THE
HOLY CITY;
OR,
THE NEW JERUSALEM:
WHEREIN ITS GOODLY LIGHT, WALLS, GATES, ANGELS, AND THE MANNER
OF THEIR STANDING, ARE EXPOUNDED: ALSO HER LENGTH AND BREADTH,
TOGETHER WITH THE GOLDEN MEASURING-REED EXPLAINED:
AND THE GLORY OF ALL UNFOLDED.
AS ALSO THE NUMEROUSNESS OF ITS INHABITANTS; AND WHAT THE TREE
AND WATER OF LIFE ARE, BY WHICH THEY ARE SUSTAINED.
‘Glorious things are spoken of thee, O city of God.’—Psalm 87:3
‘And the name of the city from that day shall be, THE LORD IS
THERE.’—Ezekiel 48:35
London: Printed in the year 1665
THE EPISTLE TO FOUR SORTS
OF READERS
I. TO THE GODLY READER.
Friend,—Though the men of this world, at
the sight of this book, will not only deride, but laugh in conceit, to
consider that one so low, contemptible, and inconsiderable as I, should
busy myself in such sort, as to meddle with the exposition of so hard
and knotty a Scripture as here they find the subject matter of this
little book; yet do thou remember that ‘God hath chosen the foolish
things of the world to confound the wise, and things which are not, to
bring to nought things that are’ (1 Cor 1:27,28). Consider also, that
even of old it hath been his pleasure to ‘hide these things from the
wise and prudent, and to reveal them unto babes’ (Matt 11:25,
21:15,16). I tell you that the operation of the Word and Spirit of God,
without depending upon that idol, [1] so much adored, is sufficient of
itself to search out ‘all things, even the deep things of God’ (1 Cor
2:10).
The occasion of my first meddling with
this matter was as followeth:—Upon a certain first-day, I being
together with my brethren in our prison chamber, they expected that,
according to our custom, something should be spoken out of the Word for
our mutual edification; but at that time I felt myself, it being my
turn to speak, so empty, spiritless, and barren, that I thought I
should not have been able to speak among them so much as five words of
truth with life and evidence; but at last it so fell out that
providentially I cast mine eye upon the eleventh verse of the one and
twentieth chapter of this prophecy; upon which, when I had considered a
while, methought I perceived something of that jasper in whose light
you there find this holy city is said to come or descend; wherefore
having got in my eye some dim glimmerings thereof, and finding also in
my heart a desire to see farther thereinto, I with a few groans did
carry my meditations to the Lord Jesus for a blessing, which he did
forthwith grant according to his grace; and helping me to set before my
brethren, we did all eat, and were well refreshed; and behold also,
that while I was in the distributing of it, it so increased in my hand,
that of the fragments that we left, after we had well dined, I gathered
up this basketful. Methought the more I cast mine eye upon the whole
discourse, the more I saw lie in it. Wherefore setting myself to a more
narrow search, through frequent prayer to God, what first with doing,
and then with undoing, and after that with doing again, I thus did
finish it.
But yet, notwithstanding all my labour
and travel in this matter, I do not, neither can I expect that every
godly heart should in every thing see the truth and excellency of what
is here discoursed; neither would I have them imagine that I have so
thoroughly viewed this holy city, but that much more than I do here
crush out is yet left in the cluster. Alas! I shall only say thus, I
have crushed out a little juice to sweeten their lips withal, not
doubting but in a little time more large measures of the excellency of
this city, and of its sweetness and glory, will by others be opened and
unfolded; yea, if not by the servants of the Lord Jesus, yet by the
Lord himself, who will have this city builded and set in its own place.
But, I say, for this discourse, if any
of the saints that read herein think they find nought at all but words,
as many times it falleth out even in their reading the Scriptures of
God themselves, I beg, I say, of such, that they read charitably, judge
modestly, and also that they would take heed of concluding that because
they for the present see nothing in this or that passage, that
therefore there is nothing in it: possibly from that which thou mayest
cast away as an empty bone, others may pick both good and wholesome
bits, yea, and also out of that suck much nourishing marrow. You find
by experience, that that very bit that will not down with one, may yet
not only down, but be healthful and nourishing to another. Babes are
more for milk than strong meat, though meat will well digest with those
that are of riper years. Wherefore that which thy weakness will not
suffer thee to feed on, leave; and go to the milk and nourishment that
in other places thou shalt find.
II. TO THE
LEARNED READER.
My second word is to my wise and learned reader.
Sir,—I
suppose, in your reading of this discourse, you will be apt to blame me
for two things: First, Because I have not so beautified my matter with
acuteness of language as you could wish or desire. Secondly, Because
also I have not given you, either in the line or in the margent, a
cloud of sentences from the learned fathers, that have, according to
their wisdom, possibly, handled these matters long before me.
To the first I say, the matter indeed is excellent and high; but for my
part I am weak and low; it also deserveth a more full and profound
discourse than my small pats will help me to make upon the matter. But
yet seeing the Lord looketh not at the outward appearance, but on the
heart, neither regardeth high-swelling words of vanity, but pure and
naked truth; and seeing also that a widow’s mite being all, even heart
as well as substance, is counted more, and better, than to cast in
little out of much, and that little too perhaps the worst, I hope my
little, being all, my farthing, seeing I have no more, may be accepted
and counted for a great deal in the Lord’s treasury. Besides, Sir,
words easy to be understood do often hit the mark, when high and
learned ones do only pierce the air. He also that speaks to the
weakest, may make the learned understand him; when he that striveth to
be high, is not only for the most part understood but of a sort, but
also many times is neither understood by them nor by himself.
Secondly, The reason why you find me empty of the language of the
learned, I mean their sentences and words which others use, is because
I have them not, nor have not read them: had it not been for the Bible,
I had not only not thus done it, but not at all.
Lastly. I do find in most such a spirit of whoredom and idolatry
concerning the learning of this world, and wisdom of the flesh, and
God’s glory so much stained and diminished thereby; that had I all
their aid and assistance at command, I durst not make use of ought
thereof, and that for fear lest that grace, and these gifts that the
Lord hath given me, should be attributed to their wits, rather than the
light of the Word and Spirit of God: Wherefore ‘I will not take’ of
them ‘from a thread even to a shoe-latchet, - lest they should say, We
have made Abram rich’ (Gen 14:23).
Sir, What you find suiting with the Scriptures take, though it should
not suit with authors; but that which you find against the Scriptures,
slight, though it should be confirmed by multitudes of them. Yea,
further, where you find the Scriptures and your authors jump, [2] yet
believe it for the sake of Scripture’s authority. I honour the godly as
Christians, but I prefer the Bible before them; and having that still
with me, I count myself far better furnished than if I had without it
all the libraries of the two universities. Besides, I am for drinking
water out of my own cistern; [3] what God makes mine by the evidence
of
his Word and Spirit, that I dare make bold with. Wherefore seeing,
though I am without their learned lines, yet well furnished with the
words of God, I mean the Bible, I have contented myself with what I
there have found, and having set it before your eyes,
I pray read and take, Sir, what
you like best;
And that which you like not, leave for the rest.
III. TO
THE CAPTIOUS READER.
My third word is to the captious and wrangling reader.
Friend,—However thou
camest by this book, I will assure thee thou wast least in my thoughts
when I writ it; I tell thee, I intended this book as little for thee as
the goldsmith intendeth his jewels and rings for the snout of a sow.
Wherefore put on reason, and lay aside thy frenzy; be sober, or lay by
the book (Matt 7:6).
My
fourth word is to the lady of kingdoms, the well-favoured harlot, the
mistress of witchcrafts, and the abominations of the earth.
Mistress,—I suppose I have nothing here that will either please your
wanton eye or go down with your voluptuous palate. Here is bread
indeed, as also milk and meat; but here is neither paint to adorn thy
wrinkled face, nor crutch to uphold or undershore thy shaking,
tottering, staggering kingdom of Rome; but rather a certain presage of
thy sudden and fearful final downfall, and of the exaltation of
that holy matron, whose chastity thou dost abhor, because by it she
reproveth and condemneth thy lewd and stubborn life. Wherefore, lady,
smell thou mayest of this, but taste thou wilt not: I know that both
thy wanton eye, with all thy mincing brats that are intoxicated with
thy cup and enchanted with thy fornications, will, at the sight of so
homely and plain a dish as this, cry, Foh! snuff, put the branch to the
nose, [4] and say,
Contemptible! (Mal 1:12,13; Eze 8:17). ‘But wisdom is
justified of all her children’ (Matt 11:19). ‘The virgin the daughter
of Zion hath despised thee, and laughed thee to scorn; Jerusalem hath
shaken her head at thee’ (Isa 37:22), yea, her God hath smitten his
hands at thy dishonest gain and freaks (Eze 22:7-11, &c.). ‘Rejoice
ye with Jerusalem, and be glad for her, all ye that love her; rejoice
for joy with her, all ye that mourn for her; that ye may suck and be
satisfied with the breasts of her consolations, that ye may milk out
and be delighted with the abundance of her glory’ (Isa 66:10,11).
JOHN BUNYAN
THE HOLY CITY;
OR,
THE NEW JERUSALEM
By John Bunyan

Revelation
21:10-27;
22:1-4
“And he carried
me away in the spirit to a great and high mountain, and
showed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem, descending out of heaven
from God, Having the glory of God: and her light was like unto a stone
most precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal:
And had a wall
great and high, and had twelve gates, and at the gates
twelve angels and names written thereon, which are the names of the
twelve tribes of the children of Israel. On the east three gates, on
the north three gates, on the south three gates, and on the west three
gates. And the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and in them the
names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb. And he that talked with me
had a golden reed to measure the city, and the gates thereof and the
wall thereof. And the city lieth four-square, and the length is as
large as the breadth: and he measured the city with the reed, twelve
thousand furlongs: the length and the breadth and the height of it are
equal.
And he measured
the wall thereof, an hundred and forty and four cubits,
according to the measure of a man, that is of the angel. And the
building of the wall of it was of jasper, and the city was pure gold,
like unto clear glass. And the foundations of the wall of the city were
garnished with all manner of precious stones. The first foundation was
jasper; the second, sapphire; the third, a chalcedony; the fourth, an
emerald; The fifth, sardonyx; the sixth, sardius; the seventh,
chrysolite; the eighth, beryl; the ninth, a topaz; the tenth, a
chrysoprasus; the eleventh, a jacinth; the twelfth, an amethyst.
And the twelve
gates were twelve pearls, every several gate was of one
pearl; and the street of the city was pure gold, as it were transparent
glass. And I saw no temple therein: for the Lord God Almighty, and the
Lamb, are the temple of it. And the city had no need of the sun,
neither of the moon to shine in it: for the glory of God did lighten
it, and the Lamb is the light thereof. And the nations of them which
are saved, shall walk in the light of it: and the kings of the earth do
bring their glory and honour into it. And the gates of it shall not be
shut at all day by day: for there shall be no night there. And they
shall bring the glory and honour of the nations into it. And there
shall in no wise enter into it any thing that defileth, neither
whatsoever worketh abomination, or maketh a lie: but they which are
written in the Lamb’s book of life.
And he showed me
a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal,
proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb. In the midst of
the street of it, and on either side of the river, was there the tree
of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit
every month: and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the
nations. And there shall be no more curse: but the throne of God and of
the Lamb shall be in it; and his servants shall serve him. And they
shall see his face, and his name shall be in their foreheads.”
In my dealing
with this mystery, I shall not meddle where I see
nothing, neither shall I hide from you that which at present I conceive
to be wrapt up therein; only you must not from me look for much
enlargement, though I shall endeavour to speak as much in few words, as
my understanding and capacity will enable me, through the help of
Christ.
In this
description of this holy city, you have these five general
heads:
FIRST, The vision of
this city in general. SECOND, A discovery of its
defence, entrances, and fashion, in particular. THIRD, A relation of
the glory of each. FOURTH, A discovery of its inhabitants, their
quality and numerousness. FIFTH, A relation of its maintenance, by
which it continueth in life, ease, peace, tranquility, and sweetness
for ever. To all which I shall speak something in their proper places,
and shall open them before you.
But before I begin with any of them, I must speak a word or two
concerning John’s qualification, whereby he was enabled to behold and
take a view of this city; which qualification he relateth in these
words following:
Verse 10. And he carried me away in the spirit to a great and high
mountain, and showed me that great city, the holy Jerusalem, descending
out of heaven from God.
The angel being to show this holy man this great and glorious vision,
he first, by qualifying of him, puts him into a suitable capacity to
behold and take the view thereof; ‘He carried me away in the spirit.’
When he saith, He carried me away in the Spirit, he means he was taken
up into the Spirit, his soul was greatly spiritualized. Whence take
notice, that an ordinary frame of spirit is not able to comprehend, nor
yet to apprehend extraordinary things. Much of the Spirit discerneth
much of God’s matters; but little of the Spirit discerneth but little
of them: ‘I could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto
carnal, even as unto babes in Christ; I have fed you with milk, and not
with meat; for hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now
are ye able’ (1 Cor 3:2).
‘And he carried me away in the spirit,’ &c. Thus it was with the
saints of old, when God had either special work for them to do, or
great things for them to see. Ezekiel, when he had the vision of this
city in the old law, in the captivity at Babylon, he must be first
forefitted with a competent measure of the Spirit (Eze 40:2). John
also, when he had the whole matter of this prophecy revealed unto him,
he must be in the Spirit; ‘I was (saith he) in the Spirit on the Lord’s
day, and heard behind me a great voice, as of a trumpet’ talking with
me, &c (Rev 1:10,11). Whence note again, that when God calls a man
to this or that work for him, he first fits him with a suitable spirit.
Ezekiel saith, when God bid him stand upon his feet, that the Spirit
entered into him, and set him upon his feet (Eze 2:1,2).
‘And he carried me away,’ &c. Mark, And he carried me [away]
&c. As a man must have much of the Spirit that sees much of God,
and his goodly matters; so he must be also carried away with it; he
must by it be taken off from things carnal and earthly, and taken up
into the glory of things that are spiritual and heavenly. The Spirit
loveth to do what it doth in private; that man to whom God intendeth to
reveal great things, he takes him aside from the lumber and cumber of
this world, and carrieth him away in the solace and contemplation of
the things of another world; ‘And when they were alone, he expounded
all things to his disciples’ (Mark 4:34). Mark, and when they were
ALONE; according to that of the prophet, ‘Whom shall he teach
knowledge, and whom shall he make to understand doctrine? them that are
weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts’ (Isa 28:9). Whence
observe also, he is the man that is like to know most of God, that is
oftenest in private with him (Luke 2:25-38). He that obeyeth when God
saith, Come up hither, he shall see the bride, the Lamb’s wife. For
‘through desire a man having separated himself, seeketh and
intermeddleth with all wisdom’ (Pro 18:1).
‘And he carried me away in the spirit to a great and high mountain.’
Thus having showed his frame, and inward disposition of spirit, he now
comes to tell us also of the place or stage on which he was set; to the
end that now being fitted by illumination, he might not be hindered of
his vision by ought that might intercept. He carried me away in the
Spirit to a great and high mountain. Thus did God of old also; for when
he showed to Moses the patterns of the heavenly things, he must ascend
to the Mount Sinai (Exo 19:3). He must into the mount also, when he
hath the view of the Holy Land, and of that goodly mountain Lebanon
(Deu 32:49). Whence we may learn that the things of God are far from
man, as he is natural; and also that there are very great things
between us and the sight of them: none can see them but such as are
carried away in the Spirit and set on high.
‘...To a great and high mountain.’ This mountain therefore signifieth
the Lord Christ, on which the soul must be placed, as on a mighty hill,
whereby he may be able his eyes being anointed with spiritual eye
salve, to see over the tops of those mighty corruptions, temptations,
and spiritual enemies, that like high and mighty towers are built by
the wicked one, to keep the view of God’s things from the sight of our
souls (2 Cor 10:5,6). Wherefore Christ is called the Mountain of the
Lord’s house, or that on which the house of God is placed; he is also
called the Rock of ages, and the Rock that is higher than we. ‘The hill
of God is’ an high hill, as Bashan; ‘an high hill, as the hill of
Bashan’ (Psa 68:15). This is the hill from whence the prophet Ezekiel
had the vision of this city (Eze 40:2); ‘And upon this rock [saith
Christ] I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it’ (Matt 16:18).
[FIRST. The Vision of the
Holy City in General.]
‘And he carried me
away in the spirit to a great and high mountain, and showed me that
great city, the holy Jerusalem.’ Having thus told us how, and with what
he was qualified, he next makes relation of what he saw, which was that
great city, the holy Jerusalem.
Jerusalem, in the language of the Scripture, is to be acknowledged for
the church and spouse of the Lord Jesus; and is to be considered either
generally or more particularly. Now as she is to be taken generally, so
she is to be understood as being ‘the whole family in heaven and
earth,’ (Eph 3:15); and as she is thus looked upon, so she is not
considered with respect to this or that state and condition of the
church here in the world, but simply as she is the church: therefore it
is said, when at any time any are converted from Satan to God, that
they ‘are come unto Mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God,
the heavenly Jerusalem; and to an innumerable company of angels; to the
general assembly and church of the first-born which are written in
heaven; to God the judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made
perfect; and to Jesus, - and to the blood of sprinkling’ (Heb 12:22,24).
But again, as Jerusalem is thus generally to be understood, so also she
is to be considered more particularly: 1. Either as she relates to her
first and purest state; or, 2. As she relates to her declined and
captivated state; or, 3. With reference to her being recovered again
from her apostatized and captivated condition. Thus it was with
Jerusalem in the letter; which threefold state of this city shall be
most exactly answered by our gospel Jerusalem, by our New Testament
church. Her first state was in the days of Christ and his apostles, and
answereth to Jerusalem in the days of Solomon; her second state is in
the days of antichrist, and answereth to the carrying away of the Jews
from their city into Babylon; and her third state is this in the text,
and answereth to their return from captivity, and rebuilding their city
and walls again: all which will be fully manifest in this discourse
following.
[This city is the gospel church returning out of antichristian
captivity.]
Besides, that this
holy city that here you read of is the church, the gospel church,
returning out of her long and antichristian captivity; consider,
First, She is
here called a city, the very name that our primitive church went under
(Eph 2:19); which name she loseth all the while of her apostatizing and
captivity under antichrist; for observe, I say, all the while she is
under the scourge of the dragon, beast, and the woman in scarlet,
&c. (Rev 13), she goeth under the name of a woman, a woman in
travail, a woman flying before the dragon, a woman flying into the
wilderness, there to continue in an afflicted and tempted condition,
and to be glad of wilderness nourishment, until the time of her enemies
were come to an end (Rev 12).
Now the reason
why she lost the title of city at her going into captivity is, because
then she lost her situation and strength; she followed others than
Christ, wherefore he suffered her enemies to scale her walls, to break
down her battlements; he suffered, as you see here, the great red
dragon, and beast with seven heads and ten horns, to get into her
vineyard, who made most fearful work both with her and all her friends;
her gates also were now either broken down or shut up, so that none
could, according to her laws and statutes, enter into her; her charter
also, even the Bible itself, was most grossly abused and corrupted,
yea, sometimes burned and destroyed almost utterly; wherefore the
Spirit of God doth take away from her the title of city, and leaveth
her to be termed a wandering woman, as aforesaid. ‘The court which is
without the temple [saith the angel] leave out, and measure it not, for
it is given unto the Gentiles; and the holy city shall they tread under
foot forty and two months’ (Rev 11:2). ‘The holy city shall they tread
under foot’; that is, all the city constitutions, her forts and
strength, her laws and privileges for a long time, shall be laid aside
and slighted, shall become a hissing, a taunt, and a byword among the
nations. And truly thus it was in the letter, in the destruction of
Jerusalem by the king of Babylon and his wicked instruments, by whose
hands the city was broken up, the walls pulled down, the gates burned,
the houses rifled, the virgins ravished, and the children laid dead in
the top of every street (2 Chron 36:17-21; Jer 52; Lam 1; 2; 3; 4). Now
was Zion become a ploughed field, and Jerusalem turned to heaps; a
place of briars and thorns, and of wasteness and desolation (Micah
3:12; Isa 7:23,24).
Second, The
phrase also that is joined with this of city doth much concern the
point; she is here called ‘the new and holy city,’ which words are
explained by these, ‘prepared as a bride and adorned for her husband.’
The meaning is, that she is now got into her form, fashion, order, and
privileges again; she is now ready, adorned, prepared, and put into her
primitive state; mark, though she was in her state of affliction called
a woman, yet she was not then either called a city or a woman adorned;
but rather a woman robbed and spoiled, rent and torn among the briars
and thorns of the wilderness (Isa 5:6; 42:22; 32:13,14). Wherefore this
city is nothing else but the church returned out of captivity from
under the reign of antichrist, as is yet farther manifest, because,
Third. We find
no city to answer that which was built after the Jews’ return from
captivity but this; for this, and only this, is the city that you find
in this prophecy that is nominated as the antitype of that second of
the Jews; wherefore John hath no relation of her while towards the doom
of antichrist, and no description of her in particular until antichrist
is utterly overthrown; as all may see that wisely read (Rev 17-20).
[Why the
church is called a city.]
‘And showed me that
great city.’ The Holy Ghost is pleased at this time to give the church
the name of a city, rather than any other name, rather than the name of
spouse, woman, temple, and the like—though he giveth us her under the
name of a woman also, to help us to understand what he means; but, I
say, the name of a city is now the name in special, under which the
church must go, and that for special reasons.
First. To show us how great and numerous a people will then be in the
church; the church may be a woman, a temple, a spouse, when she is but
few, a handful, but two or three; but to be a city, and that in her
glory, it bespeaks great store of members, inhabitants, and citizens;
especially when she goeth under the name of a great city, as here she
does. He ‘showed me that great city.’
Second. She goeth rather under the name of a city, than temple or
spouse, to show us also how plentifully the nations and kingdoms of men
shall at that day traffic with her, and in her, for her goodly
merchandize of grace and life; to show us, I say, what wonderful custom
the church of God at this day shall have among all sorts of people, for
her heavenly treasures. It is said of Tyrus and Babylon, that their
merchandize went unto all the world, and men from all quarters under
heaven came to trade and to deal with them for their wares (Eze 27; Rev
18:2,3). Why thus it will be in the latter day with the church of God;
the nations shall come from far, from Tarshish, Pul, Lud, Tubal, Javan,
and the isles afar off. They shall come, saith God, out of all nations
upon horses and mules, and upon swift beasts, to my holy mountain
Jerusalem. ‘And it shall come to pass, that from one new moon to
another, and from one sabbath to another, shall all flesh come to
worship before me, saith the Lord’ (Isa 66:19-23). Alas, the church at
that day when she is a woman only, or a temple either, may be without
that beauty, treasure, amiableness, and affecting glory that she will
be endowed with when she is a prosperous city. His marvellous kindness
is seen ‘in a strong city’ (Psa 31:21). In cities, you know, are the
treasures, beauty, and glory of kingdoms; and it is thither men go that
are desirous to solace themselves therewith. ‘Out of Zion, the
perfection of beauty, God hath shined’ (Psa 50:2).
Third. It is called a city, rather than a woman or temple, to show us
how strongly and securely it will keep its inhabitants at that day. ‘In
that day shall this song be sung, - We have a strong city, salvation
will God appoint for walls and bulwarks’ (Isa 26:1). And verily if the
cities of the Gentiles, and the strength of their bars, and gates, and
walls did so shake the hearts, yea, the very faith of the children of
God themselves, how secure and safe will the inhabitants of this city
be, even the inhabitants of that city which God himself will build,’
&c. (Deu 9:1,2; Num 13:28).
Fourth. But lastly, and more especially, the church is called here a
city, chiefly to show us that now she shall be undermost no longer.
Babylon reigned, and so shall Jerusalem at that day. ‘And thou, O tower
of the flock, the stronghold of the daughter of Zion, unto thee shall
it come, even the first dominion, the kingdom shall come to the
daughter of Jerusalem’ (Micah 4:8). Now shall she, when she is built
and complete, have a complete conquest and victory over all her
enemies; she shall reign over them; the law shall go forth of her that
rules them, and the governors of all the world at that day shall be
Jerusalem men. ‘And the captivity of this host of the children of
Israel shall possess that of the Canaanites, even unto Zarephath; and
the captivity of Jerusalem which is in Sepharad shall possess the
cities of the south. And saviours shall come up on mount Zion, to judge
the mount of Esau, and the kingdom shall be the Lord’s’ (Obad
20,21). [1] ‘For
the law shall go forth of Zion, and the word of the
Lord from Jerusalem. - And he shall judge among many people, and rebuke
strong nations afar off, and they shall beat their swords into
plough-shares, and their spears into pruning-hooks: nation shall not
lift up a sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more’
(Micah 4:1-3). There brake he ‘the ships of Tarshish with an east wind.
As we have heard, so have we seen in the city of the Lord of hosts, in
the city of our God; God will establish it for ever’ (Psa 48:1-8). For
observe it, Christ hath not only obtained the kingdom of heaven for
those that are his, when this world is ended, but hath also, as a
reward for his sufferings, the whole world given into his hand;
wherefore, as all the kings, and princes, and powers of this world have
had their time to reign, and have glory in this world in the face of
all, so Christ will have his time at this day, to show who is ‘the only
Potentate - and Lord of lords’ (1 Tim 6:15). At which day he will not
only set up his kingdom in the midst of their kingdoms, as he doth now,
but will set it up even upon the top of their kingdoms; at which day
there will not be a nation in the world but must bend to Jerusalem or
perish (Isa 60:12). For ‘the kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of
the kingdom under the whole heaven, shall be given to the people of the
saints of the Most High, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and
all dominions shall serve and obey him’ (Dan 7:27). ‘And his dominion
shall be from sea to sea, and from the river to the ends of the earth’
(Zech 9:10). O holiness, how shall it shine in kings and nations, when
God doth this!
[This city
descends out of heaven from God.]
‘He showed me that
great city, the holy Jerusalem, descending out of heaven from God.’ In
these words we are to inquire into three things. First. What he here
should mean by heaven. Second. What it is for this city to descend out
of it. Third. And why she is said to descend out of it from God.
First. For the word heaven, in Scripture it is variously to be
understood, but generally either materially or metaphorically; now not
materially here, but metaphorically; and so is generally, if not
always, taken in this book.
Now that it is not to be taken for the material heavens where Christ in
person is, consider, that the descending of this city is not the coming
of glorified saints with their Lord; because that even after the
descending, yea and building of this city, there shall be sinners
converted to God; but at the coming of the Lord Jesus from heaven with
his saints, the door shall be shut; that is, the door of grace, against
all unbelievers (Luke 13:25; Matt 25:10).
Therefore heaven here is to be taken metaphorically, for the church;
which, as I said before, is frequently so taken in this prophecy, as
also in many others of the holy scriptures (Rev 11:15;
12:1-3,7,8,10,13; 13:6; 19:1,14; Jer 51:48; Matt 25:1, &c.). And
observe it, though the church of Christ under the tyranny of
antichrist, loseth the title of a standing city, yet in the worst of
times she loseth not the title of heaven. She is heaven when the great
red dragon is in her, and heaven when the third part of her stars are
cast unto the earth; she is heaven also when the beast doth open his
throat against her, to blaspheme her God, his tabernacle, and those
that dwell in her.
Second. Now, then, to show you what we are to understand by this, that
she is said to descend out of heaven; for indeed to speak properly,
Jerusalem is always in the Scriptures set in the highest ground, and
men are said to descend, when they go down from her, but to ascend, or
go up when they are going thitherwards (Eze 3:1; Neh 12:1; Matt
20:17,18; Luke 19:28; 10:30). But yet though this be true, there must
also be something significant in this word descending; wherefore when
he saith, he saw this city to descend out of heaven, he would have us
understand,
1. That though the church under antichrist be never so low, yet out of
her loins shall they come that yet shall be a reigning city (Heb
7:6,13,14). Generation is a descending from the loins of our friends;
he therefore speaks of the generation of the church. Wherefore the
meaning is, That out of the church that is now in captivity, there
shall come a complete city, so exact in all things, according to the
laws and liberties, privileges and riches of a city, that she shall lie
level with the great charter of heaven. Thus it was in the type, the
city after the captivity was builded, even by those that once were in
captivity, especially by their seed and offspring (Isa 45); and thus it
shall be in our New Testament New Jerusalem; ‘They that shall be of
thee,’ saith the prophet, that is, of the church of affliction, they
‘shall build the old waste places; thou shalt raise up the foundations
of many generations; and thou shalt be called, The repairer of the
breach, The restorer of paths to dwell in’ (Isa 58:12); and again, they
that sometimes had ashes for gladness, and the spirit of heaviness
instead of the garment of praise, ‘they shall build the old wastes,
they shall raise up the former desolations, and they shall repair the
waste cities, the desolations of many generations; for your shame ye
shall have double, and for confusion they shall rejoice in their
portion,’ &c. (Isa 61:3,4,7). Thus therefore by descending we may
understand that the church’s generation shall be this holy city, and
shall build up themselves the tower of the flock (Micah 4:8).
2. When he saith, This holy city descended out of heaven, he would have
us understand also what a blessing and happiness this city at her
rebuilding will be to the whole world. Never were kind and seasonable
showers more profitable to the tender new-mown grass than will this
city at this day be, to the inhabitants of the world; they will come as
a blessing from heaven upon them. As the prophet saith, ‘The remnant of
Jacob shall be in the midst of many people, as a dew from the Lord; as
the showers upon the grass, that tarrieth not for man, nor waiteth for
the sons of men’ (Micah 5:7). O the grace, the light and glory that
will strike with spangling beams from this city, as from a sun, into
the farthest parts of the world! ‘Thus saith the Lord, as the new wine
is found in the cluster, and one saith, Destroy it not, for a blessing
is in it: so will I do for my servants’ sake, that I may not destroy
them all: I will bring forth a seed out of Jacob, and out of Judah an
inheritor of my’ holy ‘mountains: and mine elect shall inherit it, and
my servants shall dwell there. And Sharon [where the sweet roses grew,
(Cant 2:1)], shall be a fold for flocks, and the valley of Achor a
place for the herds to lie down in, for my people that have sought me’
(Isa 65:8-10). ‘In that day shall Israel be the third with Egypt and
with Assyria, even a blessing in the midst of the land’ (Isa 19:24).
‘And it shall come to pass, that as ye were a curse among the heathen,
O house of Judah, and house of Israel; so will I save you, and ye shall
be a blessing. Fear not, but let your hands be strong’ (Zech 8:13). ‘As
the dew of Hermon that descended upon the mountains of Zion, for there
the Lord commanded the blessing, even life for evermore’ (Psa 133:3).
Third. And now for the third particular, namely, What it is to descend
out of heaven from God.
1. To descend out of heaven, that is, out of the church in captivity,
‘from God,’ is this: The church is the place in which God doth beget
all those that are the children of him; wherefore in that they are said
to descend out of heaven ‘from God,’ it is as if he had said, the
children of the church are heaven-born, begotten of God, and brought
forth in the church of Christ. For ‘Jerusalem which is above is the
mother of us all’ (Gal 4:26). ‘The Lord shall count when he writeth up
the people, that this man was born there’ (Psa 87:5,6).
2. When he saith he saw this Jerusalem come out of heaven from God, he
means that those of the church in captivity that shall build this city,
they shall be a people peculiarly fitted and qualified for this work of
God. It was not all the children of Israel that had their hand in
building Jerusalem after the captivity of old; ‘their nobles put not
their necks to the work of the Lord’ (Neh 3:5). Also there were many of
Judah that were sworn to Tobiah, the arch-opposer of the building of
the city, because of some kindred and relation that then was between
them and him (Neh 6:17-19). And as it was then, so we do expect it will
be now; some will be even at the beginning of this work, in Babylon, at
that time also some will be cowardly and fearful, yea, and even men
hired to hinder the work (Neh 6:10-12). Wherefore I say, those of the
church that at that day builded the city, they were men of a particular
and peculiar spirit, which also will so be at the building of New
Jerusalem. They whose light breaks forth as the morning, they that are
mighty for a spirit of prayer, they that take away the yoke, and
speaking vanity, and that draw out their soul to the hungry; they that
the Lord shall guide continually, that shall have fat bones, and that
shall be as a watered garden, whose waters fail not, &c. (Isa
58:8-14). Of them shall they be that build the old wastes, and that
raise up the foundations of many generations, &c. It was thus in
all ages, in every work of God, some of his people, some of his saints
in special in all ages, have been used to promote, and advance, and
perfect the work of their generations.
3. This city descends or comes out of heaven from God, that is, by his
special working and bringing to pass; it was God that gave them the
pattern even when they were in Babylon; it was God that put it into
their hearts while there, to pray for deliverance; it was God that put
it into the hearts of the kings of the Medes and Persians to give them
liberty to return and build; and it was God that quailed the hearts of
those that by opposing did endeavour to hinder the bringing the work to
perfection ; yea, it was God that did indeed bring the work to
perfection; wherefore she may well be said to descend ‘out of heaven
from God’: as he also saith himself by the prophet, I will cause the
captivity of Judah, and the captivity of Israel to return, and I will
build them as at the first (Ezra 4:1-4; 7:27; Neh 2:8-18; 4:15;
6:15,16; Jer 33:7; 32:44; Eze 36:33-37; 37:11-15; Amos 9:11).
Lastly, When he saith he saw her descend from God out of heaven, he may
refer to her glory, which at her declining departed from her, and
ascended to God, as the sap returns into the root at the fall of the
leaf; which glory doth again at her return descend, or come into the
church, and branches of the same, as the sap doth arise at the spring
of the year, for indeed the church’s beauty is from heaven, and it
either goeth up thither from her, or else comes from thence to her,
according to the natures of both fall and spring (Cant 2).Thus you see
what this heaven is, and what it is for this city to descend out of it;
also what it is for this city to descend out of it from God.
[This city
has the glory of God.]
Ver.
11. ‘Having the glory of God.’ These last words do put the whole matter
out of doubt, and do most clearly show unto us that the descending of
this city is the perfect return of the church out of captivity; the
church, when she began at first to go into captivity, her glory began
to depart from her; and now she is returning again, she receiveth
therewith her former glory, ‘having the glory of God.’ Thus it was in
the type, when Jerusalem went into captivity under the King of Babylon,
which was a figure of the captivity of our New Testament church under
Antichrist, it is said that then the glory of God departed from them,
and went, by degrees, first out of the temple to the threshold of the
house, and from thence with the cherubims of glory, for that time,
quite away from the city (Eze 10:4-18; 11:22,23 &c.).
Again, As the glory of God departed from this city at her going into
captivity, so when she returned again, she had also then returned to
her the glory of God; whereupon this very prophet that saw the glory of
God go from her at her going into captivity, did see it, the very same;
and that according as it departed, so return at her deliverance. ‘He
brought me to the gate,’ saith he—that is, when by a vision he saw all
the frame and patterns of the city and temple, in the state in which it
was to be after the captivity. ‘He brought me to the gate - that
looketh toward the east, and behold the glory of the God of Israel came
from the way of the east’—the very same way that it went when it was
departed from the city (Eze 11:23). ‘His voice was like a noise of many
waters, and the earth shined with is glory. It was according to the
appearance of the vision which I saw, even according to the vision
which I saw when I came to destroy the city, and the visions were like
the vision that I saw by the river Chebar; and I fell upon my face, and
the glory of the Lord came into the house by the way of the gate whose
prospect is toward the east; so the Spirit took me up, and brought me
into the inner court, and behold, the glory of the Lord filled the
house’ (Eze 43:1-5).
Thus you see it was in the destruction and restoration of the Jews’
Jerusalem, by which God doth plainly show us how things will be in our
gospel church; she was to decline and lose her glory, she was to be
trampled—as she was a city—for a long time under the feet of the
unconverted and wicked world. Again, she was after this to be builded,
and to be put into her former glory; at which time she was to have her
glory, her former glory, even the glory of God, returned to her again.
‘He showed me,’ saith John, ‘that great city, the holy Jerusalem,
descending out of heaven from God, having the glory of God.’ As he
saith by the prophet, ‘I am returned to Jerusalem with mercies, my
house shall be built in it’ (Zech 1:16). And again, ‘I am returned unto
Zion, and will dwell in the midst of Jerusalem’ (Zech 8:3).
‘Having the glory of God.’ There is the grace of God, and the glory of
that grace; there is the power of God, and the glory of that power; and
there is the majesty of God, and the glory of that majesty (Eph 1:6; 2
Thess 1:9; Isa 2:19).
It is true God doth not leave his people in some sense, even in the
worst of times, and in their most forlorn condition (John 14:18), as he
showeth by his being with them in their sad state in Egypt and Babylon,
and other of their states of calamity (Dan 3:25). As he saith,
‘Although I have cast them far off among the heathen, and although I
have scattered them among the countries, yet will I be to them a little
sanctuary in the countries where they shall come’ (Eze 2:16). God is
with his church, even in her greatest adversity, both to limit, bound,
measure, and to point out to her quantity and quality, her beginning
and duration of distress and temptation (Isa 27:7-9; Rev 2:10). But yet
I say the glory of God, in the notion of Ezekiel and John, when they
speak of the restoration of this city, that is not always upon his
people, though always they are beloved and counted for his peculiar
treasure. She may then have his grace, but not at the same time the
glory of his grace; his power, but not the glory of his power; she may
also have his majesty, but not the glory thereof; God may be with his
church, even then when the glory is departed from Israel.
The difference that is between her having his grace, power, and
majesty, and the glory of each, is manifest in these following
particulars;—grace, power, and majesty, when they are in the church in
their own proper acts, only as we are considered saints before God, so
they’re invisible, and that not only altogether to the world, but often
to the very children of God themselves; but now when the glory of these
do rest upon the church, according to Ezekiel and John; why then it
will be visible and apparent to all beholders. ‘When the Lord shall
build up Zion, he shall APPEAR in his glory’ (Psa 102:16), as he saith
also in another place, ‘The Lord shall arise upon thee, and his glory
shall be seen upon thee’ (Isa 60:1-2).
Now, then, to speak a word or two, in particular to the glory of God,
that at this day will be found to settle upon this city.
First. Therefore, at her returning, she shall not only have his grace
upon her, but the very glory of his grace shall be seen upon her; the
glory of pardoning grace shall now shine in her own soul, and grace in
the glory of it shall appear in all her doings. Now shall both our
inward and outward man be most famously adorned and beautified with
salvation; the golden pipes that are on the head of the golden
candlestick, shall at this day convey, with all freeness, the golden
oil thereout, into our golden hearts and lamps (Zech 4:2). Our wine
shall be mixed with gall no longer, we shall now drink the pure blood
of the grape; the glory of pardoning and forgiving mercy shall so show
itself at this day in this city, and shall so visibly abide there in
the eyes of all spectators, that all shall be enflamed with it. ‘For
Zion’s sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem’s sake I will
not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as brightness, and
the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth. And the Gentiles shall
see thy righteousness, and all kings thy glory; and thou shalt be
called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord shall name’ (Isa
62:1,2). And again, ‘The Lord hath made bare his holy arm in the eyes
of all the nations, and all the ends of the earth shall see the
salvation of our God’ (Isa 52:10; Psa 98:2). At that day, the prophet
tells us, there shall be holiness upon the very horses’ bridles, and
that the pots in the Lord’s house shall be like the bowls before the
altar, and every pot in Jerusalem shall be holiness unto the Lord (Zech
14:20,21). The meaning of all these places is, that in the day that the
Lord doth turn his church and people into the frame and fashion of a
city, and when he shall build them up to answer the first state of the
church, there will such grace and plenty of mercy be extended unto her,
begetting such faith and holiness and grace in her soul, and all her
actions, that she shall convince all that are about her that she is the
city, the beloved city, the city that the Lord hath chosen; for after
that he had said before, he would return to Zion, and dwell in the
midst of Jerusalem (Zech 8:3), he saith, moreover, that Jerusalem shall
be called a city of truth, and the mountain of the Lord of hosts, the
holy mountain. ‘And all the people of the earth shall see that thou art
called by the name of the Lord, and they shall be afraid of thee’ (Deu
28:10).
Second. As the glory of the grace of God will, at this day, be
wonderfully manifest in and over his city; so also at that day will be
seen the glory of his power. ‘O my people,’ saith God, ‘that dwellest
in Zion, be not afraid of the Assyrian; he shall smite thee with a
rock, and shall lift up his staff against thee, after the manner of
Egypt,’ that is, shall persecute and afflict thee, as Pharaoh served
thy friends of old; but be not afraid, ‘For yet a very little while,
and the indignation shall cease, and mine anger in their destruction:
and the Lord of hosts shall stir up a scourge for him, according to the
slaughter of Midian at the rock of Oreb: and as his rod was upon the
sea, so shall he lift it up after the manner of Egypt’ (Isa 7;
10:24-26). The sum is, God will, at the day of his rebuilding the New
Jerusalem, so visibly make bare his arm, and be so exalted before all
by his power towards his people, that no people shall dare to oppose—or
stand, if they do make the least attempt to hinder—the stability of
this city. ‘I will surely [gather, or] assemble, O Jacob, all of thee,’
saith God: ‘I will surely gather the remnant of Israel - as the sheep
of Bozrah, as the flock in the midst of the fold; they shall make great
noise by reason of the multitude of men. The breaker is come up before
them, they have broken up [the antichristian siege that hath been laid
against them], they have passed through the gate, and are gone out by
it, and their king shall pass before them, and the Lord on the head of
them’ (Micah 2:12,13). ‘Like as the lion and the young lion roaring on
his prey, when a multitude of shepherds are called forth against him,
he will not be afraid of their voice, nor abase himself for the noise
of them: so shall the Lord of hosts come down to fight for Mount Zion,
and for the hill thereof’ (Isa 31:4). ‘The Lord shall go forth as a
mighty man, he shall stir up jealousy like a man of war; he shall cry,
yea, roar; he shall prevail against his enemies’ (Isa 42:13). But ‘not
by might, nor yet by power,’ that is, the power and arm of flesh, but
by the power of the Word and Spirit of God, which will prevail, and
must prevail, to quash and overturn all opposition (Zech 12:8; Zeph
3:8; Joel 3:16; Zech 4:6).
Third. [The glory of his majesty.] When God hath thus appeared in the
glory of his grace, and the glory of his power, to deliver his chosen,
then shall the implacable enemies of God shrink and creep into holes
like the locusts and frogs of the hedges, at the appearance of the
glory of the majesty of God. Now the high ones, lofty ones, haughty
ones, and the proud, shall see so evidently the hand of the Lord
towards his servants, and his indignation towards his enemies, that
‘they shall go into the holes of the rocks, and into the caves of the
earth, - and into the tops of the ragged rocks, for the fear of the
Lord, and for the glory of his majesty, when he ariseth to shake
terribly the earth’ (Isa 2:19,21).
Where the presence of the Lord doth so appear upon a people, that those
that are spectators perceive and understand it, it must need work on
those spectators one of these two things;—either first a trembling and
astonishment, and quailing of heart, as it doth among the implacable
enemies (Josh 2:8-13), or else a buckling and bending of heart, and
submission to his people and ways (Josh 9:22-25). As saith the prophet,
‘The sons also of them that afflicted thee shall come bending unto
thee, and all they that despised thee shall fall [2] down at the soles
of thy feet; and they shall call thee The city of the Lord, the Zion of
the Holy One of Israel’ (Isa 60:14). As Moses said to the children of
Israel, ‘The Lord your God shall lay the fear of you, and the dread of
you, upon all the land that ye shall tread upon, as he hath said unto
you’ (Deu 11:25).
At this day the footsteps of the Lord will be so apparent and visible
in all his actions and dispensations in and towards his people, this
holy city, that all shall see, as I have said, how gracious, loving,
kind, and good the Lord is now towards his own children; such glory, I
say, will be over them, and upon them, that they all will shine before
the world; and such tender bowels in God towards them, that no sooner
can an adversary peep, or lift up his head against his servants, but
his hand will be in the neck of them; so that in short time he will
have brought his church into that safety, and her neighbours into that
fear and submission, that they shall not again so much as dare to hold
up a hand against her, no, not for a thousand years (Rev 20:3). ‘Thus
saith the Lord, Behold I will bring again the captivity of Jacob’s
tents, and have mercy on his dwelling-places; and the city shall be
builded on her own heap, and the palace shall remain after the manner
thereof. And out of them shall proceed thanksgiving, and the voice of
them that make merry; and I will multiply them, and they shall not be
few; and I will also glorify them, and they shall not be small: Their
children also shall be as aforetime, and their congregation shall be
established before me, and I will punish all that oppress them’ (Jer
30:18-20).
[The light
of this city.]
Having
the glory of God. ‘And her light was like unto a stone most
precious, even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal.’ Having thus told
us of her glory, even of ‘the glory of God,’ how it at this day will
rest upon this city, he now comes to touch a second thing, to wit, ‘her
light,’ and that in which she descends, and by which, as with the light
of the sun, she seeth before her, and behind her, and on every side.
This therefore is another branch of her duty; she in her descending
hath ‘the glory of God,’ and also ‘the light of a stone most precious.’
Ezekiel tells us, that in the vision which he saw when he came to
destroy the city—which vision was the very same that he saw again at
the restoring of it—he saith, I say, that in this vision, among many
other wonders, he saw a fire enfolding itself, and a brightness about
it, and that ‘the fire also was bright, and that out of it went forth
lightning’; that ‘the likeness of the firmament upon the - living
creatures, was as the colour of the terrible crystal’; that the throne
also, upon which was placed the likeness of a man, was like, or ‘as the
appearance of a sapphire-stone’ (Eze 1:4,13,14,22,26). All which words,
with the nature of their light and colour, the Holy Ghost doth in the
vision of John comprise, and placeth within the colour of the jasper
and the crystal-stone. And indeed, though the vision of John and
Ezekiel, touching the end of the matter, be but one and the same, yet
they do very much vary and differ in terms and manner of language;
Ezekiel tells us that the man that he saw come to measure the city and
temple, had in his hand ‘a line of flax’ (40:3), which line John calls
a golden reed; Ezekiel tells us that the river came out of, or ‘from
under the threshold of the house’ (47:1); but John saith it came out of
the throne of God and of the Lamb. Ezekiel tells us that on either side
of this river grew ALL trees for food (v 12); John calls these ALL
trees but ONE tree, and tells us that it stood on both sides of this
river. The like might also be showed you in many other particulars; as
here you see they differ as touching the terms of the light and
brightness that appears upon this city at her rebuilding, which the
Holy Ghost represents to John under the light and glory of the jasper
and crystal-stone; for indeed the end of Ezekiel’s vision was to show
us, that as when the glory of God departed from the city, it signified
that he would take away from them the light of his Word, and their
clearness of worship, suffering them to mourn for the loss of the one,
and to grope for the want of the other; so at his return again he would
give them both their former light of truth, and also the clearness of
spirit to understand it, which also John doth show us shall last for
ever.
‘...And her light was like unto a stone most precious...’ This stone it
is to represent unto us the Lord Jesus Christ, in whose light and
clearness this city comes out of Babylon; for, as he saith, she hath
the glory of God, that is, his visible hand of grace, power, and
majesty, to bring her forth; so she comes in the light of this precious
stone, which terms, I say, both the prophet Isaiah and the apostle
Peter do apply to the Lord Jesus, and none else; the one calling him ‘a
precious corner-stone,’ the other calling him the ‘chief corner-stone,
elect and precious’ (Isa 28:16; 1 Peter 2:6). Now then when he saith
this city hath the light of this stone to descend in, he means that she
comes in the shining wisdom, knowledge, understanding, and influences
of Christ, out of her afflicted and captivated state; and observe it,
she is rather said to descend in the light of this stone, than in the
light of God, though both be true, because it is the man Christ, the
stone which the builders rejected, ‘in whom are hid all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge,’ of whose fulness we do all receive, and grace
for grace; ‘for it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness
dwell’ (Col 2:3; John 1:16; Col 1:19. See also Acts 2:33 and Eph
4:10-13).
This showeth us, then, these two things—
First. That the time of the return of the saints to build the ruinous
city is near, yea, very near, when the light of the Lord Jesus begins
to shine unto perfect day in her. God will not bring forth his people
out of Babylon, especially those that are to be the chief in the
building of this city, without their own judgments. ‘They shall see eye
to eye, when the Lord shall bring again Zion’ (Isa 52:8). As he saith
also in another place, ‘The light of the moon shall be as the light of
the sun, and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold, as the light of
seven days, in the day that the Lord bindeth up the breach of his
people, and health the stroke of their wound’ (Isa 30:26). ‘And the
eyes of them that see shall not be dim, and the ears of them that hear
shall hearken. The heart also of the rash shall understand knowledge,
and the tongue of the stammerers shall be ready to speak plainly’ (Isa
32:3,4). The Lord shall be now exalted, and be very high, for he will
fill Zion with judgment and righteousness, and wisdom and knowledge
shall be the stability of thy times (Isa 33:5,6). When Israel went out
of Egypt, they wanted much of this, they went out blindfolded, as it
were, they went they knew not whither; wherefore they went not in the
glory of that which this city descendeth in; as Moses said, ‘The Lord
hath not given you an heart to perceive, nor eyes to see, nor ears to
hear, unto this day’ (Deu 29:4). But these shall see every step they
take; they shall be like the beasts that had eyes both before and
behind: they shall see how far they are come out of Antichrist, and
shall see also how far yet they have to go, to the complete rebuilding
and finishing of this city.
Second. This showeth us how sweet and pleasant the way of this church
will be at this day before them. Light, knowledge, and judgment in
God’s matters doth not only give men to see and behold all the things
with which they are concerned, but the things themselves being good,
they do also by this means convey very great sweetness and pleasantness
into the hearts of those that have the knowledge of them. Every step, I
say, that now they take, it shall be as it were in honey and butter.
‘The ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with songs,
and everlasting joy [see v 2] upon their heads; they shall obtain joy
and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away’ (Isa 35:10). As
he saith, ‘Again I will build thee, and thou shalt be built; O virgin
of Israel, thou shalt again be adorned with tabrets, and shall go forth
in the dances of them that make merry.—For thus saith the Lord, Sing
with gladness for Jacob, and shout among the chief of the nations:
publish ye, praise ye, and say, O Lord, save thy people, the remnant of
Israel. Behold, I will bring them from the north country, and gather
them from the coasts of the earth, and with them the blind and the
lame, the woman with child, and her that travaileth with child
together; a great company shall return thither’ (Jer 31:4,7,8).
By these words, the blind and the lame, the woman with child, and her
that travaileth, he would have us understand thus much—
1. That the way of God shall, by the illuminating grace of Christ, be
made so pleasant, so sweet, and so beautiful in the souls of all at
that day, that even the blindest shall not stumble therein, neither
shall the lame refuse it for fear of hurt; yea, the blind, the lame,
the woman with child, and her that travaileth shall, though they be of
all in most evil case to travel, and go the journey, yet, at this day,
by reason of the glorious light and sweetness that now will possess
them, even forget their impediments, and dance, as after musical
tabrets.
2. This city, upon the time of her rebuilding, shall have her blind men
see, her halt and lame made strong; she also that is with child, and
her that travaileth, shall jointly see the city-work that at this day
will be on foot, and put into form and order, yet before the end.
‘Behold, at that time I will undo all that afflict thee,’ saith the
Lord to his people, ‘and I will save her that halteth, and gather her
that was driven out, and I will get them praise and fame in every land
where they have been put to shame. At that time will I bring you again,
even in the time that I gather you, for I will make you a name and a
praise among all people of the earth, when I turn back your captivity
before your eyes, saith the Lord’ (Zeph 3:19,20).
‘And her light was like unto a stone most precious.’ In that he saith
her light is like unto ‘A STONE MOST PRECIOUS,’ he showeth us how
welcome, and with what eagerness of spirit this light will at this day
be embraced by the Lord’s people. ‘Truly the light is sweet,’ saith
Solomon, ‘and a pleasant thing it is for the eyes to behold the sun’
(Eccl 11:7). And if so, then how beautiful, desirable, and precious
will that light be, that is not only heavenly, and from Christ, but
that will be universal among all saints, to show them the same thing,
and to direct them to and in the same work. The want of this hath, to
this day, been one great reason of that crossness of judgment and
persuasion that hath been found among the saints, and that hath caused
that lingering and disputing about the glorious state of the church in
the latter days; some being for its excellency to consist chiefly in
outward glory; and others, swerving on the other side, conclude she
shall not have any of this: some conceiving that this city will not be
built until the Lord comes from heaven in person; others again
concluding that when he comes, then there shall be no longer tarrying
here, but that all shall forthwith, even all the godly, be taken up
into heaven: with divers other opinions in these matters. And thus many
‘run to and fro,’ but yet, God be thanked, knowledge does increase,
though the vision will be sealed, even to the time of the end (Dan
12:4). But now, I say, at the time of the end, the Spirit shall be
poured down upon us from on high (Isa 32:15); now ‘they also that erred
in spirit shall come to understanding’ (Isa 29;24); the city shall
descend in the light of a stone most precious. The sun will be risen
upon the earth, when Lot goeth from Sodom unto Zoar (Gen 19:23).
Now there shall be an oneness of judgment and understanding in the
hearts of all saints; they shall be now no more two, but one in the
Lord’s hand (Eze 37:19-21). Alas! the saints are yet but as an army
routed, and are apt sometimes through fear, and sometimes through
forgetfulness, to mistake the word of their captain-general, the Son of
God, and are also too prone to shoot and kill even their very
right-hand man; but at that day all such doing shall be laid aside, for
the knowledge of the glory of the Lord shall cover the earth as the
waters cover the sea (Isa 11:9,13). Which knowledge shall then strike
through the heart and liver of all swerving and unsound opinions in
Christ’s matters; for then shall every one of the Christians call upon
the name of the Lord, and that with one pure lip or language, ‘to serve
him with one consent’ (Zeph 3:9). It is darkness, and not light, that
keepeth God’s people from knowing one another, both in their faith and
language; and it is darkness that makes them stand at so great a
distance both in judgment and affections, as in these and other days
they have done. But then, saith God, ‘I will plant in the wilderness,’
that is, in the church that is now bewildered, ‘the cedar, the shittah
tree, the myrtle, and the oil tree; I will set in the desert the fir
tree, the pine, and the box tree together; that they may see and know,
and consider and understand together, that the hand of the Lord hath
done this, and the holy One of Israel hath created it’ (Isa 41:19,20).
And again, ‘The glory of Lebanon shall come unto thee, the fir tree,
and the pine tree, and the box together,’ to beautify the house of my
glory, and to ‘make the place of my feet glorious’ (Isa 60:13).
Never was fair weather after foul—nor warm weather after cold—nor a
sweet and beautiful spring after a heavy, and nipping, and terrible
winter, so comfortable, sweet, desirable, and welcome to the poor birds
and beasts of the field, as this day will be to the church of God.
Darkness! it was the plague of Egypt: it is an empty, forlorn,
desolate, solitary, and discomforting state; wherefore light, even the
illuminating grace of God, especially in the measure that it shall be
communicated unto us at this day, it must needs be precious. In light
there is warmth and pleasure; it is by the light of the sun that the
whole universe appears unto us distinctly, and it is by the heat
thereof that everything groweth and flourisheth; all which will now be
gloriously and spiritually answered in this holy and new Jerusalem (2
Thess 2). O how clearly will all the spiders, and dragons, and owls,
and foul spirits of Antichrist at that day be discovered by the light
hereof! (Rev 18:1-4). Now also will all the pretty robins and little
birds in the Lord’s field most sweetly send forth their pleasant notes,
and all the flowers and herbs of his garden spring. Then will it be
said to the church by her Husband and Saviour, ‘Rise up, my love, my
fair one, and come away; for lo, the winter is past the rain is over
and gone, the flowers appear on the earth, the time of the singing of
birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land; the
fig tree putteth forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender
grape give a good smell’ (Cant 2:10-13). You know how pleasant this is,
even to be fulfilled in the letter of it, not only to birds and beasts,
but men; especially it is pleasant to such men that have for several
years been held in the chains of affliction. It must needs, therefore,
be most pleasant and desirable to the afflicted church of Christ, who
hath lain now in the dungeon of Antichrist for above a thousand years.
But, Lord, how will this lady, when she gets her liberty, and when she
is returned to her own city, how will she then take pleasure in the
warm and spangling beams of thy shining grace! and solace herself with
thee in the garden, among the nuts and the pomegranates, among the
lilies and flowers, and all the chief spices (Cant 7:11-13).
‘Even like a jasper stone, clear as crystal.’ These words are the
metaphor by which the Holy Ghost is pleased to illustrate the whole
business. Indeed similitudes, if fitly spoke and applied, do much set
off and out [3]
any point that either in the doctrines of faith or
manners, is handled in the churches. Wherefore, because he would
illustrate, as well as affirm, the glory of this Jerusalem to the life,
therefore he concludes his general description of this city with these
comparisons:—I saw, saith he, the holy city, the Lamb’s wife; I saw her
in her spangles, and in all her adorning, but verily she was most
excellent. She was shining as the jasper, and as pure and clear as
crystal. The jasper, it seems, is a very beautiful and costly stone,
inasmuch as that, above all the precious stones, is made use of by the
Holy Ghost to show us the glory and shining virtues of the Lord Jesus
in this New Jerusalem; and yet, behold, the jasper is too short and
slender to do the business, there must another stone be added, even
like a jasper stone, clear as crystal. Yea, saith the Lord Jesus, her
checks are like rows of jewels, and so are the joints of her thighs;
even like the jewels that are ‘the work of the hands of a cunning
workman’ (Cant 1:9,10; 7:1).
The crystal is a stone so clear and spotless, that even her greatest
adversaries, in the midst of all their rage, are not able justly to
charge her with the least mote or spot imaginable; wherefore when he
saith, that this city in her descending is even like the jasper for
light, and like the crystal for clearness; he would have us further
learn, that at the day of the descending of this Jerusalem, she shall
be every way so accomplished with innocency, sincerity, and clearness
in all her actions, that none shall have from her, or her ways, any
just occasion given unto them to slight, contemn, or oppose her. For,
First, As she descends, she meddleth not with any man’s matters but her
own; she comes all along by the King’s highway; that is, alone by the
rules that her Lord hath prescribed for her in his testament. The
governors of this world need not at all to fear a disturbance from her,
or a diminishing of ought they have. She will not meddle with their
fields nor vineyards, neither will she drink of the water of their
wells: only let her go by the King’s highway, and she will not turn to
the right hand or to the left, until she hath passed all their borders
(Num 20:18,19: 21:22). It is a false report then that the governors of
the nations have received against the city, this New Jerusalem, if they
believe, that according to the tale that is told them, she is and hath
been of old a rebellious city, and destructive to kings, and a
diminisher of their revenues. I say, these things are lying words, and
forged even in the heart of ‘Bishlam, Mithredath, Tabeel, and the rest
of their companions’ (Eze 4:7). For verily this city, in her
descending, is clear from such things, even as clear as crystal. She is
not for meddling with anything that is theirs, from a thread even to a
shoe-latchet. Her glory is spiritual and heavenly, and she is satisfied
with what is her own. [4]
It is true, the kings and nations of this
world shall one day bring their glory and honour to this city; but yet
not by outward force or compulsion; none shall constrain them but the
love of Christ and the beauty of this city. ‘The Gentiles shall come to
thy light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising’ (Isa 60:3). The
light and beauty of this city, that only shall engage their hearts and
overcome them. Indeed, if any shall, out of mistrust or enmity against
this city and her prosperity, bend themselves to disappoint the designs
of the eternal God concerning her building and glory, then they must
take what followeth. Her God in the midst of her is mighty, he will
rest in his love, and rejoice over her with singing, and will UNDO all
that afflict her (Zeph 3:17-19). Wherefore, ‘associate yourselves, O ye
people, and ye shall be broken in pieces; and give ear, all ye of far
countries; gird yourselves, and ye shall be broken in pieces; gird
yourselves, and ye shall be broken in pieces. Take counsel together,
and it shall come to naught; speak the word and it shall not stand; for
God is with us’ (Isa 8:9,10).
What work did he make with Og the king of Bashan, and with Sihon, king
of the Amorites, for refusing to let his people go peaceably by them,
when they were going to their own inheritance (Num 21:22-35). God is
harmless, gentle, and pitiful; but woe be to that people that shall
oppose or gainsay him. He is gentle, yet a lion; he is loth to hurt,
yet he will not be crossed; ‘Fury is not in me,’ saith he; yet if you
set the briars and thorns against him, He ‘will go through them, and
burn them together’ (Isa 27:4). Jerusalem also, this beloved city, it
will be beautiful and profitable to them that love her; but a cup of
trembling, and a burthensome stone to all that burden themselves with
her; ‘all that burthen themselves with it, shall be cut in pieces,
though all the people of the earth be gathered together against her’
(Zech 12:2,3).
Again, she will be clear as crystal in the observation of all her turns
and stops, in her journeying from Egypt to Canaan, from Babylon to this
Jerusalem state. She will, I say, observe both time and order, and will
go only as her God doth go before her; now one step in this truth, and
then another in that, according to the dispensation of God, and the
light of day she lives in. As the cloud goes, so will she; and when the
cloud stays, so will she (Rev 14:4; Exo 40:36-38). She comes in perfect
rank and file, ‘terrible as an army with banners’ (Cant 6:10). No
Balaam can enchant her; she comes ‘out of the wilderness like pillars
of smoke, perfumed with myrrh and frankincense, with all spices [5] of
the merchants’ (Cant 3:6). Still ‘leaning upon her beloved’ (Cant 8:5).
The return of Zion from under the tyranny of her afflictors, and her
recovery to her primitive purity, is no headstrong brain-sick rashness
of her own, but the gracious and merciful hand and goodness of God unto
her, therefrom to give her deliverance. ‘For thus saith the Lord, That
after seventy years be accomplished at Babylon [that is, the time of
the reign of Antichrist, and his tyranny over his church] I will visit
you, and perform my good word toward you, in causing you to return to
this place’ (Jer 29:10). ‘Therefore they shall come and sing in the
height of Zion, and shall flow together to the goodness of the Lord,
for [spiritual] wheat, and for wine, and for oil, and for the young of
the flock and of the herd; and their soul shall be as a watered garden;
and they shall not sorrow any more at all’ (Isa 57:11; Jer 31:12).
[SECOND. A
Discovery of its Defence, Entrances, and Fashion in
Particular.]
Verse 12. ‘And had a
wall great and high, and had twelve gates, and at
the gates twelve angels, and names written thereon, which are the names
of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel.’ These words do give us
to understand, that this holy city is now built, and in all her parts
complete, they give us also to understand the manner of her strength,
&c.
‘And had a wall.’ Having thus, I say, given us a description of this
city in general, he now descends to her strength and frame in
particular: her frame and strength, I say, as she is a city compact
together: as also of her splendour and beauty.
And observe it, that of all the particulars that you read of, touching
the fence, fashion, or frame of this city, and of all her glory, the
firs thing that he presenteth to our view is her safety and security;
she ‘had a wall.’ A wall, you know, is for the safety, security,
defence, and preservation of a place, city, or town; therefore it is
much to the purpose that in the first place after this general
description, he should fall upon a discovery of her security and
fortification; for what of all this glory and goodness, if there be no
way to defend and preserve it in its high and glorious state? If a man
had in his possession even mountains of pearl and golden mines, yet if
he had not wherewith to secure and preserve them to himself, from those
that with all their might endeavour to get them from him, he might not
only quickly lose his treasure, and become a beggar, but also through
the very fear of losing them, even lose the comfort of them, while yet
in his possession. To speak nothing of the angels that fell, and of the
glory that they then did lose. I may instance to you the state of Adam
in his excellency; Adam, you know, was once so rich and wealthy, that
he had the garden of Eden, the paradise of pleasure, yea, and also the
whole world to boot, for his inheritance; but mark, in all his glory,
he was without a wall; wherefore presently, even at the very first
assault of the adversary, he was not only worsted as touching his
person and standing, but even stripped of all his treasure, his
paradise taken from him, and he in a manner left so poor, that
forthwith he was glad of an apron of fig-leaves to cover his nakedness,
and to hide his shame form the face of the sun (Gen 3:7). Wherefore, I
say, John speaks to the purpose in saying she had a wall; a wall for
defence and safety, for security and preservation. Now then she shall
lie no longer like blasted bones in an open field or valley; that was
her portion in the days of her affliction (Eze 37:1,2).
[The wall
of the city.]
‘And had a wall.’ It
is said of old Jerusalem, that she had a wall and
a wall, two walls for her defence and safety (Jer 39:4; Jer 52:7);
which two, in my judgment, did hold forth these two things. The one,
their eternal preservation and security from the wrath of God, through
the benefits of Christ; and the other, that special protection and
safeguard that the church hath always had from and by the special
providence of her God in the midst of her enemies, Wherefore one of
these is called by the proper name of salvation, which salvation I take
in special to signify our fortification and safety from the wrath of
God, and the curse and power of the law and sin (Isa 26:1; Acts 4:12).
The other is called, A wall of fire round about her; and alludeth to
the vision that the prophet’s servant was made to see for his comfort,
when he was put in fear, by reason of the great company of the enemies
that were bending their force against the life of his master (Eze 2:5;
2 Kings 6:17).
But now in those days, though there were for the defence of the city
those two walls, yet they stood a little distance each from other, and
had a ditch between them, which was to signify that though then they
had the wall of salvation about them, with reference to their eternal
state, yet the wall of God’s providence and special protection was not
yet so nearly joined thereto but that they might, for their
foolishness, have that broken down, and they suffered to fall into the
ditch that was between them both (Isa 22:10-12). And so he saith by the
prophet, ‘I will tell you what I will do to my vineyard [that is, to
this city for the wickedness thereof], I will take away the hedge
thereof, and it shall be eaten up; and break down the wall thereof, and
it shall be trodden down’ (Isa 5:5-7). Which hedge and wall could not
be that of eternal salvation, for that stood sure, though they should
be scattered among the nations ‘as wheat is sifted in a sieve’ (Amos
9:9). It must therefore be the wall of her special preservation in her
outward peace and happiness, which wall was often in those days broken
down, and they made havoc of, of all that dwelt about them.
But now touching the safety of New Jerusalem, the city of which I here
discourse, she is seen in the vision by John to have but one only wall;
to signify that at this day the wall of her eternal salvation, and of
God’s special providence to protect and defend her, in her present
visible and gospel glory, shall be so effectually joined together, that
now they shall be no more two, that is, at a distance, with a ditch
between, but one sound and enclosing wall; to show us that now the
state of this Jerusalem, even touching her outward glory, peace, and
tranquility, will be so stable, invincible, and lasting, that unless
that part of the wall which is eternal salvation, can be broken down,
the glory of this city shall never be vailed more. Wherefore the
prophet, when he speaks with reference to the happy state and condition
of this city, he saith, ‘Violence shall no more be heard in thy land,
wasting nor destruction within thy borders; but thou shalt call thy
walls salvation, and thy gates praise’ (Isa 60:18); as he saith also in
another place, ‘Thine eye shall see Jerusalem a quiet habitation, a
tabernacle that shall not be taken down, not one of the stakes thereof
shall ever be removed, neither shall any of the cords thereof be
broken’ (Isa 33:20). The walls are now conjoined, both joined into one;
the Father hath delivered up the great red dragon into the hand of
Christ, who hath shut him up and sealed him down, even down for a
thousand years (Rev 20:1-3). Wherefore from the Lord shall there be
‘upon every dwelling-place of Mount Zion, and upon her assemblies a
cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a flaming fire by night; for
upon all her glory shall be a defence’ (Isa 4:5). And ‘in that day
shall this song be sung: We have a strong city, salvation will God
appoint for walls and bulwarks’ (Isa 26:1,2). The same in effect hath
our prophet John, saying ‘I saw the holy city, the New Jerusalem,’
descending out of heaven from God, ‘prepared as a bride adorned for her
husband. And I heard a great voice out of heaven, saying, - The
tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them: - and God
himself shall be with them, and be their God. And God shall wipe away
all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither
sorrow, nor crying; neither shall there be any more pain; for the
former things are passed away’ (Rev 21:1-4).
‘And had a wall great and high.’ These words, great and high, are added
for illustration, to set out the matter to the height; and indeed the
glory of a wall lieth in this, that it is great and high; the walls of
the Canaanites were terrible upon this account, and did even sink the
hearts of those that beheld them (Deu 1:28). Wherefore this city shall
be most certainly in safety, she hath a wall about her, a great wall: a
wall about her, an high wall. It is great for compass, it incloseth
every saint; it is great for thickness, it is compacted of all the
grace and goodness of God, both spiritual and temporal; and for height,
if you count from the utmost side to the utmost, then it is higher than
heaven, who can storm it? (Heb 7:26) and for depth, it is lower than
hell, who can undermine it? (Job 11:8).
Great mercies, high mercies, great preservation, and a high arm to
defend, shall continually at this day encamp this city: God himself
will be a continual life-guard to this city; ‘I will encamp,’ saith he,
‘about mine house, because of the army, because of him that passeth by,
and because of him that returneth; and no oppressor shall pass through
them any more; for now have I seen with mine eyes’ (Zech 9:8).
[The gates of the city.]
‘And had twelve
gates.’ Having thus showed us her wall, he now comes to
her gates; it had gates, it had twelve gates. By gates in this place we
are to understand the way of entrance; gates, you know, are for coming
in, and for going out (Jer 17:19,20); and do in this place signify two
things. First, An entrance into communion with the God and Saviour of
this city. Secondly, Entrance into communion with the inhabitants and
privileges of this city; in both which the gates do signify Christ: for
as no man can come to the knowledge and enjoyment of the God, and
glorious Saviour, but by and through the Lord Christ; so no man can
come into true and spiritual communion with these inhabitants, but by
him also: ‘I am the way,’ saith he, ‘and the truth, and the life; no
man cometh unto the Father but by me’: and again, ‘I am the door, by me
if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and
find pasture’ (John 10:1-9; 14:6).
‘And had twelve gates.’ In that he saith twelve gates, he alludeth to
the city of Jerusalem that was of old, which had just so many (Neh 3:
12:37-29); and are on purpose put into the number of twelve, to answer
to the whole number of the elect of God, which are comprehended within
the number of the twelve tribes, whether they are natural Jews or
Gentiles; for as all the godly Jews are the seed of Abraham after the
flesh, though to godly, because they are the children of the flesh of
Abraham; so all the godly Gentiles are the children of Abraham after
the spirit, though not by that means made the children of the flesh of
Abraham. They both meet then in the spirit and faith of the gospel, as
God saith to the Jews, ‘when a stranger shall sojourn with thee, and
will keep the passover to the Lord,’ that is, become godly, and receive
the faith of Christ, let all his males be circumcised, and then let
them come near, and keep it, &c. (Exo 12:48). For they that are of
faith, are the children of faithful Abraham, who is called the very
father of us all (Gal 3:7; Rom 4:16). Thus you see all the godly come
under the title of the children of Abraham, and of the Jews; and so
under the denomination also of being persons belonging to the tribes,
the twelve tribes, who answer to those twelve gates. Wherefore the
Psalmist minding this, speaking indefinitely of all the godly, under
the name of the tribes of Israel; saying, ‘Our feet shall stand within
thy gates, O Jerusalem. Jerusalem is builded as a city that is compact
together, whither the tribes go up, the tribes of the Lord, unto the
testimony of Israel, to give thanks unto the name of the Lord’ (Psa
122:2-4).
But again, though I am certain that all the Gentiles that are at any
time converted, are reckoned within the compass of some of the tribes
of Israel, to which the gates of this city may truly be said to answer;
yet the gates are here in a special manner called by the name of
twelve, to answer to the happy return and restoration of those poor
distressed creatures the twelve tribes of the Jews that are scattered
abroad, and that are, and for a long time have been to our astonishment
and their shame, as vagabonds and stragglers among the nations (Hosea
9:17), there to continue ‘many days, without a king, and without a
prince, and without a sacrifice, and without an ephod’ (Hosea 3:4).
That is, without the true God, the true Saviour, and the true word and
ordinances; after which, saith the same prophet, they shall even in the
latter days, that is, when this city is builded, return and seek the
Lord their God, and David their king, and shall then ‘fear the Lord and
his goodness’ (Hosea 3:5). This the apostle also affirmeth, when he
telleth the believing Gentiles that blindness in part is happened to
Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in: which Israel in
this place cannot by any means be taken for the Gentiles that are
converted, for this Israel must be rejected until the bulk of the elect
Gentiles be converted; besides he calleth this Israel by the name of
Israel, even while unconverted; but the converted Gentiles still
Gentiles, even when converted: he calls this Israel the natural
branches, but the Gentiles wild branches; and tells us further, that
when they are converted, they shall be grafted into their own olive
tree; but when the Gentiles are converted, they must be cut off of
their own stock and tree: read Romans 11 throughout. Wherefore, I say,
the gates are called twelve, to answer these poor creatures, who at
this day shall be awakened, and enlightened, and converted to the faith
of Jesus. These gates in another place are called a way, and these
Jews, the kings of the east; and it is there said also, that at present
this way doth want preparing; which is as much as to say this city
wants setting up, and the gates want setting in their proper places.
Wherefore, saith John, the sixth angel poured out his vial upon the
great river Euphrates, that is, destroyed the strength and force of the
Roman antichrist—for the river Euphrates was the fence of literal
Babylon, the type of our spiritual one—which force and fence, when it
is destroyed or dried up, then the way of the kings of the east will be
prepared, or made ready for their journey to this Jerusalem (Rev
16:12). Of this the prophets are full, crying, ‘Cast ye up, cast ye up,
prepare the way, take up the stumbling block out of the way of my
people’ (Isa 57:14). And again, ‘Go through, go through the gates,
prepare ye the way of the people; cast up, cast up the high way; gather
out the stones, lift up a standard for the people. Behold, the Lord
hath proclaimed unto the end of the world, Say ye to the daughter of
Zion, Behold thy salvation cometh; behold his reward is with him, and
his work before him. And they shall call them, The holy people, the
redeemed of the Lord: and thou shalt be called, Sought out; A city not
forsaken’ (Isa 62:10-12). All which doth most especially relate to the
conversion of the Jews in the latter day, who in great abundance shall,
when all things are made ready, come flocking in to the Son of God, and
find favour, as in the days of old.
[The angels at the gates,
what they are.]
‘And at the gates
twelve angels.’ By angels in this place, we are to
understand the messengers and ministers of the Lord Jesus, by whom the
mystery of eternal life and felicity is held forth and discovered
before the sons of men; and thus this word angel is frequently taken in
this prophecy (Rev 1:20; 2:1,8,12,18; 3:1,7; 14:6).
‘And at the gates twelve angels’—
In these words, then, there are two things to be considered. First. Why
they should be called twelve. And, Second. Why they are said to stand
at the twelve gates of this new and holy city.
First. They are called twelve, to signify two things. 1. The truth of
their doctrine. And, 2. The sufficiency of their doctrine and ministry
for the converting of the twelve tribes to the faith of Christ, and
privileges of this city.
1. For the truth of their doctrine: for by twelve here he would have us
to understand that he hath his eye upon the twelve apostles, or upon
the doctrine of the twelve, the apostolical doctrine. As if he should
say, This city, the New Jerusalem, shall be every way accomplished with
beauty and glory; she shall have a wall for her security, and twelve
gates to answer the twelve tribes; yea, and also at these gates the
twelve apostles, in their own pure, primitive, and unspotted doctrine.
The Romish beasts have corrupted this doctrine by treading it down with
their feet, and have muddied this water with their own dirt and
filthiness (Eze 34:17,18). [6] But at this day, this shall be
recovered
from under the feet of these beasts, and cleansed also from their dirt,
and be again in the same glory, splendour, and purity, as in the
primitive times. [7]
It is said that when Israel was passed out of Egypt,
beyond the sea, they presently came to Elim, where were twelve wells of
water, &c., and that they encamped by the waters (Exo 15:27). Which
twelve wells did figure forth the doctrine of the twelve apostles, out
of which the church, at her return from captivity, shall draw and
drink, as out of the wells of salvation. Now shall the wells of our
father Abraham, which the Philistines have for a great while stopped;
now, I say, shall they again be opened by our Isaac, his son; and shall
be also called after their own names (Gen 26:18). This is generally
held forth by the prophets, that yet again the church shall be fed upon
the mountains of Israel, and that they ‘shall lie down in a good fold,
and a fat pasture’; yea, ‘I will feed my flock, and I will cause them
to lie down, saith the Lord God’ (Eze 34:14,15).
2. As by these twelve we are to understand the truth and purity of the
doctrine of the twelve [8], so again, by this word twelve, we
are to
understand the sufficiency of that doctrine and ministry to bring in
the twelve tribes to the privileges of this city. Mark, for the twelve
tribes there are twelve gates, for every tribe a gate; and at the
twelve gates, twelve angels, at every gate an angel. ‘O Judah,’ saith
God, ‘he hath set an harvest for thee, when I returned the captivity of
thy people’ (Hosea 6:11). And so for the rest of the tribes; before
Ephraim and Benjamin, and Manasseh, he will stir up his strength to
save them (Psa 80:2). ‘I will hiss for them,’ saith God, ‘and gather
them, for I have redeemed them; and they shall increase as they have
increased: and I will sow them among the people, and they shall
remember me in far countries, and they shall live with their children,
and return again; I will bring them again also out of the land of
Egypt, and gather them out of Assyria, and I will bring them into the
land of Gilead and Lebanon, and place shall not be found for them’
(Zech 10:8-10).
[Second.] But to come to the second question, that is, Why these twelve
angels are said to stand at the gate? which may be for divers reasons.
1. To show us that the doctrine of the twelve is the doctrine that
letteth in at these gates, and that also that shutteth out.
‘Whosesoever sins ye remit, they are remitted,’ saith Christ, ‘and
whosesoever sins yet retain, they are retained’ (John 20:23; Matt
18:18). And hence it is that the true ministers, in their right
administration, are called porters; because as porters stand at the
gate, and there open to, or shut upon, those that make an attempt to
enter in (Mark 13:34); so the ministers of Christ, by the doctrine of
the twelve, do both open to and shut the gates against the person that
will be attempting to enter in at the gates of this city (2 Chron
23:19).
2. But again, they are said to stand at the gates for the encouraging
and persuading of the tempted and doubting Jews, who at the beginning
of their return will be much afflicted under the sight and sense of
their own wretchedness. Alas! were it not for some to stand at the
gates of this city for instruction, and the encouragement of those that
will at that day in earnest be looking after life, they might labour as
in other things for very, very vanity; and might also be so grievously
beat out of heart and spirit, that they might die in despair. But now
to prevent this for those that are in the way to Zion with watery eyes,
and wetted cheeks, here stand the angels, continually sounding with
their golden gospel-trumpets, ‘Enter into his gates with thanksgiving,
and into his courts with praise; be thankful unto him, and bless his
name. For the Lord is good, and his mercy is everlasting, and his truth
endureth’ for ever, even ‘to all generations’ (Psa 100:4,5). As he
saith again, ‘And it shall come to pass in that day, that the great
trumpet shall be blown, and they shall come which were ready to perish
in the land of Assyria, and the outcast in the land of Egypt, and shall
worship the Lord in the holy mount at Jerusalem’ (Isa 27:13).
[The names
written on the gates.]
‘And
at the gates twelve angels, and names written thereon, which are
the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel.’ Thus it was
in the vision of the prophet, when he was taking a view of the pattern
of this city: ‘And the gates of the city,’ saith the angel to him,
‘shall be after the names of the tribes of Israel’ (Eze 48:31). Which
saying John doth here expound, saying, the names of the twelve tribes
of the children of Israel were writ or set upon them.
This being thus, it cleareth to you what I said but now, to wit, that
the gates are called twelve, to answer the twelve tribes, for their
names are written thereon. This must therefore, without all doubt, be a
very great encouragement to this despised people; I say great
encouragement, that notwithstanding all their rebellion, blasphemy, and
contempt of the glorious gospel, their names should be yet found
recorded and engraved upon the very gates of New Jerusalem. Thus then
shall the Jews be comforted in the latter days; and truly they will
have but need hereof; for doubtless, at their return, when they are
thoroughly sensible of the murder they have committed, not only upon
the bodies of the prophets and apostles, but of the Son of God himself,
I say this must needs, together with the remembrance of the rest of
their villainous actions, exceedingly afflict and distress their
bleeding souls. For ‘the children of Israel shall come, they and the
children of Judah together, going and weeping; they shall go and seek
the Lord their God. They shall ask the way to Zion, with their faces
thitherward’ (Jer 50:4,5). Mark, ‘going and weeping’; there will not be
a step that these poor people will take in the day of their returning,
but will be watered with the tears of repentance and contrition, under
the consideration of the wickedness that, in the days of their
rebellion, they have committed against the Lord of glory. As he saith
also by another prophet, ‘I will pour upon the house of David, and upon
the inhabitants of Jerusalem, the spirit of grace and of supplications;
and they shall look upon me whom they have pierced, and they shall
mourn for him, as one mourneth for his only son, and shall be in
bitterness for him, as one that is in bitterness for his firstborn. In
that day shall there be a great mourning in Jerusalem, as the mourning
of Hadad-rimmon in the valley of Megiddon, and the land shall mourn’
(Zech 12:10-12).
Wherefore, I say, they both have and also will have need of twelve
gates, and on them the names of their twelve tribes, with an angel at
each, to encourage them to enter this holy and goodly city; and to tell
them that yet he counts them his friends in whose house he received the
wounds in his hands (Zech 13:6).
But again, As by the names of the twelve tribes written on the gates,
we may see what encouragement the Jews will have, at their return, to
enter in at them; so we may also understand that by the names of the
twelve tribes here written, God would have us to perceive how all must
be qualified that from among the Gentiles at this day do enter in at
these gates; namely, those, and those only, that be cut out of their
own wild olive tree, and transplanted among the children of Israel,
into their good olive tree. Such as are Jews inwardly, the Israel of
God, according to the new creature, they shall enter, for the holy
Gentiles also, by virtue of their conversion, are styled the children
of Abraham, Jews, the chosen generation, the peculiar people, the holy
nation; and so are spiritually, though not naturally by carnal
generation, of the twelve tribes whose names are written upon the gates
of the city (Gal 3:7; Rom 2:28; 1 Peter 2:9,10). ‘And it shall come to
pass,’ saith the prophet, ‘that in what tribe the stranger,’ that is,
the Gentile ‘sojourneth, there shall ye give him his inheritance, saith
the Lord God’ (Eze 47:23). Thus the Jews and Gentiles shall meet
together in the spirit of the gospel, and so both become a righteous
nation; to both which the gates of this city shall stand continually
open; at which also they may with boldness demand, by the faith of the
Lord Jesus, their entrance, both for communion with the God, grace, and
privileges of this city, according to that which is written, ‘Open ye
the gates, that the righteous nation which keepeth the truth may enter
in’ (Isa 26:2). Thus much of the number of the gates, and now to
proceed to the order of them.
[The order
of the gates.]
Ver.
13. ‘On the east three gates, on the north three gates, on the south
three gates, and on the west three gates.’ I shall not speak anything
to the manner of his repeating of the quarters towards which the gates
do look; why he should begin at the east, then to the north, afterwards
crossing to the south, and last to the west; though I do verily think
that the Holy Ghost hath something to show us, wherefore he doth thus
set them forth. And possibly he may set them thus, and the west last,
not only because the west part of the world is that which always
closeth the day, but to signify that the west, when Jerusalem is
rebuilded, will be the last part of the world that will be converted,
or the gate that will be last, because longest, occupied with the
travels of the passengers and wayfaring men in their journey to this
Jerusalem. But I pass that.
From the order of their standing, I shall inquire into two things.
First. Why the gates should look in this manner every way, both east,
west, north, and south? Second. Why there should be three, just three,
on every side of this city? ‘On the east three, on the north three, on
the south three, and on the west three.’
First. For the first, the gates by looking every way, into all
quarters, may signify to us thus much, that God hath a people in every
corner of the world. And also, that grace is to be carried out of these
gates by the angels in their ministry into every place, to gather them
home to him. As it is said of the living creatures, ‘Whither the head
looked they followed it, they turned not as they went’ (Eze 10:11); so
whithersoever the gates look, thither the ministers go, and carry the
Word, to gather together the elect. He ‘sent them two and two before
his face, into every city and place whither he himself would come’
(Luke 10:1; Matt 28:19; John 11:52).
Again, the gates, by their thus looking every way, do signify to us,
that from what quarter or part of the world soever men come for life,
for those men there are the gates of life, even right before their
doors. Come they from the east, why thither look the gates; and so if
they come from north, or west, or south. No man needs at all to go
about to come at life, and peace, and rest. Let him come directly from
sin to grace, from Satan to Jesus Christ, and from this world to New
Jerusalem. The twelve brazen oxen that Solomon made to bear the molten
sea (1 Kings 7:23-25), they stood just as these gates stand, and
signify, as I said before, that the doctrine of the twelve apostles
should be carried into all the world, to convert—as in the primitive
times, so now at the building of New Jerusalem—and to bring in God’s
sheep to the fold of his church. Now, I say, as the Word is carried
every way, so the gates, the open gates, look also into all corners
after them, to signify that loving reception that shall be given to
every soul that from any corner of the whole world shall unfeignedly
close in with grace, through the Lord Jesus Christ. Thus, therefore,
men ‘shall come from the east, and from the west, and from the north,
and from the south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of God’ (Luke
13:29; Psa 107:1-3).
[Second.] ‘On the east three gates, on the north three gates, on the
south three gates, and on the west three gates.’ Having thus showed you
in a word, why they stand thus looking into every corner or quarter of
the world, I now come to show you why there must be just three looking
in this manner every way.
1. Then, there may be three looking every way, to signify that it is
both by the consent of the three persons in the Trinity, that the
gospel should thus every way go forth to call men, and also to show you
that both the Father, Son, and Spirit, are willing to receive and
embrace the sinner, from whatsoever part or corner of the earth he
cometh hither for life and safety. Come they from whence they will, the
Father is willing to give them the Son, and so is the Son to give them
himself, and so is the Spirit to give them its help against whatever
may labour to hinder them while they are here (John 3:16; Rev 21:6;
22:17).
2. In that three of the gates look every way, it may be also to show us
that there is none can enter into this city, but by the three offices
of the Lord Jesus. Christ by his priestly office must wash away their
sins; and by his prophetical office he must illuminate, teach, guide,
and refresh them; and by his kingly office, rule over them and govern
them with his Word (Heb 7:5; John 13:8; Acts 3:22-24; Isa 40:10,11;
9:6,7; Psa 76:1-3; 110:3).
3. Or, by three gates, may be signified the three states of the saints
in this life; an entrance into childhood, an entrance into a manly
state, and an entrance into the state of a father of the church (1 John
2:12-14). Or, lastly, the three gates may signify the three-fold state
we pass through from nature to glory; the state of grace in this life,
the state of felicity in paradise, and our state in glory after the
resurrection: or thus, the state of grace that possesseth body and soul
in this life, the state of glory that possesseth the soul at death, and
the state of glory that both body and soul shall be possessed with at
the coming of the Lord and Saviour. This was figured forth by the order
of the stairs in the temple at Jerusalem, which was first, second, and
third, by which men ascended from the lowest to the uppermost room in
the house of God; as he tells us, ‘They went up with winding stairs’
from the first into the second story, and from thence by them into the
third (1 Kings 6:8). Thus much for the wall and gates of New Jerusalem.
[The
foundations of the wall.]
Ver. 14. ‘And the
wall of this city had twelve foundations, and in them the names of the
twelve apostles of the Lamb.’ In these words we have two things
considerable:—First. That the city-wall hath twelve foundations.
Second. That in these twelve are the names of the twelve apostles of
the Lamb.
First. It hath twelve foundations.
This argueth invincible strength and
support. That wall that hath but one foundation, how strongly doth it
stand, if it be but safely laid upon a rock, even so strongly that
neither wind nor weather, in their greatest vehemency, are able to
shake or stir it to make it fall. But I say, how much more when a city
hath foundations, twelve foundations, and those also laid by God
himself; as it is said concerning the worthies of old, they ‘looked for
a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God’ (Heb
11:10).
‘And the wall of the city had
twelve foundations, and in them the names
of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.’ The wall, you know, I told you, is
the wall of salvation, or the safety of the church by Jesus Christ, to
which is adjoined, as the effect of that, the special providence and
protection of God. Now this wall, saith the Holy Ghost, hath twelve
foundations, to wit, to bear it up for the continuation of the safety
and security of those that are the inhabitants of this city; a
foundation is that which beareth up all, and that upon which the stress
of all must lie and abide. Now, to speak properly, the foundation of
our happiness is but one, and that one none but the Lord Jesus; ‘For
other foundation can no man lay, than that is laid, which is Jesus
Christ’ (1 Cor 3:11). So then, when he saith the wall of the city had
twelve foundations, and that in them also are written the names of the
twelve apostles of the Lamb, he doth not mean that this wall had twelve
Christs for its support, but that the doctrine of the twelve apostles
is that doctrine upon which both Christ, and grace, and all happiness
standeth firm and sure for ever. And to signify also, that neither
Christ nor any of his benefits can be profitable unto thee, unless thou
receive him alone upon the terms that they do hold him forth and offer
him to sinners in their word and doctrine. If ‘we, or an angel from
heaven, preach any other gospel unto you,’ saith Paul, ‘than that which
we have preached unto you, let him be accursed. As we said before, so
say I now again, if any man preach any other gospel unto you, than that
ye have received, let him be accursed’ (Gal 1:8,9).
[Second.] ‘And in them the names of
the twelve apostles of the Lamb.’
‘And in them their names.’ This makes it manifest that by the
foundations of this wall, we are to understand the doctrine of the
twelve apostles of the Lord Christ, for their names are to it, or found
engraved in the foundations. Thus it was with the doctrine which was
the foundation of the Jewish church; the first pattern being delivered
by the man Moses, his name was always so entailed to that doctrine,
that at last it became common, and that by Divine allowance, to call
that doctrine by the name of Moses himself. ‘There is one that accuseth
you,’ saith Christ, ‘even Moses in whom ye trust’ (John 5:45). And
again, ‘For Moses of old hath in every city them that preach him’ (Acts
15:21). The same liberty of speech doth the Holy Ghost here use in
speaking of the foundations of this wall, which is the doctrine of the
twelve. And in that he calleth the doctrine by the name of foundations,
and leaveth it only with telling us the names of the twelve apostles
are engraven in it; he expects that men should be wise that read him,
and that they should be skillful in the word of righteousness, if they
come up clearly to the understanding of him.
‘And in them the names of the
twelve apostles of the Lamb.’
Thus you see that the twelve
apostles, above all the servants of
Christ, are here owned to be the foundations of this wall; and good
reason, for they, above all other, are most clear and full in the
doctrine of grace, and all doctrines pertaining to life and holiness.
‘In other ages,’ saith Paul, it ‘was not made known unto the sons of
men, as it is now revealed to the holy apostles and prophets by the
Spirit’ (Eph 3:5). Moses was not fit for this, for his was a more dark
and veiled administration; while Moses is read, the veil is over the
heart, said Paul (2 Cor 3:13-15). Neither was any of the prophets fit
for this, for they were all inferior to Moses, and were, as it were,
his scholars (Num 12:6,7). Nay, John the Baptists is here shut out;—for
the ‘least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he’ (Matt 11:11).
The apostles, above all other, were
the men that were with the Lord
Jesus all the time, from the baptism of John, even until the time he
was taken up into heaven; they saw him, heard him, and discoursed with
him, and were beholders of all the wondrous works that he did; they did
eat and drink with him after his passion, and saw, after he was risen,
the print of the nails, and the spear with which he was pierced, when
he died for our sins (Luke 24:39,40). And because they had seen, felt,
and at such a rate experienced all things from the very first, both
touching his doctrine, miracles, and life, therefore he said unto them
in chief, Ye shall be witnesses unto me, both in Jerusalem and all
Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the utmost parts of the earth (Acts
1:8,21; 13:31; 10:39; 51:32; 1 John 1:1-3).
Further, The apostles were in that
marvellous manner endued with the
Holy Ghost, that they out-stript all the prophets that ever went before
them; neither can I believe that in the best of times there should be
any beyond them; yet if it should so fall out that a dispensation
should come in which they should have, as to the pouring forth of the
Spirit, their equals, yet it could not follow, that therefore the
gospel should be offered in other terms than they at first have offered
it, especially besides what hath been said of them, if you consider to
them it was said, ‘Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth, shall be bound in
heaven; and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth, shall be loosed in
heaven’ (Matt 18:18). They, as to their doctrine, were infallible, it
was impossible they should err; he that despised their doctrine,
despised God himself. Besides, they have given in commandment that all
should write after their copy, and that we should judge both men and
angels that did, or would do otherwise (1 Thess 3:8; Gal 1:8).
Timothy must have his rule from
Paul, and so must holy Titus. All
which, if we consider it, the Holy Ghost speaks to the purpose, in
saying that in the twelve foundations are found the names of the twelve
apostles of the Lamb. They are called the chief, and such as have laid
the foundation, and others build thereon, and that as no men have laid
the foundation but they, so none can lay even that foundation otherwise
than they afore have laid it (1 Cor 12:28; Eph 4:11,12; 1 Cor 3:6-11;
Heb 6:1-3). [9]
[Consideration from these words.]
‘And in them the names of the twelve
apostles of the Lamb.’ These words, then, teach us two things worthy of
our Christian consideration.
First. That God hath given to every
man a certain and visible mark to
aim at for his salvation, or to build his soul upon, namely, the
doctrine of the twelve apostles of the Lamb. For in that he saith their
names are in the foundations, it is better for us, all things
considered, than if he had said in them was the name of God himself;
that is, it is more easy to see this way, through the mist of our
carnality, what the mystery of his will should be, which is, that we
receive Christ according to their doctrine, words, writings, epistles,
letters, &c., their names, I say, being there, God counts it as the
broad seal of heaven, which giveth authority to all that doctrine
whereunto by themselves they are prefixed and subscribed; not where
they are writ by others, but by themselves. I say, as the token of
every epistle, and of their doctrine for truth, the which Paul
insinuates, when he saith that his hand is the token of every epistle
(2 Thess 3:17; Gal 6:11). As he saith again, Am I not an apostle? (1
Cor 9:1). And again, Behold, I Paul, have written unto you; I Paul (Gal
5:2), I, an apostle, I, a wise master-builder, I, who am in my doctrine
one of the foundations of the wall of salvation, I have written unto
you (1 Cor 11:5). And, as I said before, there is reason it should be
thus: for as he who was the foundation of the Jewish church, even
Moses, received the pattern of all his order from the mouth of the
angel in Mount Sinai, so the twelve received their doctrine of faith
and manners, the doctrine of the New Testament, from the mouth of the
Son of God himself, as from the mouth of the angel of the everlasting
covenant, on the mountain of Zion (Acts 7:38; 1:3; Matt 28:19).
Second. In that he saith the names
of the twelve are in the
foundations, this shows us the reason of the continual standing of this
Jerusalem; it is built upon the doctrine of the twelve apostles of the
Lamb, and standeth there. For, observe, so long as he sees this holy
city, he sees her standing upon these foundations; but he saw the city
till she was taken up, therefore she continued as being settled for
ever upon them. Indeed, the primitive city, or first churches, was
built upon these foundations, and had also, so long as they there
continued, sufficient supportation and upholding by that means (Eph
2:20-22). But then, as I have showed you, the wall of her salvation,
and the wall of God’s special protection, stood at a distance each from
other, and were not so conjoined as now they will be. Wherefore they
then, to answer the type, did fall into the ditch that was between, and
through their foolishness provoked God to remove the wall of his
outward protection and safeguard from them, whereupon the wild beast,
Antichrist, got into his vineyard, making havoc of all their dainties.
But mark, this city is not so, the walls are now conjoined, and for
ever fastened upon the foundations, [10] therefore it abides for ever,
and ascends higher and higher; yet not from the foundations, but by
them into heaven: ‘Behold,’ saith God, ‘I have graven thee upon the
palms of my hands, thy walls are continually before me’ (Isa 49:16).
[How we are to understand the word TWELVE.]
‘And in them the
names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb.’ This word
twelve must be warily understood, or else the weak will be ready to
stumble and take offence; wherefore, to prevent this, consider,
First. The
twelve must be them twelve that were with the Lord Jesus
from the baptism of John until the day in which our Lord was taken up
(Acts 1:22).
Second. These
twelve are not neither to be considered simply as twelve
Christians, or twelve disciples; but as their witness of the Lord
Jesus—they being with him from first to last—were a twelve-fold witness
of him in all his things; a twelve-fold seeing with their eyes, a
twelve-fold hearing with their ears, a twelve-fold handling also with
their hands, and feeling of the Son of God. As one of them said, ‘That
which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen
with our eyes, - and our hands have handled of the word of life: - that
which we have seen and heard, declare we unto you, that ye also may
have fellowship with us,’ &c. (1 John 1:1,3). Now this being thus,
it followeth that the doctrine of the other apostles, as of Paul and
Barnabas, was still but the doctrine of the twelve; their doctrine, I
say, and no other. Wherefore, as Ephraim and Manasseh were dissolved
into the twelve tribes, so these two, with all other the apostles of
Christ, are dissolved into the number of the twelve, because their
doctrine is only the doctrine of the twelve; for they centre in their
doctrine; their length, and breadth, and depth, and height being the
doctrine of the twelve. So, then, the names of the twelve being found
in the foundations of this wall, it argueth that that doctrine is only
true that is the doctrine of the twelve eye-witnesses of the Lord
Jesus. And again, that at the day of Antichrist’s fall, this doctrine
shall be in its former purity, and bear the sway, and for ever hold up
the wall of safety for the inhabitants of New Jerusalem. And indeed
this doctrine, that the doctrine of the twelve is that upon which
eternal safety is built and stands, is so true, that it must not be
varied from upon pain of eternal damnation. Here centered Luke the
Evangelist, here centered Jude