, and plant vineyards, and eat the fruit of them, and live on the fruits of their labours, as they were wont to do before. [See 2 Kings xix. 29.] This is mentioned as a type of what is promifed in verfes 30, 31. ' And the * remnant that is elcaped of the houle of Judah, fliall ' yet again take root downward, and bear fruit upward. * For out of Jerufalem (hall go forth a remnant, and they ' that efcape out of Mount Zion : the zeal of the Lord * of horts fliall do this.' The corn's fpringing again pfter it had been cut olf with the fickle, and bringing forth another crop from roots that feemed to be dead, reprefents the church's reviving again, as it were out of its own afhes, and flourifliing like a plant after it had been cut down feemingly paft recovery. When the enemies of the church have done their utmoft, and feemed to have gained ^ their point, and to have overthrown the church, fo that the being of it is fcarcely viiiblc, yet there is a fecret lite in it that will caufe it to flouriih again, and to take root downward, and bear fruit upward. . This was now fultil- led ; for the king of Aflyria had .already taken and car- ried captive the ten tribes ; and Sennacherib had alfo ta- Icen all the fenced cities of Judah, and ranged the country round FROM DAVID TO THE CAPTIVITY. 247 round about ; Jerufalem only remained, and Rabfliakeh had in his own imagination already fwallowed that up ; as he had alfo in the fearful apprehenfions of the Jews them- felves. But God wrought a wonderful deliverance. He fent an angel, that in one night fmote an hundred fourfcore and five thoufand in the enemy's camp, 19. In the reign of Uzziah, and the following reigns, God was pleafed to raife up a fet of eminent prophets, who fhould commit their prophecies to writing, and leave them for the ufe of his church in all ages. We before obferved, that God began a fucceffion of prophets in If- rael in Samuel's time ; but none of them are fuppofed to have written books of prophecies till now. Several of them indeed wrote hiftories of the wonderful difpenfa- tions of God towards his church, as we have oblerved already of Samuel, Nathan, and Gad, Ahijah, and Iddo. The hillory of Ifrael feems to have been farther carried on by Iddo and Shcmaiah : [2 Chronicles xii. 15.] ' Now the a6ts of Rehoboam, firft and laft, are they not ' written in the book of Sliemaiali the prophet, and Iddo ' the leer, concerning genealogies r' And after that [2 Chron. XX. 34.] ' Jehu the fon of Hanani, who is men- ' tioned in the book of the kings of Ifrael.' [See i Kings xvi. 1—7.] And then it was continued by the prophet Ifaiah: [2 Chronicles xxvi. 22.] ' Now the refl of tlie ' a6ls of Uzziah, lirlt and laft, did Ifaiah the prophet, the ' ion of Amos, write.' He probably did it as well in the fecond book of Kings, as in the book of his pro- phecy. And the hiltory was carried on and finiihed by other prophets after him. But now did God tirft raife up a fet of great prophets, not only to write hillories, but prophecies. The tirfl: of thefe is thought to be Hofea the fon of Beeri, and therefore his prophecy, the word of the Lord by him, is called [Hofea i. 2.] * The beginning ' of the word of the Lord by H.fca ;' that is, the flrfl part of the written word of that kind. He prophefied in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezckiah, kings of Judah, and in tlie davs of Jeroboam, the fon of Joaih, 248 HISTORY o:f redemption. Joafh, king of Ifrael. There were many other wltnefTes^ for God raifed up about this time, to commit their pro- phecies to writing, viz. Ifaiah, Amos, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, and probably fome others ; and fo from that time forward God continued a fucceffion of zvrhing pro- phets. This was a great advance in the affair of redemption, as will appear, if we confider that the main bufmefs of the prophets was to point out Chrifl: and his redemption. The great end of the fpirit of prophecy being given them ■was, that they might give teftimony to Jefus Chrift, [Rev. xix. 10.] ' For the teftimony of Jefus is the Spirit * of prophecy.' And therefore we find, that the main thing that moft of the prophets in their writings infift upon, is, Chrift and his redemption, and the glorious times of the gofpel, which ihould be in the latter days ; and though many other things were fpokcn of by them, yet they feem to be only introdu6lory to their prophecy of thefe things. Whatever they predidl, here their prophecies commonly terminate. Thefe prophets wrote chiefly to prepare the way for the coming of Chrift, and the glory that fhould follow. And in what an exalted ftrain do they all fpeak of thofe things ! Other things they fpeak of as other men. But when they come upon this fubje6l, what a heavenly fub- limity is there in their language ! Some of them are very particular and full in their predidlions of thefe things, and above all, the prophet Ifniah, (who is therefore dc- fervediy called the evangelical prophet) feems to teach the glorious dotSlrine of the gofpel almoft as plainly as the apoftles, who preached after Chrift was adtually come. The apoftle Paul therefore takes notice, that the prophet Efaias is very bold, [Rom. x. 20.] i. e. as the word is ufed in the New Teftament, very plain, fo [2 Cor. iii. 12.] ' we ufe great plainnefs of fpeech,' l. e. ' boldnefs,' ns in the margin. How plainly and fully does the prophet Ifaiah defcribe the manner and circumftances, the natuie and end, of the fufFerings and faci'iiicc of Chrift, in the liiid. FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 257 •,fea, and the dry land ; and I will fhake all nations, and * the defire of all nations ifhall come, and I will fill this * houfe with glory, faith the Lord of hofts.' [See alfo ver. 21 — 23.] It is evident by this, that thefe commotions, whereby the thrones of kingdoms and armies were over- thrown, and every one came down by the fword of his brother, were to prepare the way for the coming of him who is ' the defire of all nations.' (x) The great changes and troubles that have fometimes been in the vifible church of Chrift, are [in Rev. xii. 2.] compared to the church's being in travail to bring forth Chrill: : fo thefe great troubles and mighty revolutions before Chrift: was born, were, as it were, the world's being in travail to brmg forth the Son of God. The L I apoftle, (x) 77'^ DESIRE of aUnaUons.~\ That this prophecy refpefled the Meffiah, we have the clearelt proof by comparing this text with Mai. iii. 1,2. where ' the deiire of all nations' is explained of ' the Lord whom ye (Jews) feek, even the meflenger (or an- * gel) of the covenant.' And the houfe to be filled with glory is called the temple ; nor can the Jews in their prefent ftate of apollafy any way account (as will be hereafter fhewn) for the glory of the latter temple being faid to exceed that of the former, namely, Solomon's. But why is Chrill called ' \\\t deftn of all ' nations :' Were tbey indeed fcnfible of their guilt and mifery^ and ready to embrace the Saviour? Alas! no. But they all groaned beneath the weight of temporal calamity — they were op- prefTed with tyranny and fupeiftition ; they had alfo ioxat gencrtt^ expe(Station of a great dehverer, which they had gathered from tradition, and fome partial knowledge of revelation.— Thus far they were prepared for his coming ; and as Chrill came to deliver them eventually from thefe evils, as well as others of which they had little conception, he might well be called ' the defire of all ' nations.' Farther, he might well be fo called, as uniting in his perfon every attribute and excellence worthy the eilecm and veneration of mankind. Riches, honour, peace, and whatever we call good and great, if they have any lullre, derive it frum him ; and in him, as the grand focus of eveiy ray of blefiednefs which the Deity has emitted, they all unite and complete their glory : ' It pleafed the Father, that in him fliould all fuUnefs ' dwell.' This prophecy has been ably defended againft the objections, and fupported by the conceffions of Jewifh writers, as well as other arguments, by the late Dr. Onvin on the Hebrews, vol. i. Exercit. 13. [N. U.] 258 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. apoflle, in the viiith. of Romans, reprefents the whole creation as groaning and travailing In pain together until now, to bring forth the liberty and manifeftation of the children of God. Thereto the world being fo long a time kept in a (late of war and bloodfhed, prepared the way for the coming of the Prince of peace, as it ihowed the great need the world flood in of fuch a prince. It pleafed God to order it in his providence, that earthly power and dominion fliould be raifed to its great- ell: height, and appear in its utmofb glory, In thofe four great monarchies that fucceeded one another, and that every one fhould be greater and more glorious than the preceding, before he fet up the kingdom of his Son. By this it appeared how much his fpirltual kingdom exceeded the moft glorious temporal ones. The flrength and glory of Satan's kingdom in thefe four mighty mo- narchies, appeared in Its greateft height : for thofe were the monarchies of the heathen world, and fo the ftrength of them was the ftrength of Satan's kingdom. God fuf- fered the latter to rife to fo great a height of power and magnificence before his Son came to overthrow it, to prepare the way for his more glorious triumph. Goliath muft have on all his armour when the ftripling David comes agalnft him with a fling and a ftone, for the greater glory of David's viclorv. God fufFered one of thofe great monarchies to fubdue another, and ere6t itfelf on the other's ruins, appearing flill in greater ftrength, and the lalT: to be the ftrongeft and mightleft of all ; that fo Chrlft, in overthrowing that, might, as it were, over- throw them all at once ; as the ftone cut out of the moun- tain without hands, is reprefented as deftroying the whole image, the gold, the lilver, the brafs, the iron, and the clay ; fo that all' became as the chaff of the fummer threfning-fioor. Thefe mighty empires were fuffered tlius to convulfe the world, and deftroy one another : and though then- power was fo great, yet they could hot uphold themfelves, but fell one after another, and came* to nothing, even the laft of them, which was the ftrongeft, and had fwallowed up FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 359 up the earth. It pleafed God thus to (how in them the inftability and .vanity of all earthly power and greatnefs ; which ferved as a foil to fet forth the glory of the king- dom of his Son, which never fhall be deftroyed, [Dan. ii. 44.] ' In the days of thefe kings fhall the God of • heaven fet up a kingdom, which fhall never be de- • ftroyed: and the kingdom fhall not be left to other • people, but it fhall break in pieces, and confume all • thefe kingdoms, and it fhall fland for ever.' So greatly does this differ from all thofe kingdoms : they vanifh away, and are left to other people ; but this fhall fland for ever. God fufFered the devil to do his utmoft, and to eflablifh his interefl, by fetting up the greateft, flrongeft, and moft Sjlorious kingdoms in the world, before the defpifed Jefus overthrew him in his empire. Chrift came into the world to bring down the high things of Satan's kingdom, that the hand of the Lord might be on every one that is proud and lofty, and every high tower, and every lofty moun- tain ; [Ifaiah ii. 12, &:c.] And therefore thefe things were fufFered to rife very high, that Chrilt might appear fo much the more glorious in being above them.- -Thus ■wonderfully did the great and wife governor of the world prepare the way for the erection of the glorious kingdom of his beloved fon Jefus. (3.) Another thing for which this lafl period or fpace of time before Chrift vi'as particularly remarkable, was the wonderful prefervation of the clmrch through all thofe overturnings. This was, on fome accounts, more re- markable through this period, than through any of the foregoing. It was very wonderful that the church, which now was fo weak, and in fo low a ftate, and moftly fubje6t to the dominion of heathen monarchies, fliould be preferved for five or fix hundred years together, while the world was fo often overturned, and the earth was rent in pieces, and made fo often empty and wafte, and the inhabitants of it came down fo often every one by the fword of his brother. I fay it was wonderful that the church in its weak and low f!:atc, being but a little handful of men, lliould be preferved in all thefe great L 1 2 ^on- 26o HISTORY OF REDEMPTIOK convulfions; efpeclally confidering that the land of Judca, the chief place of the church's relidence, lay in the midfl of them, as it were in the middle between the contend- ing parties, and was very much the feat of war amongft them, and was often over-run and fubdued, and fome- times in the hands of one people, and fometimes another, and very much the objeil of the envy and hatred of all heathen nations, and often almoft ruined by them, great multitudes of its inhabitants being flain, and the land in a great meafure depopulated ; and thofe who had them in their power, often intended the utter deftruflion of the whole nation. Yet they were upheld ; they were preferved in their captivity in Babylon, and they were upheld again under all the dangers they paffed through, under the kings of Perfia, and the much greater dangers they were liable to under the empire of the Greeks, and afterwards when the world was trodden down by the Romans. Their prefervation through this period was alfo pecu- liarly remarkable, in that we never read of the church's fufFering perfecution in any former period in any meafure to fuch a degree as they did in this, under Antiochus Epi- phanes, of which more afterwards. This wonderful pre- fervation of the church ihrougli all thefe overtuinings of the world, gives light and confirmation to what we read in the xlvith. Pfalm, ' God is our refuge and ftrength, a * very prefent help in trouble. Therefore will not w'c ^ fear, though the earth be removed, and though the moun- ' tains be carried into the midll of the lea ; though the * waters thereof roar, and be troubled ; though tlie moun.- ' tains fliake with the fwelling thereof.' THUS I have taken notice of fome general things wherein this laft period of the Old Tei^ament times was diftinguilhed. I come now to confider how the work of redemption was carried on in particulars.— And, I. The firft thing that here offers is the captivity of the Jews into Babylon. This wa's a great difpenfation pi providence, and fuch as never was before. The chil- dren FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 261 .hey wept exceflively, and about noon the forrovv became fo exuberant and immealuiable, that it was thought neceffary by the governor, the preacher, and the Levites to rcftrain it. They, therefore, reminded the congregation — that a jufl; grief might run into excefs — that there was an incongruity between a fciUval and a lamentation — and that on this feilival, there were fingnlar caufes of extraordinary joy, they were deli- vered from captivity, the law was rellored, and they, the very pooreft of them, had been made by the preachers to underftand it. Go your way, faid they, eat the fat" — drink the fwect — fend portions unto them, for whom nothing is prepared. Be not dif- couraged — religi ..is joy is a people's ftrength. The wife and benevolent fentiments of thefe noble fouls were imbibed by the whole FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 279 law, and fet themfelvcs to obferve the law, and kept the i'ead of tabernacles, as the fcripture obfervcs, after fuch a manner as it had not been kept fince the days of Jortiua the fon of Nun. [Nchcm. vili.] And after this, having leparated themielves from all ftrangers, they folemnly ob- ferved a fall, by hearing the word of God, confefTing their lins, and renewing their covenant with God ; and mani- fefted their fincerity in that tranfadion, by adually re- forming many abufes in religion and morals. [See Nehem. ixth and following chapters.] It is obfervable, that it has been God's manner, in every new eftabliihment of the ftate of his vifible church, to give a remarkable out-pouring of his Spirit. So it was on the firft efliablifhment of the church of the Jews at their coming into Canaan under Jofluia, as has been obferved ; and fo it was now in this fccond fettlement of the church in the fame land in the time of Ezra ; and fo it was on the lirfl: eftablifhment of the Chriilian church after Chrift's refurreaion ; God wifely and gra- cioufly laying the foundation of thofe cftabliihments in a work of his Holy Spirit, for the lafting beneHt of the flate of his church, thenceforward continued in thofe eftablifhments. And this pouring out of the Spirit of God was a final cure to that nation of that particular iin, which juft before they efpecially run into, viz. in- termarrying with the Gentiles ; for however inclined to it they were before, they ever after fliewed an averiion to it, 7. Ezra added to the canon of fcriptures. He wrote the book of Ezra ; and he is fuppofed to have written the two books of Chronicles, at leaft to have compiled them, whole congregation, and fifty thoufand troubled hearts were calm- ed in an inllant. Home they returned to eat, to drink, to fend portions, and to make mirth, becaule they had underftood the words that were declared unto them. Plato was alive at this time, teaching dull philofophy to cold academicks : but what was he, and what was Xenophon, or Demollhenes, or any of tlie pagan orators, in comparifon with thefe men?" [Robinson's Eflay^'on Preaching, prefixed to his tranflation of Claude's EiTay, vol. i page xxii — xxiv, j 28o HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. them, if he was not the author of the materials. That thefe books were written, or compiled or completed, after the captivity, the things therein contained manifeft ; for the genealogies are brought down below the captivity ; [i Chron. iii. 17, &c.] We have there an account of the pofterity of Jehoiachin for feveral fucccfiive generations. And there is mention in thefe books of this captivity into Babylon, as of a thing pafl:, and of things that were done on the return of the Jews after the captivity ; as you may fee in the ixth chapter. The chapter is moftly filled up with an account of things that came to pafs after the cap- tivity into Babylon, as you may fee by comparing it with what is faid in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah. And that Ezra was the perfon that compiled thefe books, is probable by this, bccaufe they conclude with words that we know are the words of Ezra's hiftory. The two laft verfes of 2 Chron. are tJic two tirll: verfes of the book of Ezra. 8. Ezra is fuppofed to have collefted all the books of which the holy fcriptures did then confift, and difpofed them in their proper order. Ezra is often fpoken of as a noted and eminent fcribe of the law of God, and the ca- non of fcripture in his time was manifeftly under his fpe- cial care ; and the Jews, from the firft accounts we have from them, have always held, that the canon of fcripture, fo much of it as was then extant, was colle6led, and or- derly difpofed and fettled by Ezra ;" and that from hira they have delivered it down in the order in which he dif- pofed it, till Ciirift's time ; when the Chriflian church received it from them, and have delivered it down to our times. And the truth of this is allowed as undoubted by divines in general, (i) 9. The (i) The CANON offcripturz compiled ly E%ra.'\ ** It is gene- rally received, that after the return of the Jews from their capti- vity in Babylon, all the books of fcripture having been revifed by Ezra (then their prieft and leader) who digefted them .... were by him and the prophets of God that lived with him, configned and delivered over to all pofterity. '■" [Bp. Cosin's ScholalUc. Hift. of the Canon of Scripture,] FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 281 o. The work of redemption was carried on and pro- moted in this period, by greatly multiplying the copies of the law, and appointing the conftant public reading of them in all the cities of Ifracl in their fynagogues. It is evident, that before the captivity there were but few of them. There was, indeed, the original, laid up be- fide the ark ; and the kings were required to write out a copy of it for their own ufe, and it was commanded to be read to the whole congregation of Ifrael once every fevcnth year. And we have no account of any other flated public reading of the law before the captivity but this. It is manifeft, by feveral things that might be men- tioned, that copies of the law were then exceedingly rare; but after the captivity, the conftant reading of it was fet up in every fynagogue throughout thel and. Firfi:, they begali \vith reading the law, and then they proceed- ed to eftabliflr the conftant reading of the other books of the Old Teftament. Leflbns were read out of the Old Teftament, both from the law and the other parts of the fcriptilre then extant, in all the fynagogues which were fet up in every city and place where the Jews in. any confiderable number dwelt. Thus wc find it was in Chrift and the apoftles' time. [A6fs xv. 21.] ' Mofes of * old time hath in every city them that preach him, be- * ing read in the fynagogues every fabbath day.' This cuftom is univerfally fuppofed, both by Jews and Chrif- tians, to be begun by Ezra. There were, doubtlefs, pub- lic aflcmblies before the captivity. They ufed to aflemble at the temple at their great feafts, and were dire6led, when they were at a lofs about any thing in the law, to go to the prieft of inftru6tion ; and they ufed alfo to refort to the prophets houfes ; and we read of fynagogues in the land before, [Pfalm Ixxiv. 8.] but it is not fuppofed that they then had copies of the law for conftant public reading and expounding through the land as afterwards. This was one great means of their being preferved from idolatry, (k) 10. The (k) The or'ig'm 0/^ synagogues.] " We read of fynagogues, indeed, in the Pfalms ; but Dean Prideaux was of opinion that O o the 282 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. 10. The next thing I would mention, is God's remark- ably preferving the church and nation of the Jews, when they were in imminent danger of being univerfally dc- flroyed by Haman. We have the ftory in the book of Efther, with which you are acquainted. This ferics of providences was very wonderful in preventing this deftruc- tion. Efther was doubtlefs born for this end to be the inftrument of this remarkable prefervation. (l) 11. After this the canon of fcripture was farther en- larged in the books of Nehemiah and Efther ; the one by Nehemiah himfclf ; and whether the other was written by Nehemiah, or Mordccai, or Malachi, is not of im- portance for us to know, fo long as it is one of thofe books that were always admitted and received as a part of their canon by the Jews, and was among thofe that the Jews called their fcriptures in Chrifl's time, and fuch as was approved by him. For Chrift does often, in his fpeeches to the Jews, manifeftly approve and confirm thofe books, which amongft them went by the name of the fcriptures^ as might eafily be lliown, if there were time for it. (m) 12. After the word [nyiD] which fignifies any aflemblles, there intends ra- ther the profeucha, open courts where the people met to pray, each for himfelf, than proper fynagogues. " The fervice of the fynagogues confifted of prayers, reading, and expoundirfg or preaching, and it is thought that their whole fervice was conduced in a manner fimilar to that of our parifh churches. — And this inftitution feems to be preferved among them, with little variation, to the prefcnt day." [See Prideaux's Connect, part i. book 6.] (l) Tie 'Jenvs delivered from Haman'j cruelty.'] " There is hardly any hiftory of the Old Teftament, (except the life^of Jo- feph) that more difplays the myfteries of divine Providence, than the book of Efther ; particularly, we may obferve the extremity to which God fuffered his people to be driven ; and the wonder- ful manner in which he delivered them by bringing all the cruel- ties of wicked Haman on his own head. The Jews efteemed this book in value next to the Pentateuch, and in memory of the fal- yatlon herein recorded, keep the feall of Purim to this day." [See Stackhoufe\}ri{\k. of the Bible, book vil. chap. 2.] (m) Chkist cotifirmed the Old Tejlament.'] * Search the fcrlp- ' tares,' — /. e. of the Old Teftament, for no part of the New was FROM THE CAPTIVITY TO CHRIST. 283 12. After this the canon of the Old Teftament was compleated and fealcd by Mnlachi. The manner of con- cluding this prophecy feems to imply, that they were to expedl no more prophecies, nor any more written re- velations from God, till Chrifl fliould come. For in the laft chapter he prophefies of Chrift's coming ; [ver. 2, 3.] * But unto you that fear my name, fhall the Sun of * righteoufnefs arife with healing in his wings ; and ye * fhall go forth and grow up as calves of the flail. And < he fliall tread down the wicked ; for they fhall be as < aflies under the foles of your feet, in the day that I < {hall do this, faith the Lord of hofls.' Then we read in ver. 4. * Remember ye the law of Mofes my fervant * which I commanded unto. him in Horeb for all Ifrael, * with the ftatutes and judgments,' /. e. Remember and improve what ye have ; keep clofe to that written rule you have, as expecting no more additions to it, till the Old Teftament is over, and the Sun of righteoufnefs fliall at length arife. 13. Soon after this, the fpirit of prophecy ceafed among that people till the time of the New Teftament. Thus the Old Teftament lights, the ftars of the long night, began a pace to hide their heads, the time of the Sun of righteoufnefs now drawing nigh. We before obferved, how the Kings of the houfe of David ceafed before the true king and head of the church came ; and how the cloud of glory withdrew, before Chrift, the brightnefs of the Father's glory, appeared ; and fo as to fevcral other things. And now at laft the fpirit of pro- phecy ceafed. The time of the great Prophet of God was now fo nigh, it was time for their typical prophets to be filent. WE have now gone through with the time that we have any hiftorical account of in the writings of the Old O o 2 Tefta- was written till fome time after our Lord's death,-^* for in them * ye think ye have eternal life, and they are they that teltify of • me.' [John v. 39. fee alfo ver. 46, and Luke xvi. 29. j 284 HISTORY OF REDEMPTION. Teftament, and the laft thing that was mentioned, by which the work of redemption was promoted, was the ceafing of the fpirit of prophecy. I now proceed to Hiow how the work of redemption was carried on through the remaining times that were before Chrift : in which we have not that thread of fcrip- ture hiftory to guide ns which we have had hitherto ; but we have thefe three things to dire£t us, viz. the pro- phecies of the Old Teftament, human hiftories of thofe times, and fome occafional mention made of things which then happened, in the books ot the New Teftament. Therefore, 14. The next particular that I fhall mention under this period, is the deftrudlion of the Perfian empire, and fetting up of the Grecian empire by Alexander. This came to pafs about fixty or feventy years after the times wherein the prophet Malachi is fuppofed to have prophefied, and about three hundred and thirty years before Chrifl:. This ■was the third overturning of the world that came to pafs in this period, and was greater and more remarkable than either of the foregoing. It was very remarkable on ac- count of the fuddenneis of that conqueft of the world which Alexander made, and the greatnefs of the empire which he fet up, which much exceeded all the foregoing in its extent. This event is much fpoken of in the propliecies of Daniel. This empire is reprefented by the third king- dom of brafs in Daniel's interpretation of Nebuchad- nezzar's dream, [Dan. ii.] and in Daniel's vifion of the four bcafts is intended by the third beaft that was like a leopard, tl\at had on his back four wings of a fowl, to reprefent the fwiftnefs of its conqueft, [chap, vii.] and is more particularly reprefented by the he-goat, [chap, viii.] ' that came from the weft on the face of the whole * earth, and touched not the grounc],' to reprefent ho\y fwiftly Alexander over-ran the world. The an