As
there were spoons, so there were bowls and basins belonging to the
temple. Some of these were of gold, and some of silver; and when they
were put together, their number was four hundred and forty. These you
read of, Ezra 1:10. The bowls or basins were not to wash in, as was the
sea and lavers of the temple; they were rather to hold the messes in,
which the priests at their holy feasts did use to set before the
people. This being so, they were types of that proportion of faith by
which, or by the measure of which, every man received of the holy food
for the nourishment of his soul. For, as a man, had he a thousand
messes set before him, he eating for his health, cannot go beyond what
his stomach will bear; so neither can the child of God, when he comes
to worship in the temple of God, receive of the good things that are
there, beyond the ‘proportion of his faith’ (Rom 12:6). Or, as it is in
another place, according to ‘the ability which God giveth’ (1 Peter
4:11). And hence it is, at the self-same ordinance, some receive three
times as much as others do; for that their bowl, I mean their faith, is
able to receive it. Yea, Benjamin’s mess was five times as big as was
the mess of any of his brethren; and so it is with some saints while
they eat with their brother Joseph in the house of the living God.
There are three go to the same ordinance, and are all of them
believers; who, when they come home, and compare notes, do find their
receivings are not of the same quantity. One says, I got but little;
the other says, It was a pretty good ordinance to me; the third says, I
was exceeding well there. Why, to be sure, he that had but little
there, had there but little faith; for great faith in him would have
received more. He had it then according to the largeness of his bowl,
even according to his faith, ‘as God hath dealt to every man the
measure of faith’ (Rom 12:3). Mark, faith is a certain measure, and
that not only as to its degree, but for that it can receive, retain, or
hold what is put into it.
So then, here it is no matter how much milk or holy broth there is; but
how big is thy bowl, thy faith. Little bowls hold but little, nor canst
thou receive but as thy faith will bear; I speak now of God’s ordinary
dealing with his people, for so he saith in his Word, ‘According to
your faith be it unto you’ (Matt 9:29). If a man goeth to the ocean sea
for water, let him carry but an egg-shell with him, and with that he
shall not bring a gallon home. I know, indeed, that our little pots
have a promise of being made like the bowls of the altar; but still our
mess must be according to our measure, be that small, or be it great.
The same prophet saith again, the saints shall be ‘filled like bowls,
and as the corners of the altar’; which, though it supposes an
enlargement, yet it must be confined to that measure of faith which is
provided for its reception (Zech 9:15, 14:20). And suppose these bowls
should signify the promises, though the saints, not the promises, are
compared to them, because they, not promises, are the subjects of
faith; yet it is the promise by our measure of faith in that, that is
nourishing to our souls.
When Ahasuerus made a feast to his subjects, they drank their wine in
bowls. They did not drink it by the largeness of the vessel whence they
drew it, but according to their health, and as their stomachs would so
receive it (Esth 1:7,8). Thy faith, then, is one of the bowls or basins
of the temple, by, or according to which, thou receivest thy mess, when
thou sittest feasting at the table of God. And observe, all the bowls
were not made of gold, as all faith is not of a saving sort. It is the
golden faith that is right; the silver bowls were of an inferior sort
(Rev 3:18).
Some, I say, have golden faith; all faith is not so. Wherefore look to
it, soul, that thy bowl, thy faith, be golden faith, or of the best
kind. Look, I say, after a good faith, and great, for a great faith
receives a great mess. Of old, beggars did use to carry their bowls in
their laps, when they went to a door for an alms. [26]
Consequently, if their bowls were but little, they ofttimes came off by
the loss, though the charity of the giver was large. Yea, the greater
the charity, the larger the loss, because the beggar’s bowl was too
little. Mark it well, it is ofttimes thus in the matters of our God.
Art thou a beggar, a beggar at God’s door, be sure thou gettest a great
bowl; for as thy bowl is, so will be thy mess. ‘According to your
faith,’ saith he, ‘be it unto you’ (Matt 9:29).
The next thing to be
considered is the flagons and cups of the temple; of these we read, 1
Chronicles 28:17; Jeremiah 52:19; Isaiah 22:24. These were of great use
among the Jews, especially on their feasting days; as of their
sabbaths, new-moons, and the like (Lev 23:13; Num 28:7; 1 Chron 16:3;
Isa 25:6, 62:8,9).
For instance, the day that David danced before the ark, ‘he dealt among
all the people, even among the whole multitude of Israel, as well to
the women as men, to every one a cake of bread, and a good piece of
flesh, and a flagon of wine’ (2 Sam 6:19; 1 Chron 16:3). ‘In this
mountain,’ that is, in the temple typically, saith the prophet, ‘shall
the Lord of hosts make unto all people a feast of fat things, a feast
of wines on the lees, of fat things full of marrow, of wines on the
less well refined’ (Isa 25:6).
These are feasting times; the times in which our Lord used to have his
spouse into his wine-cellar, and in which he used to display with
delight his banner over her head in love (Cant 2:4,5). The church of
Christ, alas! is of herself a very sickly puely thing; a woman; a
weaker vessel; but how much more must she needs be so weak, when the
custom of women is upon her, or when she is sick of love? Then she
indeed has need of a draught, for she now sinks, and will not else be
supported. ‘Stay me with flagons,’ saith she, ‘and comfort me with
apples, for I am sick of love’ (Can 2:5).
These flagons, therefore, were types of those feastings, and of those
large draughts of Divine love, that the Lord Jesus draweth for and
giveth to his spouse in those days that he feasteth with them. For then
he saith, ‘Drink, yea, drink abundantly, O beloved.’ This he does to
cheer her up under her hours of sadness and dejection; for now new
‘corn shall make the young men cheerful, and new wine the maids’ (Prov
31:6,7; Psa 116:13; Jer 16:7; Cant 5; Zech 9:17).
As there were flagons, so there were cups; and they are called cups of
consolation, and cups of salvation, because, as I said, they were they
by which God at his feastings with his people, or when he suppeth with
them, giveth out the more large draughts of his love unto his saints,
to revive the spirits of the humble, and to revive the hearts of the
contrite ones. At these times God made David’s cup run over. For we are
now admitted, if our faith will bear it, to drink freely into this
grace, and to be merry with him (Psa 23:5; Luke 15:22-24; Cant 5:1,
7:11,12; John 14:23; Rev 3:20). This is that to which the apostle
alludeth, when he saith, ‘Be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess,
but be filled with the Spirit; speaking to yourselves in psalms, and
hymns, and spiritual songs, singing and making melody in your heart
unto the Lord’ (Eph 5:18,19).
For the cups, as to their use in the general, understand them as of the
bowls made mention of before. For assurances are the blooms and flowers
of faith, not always on it, though usually on feasting days it is so.
So the degree of the one is still according to the measure of the other
(James 5; Rom 15:13).
In
the tabernacle they had but twelve of them, and they were made of
silver; but in the temple they had in all a thousand and thirty. The
thirty were made of gold, the rest were made of silver (Ezra 1:9; Num
7:84). These chargers were not for uses common or profane, but, as I
take it, they were those in which the passover, and other
meat-offerings, were drest up, when the people came to eat before God
in his holy temple. The meat, you know, I told you, was opposite to
milk; and so are these chargers to the bowls, and cups, and flagons of
the temple.
The meat was of two sorts, roast or boiled. Of that which was roasted
was the passover, and of that which was boiled were the
trespass-offerings. Wherefore, concerning the passover, he saith, ‘Eat
not of it raw, nor sodden at all with water, but roast with fire; his
head with his legs, and with the purtenance thereof’ (Exo 12:9). This
roast meat was a type of the body of Christ as suffering for our sins,
the which, when it was roast, was, and is as dressed up in chargers,
and set before the congregations of the saints.
But what were the chargers a type of? I also ask, in what charger our
gospel passover is now dressed up and set before the people? Is it not
in the four evangelists, the prophets, and epistles of the apostles?
They therefore are the chargers and the ordinance of the supper; in
these also are the trespass-offerings, with what is fried in pans,
mystically prepared for the children of the Highest.
And why might they not be a type of gospel sermons?
I answer, I think not so fitly; for, alas! the best of sermons in the
world are but as thin slices cut out of those large dishes. Our
ministers are the carvers, good doctrine is the meat, and the charger
in which this meat is found are the holy canonical Scriptures, &c.,
though, as I said, most properly the New Testament of our Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ.
In these is Christ most truly, lively, and amply set before us as
crucified, or roasted at the fire of God’s law for our sins, that we
might live by him through faith, feeding upon him (2 Cor 3:12; Gal
3:12; Acts 3:18-22, 13:2-5, 26:22; 1 Peter 1:10; Acts 7:52, 15:15,
28:23; Rom 16:26; Rev 10:7).
There is in these chargers not only meat, but sauce, if you like it, to
eat the meat withal; for the passover there are bitter herbs, or sound
repentance; and for other, as the thank-offerings, their is holy
cheerfulness and prayers to God for grace. All these are set forth
before in the holy Scriptures, and presented to us thereby, as in the
gold chargers of the temple. He that will scoff at this, let him scoff.
The chargers were a type of something; and he that can show a fitter
antitype than is here proposed to consideration, let him do it, and I
will be thankful to him.
Christians, here is your meat before you, and get your carvers to slice
it out for you, and this know, the deeper you dip it in the sauce, the
better it will relish. But let not unbelief teach you such manners as
to make you leave the best bits behind you. For your liberty is to eat
freely of the best, of the fat, and of the sweet.
As to the comings
into the temple, of them we have spoken already;
namely, of the outer and inner court, as also of the doors of the porch
and temple. The coming in was but one strait course, and that a type of
Jesus Christ; but the goings out were many (John 10:9, 14:6).
Now, as I said, it is insinuated that the goings out are many,
answerable to the many ways which the children of men have invented to
apostatize in from God. Christ is the way into; but sin the way out of
the temple of God. True, I read not of a description of the goings out
of this house, as I read of the comings in. Only when they had Athaliah
out thence, she is said to go out by the way by which the horses come
into the king’s stables, and there she was slain, as it were upon the
horse dung-hill (2 Kings 11:16; 2 Chron 23:15). When Uzziah also went
out of this house for his transgression, he was cast out of all
society, and made to dwell in a kind of a pest-house, even to the day
of his death (2 Chron 26:21).
Thus, therefore, though these goings out are not particularly
described, the judgments that followed them that have for their
transgressions been thrust out thence, have been both remarkable and
tremendous: for to die upon a dung-hill, or in a pest-house, and that
for wicked actions, is a shameful, a disgraceful thing. And God will
still be spreading dung upon the faces of such; no greatness shall
prevent it (Mal 2:3). Yea, and will take them away with it. ‘I will
drive them out of my house,’ says he, ‘I will love them no more’ (Hosea
9:15).
But what are we to understand in gospel days, by going out of the house
of the Lord, for or by sin? I answer, if it be done voluntarily, then
sin leads you out: if it be done by the holy compulsion of the church,
then it is done by the judicial judgment of God; that is, they are cut
off, and cast out from thence, as a just reward for their
transgressions (Lev 20, 21:3; Eze 14:8; 1 Cor 5:13). [27]
Well, but whither do they go, that are thus gone out of the temple or
church of God? I answer, not to the dunghill with Athaliah, nor to the
pest-house with Uzziah, but to the devil, that is the first step, and
so to hell, without repentance. But if their sin be not unpardonable,
they may by repentance be recovered, and in mercy tread these courts
again. Now the way to this recovery is to think seriously what they
have done, or by what way they went out from the house of God. Hence
the prophet is bid to show to the rebellious house, first the goings
out of the house, and then the comings in. But, I say, first he bids
show them the goings out thereof (Eze 43:10,11). And this is of
absolute necessity for the recovering of the sinner. For until he that
has sinned himself out of God’s house shall see what danger he has
incurred to himself by this his wicked going out, he will not
unfeignedly desire to come in thither again.
There is another thing as to this point to be taken notice of. There is
a way by which God also doth depart from this house, and that also is
by sin, as the occasion. The sin of a man will thrust him out, and the
sin of men will drive God out of his own house. Of this you read,
Ezekiel 11:22, 23. For this, he saith, ‘I have forsaken mine house, I
have left mine heritage, I have given the dearly beloved of my soul
into the hand of her enemies’ (Jer 12:7). And this also is dreadful.
The great sentence of Christ upon the Jews lay much in these words,
‘Your house is left unto you desolate’; that is, God has left you to
bare walls, and to lifeless traditions. Consider, therefore, of this
going out also. Alas! a church, a true church, is but a poor thing if
God leaves, if God forsakes it. By a true church I mean one that is
congregated according to outward rule, that has sinned God away, as she
had almost quite done that was of Laodicea (Rev 3).
He that sins himself out, can find no good in the world; and they that
have sinned God out, can find no good in the church. A church that has
sinned God away from it, is a sad lump indeed. You therefore that are
in God’s church, take heed of sinning yourselves out thence; also take
heed, that while you keep in, you sin not God away, for thenceforth no
good is there. ‘Yea, woe to them when I depart from them!’ saith God
(Hosea 9:12).
Having
thus far passed through the temple, I now come to the singers
there. The singers were many, but all of the church, either Jews or
proselytes; nor was there any, as I know of, under the Old Testament
worship, admitted to sing the songs of the church, and to celebrate
that part of worship with the saints, but they who, at least in
appearance, were so. The song of Moses, of Deborah, and of those that
danced before David, with others that you read of, they were all
performed, either by Jews by nature, or by such as were proselyted to
their religion (Exo 15:1; Jude 5:1,2; 1 Sam 18:6). And such worship
then was occasioned by God’s great appearance for them, against the
power of the Gentiles their enemies.
But we are confined to the songs of the temple, a more distinct type of
ours in the church under the gospel. 1. The singers then were many, but
the chief of them, in the days of David, were David himself, Asaph,
Jeduthun, and Heman, and their sons. 2. In David’s time the chief of
these singers were two hundred fourscore and eight (1 Chron 25). These
singers of old were to sing their songs over the burnt-offering, which
were types of the sacrificed body of Christ; a memorial of which
offering we have at the Lord’s table, the consummation of which Christ
and his disciples celebrated with a hymn (Matt 26:30). And as of old
they were the church that did sing in the temple, according to
institution, to God, so also they are by God’s appointment to be sung
in the church by the new. Hence,
1. They are said to be the redeemed that sin. 2. The songs that they
sing are said to be the ‘songs of their redemption’ (Rev 5:9,10). 3.
They were and are songs that no man can learn but they.
But let us run a little in the parallel.
1. They were of old appointed to sin, that were cunning and skilful in
songs. And answerable to that it is said, That no man could learn our
New Testament songs, but the hundred and forty and four thousand which
were redeemed from the earth (1 Chron 15:22; Rev 14:3).
2. These songs were sung with harps, psalteries, cymbals, and trumpets;
a type of our singing with spiritual joy, from grace in our hearts (1
Chron 25:6; 2 Chron 29:26-28; Col 3:16).
3. The singers of old were to be clothed in fine linen; which fine
linen was a type of innocency, and an upright conversation. Hence the
singers under the New Testament are said to be virgins, such in whose
mouth was no guile, and that were without ‘fault before the throne of
God’ (1 Chron 15:27; Rev 14:1-5. See also 7:9-16; Psa 33:1).
4. The songs sung in the temple were new, or such as were compiled
after the manner of repeated mercies that the church of God had
received, or were to receive. And answerable to this, is the church to
sing now new songs, with new hearts, for new mercies (Psa 33:3, 40:3,
96, 144:9; Rev 14:3). New songs, I say, are grounded on new matter, new
occasions, new mercies, new deliverances, new discoveries of God to the
soul, or for new frames of heart; and are such as are most taking, most
pleasing, and most refreshing to the soul.
5. These songs of old, to distinguish them from heathenish ones, were
called God’s songs, the Lord’s songs: because taught by him, and
learned of him, and enjoined to them, to be sung to his praise. Hence
David said, God had put a new song in his mouth, ‘even praise unto our
God’ (1 Chron 25:7; Psa 47:6,7, 137:4, 40:3).
6. These songs also were called ‘the songs of Zion,’ and ‘the songs of
the temple’ (Psa 137:3; Amos 8:3). And they are so called as they were
theirs to sing there; I say, of them of Zion, and the worshippers in
the temple. I say, to sing in the church, by the church, to him who is
the God of the church, for the mercies, benefits, and blessings which
she has received from him. Sion-songs, temple-songs, must be sung by
Sion’s sons, and temple-worshippers.
The redeemed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with songs, and
everlasting joy upon their heads, they shall obtain joy and gladness;
and sorrow and sighing shall fly away. Therefore they shall come and
sing in the height, or upon the mountain of Zion; and shall flow
together thither, to the goodness of the Lord. ‘Break forth into
singing, ye mountains,’ and let the inhabitants of the rock sing (Isa
44:23, 42:11, 51:11).
To sing to God, is the highest worship we are capable of performing in
heaven; and it is much if sinners on earth, without grace, should be
capable of performing it, according to his institution, acceptably. I
pray God it be done by all those that now-a-days get into churches, in
spirit and with understanding. [28]
That
commonly called the temple of God at Jerusalem, considered as
standing of two parts, was called the outward and inward temple, or,
the holy and most holy place. They were built upon one and the same
foundation; neither could one go into the holiest, but as through the
holy place (1 Kings 3:1, 6:1; 2 Chron 5:1,13, 7:2).
The first house, namely, that which we have been speaking of, was a
type of the church-militant, and the place most holy a type of the
church-triumphant; I say, of the church-triumphant, as it now is.
So, then, the house standing of these two parts, was a shadow of the
church both in heaven and earth. And for that they are joined together
by one and the same foundation, it was to show, that they above, and we
below, are yet one and the self-same house of God. Hence they, and we
together, are called, ‘The whole family in heaven and earth’ (Eph
3:14,15).
And hence it is said again, that we who believe on earth ‘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, and
to God the judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect,
and to Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of
sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of Abel’ (Heb
12:22-24).
The difference, then, betwixt us and them is, not that we are really
two, but one body in Christ, in divers places. True, we are below
stairs, and they above; they in their holiday, and we in our
working-day clothes; they in harbour, but we in the storm; they at
rest, and we in the wilderness; they singing, as crowned with joy; we
crying, as crowned with thorns. But, I say, we are all of one house,
one family, and are all the children of one Father. This, therefore, we
must not forget, lest we debar ourselves of much of that which
otherwise, while here, we have a right unto. Let us, therefore, I say,
remember, that the temple of God is but one, though divided, as one may
say into kitchen and hall, above stairs and below; or holy and most
holy place. For it stands upon the same foundation, and is called but
one, the temple of God; which is built upon the Lord our Saviour.
I told you before, that none of old could go into the most holy, but by
the holy place, even by the veil that made the partition between (Exo
26:33; Lev 16:2,12,15; Heb 9:7,8, 10:19). Wherefore, they are deceived
that think to go into the holiest, which is heaven, when they die, who
yet abandon and hate the holy place, while they live. Nay, Sirs, the
way into the holiest is through the holy place; the way into heaven is
through the church on earth; for that Christ is there by his word to be
received by faith, before he can by us in person be received in the
beatical vision. The church on earth is as the house of the women,
spoken of in the book of Esther, where we must be dieted, perfumed, and
made fit to go into the bridegroom’s chamber, or as Paul says, ‘made
meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light’ (Esth
2; Col 1:12).
The
most holy place was, as I said, a figure of heaven itself,
consequently a type of that where the most special presence of God is,
and where his face is most clearly seen, and the gladness of his
countenance most enjoyed (Heb 9:23,24; Exo 25:22; Num 7:89).
The most holy place was dark, it had no windows in it, though there
were such round the chambers; the more special presence of God, too, on
Mount Sinai, was in the thick darkness there (1 Kings 8:12; 2 Chron
7:1; Exo 19:9, 20:21).
1. This holiest, therefore, being thus made, was to show that God, as
in heaven, to us on earth is altogether invisible, and not to be
reached otherwise than by faith. For, I say, in that this house had no
windows, nothing therein could be seen by the highest light of this
world. Things there were only seen by the light of the fire of the
altar, which was a type of the shinings of the Holy Ghost (1 Cor 2).
And hence it is said, notwithstanding this darkness, ‘He dwelleth in
the light, which no man can approach unto’; none but the high-priest,
Christ (1 Tim 6:16; 1 Peter 3:21,22).
2. The holiest, therefore, was thus built, to show how different our
state in heaven will be from this our state on earth. We walk here by
one light, by the light of a written word; for that is now a light to
our feet, and a lantern to our path. But that place, where there will
be no written word, nor ordinances as here, will yet to us shine more
light and clear, than if all the lights that are in the world were put
together, to light one man. ‘For God is light, and in him is no
darkness at all’ (1 John 1:5). And in his light, and in the light of
the Lamb immediately, we shall live, and walk, and rejoice all the days
of eternity.
3. This also was ordained thus, to show that we, while in the first
temple, should live by faith, as to what there was, or as to what was
done in the second. Hence it is said, as to that, ‘we walk by faith,
not by sight’ (2 Cor 5:9). The things that are there we are told of,
even of the ark of the testimony, and mercy-seat, and the cherubims of
glory, and the presence of Christ, and of God: we are, I say, told of
them by the word, and believe, and are taken therewith, and hope to go
to them hereafter; but otherwise we see them not. Therefore we are said
to ‘look, not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are
not seen; for the things which are seen are temporal, but the things
which are not seen are eternal’ (2 Cor 4:18).
4. The people of old were not to look into the holiest, lest they died,
save only their high-priest, he might go into it (Num 17:13). To show
that we, while here, must have a care of vain speculations, for there
is nothing to be seen, by us while here, in heaven, otherwise than by
faith in God’s eternal testament. True, we may now come to the holiest,
even as nigh as the first temple will admit us to come; but it must be
by blood and faith, not by vain imagination, sense, or carnal reason
(Heb 10:19).
5. This holiest of all was four square every way, both as to height,
length, and breadth. To be thus, is a note of perfection, as I have
showed elsewhere; wherefore it was on purpose thus built, to show us
that all fulness of blessedness is there, both as to the nature,
degree, and duration. So ‘when that which is perfect is come, then that
which is in part shall be done away’ (1 Cor 13:8-10; Heb 10:19-22).
The veil of the
temple was a hanging made of ‘blue and purple, and
scarlet, and fine twined linen,’ and there were cherubims wrought
thereon (Exo 26:31).
1. This veil was one partition, betwixt the holy and most holy place;
and I take it, it was to keep from the sight of the worshippers the
things most holy, when the high-priest went in thither, to accomplish
the service of God (Exo 26:33; 2 Chron 3:14; Heb 9:8).
2. The veil was a type of two things.
(1.) Of these visible heavens through which Christ passed when he went
to make intercession for us. And as by the veil, the priest went out of
the sight of the people, when he went into the holiest of all, so Jesus
Christ when he ascended, was by the heavens, that great and stretched
out curtain, received out of the sight of his people here. Also by the
same curtain, since it is become as a tent for him to dwell in, he is
still received, and still kept out of our sight; for now we see him
not, nor shall, until these heavens be rolled together as a scroll, and
pass away like a thing rolled together (Isa 40:22; Acts 1:9-11,
3:19-21; 1 Peter 1:8).
(2.) This is that veil through which the apostle saith, Jesus is, as a
forerunner for us, entered into the presence of God. For by veil here
also must be meant the heavens, or outspread firmament thereof; as both
Mark and Peter say, He ‘is gone into heaven, and is on the right hand
of God’ (Mark 16:19; 1 Peter 3:22).
3. The veil of the temple was made of blue, the very colour of the
heaven. Of purple and crimson, and scarlet also, which are the colours
of many of the clouds, because of the reflections of the sun. But again,
4. The veil was also a type of the body of Christ. For as the veil of
the temple, when whole, kept the view of the things of the holiest from
us, but when rent, gave place to man to look in unto them; even so the
body of Christ, while whole, kept the things of the holiest from that
view, we, since he was pierced, have of them. Hence we are said to
enter into the holiest, by faith, through the veil, that is to say, his
flesh (Heb 10:19-22). But yet, I say, all is by faith; and, indeed, the
rending of the veil that day that Christ was crucified, did loudly
preach this to us. For no sooner was the body of Christ pierced, but
the veil of the temple rent in twain from the top to the bottom; and so
a way was made for a clearer sight of what was there beyond it, both in
the type and antitype (Matt 27:50-53; Heb 10:19,20).
Thus you see that the veil of the temple was a type of these visible
heavens, and also of the body of Christ; of the first, because he
passed through it unto the Father; of the second, because we by it have
boldness to come to the Father.
I read also of two other veils, as of that spread over the face of
Moses, to the end that the children of Israel should not stedfastly
behold; and of the first veil of the tabernacle. But of these I shall
not in this place speak.
Upon the veil of the temple there were also the figures of cherubims
wrought, that is, of angels; to show, that as the angels are with us
here, and wait upon us all the days of our pilgrimage in this world; so
when we die, they stand ready, even at the veil, at the door of these
heavens, to come when bid, to fetch us, and carry us away into
Abraham’s bosom (Luke 16:22).
The veil, then, thus understood, teaches us first where Jesus is,
namely, not here, but gone into heaven, from whence we should wait for
him. It also teaches us, that if we would even now discern the
glories that are in the holiest of all, we must look through Jesus to
them, even through the veil, ‘that is to say, his flesh.’ Yea, it
teaches us that we may, by faith through him, attain to a kind of a
presence, at least of the beauty and sweetness of them.
1.
Besides the veil, there was a door to the inner temple, and that
door was made of olive tree; ‘and for the entering of the oracle, he
made doors of olive tree. The two doors also of olive tree, and he
carved upon them - cherubims, and palm trees, and open flowers, and
overlaid them with gold, and spread gold upon the cherubims, and upon
the palm trees’ (1 Kings 6:31).
2. These doors were a type of the gate of heaven, even of that which
lets into the eternal mansion-house that is beyond that veil. I told
you before that the veil was a type of the visible heavens, which God
has spread out as a curtain, and through which Christ went when he
ascended to the right hand of the Father.
3. Now, beyond this veil, as I said, I find a door, a gate opening with
two leaves, as afore we found at the door of the outward temple. These
are they which the Psalmist calls to, when he saith, ‘Lift up your
heads, O ye gates, even lift them up, ye everlasting doors, and the
King of glory shall come in’ (Psa 24:7,9).
4. The doors of the temple were made of fire, but these, as you see,
were made of olive; to show us by that fat tree, that rich type, with
what glory we shall be met, who shall be counted worthy to enter at
these gates. The olive tree has its name from the oil and fatness of
its nature, and the doors that let into the holiest were made of this
olive tree (Rom 11:16-18). [29]
5. Cherubims were also carved upon these doors to show, that as the
angels met us at the temple door, and as they wait upon us in the
temple, and stand also ready at the veil, so even at the gate of the
mansion-house, they will be also ready to give us a welcome thither,
and to attend us into the presence chamber.
6. Palm trees also, as they were carved upon the temple doors, so we
also find them here before the oracle, upon the doors that let in
thither; to show, that as Christ gave us the victory at our first
entering into faith, so he will finish that victory, by giving of us
eternal salvation. Thus is he the author and finisher of our faith. For
as sure as at first we received the palm branch by faith, so surely
shall we wear it in our hands, as a token of his faithfulness in the
heaven of heavens, for ever (Rev 7:9).
7. Open flowers are also carved here, to show that Christ, who is the
door to glory, as well as the door to grace, will be precious to us at
our entering in thither, as well as at the first step we took
thitherward in a sinful and miserable world. Christ will never lose his
sweet scent in the nostrils of his church. He is most sweet now, will
be so at death, and sweetest of all, when by him we shall enter into
that mansion-house prepared for us in heaven.
8. The palm trees and open flowers may also be a type of the precious
ones of God, who shall be counted worthy of his kingdom; the one, of
the uprightness of their hearts; the other, of the good favour of their
lives. ‘The upright shall dwell in thy presence; and to him that
ordereth his conversation aright, I will show the salvation of God’
(Psa 140:13).
9. Thus sweet on earth, sweet in heaven; and he that yields the fruit
of the gospel here, shall find it for himself, and his eternal comfort,
at the gates of glory.
10. All these were overlaid with gold, as you may say, and so they were
at the door of the first house. True, but observe here we have an
addition. Here is gold upon gold. Gold laid on them, and then gold
spread upon that. He overlaid them with gold, and then spread gold upon
them. The Lord gives grace and glory (Psa 84:11). Gold and gold. Gold
spread upon gold. Grace is gold in the leaf, and glory is gold in
plates. Grace is thin gold, glory is gold that is thick. Here is gold
laid on, and gold spread upon that: and that both upon the palm trees
and the cherubims. Gold upon the palm trees, that is, on the saints;
gold upon the cherubims, that is, upon the angels. For I doubt not but
that the angels themselves shall receive additional glory for the
service which they have served Christ and his church on earth.
11. The angels are God’s harvest men, and doubtless he will give them
good wages, even glory upon their glory then (Matt 13:38,39, 24:31;
John 4:36).
12. You know harvest men use to be paid well for gathering in the corn,
and I doubt not but so shall these, when the great ingathering is over.
But what an entrance into life is here? Here is gold upon gold at the
door, at our first step into the kingdom.
I shall not concern
myself with all the nails of the temple, as of
those made of iron, &c. (1 Chron 22:3). But only with the golden
ones, of which you read, where he saith, ‘And the weight of the nails
was fifty shekels of gold’ (2 Chron 3:9). These nails, as I conceive,
were all fastened to the place most holy, and of form most apt to that
of which they were a figure.
1. Some of them represented Christ Jesus our Lord as fixed in his
mediatory office in the heavens; wherefore in one place, when the Holy
Ghost speaks of Christ, as he sprang from Judah to be a mediator,
saith, ‘Out of him came the corner,’ the corner stone, ‘out of him the
nail’ (Zech 10:4). Now, since he is compared to a nail, a golden nail,
it is to show, that as a nail, by driving, is fixed in his place; so
Christ, by God’s oath, is made an everlasting priest (Heb 7:25).
Therefore, as he saith again, the nail, the Aaronical priesthood, that
was fastened in a sure place, should be removed, be cut down, and fall;
so he who has the key of David, which is Christ (Rev 3:7), shall by
God, as a nail, be fastened in a sure place, and abide; therefore he
says again, ‘And he shall be for a glorious throne,’ or mercy-seat, ‘to
his Father’s house.’ And moreover, That ‘they shall hang upon him,’ as
on a nail, ‘all the glory of his Father’s house, the offspring, and the
issue, all vessels of small quantity, from the vessels of cups, even to
all the vessels of flagons’ (Isa 22:20-25). According to that which is
written, ‘And they sang a new song’ to the Lamb that was slain,
‘saying, Thou art worthy,’ &c. (Rev 5:9-12).
And therefore it is again that Christ, under the similitude of a nail,
is accounted by saints indeed their great pledge or hope, as he is in
heaven, of their certain coming thither. Hence they said of old, God
has given us ‘a nail in his holy place’; a nail, says the line, ‘a pin,
a constant and sure abode,’ says the margin (Ezra 9:8). Now, this nail
in his holy place, as was showed before, is Christ; Christ, as
possessed of heaven, and as abiding, and ever living therein for us.
Hence he is called, as there, our head, our life, and our salvation;
and also we are said there to be set down together in him (Eph 1; Col
3:3; Eph 2:5,6).
2. Some of these nails were types of the holy words of God, which for
ever are settled in heaven. Types, I say, of their ‘yea and amen.’
Hence Solomon, in another place, compares the words of the wise God,
‘to goads and nails, fastened by the masters of assemblies, which are
given from one shepherd’ (Eccl 12:11).
They are called goads, because, as such prick the oxen on in their
drawing, so God’s words prick Christians on in their holy duties. They
are called nails, to show, that as nails, when fastened well in a sure
place, are not easily removed; so God’s words, by his will, stand firm
for ever. The masters of the assemblies are first, the apostles. The
one shepherd is Jesus Christ. Hence the gospel of Christ is said to be
everlasting, to abide for ever, and to be more stedfast than heaven and
earth (Isa 40:6-8; 1 Peter 1:24,25; Heb 13:20; Rev 14:6; Matt 24:35).
The Lord Jesus then, and his holy words, are the golden nails of the
temple, and the fixing of thess nails in the temple, was to show that
Christ is the same today, yesterday, and for ever; and that his words
abide, and remain the same for ever and ever. He then that hath Christ,
has a nail in the holiest; he that hath a promise of salvation hath
also a nail in heaven, a golden nail in heaven!
1. The floor of the oracle was overlaid
with cedar, and so also were
the walls of this house. ‘He built twenty cubits on the sides of the
house, both the floor and the walls with boards of cedar. He even built
for it within, for the oracle, for the most holy place’ (1 Kings 6:16).
2. In that he doth tell us with what
it was ceiled, and doth also thus
repeat, saying, ‘for the oracle, for it within, even for the most holy
place,’ it is because he would have it noted, that this only is the
place that thus was done.
3. Twenty cubits, that was the length,
and breadth, and height of the
house; so that by his thus saying he teacheth that thus it was built
round about.
4. The cedar is, if I mistake not, the
highest of the trees (Eze
31:3-8). Now in that it is said the house, the oracle, was ceiled round
about therewith, it may be to show, that in heaven, and no where else,
is the height of all perfections. Perfection is in the church on earth,
but not such as is in heaven.
(1.) There is a natural perfection,
and so a penny is as natural silver
as is a shilling. (2.) There is a comparative perfection, and so one
thing may be perfect and imperfect at the same time; as a half-crown is
more than a shilling, yet less than a crown. (3.) There is also that
which we call the utmost perfection, and that is it which cannot be
added to, or taken from him; and so God only is perfect. Now, heavenly
glory is that which goes beyond all perfection on the earth, as the
cedar goes beyond all trees for height. Hence God, when he speaks of
his own excellency, sets it forth by its height. The high God, the most
High, and the high and lofty One; and the Highest (Psa 92:9, 138:6; Gen
14:19-21; Dan 3:26, 5:18; Psa 18:13, 87:5; Luke 1:32, 6:35; Isa 57:15;
Psa 9:2, 56:2, 92:1; Isa 14:14). These terms also are ascribed to this
house, for that it was the place where utmost perfection dwelt.
I take, therefore, the cedar in this
place to be a note of perfection,
even the cedar with which this house was ceiled. For since it is the
wisdom of God to speak to us ofttimes by trees, gold, silver, stones,
beasts, fowls, fishes, spiders, ants, frogs, flies, lice, dust,
&c., and here by wood; how should we by them understand his voice,
if we count there is no meaning in them? ‘And the cedar of the house
within was carved with knops and open flowers; all was cedar; there was
no stone seen’ (1 Kings 6:18).
Knops and flowers were they with which
the golden candlestick was
adorned, as you read, Exodus 25:33, 35, 37:10, 21. The candlestick was
a type of the church, and the knops and flowers a type of her
ornaments. But what! must heaven be hanged round about with the
ornaments of saints! with the fruits of their graces! Well, it is
certain that something more than ordinary must be done with them, since
they are admitted to follow them into the holy place (Rev 14:13); and
since, it is said, they shall have a far more exceeding and eternal
weight of glory bestowed on them, for them in the heavens’ (2 Cor
4:16,17).
‘All was cedar; there was no stone
seen.’ Take stone in the type for
that which was really so, and in the antitype for that which is so
mystically, and then it may import to us, that in heaven, the antitype
of this holiest, there shall never be anything of hardness of heart in
them that possess it for ever. All imperfection ariseth from the
badness of the heart, but there will be no bad hearts in glory. No
shortness in knowledge, no crossness of disposition, no workings of
lusts, or corruptions will be there; no, not throughout the whole
heavens. Here, alas! they are seen, and that in the best of saints,
because here our light is mixed with darkness; but there will be no
night there, nor any stone seen.
‘And the floor of the house was
overlaid with gold’ (1 Kings 6:30).
This is like that of which we read of the New Jerusalem that is to come
from God out of heaven; says the text, ‘The street of the city was pure
gold’; and like that of which you read in Exodus, ‘They saw the God of
Israel, and under his feet as it were a paved work of a sapphire stone,
and as it were the body of heaven in his clearness’ (Rev 21:21; Exo
24:10). All the visions were rich, but this the richest, that the floor
of the house should be covered or overlaid with gold. The floor and
street are walking-places, and how rich will our steps be then! Alas!
here we sometimes fall into the mire, and then again stumble upon
blocks and stones. Here we sometimes fall into holes, and have our heel
oft catched in a snare; but there will be none of these. Gold! gold!
all will be gold, and golden perfections, when we come into the holy
place! Job at best took but his steps in butter, but we then shall take
all our steps in the gold of the sanctuary.
In the Word I read of
three arks; to wit, Noah’s ark, that in which
Moses was hid, and the ark of the covenant of God (Gen 6:14; Exo
2:3,5). But it is the ark of the covenant of which I shall now speak.
The ark was made ‘of shittim-wood, two cubits and a half was the length
thereof, and a cubit and a half the breadth thereof, and a cubit and a
half the height thereof.’ It was overlaid ‘with pure gold within and
without,’ and ‘a crown of gold’ was made for it ‘round about’ (Exo
25:10,11).
1. This ark was called ‘the ark of the covenant,’ as the first that you
read of was called ‘Noah’s,’ because as he in that was kept from being
drowned, so the tables of the covenant were kept in this from breaking.
2. This ark, in this, was a type of Christ; for that in him only, and
not in the hand of Moses, these tables were kept whole. Moses brake
them, the ark keeps them.
3. Not only that wrote on two tables of stone, but that also called
‘the ceremonial,’ was put into the ark to be kept. The two tables were
put into the midst of the ark, to answer to this—thy law is within my
heart to do it. But the ceremonial was put into the side of the ark, to
show that out of the side of Christ must come that which must answer
that, for out thence came blood and water; blood, to answer the blood
of the ceremonies; and water, to answer the purifyings and rinsings of
that law. The ceremonies, therefore, were lodged in the side of the
ark, to show that they should be answered out of the side of Jesus
Christ (Exo 25:16,17; Deut 10:5; Psa 40:8; John 19:34; Heb 10:7).
4. The ark had the name of God put upon it; yea, it was called the
strength of God, and his glory, though made of wood. And Christ is God
both in name and nature, though made flesh; yea more, made to be sin
for us (2 Sam 6:2; 1 Chron 13:6; 2 Chron 6:1; John 1:14; Rom 9:5; 2 Cor
5:21).
5. The ark was carried upon men’s shoulders this way and that, to show
how Christ should be carried and preached by his apostles and ministers
into all parts of the world (Exo 25:14; 1 Chron 15:15; Matt 28:19,20;
Luke 24:46,47).
6. The ark had those testimonies of God’s presence accompanying it, as
had no other ceremony of the law; and Christ had those signs and tokens
of his presence with him, as never had man either in law or gospel.
This is so apparent it needs no proof. And now for a few comparisons
more.
(1.) It was at that that God answered the people, when they were wont
to come to inquire of him; and in these last days God has spoken to us
by his Son (1 Chron 13:3; 1 Sam 14:18; Heb 1:2; John 16:23,24).
(2.) At the presence of the ark the waters of Jordan stood still till
Israel, the ransomed of the Lord, passed over from the wilderness to
Canaan; and it is by the power and presence of Christ that we pass over
death, Jordan’s antitype, from the wilderness of this world to heaven
(Josh 3:15-17; John 11:25; Rom 8:37-39; 1 Cor 15:54-57).
(3.) Before the ark the walls of Jericho fell down; and at the presence
of Christ shall all high towers, and strongholds, and hiding places for
sinners be razed, and dissolved at his coming (Josh 6:20; Isa 30:25,
2:10,16; 2 Peter 3:10; Rev 20:11-13).
(4.) Before the ark Dagon fell, that idol of the Philistines; and
before Christ Jesus devils fell, those gods of all those idols. And he
must reign till all his enemies be put under his feet, and until they
be made his footstool (1 Sam 5:1-4; Mark 5:12; 1 Cor 15:25; Heb 10:13).
(5.) The Philistines were also plagued for meddling with the ark, while
they abode uncircumcised; and the wicked will one day be most severely
plagued for their meddling with Christ, with their uncircumcised hearts
(1 Sam 5:6-13; Psa 50:6; Matt 24:51, 25:11,12; Luke 13:25-29).
(6.) God’s blessing was upon those that entertained the ark as they
should; and much more is, and will his blessing be upon those that so
embrace and entertain his Christ, and profess his name sincerely (2 Sam
6:11; Acts 3:26; Gal 3:13,14; Matt 19:27-29; Luke 22:28,29).
(7.) When Uzzah put forth his hand to stay the ark, when the oxen shook
it, as despairing of God’s protecting of it without a human help, he
died before the Lord; even so will all those do, without repentance,
who use unlawful means to promote Christ’s religion, and to support it
in the world (1 Chron 13:9,10; Matt 26:52; Rev 13:10).
(8.) The ark, though thus dignified, was of itself but low—but a cubit
and a half high; also Christ—though he was the glory of heaven and of
God—yet made himself of no reputation, and was found in the likeness of
a man (Exo 25:10-12; Phil 2:6-11).
(9.) The ark had a crown of gold round about upon it, to show how
Christ is crowned by his saints by faith, and shall be crowned by them
in glory, for all the good he hath done for them; as also how all
crowns shall one day stoop to him, and be set upon his head. This is
showed in the type (Zech 6:11,14). And in the antitype (Rev 4:10,
19:12).
(10.) The ark was overlaid with gold within and without, to show that
Christ was perfect in inward grace and outward life, in spirit and in
righteousness (John 1:14; 1 Peter 2:22).
(11.) The ark was placed under the mercy-seat, to show that Jesus
Christ, as Redeemer, brings and bears, as it were, upon his shoulders,
the mercy of God to us, even in the body of his flesh, through death
(Exo 25:21; Eph 4:22; 5:1,2).
(12.) When the ark was removed far from the people, the godly went
mourning after it; and when Christ is hid, or taken from us, then we
mourn in those days (2 Sam 7:2; Mark 2:19,20; Luke 5:34,35; John
16:20-22).
(13.) All Israel had the ark again, after their mourning-time was over;
and Christ, after his people have sorrowed for him a while, will see
them again, ‘and their hearts shall rejoice’ (John 16:1-3,20-22).
By all these things, and many more that might be mentioned, it is most
evident that the ark of the testimony was a type of Jesus Christ; and
take notice a little of that which follows, namely, that the ark at
last arrived to the place most holy (Heb 9:3,4). That is, after its
wanderings; for the ark was first made to wander, like a
non-inhabitant, from place to place; now hither, and then thither; now
in the hands of enemies, and then abused by friends; yea, it was caused
to rove from place to place, as that of which the world was weary. I
need instance to you for proof hereof none other place than the fifth,
sixth, and seventh chapters of the first Book of Samuel; and,
answerable to this, was our dear Lord Jesus posted backwards and
forwards, hither and thither, by the force of the rage of his enemies.
He was hunted into Egypt so soon as he was born (Matt 2). Then he was
driven to live in Galilee the space of many years. Also, when he showed
himself to Israel, they drove him sometimes into the wilderness,
sometimes into the desert, sometimes into the sea, and sometimes into
the mountains, and still in every of these places he was either haunted
or hunted by new enemies.
And at last of all, the Pharisees plot for his life; Judas sells him,
the priests buy him, Peter denies him, his enemies mock, scourge,
buffet, and much abuse him. In fine, they get him condemned, and
crucified, and buried; but at last God commanded, and took him to his
place, even within the veil, and sets him to bear up the mercy-seat,
where he is to this very day, being our ark to save us, as Noah’s did
him, as Moses’ did him; yea, better, as none but Christ doth save his
own.
1. The ark, as we
have said, and as the text declares, when carried to
its rest, was placed in the inner temple, or in the most holy place,
‘even under the wings of the cherubims.’ ‘And the priests brought in
the ark of the covenant of the Lord unto his place, to the oracle of
the house, into the most holy place, even under the wings of the
cherubims’ (Exo 26:33, 39:35; 1 Kings 8:3; 2 Chron 5:7).
2. Before this, as was said afore, the ark was carried from place to
place, and caused to dwell in a tent under curtains, as all our fathers
did; to show that Christ, as we, was made for a time to wander in the
world, in order to his being possessed of glory (2 Sam 7:1,3,6; Heb
11:9; John 1:10, 16:28, 3:13).
3. But now, when the ark was brought into the holiest, it is said to be
brought into its place. This world then was not Christ’s place, he was
not from beneath, he came from his Father’s house; wherefore while
here, he was not at his place, nor could until he ascended up where he
was before (John 8:23, 16:28, 6:62, 3:13).
4. Christ’s proper place, therefore, is the holiest. His proper place,
as God, as Priest, as Prophet, as King, and as the Advocate of his
people. Here, with us, he has no more to do, in person, as mediator. If
he were on earth, he should not be a priest, &c. His place and work
is now above with his Father, and before the angels (Acts 5:31; 1 Peter
3:22; Heb 4:14, 8:4; 9:24; 1 John 2:1,2; Rev 1:4,5).
5. It is said the ark was brought ‘to the oracle of the house,’ Solomon
was not content to say it was brought into the holiest; but he saith,
his place was the oracle, the holy oracle, that is, the place of
hearing. For he, when he ascended, had somewhat to say to God on the
behalf of his people. To the oracle, that is, to the place of
revealing. For he also was there to receive, and from thence to reveal
to his church on earth, something that could not be made manifest but
from this holy oracle. There therefore he is with the two tables of
testimony in his heart, as perfectly kept; he also is there with the
whole fulfulling of the ceremonial law in his side, showing and
pleading the perfection of his righteousness, and the merit of his
blood with his Father, and to receive and to do us good, who believe in
him, how well pleased the Father is with what he has done in our behalf.
6. ‘Into the most holy place.’ By these words is showed, whither also
the ark went, when it went to take up its rest. And in that this ark
was a type of Christ in this, it is to show or further manifest, that
what Christ doth now in heaven, he doth it before his Father’s face.
Yea, it intimates, that Christ even there makes his appeals to God,
concerning the worth of what he did on earth; to God the Judge of all,
I say, whether he ought not for his suffering-sake to have granted to
him his whole desire, as Priest and Advocate for his people?
‘Wilt thou,’ said Festus to Paul, ‘go up to Jerusalem, and there be
judged of these things before me?’ (Acts 25:9). Why, this our blessed
Jesus was willing, when here, to go up to Jerusalem to be judged; and
being misjudged of there, he made his appeal to God, and is now gone
thither, even into the holy place, even to him that is Judge of all,
for his verdict upon his doing; and whether the souls for whom he
became undertaker, to bring them to glory, have not by him a right to
the kingdom of heaven.
7. ‘Under the wings of the cherubims.’ This doth further confirm our
words; for having appealed from earth to heaven, as the ark was set
under the wings of the cherubims, so he, in his interceding with God
and pleading his merits for us, doth it in the presence and hearing of
all the angels in heaven.
And thus much of the ark of the covenant, and of its antitype. We come
next to speak of the mercy-seat.
The mercy-seat was
made in the wilderness, but brought up by Solomon,
after the temple was built, with the rest of the holy things (2 Chron
5:2-10).
The mercy-seat, as I have showed of the ark, was but low. ‘Two cubits
and a half was the length, and a cubit and a half the breadth thereof’;
but the height thereof ‘was without measure.’
1. The length and breadth of the mercy-seat is the same with that of
the ark: perhaps to show us, that the length and breadth of the mercy
of God to his elect, is the same with the length and breadth of the
merits of Christ (Exo 25:10,17). Therefore, we are said to be justified
in him, blessed in him, even according to the purpose which God
purposed in him.
2. But in that the mercy-seat is without measure, as to height, it is
to show, that would God extend it, it is able to reach even them that
fall from heaven, and to save all that ever lived on earth, even all
that are now in hell. For there is not only breadth enough for them
that shall be saved, but ‘bread enough and to spare’ (Luke 15:17). ‘And
thou shalt,’ says God, ‘put the mercy-seat above upon the ark.’ Thus he
said to Moses, and this was the place which David assigned for it (Exo
25:21; 1 Chron 28:11). Now, its being by God’s ordinance placed thus,
doth teach us many things.
(1.) That mercy’s foundation to us is Christ. The mercy-seat was set
upon the ark of the testimony, and there it rested to usward. Justice
would not, could not have suffered us to have had any benefit by mercy,
had it not found an ark, a Christ to rest upon. ‘Deliver him,’ saith
God, ‘from going down to the pit, I have found a ransom’ (Job 33:24).
(2.) In that it was placed above, it doth show also that Christ was, of
mercies, ordaining a fruit of mercy. Mercy is above, is the ordainer;
God is love, and sent of love his Son to be the Saviour and
propitiation for our sins (John 3:16; 1 John 4:10).
(3.) In that the mercy-seat and ark were thus joined together, it also
shows, that without Christ mercy doth not act. Hence, when the priest
came of old to God for mercy, he did use to come into the holy place
with blood; yea, and did use to sprinkle it upon the mercy-seat, and
before it, seven times. Take away the ark, and the mercy-seat will
fall, or come greatly down at least. So take away Christ, and the
flood-gate of mercy is let down, and the current of mercy stopped. This
is true, for so soon as Christ shall leave off to mediate, will come
the eternal judgment.
(4.) Again, in that the mercy-seat was set above upon the ark, it
teacheth us to know, that mercy can look down from heaven, though the
law stand by and looks on; but then it must be in Christ, as kept
there, and fulfilled by him for us. The law out of Christ is terrible
as a lion; the law in him is meek as a lamb. The reason is, for that it
finds in him enough to answer for all their faults, that come to God
for mercy by him. ‘Christ is the end of the law for righteousness’; and
if that be true, the law for that can look no further upon whoever
comes to God by him. The law did use to sentence terribly, until it was
put into the ark to be kept. [30]
(5.) Let them then that come to God for mercy be sure to come to him by
the ark, Christ. For grace, as it descends to us from above the
mercy-seat, so that mercy-seat doth rest upon the ark. Wherefore,
sinner, come thou for mercy that way: for there if thou meetest with
the law, it can do thee no harm; nor can mercy, shouldst thou elsewhere
meet it, do thee good. Come, therefore, and come boldly to the throne
of grace, this mercy-seat, thus borne up by the ark, and ‘obtain mercy,
and find grace to help in time of need’ (Heb 4:16).
Wherefore the thus placing of things in the holiest, is admirable to
behold in the word of God. For that indeed is the glass by and through
which we must behold this glory of the Lord. Here we see the reason of
things; here we see how a just God can have to do, and that in a way of
mercy, with one that has sinned against him. It is because the law has
been kept by the Lord Jesus Christ; for as you see, the mercy-seat
stands upon the ark of the covenant, and there God acts in a way of
grace towards us (Exo 25:17-23).
Although in the holy
relation of the building of the temple no mention
is made of these waters, but only of the mount on which, and the
materials with which the king did build it, yet it seems to me that in
that mount, and there too where the temple was built, there was a
spring of living water. This seems more than probable, by Ezekiel 47:1,
where he saith, ‘He brought me again unto the door of the house, and
behold, waters issued out from under the threshold of the house
eastward, for the fore-front of the house stood toward the east, and
the waters came down from under, from the right side of the house, at
the south side of the altar.’ So again, ‘And a fountain shall come
forth of the house of the Lord, and shall water the valley of Shittim’
(Joel 3:18). Nor was the spring, wherever was the first appearance of
thess holy waters, but in the sanctuary, which is the holiest of all
(Eke 47:12), where the mercy-seat stood, which in Revelation is called
‘The throne of God, and of the Lamb’ (Rev 22:1,2).
This also is that which the prophet Zechariah means, when he says,
‘Living waters shall go out from Jerusalem, half of them toward the
former sea, and half of them toward the hinder sea,’ &c. (Zech
14:8). They are said to go forth from Jerusalem, because they came down
to the city from out of the sanctuary which stood in Jerusalem. This is
that which in another place is called a river of water of life, because
it comes forth from the throne, and because it was at the head of it,
as I suppose, used in and about temple-worship. It was with this, I
think, that the molten sea and the ten lavers were filled, and in which
the priests washed their hands and feet when they went into the temple
to do service; and that also in which they washed the sacrifices before
they offered them to God; yea, I presume, all the washings and rinsings
about their worship was with this water.
This water is said in Ezekiel and Revelation to have the tree of life
grow on the banks of it, and was a type of the word and Spirit of God,
by which, both Christ himself sanctified himself, in order to his
worship as high-priest (Eze 47; Rev 22). And also this water is that
which heals all those that shall be saved; and by which, they being
sanctified thereby also, do all their works of worship and service
acceptably, through Jesus Christ our Lord. This water therefore is said
to go forth into the sea, the world, and to heal its fish, the sinners
therein; yea, this is that water of which Christ Jesus our Lord saith,
Whosoever shall drink thereof shall live for ever (Eze 47:8-10; Zech
14:8; John 4:14).
As
there were chains on the pillars that stood before the porch of the
temple, and in the first house; so, like unto them, there were chains
in the holiest, here called the oracle. These chains were not chains in
show, or as carved on wood, &c., but chains indeed, and that of
gold; and they were prepared to make a partition ‘before the oracle’
within (1 Kings 6:21; 2 Chron 3:16).
I told you before that the holiest was called the oracle, not because
in a strict sense the whole of it was so, but because such answer of
God was there, as was not in the outward temple, but I think that the
ark and mercy-seat were indeed more especially that called the oracle;
‘for there I will meet with thee,’ saith God, and from above that ‘I
will commune with thee’ (Exo 25:22). When David said, ‘I lift up my
hands toward thy holy oracle,’ he meant not so much towards the holiest
house, as toward the mercy-seat that was therein. Or, as he saith in
the margin, ‘Toward the oracle of thy sanctuary’ (Psa 28:2).
When therefore he saith, ‘before the oracle,’ he means, these chains
were put in the most holy place, before the ark and mercy-seat, to give
to Aaron and his sons to understand that an additional glory was there.
For the ark and mercy-seat were preferred before that holy house
itself, even as Christ and the grace of God is preferred before the
highest heavens. ‘The Lord is high above all nations, and his glory
above the heavens’ (Psa 113:4).
So then, the partition that was made in this house by these chains,
these golden chains, was not so much to divide the holy from the place
most holy, as to show that there is in the holiest house that which is
yet more worthy than it.
The holiest was a type of heaven, but the ark and mercy-seat were a
type of Christ, and of the mercy of God to us by him; and I trow any
man will conclude, if he knows what he says, that the God and Christ of
heaven are more excellent than the house they dwell in. Hence David
said again, ‘Whom have I in heaven but thee?’ For thou art more
excellent than they (Psa 73:25). For though that which is called heaven
would serve some; yea, though God himself was out of it, yet none but
the God of heaven will satisfy a truly gracious man: it is God that the
soul of this man thirsteth for; it is God that is his exceeding joy
(Psa 52:2, 63:1, 143:6, 17:15, 43:4).
These chains then, as they made this partition in the most holy place,
may teach us, that when we shall be glorified in heaven, we shall yet,
even then, and there, know that there will continue an infinite
disproportion between God and us. The golden chains that are there will
then distinguish [or separate] the Creator from the creature. For we,
even we which shall be saved, shall yet retain our own nature, and
shall still continue finite beings; yea, and shall there also see a
disproportion between our Lord, our head, and us; for though now we
are, and also then shall be like him as to his manhood; yea, and shall
be like him also, as being glorified with his glory; yet he shall
transcend and go beyond us, as to degree and splendour, as far as ever
the highest king on earth did shine above the meanest subject that
dwelt in his kingdom.
Chains have of old been made use of as notes of distinction, to show us
who are bond men, and who free. Yea, they shall at the day of judgment
be a note of distinction of bad and good; even as here they will
distinguish the heavens from God, and the creature from the
Creator (2 Peter 2:4; Jude 6; Matt 22:13).
True, they are chains of sin and wrath, but these chains of gold; yet
these chains, even these also will keep creatures in their place, that
the Creator may have his glory, and receive those acknowledgments there
from them, which is due unto his Majesty (Rev 4, 5:11-14).
When things were thus
ordained in the house ‘most holy,’ then went the
high-priest in thither, according as he was appointed, to do his
office, which was to burn incense in his golden censer, and to sprinkle
with his finger the blood of his sacrifice, for the people, upon and
above the mercy-seat (Exo 30:7-10; Lev 16:11-14).
Now for this special work of his, he had peculiar preparations. 1. He
was to be washed in water. 2. Then he was to put on his holy garments.
3. After that he was to be anointed with holy oil. 4. Then an offering
was to be offered for him, for the further fitting of him for his
office. 5. The blood of this sacrifice must be put, some of it upon his
right ear, some on the thumb of his right hand, and some on the great
toe of his right foot. This done, some more of the blood, with the
anointing oil, must be sprinkled upon him, and upon his garment; for
after this manner must he be consecrated to his work as high-priest
(Exo 29).
His being washed in water was to show the purity of Christ’s humanity.
His curious robes were a type of all the perfections of Christ’s
righteousness. The holy oil that was poured on his head was to show how
Christ was anointed with the Holy Ghost unto his work, as priest. The
sacrifice of his consecration was a type of that offering Christ
offered in the garden when he mixed his sweat with his own blood, and
tears, and cries, when he prayed to him that was able to save him; ‘and
was heard in that he feared’; for with his blood, as was Aaron with the
blood of the bullock that was slain for him, was this blessed one
besmeared from head to foot, when his sweat, as great drops or clodders
of blood, fell down from head and face, and whole body, to the ground
(Luke 22:44; Heb 10:20).
When Aaron was thus prepared, then he offered his offering for the
people, and carried the blood within the veil (Lev 16). The which
Christ Jesus also answered, when he offered his own body without the
gate, and then carried his blood into the heavens, and sprinkled it
before the mercy-seat (Heb 13:11,12, 9:11,12,24). For Aaron was a type
of Christ; his offering, a type of Christ’s offering his body; the
blood of the sacrifice, a type of the blood of Christ; his garments, a
type of Christ’s righteousness; the mercy-seat, a type of the throne of
grace; the incense, a type of Christ’s praise; and the sprinkling of
the blood of the sacrifice upon the mercy-seat, a type of Christ’s
pleading the virtue of his sufferings for us in the presence of God in
heaven (Heb 9:10-28).
‘Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of the heavenly calling, consider
the apostle and high priest of our profession, Christ Jesus’ (Heb 3:1).
‘Seeing then that we have a great high priest, that is passed into the
heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession. For we
have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our
infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without
sin. Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may
obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need. For every high
priest taken from among men is ordained for men in things pertaining to
God, that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins: who can have
compassion on the ignorant, and on them that are out of the way; for
that he himself also is compassed with infirmity’ (Hosea 4:14-16,
5:1,2).
This then is our high priest; and this was made so ‘not after the law
of a carnal commandment, but after the power of an endless life.’ For
Aaron and his sons were made priests without an oath, ‘but this with an
oath by him that said unto him, The Lord sware and will not repent,
Thou art a priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec. By so much
was Jesus made a surety of a better testament.’
‘And they truly were many priests, because they were not suffered to
continue by reason of death. But this man, because he continueth ever,
hath an unchangeable priesthood. Wherefore he is able also to save them
to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth to
make intercession for them. For such an high priest became us, who is
holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher than
the heavens; who needeth not daily, as those high priests, to offer up
sacrifice, first for his own sins, and then for the people’s: for this
he did once, when he offered up himself. For the law maketh men high
priests which have infirmity; but the word of the oath, which was since
the law, maketh the Son, who is consecrated for evermore. Now of the
things which we have spoken this is the sum: We have such an high
priest, who is set on the right hand of the throne of the majesty in
the heavens; a minister of the sanctuary, and of the true
tabernacle, [31]
which the Lord pitched, and not man. For every high
priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices: wherefore it is of
necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer. For if he were on
earth, he should not be a priest, seeing that there are priests that
offer gifts according to the law: who serve unto the example and shadow
of heavenly things, as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to
make the tabernacle: for, See, saith he, that thou make all things
according to the pattern showed to thee in the mount’ (Heb 7:16-8:5).
‘But Christ being come an high priest of good things to come, by a
greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made with hands, that is to
say, not of this building; neither by the blood of goats and calves,
but by his own blood, he entered in once into the holy place, having
obtained eternal redemption for us. For if the blood of bulls and of
goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth
to the purifying of the flesh: how much more shall the blood of Christ,
who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God,
purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God.
‘For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands, which
are the figures of the true; but into heaven itself, now to appear in
the presence of God for us: Nor yet that he should offer himself often,
as the high priest entereth into the holy place every year with blood
of others; for then must he often have suffered since the foundation of
the world: but now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put
away sin by the sacrifice of himself. And as it is appointed unto men
once to die, but after this the judgment: so Christ was once offered to
bear the sins of many; and unto them that look for him shall he appear
the second time without sin unto salvation’ (Heb 9:11-14,24-28).
As
it was the privilege of the high-priest to go into the holiest
alone, so there was something of mystery also, to which I shall speak a
little: ‘There shall,’ says God, ‘be no man in the tabernacle of the
congregation, when he [Aaron] goeth in to make an atonement in the holy
place, until he come out, and have made an atonement for himself, and
for his household, and for all the congregation of Israel’ (Lev
167:17). The reason is, for that Christ is mediator alone; he trod the
winepress alone; and of the people there was none with him to help him
there (Isa 63:3; 1 Tim 2:5).
Of the people there was none to help him to bear his cross, or in the
management of the first part of his priestly office. Why then should
there be any to share with him in his executing of the second part
thereof? Besides, he that helps an intercessor must himself be
innocent, or in favour, upon some grounds not depending on the worth of
the intercession. But as to the intercession of Christ, who can come in
to help upon the account of such innocency or worth? Not the highest
angel; for there is none such but one, wherefore he must do that alone.
Hence it is said, He went in alone, is there alone, and there
intercedes alone. And this is manifest not only in the type Aaron, but
in the antitype Christ Jesus (Heb 6:19,20, 9:7-11,21,23,24).
I do not say that there is no man in heaven but Jesus Christ; but I
say, he is there to make intercession for us alone. Yea, the holy text
says more. ‘I go,’ saith Christ, ‘to prepare a place for you; and if I
go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you unto
myself, that where I am there ye may be also’ (John 14:1-3).
This text seems to insinuate that Christ is in the holiest or highest
heavens alone; and that he there alone must be, until he has finished
his work of intercession; for not till then he comes again to take us
to himself. Let us grant Christ the pre-eminency in this, as also in
all other things; for he is intercessor for his church, and makes it
for them in the holiest alone. It is said he is the light that no man
can approach unto.
As the high-priest
went into the holiest when he went in thither alone;
so to do that work, he went in thither but once a year. Thou shalt not
come ‘at all times,’ said God to him, ‘into the holy place, within the
veil, before the mercy-seat, which is upon the ark, that thou die not’
(Lev 16:2).
And as he was to go in thither but ‘once a year,’ so not then neither,
unless clothed and adorned, with his Aaronical holy robes (Lev
16:32-34). Then he was to be clothed, as I hinted before, with the holy
robes, the frontlet of gold upon his forehead, the names of the twelve
tribes upon his breast, and the jingling bells upon the skirts of his
garment? nor would all this do, unless he went in thither with blood
(Exo 28; Lev 16).
Now, this once a year the apostle taketh special notice of, and makes
great use of it. ‘Once a year,’ saith he, this high-priest went in
thither: once a year, that is, to show, that Christ should once in the
end of the world, go into heaven itself, to make intercession there for
us. For by this word ‘year,’ he shows the term and time of the world is
meant; and by ‘once’ in that year, he means once in the end of the
world.
‘Not,’ saith he, ‘that he should offer himself often: as the
high-priest entereth into the holy place every year with blood of
others. For then must he often have suffered since the foundation of
the world: but now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put
away sin by the sacrifice of himself (Heb 9:25,26).
And having thus once offered his sacrifice without the veil, he is now
gone into the holiest, to perfect his work of mediation for us. Not
into the holy places made with hands, which are the figures of the
true, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for
us.
Now if our Lord Jesus is gone indeed, now to appear in the presence of
God for us; and if this now be the once a year that the type speaks of;
the once in the end of the world, as our apostle says; then it follows,
that the people of God should all stand waiting for his benediction
that to them he shall bring with him when he shall return from thence.
Wherefore he adds, ‘Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many;
and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without
sin unto salvation’ (v 28).
This, therefore, shows us the greatness of the work that Christ has to
do at the right hand of God, for that he stays there so long. He
accomplished all the first part of his priesthood in less than forty
years, if you take in the making of his holy garments and all; but
about this second part thereof, he has been above in heaven above
sixteen hundred years, and yet has not done.
This therefore calls for faith and patience in saints, and by this he
also tries the world; so that they, in mocking manner, being to say
already, ‘Where is the promise of his coming?’ (2 Peter 3:4). But I say
again, We must look and wait. If the people waited for Zacharias, and
wondered that he staid so long, because he staid in the holy place
somewhat longer than they expected, no marvel if the faith of the world
about Christ’s coming is fled and gone long ago, yea, and that the
children also are put to it to wait, since a scripture ‘little while’
doth prove so long. For that which the apostle saith, ‘yet a little
while,’ doth prove to some to be a very long little (John 16:16; Heb
10:37).
True, Zacharias had then to do with angels, and that made him stay so
long. O but Jesus is with God, before him, in his presence, talking
with him, swallowed up in him, and with his glory, and that is one
cause he stays so long. He is there also pleading his blood for his
tempted ones, and interceding for all his elect, and waits there till
all his be fitted for, and ready to enter into glory. I say, he is
there, and there must be till then; and this is another reason why he
doth stay the time we count so long.
And, indeed, it is a wonder to me, that Jesus Christ our Lord should
once think now he is there, of returning higher again, considering the
ill treatment he met with here before. But what will not love do?
Surely he would never touch the ground again, had he not a people here
that cannot be made perfect but by his coming to them. He also is made
judge of quick and dead, and will get him glory in the ruin of them
that hath him.
His people are as himself to him. Can a loving husband abide to be
always from a beloved spouse? Besides, as I said, he is to pay the
wicked off, for all their wickedness, and that in that very plat where
they have committed it. Wherefore the day appointed for this is set,
and he will, and shall come quickly to do it. For however the time may
seem long to us, yet, according to the reckoning of God, it is but a
little while since he went into the holiest to intercede. ‘A thousand
years with the Lord is as one day’; and after this manner of counting,
he has not been gone yet full two days into the holiest. ‘The Lord is
not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness’; ‘he
will come quickly, and will not tarry’ (2 Peter 3; Heb 10:37).
There were also
cherubims in the most holy place, which were set on
high above the mercy-seat. See 1 Kings 6:23-28.
1. These are called by the apostles, ‘the cherubims of glory shadowing
the mercy-seat’ (Heb 9:5).
2. These cherubims were figures of the angels of God, as in other
places we have proved.
3. It is said these cherubims were made of image work, and that in such
manner, as that they could, as some think, move their wings by art;
wherefore it is said, ‘they stretched forth their wings’; the wings of
the ‘cherubims spread themselves’; and that the ‘cherubims spread forth
their wings over the place of the ark, - and the staves thereof above’
(1 Kings 6:27; 2 Chron 3:13, 5:8).
4. I read also of these cherubims, that they had chariots and wheels;
by which is taught us how ready and willing the angels are to fetch us
when commanded, unto the paradise of God; for these chariots were types
of the bosoms of the angels; and these wheels, of the quickness of
their motion to come for us when sent. ‘The chariots of God are twenty
thousand, even thousands of angels; the Lord is among them, as in
Sinai, in the holy place’ (1 Chron 28:18; Eze 10:9,15,16,18-20; 2 Kings
6:17; Psa 68:17; 2 Kings 2:11; Dan 9:2).
5. What difference, if any, there is between cherubims and seraphims,
into that I shall not now inquire; though I believe that there are
diverse orders and degrees of angels in the heavens, as there are
degrees and diverse orders among men in the world. But that these
cherubims were figures of the holy angels, their being thus placed in
the holy oracle doth declare; for their dwelling-place is heaven,
though they, for our sakes, are conversant in the world (Heb 1).
6. It is said that these cherubims, in this holy place, did stand upon
their feet, to show, (1.) That the angels of heaven are not fallen from
their station, as the other angels are. (2.) To show also that they are
always ready, at God’s bidding, to run with swiftness to do his
pleasure. (3.) To show also that they shall continue in their station,
being therein confirmed by Jesus Christ, ‘by whom all things consist’
(Col 1:17).
7. It is said ‘their faces were inward,’ looking one to another, yet
withal somewhat ascending, to show that the angels both behold and
wonder at the mysteries of grace, as it is displayed to usward from off
the mercy-seat. The faces of the cherubims ‘shall look one to another;
towards the mercy-seat shall the faces of the cherubims be’ (Exo 25:20;
2 Chron 3:13; 1 Peter 1:12; Eph 3:10).
(1.) ‘Towards the mercy-seat.’ They are desirous to see it, and how
from hence, I say, mercy doth look towards us.
(2.) ‘They look one towards another,’ to show that they agree to
rejoice in the salvation of our souls (Luke 15:10).
(3.) They are said to stand above the mercy-seat, perhaps to show that
the angels have not need of those acts of mercy and forgiveness as we
have, who stand below, and are sinners. They stand above it; they are
holy. I do not say they have no need that the goodness of God should be
extended to them, for it is by that they have been and are preserved;
but they need not to be forgiven, for they have committed no iniquity.
(4.) They stand there also with wings stretched out, to show how ready,
if need be, the angels are to come from heaven to preach this gospel to
the world (Luke 2:9-14).
(5.) It is said in this, that thus standing, their wings did reach from
wall to wall; from one side of this holy house to the other; to show
that all the angels within the boundaries of the heavens, with one
consent and one mind, are ready to come down to help and serve, and do
for God’s elect at his command.
It is said, also, that their wings are stretched on high, to show that
they are only delighted in those duties which are enjoined them by the
high and lofty One, and not inclined, no not to serve the saints in
their sensual or fleshly designs. It may be also to show that they are
willing to take their flight from one end of heaven to the other, to
serve God and his church for good (Matt 13:41,49, 24:31, 25:31; 2 Thess
1:7,8).
The wall of the inner temple, which was a
type of heaven, was, as I
have already told you, ceiled with cedar from the bottom to the top.
Now by the vision of Ezekiel, it is said this wall was carved with
cherubims and palm trees. ‘So that a palm tree was between a cherub and
a cherub, and every cherub had two faces; so that the face of a man was
toward the palm tree on the one side, and the face of a young lion
toward the palm tree on the other. It was made through all the house
round about; from the ground unto above the door were cherubims and
palm trees made’ (Eze 41:18-20).
1. As to these cherubims and palm
trees, I have already told you what I
think them to be figures of. The cherubims are figures of the holy
angels, and the palm trees of upright ones; we therefore here are to
discourse only of the placing of them in the heavens.
2. Now you see the palm trees in the
holiest are placed between a
cherub and a cherub, round about the house, which methinks should be to
signify that the saints shall not there live by faith and hope, as
here, but in the immediate enjoyment of God; for to be placed between
the cherubims, is to be placed where God dwells; for Holy Writ says
plainly, He dwells between the cherubims, even where here it is said
these palm trees, or upright ones are placed (1 Sam 4:4; 2 Kings 19:15;
1 Chron 13:6; Psa 80:1; Isa 37:16). The church on earth is called God’s
house, and he will dwell in it for ever; and heaven itself is called
God’s house, and we shall dwell in it for ever, and that between the
cherubims. This is more than grace, this is grace and glory, glory
indeed.
3. To dwell between the cherubims may
be also to show that there we
shall be equal to the angels. Mark, here is a palm tree and a cherub, a
palm tree and a cherub. Here we are a little lower, but there we shall
not be a whit behind the very chief of them. A palm tree and a cherub,
an upright one between the cherubs, will then be round about the house;
we shall be placed in the same rank; ‘neither can they die any more,
for they are equal unto the angels’ (Luke 20:36).
4. The palm trees thus placed, may be
also to show us that the elect of
God shall there take up the vacancies of the fallen angels; they for
sin were cast down from the holy heavens, and we by grace shall be
caught up thither, and be placed between a cherub and a cherub. When I
say their places, I do not mean the fickleness of that state, that they
for want of electing love did stand in while in glory; for the heavens,
by the blood of Christ, is now to us become a purchased possession;
wherefore, as we shall have their place in the heavenly kingdom, so, by
virtue of redeeming blood, we shall there abide, and go no more out;
for by that means that kingdom will stand to us unshaken (Heb 9:12,
12:22-24,28; Rev 3:12).
5. These palm trees, I say, seem to
take their places who for sin were
cast from thence. The elect therefore take that place in possession,
but a better crown for ever. Thus ‘Israel possessed that of the
Canaanites’; and David, Saul’s kingdom; and Matthias, the place, the
apostleship of Judas (Acts 1:20-26).
6. Nor were the habitations which the
fallen angels lost, excepting
that which was excepted before, at all inferior to theirs that stood;
for their captain and prince is called son of the morning, for he was
the antitype there (Isa 14:12).
7. Thus, you see, they were placed
from the ground up to above the
door; that is, from the lowest to the highest angel there. For as there
are great saints and small ones in the church on earth, so there are
angels of divers degrees in heaven, some greater than some; but the
smallest saint, when he gets to heaven, shall have an angel’s dignity,
an angel’s place. From the ground you find a palm tree between a cherub
and a cherub.
8. And every cherub had two faces—so
here; but I read in Ezekiel 10:14,
that they had four faces apiece. The first was the face of a cherubim;
the second, the face of a man; the third, the face of a lion; and the
fourth, the face of an eagle.
9. They had two faces apiece; not to
show that they were of a double
heart, for ‘their appearances and themselves’ were the same, and ‘they
went every one straight forward’ (Eze 10:22). These two faces, then,
were to show here the quickness of their apprehension, and their
terribleness to execute the mind of God. The face of a man signifies
them masters of reason; the face of a lion, the terribleness of their
presence (1 Cor 13:12; Judg 13:6).
In another place I read of their
wheels; yea, that themselves, ‘their
whole bodies, and their backs, and their hands, and their wings, and
the wheels were full of eyes round about’ (Eze 1:18, 10:12). And this
is to show us how knowing and quick-sighted they are in all providences
and dark dispensations, and how nimble in apprehending the mischievous
designs of the enemies of God’s church, and so how able they are to
undermine them. And forasmuch also as they have the face of a lion, we
by that are showed how full of power they are to kill and to destroy,
when God says, Go forth and do so. Now, with these we must dwell and
cohabit, a palm tree and a cherub; a palm tree and a cherub must be
from the ground to above the door, round about the house—the heavens.
‘So that the face of a man was toward
the palm tree on the one side,
and the face of a young lion toward the palm tree on the other side.’
By these two faces may be also showed that we in the heavens shall have
glory sufficient to familiarize us to the angels. Their lion-like
looks, with which they used to fright the biggest saint on earth, as
you have it, Genesis 32:30; Judges 13:15,22, shall then be accompanied
with the familiar looks of a man. Then angels and men shall be fellows,
and have to do with each as such.
Thus you see something of that little
that I have found in the temple
of God.