| |
Historical
Types
HISTORICAL TYPES
A type, as already shown, may either be an
institution or an action. Types are of two classes -
ritual and historical. Thus far in our consideration of
types we have dealt almost exclusively with the former
class. Now we shall undertake a brief discussion of
historical types. It is not unreasonable that God should
choose to order events in such a manner that they as well
as the institutions he ordained should foreshadow the
grand truths of true religion.
But let us remember that a real type must not only
resemble a particular Christian truth, but must have been designed
to resemble it at the time of its institution or
occurrence. He whose controlling hand governs all things
is well able to so order events of history that they will
typify great truths of the gospel. That he has done so is
clear from the plain statements of Scripture and also from
the nature of certain historical facts that bear all the
marks of types. But caution is needed in determining which
of these events are typical and which merely possess a
superficial resemblance. Because of lack of clearness on
this point some of these events have more value as illustrations
of Christian truths than as proofs of them. But the
opposite danger must also be avoided of laying down a rule
for determining types, as did Bishop Marsh, that excludes
many of the real types that God gave. The reason many
historical happenings are so remarkably parallel with
Christian truth is because God caused them to occur as
they did with that very Christian truth in view when they
took place. They are parallel because designed to be
parallel.
EXAMPLES OF HISTORICAL TYPES
The brazen serpent as a means of salvation for the
Israelites was a most remarkable type of Christ as a means
of our salvation through him. The Israelites murmured
against Moses and God, and as a punishment God sent fiery
serpents among them to bite them, so that many of the
people died. When, at the request of the people, Moses
prayed for their deliverance, he was told to make a brazen
serpent and place it upon a pole so that those looking
upon it might live and not die. Jesus said, "As Moses
lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the
Son of man be lifted up" (John 3:14). Jesus did not
here merely find an apt illustration of his means of
saving men by dying on the cross; it was a remarkable
divinely ordained type of salvation from death and the
punishment for sin by a God-appointed means. As they
looked at that serpent and lived, so we believe on Christ
and live. It very beautifully set forth salvation through
Christ. We need not suppose that God ordained that the
Israelites should sin that he might present a type of New
Testament salvation; but when they did sin he took
advantage of the occasion to give this type. So usually
the historical types seem to be incidental; but that is
God's ordinary method of doing things. The institution of
the Lord's Supper seemed at the time to be incidental.
The salvation of Noah and his family in the ark at the
time of the deluge was another remarkable type of our
salvation through Christ. Of course there was a more
immediate and practical purpose in the preservation of
Noah and his family from drowning; but that was true in
the case of the brazen serpent, and practically every
other typical institution or event. The flood was a divine
judgment on sinners. As Noah, a just man, accepted the
divinely appointed means of salvation by entering into the
ark, so we who are in Christ are saved from the penalty of
sin. In 1 Pet. 3:21 the apostle describes that salvation
of Noah as well as Christian baptism as being a figure of
the salvation we have in Christ. Other historical types,
such as the offering of Isaac, the suffering of Joseph in
Egypt that his people might be saved, cannot be described
for lack of space.
But probably the most important point to be noticed in
this class of types is that the people of Israel
themselves were a type. We have already shown that their
worship in its various aspects was typical. It is just as
clear that the nation itself as God's special people was
typical of the true people of God. It was literal Israel,
but Paul describes Christian believers as spiritual
Israel. Except for the spiritual Israel which was to be
and whom God foreknew there had been no literal Israel.
Literal Israel was divinely ordained to resemble
spiritual Israel. The literal seed of Abraham typified the
spiritual seed of Abraham, and some of the promises made
to his seed were not fulfilled at all to his literal seed,
but, as Paul teaches in Romans 4, only to his spiritual
children. Literal Israel as a type of spiritual Israel is
constantly set forth by Paul in the Roman and Galatian
letters. And with the fact before us of the nation of
Israel as a type we need not be surprised to find that
some of the great facts of the history of literal Israel
also had typical significance.
JOURNEY FROM EGYPT TO CANAAN
Typologists commonly allow that Israel's
extraordinary, divinely directed journey from Egypt to
Canaan, full of miraculous dealings, during which God led
them by a pillar of cloud by day and a pillar of fire by
night, was typical of the Christian experience. Egypt, the
land of oppression, well typified the state of sin. The
bitter bondage was like the slavery of sin, in which
sinners are held and compelled by sinful tendencies within
to serve sin and bear the consequences even though they
should like to do otherwise. Pharoah was like Satan, who
strives so hard to keep people in bondage and from obeying
God. Moses was like Christ, who through the Holy Spirit
leads men out of sin.
The crossing of the Red Sea was a beautiful type of
salvation from sin. Deliverance from sin's bondage, like
theirs, is not possible by human means. Like them, the
sinner trying to get out of sin finds himself helpless and
hopeless except as God is pleased to aid him. As the
crossing of the Red Sea was by a miracle of God's power,
so the conversion of every sinner who is saved is a
miracle. When the Red Sea was crossed, and the people
found themselves free, they sang the "Song of
Moses," a song of praise for salvation and
deliverance. Even this seems to typify the joy which,
times without number, has come to the newly converted soul
with the first realization of freedom from the bondage of
sin.
The Israelites seemed to think, when once out of Egypt,
as some newly converted Christians think today - that it
will be all singing, and no trouble or trials. But their
very next move brought them to the bitter waters of Marah,
of which they could not drink. The circumstance
discouraged them greatly. They doubtless felt much as does
the new convert when he meets his first adversity in the
service of God. But He who made the waters of Marah sweet
for Israel through Moses' faith and obedience to God's
command makes the bitter sweet for us.
The next important type was the manna. God sent the
people food from heaven. This was a remarkable miracle. It
meets every requirement of a true type. Jesus makes it to
represent the "true bread from heaven" (John
6:31-51), which is himself. "I am the living bread
which came down from heaven: if any man eat of this bread,
he shall live forever." As God gave Christ for the
life of the soul, so he gave the manna for the life of the
body. As the manna was given daily, and could not be kept
until the morrow, so we must continually partake of the
life of Christ. Our souls must be divinely fed daily with
food fresh from God. The manna was enough for every man.
If one gathered much, he had but an omer full when
measured. If he gathered little, he had the same amount.
It was enough for all and alike to all, as God's gracious
provision for the sustenance of our souls.
Shortly after the manna was given, the people found
themselves without water, at Rephidim. Again through
prayer and obedience to God gave them water out of the
smitten rock, in Horeb. Paul makes this rock
representative of Christ (1 Cor. 10:4). Christ gives the
water of which if one drink he shall never thirst. He it
was who said, "If any man thirst, let him come unto
me, and drink." His blood "is drink
indeed." Christ both gives life to and satisfies
every want of the redeemed soul.
The battle with Amalek in Rephidim is a good
illustration of the Christian's spiritual conflicts. The
victory was gained by the holding-up of Moses' hands. That
act on Moses' part symbolized prayer to God. Through
prayer our victories are won today.
The crossing of the River Jordan into the promised land
was another highly miraculous event which evidently was
full of typical meaning. No other reason can well be given
for God's leading the Israelites to the eastward of the
Dead Sea and the Jordan that they might enter by crossing
the River than that Christian truth might the better be
typified. But what does this crossing of the Jordan
typify? The answer to this question can be known only by
first learning what Canaan itself typified. Interpreters
have often regarded it as being typical of heaven. So it
has been represented in both sermon and song. But with
this as the holiest place of the tabernacle, we believe
the Scriptures clearly show that it does not typify heaven
as a place, but the fullness of Christian experience in
this life.
In the third and fourth chapters of the Epistle of
Hebrews the inspired writer gives a discussion of this
very matter. God said of those who did not believe that
"they shall not enter into my rest." That rest
was the rest from journeying, or the settled home they
should have in Canaan, according to Heb. 3:8-19 and
4:1-11. Next he shows that another rest than that in
literal Canaan remains for the people of God, by quoting
from David, who promises another rest than that in literal
Canaan (chap. 4:7). Therefore the writer to the Hebrews
says that Joshua, who led the Israelites into Canaan,
failed to give them the promised rest (v. 8). He
spiritualizes that promised rest and locates it, not in
literal Canaan, but in Christian experience, of which
Canaan was a type. Here is positive proof that God
attached typical meaning to that journey of the
Israelites.
Throughout the discussion of this matter the inspired
writer shows that the reason those ancient Israelites
failed to enter into God's rest was because of their
unbelief, and that we today may enter in by faith in God's
promises through Christ. For he that is entered
into his rest, he also hath ceased from his own
works, as God did from his. Let us labor therefore to
enter into that rest" (Heb. 4:10, 11). "For we
which have believed do enter into rest" (v.
3). Then this rest typified by Canaan is a present
experience in this world, not merely in heaven. we do
enter it now. He "is" entered who trust
in the mercy of God through Christ for salvation, and not
his own works.
That Canaan is used in Scripture to typify the state of
perfect holiness attainable in this life, rather than of
heaven as a place, is further shown by the apostle Paul's
explanation of the Abrahamic covenant given in Romans and
Galatians. The covenant of Abraham promised two things in
particular; a numerous seed, and an inheritance in Canaan.
There was a literal fulfillment of this promise under the
law to Abraham's descendants, but Paul clearly shows that
the main application of that covenant promise is
spiritual. In Rom. 4:13-16 he says: "For the promise,
that he [Abraham] should be the heir of the word, was not
to Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through
the righteousness of faith. For if they which are of the
law be heirs, faith is made void, and the promise made of
none effect ... Therefore it is of faith, that it might be
by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the
seed; not to that only which is of the law, but to that
also which is of the faith of Abraham; who is the father
of us all." The Abrahamic promise, therefore, has a
spiritual fulfillment.
In the Galatian letter Paul gives explanation both of
the seed of Abraham and of the inheritance promised to
that seed. "Now to Abraham and his seed were the
promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of man; but
as of one, And to thy seed, which is Christ"
(chap 3:16). The seed of Abraham, then, in the spiritual
fulfillment of the promise, refers directly to Christ.
"And if ye be Christ's then are ye Abraham's seed, and
heirs according to the promise" (ver. 29). Hence
Christians constitute the spiritual seed of Abraham,
"the Israel of God," and they are heirs. Heirs
of what? The Israelites inherited Canaan literally, yet
Paul adds, "If the inheritance be of the law, it is
no more of promise: but God gave it to Abraham by
promise" (ver. 18). The real Canaan inheritance was
there fore reserved for Christians "that the blessing
of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus
Christ; that we might receive the PROMISE OF THE SPIRIT
through faith" (ver. 14). There was no inheritance
promised except Canaan, and this Paul identifies with the
baptism of "the Spirit," which Jesus elsewhere
terms "the promise of the Father" (Luke 24:49).
In view of these facts and what we have already shown
of the fullness of Christian experience one can scarcely
avoid the conclusion that if Egypt typified the state of
sin, the wilderness must have typified justification, and
Canaan entire sanctification. As the crossing of the Red
Sea typical of conversion admits to the state of
salvation, so crossing the Jordan admits to the blessed
soul-rest of entire sanctification, where the last remains
of inherited sin are removed by the power of the
indwelling Spirit of God. It is reasonable that this
Spirit-filled experience should have been portrayed in
such a system of types as this journey presented. Also
this interpretation is in harmony with the Scriptures and
every law of typology. This experience of perfect rest God
wants all his people to have. Too many of those who have
left Egypt spend their lives wandering in the wilderness.
Of course that is much better than the bitter bondage of
Egypt, but God intends that all his people by faith in
God, like the priests who walked out into Jordan with the
ark, boldly cross over to the promised inheritance. All
need the baptism of the Holy Spirit and His sanctifying
power.
"I came to Jordan's sullen stream;
With trusting heart i there had been
Directed by my Savior's hand,
Tow'rd Canaan's bright and blessed land.
"My many sins were all forgiv'n,
My heart was clear with light from heav'n;
And yet I longed for deeper grace,
In Canaan's blessed resting-place.
"Oh, second grace! I find it sweet!
God's holy will is now complete:
The Father, Son and Spirit reign;
All inward foes are surely slain.
"Come over into the Canaan land,
Come over into the Canaan land,
Where figs and grapes so plenteous grow,
Where milk and honey freely flow,
Come over into the Canaan land." - J. W. Byers
BABYLONISH CAPTIVITY
Because of apostasy from the worship of Jehovah,
Israel was carried away into Babylon as captives by
Nebuchadnezzar, king of the Chaldeans. This, of course,
was primarily a punishment upon Israel, designed to lead
them to repentance. But from the Scriptures it is evident
that God had a more remote end in view, as in Israel
themselves, that this captivity in Babylon might typify a
great fact in God's true church. As literal Israel
typified God's people today, so Jerusalem was typical of
the condition of the church at the time of the apostasy.
As that captivity was because Israel turned away from the
true God, so the church's captivity in Spiritual Babylon
was because of apostasy from God.
The "Mystery, Babylon" of Revelation 14, 17,
18 is commonly admitted by interpreters to be apostate
Christianity as it is exhibited in Roman Catholicism.
Doubtless all forms of apostate Christianity are included
under the symbol of "Babylon." The Old Testament
prophets seem to have seen beyond mere literal Babylon in
their many predictions of the captivity and return. This
accounts for certain predictions such as those in Ezekiel
34, which seem never to have been fulfilled in literal
Israel's return but are remarkably fulfilled in the
present gathering into unity of God's people in the true
church of God from the various human organizations or
churches into which they had been scattered during the
apostasy.
Certain predictions of the land of Canaan, says
Fairbairn, were never fulfilled in literal Canaan; but, as
we have found according to the Epistle of the Hebrews,
were fulfilled in the spiritual-Canaan rest of the soul in
full salvation. Also, certain prophecies of blessings on
the children of Abraham were not fulfilled in the literal
seed of Abraham, but, as Paul reasons again and again in
the Epistle to the Romans, they are fulfilled in those who
become his children by faith in faithful Abraham's God.
The reason for such fulfillment of prophecies is that the
literal was typical of the spiritual. So these prophecies
of the captivity and the return of Israel are fulfilled in
the Christian church because that captivity and return was
typical of the captivity and return of God's true people
in and from the apostasy of the Christian dispensation.
The apostasy was predicted by the Apostle Paul as a
"falling away" which was to come before the
second advent of Christ (2 Thess. 2:3-8). Other texts in
the New Testament predict the same thing. The facts of
church history furnish abundant proof that that apostasy
came. Men rejected God's Word for human creeds, and the
rule of God's Spirit for elaborate human organized
machines to rule over them in His stead. God's spiritual
people were obliged to submit to these man-made creeds and
this man rule. But the time of the return to the true
church, the spiritual Jerusalem, has come. God's Spirit is
leading His people back to their own land.
Devout hearts everywhere are becoming stirred to reject
the creeds and forms of men and to seek for the true unity
of God's people as it was in the primitive church. They
are hearing the voice of God calling, "Babylon the
great is fallen, is fallen. Come out of her, my people,
that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive
not of her plagues." (Rev. 18:2, 4). The remedy for
sectarianism among God's people is to quit those
institutions that divide God's people and abide in the
church of God alone, where salvation places us, as did the
Christians of the apostolic age. This is both possible and
practicable. Many of God's true people have thus returned
from the captivity to their own land, the true church of
God.
THE END.
|
|