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A35951 An expositon of all St. Pauls epistles together with an explanation of those other epistles of the apostles St. James, Peter, John & Jude : wherein the sense of every chapter and verse is analytically unfolded and the text enlightened. / David Dickson ...; Expositio analytica omnium Apostolicarum Epistolarum. English Dickson, David, 1583?-1663.; Retchford, William.; Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. 1659 (1659) Wing D1403; ESTC R7896 807,291 340

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than c. The Second Part. Vers. 16. For where a Testament is there must also of necessity bee the death of the Testator The second part of the Chapter follows wherein to take off the scandal of the Cross hee first proves the necessity of Christs death by six Arguments to vers 25. Furthermore the sufficiency of his offering once upon the Cross hee proves it by five Arguments to the end Argum. 1. The New Covenant of Christ is the New Testament of Christ Therefore it was necessary that the death of the Testator Christ should intercede Vers. 17. For a Testament is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at all while the Testator liveth Argum. 2. Confirming the former unless Christ had died the Covenant or Testament had not been firm for even amongst men a Testament is not valid while the Testator is alive but onely after his death For while hee lives it may be changed but not when hee is dead Therefore it was necessary that Christ should dye Vers. 18. Whereupon neither the first Testament was dedicated without blood Argum. 3. As the Old Testament was not dedicated unto God without typical blood so neither the New Testament can be dedicated or offered by way of satisfaction for sinful men without the true blood of Christ the true Mediatour the Antitype Therefore it was necessary Christ should dye Vers. 19. For when Moses had spoken every Precept to all the people according to the Law hee took the blood of Calves and of Goats with water and Scarlet wool and hysop and sprinkled both the book and all the people 20. Saying This is the Blood of the Testament which God hath enjoyned unto you Hee explicates and proves this Argument out of the History Exod. 24. concerning the dedication of the first Tabernacle by Blood where Moses sprinkled the Book of the Covenant and the people with the blood of Calves and Goats withall expounding the signification and use of the ceremony that that Blood was the Blood of the Covenant or a symbol of the Covenant typically made in those ceremonies and truly to bee fulfilled in the Blood of Christ. Vers. 21. Moreover hee sprinkled with blood both the Tabernacle and all the Vessels of the Ministery 22. And almost all things are by the Law purged with blood and without shedding of blood is no remission Argum. 4. As under the Law all things were purged either with blood or washings drawing virtue to purge from the Sacrifices so that without typical shedding of blood there was no remission of sins So in the New Covenant there can bee no remission of sins but by the shedding of the Blood of Christ Therefore the Death of Christ was necessary The Tabernacle and the Holy Vessels which were in themselves without pollution are said to bee sprinkled with blood because in respect to us were wee not purified by the Blood of Christ all things become polluted unto us Therefore the use of the most holy things must bee sanctified to us by Christ otherwise to the impure all things are impure in as much as in all things unbeleevers pollute themselves Vers. 23. It was therefore necessary that the patterns of things in the heavens should be purified with these but the heavenly things themselves with better Sacrifices than these Argum. 5. If the types ought to bee purged with typical blood heavenly things signified by those types ought to bee consecrated by better Sacrifices i. e. with the Blood of the Mediator himself who in his Virtue comprehends all Sacrifices and by consequence the Death of Christ was necessary Vers. 24. For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands which are the figures of the true but into heaven it self now to appear in the presence of God for us Argum. 6. Confirming the former Christ is not entred into the typical Holy place made with hands but into heaven signified by the holy place that constantly appearing there hee might intercede for us Therefore it behoved him to offer up a more excellent Sacrifice viz. himself as much as heaven exceeds the earthly Holy place and by consequence his death was necessary Vers. 25. Nor yet that hee should offer himself often a● the High-Priest entereth into the Holy place every year with blood of others Now hee proves the sufficiency of the one Oblation of Christ upon the Cross by five Arguments Argum. 1. Christ entred not often into the Terrestrial Sanctuary that hee might often offer up himself as the Levitical High-Priest who offered not his own but other blood yearly but is once entered into heaven Therefore that one Oblation of himself upon the Cross was sufficient whereby hee was admitted into heaven Vers. 26. For then must hee often have suffered since the foundation of the world but now once in the end of the world hath hee appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself Argum. 2. Unless that one Oblation of Christ upon the Cross had been sufficient hee must by often offering himself die often from the beginning of the world for if an Oblation of the Body of Chirst ought to have been often offered up for sin it would have been necessary that the Oblation should have begun at what time sin began to bee committed i. e. from the beginning of the world and from that time that Sacrifice ought to have been so often repeated as new sins were committed after the Sacrifice the courses of Sacrifice being acted over and over without number But this is absurd Therefore his once offering up upon the Cross was sufficient But now once Argum. 3. Christ in the fulness of time appeared to that end that by his one Oblation of himself he might abolish the sins of his people present past and to come For to the obtaining and application of remission of sins to the mortification and abolishing of sins of all the Redeemed or Elect there is virtue enough in the Death of Christ Therefore his one Oblation is sufficient Vers. 27. And as it is appointed unto men once to die but after this the Iudgement 28. So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many and unto them that look for him shall hee appear the second time without sin unto Salvation Argum. 4. As it is appointed of God that all men shall once die and after death come to Judgement so it is appointed of God that Christ should onely once offer up himself to expiate the sins of many i. e. of his Elect and that hee should come the second time judge both of quick and dead Therefore his one Oblation of himself upon the Cross is sufficient The second time Argum. 5. Christ coming the second time at the Day of Judgement shall make it manifest to all the world that hee with one Oblation of himself hath most fully satisfied for sin and that the imputation of sin and the punishment or misery and whatever footsteps there are of sin are removed
repeated But Christs entry into Heaven to be perfect because but once not to be repeated 3. The Levitical Priests entred by the blood of Goats and Calves But Christ entred by his own blood 1. And if Christ entred but once into Heaven after his Suffering Then Wee must not think that his Body is any where else but in Heaven onely wherein it is once onely entred 2. If the blood whereby Christ entred into Heaven was his own blood Then 1. Verily Christs Body was like ours in substance having blood in it as ours and wee must not conceive otherwise of his body than to be of the same substance and substantial properties with ours 2. The blood belonged to the same person to whom the properties of God belongeth so often in this Epistle attributed unto Christ. His Blood was the blood of God Act. 20.28 That is the same Jesus was God and man with flesh and blood in one person 3. The Fruit of Christs bloody Sacrifice hee maketh The Eternal Redemption of those for whom hee offered it And to the typical Sacrifice hee ascribeth no redemption at all in the comparison Thereby giving us to understand 1. That from the worlds beginning to the end thereof salvation of sinners is by way of Christs Redemption That is by his loosing them through payment of a price 2. That the Redemption was manifested to have force when after his bloody Sacrifice hee entred into Heaven 3. That such as are once redeemed by Christ are Eternally Redeemed not for a time to fall away again but eternally to be saved most certainly Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh Vers. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God To prove that eternal Redemption is the fruit of Christs Sacrifice he reasoneth thus If the Typical Sacrifices and Rites of old were able to work that for which they were ordained that is external Sanctification Much more shall Christs true Sacrifice be able to work that for which it was appointed that is Eternal Remission of sins and inward Sanctification unto eternal life Then there are two sorts of Sanctification One external of the flesh which maketh a man holy to the Church whatsoever he be within Another internal of the conscience and inner man which maketh a man holy before God 2. The purifying of the flesh he maketh to be by the exercise of such and such Ordinances of Divine Service for the time Then External or Church-holiness of the outward man is procured by such and such exercises of Divine Ordinances in the Church as serve to make a man to be reputed and holden for clean before men and so to be received for a member of the Church as is to be seen Numb 19. 3. From his form of reasoning we learn That whatsoever liberty and access of coming to the Church was made to the Jew of old by these ceremonies of the Law as much and more liberty is made to the Christian to come in to God by the blood of Christ. 4. In describing Christs Sacrifice he saith Christ through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God Then 1. Christ is both the Sacrifice and the Priest in one person He offered himself as man through the Eternal Spirit that is by the vertue and power of his own Godhead by which he preached before his Incarnation to sinners 1 Pet. 3.19 2. His sacrifice was without spot He was that spotless Lamb in whom was no sin nor imperfection nor defect of any thing that the sacrifice required 3. The vertue of the sacrifice which made it to purchase Eternal Redemption unto us floweth from the infinite worth of his Eternal Godhead 4. Albeit Christs two natures have their distinct respects in the actions of his Office yet Christ is one and undivided in the execution of his Office 5. The fruit and force of the sacrifice is set down in this that this Blood shall purge our conscience from dead works to serve the living God That is shall both absolve a man from his foregon sin and also enable him to serve God for time to come Then 1. Sins are but dead works flowing from nature dead in sin and not onely deserving but also drawing on death upon the sinner 2. The conscience lieth polluted with the filthiness of dead works till the vertue of the blood of Jesus applied bring intimation of absolution 3. Christs blood doth not purge the Conscience from dead works that a man should go wallow in them again but that he may serve the living God more acceptably 4. The purging vertue of Christs blood is joyned with the sanctifying and renewing of the absolved sinner and what God hath conjoyned let no man put asunder Vers. 15. And for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions which were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Now lest any man should stumble at Christs death he sheweth a necessity thereof in respect of his office of Mediation and the purchase to be made by his Redemption The force of the reason is this Remission of sins could not have been given under the Law except the Mediator had been to pay the price of the same under the Gospel Nor could the faithful and called ones either then or now obtain eternal life for an inheritance otherwise than by the Mediators death Therefore it behoved the true Mediator by means of death to pay the promised price of the purchase of remission of sins and eternal life Then 1. The remission of transgressions and the inheritance of eternal life are both fruits of Christs Passion 2. The fruits of his Passion extended themselves unto them who were under the Old Testament as well as unto us under the New 3. The way of purchase of these benefits was by Redemption that is to say by lawful purchase such as might satisfie justice 4. The way in special was by means of the Mediators death His life was laid down to redeem ours His one life as good as all ours 5. For this cause Christ took the office of a Mediator unto himself that he might have right and interest by death to make this purchase 6. And therefore except he had really died the purchase could not have been lawfully made Vers. 16. For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator Another reason to prove the necessity of Christs death from the force of the word Covenant which signifieth also a Testament The force of the reason is this Christ Jer. 31.31 promised to make a New Covenant and therefore also a New Testament i● to make a New Testament then also he promised
misery are in their wayes 17. And the way of peace have they not known The fifth testimony is from Psalm 59.7 8. In which unregenerate men are pronounced guilty of cruelty violence oppression and man-slaughter who create nothing but misery and destruction to themselves and others in the whole course of their lives who are very far from procuring peace or any thing that is good either to themselves or others Vers. 18. There is no fear of God before their eyes The sixth testimony is from Psalm 36.2 Wherein unregenerate men by their deeds are condemned of prophaness and contempt of God for seeing they are void of the fear of God there is nothing to restrain them from falling headlong into all kind of wickedness Vers. 19. Now wee know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them that are under the Law that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God Hee prevents an Objection lest any man should elude the force of the testimonies before recited as if they belonged but to some few and those certain impious men who lived in the times of David or Isaias Here hee shews that the common disposition of mankind is taxed which live unde● the Law or the Covenant of Works and not under grace and hereupon these fore-cited sentences of the Law are directed against all men under the state of corrupt nature chiefly the Jewes whereupon a threefold conclusion is inferred First from hence every mouth is stopped lest any man should glory in himself or excuse himself in the judgement of God Another conclusion Hence the whole world is made lyable to condemnation and obnoxious to punishment Vers. 20. Therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh bee justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of sin The third conclusion and principal drawn from the fore-cited testimonies therefore by the works of the Law no flesh shall bee justified in the sight of God for it matters not that some may bee justified by their works before men For by the Law Argument 5. Serving to prove the same assertion All men are convinced of sin and condemned by the Law for by the Law is the knowledge of sin not a procurer of righteousness to any one Therefore no man is justified by the works of the Law Vers. 21. But know the righteousness of God without the Law is manifested being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets 22. Even the righteousness of God which is by the Faith of Iesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe for there is no difference Argum. 6. Tending to the asserting of the affirmative part of the position Now in the Gospel the righteousness of God is manifested without the works of the Law approved by the testimony of Scripture to wit that the righteousness of God which is imputed and given to all believers apprehending by Faith the righteousness of Christ Jesus without distinction of Nations or persons therefore by this Righteousness alone which is through Faith in Jesus Christ are wee justified The Argument is good for if wee cannot bee justified by the works of the Law and yet there is another way to justify us found out to wit that which God commends to us in the Law and in the Prophets As for example when hee hath said in the Law In the Seed of Abraham all Nations shall bee blessed And in the Prophets The Iust shall live by Faith It 's fitting wee should believe our selves to bee justified only upon this latter ground to wit by Faith Furthermore seeing wee can conceive only a two-fold Righteousness one is of the Law or of works inherent or a mans own righteousness another which is Evangelical called the Righteousness of Faith or the Righteousness of Christ imputed unto us to wit that Righteousness which hee imputes to all that believe After the exclusion of the former Righteousness that being now impossible the other is of necessity to bee admitted which is commended to us in the Old Testament now revealed in the New and only is possible and acceptable to God deserving alone the name of Righteousness Vers. 23. For all have sinned and come short of the Glory of God 24. Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Iesus Christ. Argum. 7. Wherein is shewed the common disease of all men as also the necessity of the common remedy all men without exception have sinned and by Law are shut out from the glory of God or Eternal Life therefore all are no otherwise justified but freely or by Divine Grace through the Redemption of Jesus Christ that is to say they cannot otherwayes bee justified than by Faith in Christ the Redeemer who by his Blood hath purchased for us Righteousness and Salvation and hath freely of his Grace made it ours Vers. 25. Whom God hath set forth to bee a Propitiation through Faith in his Blood to declare his Righteousness for the remission of sins that are past through the forbearance of God 26. To declare I say at this time his righteousness that hee might bee just and the Iustifier of him which believeth in Iesus Argum. 8. God hath set forth Christ that hee might bee a Reconcilement and Propitiatory Sacrifice whereby the wrath of God is appeased towards all that lay hold on him by Faith therefore it is not possible that a man should be justified but by Faith in Christ offering up this attonement in his Blood unless God should alter the means of appeasing himself To shew forth Argum. 9. God in this present time of the Gospel hath set forth Christ as the means of appeasing his anger to those that imbrace it by Faith that by this way of justifying his Righteousness might bee manifest in the time past in his forbearance and forgiveness of sins past which from the beginning of the world hee hath forborn and forgiven to wit that God did not pardon the sins of his own but upon the account of the Propitiatory Sacrifice of Christ which was to come and that without any violation of his Justice Therefore this ground of our Justification is no less to bee asserted than the glory of Gods Justice is to bee manifested The matter is clear For if Justification by Faith in the Blood of Christ shews that God never pardoned sins but upon satisfaction made to his Justice by the Blood of Christ certainly hee would have the righteousness of God concealed that would determine any other ground of our Justification than by Faith That hee might bee just This confirms the Argument that God hath set forth Christ that hee might bee a Propitiation through Faith in his Blood not only that hee might declare himself just in sending the promised Messias for whose sake freely and also justly hee would pardon sin but that hee might shew himself the Author and Doner of true Righteousness to us that were without any righteousness of our own by believing
unto you that the Lord Iesus the same night in which hee was betrayed took bread 24. And when hee had given thanks hee brake it and said Take eat this is my body which is broken for you this do in remembrance of mee That hee may correct these errours First hee sets down the institution of the Sacrament to vers 27. and then hee exhorts them to and teaches them the lawful use of this Sacrament to the end As for the institution of the Supper hee shews that the Lord Jesus being about to suffer by way of Testament set his seal to the Covenant of Grace which by his mediation hee entred into between God and the Church Whereby the glorious memory of his death might bee celebrated in the world till his second comming and might bee delivered to the faithful and being delivered it might judicially confirm a right to his person and the benefits of his sufferings and a living virtue flowing from his death resurrection and exaltation to the sanctification and salvation of Beleevers and that by the symbols of this holy Banquet and holy Communion with God and amongst themselves To which end Christ sitting at Table with his Disciples after the eating of the Paschal Lamb First Took Bread and sanctified it by giving of thanks brake and gave it to his Disciples commanding them to take and eat further hee declared the Bread received and eaten to bee his body represented after a Sacramental manner that i● being given for our Redemption and after a judicial manner applied to us and last●y hee commanded that his Disciples or all the faithful should imitate this his action in the Church in remembrance of him who had paid the price of Redemption by the sufferings of his body Vers. 25. After the same manner also hee took the Cup when hee had supped saying This Cup is the New Testament in my blood this do you as oft as yee drink it in remembrance of mee That which concerns the other part of the Supper follows In the same Supper viz. after the Paschal Supper when the Bread was distributed Christ took the Cup with Wine sanctified by the giving of thanks gave it to the Disciples to drink further concerning the Cup hee declared That it being taken and drunk was that new Covenant of Grace between God and the Church established Sacramentally by his blood i. e. As it is ratified on Gods part that gives so it is confirmed on the beleevers part that receives and judicially applied and sealed Lastly Hee commanded that his Disciples should frequently imitate him in this action in remembrance of him who had paid the price of Redemption for the Church by the shedding of his blood Vers. 26. For as often as yee eat this Bread and drink this Cap yee do shew the Lords death till hee come And that wee might acknowledge that of two Elements Bread and Wine one Supper frequently to bee celebrated in the Church ought to bee made the Apostle would have perpetuated in the Church a publick commemoration of our Lords death by the often reiteration of this Sacrament and that because Christ would not bee present in his body with the Church before the last judgement by this Sacrament hee would that the memorial of the Churches redemption by his death might bee preserved and celebrated until hee come out of Heaven in the last day Vers. 27. Wherefore whosoever shall eat this Bread and drink this Cup of the Lord unworthily shall bee guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. After the Apostle had repeated the institution of this Sacrament hee exhorts and instructs the Corinthians in the right use of it and that in six waies First Shewing the danger of guilt which they are liable to who prophane this Sacrament For whosoever without preparation and reverence otherwise than becomes such an Ordinance approaches so great mysteries abuses the Sacrament despiseth Christ and comes near to the wickedness of those that crucified Christ. Vers. 28. But let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup. Secondly Shewing the easiness of preparation that every one may worthily receive this Sacrament Onely saith hee set every man examine himself that being sensible of the greatness of his sin and misery hee may see how much need hee hath of a remedy by Christ and let him consider with what Faith and purposes of holiness hee is bound to approach communion with Christ who is a thousand times lost without him and when hee hath examined himself so let him eat and drink in that holy Banquet i. e. so let him apply the thing signified with his participation of the sign that hee consider what need hee hath of it Vers. 29. For hee that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself not discerning the Lords body Thirdly Having shewed the punishment of eating unworthily That hee brings judgement or temporal and eternal punishment unless hee repent upon himself by unworthy eating and drinking who participates of the outward Sacrament without examination of himself because hee discerns not this Feast or the thing signified from his own common Supper but comes to the Lords Table no otherwise than to some common one Vers. 30. For this cause many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep Fourthly Shewing before their eyes the examples of Gods temporal anger in diseases and death it self inflicted already upon many of the Corinthians for their prophanation of the Sacrament Vers. 31. For if wee would judge our selves wee should not bee judged Hee clears from severity this infliction of temporal judgement First From the equity of it That God justly punishes those that judge not themselves or repent not but lye securely in their sin which hee would not do if they repenting would judge themselves Vers. 32. For when wee are judged wee are chastened of the Lord that wee should not bee condemned with the world Further That the inflicting of these punishments is a fatherly chastisement whereby the faithful may bee brought to repentance and not perish with the world Vers. 33. Wherefore my Brethren when yee come together to eat tarry one for another Fifthly The Apostle directs the Corinthians to a right use of the Supper giving a Precept to avoid Schism that they would tarry one for another and would partake of the holy Supper together and every man take not his supper asunder because the Supper of the Lord is a common action of the Church in the publick Assembly to bee celebrated after the manner of a Feast Vers. 34. And if any man hunger let him eat at home that yee come not together unto condemnation And the rest will I set in order when I come Sixthly By forbidding their manner of feasting in publick by their feasts of charity before the holy Communion and commanding that if need were they would eat at home to satisfie their hunger repeating the danger of prophaning the Supper and of the
without blood which hee offered for himself and for the errours of the people Hee proceeds in describing the anniversary rites which were of this sort 1 The High Priest alone without any companion 2 Once a year not oftener 3 Never without the offering the blood of a Calf and an Hee-Goat in a basin 4 This blood hee offered for his own sins great and small and for the sins of the people All these outward worldly and shadowy things were in no wise efficacious in themselves For they prefigured the entring of Christ into Heaven by his own blood the true Propitiatory This is the first Argument of the earthly imperfection in the Levitical Priesthood Vers. 8. The Holy Ghost this signifying that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Argum. 2. Propounded by way of exposition of the next mystery In the time of the Levitical Priesthood while it obtained a standing Tabernacle and that Ceremonial worship about the Sanctuary the way to Heaven or the true Sanctuary was not manifestly declared as it is now under the Priesthood of Christ That which the Holy Ghost taught by excluding the Priests from the inward Sanctuary by admitting the High Priest once a year the Sanctuary remaining shut all the year after Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 9. Which was a figure for the time then present in which were offered both gifts and Sacrifices that could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience Argum. 3. The rites of the foresaid expiatory and the other such exercises of the Levitical High Priest were typical and parabolical and a meer pattern of those things which were to bee performed by Christ Therefore the excellency of the Levitical Priesthood is no waies to bee equallized with the Priesthood of Christ. For the time Argum. 4. The things which were done by the High Priest and the Levitical Priests served onely for the time present of the Law institution viz. in the infancy and beginning of the Church wherein gifts and typical Sacrifices were offered Therefore the Levitical Priesthood is far inferiour to the Priesthood of Christ. Could not Argum. 5. The gifts and sacrifices which were offered by the Levitical Priesthood could not sanctifie the conscience of him that worshiped or take away the evil conscience of sins committed Therefore the Levitical Priesthood c. Vers. 10. Which stood onely in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal ordinances imposed on them until the time of reformation Argum. 6. Confirming the former Those things which were offered by the Levitical Priest consisted onely in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal rites which did not commend a man to God 1 Cor. 8.2 but onely they did these things as sanctified in the flesh ceremonially they might bee accounted pure worshipers Therefore the Levitical Priesthood is nothing being compared to the Priesthood of Christ. Until Argum. 7. These gifts and sacrifices and the other offices of the Levitical Priests were imposed as a yoak and burden onely till the time of Reformation i. e. till the comming of Christ who would reform the imperfect sacrifices and gifts of the old Priesthood and they being abolished hee would introduce a more perfect gift and sacrifice Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more perfect c. Vers. 11. But Christ being come an High Priest of good things to come by a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is to say not of this building Argum. 8. Christ is the High Priest not of types but of spiritual good things of Justification Sanctification and Salvation which were figured by the types Therefore c. By a greater Argum. 9. Christ had a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands not of a common structure viz. the Tabernacle of his body which was formed in the womb of the Virgin by the Holy Ghost after a special manner without the spot of Original sin in which Tabernacle the fulness of the Godhead dwels Therefore his Priesthood is far more excellent than c. Vers. 12. Neither by the blood of Goats and Calves but by his own blood hee entred in once into the holy place having obtained eternal redemption for us Argum. 10. Christ offered not the blood of Bulls or Goats as the Levitical Priests but his own blood and the same is made the Priest and the Sacrifice Therefore his Priesthood c. Once Argum. 11. Christ hath once entred into the true holy place i. e. Heaven and there abides not often as the Levitical Priests into the typical holy place Therefore his Priesthood c. Eternal Argum. 12. Christ hath purchased eternal Redemption with his own blood which was impossible for the Levitical Priests Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent than c. Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of 〈◊〉 Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the Living God Shall purge Argum. 13. Confirming the former The blood of Christ purges the conscience partly as the conscience seeing full satisfaction made in the death of Christ to divine Justice for it self closeth with its perfect discharge and rests therein partly as the power of sanctifying the heart to the service of God flowes from him For if Hee confirms this Argument a minori The blood of Bulls and other types performed what they were appointed to viz. Ecclesiastical purification of the outward man that hee might be sanctified to the works of external worship how much more shall the blood of Christ the Antitype perform that which is signified by the types viz. The purifying of the conscience from sins to the service of God Sins are called dead works because they deserve death and make sinners guilty of death By the Spirit Argum. 14. In the Sacrifice of Christ the Eternal Spirit or Christ as God acted the chief parts of the Priest and offered up himself as a man without spot for a Sacrifice Therefore his Priesthood is so much the more excellent than the Levitical as God is more excellent than man and his holy humanity than a beast Vers. 15. And for this cause hee is the Mediatour of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Argum. 15. Under the Old Covenant neither Remission of sin nor the Inheritance of Eternal Life was given to them that were called but for the sake of Christs death interceding under the New Covenant to which end hee being now the Mediatour of the New Covenant is ordained for all them that are called Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent
Covenant and ceremonial forms of worship are abrogated The Summe of Chap. IX THen That you may see this more clearly let us take view of the typical Ordinances in the Old Covenant and of their accomplishment in Christ under the Old Covenant and typical Tabernacle there were sundry shadows vers 1 2. The Tabernacle divided in two rooms and their furniture within them both vers 3 4 5. In the outer room the Priests resorted daily vers 6. In the inner room onely the High Priest once a year vers 7. The close-keeping of which room signified that the way to Heaven was not to be fully clear during the time of those shadows vers 8. Nothing done then externally could quiet the conscience vers 9. All being but temporary shadows imposed till Christ came to reform all vers 10. But when Christ came hee gave to those shadows accomplishment For hee was Priest of the true Tabernacle of his own Body signified by the typical Tabernacle vers 11. And by his own blood entred into Heaven for our Eternal Redemption vers 12. For if the types procured a Ceremonial cleansing vers 13. How much more shall his blood truly and in effect procure our Justification and Sanctification vers 14. And therefore that Remission of sins and Eternal Life might be given to the faithful both then of old and now hee behoved by his office to make his Testament and die vers 15. For so requireth the nature of a Testament vers 16 17. Wherefore the typical Testament of old also behoved to have a typical death as Levit. 16. maketh plain vers 18 19 20 21. Yea every cleansing of the Types and every Remission behoved to be with blood vers 22. Therefore the things represented by the types behoved to be cleaned by better blood even the blood of the Messias vers 23. For Christ entred not into the typical Sanctuary but into Heaven it self vers 24. And offered not himself often as the imperfect Levitical Sacrifice was offered vers 25. For then should hee have often died But his once offering was sufficient for ever vers 26. And as God appointed men but once to die vers 27. So Christ was but once offered till the time hee come to judgement for the salvation of the faithful vers 28. The Doctrine of Chap. IX Vers. 1. Then verily the first Covenant had also Ordinances of Divine Service and a worldly Sanctuary THe word Ordinances in the original is also Justifications in the plural number so called because they represented our Iustification Whereof wee learn 1. That as other things were typed under the Law so also was our Justification and the manner of obtaining the same shadowed forth 2. That those things which then were called Justifications were so called onely because they were the representations of the way of obtaining Justification for they did not justifie 3. That albeit Justification be onely one yet the types therefore were many no one of them being able to express the truth but in part 2. By calling them Ordinances of Divine Service hee teacheth us That sometime those Ceremonies which are now abolished were during their own time parts of Gods external worship in regard of the Commandement of God injoyning them 3. By calling the Sanctuary Worldly hee teacheth us To think of all the external glory of Levitical Service onely as the earthly representation of heavenly things and under all these earthly shadows to seek in to an heavenly signification Vers. 2. For there was a Tabernacle made the first wherein was the Candlestick and the Table and the Shew-bread which is called the Sanctuary 3. And after the second Veil the Tabernacle which is called the holiest of all 4. Which had the Golden Censer and the Ark of the Covenant overlaid round about with Gold wherein was the Golden Pot that had Manna and Aarons Rod that buded and the Tables of the Covenant 5. And over it the Cherubims of Glory shadowing the Mercy-Seat of which wee cannot now speak particularly 6. Now when these things were thus ordained the Priests went alwaies into the first Tabernacle accomplishing the Service of God 7. But into the second went the High-Priest alone once every year not without blood which hee offered for himself and for the errours of the people Hee setteth before our eyes the pleasant face of Gods outward worship that in the wise appointing of every thing for place for division of rooms for furniture for ornaments for materials for persons for actions for order of doing wee may behold the Glory not onely of the appointer of them but also the glory of the Church and of Heaven and of Christ and of his Saints represented thereby as far above the glory of those outward things as heavenly and spiritual things are above earthly as the particular Exposition of the meaning of the Types in their own proper place will make plain which wee cannot meddle with here seeing the Apostle judgeth it not pertinent Vers. 8. The Holy Ghost this signifying that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Hee expoundeth what the High Priests going through the Veil but once a year did mean saying the Holy Ghost signified something thereby Then 1. The Holy Ghost is the Author of these Ordinances of Levi and of matters appointed about that Old Tabernacle as of the expressions of his own mind to the Church and so hee is very God 2. The Holy Ghost is a distinct person of the God-head exercising the proper actions of a person subsisting by himself directing the Ordinances of the Church teaching the Church and interpreting the meaning of the Types unto the Church 3. The Church under the Law was not altogether ignorant of the spiritual signification of the Levitical Ordinances because the Holy Ghost was then teaching them the meaning 4. Those Rites and Ceremonies were not so dark in themselves as they could not be in any sort understood but were expressions of the mind of God to the Church of that time 2. That which the Holy Ghost did signifie was this That the way unto the holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Then That the holiest of all represented Heaven the Old Church did know 3. Hee saith not that the way to Heaven was closed but not clearly manifested Then They knew the way to Heaven darkly through the Veil of Types 2. They knew there was a time of clearer light comming 4. The time of the endurance of this not clear manifestation of the way to Heaven is set down to be Whilst the first Tabernacle was standing Then the Old Church was taught 1. That the clear light of the way to Heaven was not to be revealed while those shadows and that Tabernacle endured 2. That when the clear manifestation of that way should come by the Messias that Tabernacle was not to stand 3. That when God should cause that
to dye The Articles of the Covenant also evinceth it to be a Testament and the promiser bound to make his word good and so to dye For Jer. 31. the Lord Christ promiseth to reconcile his people to God to take away their sins and to be their God Iustice required satisfaction of them before they could be reconciled Satisfaction they could not make themselves therefore he who promised to make the Reconciliation with God was bound to make the satisfaction for them to God and if satisfaction for them then to undergo the curse of the Law for them and so to dye Then 1. The New Covenant is of the nature of a Testament and the benefits promised therein to wit Remission of sins Reconciliation Sanctification and Life Eternal are Legacies freely left unto us by our Defunct Lord who was dead and is alive to execute his own will for evermore The Scripture is the instrument and evidence the Apostles Notaries the Sacraments are seals witnesses from Heaven the Father the Word and the Spirit witnesses on earth the Water the Blood and the Spirit 2. Christ Jesus is both the maker of the Covenant which is in Ier. 31. and the Mediator thereof also the Testator and Executor of that blessed Testament 3. Christs death was concluded and resolved upon and intimated before he came into the world Vers. 17. For a Testament is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at all whilest the Testator liveth He cleareth his reasoning from the nature of Testaments amongst men which not before but after a mans death have force But here it may be objected How can this be seeing by vertue of the testament of Christ benefits not a few were bestowed upon the Church before his death from the beginning of the world not onely Remission of sins and Eternal Life but also many graces and blessings in this life both bodily and spiritual I answer Albeit Christs death was not accomplished in act till of late yet for the certainty of his death to follow and the unchangeableness of his minde towards his Church before his death he was reckoned both with God and the Church for dead and the promise of laying down his life for his people accepted for the time as if it had been performed For which cause he is called Rev. 13.8 The Lamb slain from the beginning of the world And Christ was still represented as a slain man in all these Sacrifices which the Apostle pointeth at as meeting this doubt in the next words which follow hereafter Vers. 18. Vers. 18. Whereupon neither the first Testament was dedicated without blood He proveth the necessity of Christs death yet farther Under the Law his bloodshed was represented by types of bloody Sacrifices therefore it behoved those types to be answered by his real bloodshed and death Then 1. What the types of the Law did signifie Christ behoved to accomplish in verity 2. The Old Church was taught that by vertue of the blood signified by these types the Covenant stood betwixt God and them Vers. 19. For when Moses had spoken every Precept to all the people according to the Law he took the blood of Calves and of Goats with Water and Scarlet Wooll and Hyssope and sprinkled both the book and all the people 20. Saying This is the blood of the Testament which God hath enjoyned unto you 21. Moreover he sprinkled with blood both the Tabernacle and all the Vessels of the Ministery From Moses example we learn 1. That the Lords Word should be manifested to all the people and none of them debarred from taking knowledge thereof 2. That the Word must be spoken plainly with a distinct voyce in the common Language and not muttered in an unknown Tongue 3. That with the use of holy Rites appointed of God the Preaching of Gods Word should be joyned to shew the Institution and force of Gods Ordinances to his people 2. In that the Book and the People and Instruments of Service were all to be sprinkled we learn That every thing which we touch or meddle with or make use of is unclean unto us were it never so holy in it self except the Blood of Jesus make it clean unto us and cleanse us in the using of it Vers. 22. And almost all things are by the Law purged with blood and without shedding of blood is no remission He saith Almost because of some purging which was done by washing and yet even that washing also drew the Vertue of Ceremonial purging from the Sacrifice whereunto the washing was annexed 2. In saying Without shedding of blood there is no remission of sins he teacheth us That wheresoever a sacrifice is offered for obtaining remission of sin there shedding of blood must really be and where an unbloody sacrifice is pretended to be offered for obtaining remission it serveth not the purpose because Without shedding of blood there is no remission Either therefore must such as pretend to offer Christ for obtaining the remission of sin grant that Christ is daily murthered by them and his blood shed anew in their pretended Offering or else that by their Offering no new Remission is purchased But the truth is Christs Blood is once shed and never to be shed again and that once Offering and Blood shedding is sufficient for everlasting remission without any new Offering of him again Vers. 23. It was therefore necessary that the Patterns of things in the Heavens should be purified with these but the Heavenly things themselves with better Sacrifices than these Another reason of the necessity of Christs death in force thus much If things figuratively holy behoved to be cleansed with the Typical Blood of Beasts Then things truly holy behoved to be cleansed with better blood even the blood of the Messias Hence we learn 1. That for the significations cause God would not have the Tabernacle nor any Instrument of Service about it to ●e esteemed holy till blood was shed to sprinkle it That it might be known thereby that without the shedding of Christs blood he would not accept of any thing from us as holy 2. That the blood of Beasts was sufficient to make representation but better blood even the Blood of the Messiah behoved to be shed to give the truth of the signification For as far as Heaven is above the earthly sanctuary and mens souls above the vessels thereof so far better behoved to be that blood which made souls acceptable to God and to get entrance into heaven than the blood of Levitical sacrifices was Vers. 24. For Christ is not entred into the Holy Places made with hands which are the figures of the true but into Heaven it self now to appear in the presence of God for us He cleareth the matter how Christ hath offered a better Sacrifice than the Levitical yea and behoved to offer a better because he is entered into a better Sanctuary another man in another manner and to another end than the High Priest under
not work the love of God without love of the Brethren Therefore c. For hee Hee confirms this Argument by this Reason Because wee are more moved to love by sight than by hearing hee that loveth not his Brother whom hee hath seen and the Image of God in him hee cannot love God whom hee hath not seen Therefore the boasting of love towards God is vain where love of the Brethren is wanting Vers. 21. And this commandement have wee from him that hee who loveth God loveth his brother also Argum. 20. The same authority of God hath conjoyned the command of both requiring of all that love God that they love their Brethren also Therefore yee ought to love the Brethren CHAP. V. THe principal scope of the whole Epistle and especially of this Chapter is propounded vers 13. viz. that those who beleeve in Christ may know that they have eternal life and that knowing they have life they may more and more believe in Christ. Of the Chapter there bee two parts In the first hee describes the marks of those that are true beleevers or born again who have right to eternal life with an inchoate possession thereof to vers 6. In the second hee propounds the Arguments to move us to beleeve in Christ. Vers. 1. Whosoever beleeveth that Iesus is the Christ is born of God and every one that loveth him that begat loveth him also that is begotten of him The marks of those that are true beleevers or born again and live sincerely are six Note 1. Hee that is truly faithful or begotten of God beleeves seriously that Jesus is the promised Christ viz. the Redeemer of the world for whosoever solidly receives this truth and applies it to himself acknowledges it in his heart as the Scripture requires is born of God And every one Note 2. Hee so loves God that hee loves the Brethren or those that are begotten of him Vers. 2. By this wee know that wee love the children of God when wee love God and keep his commandements Note 3. Those that are truly faithful do so love the Brethren that they also love God and out of love to God they endeavour to keep his commandements Vers. 3. For this is the love of God that wee keep his Commandements and his Commandements are not grievous Note 4. Explicating the former They that are truly faithful demonstrate the sincerity of their love in endeavouring to observe Gods Commandements out of love to him so that his commandements how much soever they bee hard and unpleasant to the flesh yet they are not grievous but such as they desire most willingly to perform Vers. 4. For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world and this is the victory that overcometh the world even our Faith Note 5. Giving the reason of the former They that are truly faithful or born again do overcome the world that is they overcome whatsoever opposes it self to the Spirit of God viz. deceits inticements and the terrours of the world and all hinderances which may draw them from obedience to Gods commandements so that their conflicts bee daily yet they do not yeeld but are sure to triumph as conquerors as often as their enemies oppose them And this Note 6. Explicating the former They that are truly faithful do not lean to their own strength in warring against the world but on Christ by Faith who hath overcome the world in their behalf and doth administer strength to them for the overcoming the world which is the most certain excellent and compleat way to conquer Vers. 5. Who is hee that overcometh the world but hee that beleeveth that Iesus is the Son of God The reason of the victory got over the world by Faith is because it is impossible that any one should overcome the world unless it bee hee that despairing of himself by Faith leans on the sole truth and strength of Jesus Christ as of the omnipotent Son of God who hath not onely overcome the world for his but doth also make all his conquerors The Second Part. Vers. 6. This is ●ee that came by water and blood even Iesus Christ not by water onely but by water and blood and it is the Spirit that beareth witness because the spirit is truth The other part of the Chapter follows wherein hee proves that wee ought to beleeve in Christ as in the Son of God The Arguments are fourteen Argum. 1. Because Jesus Christ is hee who when hee came brought with him the solid substance of Legal Ceremonies as to that which chiefly belongs to the abolishing of sin For hee came with water or with that holiness in himself and virtue for the sanctifying his which was signified by water and washings in the old Law to be in the Messias that was to come when he came And hee came with blood or with a full expiation of their sins by the propitiatory Sacrifice of his blood offered on the Cross for the taking away of the sins of his people Not by water Hee confirms that because Christ came not with one propriety of a Mediatour which is the Sanctity of his Person and virtue of sanctifying his signified by water or legal washings but hee comes also with another propriety which is expiation and full reconciliation signified by the sprinkling of blood or by the slaying of beasts The admirable symbole of which conjunction was the flowing of water and blood out of his side on the cross as our Apostle hath diligently observed in his Gospel Chap. 19.34 That wee may all know that whom Christ justifies hee also sanctifies and on the contrary those whom hee sanctifies the same hee also justifies Therefore yee ought to beleeve in Christ. The Spirit Argum. 2. The spirit witnesseth the same i. e. the manifestation of the spirit in divers gifts poured forth upon Christs Disciples witnesseth that Christ is the Son of God and by its dictate makes this firm in the hearts of those that are faithful Therefore yee ought to beleeve in Christ. Truth Hee confirms this Argument that the Spirit in these operations is true and far from all deceit because it commends nothing to us besides the Word of God or Truth it self Vers. 7. For there are three that bear record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one Arg. 3. Because as the three persons of the God-head the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost are one in essence so they also consent together in witnessing to confirm this one thing That Jesus Christ is the Son of God For the Father witnesseth of him 1 Pronouncing with an audible voice both in Christs Baptism and Transfiguration that he was his beloved Son in whom hee was well pleased 2 In the works which hee gave to Christ to finish Iob 5.16.36 Furthermore the word bears record of Christ that is Christ wherein hee is God bears record of himself being incarnate that hee is the Son of God partly affirming that very
often with a lively voice partly making it manifest in his whole doctrine that hee is the same which came out of his Fathers bosome and laid open his counsel touching mans salvation Hee that cometh from above hee that cometh from Heaven is above all Ioh. 4.31 3 The Holy Ghost bears record that Jesus Christ is the Son of God partly by his descending upon him in his Baptism partly by his descending upon his Apostles and Disciples in the day of Pentecost partly by inspiring the doctrine of Christ into the Pen-men of the Scripture and by commending it to the world that it might teach men and perswade and confirm them touching that truth as truly divine By which hee may gather a Church and lead it into all truth to eternal life These three are said to bear record in Heaven 1 Because they immediately bear witness from Heaven as from their Throne 2 Because the Majesty of these witnesses chiefly shines in Heaven 3 Because this testimony is not heard observed acknowledged unless by souls lifted up to Heaven Lastly Because this testimony for the most part is perfected in Heaven although it should never bee received on earth Therefore yee ought to beleeve in Christ for his testimonies sake Vers. 8. And there are three that bear witness in earth the Spirit and the Water and the Blood and these three agree in one Argum. 4. Because three witnesses in earth consent together to prove that Christ is the Son of God viz. the Spirit and the Water and the Blood which are called witnesses in earth 1 Because this testimony is mediate and is produced out of the works which are to bee seen in the earth 2 Because uttering of this testimony is written in men that are in the earth and is acknowledged by the Visible Church Lastly Because this testimony doth not onely sound in the Church but also utters its voice amongst the men of the world and is heard of them to their conviction For 1 The Spirit or manifestation of the Spirit partly in miraculous gifts which are shed abroad in the Church even to the amazement of the world for many years after Christs ascention Partly in ordinary gifts which as yet flourish in the Church and suffice both to testifie that Christ who is preached amongst us is God and to draw an acknowledgement from them who are without the Church that God is in us who beleeve in Christ 1 Cor. 14. Furthermore the operation of the Spirit in the hearts of the faithful doth so quicken the words of Christ and by them doth so instruct comfort and confirm the elect that it leaves no doubt as touching the Divinity of Christ. As for Water which is the virtue of Christ sanctifiing his it so expresly speaks of Christ that those also who are without the Church seeing the light of good works in Christians are forced to glorifie our Father and the Father of Christ who is in Heaven so that also being even perceived in women it brought their unbeleeving husbands to God who at the first did not acknowledge the Word of God 1 Pet. 3.1 Lastly As for Blood which is the price of redemption and the virtue of Christ expiating sins and reconciling men to God that blood speaks better things than the blood of Abel so that it makes the consciences of the faithful quiet and peaceable and opens a way to the Throne of God and so confirms their hearts against the world and all things which are evil in it that they may bee bold and able to resound even with their own blood this testimony to those enemies that hear them in the midst of torments with joy Rev. 12.11 Therefore wee ought to beleeve in Christ as the Son of God Vers. 9. If wee receive the witness of men the witness of God is greater For this is the witness of God which hee hath testified of his Son Argum. 5. For the sake of the testimonies of faithful and true men wee beleeve their assertions Therefore for the sake of the testimony of God which is greater testifying of his Son we ought to beleeve in Christ as the Son of God Vers. 10. Hee that beleeveth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself hee that beleeveth not God hath made him a lyer because hee beleeveth not the record that God gave of his Son Argum. 6 Hee that beleeves in Christ as the Son of God is so much rectified that hee rests in the witness of the Spirit in●ardly confirming this truth of the Divine Word Therefore c. Hee that beleeveth not Argum. 7. Hee that doth not beleeve in ●hrist as the Son of God doth really accuse God of a lye because hee rejects the testimony concerning his Son as if it were false Therefore wee must beleeve in Christ as the Son of God Vers. 11. And this is the record that God hath given to us eternal life and this life is in his Son Argum. 8. Those that beleeve in the Son have right to eternal life which is in the Son as in the Fountain Procurer Giver and Conserver given to them by grace and confirmed by the constancy of Gods testimony Therefore c. Vers. 12. Hee that hath the Son hath life and hee that hath not the Son hath not life Argum. 9. Hee that truly embraces the Son by Faith hath also eternal life not onely as to the right of it but also to 〈◊〉 inchoate possession and hee that hath not the Son by Faith or seeks life in another rather than in him is destitute and shut out from all spiritual life Therefore c. Vers. 13. These things have I written unto you that beleeve on the Name of the Son of God that yee may know that yee have eternal life and that yee may beleeve on the Name of the Son of God Argum. 10. For this end all these things are written to the faithful from the Holy Ghost by the Apostle the Pen-man that they might bee certain that they have eternal life already and might more and more beleeve in the name of the Son of God Therefore yee must beleeve in Christ. Vers. 14. And this is the confidence that wee have in him that if wee ask any thing according to his will hee heareth us Argum. 11. Hee that beleeveth in Christ hath confidence in his approaches to God in prayer and that hee shall have Gods favourable ear in every petition which is put up according to the will of God Therefore c. Vers. 15. And if wee know that hee heareth us whatsoever wee ask wee know that wee have the p●titions that wee desired of him Argum. 12. Explicating and unfolding the former Hee that beleeves in Christ by knowing that God will bee propitious to him in his lawful or well-ordered petitions hee may also bee certain that the petitions which hee hath offered according to the Promises of God are already granted by him before they bee finished and so hee may bee assured of the success