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A53696 Exercitations on the Epistle to the Hebrews also concerning the Messiah wherein the promises concerning him to be a spiritual redeemer of mankind are explained and vindicated, his coming and accomplishment of his work according to the promises is proved and confirmed, the person, or who he is, is declared, the whole oeconomy of the mosaical law, rites, worship, and sacrifice is explained : and in all the doctrine of the person, office, and work of the Messiah is opened, the nature and demerit of the first sin is unfolded, the opinions and traditions of the antient and modern Jews are examined, their objections against the Lord Christ and the Gospel are answered, the time of the coming of the Messiah is stated, and the great fundamental truths of the Gospel vindicated : with an exposition and discourses on the two first chapters of the said epistle to the Hebrews / by J. Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1668 (1668) Wing O753; ESTC R18100 1,091,989 640

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thus stedfast upon the account of its being spoken from God and stands in no need of the contribution of any strength Authority or Testimony from men Church Tradition or ought else that is extrinsecal unto it The Testimonies given hereunto in the Scripture it self which are very many with the general Grounds and Reasons hereof I shall not here insist upon and that because I have done it elsewhere I shall only mention that one consideration which this place of the Apostle suggests unto us and which is contained in our second Observation from the word stedfast Take this word as spoken from God without the help of any other Advantages and the stedfastness of it is the Ground of Gods inflicting Vengeance on them that receive it not that obey it not Because it is his Word because it is cloathed with his Authority if men believe it not they must perish But now if this be not sufficiently evidenced unto them namely that it is his Word God could not be just in taking vengeance of them for he should punish them for not believing that which they had no sufficient Reason to believe which suits not with the Holiness and Justice of God The Evidence then that this Word is from God that it is his being the foundation of the Justice of God in his proceeding against them that do not believe it it is of indispensible necessity that he himself also do give that Evidence unto it For whence also should it have it from the Testimony of the Church or from Tradition or from probable moral inducements that men can tender one to another Then these two things will inevitably follow 1. That if men should neglect their duty in giving Testimony unto the Word as they may do because they are but men then God cannot justly condemn any man in the world for the neglect of his Word in not believing it or not yielding obedience unto it And the Reason is evident because if they have not sufficient Grounds to believe it to be his without such Testimonies as are not given unto it it is the highest Injustice to condemn them for not believing it and they should perish without a cause For what can be more unjust than to punish a man especially eternally for not doing that which he had no just or sufficient Reason to do This be far from God to destroy the innocent with the wicked 2. Suppose all men aright to discharge their duty and that there be a full Tradition concerning the Word of God that the Church give Testimony unto it and Learned men produce their Arguments for it if this all or any part hereof be esteemed as the sufficient Proposition of the Scripture to be the Word of God then is the Execution of infinite divine Justice built upon the Testimony of men which is not divine or infallible but such as might deceive For God on this supposal must condemn men for not believing with faith divine and infallible that which is proposed unto them by Testimonies and Arguments humane and fallible quod absit It remaineth then that the Righteousness of the Act of God in condemning unbelievers is built upon the Evidence that the Object of Faith or Word to be believed is from him And this he gives unto it both by the Impression of his Majesty and Authority upon it and by the Power and Efficacy wherewith by his Spirit it is accompanied Thus is every Word of God stedfast as a Declaration of his Will unto us by what means soever it is made known unto us V. Every Transaction between God and man is alwayes confirmed and ratified by promises and Threatnings Rewards and Punishments every trespass VI. The most glorious Administrators of the Law do stoop to look into the Mysteries of the Gospel See 1 Pet. 1.12 VII Covenant transgressions are attended with unavoidable penalties every transgression that is of the Covenant disannulling of it received a meet recompence of reward VIII The Gospel is a Word of Salvation to them that do believe IX The Salvation tendered in the Gospel is great Salvation X. Men are apt to entertain thoughts of escaping the wrath of God though they live in a neglect of the Gospel This the Apostle insinuates in that interrogation How shall we escape XI The neglecters of the Gospel shall unavoidably perish the wrath of God How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation These last Observations may be cast into one Proposition and so be considered together namely That the Gospel is great Salvation which who so neglecteth shall therefore unavoidably perish without remedy We shall first enquire how the Gospel is said to be Salvation and that Great Salvation and then shew the equity and unavoidableness of their Destruction by whom it is neglected and therein the vanity of their hopes who look for an escaping in the contempt of it By the Gospel we understand with the Apostle the Word preached or spoken by Christ and his Apostles and now recorded for our use in the Books of the New Testament not exclusively unto what was declared of it in the Types and Promises of the Old Testament But by the way of Eminency we appropriate the whole name and nature of the Gospel unto that delivery of the Mind and Will of God by Jesus Christ which included and perfected all that had preceded unto that purpose Now the Gospel is salvation upon a double account First Declaratively In that the Salvation of God by Christ is declared taught and revealed thereby So the Apostle informs us Rom. 1.16 17. It is the power of God unto salvation because therein the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith that is the Righteousness of God in Christ whereby Believers shall be saved And therefore it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Titus 2.11 the saving or salvation bringing Grace of God The Grace of God as that which teacheth and revealeth his Grace And thence they that abuse it to their lusts are said to turn the grace of God into lasciviousness Jude 4. that is the Doctrine of it which is the Gospel And therefore under the Old Testament it is called the Preaching or declaring of glad tydings tydings of peace and salvation Nahum 2.1 Isa. 52.7 and is described as a Proclamation of Mercy Peace Pardon and Salvation unto sinners Isa. 61.1 2. And life and immortality are said to be brought to light thereby 2 Tim. 1.10 It is true God had from all Eternity in his infinite Grace contrived the salvation of sinners but this Contrivance and the Purpose of it lay hid in his own Will and Wisdom as in an infinite Abysse of darkness utterly imperceptible unto Angels and men untill it was brought to light or manifested and declared by the Gospel Ephes. 3.9 10. Coloss. 1.25 26 27. There is nothing more vain than the supposals of some that there are other wayes whereby this Salvation might be discovered and made known The Works of Nature
condition with whom in an especial manner he had to do and this in perfect Harmony with the Wisdom of the Holy Ghost in other portions of Scripture So that on this account also its Station in the Holy Canon is secured § 32 Moreover Besides the Peculiar Excellency which is found in the Style of the holy Scripture either evidencing its Divine Original or at least manifesting that there is nothing in it unworthy of such an extract the Authority of its principal Author exerts it self in the whole of it unto the consciences of men And herein is this Epistle an especial sharer also Now this Authority as it respects the minds of men is in part an exurgency of the Holy Matter contained in it and the Heavenly Manner wherein it is declared They have in their Conjunction a peculiar Character differencing their Writings from all Writing of an humane Original and manifesting it to be of God Neither can it otherwise be but that things of Divine Revelation expressed in words of Divine Suggestion and determination will appear to be of a Divine Original And partly it consists in an Ineffable E●anation of Divine Excellency communicating unto his own Word a distinguishing property from its Relation unto him We speak not now of the work of the Holy Ghost in our hearts by his Grace enabling us to believe but of his work in the Word rendring it credible and meet to be b●lieved not of the Seal and Testimony that he gives unto the hearts of individual Persons of the Truth of the Scripture or rather of the things contained in it but of the Seal and Testimony which in the Scripture he gives unto it and by it to be his own Work and Word Such a character have the Works of other Agents whereby they are known and discerned to be theirs By such properties are the Works of men disc●rned and oftentimes of Individuals amongst them They bear the likeness of their Authors and are thereby known to be theirs Neither is it possible that there should be any work of God proceeding so immediately from him as do Writings by Divine Inspiration but there will be such a communication of his Spirit and likeness unto it such an impression of his Greatness Holiness Goodness Truth and Majesty upon it as will manifest it to be from him The false Prophets of old pretended their Dreams Visions Predictions and Revelations to be from him They prefixed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he saith unto all the Declarations of them Jer. 23.31 and therefore doubtless framed them to as great a likeness unto those that were by inspiration from him as they were able And yet the Lord declares that all their imaginations were as discernable from his Word as Chaff from Wheat and this by that Authority and power wherewith his Word is accompanied whereof they were utterly destitute vers 28 29. And this Authority do all they who have their senses exercised in it find and acknowledge in this Epistle wherein their minds and consciences do acquiesce They hear and understand the voice of God in it and by that Spirit which is promised unto them discern it from the voice of a Stranger And when their minds are prepared and fortified against Objections by the former considerations this they ultimately resolve their perswasion of its Divine Authority into For From this Authority they find a Divine Efficacy proceeding a powerful operation § 33 upon their souls and consciences unto all the Ends of the Scripture A Reverence and awe of God from his Authority shining forth and exerting its self in it being wrought in them they find their minds effectually brought into captivity unto the obedience taught therein This Efficacy and power is in the whole Word of God Is not my Word as a Fire saith the Lord and like an Hammer that breaketh the rocks in pieces Jer. 23.29 that is living and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword piercing even to the dividing asunder of the soul and spirit and of the joints and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Heb. 4.12 As it hath an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Authority over men Matth. 7.29 So it hath a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or powerfull Efficacy in and towards them Acts 20.32 James 1.21 yea it is the Power of God himself for its proper end Rom. 1.16 and therefore said to be accompanied with the demonstration of the Spirit and power 1 Cor. 1.4 a Demonstration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Basil drawing the Soul to consent beyond the Efficacy of Rational or Logical Arguments or Geometrical Demonstrations as he adds in the same place And this Divine Power and Efficacy of the Word as to all the ends of it proceeding from the Authority of God in it with his designation of it unto those ends which is that which giveth energie unto all things enabling them to produce their proper Effects and setting limits and bounds to their operation as it is testified unto in innumerable places of the Scripture its self so it hath and doth sufficiently manifest and evidence its self both in the fruits and effects of it on the souls of particular persons and in that work which it hath wrought and doth yet carry on invisibly in the world in despight of all the opposition that is made unto it by the power of Hell in conjunction with the unbelief darkness and lusts of the minds of men as may elsewhere be more at large declared A Learned Man said well Non monent non persuadent Sacrae literae sed cogunt agitant vim inferunt Legis rudia verba agrestia Sed viva sed animata flammea aculeata ad imum spiritum penetrantia hominem totum potestate mirabili transformantia expressing the summ of what we discourse From hence is all that supernatural Light and knowledge that conviction and restraint that Conversion Faith Consolation and Obedience that are found amongst any of the Sons of men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Basil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The whole Scripture is divinely inspired and profitable being written by the Holy Ghost for this purpose that in it as a common healing Office for souls all men may chuse the Medicine suited to cure their own distempers Such is the Nature Power and Efficacy of this Epistle towards them that do believe It searches their hearts discovers their thoughts principles their consciences judges their Acts inward and outward supports their Spirits comforts their souls enlightens their minds guides them in their hope confidence and love to God directs them in all their communion with him and obedience unto him and leads them to an enjoyment of him And this Work of the Holy Ghost in it and by it seals up its Divine Authority unto them so that they find rest spiritual satisfaction and great assurance therein When once they have obtained this Experience of its Divine Power it is in vain for Men or Devils
Recovery For First The Glorious Properties of the Nature of God whose Manifestation and Exaltation in all the works that outwardly are of him he designeth do require that there should be Salvation for Sinners Even this matter of the Salvation of Sinners conduceth yea is necessary unto the manifestation of some of those Divine Excellencies wherein no small part of the glory of God doth consist God had in the Creation of all things glorified his Greatness Power Wisdom and Goodness His Soveraignty Righteousness and Holiness he had in like manner revealed in that Holy Law which he had prescribed unto Angels and Men for the Rule of their Obedience and in the Assignation of their Reward Upon the Sin of Angels and Men he had made known his Severity and Vindictive Justice in the Curse and Punishment inflicted on them But there were yet remaining undiscovered in the Abysse of his Eternal Essence Grace and Pardoning Mercy which in none of his Works had as yet exerted themselves or manifested their Glory And in case no Remedy be provided for mankind under the Evils mentioned and their utter ruine as they must have perished accordingly so those glorious Properties of the nature of God all wayes of exerting their proper and peculiar Acts being secluded all objects of them removed could not have been equally glorified with his other Holy Attributes The creatures know nothing in God but as it manifested in its Effects His Essence in its self dwells in Light inaccessible Had never any stood in need of Grace or Mercy or doing so had never been made partakers of them it could not have been known that there was that kind of Goodness in his Nature which yet it is his design principally to glorifie himself in The necessity therefore of the Manifestation of these Properties of God his Goodness Grace Mercy and Readiness to Forgive which can only be exercised about sinners and that in their Relief and Salvation from Sin and Misery do require that the Deliverance enquired after be admitted and justly expected And this Expectation is so much the more just and firmly grounded in that there is nothing in himself which the Lord more requireth our Conformity unto himself in than in this Condescension Goodness Grace and Readiness to forgive which manifests how dear the glory of them is unto him Secondly To what End shall we conceive the Providence and Patience of God to be exercised towards the Race of Mankind for so long a season in the Earth We see what is the general Issue and Event of the continuance of Mankind in the world God saw it and complained of it long ago Gen. 6. v. 5 6. Shall we now think that God hath no other Design in his Patience towards mankind for so many Generations but meerly to suffer them All and Every one without exception to sin against him dishonour him provoke him that so He may at length everlastingly destroy them That this indeed is the Event with many with the most through their own perverse wickedness blindness and love of the pleasures of sin cannot be denyed But to suppose that God hath no other design at all but meerly by his Patience to forbear them awhile in their folly and then to avenge himself upon them is unsuitable unto his Wisdom and Goodness It cannot be then but that he would long since have cut off the whole Race if there were no way for them to be delivered out of this perishing condition And although this way what ever it be is not Effectual towards All yet for their sakes towards whom through the grace of God it is and shall be so is the Patience of God exercised towards the whole Race of Mankind and their Being is continued in this world Other Reason of this Dispensation of Divine Wisdom and Goodness can none be assigned Thirdly That there is a way of Diliverance for Mankind the Event hath manifested in two remarkable and undeniable Instances First In that sundry Persons who were as others by nature children of Wrath and under the Curse have obtained an undoubted and infallible interest in the love and favour of God and this Testimony that they pleased him What were the Assurances they had hereof I shall not now debate But I take it now for granted which may be farther confirmed as occasion shall require that some Persons in all Generations have enjoyed the Friendship Love and Favour of God which they could never have done unless there had been some way for their Deliverance out of the state of Sin and Misery before described For therein every man upon a just account will find himself in the state of Adam who when he heard the voice of God was afraid Secondly God hath been pleased to require from men a Revenue of Glory by a way of Worship prescribed unto them after the Entrance of sin This he hath not done unto the Angels that sinned nor could it have been done in a consistency with Righteousness unto men without a Supposition of a Possibility of Deliverance from under his Wrath. For in every Prescription of Duty God proposeth himself as a Rewarder which he is only unto them that please him and to please God without the Deliverance enquired after is impossible Besides that God is actually glorified in the world by the Way of Worship required on this supposition shall be elsewhere declared and Arguments added in full measure to confirm our Assertion Deliverance then from this condition may on just grounds be expected and how it might be effected is our next Enquiry § 16 The great Relief enquired after must be brought about by men themselves or by some other for them What they can do themselves herein we may be quickly satisfied about The nature of the Evils under which they suffer and the Event of things in the world sufficiently discover the disability of men to be their own Deliverers Besides who should contrive the way of it for them One Single Person More or All How easily the impossibility of it might be demonstrated on any of these suppositions is too manifest to be insisted on The Evils suffered under are of two sorts both Vniversal and Eternal The first is that of Punishment inflicted from the Righteousness of God There are but two wayes possible setting aside the Consideration of what shall be afterwards fixed on whereby mankind or any individual Person amongst them may obtain deliverance from this Evil And the first is that God without any further consideration should remit it and exempt the Creation from under it But although this way may seem possible unto some it is indeed utterly otherwise Did not the sentence of it proceed from his Righteousness and the Essential Rectitude of his Nature Did he not engage his Truth and faithfulness that it should be inflicted and doth not his Holiness and Justice require that so it should be What should become o● his glory what would he do unto his great name if now without
of the Kingdom and Reign of the Messiah But the matter of the Psalm it self makes it manifest that the Holy Ghost treateth in it about God's bringing in the first-born into the world and the setting up of his Kingdom in him A Kingdom is described wherein God would reign which should destroy Idolatry and false-worship a Kingdom wherein the Isles of the Gentiles should rejoyce being called to an interest therein a Kingdom that was to be preached proclaimed declared unto the encrease of Light and Holiness in the world with the manifestation of the glory of God unto the ends of the earth every part whereof declareth the Kingdom of Christ to be intended in the Psalm and consequently that it is a Prophesie of the bringing in of the first-begotten into the world 2. Our second enquiry is Whether the Angels be intended in these words They are as was before observed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 omnes dii and are so rendred by Hierom Adorate eum omnes dii and by ours Worship him all ye gods The preceding words are Confounded be all they that serve graven images 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that boast themselves in or of idols Vanities Nothings as the word signifies whereon ensues this Apostrophe Worship him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all ye gods And who they are is our present enquiry Some as all the Modern Jews say that it is the gods of the Gentiles those whom they worship that are intended so making 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gods and vain idols to be the same in this place But 1. It cannot be that the Psalmist should exhort the idols of the Heathen some whereof were Devils some dead men some inanimate parts of the Creation unto a reverential worshipping of God reigning over all Hence the Targumist seeing the vanity of that Interpretation perverts the words and renders them Worship before him all ye Nations which serve idols 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Elohim is so far in this place from being exegetical of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gods or vain idols that it is put in direct Opposition unto it as is evident from the words themselves 3. The word Elohim which most frequently denoteth the true God doth never alone and absolutely taken signifie false gods or idols but only when it is joyned with some other word discovering its application as his god or their gods or the gods of this or that people in which case it is rendred by the LXX sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an idol sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an idol made with hands sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an abomination but here it hath no such limitation or restriction Whereas therefore there are some Creatures who by reason of some peculiar Excellency and likeness unto God or subordination unto him in his work are called gods it must be those or some of them that are intended in the expression now these are either Magistrates or Angels First Magistrates are somewhere called Elohim because of the Representation they make of God in his Power and their peculiar subordination unto him in their working The Jews indeed contend that no other Magistrates but only those of the Great Sanedrin are any where called gods but that concerns not our present enquiry some Magistrates are so called but none of them are here intended by the Psalmist there being no Occasion administred unto him of any such Apostrophe unto them Secondly Angels also are called Elohim 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 8.5 They have the Name of God attributed unto them as we have shewed before in some instances And these alone are they whom the Psalmist speaks unto Having called on the whole Creation to rejoyce in the bringing forth of the Kingdom of God and pressed his Exhortation upon things on the Earth he turns unto the ministring Angels and calls on them to the discharge of their duty unto the King of that Kingdom Hence the Targumist in the beginning of Psal. 96. which is indeed in the beginning of this expresly mentioneth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his high Angels joyning in his praise and worship using the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for distinction sake as on the same account it often occurs in the Targum We have thus evinced that the Psalm treats about the bringing in of the first-born into the world as also that they are the ministring Angels who are here commanded to worship him For the command it self and the nature of it it consisted in these two things 1. A declaration of the state and condition of the Messiah which is such as that he is a meet Object of Religious Adoration unto the Angels and attended with peculiar motives unto the discharge of their duty The former he hath from his Divine Nature the latter from his Work with his State and Dignity that ensued thereon 2. An intimation of the pleasure of God unto the Angels not that Divine Worship was absolutely due unto the Son of God which they knew from the first instant of their Creation but that all Honour and Glory were due unto him on the account of his Work and Office as Mediator and King of his Church 3. It remaineth only that we shew that this testimony thus explained was suitable unto the Apostles design and purpose and did prove the Assertion in the Confirmation whereof it is produced Now this is a matter of so full and clear an evidence that it will not at all detain us For it is impossible that there should be any more clear or full demonstration of this truth That the Lord Christ hath an unspeakable Preheminence above the Angels than this that they are all appointed and commanded by God himself to adore him with Divine and Religious Worship We may now therefore consider what Observations the words will afford us for our own instruction It appears then from hence 1. That the Authority of God speaking in the Scripture is that alone which Divine Faith rests upon and is to be resolved into He saith It was the begetting of faith in some of the Hebrews and the increase or establishment of it in others that the Apostle aimed at That which he proposeth to them as the Object of their faith that which they were to believe was that Excellency of the Person and Kingly Authority of the Messiah wherein they had not as yet been instructed And hereof he endeavours not to beget an Opinion in them but that Faith which cannot deceive or be deceived To this end he proposeth that unto them which they ought to submit unto and which they may safely rest in For as Faith is an Act of Religious Obedience it respects the Authority of God requiring it and as it is a Religious infallible assent of the mind it regards the Truth and Veracity of God as its Object On this alone it rests God saith And in what ever God speaks in the Scripture his Truth and Authority manifest themselves to
●●●e and immortality were brought to light by the Gospel so death and hell the pun●●●ment of sin under the wrath of God are more fully declared therein The Nature of the judgment to come the duration of the penalties to be inflicted on unbelievers with such intimations of the nature and kind of them as our understandings are able to receive are fully and frequently insisted on in the New Testament whereas they are very obscurely only gathered out of the Writings of the Old 2. The punishment threatned in the Gospel is as unto degrees greater and more sore than that which was annexed to the meer transgression of the first Covenant Hence the Apostle calls it death unto death 2 Cor. 2.16 by reason of the sore aggravations which the first sentence of death will receive from the wrath due unto the contempt of the Gospel Separation from God under eternal punishment was unquestionably due to the sin of Adam and so consequently unto every transgression against the first Covenant Gen. 2.17 Rom. 5.12 13 14. But yet this hinders not but that the same penalty for the nature and kind of it may receive many and great aggravations upon mens sinning against that great Remedy provided against the first guilt and prevarication which it also doth as shall farther afterwards be declared And this ought they to be well acquainted withall who are called unto the Dispensation of the Gospel A fond conceit hath befallen some that all denunciations of future wrath even unto unbelievers is Legal which therefore it doth not become the Preachers of the Gospel to insist upon so would men make themselves wiser than Jesus Christ and all his Apostles yea they would disarm the Lord Christ and expose him to the contempt of his vilest enemies There is also we see a great use in these Evangelical threatnings unto believers themselves And they have been observed to have had an effectual ministery both unto Conversion and Edification who have been made wise and dextrous in managing Gospel Comminations towards the consciences of their hearers And those also that hear the Word may hence learn their duty when such threatnings are handled and opened unto them II. All punishments annexed unto the transgression either of the Law or Gospel are effects of God's vindictive Justice and consequently just and equal A meet recompence of reward What it is the Apostle doth not declare but he doth that it is just and equal which depends on the Justice of God appointing and designing of it Foolish men have always had tumultuating thoughts about the judgments of God Some have disputed with him about the equity and equality of his ways in judgments temporal Ezek. 18. and some about those that shall be eternal Hence was the vain imagination of them of old who dreamed that an end should be put after some season unto the punishment of Devils and wicked men so turning hell into a kind of Purgatory Others have disputed in our days that there shall be no hell at all but a meer annihilation of ungodly men at the last day These things being so expresly contrary to the Scripture can have no other rise but the corrupt minds and affections of men not conceiving the reasons of God's judgments nor acquiescing in his Sovereignty That which they seem principally to have stumbled at is the assignation of a punishment infinite as to its duration as well as in its nature extended unto the utmost capacity of the subject unto a fault temporary finite and transient Now that we may justifie God herein and the more clearly discern that the punishment inflicted finally on sin is but a meet recompence of reward we must consider First That God's Justice constituting and in the end inflicting the reward of sin is essential unto him Is God unjust saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 3.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 anger or wrath is not that from whence punishment proceedeth but punishment it self God inflicteth wrath anger or vengeance And therefore when we read of the anger or wrath of God against sin or sinners as Rom. 1.18 the expression is metonymical the cause being designed by the effect The true fountain and cause of the punishment of sin is the Justice of God which is an Essential property of his Nature natural unto him and inseparable from any of his works And this absolutely is the same with his Holiness or the infinite Purity of his Nature So that God doth not assign the punishment of sin arbitrarily that he might do so or otherwise without any impeachment of his Glory but his Justice and his Holiness indispensibly require that it should be punished even as it is indispensibly necessary that God in all things should be just and holy The holy God will do no iniquity the Judge of all the earth will do right and will by no means acquit the guilty This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the judgement of God that which his Justice requireth that they which commit sin are worthy of death Rom. 1.32 And God cannot but do that which it is just that he should do See 2 Thess. 1.6 We have no more Reason then to quarrel with the Punishment of sin than we have to repine that God is Holy and Just that is that he is God for the one naturally and necessarily followeth upon the other Now there is no Principle of a more uncontrolable and Soveraign Truth written in the hearts of all men than this that what the Nature of God or any of his Essential Properties require to be is holy meet equal just and good Secondly That this Righteousness or Justice of God is in the Exercise of it inseparably accompanied with infinite Wisdom These things are not diverse in God but are distinguished with respect unto the various manners of his actings and the variety of the Objects which he acteth towards and so denote a different Habitude of the Divine Nature not diverse things in God They are therefore inseparable in all the works of God Now from this Infinite Wisdom of God which his Righteousness in the constitution of the punishment of sin is eternally accompanied withal two things ensue 1. That He alone knoweth what is the true desert and demerit of sin and but from his Declaration of creatures not any And how shall we judge of what we know nothing but from him but only by what he doth We see amongst men that the guilt of crimes is aggravated according to the Dignity of the Persons against whom they are committed Now no creature knowing him perfectly against whom all sin is committed none can truly and perfectly know what is the desert and demerit of sin but by his Revelation who is perfectly known unto himself And what a madness is it to judge otherwise of that we do no otherwise understand Shall we make our selves Judges of what sin against God doth deserve Let us first by searching find out the Almighty unto Perfection and then
Priest in things appertaining unto God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to reconcile that is make reconciliation for the sins of the people Two things are to be considered in these words 1. The Object of the Priestly action here assigned to the Lord Christ. 2. The Action it self which with respect thereunto he is said to perform The first is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the people that is say some the seed of Abraham whose interest in the Mediation of Christ and their priviledge therein the Apostle here minds them of to provoke the Hebrews to constancy in their faith and profession And so also they limit the term Brethren before used not as they say that the Elect among the Gentiles are excluded but that he expresly mentions only the first fruits in the Jews But this sense is not necessarily included in the words the intention of the Apostle in the expression is only to give some light into the effect of the Priesthood of Christ from the Office of the High Priest under the Old Testament and the discharge thereof For as he had a peculiar people for whom he made attonement so also hath Christ that is all his Elect. 2. The Action ascribed unto him is expressed in those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which want not their difficulty the construction of the Verb being inconsistent with its native and proper signification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is properly and usually in all Writers Sacred and others to appease to attone to please to propitiate to recon●ile But the following word seems not to admit of that sense in this place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For how can any one be said to please or attone or reconcile sin Wherefore some laying the emphasis of the expression on the construction do regulate the sense of the Verb by the Noun of the Act by the Object and so will have it signifie to expiate cleanse and do away sin to cleanse the sins of the people to do away the sins of the people The Vulgar Latine renders the word repropitio ut repropit●aret which as Anselm tells us and he hath those that follow him is composed of re prope and cleo a barbarous Etymologie of a barbarous word Propitio is a Latin● word and used not only by Plautus but by Suetonius and Pliny and that to appease attone please or turn away anger Most Translations render it by expio ad expiandum peccata but the signification of that word is also doubtful It is indeed sometimes used for to cleanse make pure and to take away sin but never in any good Author but with reference unto attonement to take them away by sacrifice by publick punishments by mens devoting themselves to destruction So Livy speaking of Horatius who killed his sister Ita ut caedes manifesta aliquo tamen piaculo lueretur imperatum patri ut filium expiaret pecunia publica Expiare is the same with luere piaculo which is to take away the guilt of a crime by a commutation of punishments There may then be a double sense of these words 1. To make attonement and reconciliation for sin appeasing the anger and wrath of God against it 2. To remove and take away sin either by the cleansing and sanctifying of the sinner or by any means prevailing with him not to continue in sin Against the first sense the construction of the word with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sins is objected Against the latter the constant sense of the word it self which is not to be deserted It is the former sense therefore which we do embrace and shall confirm 1. The constant use of the word in all good Authors of the Greek Tongue will admit no other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is of an active importance and denotes propitium facio placo as we observed before to appease and attone And this is that whereby the Heathen generally expressed their endeavours to turn away the wrath of their gods to appease them and then they use it transitively with an Accusative case of the Object as Homer Iliad 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To propitiate or appease God And Iliad 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To offer an Hecatomb unto Apollo for the Greeks and appease him who hath sent on them so many sorrows or attone him And when it hath the Accusative case of the person joyned with it it can bear no other sense So Plutarch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Lucian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to appease God Sometimes it is used with a Dative case as Plutarch in Public 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then it hath respect unto the Sacrifice whereby attonement is made and anger turned away and is rendred piaculare sacrum facere to offer a piacular sacrifice So that the word constantly hath regard unto the anger and wrath of some person which is deprecated turned away appeased by reconciliation made 2. The use of the word by the LXX confirms it unto this sense Commonly they render the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by it which when regarding God always signifies attonement and to attone So the Noun Psal. 48.17 No man can redeem his brother 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor can he give to God his ransom or the price of his redemption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And unto the Verb where it respecteth the offence to be attoned for they usually annex 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to it Exod. 32.30 You have sinned a great sin and now I will go up unto the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that I may attone for your sins And it is God who is the Object of the Act of appeasing or attoning to make attonement with God for your sin So Numb 28.22 30. Nehem. 10.33 Once in the Old Testament it is used transitively and sin placed as the Object of it Dan. 9.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to attone sin or unrighteousness that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make attonement with God for sin And so also they express the person with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for whom the attonement is made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 30.15 16. Levit. 1.4 chap. 4.20 26 6.30 Numb 15.23 26. And still God is respected as he who is offended and is to be reconciled as it is expressed Levit. 10.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall make attonement for them before the Lord. And sometimes they adde that wherewith the attonement is made namely Offerings or Sacrifices of one sort or another Levit. 8.17 And they will give us the sense of the word in another place Prov. 16.15 The wrath of a King is as messengers of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a wise man shall appease him referring that to the King which the Original doth to his wrath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall turn away that is by appeasing him In the use of this word then there is always understood 1. An offence crime guilt or debt to be taken away 2.
that Office do flow was to make Reconciliation or Attonement for sin This John declares 1 Ep. 2.2 We have an Advocate with the Father and he is a propitiation for our sins What he doth for us in Heaven as our Advocate depends on what he did on earth when he was a Propitiation for our sins This work was that which was principally regarded in the first Promise Gen. 3.15 namely That which he was to do by his sufferings To shadow out and represent this unto the Church of old were all the Sacrifices of the Law and the Typical Priesthood it self instituted They all directed Believers to look for and to believe the Attonement that was to be made by him And that this should be the foundation of all his other actings as an High Priest was necessary First On the part of his Elect for whom he undertook that Office They were by nature Enemies of God and children of Wrath unless Peace and Reconciliation be made for them in the first place they could neither have encouragement to go to him with their Obedience nor to expect any mercy from him or Acceptation with him For as Enemies they could neither have any mind to serve him nor hope to please him Here lye the first thoughts of all who have any design seriously to appear before God or to have to do with him wherewith shall we come before him how shall we obtain Reconciliation with him Until this Enquiry be answered and satisfied they find it in vain to address themselves unto any thing else nor can obtain any ground of hope to receive any good thing from the hand of God This order of things the Apostle layes down Rom. 5.8 9 10. The first thing to be done for us was to reconcile us to God whilest we were sinners and enemies this was done by the death by the blood of Christ when as our High Priest he offered himself a Sacrifice for us This being performed as we have abundant Cause of and Encouragement unto Obedience so also just ground to expect what ever else belongs unto our salvation as he also argues Chap. 8. Secondly It was so on his own part also Had not this been first accomplished he could not have undertaken any other Act of his Priestly Office for us What the Lord Christ doth in Heaven on our behalf was prefigured by the entrance of the High Priest into the Holy Place Now this he could not do unless he had before offered his Sacrifice of Attonement the blood whereof he carried along with him into the presence of God All his Intercession for us his watching for our Good as the merciful High Priest over the House of God is grounded upon the Reconciliation and Attonement which he made his Intercession indeed being nothing but the blessed Representation of the Blood of the Attonement Besides this was required of him in the first place namely that he should make his soul an Offering for sin and do that in the Body prepared for him which all the Sacrifices and Burnt-Offerings of old could not effect nor accomplish And therefore hereon depended all the Promises that were made unto him about the success of his Mediation so that without the performance of it he could not claim the accomplishment of them Thirdly It was so on the part of God also For herein principally had he designed to manifest his Righteousness Grace Love and Wisdom wherein he will be glorified Rom. 3.25 He set him forth to be a propitiation to declare h●s Righteousness the Righteousness of God was most eminently glorified in the Reconciliation wrought by Christ when he was a Propitiation for us or made attonement for us in his blood And herein also God commendeth his Love unto us Rom. 5.8 John 3.16 1 John 4.9 And what greater demonstration of it could possibly be made than to send his Son to dye for us when we were enemies that we might be reconciled unto him All after actings of God towards us indeed are full of Love but they are all streams from this fountain or Rivers from this Ocean And the Apostle summs up all the Grace of the Gospel in this that God was in Christ reconciling us to himself and that by this way of Attonement making him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might become the Righteousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5.19 21. And so also he declares that this was the mysterie of his Will wherein he abounded towards us in all Wisdom and Prudence Ephes. 1.8 9 10. So that in all things the great glory which God designed in the Mediation of Christ is founded alone in that Act of his Priesthood whereby he made Reconciliation for the sins of his people And therefore 1. They who weaken oppose or take away this Reconciliation are Enemies to the salvation of men the Honour of Christ and the Glory of God From men they take their Hopes and Happiness from Christ his Office and Honour from God his Grace and Glory I know they will allow of a Reconciliation in Words but it is of Men to God not of God unto men They would have us reconcile our selves unto God by Faith and Obedience but for the Reconciliation of God unto us by Sacrifice Satisfaction and Attonement that they deny What would they have poor sinners do in this case they are Enemies unto God go say they and be reconciled unto him lay aside your Enmity and be no more his adversaries but alas he is our Enemy also we are children of wrath obnoxious to the curse as transgressors of his Law and how shall we be delivered from the wrath to come Take no care of that there is no such Justice in God no such Indignation against sin and sinners as you imagine but our Consciences tell us otherwise the Law of God tells us otherwise the whole Scripture testifies to the contrary all the Creation is filled with tokens and evidences of this Justice and Indignation of God against sin which you deny And would you have us to give credit unto you contrary to the constant dictates of our own Consciences the Sentence of the Law the Testimony of the Word the Voyce of the whole Creation and that in a matter of such importance and everlasting concernment unto us What if all these should prove true and you should prove lyars should we not perish for ever by relying on your testimony Is it reasonable we should attend unto you in this matter Go with your Sophisms unto men who were never burdened with a sense of the Guilt of sin whose Spirits never took in a sense of Gods displeasure against it who never were brought under bondage by the sentence of the Law who never were forced to cry out in the bitterness and anguish of their souls what shall we do to be saved Wherewith shall we come before the Lord or appear before the High God and it may be they will be entangled and seduced by you but
for those who have thus in any measure known the terror of the Lord they will be secured from you by his Grace Besides what ground do such men leave unto the Lord Christ to stand upon as it were in his Intercession for us in Heaven Do they not take that blood out of his hand which he is carrying into the Holy Place And how do they despoil him of his Honor in taking of from his work a miserable employment when men shall study and take pains to perswade themselves and others that Christ hath not done that for them which he hath done for all that are his and which if he hath not done for them they must perish for evermore Is it worth the while for them to weaken Faith Love and Thankfulness unto Christ From whom can such men look for their Reward Can Right Reason or a Light within be no otherwise adored but by sacrificing the blood of Christ unto them no otherwise be enthroned but by deposing him from his Office and taking his work out of his hand and by an horrible ingratitude because they know no other could do that work to conclude that it is needless Are men so resolved not to be beholding unto Jesus Christ that rather than grant that he hath made Reconciliation for us by his blood they will deny that there was any need that any such Reconciliation should be made O the depths of Satan Oh the stupidity and blindness of men that are taken alive by him and lead captive at his pleasure 2. They who would come unto God by Christ may see what in the first place they are to look after Indeed if they are once brought into that Condition wherein they will seriously look after him they will not be able to look from it though for a while it may be they will be unwilling to look unto it Reconciliation they must have or they can have no peace This lyes straight before them they are willing it may be to look upon the right hand and the left to see if there be any thing nigh them that will yield them relief but all is in vain If any thing else gives them ease it gives them poyson if it gives them peace it gives them ruine Reconciliation by the blood of Christ is the only relief for their souls And nothing more discovers the vanity of much of that Religion which is in the world than the regardlesness of men in looking after this which is the Foundation-stone of any durable building in the things of God This they will do and that they will do but how they shall have an interest in the Reconciliation made for sin they trouble not themselves withall II. The Lord Christ suffered under all his temptations sinned in none He suffered being tempted sinned not being tempted He had the Heart of a man the Affections of a man and that in the highest degree offense and tenderness What ever sufferings the soul of a man may be brought under by Grief Sorrow Shame Fear Pain Danger loss by any afflictive passions within or impressions of force from without he underwent he felt it all Because he was alwayes in the Favour of God and in the assurance of the indissolubility of the Vnion of his Person we are apt to think that what came upon him was so overballanced by the Blessedness of his Relation unto God as not to cause any great Trouble unto him But we mistake when we so conceive No sorrows were like to his no sufferings like unto his He fortified not himself against them but as they were meerly poenal he made bare his breast unto their strokes and laid open his soul that they might soak into the inmost parts of it Isa. 50.6 All those Reliefs and diversions of this life which we may make use of to alleviate our sorrows and sufferings he utterly abandoned He left nothing in the whole Nature of sorrow or suffering that he tasted not and made experience of Indeed in all his sufferings and temptations he was supported with the thoughts of the glory that was set before him but our thoughts of his present glory should not divert us from the contemplation of his past real sufferings All the advantage that he had above us by the Excellency of his Person was only that the sorrows of his heart were enlarged thereby and he was made capable of greater enduring without sin And it was to be thus with him 1. Because although the Participation of Humane Nature was only necessary that he might be an High Priest yet his sufferings under Temptations were so that he might be a merciful High Priest for tempted sufferers Such have need not only to be saved by his Attonement but to be relieved favoured comforted by his Grace They did not only want one to undertake for them but to undertake for them with Care Pity and tenderness Their state required delivery with compassion God by that way of Salvation that he provides for them intends not only their final Safety in Heaven but also that in the sense of the first fruits of it in this world they may glorifie him by Faith and Thankful Obedience To this end it was necessary that they should have relief provided for them in the Tenderness and Compassion of their High Priest which they could have no greater pledge of than by seeing him for their sakes exposing himself unto the miseries which they had to conflict withal and so alwayes to bear that sense of them which that impression would surely leave upon his soul. And 2. Because although the Lord Jesus by vertue of the Vnion of his Person and plenary unction with the Spirit had an habitual fulness of mercy and compassion yet he was to be particularly excited unto the exercise of them towards the Brethren by the experience he had of their condition His internal habitual fulness of Grace and mercy was capable of excitation unto suitable actings by external Objects and sensible Experience It added not to his mercifulness but occasioned his readiness to dispose it unto others and shut the door against pleas of delaying succour He bears still in his holy mind the sense he had of the sorrows wherewith he was pressed in the time of his Temptations and thereon seeing his Brethren conflicting with the like difficulties is ready to help them and because his Power is proportioned unto his Will it is said he is able And what ever may be the real effects on the mind of Christ from his temptations and sufferings now he is in Heaven I am sure they ought to be great on our Faith and Consolation when we consider him undergoing them for this very end and purpose that seeing he was constituted our High Priest to transact all our Affairs with God he would be sensible of that condition in his own person which he was afterwards to present unto God for relief to be afforded unto it III. Temptations cast souls into Danger They have need