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A41199 A brief exposition of the Epistles of Paul to the Philippians and Colossians by James Fergusson ... Fergusson, James, 1621-1667. 1656 (1656) Wing F774; ESTC R11959 185,316 304

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name of evill concupiscence even those are to be mortified evil concupiscence 7. We do then set against sin to some purpose when we pursue it to the den and labour to pluck it up by the very roots with-drawing from those things which adde fuell to it for he will have them going from the outward acts of filthinesse to the inward root evill concupiscence and to set against covetousnesse also whereby lust is sed and nourished evill concupiscence and covetousnesse 8. Covetousnesse which consists in an immoderate desire to acquire or keep worldly riches is a sin which all Christians are to mortifie not onely because it provideth oyl to make all other sins burn but it hath a kind of idolatry in it as drawing our love trust fear and joy from God and his service to be taken up with and laid out upon wealth and riches more than any other sins and covetousnesse which is idolatry Vers. 6. For which things sake the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience He presseth the exhortation by arguments The first is taken from the wrath of God manifested in its sad effects upon those who have continued contumacious and impenitent under those sins Doct. 1. Unbelief of divine promises and threatnings and obstinat impenitency under sin go together the latter following upon the former for disobedience signifieth both misbelief and contumacy or disobedience 2. It is not sin in it self so much as obduration in it which draweth down wrath chiefly lasting wrath upon the sinner For those things wrath cometh upon the children of disobedience or children of contumacy 3. Whatever judgments be already inflicted upon wicked men they have ground to look for more for wrath cometh in the mean time and is still coming upon the children of disobedience 4. Though the Lord be sometimes wroth with the truly godly because of sin yet he is not wroth for ever Isa. 57. 16. he debateth with them but in measure Isa. 27. 7 8. The wrath which is due unto and is accordingly poured forth upon contumacious sinners is of another kind as being everlasting without any mixture of fatherly mercy and flowing from sin-pursuing justice Matth. 25. 4. for which cause he holdeth forth that wrath which cometh on the children of disobedience as being most terrifying 5. As the consideration of the terror of divine wrath is a strong aw-band to restrain from sin So it is most moving when considered in the sad and woful experience of those who have found the dolefull effects of it for he mentioneth the effects of this wrath upon others to fear them 6. Sin keepeth so much of its old interest in the best and even Believers sometimes are so much overtaken with spiritual deadnesse Isa. 64. 7. that there is need to present the terror of divine wrath unto them to fear them from sin and excite them to duty for the Apostle proponeth the terror of divine wrath even to those believing Colossians Vers. 7. In the which ye also walked sometime when ye lived in them Here is a second argument taken from their by-past long continance in these sins when they lived in them or were in their natural state Doct. 1. It is not some moe or fewer particular acts of a man's life but his ordinary strain and way according to which sentence is to passe upon his state whether it be good or bad It was their walking in sin and making a daily trade of it which argued them to be in nature or living in sin 2. Before a mans effectual calling there is no difference betwixt him and the most godlesse man that is so as to make God his debtor either by promise or because of any worth which is in him to give him grace Rom. 11. 35. for as long as those Colossians were unconverted they were as much inslaved to sin as the most obstinat of natural men are In which ye also walked 3. A mans walking in sin or his ordinary strain of breaking forth in the outward acts of it dependeth upon his living in sin or upon the inward power and dominion which sin exerceth in him even as natural life is the cause of outward motion So that the best way to curb the outward acts is to strike at the life and power of sin within In which ye walked when ye lived in them 4. Our calling to mind of by-past sins and our long continuance in them should not be without an holy indignation at them and at our selves for them so as to scar us from them in time coming for the Apostle mentioneth their by-past continuance in those sins as one argument to scar them from them Vers. 8. But now you also put off all these Anger wrath malice blasphemy filthy communication out of your mouth 9. Lie not one to another He returneth to the former exhortation of mortifying sin and exemplisieth it in another sort of corruptions to wit those which are more spiritual whereof he mentioneth six The first three are sins of the heart the rest are sins of the mouth Doct. 1. So deceitful are our hearts in adhering to sin even when they seem to quit it Psal. 78. 36 37. that we should not be easily satisfied with our mortifying or subduing of it for Paul having commanded them to mortifie and kill sin ver 5. he biddeth them here put it off which speaks somewhat further to wit a removing of it quite out of sight as we do dead bodies when we bury them for so the word sometimes signifieth 2. Though all sins be not alike throughly mortified there being some more deeply rooted than others Psal. 18. v. 23. yet the grace of mortification striketh at all known sin and spareth none for it opposeth sin as it is sin Gen. 39. v. 9. and so all sin So the Apostle commandeth But now also put you off all those And the particulars after mentioned are not for restriction but for instance or example 3. In the work of mortification we are not to rest upon the subduing of these sins which are grosse and fleshly but are to proceed against more spiritual sins also which have as much of guilt in them before God Gal. 5. 20. though not so much of infamy before men So the Apostle exhorteth to put off anger wrath c. 4. Anger which as distinguished from wrath and malice is an unjust desire of revenge is a sin unbeseeming Christians and so to be put off chiefly when wrath is joyned with it which as it is distinguished from anger pointeth at the gorging and swelling of the blood about the heart which fireth the eye and tongue even that passionate commotion which useth to accompany anger transforming a man to a very beast thrusting him forward to act some mischief Luke 4. 28 29. and banishing the Spirit of God Eph. 4. 30 31. Put off anger wrath c. 5. But then is anger and wrath most dangerous and unbeseeming Christians when malice is joyned which as it is distinguished
of those that are absent without detracting any thing from their just worth is praise-worthy and evidenceth a man's faithfulnesse much towards those of whom he so speaketh as the contrary doth argue a man to be unfaithfull Jer. 9. 4. for this was an evidence of his being faithfull for them he also declared unto us your love faith he 7. Then is love praise-worthy when it is in the spirit or spiritual that is wrought by the Spirit of God Gal. 5. 22. when it is in a spiritual or renewed heart 1 Pet. 1. 22 23. and drawn out by spiritual considerations and motives chiefly such as the work of grace already in the person loved Gal. 6. 10. or some hope at least that this work may yet be where it is not 1 Cor. 13. 7. and not by carnal natural or civil motives only Matth. 5. 46. for which reasons their love is said to be in the Spirit Vers. 9. For this cause we also since the day we heard it do not cease to pray for you and to desire that ye might be filled with the knowledge of his will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding Having shewen how he had thanked God for them he mentioneth now his praying for them and this as a further mean to procure their good-will In this verse is first the cause moving him to pray to wit that he heard by Epaphras of their love Secondly the manner of his prayer it was timeous constant and servent Thirdly the first of those things which he prayed for to wit increase and fulnesse of the knowledge of Gods revealed will which knowledge he divideth in two First wisedome whereby we know celestiall mysteries revealed in Scripture Secondly understanding whereby as it is distinguished from wisedome we know our duty and the right way of reducing all our knowledge to practice Doct. 1. As the graces of God's Spirit in any are matter of thanksgiving to God so they are incitements also unto prayer for those who have them for the graces of the best are but imperfect 1 Cor. 13. 9. subject to decay Rev. 2. 4. and may be abused 2 Cor. 12. 7. Hence Paul takes occasion from their graces for which he had blessed God verse 4. c. to pray to God for them for this cause we pray 2. As our praying to God for others doth evidence much our affection to them so the expressions of our sympathie that way would be timeously begun and constantly continued in Thus Paul to testifie his affection towards this Church sheweth he prayed for them and that timeously Since the day we heard it and constantly we cease not which is not to be understood as if he had done no other thing but that he had a rooted desire after their good which was alwayes expressed by him in prayer when opportunity did offer 3. The knowledge of God's will revealed in Scripture is to be studied above the knowledge of any other thing besides as being more sublime 1 Cor. 2. 6 7. and so more pleasant yea and more profitable verse 27. nor any other for whileas he prayeth that they may be filled with the knowledge of Gods will he speaketh of his revealed will Deut. 29. 29. 4. They who know most of God's will revealed in Scripture come far short of what they should know there is a fulnesse of knowledge which is attained by none 1 Cor. 13. 12. but should be aimed at by all for notwithstanding the Apostle had heard of their knowing the grace of God verse 6. yet he prayeth here that they may be filled with the knowledge of his will 5. Our desires after spirituall good would be inlarged and in a manner insatiable great things would be sought from God for he is a great King Ps. 95. 3. whom it becometh to give largely so he seeketh that they may be filled 6. As wisedome or kowledge of divine mysteries and of the things of faith is requisite so also is understanding or knowledge of our duty and of the right way to go about it with due respect had to time Ps. 1. 3 place Ecc. 5. 1 company Ps. 39. 1 and other circumstances Luke 8. 18. upon the right ordering whereof the goodnesse of an action dependeth much Ps. 50. 23. In all wisedome and understanding 7. The knowledge wisedome and understanding mainly to be sought after is spirituall that is of things spirituall 1 Cor. 2. 2. attained unto by spirituall means as prayer hearing reading and meditation Psal. 119. 18. Prov. 1. 8. and produced in us by the Spirit of God upon the use of those means 1 Cor. 2. 10. for he saith in all spiritual wisedome c. 8. There is no part of this spirituall knowledge and wisedome the attaining whereof is not to be endeavored by us some truths are indeed more necessary to be known than others Heb. 6. 1. yet we are not to slight the knowledge of any revealed truth Acts 20. 27. In all spiritual wisedome and understanding Vers. 10. That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God He prayeth secondly for increase of holinesse to them or for such a conversation as is worthy of the Lord which he brancheth forth in three First their aiming in all things to please him as the scope of all their actions Secondly fruitfulnesse in good works And thirdly growth in the saving knowledge of God Doct. 1. Spirituall knowledge wisedome and understanding is to be sought after not to be puffed up with Coloss. 2. 18. or to rest upon it Luke 12. 47. but that we may order our practice according to it for the end why the Apostle did pray for knowledge to these Colossians is that ye may walk worthy of the Lord. 2. It is not every sort of walking which is required as the fruit of knowledge but a walking worthy of the Lord which doth not import a dignity or worth in our walking to recompence the Lord but onely a beseemingnesse and not repugnancie to that state whereunto we are called by him as the same word is well rendered Phil. 1. 27. which may consist with many failings and sins of infirmity where there is self-judging for them Rom. 7. 14. 3. That we may thus walk worthy of the Lord it is required first that there be an habituall purpose at least in every action and an actuall purpose in actions more solemne and weighty to please him by our obedience to him for so the Apostle explaineth walking worthy to wit unto all well-pleasing Secondly there must be fruitfulnesse following upon his pains towards us and this must be in works which are good as being commanded or warranted by God for the matter Isa. 29. 13. and gone about in the right manner chap. 3. v. 17. and no good work is to be omitted unto which we have a calling from God Luke 12. 14 Being fruitful in every good work Thirdly as fruitfulnesse in good works maketh much
by wicked works yet now hath he reconciled 22. In the body of his flesh through death to present you holy and unblamable and unreprovable in his sight What he spoke of reconciliation in general he applieth to the Collossians in particular hereby to make way for the following exhortation and having shown the miserable state wherein they were by nature as being not only strangers but enemies to God and that because of sin in them He declareth the gracious change wrought in them they being put in a state of friendship with God which Christ had purchased for them by taking on a true body subject to fleshly infirmities though without sin Heb. 4. 15. and by suffering death in it and all this that they might be presented free from all sin and perfect in holinesse before God in the last day Doct. 1. That general Truths may not be without fruit being looked upon as remote from us Ministers would labour prudently to apply them to the particular state and severall cases of hearers so doth Paul here You hath he reconciled 2. As those who are at peace with God were once in as desperate an estate as others so it concerneth them who are delivered from that state and would have the sense of that mercy kept still lively and fresh and not be puffed up with their present good condition despising others to be frequently minding that woful case wherein they were when first free-grace did lay hold upon them so Paul to commend this peace-making mercy in God doth mind them they were sometimes alienated and enemies in their mind 3. The state of man by nature is most miserable as being first estranged from God having no spiritual communion with him Gen. 3. 8 9. 24. nor any right or claim to that happinesse which floweth from the the enjoyment of him Psa. 58. 3. So they were sometimes alienated to wit by Adams fall as the fountain-fountain-cause Secondly they are enemies to God as fighting against Gods revealed will Rom. 6. 19. and hating God Rom. 8. 7. though not as creator and preserver of the world yet as he is a just Judge armed with vengeance against those who do wickedly and God is an enemy to them Isa. 63. 10. who though he love his Elect even in their unregenerate state with an everlasting love Eph. 1. 4. yet so long as they are unrenewed and have not fled to Christ by faith he cannot adjudge them to eternal life or look upon them any other way than as men under an actuall obligation to lie under the curse of the Law which is eternal wrath so they are enemies Thirdly As the cause of this enmity betwixt God and man is no wrong done on Gods part Mic. 6. 3. but mans own sin and wrong done by him to God so the great part of man's misery by nature consisteth in this his sin whereby the chiefest part of him even his soul and all the faculties of it to wit his reason Eph. 4. 18. will and affections Gen. 6. 5. all of which are here signified by the mind are wholly corrupted from whence doth flow all his actuall wickednesse and so much of it that every action of his is polluted as proceeding from such a silthy fountain Enemies in your mind by wicked works Doct. 4. As there is nothing in us to bud or buy free-grace with so by-past misery though arrived at the height of enmity against God will not impede Jesus Christ to work a miracle of mercy where he intendeth to be gracious so you who were enemies yet now hath he reconciled 5. The reconciliation of the Elect unto God is not from eternity nor the time of Christs death nor at any time before the sinner doth beleeve in Jesus Christ Election indeed is from eternity Eph. 1. 4. and satisfaction for sin was given to the Father's justice by Christ upon the crosse Joh. 19. 30. but justification is not until the self-condemned sinner assent to the bargain and enter himself heir unto Christ's purchase by faith for he speaks of them as now being reconciled having imbraced the Gospel when before they were enemies 6. The second person of the blessed Trinity in order to our reconciliation with God behoved to be incarnate taking on a true fleshly body not in appearance only and subject to all the common and sinlesse infirmities of flesh reconciled in the body of his flesh 7. It was necessary also in order to our reconciliation for Jesus Christ to suffer death in his body that thus Christ our surety and one of the same nature with us being seized upon we the principal debters might be absolved and set free Joh. 18. 8. yet now hath he reconciled in the body of his flesh through death 8. As reconciliation with God hath holinesse of life following on it so the sanctifying of those who are reconciled is a work undertaken by Christ which he is to carry on from one degree unto another until he compleat it at death and so present the justified person holy unblamable and unreprovable in his sight that is Perfectly sanctified as the multiplying of words to one purpose doth import which is not to be accomplished untill death no nor fully in both soul and body joyned together until the day of his second coming Vers. 23. If ye continue in the faith grounded and setled and be not moved away from the hope of the Gospel which ye have heard and which was preached to every creature which is under Heaven whereof I Paul am made a Minister In the third part of the chapter he exhorts them to persevere in the faith of the former doctrine not questioning the truth thereof nor quitting those hopes of good things to come which was begotten in them by it and that because what he had spoken of their reconciliation did depend upon their perseverance and the doctrine was the same with that which at Christ's command was taught through the world by Apostles and which he himself was called by God to preach among the Gentiles Doct. 1. Though a Minister may speak to a mixed multitude indefinitly sometimes as to regenerate persons 1 Cor. 6. 11. because the better part are so Mal. 3. 16 17. And sometimes as to unregenerate Deut. 29. 4 because the greater part ordinarily are such Matth. 22. 14. yet it is safest for him alwayes to guard what he so speaketh by propounding some marks and qualifications of those to whom the thing spoken doth belong l●st people stumble by conceiving their state to be either better or worse than really it is Rev. 3. 17. So Paul having spoken vers 22 indefinitly of them all as being reconciled he doth now restrict his speech only to those who had saving faith and would persevere in it If ye continue in the faith 2. All those who are reconciled to God having fled to Christ by faith shall undoubtedly persevere unto the end as being kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1.
of the cup the great wave of affliction did first beat on him and being thereby broken some small sparks of it only do light upon us I fill up that which is behind or the relicts and hinder parts of the sufferings of Christ. 5. The cup of affliction and sufferings goeth about by course and round as Christ did drink of it first the Apostles only standing by Joh. 18. 8. so their course came next 1 Cor. 4. 9. and thus it hath gone from hand to hand ever since all are not made to drink of it at once that some may still be in a capacity to pity help and sympathize with others 2 Cor. 8. 14. so the word rendred fill up signifieth to do a thing in our own course or turn 6. As the personal sufferings of Christ were for the Churches redemption and to satisfie the Fathers justice for the sins of the Elect Act. 20. v. 28. which he did compleatly Joh. 19. 30. So the sufferings of the Saints are also for the Churches good though not for her redemption or expiation of sin neither in its guilt nor punishment 1 Joh. 1. 7. yet to edifie the Church by their example Jam. 5. 10. to comfort her under sufferings 2 Cor. 1. 6. and to confirm that Truth for which they do suffer Phil. 2. 17. In which respects Paul affirmeth his afflictions were for Christs bodies sake which is the Church Vers. 25. Whereof I am made a Minister according to the dispensation of God which is given to me for you to fulfill the Word of God He confirmeth his Apostleship yet further from his calling to that Office and withall giveth a reason of his suffering cheerfully for the Churches good he was called to be a Minister unto the Church chiefly among the Gentiles of whom these Colossians were a part and that by the appointment of God that he might open up and preach the word of the Gospel fully or that God by his Ministery might fulfill that word of Prophecy and Promise of calling the Gentiles in the dayes of the Gospel Zech. 2. 11. for to fulfill the word of God may be taken either of these wayes Doct. 1. The greater honour or the more eminent office a man doth enjoy in the Church he standeth under stricter obligation to undergo affliction for the Churches good and may expect to meet with the more of a suffering lot for this engageth Paul to rejoyce in his afflictions for the Church of which Church saith he I am made a Minister 2. Ministers are but Gods Stewards and Servants under him who being the great Master of that Family which is his House and Church 1 Tim. 3. 15. will have all things ordered in it especially the number of Office-bearers their calling to and their carriage in their Office Eph. 4. 11. 1 Tim. 3. 1 c. according to his own will and prescript so Paul was made a Minister according to the dispensation of God the word dispensation signifies the ordering of things belonging to a Family by him who is Master of it 3. Though the Apostles were not tied by vertue of their Office unto any certain nation or place their charge being the broad world Matth. 28. 19. yet because every one could not actually and with advantage to the Church discharge their Office towards all therefore either by divine appointment or mutual agreement they did divide their Charge among them Gal. 2. 7. yet so as every one might exercise their Apostolick Authority in every place as occasion offered even without a particular Call from the Church Act. 10. 34. which ordinary Pastors cannot do without the bounds of their own Charge 1 Cor. 14. 48. In this respect Paul was to exercise his Apostleship among the Gentiles which is given to me for you saith he 4. The Ministers of Jesus Christ must preach the Word of God and his full Word keeping up nothing of the Word Act. 20. 27. and imploy the uttermost of their parts time and pains in so doing 1 Tim. 4. 15. for this is to fulfill the word of God according to the first sense given in the Exposition 5. What ever word of promise is given to the Church though it be never so unlikely it must and shall be fulfilled in Gods time for Paul is made a Minister to fulfill the word that is the word of promise for calling of the Gentiles according to the latter sense Vers. 26. Even the mysterie which hath been hid from ages and from generations but now is made manifest to his saints He confirmeth the truth preached by Epaphras further from the worth which is in it self by shewing it is an ancient doctrine ●id from the former ages of the Church but now made manifest in the fulnesse of time to his holy Apostles immediatly and by them to all other saints Eph. 3. 5. Doct. 1. The Gospel or doctrine of Christian Religion concerning Christ his Incarnation Natures Person Offices Death Resurrection and Salvation thereby acquired unto lost sinners 1 Tim. 3. 16. is an ancient doctrine as having been before ages and generations though not revealed which hath been hid from ages 2. This doctrine is a mysterie a thing in it self dark and secret so that Nature's light would never have found it out except it had been made manifest yea and is scarcely capable of it when it is revealed and more particularly the counsell of God in calling of the Gentiles to the fellowship of the Gospel without tying them to circumcision and the other duties of the ceremoniall Law was wholly hid from the Gentiles themselves and from the greatest part of the Jews who dreamed of no such thing yea the Prophets themselves did know but little of it for this is a part of the mysterie whereof he speaketh chiefly here even the mysterie which hath been hid from ages See Eph. 3. 3. 5 6. 3. Divine mercies are upon the growing hand Christ and free grace in its full extent was but dark under the old dispensation as being covered with a vail of many ceremonies 2 Cor. 3. 13. but now the vail is removed Christ and free grace are clearly preached and shine forth in their native beauty and lustre but now is made manifest 4. Though the Gospel be now made manifest yet they are onely saints and truly gracious who attain unto the full through and saving knowledge of it 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. wicked men have some insight in it but they know it not so as to prize it 1 Cor. 1. 18. so as to believe it and venture their Heaven and happinesse upon it Joh. 5. 40. nor yet so as to walk like it Matth. 7. 22 23. Thus it is a mysterie made manifest unto the saints Vers. 27 To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mysterie among the Gentiles which is Christ in you the hope of glory He sheweth that the cause of this manifestation was God's will and pleasure and withall commendeth and explaineth