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T H E By J O H N.B U N Y A N. |
[THIRD. A RELATION OF THE GLORY OF THE CITY, ITS WALLS, GATES,
AND FOUNDATIONS.]
er. 18. 'And the building of the wall of it was of jasper; and
the city was pure gold, like unto clear glass.'
[The glory of the walls.]
In these words you have a discovery of the glory, both of the wall and city itself;
and that, as you see, under the notion of two choice metaphors. The wall is jasper,
the chief of stones; and the city is gold, the chief of metals. 'And the building
of the wall of it was of jasper, and the city was pure gold.'
This jasper is that stone, in the light of which this city is said to descend, as
in the light of a stone most precious. Now, as there he saith she descended in the
light of this stone, so here he saith this stone is the wall thereof. 'And the building
of the wall of it was of jasper.'
This therefore confirmeth unto you what I said of the wall before, to wit, that it
was the salvation of God through Christ; wherefore, learn this by the way, that this
city shall not be at this day in her own keeping, but in the keeping of Jesus Christ.
He with his benefits doth compass her round, and by him alone she lieth down in safety.
Wherefore it is from this consideration that God doth say by the mouth of the prophet,
I will give them within my house, and within my walls, 'a place and a name better
than that of sons and of daughters; I will give them an everlasting name that shall
not be cut off' (Isa 56:5).
'And the building of the wall,' &c. By this word building, we are to understand
both the materials of the wall, the manner of their placing, and the instruments
that God will use for the setting up thereof. Now, to speak properly, this wall being
the Lord Jesus Christ himself in his precious merits, benefits, and offices, the
builder hereof must needs be God himself, for he it is that hath made this Christ
for us a safeguard and defence, by making of him our wisdom, righteousness, sanctification,
and redemption, by which he doth encompass us round on every side, and that at every
moment to deliver us from the power and destruction both of sin, death, the devil,
and hell (1 Cor 1:30; Heb 11:10; 3:4).
But again, the building here spoken of is a building of this wall after the destruction
of Antichrist, and so long after Christ was sent, and made these things in his own
person, to his beloved and blessed church. Wherefore the building of this wall that
is here spoken of, it must be understood of the recovering again the purity of those
doctrines, in which the Lord Jesus, with all his benefits, is found and made ours,
for our everlasting defence and safety. For we find that the king of Babylon, who
was a type of our Antichrist, when he came up against Jerusalem, the type of our
primitive church, he brake down their city, destroyed their walls, rifled their houses,
and killed their children; whose steps, I say, our Antichrist follows to a hair,
in treading down the primitive church, corrupting her doctrines— which are her safeguard
and wall—also robbing and spoiling the houses of God, and killing his children with
a thousand calamities; turning all the heavenly frame and order of church government
into a heap of rubbish, and a confused dunghill (Psa 74:4-7).
Wherefore the building again of this wall is to be understood of the recovering,
and settling, and fastening the doctrines of Christ, as afore, in which doctrines
he in all his benefits is wrapped and held fast for ever. I say, a recovering of
them, and setting him up again in his primitive and pure glory, of being our priest,
prophet, and king in his church, and a giving unto these offices their own proper
length, breadth, height, and depth, letting them rule in all their force, glory,
and majesty, and authority, for then will be golden days, and not till then; then,
I say, when the several offices of the Lord Jesus do rule in their own nature and
largeness of authority, both in the church and in the world (Zech 9:7,8; 14:9; Rev
11:15).
Alas! this wall is yet unbuilt, the offices of the Lord Jesus do not yet shine in
that purity, nor so stand in their proper places as they shall do at the coming in
of New Jerusalem. The wall lies yet but as a heap of rubbish; the offices of the
Lord Christ are to this day by many preachers confounded, and removed to and fro,
even like loose and rolling stones. These offices, also, are by others attributed
to Antichrist, and his children of iniquity; but at this day the nations shall know
themselves to be but men, and the doctrines of Christ shall be set again in their
own places (Eze 28:2,3; 2 Thess 2:4). Now shall every going into this city, and every
going out thereof, stand where it ought; and now shall every tower and fortress on
this wall be placed as in the days of old; which towers and fortresses are the glorious
names and attributes of the Father and Christ; for the name of the Lord is a strong
tower, the righteous flee into it, and are safe. And again, thou hast been a shelter
to me, and a strong tower from the enemy. Wherefore now, I say, shall the name of
God, as Lord of all, and Father of his church, with the names of the Son, as Head,
Saviour, and King of kings, be as the bulwarks to this city (Cant 1:10), to which
shall be added all the promises, consolations, encouragements, &c., in the blessed
book of God, out of which this city continually shall suck the milk and nourishment
of the unsearchable grace of God to them (1 Peter 2:1,2). To all which shall be added
many new pieces of timber in the wall, for so it was in the type at the rebuilding
of the city (Neh 2:8).
By which new pieces I gather, that the special providence of God, and his protection,
shall be at this day so fastened in this wall for the complete delivering of this
city, both from hell and earth, that she shall stand in full force, safety, and peace,
even till the heavens and the earth shall be no more. Now, when this wall is thus
set up, even every truth and office of Christ in its own true natural force, about
this city, and when God, in his special and most endeared affections, shall engage
himself, even everlastingly, to keep this city safe from all storms and tempests,
and trouble, and sorrow, then shall these citizens, as a sign of their conquest both
of hell and the world, even set up their banners on the several towers of this wall,
and the standards that belong to the tribes thereof; then, I say, 'we will rejoice
in thy salvation,' O Lord, 'and in the name of our God will we set up our banners'
(Psa 20:5). And then shall the inhabitants of the world both wondering and tremblingly
say, 'Who is she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the
sun, and terrible as an army with banners?' (Cant 6:10). O the names of God, of Christ,
of his offices, and the power of his grace and promises! How will they shine? In
what glory will they appear? They will be even as a wall of fire round about Jerusalem;
and will not be, as now, in the mind and thought of the people as the white of an
egg in the mouth, without taste; but shall be, and appear in their own brightness,
sweetness, and grace. 'For how great is his goodness, and how great is his beauty?
corn shall make the young men cheerful, and new wine the maids' (Zech 9:10). 'In
that day thou shalt say, O Lord, I will praise thee; though thou wast angry with
me, thine anger is turned away, and thou comfortest me. Behold, God is my salvation;
I will trust and not be afraid; for the Lord JEHOVAH is my strength, and my song,
he also is become my salvation' (Isa 12:1,2).
For the workman, I am sure, God is the principal, as I said before; but yet he will
do it by instruments, through the guidance of his Spirit. The building of the wall
of old was of God; but so as that he did it by the hand of Nehemiah and his companions.
I do observe, in the completing of the city of Jerusalem of old, that there was first
altar-work, then temple-work, and after that the building of the wall and completing
the city. Altar-work, I say, was the first which was reared, and on which there were
offered, according to the law and holy custom, the sacrifices and offerings both
morning and evening, as every day required. 'But the foundation of the temple of
the Lord was not yet laid' (Ezra 3:1-6). These altar-men were those also that afterward
built the temple; but yet by them was first of all repaired the altar, to signify
that the first work that will be on foot at the beginning of the return of the Christians
from out of Antichristian Babylon, it will be to find out altar-work, that is, the
priestly office of Christ, and to offer by him the prayers and supplications of the
church continually (Acts 19:9). Wherefore these altar-men, or these men in their
altar-work, did figure out for us our famous and holy worthies, that before us have
risen up in their place, and shook off those relics of Antichrist that entrenched
upon the priestly office of our Lord and Saviour, even worthy Wickliff, Huss, Luther,
Melancthon, Calvin, and the blessed martyrs in Queen Mary's days, &c., with the
rest of their companions. These, in their days, were stout and valiant champions
for God according to their light, and did upon the altar of God, which is Christ
our Lord, offer up many strong cries, with groans and tears, as every day required,
for the complete recovering of the church of God; the benefit of whose offering we
have felt and enjoyed to this day; but by this the foundation of the temple was not
yet laid (Ezra 3:6).
Now after these arise another people, not another with respect to Christianity, but
with respect to further light.[14] These men, though they keep the continual
offerings upon the altar, as the other did, yet they are men also that are for temple-work;
wherefore these begin to search out the foundations of the temple of God, that they
may rear up the house, as well as build up the altar. These be they that are for
having the church a select company of visible believers, walking in the faith and
holiness of the gospel, which believers are for separating from the unconverted and
open profane, and for building up one another an holy temple in the Lord, through
the Spirit (1 Cor 12:13). I say, a temple, or house, or church, separate and distinct
from that confused heap of rubbish and carnal gospellers that everywhere, like locusts
and maggots, crawl up and down the nations (Rom 1:7; 2 Cor 6:14-16; Acts 2:40; Eph
2:21,22; 1 Cor 5:11-13). These were figured forth by Zerubbabel, Joshua, and all
the people of the land that are for working and labouring in this service of temple-work
(Haggai 1:12; 2:1-5).
Again, As there is thus altar-work and temple-work to be done by the saints when
they are coming out of spiritual Sodom and Egypt; so, at the end of these, there
will be city- work on foot also. Which city-work will chiefly consist in setting
up the wall and gates for defence, and of building themselves houses or mansions
of rest and refreshment after all their hard usage under the tyranny of the man of
sin, that son of perdition (Isa 65:19-21). Which city-work will be then completed,
when the church of Christ hath obtained a complete conquest and victory over the
world, and hath got her enemies and them that hate her, to lie at her feet, and to
lick the dust of the soles thereof (Isa 60:14). For, as I have told you already,
temple-work, yea, when that is complete in the work, yet there may be great havoc
made of the church of Christ (Rev 11:1-3). At which time also, city-work may be trampled
under the feet of the wicked and uncircumcised Gentiles; but when the city is built,
then Zion is become a stronghold, and about all her glory shall be a defence (Isa
4:5). Then she either draweth and allureth her adversaries to entreat her kindly,
and to count it their honour to be under her protection, as did the Gibeonites; or
else she breaks, and bruises, and subjects them to her by her power and authority
(Josh 9). 'The daughter of Tyre shall be there with a gift, even the rich among the
people shall entreat thy favour' (Psa 45:12).
'In the last days,' saith the prophet, 'it shall come to pass, that the mountain
of the house of the Lord shall be established in the top of the mountains, and it
shall be exalted above the hills; and people shall flow unto it. And many nations
shall come and say, - Let us go up unto the mountain of the Lord, and to the house
of the God of Jacob, and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths:
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'; that
force and power that they used formerly to destroy the church of God, now they shall
use it to do her service, even to break up the clods of the hearts of sinners, and
to prune and dress the house of God, and vineyard of Jesus Christ; 'nation shall
not lift up a sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more'; for the
word of the kingdom of peace shall bear sway. '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 4:1-3,8). This is city-work,
and as to the glory, peace, and deliverance of the church, it is the chiefest of
all other, because it is not only most excellent for concourse and multitude, but,
I say, for preservation and safety; and that not only to keep the worshippers, if
they keep their order, but to keep the order and worshippers both in order and continual
safety, that they may be for ever in the purest order. But now, though at the completing
of this wall, and the building its towers, when they are finished there will be great
peace; yet all the time that these things are doing, before they be done, let the
workmen look for opposition, taunts, underminers, and a thousand tricks for the hindrance
of it (Neh 4:1-11; 6:1-14). For the streets of the city shall be built, and the wall,
'even in troublous times' (Dan 9:25).
'And the building of the wall of it was of jasper.' Of jasper only; for as by building
is showed unto us the manner of the work, so by jasper is showed unto us the matter
itself; the matter therefore must be, JASPER, Christ only, his Word, offices, and
glorious brightness only; for indeed, whatever the special grace, protection, and
providence of God will at this day be over this city, yet it shall be every whit
of it according to Christ; that is, both of him, for him, and by him, as the fruits
and effects of his suffering, bloodshed, and merits. 'Therefore,' saith God, 'will
I divide him a portion with the great, and he shall divide the spoil with the strong;
because he hath poured out his soul unto death: and was numbered with the transgressors'
(Isa 53:12). O holiness, how will it shine both in kings and nations, when God doth
this!
[The glory of the city.]
'And the city was pure gold.' Having thus given us a discovery of the glory of the
wall, he now comes to show us the glory of the city that is within the wall. The
city, saith he, is gold, it is pure gold. This was figured out by the golden candlesticks
belonging to the tabernacle and temple among the Jews, which candlesticks did then
present unto us the worth and use of the church of Christ (Exo 25:31- 36). 'The seven
candlesticks are the seven churches,' saith the Lord Christ himself (Rev 1:20). Now
the city here spoken of is the church in her highest and greatest glory. Its state
was also figured out by the temple itself, whose beams, posts, walls, doors, and
the like, were most famously covered over with gold (2 Chron 3:5-7). It was also,
though but leanly, represented to us by the golden state of old Jerusalem in the
days of Solomon the king, in which state gold was so plentiful in the midst thereof,
that silver was nothing counted of among the citizens there in those days, but was
as common as the stones in the street of the city (2 Chron 9:13-22,27).
'And the city was pure gold.' I find by the search of the Scriptures, that there
are divers sorts of gold in the world; there is the gold of the land of Havilah (Gen
2:11); the gold of Parvaim (2 Chron 3:6); the gold of Ophir (Job 22:24); the gold
of Sheba (Psa 72:15); and the gold of Uphaz (Jer 10:9). Now seeing he saith the city
is gold, yet not distinguishing what gold, or which, we may suppose in this place
he means gold of all these sorts; and indeed it is most agreeable to this text thus
to judges. For the church at this day shall be made up of the twelve tribes that
are scattered abroad, and of the Gentile nations both far and near; who, as they
now lie, are, for ought I can learn, at as great a distance, and as remote from one
another, not only in knowledge and affections, but touching the places of their abode,
as are the golden mines out of which the gold that I spake of before is digged and
fetched. Thus shall gold, the golden saints of God, at this day be gathered out of
the several golden mines of the world, and be brought to King Solomon, the Son of
David, our Lord Jesus, to Jerusalem, with which he will build him a golden shining
city, the joy of all the world.
'And the city was pure gold.' Gold is the choice and chief of all metals, both for
worth, colour, and virtue; wherefore, when he saith, 'The city is gold,' you may
conceive how rich and shining, and virtuous[15] this city will be;
the riches of the whole world will be here, the beauty of the whole world will be
here, and the virtue of the whole world will be here; I mean spiritual riches, beauty,
and health. Wherefore the rest of the world at this day will be but as a crushed
bunch of herbs in which is no virtue; or like a furnace full of dross, out of which
the gold is taken; or like an old, crazy, and ruinous house, from which is departed
all health and happiness; and indeed much like to this is that saying of the prophet,
to wit, that at this day the whole circumference of the world that is without the
walls and privileges of this city, it shall be but like an old ruinous house, in
which dwells nothing but cormorants, bitterns, owls, ravens, dragons, satyrs, the
screech-owl, the great owl, the vulture, and the like most doleful birds. All their
princes shall be nothing, saith the prophet, and when they call their nobles to the
kingdom, none shall be there. In their very palaces shall be thorns, and nettles,
and brambles; for all among them that are princes and nobles indeed, will have packed
up, and be gone for Jerusalem (Isa 34:10-17). So that the world, I say, will be left
empty, void, and stripped both of treasure, beauty, and health, at the day of Jerusalem's
building again. But O how melancholy a forlorn, beautiless world will this be at
this day! It will be only the place of 'dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and
murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and maketh a lie' (Rev 22:15). It
will now be the very emblem of hell, as the church at this day will be the emblem
of heaven. Wherefore, as the church, as I showed you before, will be most fit for
her putting on of immortality and incorruption, so the world will at this day be
most fit to be swallowed up of the lake and bottomless gulf. All things that are
good and worth anything shall at this day be found only in the city of God. The gold
will be in Jerusalem (Zech 14:14; Rev 18).
Again, In that this city is here called by the name of gold it is to show us how
great pains, and travel, and charge the Lord Christ hath been at to get so great
a treasure together. Gold is fetched from a far country, and that with great pains,
charge, and difficulty (2 Chron 9:10). The gold wherewith King Solomon made his drinking
vessels, it cost a three years' journey to obtain it. So the saints also, those golden
vessels wherewith is made this golden city, they cost Christ a three days' travel
in the heart of the earth, even sweatingly under the wrath of God, to obtain them,
and thus to build this city with them (Luke 22:44; Mark 12:40).
Further, In that he saith this city is gold, he would have us to consider what the
state of the church was before she came into this happy condition, to wit, an afflicted,
tempted, and tried condition. Gold, as it comes from the mine, it cometh commixed
with its dust and ore; wherefore the goldsmith hath a burning furnace wherein he
having put it, doth with the fire purge and take away the dross and dust from among
the metal itself; into which furnace he puts it once, twice, thrice, and again to
the end it may at length be thoroughly cleansed and purified from its dross. Now
all this befalleth the people of God; they are thrown into the burning fiery furnace
of affliction and temptation, and there they are tried, purged, and purified (Isa
31:9). As the Lord also saith by the prophet, 'I will try them as gold is tried,
and will refine them as silver is refined' (Zech 13:9). Yea, 'I will melt them and
try them, for how shall I do for the daughter of my people' (Jer 9:7).
Lastly, When he saith this city is gold, he also thereby insinuates how invincible
and unconquerable a spirit the people of God are possessed with. Gold is a metal
so invincible and unconquerable, that no fire can consume it; it may burn it indeed,
and melt it; the dross indeed doth consume and give way to the power of the fire,
but the gold remains, and holds its ground; yea, it gets ground even of the furnace
and fire itself; for the more it is burned and melted, the more it recovers its colour,
and the more it shakes off its dross and dishonour. Just thus it is with the people
of God, and hath been so even from the beginning: the more they oppressed them, the
more they grew (Exo 1:12). The truth of which will be proved with a witness, when
God comes to set up this city Jerusalem: his church hath been now for many hundred
years in the king of Babylon's furnace; all which time she hath most gloriously endured
and withstood the heat; and at last when the fire hath done its worst against her,
behold there comes out a city of gold. A type of which was the state of the three
children, who though they were cast into the fire bound and in disgrace; yet came
out in the liberty and grace of the Son of God (Dan 3:23-26). Wherefore let her be
bold to say, even before she comes out of the fire, When I am tried, 'I shall come
forth as gold' (Job 23:10).
'And the city was PURE gold.' These words, PURE GOLD, clear up what I said already.
Pure gold, or gold upon which the fire hath done its work. The church in the fire
of persecution is like Esther in the perfuming chamber, but making fit for the presence
of the king; which fire, when it hath done its work, then she comes into his presence
in clothing all of gold (Esth 2:10). 'The king's daughter is all glorious within,
her clothing is of wrought gold.' And again, 'At thy right hand did stand the queen
in gold of Ophir' (Psa 45:9,13). Wherefore he means by pure gold, gold out of the
fire, gold on which the fire of persecution and temptation hath done its full and
complete work.
'And the city was pure gold, like unto clear glass.' By glass, in this place, we
are to understand the Word of God, as both James and Paul do testify (James 1:22-25;
2 Cor 3:18; 1 Cor 13:12). By clear glass then, we are to understand the Word in its
own nature and purity, without the corruptions and traditions of men. Wherefore,
when he saith this golden city was like unto clear glass, it is as if he had said
she is even with the Word and law of her goldsmith, in all her matters. The Word
is a golden reed, this city a golden city; and that, a golden city, taken out of
the furnace of affliction, and therefore like to the golden reed. 'And the city was
pure gold, like unto clear glass.'
[The glory of the foundations.]
Ver. 19, 20. 'And the foundations of the wall 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.'
Thus having showed us the glory of the wall, and of the city, he now comes to show
us the glory of the foundations. The foundations you know, I told you before, they
are the twelve apostles in their doctrine, or the primitive doctrine of the twelve
apostles of the Lamb.
Now the great business in this place will be to show you the garnishing of these
foundations, and also the mystery and order of the lying of the foundations, for
their glory lieth in both.
As for the garnishing of these foundations, it is, and will be at the day of New
Jerusalem, two-fold, and the first is with beautiful gifts and grace. Thus were the
apostles of old adorned, and thus shall their doctrine again be garnished. I know
that the doctrine of the twelve hath been always accompanied with goodly gifts and
grace, from the first churches quite down, that is, according to the measure of light
they appeared in, and according to the dispensations of God in the times of antichrist.
But yet the glory that this doctrine had in these latter days, I mean since the apostacy,
it was nothing in comparison of the glory and splendour that will be in them in the
day when this city is built and complete. Wherefore you find, that though all along
in antichrist's reign, the gospel of grace hath shone, and given light to the saints
and people of God in all their travels and afflictions; yet the shining of it at
that day was much opposed and eclipsed by the smoke of the bottomless pit: as he
saith, 'There arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace, and
the sun and the air were darkened by reason of the smoke of the pit' (Rev 9:2). In
which days, I say, abundance of the light, heat, and operation of the gospel was
diminished and taken off, so that but little of the power or glory of it hath been
either felt or seen from that time to this very day. This is that God spake of by
the prophet Amos, saying, 'I will cause the sun to go down at noon, and I will darken
the earth in the clear day; and I will turn your feasts into mourning, and all your
songs into lamentation; and I will bring up sackcloth upon all loins, and baldness
upon every head; and I will make it as the mourning of an only son, and the end thereof
as a bitter day.'
All which he explaineth in the next words, for 'Behold the days come, saith the Lord
God, that I will send a famine in the land, not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for
water, but of hearing the words of the Lord; and they shall wander from sea to sea,
and from the north even to the east; they shall run to and fro to seek the word of
the Lord, and shall not find it' (Amos 8:9-12). In those days Eli's sons were become
varlets (1 Sam 2:12-15). Indeed there was here and there a little child, like Samuel
in his minority, that now and then would speak most goodly things. But 'the word
of the Lord was precious in those days, there was no open vision' (1 Sam 3:1). This
is that which David in the Spirit of prophecy complaineth of, saying, 'They know
not, neither will they understand; they walk on in darkness: all the foundations
of the earth are out of course' (Psa 82:5). Thus in the days of the eclipsing of
the glory of these foundations. But now, behold, they recover their light, and put
on, as of old, their former glory, and are again garnished as in the former days.
Now will all the doctrines of the gospel spangle and sparkle; out of every text will
the ministers of God make to issue exceedingly most precious and heavenly fire; for
these stones are indeed the stones of fire (Eze 28:16). And in them is contained
that which would set the whole world on a flame with love and delight in the things
of God and another world, had but men the spirit of wisdom, and the authority of
God in their ministry, as the apostles and the primitive Christians had. Well this
doctrine of the twelve shall be again adorned with gifts and graces as in the days
of old: by which it shall also be made to shine, and to cast forth its golden rays
before the nations to their salvation. Behold, saith God, I will lay thy stones with
fair colours, that is, thy apostolical doctrines shall again be garnished as at the
first (Isa 54:11). Truth shall appear in its old and mature colours, and as such
shall be embraced, and lived and delighted in, both by Jews and Gentiles, as I have
showed.
But secondly, The twelve foundations that here you read of, they are the same with
those twelve stones that long before were set in the breastplate of judgment, in
which were engraven the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel, the
names of which tribes did comprehend the whole body of the house of their fathers
(Exo 28:16-21,29; 39:14). Now then, seeing these twelve are the same with those on
the breastplate of judgment; and seeing also, that those on the breastplate did comprehend
the whole of the twelve tribes, I conclude that for these foundations to be garnished
with all manner of precious stones, it is as much as to say, they shall be garnished
with abundance of converts; multitudes, and that of all sorts, both of Jews and Gentiles,
Moors, Tartars, Turks, and those in the utmost parts of the world, shall now be entangled
with the light and truth, with the glory and goodness of the doctrine of the twelve.
And I the rather take it thus, 1. Because, as the foundations themselves are said
to be precious stones; so also the saints in general, they go under the same names
too. As Jeremiah saith, the precious stones of the sanctuary are the precious sons
of Zion (Lam 4:1-3). As Peter also saith, in alluding to the precious stones of the
temple; the saints are lively, or living precious stones, built up a spiritual house,
&c. (1 Peter 2:5). And the foundations of the wall were garnished with all manner
of precious stones (1 Chron 29:2). That is, the doctrine of the twelve was garnished
with all manner of precious souls; that is, converted by it, by which they become
a glory and a garnishing to it. 2. I take it to be the conversion of the precious
ones of God; because that thus to understand it, is most like the phrase of the apostle
Paul himself, saying, 'What is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? Are not even
ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? For ye are our glory and
joy' (1 Thess 2:19,20). Mark, in the text he saith, The foundations were garnished
with all manner of precious stones, and here those precious stones, Paul accounts
to be those that are converted by the Word: for what is our hope, or joy, or crown?
are not even ye that have been converted by us? Ye are our joy, ye are our crown,
ye are our glory; it is with you that we shall be crowned, adorned, and garnished
in the presence of our Lord Jesus. Mark, John saith, They are garnished, Paul saith,
they are crowned; John saith, they are garnished with precious stones, and Paul saith,
they are crowned with the conversion of sinners. Thus therefore as God will lay these
stones with fair colours, so also he will lay these foundations with sapphires (Isa
54:11). That is, as he will beautify the doctrine of the twelve with its former glory,
sweetness, and authority; so he will crown and garnish it with the conversion of
many sinners. The elect are the jewels of God, and this is the day of his binding
them up, even then when the antichrist falls, and the gospel breaks out in its primitive
glory (Mal 3:16-18).
'And the foundations of the wall were garnished with all manner of precious stones.'
In these words, there are yet two things considerable.
First Consideration. That all who go to the adorning of these foundations, they must
be precious stones, not a common stone shall here be owned. And indeed what should
pebbles do among the pearls and the diamonds of New Jerusalem; or the stones of blackness
and emptiness, among the saints of light (Job 28:3). I tell you, that those which
God doth reckon the adorning-stones, they are all and every one, precious stone;
they must be all lively, glistering, and curious stones, though stones of divers
colours (1 Peter 2:5; 1 Chron 29:2). Antichrist counts anything sufficient enough
to garnish his apostles with, even the empty stones of confusion, the sinners that
have no more grace in their souls then there is sap in a post that hath been this
twenty years without either sap or water (Isa 34:11). But God will not count such
for the beauty of his word, nor for the garnishing and beautifying of the doctrine
of the twelve, they are garnished with PRECIOUS STONES.
Second Consideration. As he saith the foundations are garnished with precious stones
only, so he saith it is with ALL MANNER of precious stones: by which he would have
us understand that all saints have not the same degree either of precious grace or
gifts and virtue in them. There are some that excel and differ from the rest, even
as one star differeth from another in glory (1 Cor 14:12). Some saints, as they have
both more grace and also gifts than others; so too they are more laborious and painful
in the work of God than their fellows, and therefore he saith, ALL MANNER of precious
stones (Pro 31:29; 1 Cor 15:10,41).
[The Foundations, what they are, with their order of placing.]
Ver. 20. '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';
&c. Thus having showed you the garnishing and beautifying of the twelve foundations,
he now comes to discover the foundations themselves, with reference to their order
of placing and lying.
[The First Foundation.] Touching which order, he saith the first and bottom foundation
is a jasper.
I have hitherto said that this jasper in both the two afore- mentioned places, both
as to the light of this city, and also of the wall, it was Jesus Christ: Christ illuminating,
and Christ defending. But here the jasper is said to be one of the twelve foundations,
even one of those foundations in which are writ the names of the twelve apostles
of the Lamb, which one would think did put this jasper now into another state, even
to be a representation of one of the twelve apostles, and not of the Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ himself. To which I shall yet say, that the jasper here in the order
of the foundations, is to be understood of Christ, as well as in the other two places
in this discourse; I say it is yet to be understood of representing the Lord Jesus,
though it also doth bear the name of one of the twelve apostles of the Lamb. And
in this very thing there is an infolding mystery wrapped up and inclosed. For,
First. In that the name of an apostle is writ in this stone, and yet that this jasper
should represent Christ, it showeth unto us the agreement that is between the doctrine
of the apostles and Christ himself, to wit, that they are one and the very same;
and hence it is that the apostle saith, 'We preach Christ crucified' (1 Cor 1:23,24).
Christ in all his benefits is the very marrow, life, and sum of all their teaching.
'Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ' (1 Cor
3:11). Wherefore the doctrine of the apostles being Christ itself, no marvel though
the name of an apostle be writ upon this jasper; and again, no marvel though this
jasper go yet under that name that represents him.
Second. In that it is said the names of the twelve are in these twelve foundations,
and yet that the first of them should be the jasper, Christ; it argueth also, that
whosoever receiveth the doctrine of the twelve, they must needs with that receive
the Lord Christ himself. Receive the doctrine of the gospel, as it is held forth
by the twelve in the word, and thou canst not miss of the Lord Jesus Christ himself;
he will be found in the bottom of their doctrine. Ye 'are built upon the foundation
of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone'
(Eph 1:19,20).
Third. In that he saith in these twelve stones are the names of the twelve apostles,
and yet that the first should be the jasper, Christ; it argueth also that wherever
the doctrine of the twelve is preached, there is therewith the presence of Christ:
the presence of his Spirit to teach and enlighten the ignorant and blind hearts of
the unconverted; the presence also of his power to overcome them, and to make them
fall under the glory and truth of his heavenly word. 'Lo,' saith he, 'I am with you
alway, even unto the end of the world.' 'And they went forth and preached everywhere
the Lord working with them, and confirming the word with signs following' (Matt 28:20;
Mark 16:20).
Fourth. In that he saith the names of the twelve are in the foundations, and yet
that Christ should be one of the twelve himself; it showeth to us the union that
is between Christ and his holy people. Mark in the twelve foundations are placed
all, even all manner of precious stones. Again, in the twelve is placed the jasper,
Christ; by which we may see the nearness that is between Christ and his whole body.
'I in them, and thou in me,' saith Christ, 'that they may be made perfect in one'
(John 17:23). Christ and his saints make but one temple, one man; being but one flesh,
one nature, &c. (1 Cor 12:12).
Fifth. In that this jasper is said to be one of the foundations, and that too the
first and undermost; he showeth farther, that Christ is the foundation of them before
God, that are the foundation of him before men. The twelve do bear up Christ before
the world, as the twelve brazen oxen did hold up the molten sea in the temple (1
Kings 7:25). And Christ doth bear up the twelve before his Father, as the high priests
did carry the twelve stones on their breastplate of judgment, when they went to make
an atonement for the sins of the people, into the holiest (Exo 28:29).
Sixth. It showed us further, that though the apostles shall be adorned with the conversion
of those that they shall win to the Lord Christ; yet they will never be able to stand
under that glory and honour unless they are supported and upheld by Christ, as their
foundation. Sirs, as Christ is the strength of his people in their work for him in
this world, so he must be their strength by which they must stand under the reward
they shall have for their labour when this world is ended. And hence it is, that
the prophet saith, 'They shall hang upon him 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' (Is 22:24), and again, 'He shall build the temple
of the Lord, and he shall bear the glory' (Zech 6:13). He shall bear the glory of
our salvation from sin, preservation in the midst of all temptations, and of our
going to glory; also he shall bear the glory of our labour in the gospel, of our
gifts and abilities, of making our labour and work effectual to the saving of sinners,
'that in all things he might have the pre- eminence' (Col 1:18).
Seventh. In that the foundations are twelve, and Christ the undermost of them; it
signifieth, that all that are converted by the twelve, as they shall be for the garnishing
of the twelve, so also both the twelve, with all that they are garnished with, shall
be for garnishing of Christ. We shall stick like perarls in the crowns of the twelve
apostles, and they again with all their glory shall stick in the crown of Christ.
And hence it is that you find the four and twenty elders, which four and twenty do,
as I conceive, hold for the twelve, both in the first and second Jerusalem. I say,
hence it is that you find them take their crowns from off their heads, and cat them
down before the throne of God and of the Lamb, crying, 'Blessing, and honour, and
glory and power be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever
and ever' (Rev 4:9-11; 5:11-14).
Eighth. One thing more of this goodly jasper, and then to the rest; which thing is
this, that jasper that here you find to be the first in the twelve foundations, even
that jasper you find to be the last of all among the stones in the breastplate of
judgment (Exo 28:20). From whence you may note, 1. That Christ, as he is to be the
author, or first of our faith, so also he is to be the finisher, or last of our faith
(Heb 12:2). 2. That as he is to be the captain and leader of his people, so he is
to be the rereward and bringer up of his people (Heb 2:10; Isa 52:12). He is to go
before them to lead them the way; and to come behind them to bring them all up (Isa
58:8; Exo 14:19). 3. Again, forasmuch as he is said to be last before he is first;
that is, last in Exodus, and after that, first in the Revelation, it may be to show
us, that Christ was first to be least, lowest, and last, and then to be greatest,
highest, and first. He first humbled himself to the death, even to the shameful death
of the cross; and then was by God his Father exalted and placed above every name;
as he also himself doth witness, saying, 'Ought not Christ to have suffered these
things, and to enter into his glory?' (Luke 24:26; Phil 2:6-11).
[The other foundations.] '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,' &c.
Touching the jasper you see what I have said. Now all I have to say to the rest of
them, it is in general these three things.
First, In that the foundations are all and every one of them precious stones, it
signifieth that all the doctrines of the New Jerusalem will be only the precious
doctrine of the twelve apostles, not common stuff, not raked out of the dunghills
and muck-heaps of this world, and from among the toys of antichrist, but spiritual,
heavenly, and glorious. He that hath his word shall then speak it faithfully, for
'what is the chaff to the wheat? saith the Lord' (Jer 23:28,32).
Second, In that they are called after the names of precious stones, it signifieth
also that at that day none shall be used or put into the ministry but these that
have received spiritual and heavenly gifts from above. It is not every babbling fellow,
not those that look for their abilities from the rudiments of the world, that then
shall be of any value or account. He must be a costly stone, a stone about which
the Lord Jesus hath bestowed the cost of his heavenly abilities, even he whom the
Lord Jesus shall appear unto for that very purpose, to make him a minister. HE shall
be a minister, and none else at that day. The other shall be ashamed every one of
his vision; yea, and shall in those days be so contemptible, that their father and
their mother shall reprove them, and count them liars; yea, and shall be ready to
run them through while they are prophesying in their rough garments to deceive (Zech
13:3-5).
Third, In that these precious stones are not all of one and the same nature, but
every one of them several, and diverse one from another; it argueth that the gifts
of the apostles, and so of the ministers of the New Jerusalem, shall be differing
one from another in glory and operation; yet mark, as in these stones, so in every
one of them shall be perfect glory, according to the nature of God's working by his
Spirit; as the nature of the jasper is perfect in his kind, and the nature of the
sapphire is perfect in his. These stones, some of them are of greater light and clearness
than others; and so some of the apostles are chiefest (2 Cor 11:5). Some of these
stones, again, they are of a more fiery and burning colour than others, they being
bright also, but of a more mild brightness. Therefore some of the ministry are called
the sons of thunder, when others are styled by the name of the sons of consolation
(Mark 3:17; Acts 4:36). The gifts are differing, being diverse, their administrations
are differing, and the operations of them also are differing, though all those things
are from that one and the self-same Spirit, working in every one severally as he
pleases (Rom 12:6; 1 Cor 12:4-6). All these things will spangle in the New Jerusalem,
and carry their full breadth and sway as in the days of old.
To conclude this, in that he here saith, that the foundations of the wall are these
twelve stones, he doth it to show that now also the former ministration that was
in the apostles' days will be the same and in full force again. For their gifts of
knowledge, judgment, and authority, they are such as have to this day lain buried,
as it were with the apostles themselves. But now they shall show themselves again,
even these foundation-stones, stones that are great stones, stones of ten cubits,
and stones of eight cubits (1 Kings 7:10). Thus much of the glory of the foundations.
[The glory of the gates.]
Ver. 21. '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.' Having
thus showed us the glory of this city, wall, and foundations, he now comes to show
us the glory of the gates and of the street of the city.
'And the twelve gates are twelve pearls.' The gates, I told you before, they signify
Christ, both as he is the way to communion with the God of this city, and with the
inhabitants thereof, that so they may have a share in the privileges of the same.
I told you also then, that though he tells us exactly of the measure both of city
and wall, yet he tells us nothing of the measure of these twelve gates and goings
in thereat, and the reason is, because Christ, as he is the way to grace, he is beyond
all measure both as to fulness and freeness (Eph 3:8). And now again he puts us to
the same plunge with the unsearchable riches of the Lord Christ; for who can count
the worth of pearl as big as the gates of a city? As, indeed, when Christ himself
doth speak of the parable of the pearl in the field, he only telleth us that there
is such a one, but never valueth the worth thereof, only he saith, a pearl of great
price, and so leaveth it (Matt 13:35,36). Now, when he saith that the gates are pearls,
he thereby insinuates several things. As,
First. To show us how rich a treasure Christ Jesus our Lord is, and will be to all
those that by him shall enter in through the gates into this city, 'riches and honour
are with me,' saith he, even 'durable riches and righteousness. My fruit [or the
fruit of entering in by me] is better than gold, and my revenue than choice silver.
I lead in the way of righteousness, in the midst of the paths of judgment; that I
may cause those that love me to inherit substance, and I will fill their treasures'
(Pro 8:18-21; Eph 3:8).
Christ is rich indeed, both in his blood, resurrection, intercession, and all his
offices, together with his relations and all his benefits; all which he bestoweth
upon every one that receiveth him, and maketh them unspeakably wealthy.
Second. The pearl, as it is rich, and so worth much, so again it is beautiful and
amiable, even to take the eyes of all beholders. It hath, I say, a very sweet and
sparkling light and glory in it, enough to take the eye and affect the heart of all
those that look upon it. And thus is Christ to all that come to him, and by him to
the Father, &c. 'My beloved,' saith she, 'is white and ruddy, the chiefest among
ten thousand.' 'His mouth is most sweet, yea, he is altogether lovely' (Cant 5:10,16).
The mother of harlots had some knowledge of the beauty and glory of this stone, and
knew that it had a very taking and drawing glory in it, and therefore she gets it
for some time to adorn herself withal; she was decked with gold and precious stones
and pearls (Eze 16:17), and was therefore called 'the well-favoured harlot' (Nahum
3:4; Rev 18:4). By which means she hath drawn into her lewdness the kings and kingdom
of the world; who have in such sort been entangled with her beauty, and with her
fornication, that they have been adulterated from God and their own salvation. For
indeed she used this pearl but for to get them to drink of her fornication, that
they might drink and spew, and fall and never rise more. But now when he saith, the
gates are pearl, it is as if he had said, this woman is stript of her beauty and
delicate ornaments; the pearl is taken from her, and is set in its right place, even
to be for the gates of Jerusalem (Rev 18:12,22,23). Wherefore it is to be expected,
that many should be taken with the way of entrance into this beloved city in the
day that she shall be set up and appear in her heavenly beauty (Pro 8:35; 3:35).
The glory of that city must needs be great whose wall is jasper and gates are pearl
(1 Cor 2:9; John 17:24).
'And the twelve gates were twelve pearls.' Not pearls and other precious stones commixed,
but pearl only. To signify that Christ only can let in souls into this city, that
they may partake of the goodness and privileges thereof. It is not he and saints
together, neither is it all the saints and angels in heaven without him, he alone
'hath the key of David, and that openeth, and no man shutteth; and that shutteth,
and no man openeth' (Rev 3:7; 22:12).
Secondly, As he saith, the several gates are each of them pearls, so he saith that
every several gate was of one pearl, of one entire pearl. By which he would have
us to understand also, that as none can enter in but by Christ, so none can enter
in but by whole Christ. Christ must be helpful to thee every way, or he will be helpful
to thee no way; thou must enter in by every whit of Christ, or thou shalt enter in
by never a whit of him. Wherefore look not to have him thy Saviour, if thou take
him not for king and prophet; nay, thou shalt not have him in any one, if thou dost
not take him in every one of these. Wherefore the prophet saith, 'He shall build
the temple of the Lord [that is, by his prophetical office] - and shall sit and rule
upon his throne, and he shall be a priest upon his throne, and the counsel of peace
shall be between them both' (Zech 6:13).
[The glory of the street.]
'And the street of the city was pure gold, as it were transparent glass.' In these
words there are four things to be enquired into. First. What this street is? Second.
Why he saith not streets, but street, as of one? Third. Why this street is called
by the term of pure gold? Fourth. And why it should look like transparent glass.
For the
First, A street ordinarily is the place of common concourse, and the place of continual
open salutation, and taking acquaintance one of another; and as touching this street,
we are also to understand it of the open and common place or way of God's worship,
in which saints salute each other and acquaint themselves together; also here the
world are converted, saints built up and edified, &c. 'Wisdom crieth without;
she uttereth her voice in the streets,' saith Solomon; 'she crieth in the chief place
of concourse, in the openings of the gates; in the city she uttereth her words' (Pro
1:20,21). That is, in the public and righteous ordinances of the Lord Jesus, which
he hat ordained in his church, for men to travel and trade in,[16] for the good and wholesome
merchandize of heaven, as the men of this world do for the things thereof in the
streets and open places of their cities and places of privilege (Pro 8:1-3; 9:1-
3).
Thus it was in the figure when the city Jerusalem was built after the captivity,
as ours shall be at and after the overthrow and downfall of antichrist, for then
it is said that the people, to hear the law, were gathered together in the street,
even in the water street; there they heard the sense given, and there they were convinced
of their wickedness; also thee they received the knowledge of God's goodness to them,
and there they received power to eat the fat and drink the sweet, to eat and drink
and be merry, and to cast away sadness and fear (Neh 8). This, by way of allegory,
is called the way for the wayfaring men, even the way of holiness, over which the
unclean shall not in anywise pass. The way in which they learn to know God and themselves,
and the way of newness of life, in which every one walks that entereth in by the
gates of New Jerusalem. And it is most suitable to the matter that went before to
understand the street to be the way of God, the way of holiness and newness of life;
because as it is natural for the stranger, so soon as ever he is entered the gates
of a city, to have his feet in the streets of the city, so it is natural for the
sinner, so soon as ever he is entered into the church by Christ, to have his feet
treading in the way and paths of holiness. Wherefore it is usual in the Holy Scripture
to call the transformation of the sinner from Satan to God a holy way, and also to
admonish him that is so transformed to walk in that way, saying, Walk in the faith,
love, spirit, and newness of life, and walk in the truth, ways, statutes, and judgments
of God (Psa 86:11; 143:8; Eze 11:20; 37:24; Gal 5:25; Rom 4:12).
He that entereth not by these gates into the city, he cannot walk in newness of life;
but he that entered in by them, he cannot but walk in newness of life. The next thing
then that a man passeth into when he is entered into the New Jerusalem, is to walk
in the STREET thereof, the way of holiness, even the way in which men learn to fear
God, and to believe in and love the Lord Jesus, &c. (Eph 5:1,2; 2 John 4; Rom
6:4).
Second. Now this street or way of holiness, it is on purpose called not many, but
one, to show us the perfection of light, grace, faith, and spiritual comfort, that
the inhabitants of this city shall then enjoy. Daniel also calleth it one street,
to signify the same thing (Dan 9:25). Wherefore from hence I gather, that then all
saints shall walk—as before I have made appear—even in one street, in one way, and
in one light. It is antichrist that hath brought in all those crossings, bye-lanes,
and odd nooks, that to this day many an honest heart doth greatly lose itself in;
but at this day they shall be otherwise minded, that is, made all to savour one thing,
and to walk one way, not biting and devouring each other as now. And indeed there
is all reason it should be thus, for the street itself is but one. There is but ONE
God, ONE Lord Jesus, ONE Spirit, ONE faith, ONE baptism, even as we are also called
in ONE hope of our calling (Eph 4:5,6; Acts 2:27,32,33; Phil 1:27; Rom 15:6). Now,
therefore, when saints have the rubbish of antichristian darkness and trumpery removed,
then they shall have, as they also had of old, but one heart, one soul, one judgment,
one mind, and shall with one heart and mouth glorify God. The which also shall be
prayed for of all the saints, even of all that have received the pure language before
these things come to pass. They shall 'call upon the name of the Lord' with One lip,
'to serve him with One consent' (Zeph 3:9). O! the heavenly spiritual harmony that
will be in the city of God in those days, when the trumpeters and singers shall be
as one, to make one sound, then the house shall be filled with a cloud' (2 Chron
5:13).[17]
Third. When he saith that the street of the city was pure gold, he alludes to the
floor in Solomon's temple, which was overlaid with gold (1 Kings 6:30). He alludes
to Solomon's chariot also, whose bottom was paved with love, and overlaid with gold
(Can 3:10). By the floor of the temple, we are to understand the way of holiness;
and by the chariot of Solomon, the triumphant glory of that way. Again, in that he
saith this street is gold, he would have us to understand the worth and treasure
that is laid up in the ways of God, and of a truly gracious heart. First for the
worth and treasure that is laid up in the ways of God. They beget light (Psa 119:130),
they change the heart, they lead from death, the devil, and hell, to life, God, and
the kingdom of heaven (Psa 119:9; Pro 2). In them God walks, and those that walk
there also are sure to meet with him (Isa 64:5). O this way, it is the way which
'no fowl knoweth, and which the vulture's eye hath not seen'; 'It cannot be gotten
for gold, neither shall silver be weighed for the price thereof. - The gold and the
crystal cannot equal it; and the exchange of it shall not be for jewels of fine gold.
No mention shall be made of coral or of pearls; for the price of wisdom is above
rubies' (Job 28:7,15- 18,28). All the ways of God they are pleasantness, and all
his paths are peace, and ought to be preferred before our necessary food (Pro 3:17).
Again, as the ways of God are thus rich, and so far above the gold and rubies of
the world, so also is that sanctified and gracious heart, without which no man can
walk in this golden street. It is not every clown with his clumping dirty shoes that
is admitted into kings' privy-chambers and private palaces; neither doth, or will
God, at the day of New Jerusalem, suffer any to trace about this golden street, but
such as have golden feet, and that beautified with goodly shoes. For as for this
street, all that walk in it, they must be golden men, with golden hearts, and with
graces that are 'much more precious than of gold that perisheth' (Cant 7:1; 1 Peter
1:7; Rev 3:18).
Further, in that he saith this street is gold, 'pure gold,' he giveth us to understand
also what great delight and pleasure the Lord's people will take in his ways and
ordinances in that day. There will not then be that backwardness to do good, and
to receive God, as there is in these more dry and empty days of the gospel. As gold
is pleasing to the covetous man and worldling, so shall the ways of God be to the
saints and godly at that day. Now we have strong corruptions and weak grace, but
then we shall have strong grace and weak withered corruptions. You that are spiritual,
you know what an high and goodly lifting up of heart one small gale of the good Spirit
of God will make in your souls, how it will make your lusts to languish, and your
souls to love, and take pleasure in the Lord that saves you. You know, I say, what
a flame of love, and bowels, and compassion, and self-denial, and endeared affection
to God and all saints, it will beget in the soul. O! it is good to be here, saith
the gracious heart. Well, and so thou shalt be always, if thou live to see New Jerusalem
settled in her own place (Isa 65:17-25).
Fourth. 'And the street of the city was pure gold, as it were transparent glass.'
Mark, a street of gold like glass, a street of gold, as it were transparent glass.
By glass here, as also in verse 18, we are to understand the Word (James 1:23- 25).
Wherefore, when he saith the street, the golden street, was like unto glass, he means,that
the walking and carriage of the saints at this day shall be like unto, or according
to, the Word, the life of the saints answering the life of the Word and rule of the
Lord Christ.
Again, in that he doth add to glass the word transparent, he would have us to understand
thereby these two things.
1. That the walking and ways of holiness of saints shall be more in the power and
spirit of the Word, than all along in the reign of Antichrist they have been. For
transparent glass, it is the most clear and excellent glass, and goeth as far beyond
other sorts of glass, as he that walks in the spirit and power of the commandment
goes beyond him that only walks in the letter and outward word thereof. Alas, the
churches of Christ, at their firs assembling, will be like the coming together of
Ezekiel's bones, clothed much with flesh and sinews, but greatly void of spirit and
life (Eze 37:7,8). Wherefore the spirit, power, holiness, and majesty that now will
appear in the church, it will greatly transcend and go beyond the spirit, power,
and holiness that hath accompanied her in former days. Then shall the sun be ashamed,
and the moon confounded, when the Lord shall reign in Mount Zion, &c. (Isa 24:23).
Then shall the sun be ashamed, that is, then shall that little light and understanding
of the Word, that hath been in the church in the days when a third part of the glory
of the gospel was hid by the smoke of the pit, be, as it were, laid aside and be
useless (Rev 8:12; 9:2). Every saint shall be under the light of a sun that shines
seven-fold brighter, even as the light of seven days. We see it is so in some measure
at this day; what light, and with what clearness do the saints in this day see the
things pertaining to the kingdom of God, beyond what the holy and goodly martyrs
and saints did in the days that were before us; Huss, Bilney, Ridley, Hooper, Cranmer,
with their brethren, if they were now in the world, would cry out and say, Our light
and knowledge of the word of the Testament of Christ was much inferior to the light
that at this day is broken forth, and that will yet daily, in despite of men and
devils, display its rays and beams amongst the sons of men![18] When the children
of Israel were to depart the land of Egypt, the Lord made known himself to them otherwise
than ever he made known himself either to Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob, their fathers
(Exo 6:3). The book also, at the recovering the church from under Antichrist, is
to be unlocked and unsealed gradually, first one seal and afterwards another, and
last of all the seventh, before which time the book will never quite be opened (Rev
5; 6). According to that of the angel, 'Go thy way, Daniel; for the words are closed
up, and sealed till the time of the end' (Dan 12:9). In which time (which is the
time of New Jerusalem) they shall be opened, and men shall consider it perfectly
(Jer 30:24; 23:20). Wherefore,
2. It must needs be that the church return to her old and primitive love. For what
is the cause of the want of love to Christ and one another now, but our want of light
in the things, mysteries, and privileges of the glorious gospel of the Son of God?
Wherefore this being come, then love will reign, and have her perfect work among
the godly. Love is the very quintessence of all the graces of the gospel, and is
as transparent to them; 'the greatest of these is charity' (1 Cor 13:13). It is the
'fulfilling of the law,' 'the bond of perfectness,' and the most 'excellent way'
(1 Cor 12:31; Rom 13:10; 1 Cor 16:14; Col 3:14). Wherefore the Holy Ghost doth mean,
by this word transparent glass, that the height of light, and the height of love,
will be found in this city; all their things shall be done without confused smoke
and darkness, and also without spiritual pride and desire of vain-glory: then shall
they indeed do all their things in charity, and in the feeling bowels and fellowship
of the gospel. 'Then shall the offering of Judah and Jerusalem be pleasant unto the
Lord, as in the days of old, and as in former years' (Mal 3:4).
Alas! though now through grace the saints of God have attained to more light and
knowledge in the mysteries of the kingdom of God than heretofore they had, yet their
light is far inferior to that which will be when this city is built. Our spiritual
union and fellowship in the very bowels of the grace and gospel of the Lord Jesus
Christ also is yet greatly defective. It is said that 'no man was able to enter into
the temple' of God, 'till the seven plagues of the seven angels were fulfilled' (Rev
15:8). But when the seven last plagues are spent, and when all the adversaries of
the church, which caused terror in the land of the living, shall be laid with the
uncircumcised in the pit, then look for golden days, and not till then (Eze 32:18).
Then shall this golden street be finished; that is, then shall the light, faith,
love, and holiness of the gospel be walked in and embraced in a transparent and transcending
way. 'He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root; Israel shall blossom and
bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit' (Isa 27:6).
[The city has no temple.]
Ver. 22. 'And I saw no temple therein; for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are
the temple of it.' These words do, in my present light, point at the end of the days
of this Jerusalem here in this world: and in so doing they signify to us, that when
she is built, she shall stand and continue in this her glorious state afore-mentioned
even until that glory be swallowed up of that which doth excel. That they do point
at the end of her day in this world, I do gather from these particulars:—
First. Because they are the last words of the description of her glory,—that is,
these and the words ensuing, which is but one and the same continued speech; and
it is easy to conclude that John, in this description of this city, doth, from first
to last, even from the first appearing of her as she cometh out of Babylon till she
be perfect in glory, give us the relation of it. First, I say, showing us her descending,
then her building, and afterward the glory of that building; at the end of which
also he showeth to us with what glory he will crown this glory, even by swallowing
of her up with a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.
Second. Because in these words he doth absolutely cut off all and every whit of her
outward and external glory; that is, as to outward ordinances and temple-worship,
which yet was to be most famous for a long time in this new and goodly city; which
he verifies in the eleventh chapter of this prophecy, which chapter is a summary
collecting of the church in her fall and rise under Antichrist, which church there
in her rise is this city here in her glory in this world. He tells us there, I say,
that when the kingdoms of this world were become the kingdoms of the Lord, and of
his Christ, that 'then the temple of God was opened in heaven'; that is, temple-worship
under the gospel recovered into its former and primitive state and purity, in which
it was before the coming in of the man of sin (Rev 11:15-19, compared with 15:8).
Which temple he here utterly shutteth out, saying, 'I saw no temple therein'; in
the room of which he setteth the presence of the Lord Jesus, and God his Father,
making them to stand and be in the room of temple and gospel-worship, in that manner
as it is used while we here live in the flesh. 'For the Lord God Almighty and the
Lamb are the temple of it.' It is true, the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the
temple of this church in her lowest condition, therefore much more when she is brought
into the condition that she is in at her rebuilding; but yet, neither in her low
estate, nor yet in her highest, is it proper to say, that so long as she is in this
world, God will be a temple to her, in opposition to her temple and gospel- worship,
in outward and New Testament administrations. Wherefore when he saith He 'saw no
temple therein,' and that from this reason, because 'the Lord God Almighty and the
Lamb are the temple of it'; he must needs aim at a state to which the church cannot
attain until her Lord comes. For then will that which is perfect be come, and that
which is in part be done away (1 Cor 13:10).
Now that the temple in this place excluded, can signify nothing else but the outward
orderly way of God's worship, which the saints ought with conscience, in faith, to
be found in till their Lord comes, consider that our New Testament doth use the word
'temple' three several ways: 1. For the outward order and worship or discipline of
the Gospel (Rev 11:1-3). 2. For the body of Christ, which is his church, &c.
3. And lastly, For the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb, which here are said to be
the temple of this city.
Now then, when he saith he saw 'No temple therein,' he cannot exclude the Lord God
Almighty and the Lamb, for they are here said to be 'the temple of it.' Neither can
he shut out the church, which is the body of Christ, for that is the city itself;
yea, and the church shall be God's temple, and God and Christ the temple of the church
for ever and ever He must therefore by this word 'no temple,' exclude only the outward
way of gospel-worship, in which the saints in the times of the New Testament both
meet and edify each other, and also meet their God, and are blessed and refreshed
by him. Again, that this outward gospel- worship should be laid aside while the church
is in this world, before her Lord doth come to be enjoyed by her, as touching his
personal presence; it looks too like ranting opinions, and contradiction to Scripture,
for me to believe (1 Cor 11:26). For when he comes, but not till then, shall these
things be laid aside.
Besides, that which yet confirms me more fully in this opinion, is because herein
this New Jerusalem doth most exactly answer the city and temple, which was built
after the captivity; which city and temple being once built, it stood till Christ
our Lord did visit them in his own personal coming the first time; as the prophets
also said it should. 'The Lord, whom ye seek,' saith one, 'shall suddenly come to
his temple, even the messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in; behold, he shall
come, saith the Lord of Hosts' (Mal 3:1). And again, 'I will shake all nations, and
the desire of all nations shall come; and I will fill this house with glory, saith
the Lord of Hosts.' Wherefore 'the glory of this latter house shall be greater than
[that] of the former, saith the Lord of Hosts: and in this place will I give peace,
saith the Lord of Hosts' (Hagg 2:7,9).
Now observe, that from the time of the building of the second temple to the coming
of Christ, the worship of the temple order was to be by all most devoutly and continually
observed. But when the Lord Jesus was come, and had established his own more honourable
and New Testament dispensation, then all the former temple-worship fell to the ground,
and became, with all the instruments of worship that there unto belonged, null and
void. Yea, and it was a derogation to his gospel to offer to uphold that former way
of worship, after he had by his own personal presence and Spirit brought in that
other dispensation. All which, I say, will be answered by our second and New Testament
New Jerusalem. For as the Old Jerusalem was built after the Jews were come out of
literal Babylon, so is our New Jerusalem built after our coming out of the antichristian
oppression of spiritual Babylon. Again, as that city did after she was built continue
and retain her temple-worship, until the personal appearing of Christ the first time,
so New Jerusalem shall retain and hold her outward New Testament worship till HE
comes in person the second time. After all which, as the second temple was swallowed
up of a more heavenly and spiritual dispensation by the personal presence of Christ,
so shall also the New Jerusalem temple- worship be swallowed up by the glory of the
appearing of the person of Christ the second time; as Paul saith, for he speaks in
the person of Christ, 'Till I come, give attendance to reading, to exhortation, to
doctrine,' &c. (1 Tim 4:13).
Thus then, when this holy city doth once again appear upon the stage, and in her
own situation, and when she hath been showed in the attire of a queen before the
face of all nations, and their kings; and when she hath by the glory of the light
of her New Testament temple, gathered, as with a net, the number of God's elect;
then she is taken into her husband's privy chamber, where she and he alone shall
be in that blessed fellowship and communion that shall not again be once eclipsed,
or in the least interrupted to eternity.
Thus have I showed you my present light into this portion of the Holy Scripture.
If any can give me further, I hope I shall not refuse it. But as yet, methinks this
should be the genuine sense of this place, and is the very track of John himself.
For after he had seen the wall for present safety, the foundations for continuation,
the gates for entrance, and the like, then he comes to tell us of the glory of all,
and of the street itself at last; which indeed is the last and end of all the order
of God, and to continue till an end be put to it by mortality's being swallowed up
of life. As is yet more fully showed you in the next verse of this description.
[The city needs not the light of sun or moon.]
Ver. 23. '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 city had no need of the sun.' That is, after temple- worship is over: this
verse is added therefore for further clearing up and illustrating of that which he
said before. There he tells us this city had 'no temple,' and here he tells us she
needed neither the light of the sun or moon. There he said, 'The Lord God Almighty
and the Lamb are the temple of it'; and here he saith, they are the light thereof.
The substance of which, in the language of the Holy Ghost, is this: the reason why
temple-worship is now gone and over, it is because there is now no need in this city
of the light of the sun and the moon; and the reason why she hath now no need of
them, is because the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are to it instead of both temple
and light. 'For the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are the temple of it.' 'For the
glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof.' Whereby we may note,
that though the light in which she descended, being the purity of temple- worship,
was glorious, yet this city shall, when she is once built, so advance from glory
to glory, that at the last she shall be more happy without the help of that light,
without which she had been for ever unbuilt, than she was by it in the midst of the
fulness of it.
'And the city had no need of the sun,' &c. The word sun is in Scripture taken
divers ways; sometimes for the true and natural sun in the firmament; sometimes again
for persecution, and the rage of the enemy, &c. (Josh 10:12; Matt 13:6). But
I take 'sun' here not to be any of these, but for the good and pure word of the gospel
of Christ, unfolded, opened, and explained by the servants of Christ; which sun is
the same that before you find to be darkened by the Antichristian fog and mist, which
was darkened, I say, even to a third part of it (Rev 8:12; 9:2). This sun, or word
of the gospel, Paul saith it is shadowed forth even by that which shineth in the
firmament of heaven, because as that by its light and shining, giveth to those that
have eyes, to see the glory and excellency of this world, so by the shining and light
of the gospel is given 'the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face
of Jesus Christ,' and a view of the excellency of the things of the world to come
(2 Cor 4:3-6). Now, I say, though while the church is in this world, and on this
side the state of glory, she cannot live and flourish without the shining of this
sun, but would be lifeless and lightless, and without all heat and comfort— for it
is the entrance of the law that giveth light here, and that lighteneth the eyes,
'making wise the simple' (Psa 19:7,8; 119:130)—yet at the day of the coming of her
Lord in person she shall see far more clearly without the thus shining of the sun
than ever she did or could see with and by it.
'And the city had no need of the sun.' For when by the light of it the whole body
of the elect have found out the way to this city, and when they have also by this
light accomplished and fulfilled all their work; yea, when the Lord himself is come,
and doth immediately communicate far more glorious light to this city without it
than ever he did by it; what need is there then of the light of this sun? for that
is to be of use but for the time present, even until the whole of the body of the
Lord Jesus is come to the perfect measure, even 'to the measure of the stature of
the fulness of Christ' (Eph 4:10-12). So then, when the body of Christ is in every
sense completed in this life by the light of the sunshine of his holy gospel, what
need of this sun? And hence it is that the word of the gospel is called 'the word
of reconciliation,' 'the word of faith,' and 'the words of this life' (2 Cor 5:19;
Rom 10:8; Acts 5:20). Wherefore, I say, it ceaseth when there is no more to be reconciled,
and when faith in all is perfected, and when this life is put an end unto by the
coming in of another. For 'when that which is perfect is come, then that which is
in part shall be done away' (1 Cor 13:8-10).
The ministers of the gospel are of use so long as there is either elect to be converted,
or any converted soul to be perfected by that measure of perfection that God hath
appointed on this side glory; but when this work is done, their ministry ceaseth.
Wherefore, though like the widow's sons, they are busy to borrow vessels for the
oil so long as it is running, and emptying itself out of the great and principal
barrel; yet when it ceaseth, as it will do, when there are no more vessels to be
found, then let them sit down as they, and receive of the fruits of their labour,
for the reward of their work is then only to be enjoyed by them (2 Kings 4:1-6).
'And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon to shine in it.' This word
moon also, as well as that of the sun, is to be taken divers ways in the Scriptures
of truth; sometimes for the natural one, sometimes for the world and persecutors,
&c. (Josh 10:13; Rev 12:1; Psa 121:6). But moon here is to be taken for the church
of God, with reference to her life, conversation, duties, and exemplary behaviour,
in which she is conversant on this side glory; according to that of the Song, 'Who
is she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and
terrible as an army with banners?' (Cant 6:10). When he saith, then, that at this
day there shall be here no need of the shining light of the moon, he means that this
city at this day, in the state she is in when she hath the person of the Lamb in
her, then she shall have no need of the growth of Christianity, for they shall be
all perfect; nor no need of mortification, for there shall be no sin. They shall
not need now, as in time past, to exhort and encourage one another to stick fast
to the promise, for they shall be swallowed up of life and open vision (2 Cor 5:4).
Here shall be no need either of prayer, of repentance, of faith, or of good works,
as afore. 'And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon to shine in it.'
Now, I say, the Holy Ghost is pleased to bring in here the shining virtues of the
church under the notion of a shining moon, because, as the church herself is compared
to the moon, so her virtues are as naturally compared to a shining light; as Christ
saith, 'Let our light so shine' (Matt 5:16); and again, 'Let your loins be girded
about, and your lights burning' (Luke 12:35; Phil 2:15). For, indeed, while we are
here, that church and congregation of the Lord doth most shine, and most send forth
the golden rays and pleasant beams of Christianity, that is most in the exercise
of the afore-mentioned virtues. Take away the moon, and the night is doubtful; or
though the moon be in the firmament, if she hath lost her light, the night is not
thereby made more comfortable. And thus, I say, it is first with the world, where
here there is no church to shine, or where there is a church that doth not so shine
that others may see and be lighted. For while the day of time doth last, even the
world itself hath need of the shining of the church; but at this day this time will
be no longer, because the day of eternity will break, and by that means cause the
world that now is, even the world of the ungodly, to cease to have a being here any
longer. Therefore now no need of the moon, or of the light thereof, to shine before
that which is not.[19]
Second. Again, as the church is in her light before men as the moon is in her light
in the night to the world, so, as I said before, this city which is called also heaven,
she, even she, shall have no need of these things, for she shall be taken up in open
vision, and shall be completely delivered from all imperfection; she shall not need
now the light of her children to provoke her and to stir her up to this or the other
act of holiness; all shall be done, all shall be complete, the Lord himself is come.
Indeed, while Christ is absent as touching his person, and while the work of God
is not yet completely done in the church, there will be need both of the light of
sun and moon, but when the work is done, and he come, then these things will be out
of use. Thus 'the path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and
more unto the perfect day' (Pro 4:18).
'For the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof.' This is
rendered as the reason why at this day both the light of the sun and moon are needless;
it is because 'the glory of God did lighten it,' and because 'the Lamb is the light
thereof.' Now the glory of God must be understood in this place, not of that glory
that doth attend the church in this world, for that glory doth attend the church
upon the account of her purity of worship, of temple-worship, and doth either abide
on her, or withdraw itself, according to her exact observing the rule, or declining
from it, as I have showed you in the beginning of this discourse (see the exposition
of the 11th verse). But the glory that here you read of, it is a glory that supplieth
this city without those ordinances; yea, therefore, those ordinances, as the temple
and the light of the sun and moon, do cease because of the glory of this glory that
now is come into this city. 'The city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon
to shine in it,' mark, 'for the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the
light thereof.'
Wherefore, I say, this glory that now he speaks of, it is the glory that shall possess
this city at the end of her glory in this world; wherefore, as saith the Holy Ghost
by Isaiah the prophet, from this day forward, 'The sun shall be no more thy light
by day, neither for brightness shall the moon give light unto thee; but the Lord
shall be unto thee an everlasting light, and thy God thy glory' (Isa 60:19).
'For the glory of God did lighten it,' &c. Thus it was at the finishing of the
tabernacle in the wilderness, and of the temple at Jerusalem; both which were figures,
in their finishing, of the finishing of the state of the church in this world; and
it is said of them, that in the day when they in all things were accomplished, according
to the fashion that was revealed before concerning their order and accomplishment,
that then the glory of God so appeared upon them, that neither Moses nor Aaron was
able to enter in, or to stand therein, because of the cloud, and of the glory of
the Lord that at that time filled the house (Exo 40:33,34; 1 Kings 8:10,11). Thus
you see this city descends in one measure of glory, and is consummate in another
measure of glory. The glory of the Lord was upon the mount Sinai while the pattern
of the tabernacle was giving, but it rested on the tabernacle when the work thereof
was finished; to signify, I say, that the glory of God will rest in his ordinances,
and in his church by them, so long as ordinances are in use; but when they are needless,
then it will rest in the church without them, and that more gloriously than ever
it therein did rest by them.
'For the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof.' Mark, though
now there shall be no need of temple, sun, or moon, yet Christ the Lamb, or the Man
who was offered in sacrifice for our redemption, shall be of use and benefit; 'for
the glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof.' Wherefore, all
that we who are the saved shall enjoy of glory and sweetness in another world, though
we shall not enjoy it from God through Christ, by and in the ordinances, yet we shall
enjoy it through Christ the Lamb without them; 'for the Lamb is the light of it.'
by this word Lamb, he would have us understand that when we are in glory, the blood,
death, and bloody conquest that the man Christ did get over our infernal enemies,
will be of eternal use to us; because that benefit of Christ shall not only for ever
be the foundation of our eternal felicity, but the burden of our song of glory in
all our raptures among the angels (Rev 5:9). It will be the blood, the blood, the
redeeming blood of the Lamb. 'Blessing, and honour, and glory, and power be unto
him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the LAMB for ever and ever' (Rev 5:13).
It is he in whom will be found the seven eyes, the seven spirits of God, in whose
light we shall see the heights and depths of those springs and everlasting foundations
and depths of glory for ever; and, indeed, the conceit of the contrary is foolish
(Zech 3:9; Rev 5:6). Is not Christ the head, and we the members? and do not the members
receive their whole light, guidance, and wisdom from it? Is not he also the price,
the ground, and bottom of our happiness, both in this world and that which is to
come? And is it possible it should be forgotten, or that, by it, our joy, light,
and heaven should not be made the sweeter to all eternity? Our soul is now bound
up in him, as in a bundle of life (1 Sam 25:29). And when we come thither, he is
still the Christ, our life; and it is by our being where he is that we shall behold
his glory and our glory, because he is glorified (Col 3:3,4; John 17:24). 'For the
glory of God did lighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof.' As he said, 'Ye
now therefore have sorrow; but I will see you again, and your heart shall rejoice,
and your joy no man taketh from you' (John 16:22).
Thus much of this city, her descending, her fashion, her glory, and of her wading
through glory, from glory to glory.
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