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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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may bee illuminated to see and understand things revealed 3. That all men may know they are to be made partakers of salvation onely by the faith of Jesus Christ without Circumcision and the works of the Law 4. That all men may evidently see the excellency of Christ not only as Redeemer but also as the Creator by whom as the Church is redeemed so the world and all things therein are created Therefore c. Vers. 10. To the intent that now unto the Principalities and Powers in heavenly places might bee known by the Church the manifold wisdome of God Argum. 10. The use of my Ministry is glorious because by it the manifold wisdome of God in declaring his counsel touching the gathering of a Church out of the circumcised and uncrcumcised is more clearly laid open then ever before even to the holy Angels in heaven much more to men on earth Therefore c. For the Angels know nothing of the mystery of mans salvation but by the revelation of it to the Church Vers. 11. According to the eternal purpose which hee purposed in Christ Iesus our Lord Argum. 11. And all this is not come to pass by chance but according to the eternal purpose of God which as at first hee determined and established in Christ so at length hee hath compleated and perfected it in him Therefore c. Vers. 12. In whom wee have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him Argum. 12. The fruit of this Ministry is glorious because by the preaching of the Gospel to Jews and Gentiles beleeving on Christ there is equally afforded liberty in Christ of going to God in confidence and of freely pleading with him for all our necessities as with a most loving Father Therefore my Ministry ought to bee accepted with you Vers. 13. Wherefore I desire that you faint not at my tribulations for you which is your glory From all these fore-going things as from one antecedent the Apostle infers this consequent conclusion That they should not bee offended in his bonds or captivity that is they should not faint nor become weary or slothfull in the cause of faith for his afflictions but rather constantly persevere and make proficiency therein To which Exhortation hee adjoyns two Reasons 1. Because hee suffered these afflictions for them that is for vouching their priviledges in Christ and for the confirmation of their faith 2. Because his afflictions were a glory to the Ephesians for from hence 〈◊〉 did appear how much God esteemed them in that hee had sent Apostles to them who should not onely teach them the way of salvation but also undergo afflictions for to witness the truth they preached and for the confirmation of their faith The Second Part. Vers. 14. For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ. The second part of this Chapter contains the Apostles prayer for the Ephesians perse●●rance and progress in the faith of the Gospel Which prayer doth and that not obscurely include an exhortation to perseverance and constancy in faith there being twelve Arguments couched in it tending to that purpose every one whereof proving that they ought stedfastly to continue in the faith For this cause Argum. 1. To this end I pray every day upon my bended knees that yee may continue in the faith without offence Therefore you should cheerfully proceed therein Unto the Father Argum. 2. The God which gives us this grace is propitious and easie to bee intreated hee is the Father of our Lord and the Father of all us that are the servants of Jesus Christ and hee will not refuse to bestow perseverance on us if we pray for it Therefore you should proceed upon the account of this hope Vers. 15. Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named Argum. 3. Our God the giver of perseverance is the Master of the houshold of the Catholick Church adopted in Christ who equally favours beleeving Gentiles and Jews and imbraces you his houshold servants who are militant in earth with the same Fatherly affection as hee doth the triumphant in heaven and will have you as well as they named his Sons not being ashamed to receive your weakness and unworthiness into his imbraces Therefore you should couragiously proceed in the faith Vers. 16. That hee would grant you according to the riches of his glory to bee strengthned with might by his Spirit in the inner man According to the riches Argum. 4. The mercy of God is rich and glorious and rejoyceth to advance its glorious greatness in plentifully bestowing the grace of continuance in faith to those that ask it Therefore you should boldly seek grace and hold on in faith Strengthened Argum. 5. Though you are weak and unable to resist the difficulties in the way yet there is sufficient strength to bee communicated to you from your Father who is most willing of and inclinable to your confirmation wee do not then in vain pray to God for this grace Therefore c. In the inner The Apostle intimates by the way● that there is not so much as in the inner man and inmost faculties of the new-begotten soul any strength of free-will any merit of good work or any efficacy and power which will bee sufficient for our perseverance but that they have need of the Holy Ghost who must give them both to will and to do who must furnish them with strength and power to persevere and of his rich grace passing by their sins must constantly maintain and put forward his own work in them Vers. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith that yee being rooted and grounded in love Argum. 6. Though you are weak and the Devil who fights against you bee powerful yet Christ is more powerful dwelling in you by faith fashioning you to his own Image confirming you and ruling you to the obedience of his own will and our desires and prayers to God shall not bee wanting that hee may constantly and more fully dwell in you Therefore Vers. 18. May bee able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height Argum. 7. The love of God towards you is immutable being firmly laid as a living root and sure foundation of the perfecting of your faith whence therefore you may derive both stability to increase being perswaded of this love yee may bee able to persevere most stedfastly in the faith and I will pray that this perswasion may bee given you Therefore press forward The breadth Argum. 8. The grace of God offered in the Gospel to bee comprehended by you in its immense length reaches from eternity to eternity in its breadth it extends it self to all ages and orders of men in its depth it descends to the abyss of sin and misery that it may hale men out And lastly in its height it rayseth it self to the highest happiness in heaven yea this offered grace doth already comprehend you whereof I wish
poverty by idleness but by calamity lest they waxe sloathful in the actions of any vertue but go couragiously forward to do th●se things which are decent and excellent Vers. 14. And if any man obey not our word by this Epistle note that man and have no company with him that hee may bee ashamed Exhort 7. That they note the refractory and brand them that obey not the Apostolical doctrine that is that they excommunicate those which is manifest from this that hee commands that they have no society with him that is thus noted which is the consequent of excommunication and for this end commands that the excommunicate person segregated from the society of others being ashamed might enter into himself and repent Vers. 15. Yet count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother Hee expounds the Commandement that they bee not cruel toward the excommunicated person or esteem him as an enemy but to shew their hatred to his sin that the excommunicated person may understand that under that severe correction there is brotherly love and so hee may bee reduced into favour with God and the Church by repentance Vers. 16. Now the Lord of peace himself give you peace alwayes by all means The Lord bee wi●h you all The Epilogue remains whereof there are three Articles In the first hee praies the God of Peace so to direct their waies and bridle the turbulent spirits of the disobedient that they may injoy peace towards God and amongst themselves and with those that are without which work did require a divine hand Furthermore hee praies that God by his gracious presence would bee alwaies present with them all Vers. 17. The salutation of Paul with my own hand which is the token in every Epistle so I write Artic. 2. Contains the obsignation of the Epistle by the subscription of Paul himself who for the most part did use the help of Scribes in writing the body of every Epistle but hee subscribed the conclusion with his own hand that his genuine Epistles might bee known from the adulterate and counterfeit which were carryed about in the name of Paul and by Impostors thrust upon the Churches Vers. 18. The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with you all Amen Artic. 3. Contains the Apostolical vote set down by his own hand wherein hee wishes the eternal influence of the Grace of Christ as the fountain of all good things to them for their sanctification and salvation The First Epistle of Paul to TIMOTHY Analytically expounded The Contents THe Apostle departing from Ephesus into Macedonia did not think it sufficient to commit the Church of Ephesus now publickly founded to the care of ordinary Pastors but desired the Evangelist Timothy that hee would tarry there a while to establish the Church in all things that appertained to Doctrine and Discipline which work being accomplished the Apostle intended to call him back and imploy him for the confirming of other Churches as appears in the end of the Epistle and other places But because Timothy was young as yet and might seem not sufficiently furnished with authority for the restraining of unruly men which possibly might make insurrection against him in this Epistle hee doth not onely admonish him concerning his office as one that hee knew very well instructed already but all the Churches and their Governours are informed touching the Authority of Timothy and their own duties The special parts of the Epistle are six according to the number of the Chapters In the first Chapter hee laies down the manner of his preaching the Law and the Gospel duly and with profit In the second Chapter hee sets down how Pastors and Hearers Men and Women ought to behave themselves in their publick prayers and Ecclesiastical meetings In the third Chapter hee treats of the right institution of Pastors and Deacons and concerning the Heads of Doctrine whereof they were to take special care In the fourth Chapter hee speaks of avoiding the Apostacy that was comming and touching the diligence which ought to bee used by a faithful Pastor to that end In the fifth Chapter hee treats of private admonitions to bee performed by the Elders and how they ought to carry themselves toward Widows and other Elders In the sixth Chapter hee delivers Precepts to Timothy wherein hee is instructed what hee ought to teach concerning Christian duties as well of private persons as of Ministers CHAP. I. BEside● the Inscription which is contained in the two first verses There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee enjoyns Timothy to observe the right method and course of teaching and to suppress the perverse Teachers of the Law to vers 12. In the second hee asserts his Apostleship that with authority it might bee avouched by Timothy as hee had commanded to vers 18. In the third hee encourages Timothy to carry himself stoutly in the discharge of his Ministery Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the Commandement of God our Saviour and Lord Iesus Christ which is our hope The Inscription of the Epistle wherein 1 That hee might win authority to this Epistle Paul affirms that in writing of it hee fulfilled his Apostolical Embassage for Christ 2 Hee confirms his Apostleship by a special command from God the Father whom hee calls the Saviour because hee is the Author of our Salvation who had called him to the office of an Apostle and used him in the execution of his office about the present matter hee was in hand with 3 Hee confirms his Apostleship from the command of our Lord Jesus Christ whom hee calls our hope because the Author the meritorious cause the object and the finisher of our hope Vers. 2. Unto Timothy my own Son in the Faith Grace Mercy and Peace from God our Father and Iesus Christ our Lord. Timothy to whom this Epistle is written is called the Son of the Apostle not simply but in 〈◊〉 Faith because hee was his Disciple and as the Son represents the Father in face and manners so Timothy resembled Paul in Doctrine and an holy conversation In his salutation hee wishes to Timothy 1 Grace i. e. the renovation of the Image of God from the fountain of Gods free good will 2 Mercy i. e. free remission of sins because hee knew that the holy young man affected with the sense of his sins with many tears did daily prostrate himself before God 3 Peace i. e. Quietness of conscience and joy from the apprehension of divine favour and finally a compleat felicity in the life to come which is comprehended under peace Vers. 3. As I besought thee to abide still at Ephesus when I went into Macedonia that thou mightest charge some that they teach no other Doctrine The first part of the Chapter follows touching the right manner of teaching wherein after hee had confirmed to Timothy not an ordinary Episcopacy in the Church of Ephesus but a special temporary and extraordinary Commission hee repeats the command
in Jesus Christ Therefore this ground of our Justification by Faith is no less to bee maintained than the glory of Gods Justice Faithfulness and Goodness to bee declared in justifying Believers Vers. 27. Where is boasting then it is excluded By what Law of Works nay but by the Law of Faith 28. Therefore wee conclude that a man is justified by Faith without the deeds of the Law Argum. 10. Because by the Law of Faith or the Covenant of Grace which requires Faith to our Justification by the Righteousness of another mans boasting in himself is excluded and not by the Law of Works or the Covenant of Works which exacts perfect obedience and affords matter of boasting to men in their Inherent Righteousness Therefore saith hee wee conclude that a man is Iustified by Faith without the Works of the Law The Argument is good For if men were Justified by their Works and Inherent Righteousness they might boast of the meritorious cause of their Justification to bee in themselves but they that are Justified by Faith are compelled to renounce their own Inherent Righteousness and to place their only Confidence in the imputation of the Righteousness of Christ and solely in the grace of God Vers. 29. Is hee the God of the Iewes only Is hee not also of the Gentiles Yes of the Gentiles also 30. Seeing it is one God which shall justifie the Circumcision by Faith and uncircumcision through Faith Hee concludes this Disputation with the resolution of two questions which give much light to the present Doctrine The first question is Whether this way of our Justification by Faith bee common both to Jewes and Gentiles To which hee answers That it 's common to both whereof he adds a reason because there is one God of those that are Justified therefore there must bee but one way of justifying all to wit by Faith or of Faith For if hee should Justifie the Jews upon one ground and the Gentiles upon another God would seem to differ from Himself in communicating Righteousness and Salvation to sinners both to Jews and Gentiles which is absurd Vers. 31. Do wee then make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea wee establish the Law Another question is Whether the Doctrine of Faith or Justification by Faith makes the Law of none effect or to bee given in vain while it is denied that men are Justified by the Law Hee answers that the Law is no wayes rendred void but is rather established by the Doctrine of Faith for Faith or the Doctrine of Faith establishes the Law three wayes First in respect to the threatnings shewing that Christ was dead by the Sentence of the Law that hee might satisfie the Law and that wee were lyable to death unless freed from it by Christ. Secondly in respect to the Precepts because hee demonstrates that perfect obedience was yeelded to the Law in the Righteousness of Christ. Thirdly Faith establishes the Law in respect to Believers because being justified by Faith by virtue of Christ they are initiated into new obedience who before they were justified by Faith could do nothing but sin CHAP. IV. UNto the twelfth Chapter the Apostle illustrates commends and further by many Arguments establishes this Divine ground of our Iustification by Faith not by Works Wee for the more easie method shall make the Confirmation of this Doctrine seven-fold The first Confirmation of Iustification by Faith which is contained in this Chapter is chiefly from the example of Abraham the ground of whose Iustification is common both to Iews and Gentiles whose Faith is set before us all of God for a pattern There are three parts of the Chapter In the first the example of Abrahams Iustification is set down to ver 9. In the second hee proves this ground of Iustification to bee common both to Iews and Gentiles to ver 18. In the third the Faith of Abraham is commended to the use of Believers to the end of the Chapter Vers. 1. What shall wee say then that Abraham our Father as pertaining to the flesh hath found So much as pertains to the example of Abraham under the form of an interrogation hee denies that Abraham was justified according to the flesh or by the Law of Works or Inherent Righteousness which is called flesh Galat. 3.3 in respect to the Spiritual Righteousness of Christ From whence it follows that no man is justified by Works Vers. 2. For if Abraham were justified by Works hee hath whereof to glory but not before God This Thesis concerning Abraham is asserted by five Reasons Reason 1. If Abraham was justified by Works hee hath whereof hee may glory but not before God therefore hee is not justified by Works before God The reason is sufficient because boasting in our selves is not taken away by the Law of Works but by the Law of Faith Rom. 3.27 For in the question before men Whether Abraham is just Abraham can produce his Works and boast saying I will shew thee my Works and so hee shall bee justified before men by his Works But the question is Whether hee bee righteous before God whereupon hee must renounce his own works and fly to the Promise of Blessedness in Christ to come of Abrahams Seed that hee might bee justified in Christ by Faith alone Vers. 3. For what saith the Scripture Abraham hath believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness Reason 2. The Scripture testifies Gen. 15.6 that Abraham was justified by Faith or that Righteousness was imputed to him by Faith therefore hee was justified by Faith not by Works Vers. 4. Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of Grace but of debt Reason 3. The reward cannot bee of Grace but of debt to him that seeks after righteousness by his works wee may assume thus But to Abraham it was imputed of Grace Therefore Abraham did not mercenarily seek after righteousness by the works of the Law Vers. 5. But to him that worketh not but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly his Faith is counted for righteousness Reason 4. To this purpose Faith is imputed for righteousness to him that is not mercenary but renouncing his own righteousness believes in God who freely justifies the ungodly that flees to Christ Jesus But such was the Faith of Abraham Therefore Abraham was not justified by works before God but Faith was imputed to him for righteousness or the Blessing promised in Christ to come received through Faith by Abraham was imputed to him for righteousness Vers. 6. Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputed righteousness without works 7. Saying Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered 8. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin Reason 5. David testifies Psalm 32.12 that Blessedness is given to him to whom Righteousness is imputed without works and whose righteousness consists not in good works but in the forgiveness of sins therefore such was
shew of good works and they that affect Justification thereby fondly desire to bee justified as it were by works or a shew of good works The third cause because they knew not Christ by reason of his humility and the infirmity of his flesh in whom they should believe that they might bee justified but despised him and to their own destruction set themselves against him stumbling at him as at a stumbling stone Vers. 33. As it is written Behold I lay in Zion a stumbling stone and rock of offence and whosoever believeth on him shall not bee ashamed Both parts of this experience hee confirms from the Prophets prediction Isai. 8.14 and 28.16 after this manner Behold I will lay saith God Christ in the Church whose beginning is out of Zion a tryed stone a rock of offence as the incredulous Jews have experienced and whoever believeth in him in the expectation of him that is in his righteousness and life eternal hee shall not bee frustrated as the believing Jews have found by experience And thus the Apostle hath firmly proved that wee are justified by Faith CHAP. X. HEE further prosecutes the argument of the Jewes temporal rejection shewing this to bee the cause in that the Jews foolishly and stubbornly rejected the righteousness of God in Christ. There are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee shews the folly of the Jews to ver 14. In the other their stubbornness to the end of the Chapter Vers. 1. Brethren my hearts desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they might bee saved The Apostle being about to shew the just causes of the Jews rejection hee prefaces as before from his good affection lest any thing should bee thought to bee spoken by him out of hatred Vers. 2. For I hear them Record that they have a zeal of God but not according to knowledge Hee shews their preposterous zeal for God to bee the cause of his affection which zeal was worthy of humane commiseration though it was not to bee commended because it did not arise out of knowledge but ignorance therefore it was blind zeal the zeal of fools Vers. 3. For they being ignorant of Gods righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness have not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God Hee proves the folly of the Romans by six Arguments The first Argument Out of ignorance of the righteousness of God imputed to us by Faith in Christ they affected the inherent righteousness of their own works and proudly rejected the righteousness of Christ offered to them Therefore they betrayed their folly Vers. 4. For Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth The second Argum. Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to him that believes i. e. the whole Law is therefore given that men acknowledging their sins manifested by the Law might flee unto Christ and might obtain righteousness by Faith Therefore the Jews did foolishly who making a shew of the Law did not acknowledge Christ which is the end of the Law Vers. 5. For Moses describeth the righteousness which is of the Law that the man which doth those things shall live by them Argum. 3. The righteousness of the Law or Works as Moses testifies confers life upon none but those that perform all things that are commanded in the Law which is impossible Therefore the Jews foolishly affected such a kind of righteousness Vers. 6. But the righteousness which is of Faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart who shall ascend into heaven that is to bring Christ down from above 7. Or who shall descend into the deep that is to bring Christ up again from the dead Argum. 4. The righteousness of Faith as the same Moses witnesseth forbids those that believe in God from being troubled for those things which are so difficult or impossible as to ascend into heaven or to descend into the deep Because seeing Christ hath already overcome those difficulties descending from heaven and rising from the dead to bee any further troubled how to attain righteousness life eternal and freedome from death is no less than to destroy the foundations of the Christian Religion and to enquire how it was possible to descend from heaven or rise again from the dead Therefore the Jews betray their folly who renounce this righteousness of Faith Vers. 8. But what saith it the word is nigh thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the word of Faith which wee preach Argum. 5. The righteousness of Faith as it gives security to those that believe touching the difficulties in the way of salvation so also it holds forth an easie way to righteousness and salvation For the Word of God or the Word of the Gospel the same which the Apostles preached is neer us that receiving it into our hearts wee may acquiesce in it and confess the truth of it with the mouth As if hee should say to us Bee not troubled cast your care upon God and believe him that speaks in the Gospel and shew forth your Faith by your works Therefore the Jews rejecting this easie way of righteousness propounded are very foolish Vers. 9. That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt bee saved Argum. 6. Opening and confirming the former The sum of the Gospel is propounded under this most sweet condition viz. If thou applyest with sincere affection to thy self the redemption procured by Christ and manifested in his Resurrection by the power of God and studiest to glorifie Christ with a sincere confession without doubt thou shalt obtain salvation Therefore the Jews refusing this condition of Justification and Salvation betray their folly Vers. 10. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation This hee confirms with five reasons The first Reason is From the connection of Faith in the heart and confession in the mouth according to the order appointed by God which is that by Faith from the heart in Christ Jesus wee might obtain righteousness or Justification and that justified by Faith wee might proceed to the possession of Salvation glorifying Christ by confession of the mouth or outward works Therefore they ought to bee joyned Faith in Christ from the heart and confession of Christ in the mouth or inward Faith and outward works ought to bee joyned together Vers. 11. For the Scripture saith Whosoever believeth on him shall not bee ashamed Reason 2. Confirming the connection of true Faith and Salvation from the testimony of Isai. 28.16 which shews that they shall not bee frustrated in their hope or their expected salvation whoever believe in Christ Therefore the connection of Faith and Salvation is firm Vers. 12. For there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek for the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon
it bee of Works then is it no more Grace otherwise Work is no more Work From hence the Apostle inferres two Conclusions the first answering the design of this Epistle viz. That the Election seeing it is of Grace not of any Works foreseen because in the matter of Election Grace and Works as causes mutually destroy each other For if Grace bee the cause of Election Works are not And on the contrary But Grace is the cause as hath been said Therefore Works fore-seen are not the cause Vers. 7. What then Israel hath not obtained that which hee seeketh for but the Election hath obtained it and the rest were blinded The second Conclusion shewing what was said before Chap. 9. vers 31. of the Israelites who sought for Righteousness by the Law and did not attain it is to bee understood onely of the Reprobate For the Elect Israelites obtained Righteousness which they sought for by Grace in the Messiah but the rest that is the Reprobate were hardened Vers. 8. According as it is written God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear unto this day That the Reprobate were hardened hee proves by a twofold Testimony The first is of Isaiah 29.16 and 6.9 where God is said in his Righteous judgement to have smitten this perverse people with the punishment of blindness and stupidity or for the contempt of his Word to have given up to a reprobate sense that they might not discern the Grace of God offered in the Gospel which judgement lay upon the multitude till the time of the preaching of the Gospel Vers. 9. And David saith Let their Table bee made a snare and a trap and a stumbling-block and a recompence unto them 10. Let their eyes bee darkened that they may not see and bow down their back alwaies Another Testimony is from David Psal. 69.23 24. who as a type of Christ praies against his enemies that all the benefits of God and the Gospel also tendered to them might bee to them an occasion of ruine that afterwards they might savour nothing but earthly things who being so often warned of God would not relish heavenly things and that in just revenge of their unthankfulness Vers. 11. I say then have they stumbled that they should fall God forbid But rather through their fall salvation is come unto the Gentiles for to provoke them to jealousie Hee repeats the first Argument to prove that the Jews were not to bee despised and hee adds a second The Jews are not cast off that all and every one of them should perish that are of this Nation but that salvation through Christ refused by the Jews might come to the Gentiles that the Gentiles being converted unto God might provoke the Jews to jealousie and by consequence to Repentance Therefore the Jews are not to bee despised The Jews are provoked to jealousie when they see themselves shut out from God and scattered that they might not bee a Church But the Gentiles in their room to bee taken of God into his bosome wherein before the Church of the Jews had been cherished Vers. 12. Now if the fall of them bee the riches of the world and the diminishing of them the riches of the Gentiles how much more their fulness Argum. 3. As the ruine of the Jews turned to the good of the Gentiles so also and much more the restitution of the Jews shall prove an advantage to the world and the Gentiles Therefore so far should it bee from us to despise the Jews as wholly cast away that on the other side their Conversion is to bee wished and hoped for Vers. 13. For I speak to you Gentiles in as much as I am the Apostle of the Gentiles I magnifie mine office 14. If by any means I may provoke to emulation them which are my flesh and might save some of them Argum. 4. I my self am an Apostle of the Gentiles so much the more earnestly do I bestow my Ministery in converting as many as I can and magnifie my office to this end that I might provoke the Jews my Kinsmen not to suffer you only to enjoy the priviledge of the Sons of God but that they would joyn themselves unto you and so might bee saved Therefore it is your duty not to despise them as altogether cast off but to labour with mee that they may bee saved Vers. 15. For if the casting away of them bee the reconciling of the world what shall the receiving of them bee but life from the dead Argum. 5. If the casting off the Jews is through the goodness of God turned to an occasion of reconciling the Gentiles from the conversion of the Jews is not such a change for the better to bee expected amongst the Gentiles as if it was a kind of Resurrection from the dead Therefore the Jews are not to bee despised as altogether cast off but their conversion is to bee desired and hoped for For when God shall again resume his antient people what wonder if hee shall powre out upon all the Churches a greater plenty of his Spirit What wonder if hee take away those destructive Heresies and Schismes wherewith the Christian Churches amongst the Gentiles was almost oppressed even to death and unite them more firmly among themselves and with the Church of the Jews That this hereafter shall bee the happy condition of the Churches about the time of the Jews conversion the Apostle would not have us despair who propounds to us as it were a Resurrection from the dead to bee hoped for by us in the change of the Churches condition Vers. 16. For if the first fruit bee holy the lump is also holy and if the root bee holy so are the branches Argum. 6. The Nation of the Jews by virtue of the Covenant with their Fathers is consecrated unto God and is honored with the dignity of Federal Holiness descending from their Fathers that were in Covenant As the lump and harvest is sanctified in the first fruits and the branches in the consecrating of the root Therefore the Jews are not to bee contemned as wholly cast away Vers. 17. And if some of the branches bee broken off and thou being a wild Olive-tree wert graffed in amongst them and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the Olive-tree Some unbelieving Jews as branches are broken off from the Olive-tree from the Church of the holy Patriarchs and thou a Gentile being as a wild Olive far from the Covenant of God art implanted in their stead and so made partaker of the priviledges of that Church and holy Covenant as of the fatness of the Olive-tree Therefore thou oughtest not to despise the Jews Vers. 18. Boast not against the branches But if thou boast thou bearest not the root but the root thee Argum. 8. If thou shalt boast against the Jews as more worthy than they thou behavest thy self no less foolishly than the branches born by the root
with one mind and one mouth glorifie God even the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ. The end of his prayer is that all strife and discord being removed with one heart and mouth they might glorifie God even the Father of Christ who hath given us the adoption of Sons and joyned us amongst our selves by the bond of Brethren with Christ. Vers. 7. Wherefore receive yee one another as Christ also received us to the glory of God Argum. 5. In like manner by the example of Christ drawn from what was abovesaid by way of exhortation Christ had compassion on us took us weak ones and unworthy into fellowship with him to the glory of God pardoning our sins Therefore wee ought to take into our fellowship of love and peace those that are weak and as they may seem unworthy passing by their infirmities Vers. 8. Now I say that Iesus Christ was a Minister of the Circumcision for the truth of God to confirm the promises made unto the Fathers Argum. 6. Again also from the example of Christ Christ was a Minister of the Circumcision or to the Jews preaching amongst them and undergoing all the offices of a Minister by reason of the Covenant that was made with their Fathers Therefore it behoves all Christians to bee of the same mind with Christ towards the Jews which are weak in the Faith even because of the Covenant with their Fathers Vers. 9. And that the Gentiles might glorifie God for his mercy as it is written For this cause I will confess to thee among the Gentiles and sing unto thy Name Argum. 7. Again from the example of Christ who preached among the Jews not onely that hee might promote the completing of the Truth of God and the promises made to the Patriarchs but also to this end that the Gentiles converted by and with the Jews might glorifie God together Therefore it is most unworthy that the Jews and Gentiles should contemn one another for things indifferent Wherefore As concerning the Gentiles hee proves out of the Scripture that Christ intended to call them into the fellowship of the Jews by a fourfold testimony first out of Psal. 18.50 Wherein Christ under the type of David promiseth that hee will preach the Name of God amongst the Gentiles Vers. 10. And again hee saith Rejoyce yee Gentiles with his people The second proof is taken out of Deut. 32.43 wherein the Gentiles are commanded to rejoyce with the Jews as the people of God Therefore the Gentiles are joyned with this people Vers. 11. And again Praise the Lord all yee Gentiles and laud him all yee people The third proof is taken out of Psal. 117.1 The Gentiles are commanded to praise God Therefore they shall obtain mercy Vers. 12. And again Isaiah saith There shall bee a root of Jesse and hee that shall rise to reign over the Gentiles in him shall the Gentiles trust The fourth proof is taken out of Isaiah 11.10 Christ shall reign as King over the Gentiles and the Gentiles shall beleeve in him Therefore they shall bee converted Vers. 13. Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in beleeving that you may abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost Hee concludes this whole Exhortation concerning abstaining from the unseasonable use of our liberty about meats in case of scandal with a most ardent prayer That God would recompence this their Christian abstinence from meats with the abundance of spiritual gifts which would create to them more joy from the comfort of Faith and the holy Spirit of Peace than they could otherwise finde in all the delights of what meats soever Vers. 14. And I my self also am perswaded of you my Brethren that yee also are full of goodness filled with all knowledge able also to admonish one another 15. Nevertheless Brethren I have written the more boldly unto you in some sort as putting you in mind of the grace that is given to mee of God 16. That I should bee the Minister of Iesus Christ to the Gentiles ministring the Gospel of God that the offering up of the Gentiles might bee acceptable being sanctified of the Holy Ghost The other part of the Chapter containeth the conclusion of the Epistle wherein hee first shews the cause of his writing and of his not comming yet unto them that although hee was perswaded that the Romans abounded in grace and knowledge whereby they were able to exhort and instruct one another in all those things whereof hee had spoken before Yet notwithstanding hee shews that hee hath written the more freely and fully to them First Because the advice which hee gave them was profitable unto them Furthermore because of his Apostolical authority given him by the Grace of God it behoved him so to attend to his Ministery among the Gentiles that they being converted and crucified according to the old man by his Gospel might bee offered unto God as a Sacrifice sanctified by the Spirit of holiness and accepted of God through Jesus Christ. Vers. 17. I have therefore whereof I may glory through Iesus Christ in those things which pertain to God That by what is said before his authority might appear hee commends his Apostleship upon a seven-fold account First from the spiritual effects produced by the power of Christ which with God is highly esteemed however men undervalue it Vers. 18. For I will not dare to speak of any of those things which Christ hath not wrought by mee to make the Gentiles obedient by word and deed Secondly From the conversion of the Gentiles whereof hee durst not speak more than was truth neither could hee say how much hee hath done or what Christ had effected by his Ministery to the conversion of the Gentiles Vers. 19. Through mighty signs and wonders by the power of the Spirit of God so that from Jerusalem and round about unto Illyricum I have fully preached the Gospel of Christ. Thirdly From the signs of his Apostleship viz. the power and miracles of the Holy Ghost by which the Gentiles were convinced touching the certainty of the Doctrine of the Gospel So that Fourthly From the multitude of the Gentiles which hee conquered by his Ministery amongst which were all those which lye betwixt Ierusalem and Dalmatia containing as it is thought the space of about a thousand four hundred miles besides the Provinces adjacent Vers. 20. Yea so have I strived to preach the Gospel not where Christ was named lest I should build upon another mans foundation Fifthly From his founding the Churches of God in those places the bringing in of whom as Christ was the only Author so was it only by Pauls Ministery and not by any other of the Apostles Vers. 21. But as it is written To whom hee was not spoken of they shall see and they that have not heard shall understand Sixthly Because in his Ministery was most evidently fulfilled what was fore-told by the Prophet Vers. 22. For which cause also I have been
the measure for so also is Charity imperfect but chiefly in respect of the manner of knowing viz. by means which kind of knowledge because it is mediate it is imperfect Vers. 10. But when that which is perfect is come then that which is in part shall bee done away This manner of knowing viz. mediately shall bee quite abolished when the perfect way of knowledge shall come viz. the immediate But Charity although it bee imperfect as to the measure yet as to the manner of loving it is perfect for it is immediately carried to God and therefore this manner of loving shall never bee abolished but rather encreased Vers. 11. When I was a child I spake as a child I understood as a child I thought as a child but when I became a man I put away childish things Hee shews that the present way of kno●ing is to bee abolished by the similitude of the abolishing of childish sports when any comes to bee a man Vers. 12. For now wee see thorough a glass darkly but then face to face now I know in part but then shall I know even as also I am known Hee shews the same by another similitude ●●●paring the present manner of knowing to knowledge by a glass darkly which kind of knowledge is mediate but the knowledge to come is immediate whereby any one kno●● intuitively because in the life to come our mind shall immediately bee enlightened by God and wee shall see and know God immediately Vers. 13. And now abideth Faith Hope Charity these three but the greatest of these is Charity Argum. 4. Charity is more excellent than Faith or Hope which are saving Graces and gifts not to bee repented of Therefore the most worthy Because Charity shall never fail but shall also continue in the life to come when Faith and Hope shall cease In the mean time let us remember that Faith in some respects is more excellent than Charity because Faith is the cause of Love Gal. 5.6 Wee are justified by Faith and have peace with God Rom. 5.1 And Christ dwells in our hearts by Faith which works Charity in us Ephes. 3.17 But the Apostle regarding the concord and edification of the Church by right extolls Charity as much as belongs to his purpose hee knew also that no man could endeavour after the increase of Christian Charity but hee must also labour after the increase of Faith which is the cause of Love CHAP. XIV HEE PROCEEDS TO TREAT OF SPIRITUAL GIFTS AND THEIR RIGHT USE THere are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee prefers the gift of Prophesie before the gift of Tongues to vers 26. In the other hee gives commands concerning that order that was to bee observed in their Assemblies to the end Vers. 1. Follow after Charity and desire spiritual gifts but rather that yee may prophesie Hee proved in the fore-going Chapter that Charity was the most excellent gift In the beginning of this Chapter hee infers an Exhortation by way of conclusion that they would affect it and have all both gifts and spiritual offices in honour but because some were proud of the gift of tongues and most despised Pastoral gifts in comparison of this gift and too much admired the gift of tongues Therefore hee compares these gifts together and proves that the gift of Prophecie or Exhortation is more excellent than the gift of tongues separated from the gift of interpretation Hee gives thirteen Reasons Vers. 2. For hee that speaketh in an unknown tongue speaketh not unto men but unto God for no man understandeth him Howbeit in the Spirit he speaketh mysteries 3. But hee that prophesieth speaketh unto men to edification and exhortation and comfort The first Reason Hee that speaks in an unknown tongue although by the gift of the Spirit hee speaks the Mysteries of God yet hee speaks without profit because hee is understood by God alone and not by men But a Prophet or Pastor speaking in a known tongue teaches exhorts comforts his hearers and so speaks profitably Therefore Prophecie is more excellent than the gift of tongues Vers. 4. Hee that speaketh in an unknown tongue edifieth himself but hee that prophesieth edifieth the Church Reason 2. Hee that speaks in an unknown tongue edifies none 〈◊〉 himself but a Prophet the whole Church or Assembly Therefore Prophecie is more excellent Vers. 5. I would that yee all spake with tongues but rather that yee prophesied for greater is bee that prophesieth than hee that speaketh with tongues except hee interpret that the Church may receive edifying That hee might rightly bee understood hee shews that hee doth not abolish tongues though hee prefers a Prophet before him that speaks in an unknown tongue Vers. 6. Now brethren if I come unto you speaking with tongues what shall I profit you except I shall speak to you either by revelation or by knowledge or by prophecying or by doctrine Reason 3. From his own example his Apostolical Ministery would not bee profitable to them unless hee should speak to them in a known tongue by extraordinary Prophecie by Revelation or ordinary knowledge either by Prophecying or exhorting as a Pastor or instructing as a Teacher Therefore the gift of tongues is inferiour to the gift of Prophecie Vers. 7. And even things without life giving sound whether pipe or harp except they give a distinction in their sounds how shall it bee known what is piped or harped 8. For if the Trumpet give an uncertain sound who shall prepare himself unto the battel 9. So likewise you except yee utter by the tongue words easie to bee understood how shall it bee known what is spoken for yee shall speak into the ayr Reason 4. As a Trumpet or any other instrument touched or blown sounding confusedly utters an unprofitable and an ungrateful sound so also a tongue not understood gives no other than an uncertain and useless sound But the Prophets in their Prophecying speak in a known tongue Therefore the gift of tongues is inferiour to the gift of Prophecie Vers. 10. There are it may bee so many kinds of voices in the world and none of them are without signification Reason 5. The voices of Brutes are many whereof none is so inarticulate but represents a certain species of the living creature to those that hear It is therefore an unworthy thing so to debase the gift of the Spirit that it should profit no more but should bee less valued than the blearing of a brute beast In Prophecie it is not so Therefore the gift of Tongues is inferiour to that of Prophecie Vers. 11. Therefore if I know not the meaning of the voice I shall bee unto him that speaketh a Barbarian and hee that speaketh shall bee a Barbarian unto mee Reason 6. Because to speak things not understood makes the Teachers and the Hearers Barbarians each to other Therefore c. Vers. 12. Even so yee for as much as yee are zealous of spiritual gifts seek that yee may excell to the
ought to renounce that yoak Vers. 4. But when the fulness of the time was come God sent forth his Son made of a Woman made under the Law 5. To redeem them that were under the Law that wee might receive the Adoption of Sons Having spoken of the servile and childish condition of the Church before the comming of Christ as to the outward man for as to the Spirit and inward man the faithful that saw the day of Christ were freed and rejoyced in the Lord now follows the manner of delivering the Church by the comming of Christ. The fulness of time Argum. 2. Now the fulness of time is come which the Father had fore-appointed to the Legal Pedagogie and that Guardianship of Legal Ceremonies is finished Therefore you Christians must renounce the yoak of Ceremonies Sent forth his Son Argum. 3. The Son of God is sent into the world takes upon him flesh and is born of the Virgin Mary and subjected to the Covenant of Works and the yoak of Legal Ceremonies that hee might redeem those that were subject to the Law Therefore yee Christians redeemed from the yoak ought to renounce it That the Adoption Argum. 4. For that end Christ is made subject to the Law that wee might clearly attain to the Adoption or to the Priviledge of Sons grown up held forth under the Gospel Therefore wee being under the Gospel ought to renounce the servile and childish yoak of Ceremonies unless wee would render the benefit of Redemption of none effect to us Vers. 6. And because yee are Sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father Argum. 5. For a testimony of your Adoption and advancement to the priviledge of Sons now grown up God hath given you the holy Spirit by which together with other Sons of God out of Jews and Gentiles yee may call God confidently in every tongue your Father Therefore except yee would carry your selves as unworthy of this priviledge yee must renounce the childish and servile yoak of Ceremonies Vers. 7. Wherefore thou art no more a Servant but a Son and if a Son then an Heir of God through Christ. Argum. 6. Yee are no more in that servile condition under the yoak of Ceremonies but in a free state as Sons grown up and Heirs actually partakers of their Fathers goods or spiritual graces in a larger measure than the ancient Church and that by Christ manifested in the flesh Therefore now you must renounce that servi●e and childish yoak Vers. 8. Howbeit then when yee knew not God yee did service unto them which by nature are no gods 9. But now after that yee have known God or rather are known of God how turn yee again to the weak and beggarly elements whereunto yee desire again to bee in bondage Hee upbraids them with their ingratitude reprehending them for their observance of Legal Ceremonies as of daies and months c. in which they were neither born nor educated Howbeit Argum. 7. Before yee were Sons you were in a worser condition than the Jews to wit you were Idolatrous knowing not the true God and serving feigned Idols but now converted from that ignorance yee have known God or rather by the preventing Grace of God known and beloved yee are drawn to God that you might know him and are invested with the liberty of Sons How is it that a fresh as if you had been under no bondage do you turn again to the yoak of abolished ceremonial bondage Therefore this yoak you must renounce The force of this Argument is this yee bear the yoak of Ceremonies having less to pretend for your excuse and with a more signal note of ingratitude than the Jews born and brought up under the yoak Therefore you must renounce this yoak Again Argum. 8. Yee being advanced to the liberty of Sons grown up it is an unworthy thing willingly to return again to the yoak of slavery and to bee willing to bee in bondage Therefore you must renounce this yoak Beggerly Argum. 9. Those Legal Ceremonies the yoak whereof now yee affect although they had their pedagogical use before Christ came yet now Christ is come they have no use but are weak and beggerly rudiments which neither have virtue to justifie nor power to bring consolation nor their old use to prefigure Christ Therefore yee ought to renounce this so unprofitable a yoak Vers. 10. Yee observe daies and months and times and years 11. I am afraid of you lest I have bestowed upon you labour in vain Argum. 10. Your bondage begun again in the observation of Legal Ceremonies as for example of daies Sabbaths New Moons set Feasts and Sabbatical years c. hath given mee just cause of fear left I have preached to you the Gospel of free Justification in vain Because this is a sign that you are revolted from Justification by Faith or from the Grace of Christ to seek Justification by Works of the Law Therefore unless yee will renounce the Gospel yee must renounce this yoak The second Part. Vers. 12. Brethren I beseech you bee as I am for I am as yee are yee have not injured mee at all The second part of the Chapter follows wherein is contained a loving Exhortation to return into the way and the wholesome opinion of Justification by Grace through Faith without the Works of the Law This Proposition of the Exhortation may bee laid down You must return to my Doctrine of Righteousness by Faith without the Works of the Law bee yee saies hee as I am or bee yee in the same opinion with mee The Arguments of the Exhortation are twelve Furthermore Argum. 1. Because I though in times past a Pharisee have been very stiffe for Righteousness by the Law but now being made a Christian I am as you and I seek with you your salvation no less than you your selves seek it Therefore yee must return to my opinion Brethren I beseech Argum. 2. My fear concerning you hath neither alienated my mind from you neither hath it caused a doubtful judgement of charity concerning you but as Brethren let mee friendly bespeak you and as Brethren let mee beseech you to return Therefore return yee No Argum. 3. My severe reproof ariseth not against you either from anger or hatred who have not privately injured mee at all but out of an earnest desire of your salvation Therefore return yee Vers. 13. Yee know how through infirmity of the flesh I preached the Gospel unto you at first Argum. 4. I have suffered many things for preaching the Gospel unto you for yee know that I have preached the Gospel to you constantly through infirmities and a contemptible condition as to the outward-man whereunto through afflictions I am driven Therefore return yee to sound Doctrine sealed by my sufferings Vers. 14. And my temptation which was in the flesh yee despised not nor rejected but received mee as an Angel of God even as Christ Iesus Argum. 5. In
after the flesh so that they could not please God 2 They were uncircumcised that is had in reproach by the Jews who boasted in an external circumcision made with hands Vers. 12. That at that time yee were without Christ being Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel and strangers from the Covenants of Promise having no hope and without God in the world 3 They were without Christ or destitute of all actual communion with Christ in the Spirit 4 Aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel that is without the Church of God 5 Strangers from the Covenants of Promise that is from all right to apply unto themselves the Covenants and Promises of God 6 They were without any certain hope of future good 7 They were without the true God that is without his knowledge and worship 8 They were worldly or a part of the world which wallows in sin and which is the Kingdome of Satan Therefore that yee are delivered from this so miserable a condition cannot bee any thing else but of Grace Vers 13. But now in Iesus Christ yee who sometime were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. Argum. 15. If the happiness of this present state were compared with the former state it would bee found to bee so great that it could proceed from nothing but Grace There are eight parts of this Argument every one whereof hath the same tendency 1 The Ephesians who were far off from the Covenant and from the Church and its priviledges are now made nigh their way unto the Covenant and to the Church being laid open which benefit hath for its meritorious cause the blood of Christ for its instrumental Faith whereby they are implanted into Christ and consequently it is of Grace Vers. 14. For hee is our Peace who hath made both one and ha●h broken down the middle wall of partition between us 2 Christ hath reconciled the Gentiles and Iews to one another hee is a peaceable Mediatour and the very cause of Peace hee hath joyned both his people into one body hee took away the Ceremonial Law which as a body or partition-wall did divide betwixt Jews and Gentiles and was a cause of enmity by his suffering in the flesh hee hath procured this Peace And are not all these of Grace Vers. 15. Having abolished in his flesh the enmity even the Law of Commandements contained in Ordinances for to make in himself of twain one new man so making Peace 3 This is propounded more specially and in express words Christ hath abrogated the Law of Commandements consisting in Ordinances that is the positive Ceremonial Law which was fulfilled by his comming thus that Law being taken away which stirred up enmity between the two people hee joyned them both being reconciled to one another as one new man in himself the common head making one mystical Christ or joyning the Jews and Gentiles as the members of one mystical body into one body hee himself being the Head thereof And here wee may perceive Grace in the highest degree Vers. 16. And that hee might reconcile both unto God in one body by the Cross having slain the enmity thereby 4 Here hee brings another end of the abolished Law that hee might reconcile in this his own body not onely both people to one another but unto God paying the price of their Redemption from their sins by the death of the Cross and removing the enmities between God and his redeemed people by his own death Here Grace also is very conspicuous Vers. 17. And ●ame and preached Peace to you which were afar off and to them that were nigh 5 Here hee declares how this Peace was made known to the world viz. in the preaching of the Gospel by Jesus Christ who as hee was the Author of Peace so hee was the first publisher of this Peace in the Gospel to the consolation and salvation of the Jews who were called such as were nigh because of the Covenant and to the salvation of the Gentiles who were called Aliens because they were strangers to the Covenant Here also Grace shews it self Vers. 18. For through him wee both have an access by one Spirit unto the Father 6 Here hee gives the reason why this Peace was preach'd to both because the price being paid by one Christ there is one way and access opened to both Jews and Gentiles that Gentiles as well as Jews might call upon one Father through one Spirit and therefore Peace was preach'd to Jews and Gentiles Here is nothing but Grace Vers. 19. Now therefore wee are no more strangers and forreigners but fellow-Citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God 7 In this hee gathers by way of a Corolary that the Ephesians are now no more guests or strangers but Citizens of the City of the Saints and of the family of God which also is the priviledge of all us that beleeve Vers. 20. And are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Iesus Christ himself being the chief corner-stone 8 In which explaining more at large the union of the Ephesians with Christ and the holy Church hee shews that they are living stones of the Temple of God as streightly united with other Beleevers and with Christ as stones are to the foundation of a building And here is a graphical description of the Church in its likeness to a Temple the parts whereof are three 1 The Church is like to the Temple of God whose foundation is Christ not onely upholding the whole building but also joyning together the several walls the Jews and Gentiles and uniting them in himself 2 The Apostles and other faithful Ministers after them are the builders who teach that Christ who alone is able to bear the whole business of Redemption and Salvation is the onely foundation of this Temple and by thus teaching do edifie and build the Saints upon Christ according to the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles 3 The stones of this Temple are the Elect or all true Beleevers who ●re built upon Christ by the preaching of the Truth amongst whom were these beleeving Ephesians Vers. 21. In whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord Hee proceeds in his allegorical description of the true Catholick Church and explains four conditions and properties of the Church or Temple of God 1 This Temple is said to bee artificiously made or fitly compiled because the whole building of the Church and all its members are then fitly compacted with the greatest wisdome when Christ and his will is so preached that every Beleever hath his proper place and function according to the quality of the gifts of the Holy Ghost so that some in publick office some in their private calling and all in their several places concur to the edification of the whole Temple 2 This Temple is living because Christ who is the foundation is living and quickening and his true members all Beleevers are living stones being quickened and
back of Epaphroditus the Philippians Pastor who had brought mony for Pauls use and for a time had ministred to him in prison Hee commends him in five honourable Epithites or Titles 1 His Brother 2 His companion in labour 3 Fellow-souldier 4 The faithful messenger of the Philippians And 5 The publick Minister to the Apostles necessity in prison Vers. 26. For hee longed after you all and was full of heaviness because that yee had heard that hee had been sick Hee adds four causes of sending him back which would serve also for his commendation 1 The Pastoral love of Epaphroditus towards the Philippians 2 His trouble for the Philippians grief because hee knew they would hear certainly of his sickness but nothing of his recovery Vers. 27. For indeed hee was sick nigh unto death but God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on mee also lest I should have sorrow upon sorrow Hee confirms the tydings of Epaphroditus his sickness and commends the special grace of God shewn to Epaphroditus and himself whereby God was careful to restore Epaphroditus to health lest the Apostle should bee too much afflicted Vers. 28. I sent him therefore the more carefully that when yee see him again yee may rejoyce and that I may bee the less sorrowful 3 The joy of the Philippians was another cause 4 The ease of the Apostles sickness who for the Philippians sake would deprive himself of Epaphroditus his service otherwise very necessary to him rather than hee would suffer them any longer to want their Minister Vers. 29. Receive him therefore in the Lord with all gladness and hold such in reputation Hence hee wisheth them to receive him according to his worth and to esteem of him and such Ministers as Jewels and treasures Vers. 30. Because for the work of Christ hee was nigh unto death not regarding his life to supply your lack of service towards mee Hee adds four Reasons of his desire 1. Because hee had carried on the work of Christ in comforting the Apostle 2. Because hee had ministred to the Apostle with danger of his life 3. Because hee preferred the service hee undertook before his own life being more heedless of his own health than of taking care of the Apostles business 4. Because hee had supplied the Philippians absence who as they ought did earnestly desire to serve the Apostles necessities CHAP. III. IN this Chapter the Apostle exhorts them joyfully to relye upon Christ alone or onely upon his Righteousness Grace and Vertue as abundantly sufficient for holiness and happiness that they would beware of false Apostles and follow the examples of the Apostles and faithful Ministers of Christ. There are three members of the first Exhortation contained in the three first verses 1. That they would rejoyce in Christ alone 2. That they would take heed to themselves of false Iewish teachers 3. That they would imitate the example of the Apostles and faithful who do wholly adhere unto Christ. The Arguments of this Exhortation are nine all which do urge that cleaving unto Christ they should follow the example of the Apostles Vers. 1. Finally my brethren rejoyce in the Lord to write the same things to you to mee indeed is not grievous ●ut for you it is safe The first member of the Exhortation That they would rejoyce in Christ that is that with joy they would rest upon his Righteousness and Vertue nor seek for any other helps to their salvation besides him This is propounded as the end of the whole former Doctrine and as a brief of all Christian duties The same things Argum. 1. By prevention of an Objection This Exhortation is so profitable for you that it is not at all troublesome to me to inculcate repeat it often to you nor should it bee tedious to you to hear the same often Therefore cleave unto Christ earnestly imbracing this Doctrine of his sufficiency Vers. 2. Beware of Dogs beware of evil workers beware of the concision The second member of the Exhortation is That they would beware of false Apostles who endeavouring after an impossibility would joyn righteousness by the works and ceremonies of the Law with free justification by faith Dogs Argum. 2. These false Apostles that act the part of Jews confounding the righteousness of the Law with the righteousness of faith and so teaching that wee must not rest only on Christs righteousness are not holy worshippers of God as they pretend but unclean Dogs barking at the pure Doctrine of the Gospel and defaming the sincere servants of Christ with their revilings They are not upholders of good works but evill workers they are not worthy to have the honour of Circumcision but they shall bee called authors of Concision and perdition because that by their false doctrine they do ruine and separate both themselves and others from Christ and of these you must take heed by reason of the imminent danger Therefore you must relye only upon Christs Grace and Vertue Vers. 3. For wee are the Circumcision which worship God in the Spirit and rejoyce in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the flesh The third member of the Exhortation is wherein hee proposeth the example of the Apostles and faithful who do wholly cleave unto Christ first in general then more particularly further repeating the Exhortation unto vers 18. Wee are Argum. 3. Onely wee Apostles and other beleevers who rest upon Christs righteousness are to bee honoured with the title of truly Circumcised viz. Those 1. who worship God with an internal and spiritual affection of the heart And 2. who glory in Jesus Christ as the only and sufficient Saviour 3. Who do not place our confidence in Ceremonies in carnal Circumcision in any external priviledges or any other such Helps Therefore you should as wee do onely rest upon the Grace and Vertue of Christ if yee will bee accounted truly Circumcised Vers. 4. Though I might also have confidence in the flesh if any other man thinketh that hee hath whereof hee may trust in the flesh I more Argum. 4. From the particular example of the Apostle preventing an Objection I Paul who have more cause to glory in fleshly or external priviledges than any false Apostles can have do nevertheless renouncing all confidence in priviledges or my works only relye on Christ and endeavour through Christ alone to make progress in holiness unto salvation Therefore you ought to acquiesce with mee in the Grace and Vertue of Christ alone Vers. 5. Circumcised the eighth day of the flock of Israel of the Tribe of Benjamin an Hebrew of the Hebrews as touching the Law a Pharisee 6. Concerning zeal persecuting the Church touching the righteousness which is in the Law blameless Hee clearly explaines this example by reckoning up eight causes of carnal boasting vers 5. 6. 1. I am circumcised and so brought into the number of Gods people 2. I was circumcised the eighth day exactly according to the Law not as a
because converted by my Ministery and art bound to lay out thyself and all thou hast in my service much more to receive a fugitive servant upon such equal tearms Therefore c. Vers. 20. Yea Brother let mee have joy of thee in the Lord refresh my bowels in the Lord. Argum. 14. I shall receive fruit of thy Faith in the Lord if thou grant this to mee thou shalt refresh his bowels and mine for Christs sake Therefore Onesimus ought to bee received into favour Vers. 21. Having confidence in thy obedience I wrote unto thee knowing that thou wilt also do more than I say The third part of the Epistle follows being the conclusion wherein are four Articles 1 In the first the Apostle professes his hopes of obtaining pardon for Onesimus and of more favour than hee had requested Vers. 22. But withall prepare mee also a lodging for I trust that through your prayers I shall bee given unto you 2 Wherein hee desires him to provide him a lodging that Philemon might know that the Apostle would come to his greater consolation if hee gratified him in the contents of this Epistle In the mean time hee inserts two causes of his deliverance out of bonds which are the gifts and the grace of God or the prayers of the Brethren Vers. 23. There salute thee Epaphras my fellow-prisoner in Christ Iesus 24. Marcus Aristarchus Demas Lucas my fellow-labourers 3 Wherein salutations are sent to Philemon by those which were in Pauls company all which make to the scope of this Epistle as also those which are premised in the Preface viz. to excite the mind of Philemon to receive Onesimus into favour Vers. 25. The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with your spirit Amen 4 Wherein comprehending Philemon and Apphia under his Apostolical benediction hee concludes his Epistle The Epistle of Paul to the HEBREWS Analytically expounded THE CONTENTS ALthough Paul seeing hee knew himself hated by all the Hebrews not yet converted and suspected also by many of the weaker Beleevers too much addicted to the observation of Legal Rites chose to suppress his name in the beginning of this Epistle that without prejudice they might the more easily entertain the Truth yet without controversie hee intimated his name by messengers to some chief and eminent Brethren in the Church to whose hands this Epistle was first to come and that it was known appears in the end of the Epistle But after demonstration of the same Spirit in this as in the other of Paul's Epistles the Authority of the Apostle Peter may satisfie us who by a singular providence of God in the third Chapter of his second Epistle to the same scattered Hebrews witnesseth concerning the Epistle of Paul written to the same which was in their hands and openly acknowledged to bee Pauls which Epistle Peter there commends with the rest of Paul's Epistles as divinely inspired by the same Spirit of Wisdome as now brought into the Canon of the Scripture and unanimously with his other Epistles acknowledged and received by the Church wee must of necessity own this for the very Epistle unless wee will undervalue the faithfulness of the Church and the Providence of God in keeping the Canon of the Scripture and the Oracles delivered to the Church The scope of the Epistle is this To strengthen the Hebrews that were weak in faith and for the most part addicted to legal Rites not sufficiently instructed about the Excellency of Christ and further also troubled every where with persecutions by Infidels and to encourage them against all fear to perseverance in the faith and obedience of the Gospel The parts of the Epistle as of the other Epistles of Paul are two The one for the forming and confirming of their faith to Chap. 12. The other tends to holiness and bringing forth fruits of faith in their lives and conversations Chap. 12 13. As to what appertains to the Doctrine of faith hee instructs the Hebrews how great the Excellency of Christ is in his Prophetick and Priestly Office As for the Excellency of Christs Prophetical Office hee shews it to bee incomparable and far to exceed all both Men and Angels Chap. 1. In the three next Chapters hee makes a fourfold use of this Doctrine in a fourfold Exhortation The first Exhortation is Not to Apostalize from the Christian faith 2 That they detract not from the honour of Christ because of his sufferings in the flesh Chap. second 3 That they constantly cleave to the Profession of the Christian faith Chap. third 4 That they make haste by faith to enter into the rest which God hath promised whilest they hear the voyce of Christ Chap. 4. As to the Priestly Office of Christ That the Iews ascribe not too much to the Levitical Priesthood and pertinaciously adhere to the Ceremonies thereof Hee proves Christ to bee the chief Priest more excellent than any typical high Priest even that true Melchizedeck In the mean time hee rebukes the ignorance of the Hebrews who could not comprehend the things hee had to say touching the Excellency of Christ Chap. 5. From whence hee draws an Exhortation to growth in the knowledge and faith of the Gospel Chap. 6. Hee proceeds to demonstrate the eminency of Christ above the Levitical Priests as well in respect to his Person as also his Priestly Office Chap. 7 8 9. And in the beginning of the tenth This Doctrine hee makes application of exhorting them to go forward confidently and patiently in the profession of the true Religion imitating the faithful Confessors and Martyrs who departed in the faith before the birth of Christ in the latter end of Chap. 10 and Chap. 11. In the second part of the Epistle divers Exhortations to Christian duties are laid down which also may bee reckoned amongst the Uses which hee makes of the former Doctrine Chap. 12 13. CHAP. I. IN this Chapter hee proves by nine Arguments the incomparable Excellency of the Prophetical Office of Christ especially because of his Deity The last whereof is confirmed with eight Reasons Vers. 1. God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets Arg. 1. Christ the Son of God is more excellent than all the Prophets by whom God spake to the ancient Church or the Fathers hee hath made our condition under the Gospel better than the condition of the Fathers under the Law For first they were Prophets by inspiration not when they would but as they were acted by the Spirit of Christ and spake as the Ministers of God but Christ is the Son of God and chief of the Prophets who spake by his own Authority no less than in his Fathers Name Secondly Those Prophets were many by whom heretofore at sundry times and in various wayes of Revelation by parts and degrees God manifested to the Church the Doctrine of salvation But the Son is one by whom the Father once fully plainly and finally hath declared to us
those true Principles concerning God ●hrough their own false reasonings they drew false conclusions about God and the worshiping of him Lastly They apparently manifested their ingratitude and folly by their works they framed the images of men and beasts whereby they would represent God or the properties of God to the eye thus as much as in them lay they changed the glory of God dishonoured by so vile a comparison into those abominable images Vers. 24. Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts to dishonour their own bodies between themselves 25. Who changed the Truth of God into a Lie and worshipped and served the Creature more than the Creator who is blessed for ever Amen The impiety and unrighteousness of men against God being manifested in the Example of the Gentiles hee shews the wrath of God to bee poured out upon the wicked and withall the greatness of their iniquity In that God gave them up judicially to their own affections and most justly left them to themselves for a punishment of their abominable Idolatry That they which robbed God of his glory might suffer in and by themselves the foulest ignominy And that they which changed the glorious Attributes of God into lying images which are nothing less than what they are called should change themselves into beasts by their unbridled lusts They are said to worship and serve things created passing by the Creator For although Idolaters seem in the false representation of God by an Image to intend him honour and worship yet God altogether rejects that worship and leaves it wholly to the Image or Creature with whom hee will not by any means share his worship God is called in this place Blessed for ever that wee may know that the injurious carriage of Idolaters can detract nothing from the felicity of God But that his glory and blessedness will abide for ever to whom wee all of us ought with the Apostle to ascribe it saying AMEN Vers. 26. For this cause God gave them up unto vile affections for even their women did change their natural use into that which is against nature 27. And likewise also the men leaving the natural use of the woman burned in their lust one toward another men with men working that which is unseemly and receiving in themselves that recompence of their errour which was meet In the Example of the Gentiles is propounded a further demonstration of mans unrighteousness and Gods wrath against the wicked To wit that God gave them up judicially to the hands of their own lusts and defiled spirits who served their own corrupt affections in matter of Religion that against Nature the men and women in their abominable Sodomitical filthiness below beasts in their unnatural lusts by way of requital should debase themselves who by their Idolatry had abased the glory of God in resembling him to Creatures and fictions of their own Vers. 28. And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge God gave them over to a reprobate mind to do those things which are not convenient 29. Being filled with all unrighteousness fornication wickedness covetousness maliciousness full of envy murder debate deceit malignity whisperers 30. Back-biters haters of God despiteful proud boasters inventers of evil things disobedient to Parents 31. Without understanding Covenant-breakers without natural affections implacable unmerciful Hee proceeds further to manifest the unrighteousness of man and the wrath of God to wit That God most justly gave them up to a reprobate mind who refused to retain in their minds the knowledge of him which by the light of nature was apparent in all the works of Creation that being deprived of the use of common judgement as if they had turned beasts they ran mad into all wickedness against the Law of Nations and Nature without the least shew of Reason Filled That wee might not imagine them guilty of one fault onely the Apostle reckons up a Catalogue of about three and twenty with which these were filled that were left to themselves With all unrighteousness That is with all unrighteousness against their neighbour Fornication Under this hee comprehends all unlawful lying of the Man with the Woman Maliciousness That is a desire to hurt joyned with fraud and indeavour Wickedness That is a frowardness of mind openly discovering it self Malignity That is with roughness and harshness of manners Whisperers Such as privily back-bite their neighbours on purpose to dissolve the bonds of friendship Back-biters Such as injure the reputation and fame of others Haters of God Such are they who out of an evil conscience will not endure to hear any thing of God Spightful Such are those that are cruel oppressing others by force Boasters Such as make a shew of great matters Inventers of evil things Such as devise new kinds of sins Without understanding Such are they which are hurried like brute beasts without any shew of reason which way soever their lust draws them Vers. 32. Who knowing the judgement of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death not only do the same but have pleasure in them that do them The last demonstration of mans unrighteousness and the wrath of God in his justice leaving them to themselves appears with a threefold aggravation 1 They practised the foresaid wickednesses against the dictate of conscience for they knew that those wickednesses were displeasing unto God 2 They s●●ned against the knowledge of the judgement of God and the due desert of sin They knew them worthy of death that committed such things 3 They themselves onely did not commit such things but not onely by their silence but consent flattery and authority became Patrons to them that did confirming and hardening them in their sins This is the condition of the wisest men out of Christ who are so farre from the righteousness of works that they do nothing but abuse the known principles of Righteousness provoke the wrath of God against themselves and more and more pollute themselves with all manner of filthiness to their final perdition CHAP. II. IN this Chapter wee have the third Argument set down to prove the Position viz. CONCERNING THE RIGHTEOVSNESSE NOT BY WORKS BVY BY FAITH Which is propounded in the first and second verses in the remaining part of the Chapter it is confirmed and the objections removed Vers. 1. Therefore thou art inexcusable O man whosoever thou art that judgest for wherein thou judgest another thou condemnest thy self for thou that judgest doest the same things 2. But wee are sure that the judgement of God is according to truth against them which commit such things The third Argument against Justification by works from the self-condemnation of all men drawn from the last verse of the former Chapter Every man condemning others and doing the same things which hee condemns in his own judgement is condemned without excuse Therefore every man is so farre from being justified by works that on the
in the faith Vers. 6. Greet Mary who bestowed much labour on us The pains of Mary toward the Faithful and the Apostles hee would have the Church take notice of and acknowledge that hee might encourage or exci●e the like pains in others Vers. 7. Salute Andronicus and Junia my Kinsmen and my fellow-prisoners who are of note amongst the Apostles who also were in Christ before mee Andronicus and Iunia of the Apostles Kindred are said to bee of note among the Apostles because they were known and approved of by the Apostles and highly accounted of among them who also were converted to the Faith before the Apostle Paul and were partners of his sufferings for the Gospel in prison and bonds Vers. 8. Greet Amplias my beloved in the Lord. Amplias is said to bee worthy of love in the Lord for the faith and piety which was vouchsafed of the Lord. Vers. 9. Salute Urbane our helper in Christ and Starchys my beloved Urbane seems to bee one of the Pastors of the Church at Rome and an helper of the Apostle in his labours in the Gospel Vers. 10. Salute Apelles approved in Christ. Salute them which are of Aristobulus houshold Apelles hee calls approved because hee gave certain evidences of his faith and constancy Vers. 11. Salute Herodion my Kinsman Great them that bee of the houshold of Narcissus which are in the Lord. Hee doth not salute Aristobulus and Narcissus because they continued unbeleevers as wee may safely conjecture but their Christian houshold servants that they might bee confirmed in the Faith and continue their obedience towards their Masters though unbeleevers Vers. 12. Salute Traphena and Tryphosa who labour in the Lord. Salute the beloved Persis which laboured much in the Lord. Hee salutes the approved Matrons which contributed their labours zealously and successefully for the promoting of the Gospel Vers. 13. Salute Rufus chosen in the Lord and his Mother and mine Hee salutes Rufus an eminent young man whose Mother very much respected Paul even as much as shee did Rufus her own Son Vers. 14. Salute Asyncritus Phlegon Hermas Patrabas Hermes and the Brethren which are with them 15. Salute Philologus and Julia Nerius and his Sister and Olympias and all the Saints which are with them Because hee could not insist upon the rehearsal of all setting down some Saints by name the rest hee salutes in general Vers. 16. Salute one another with an holy kiss Because in those times amongst the signs of mutual love a kiss was as now the shaking of right hands amongst us hee commands that they salute one another holily without fraud and deceit Vers. 16. The Churches of Christ salute you Salute The second part of the Chapter follows wherein the Apostle salutes the Romans in the name of the Churches amongst which hee was conversant who understood his purpose of writing to the Romans Vers. 17. Now I beseech you Brethren mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which yee have learned and avoid them Hee interposes as it were in a Parenthesis his admonition to observe restrain and excommunicate those which should move any thing against the Apostolical doctrine or discipline already received by them to the renting of the Church and commands to avoid fellowship viz. after they were excommunicated by the Church Vers. 18. For they that are such serve not our Lord Iesus Christ but their own belly and by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the people Hee adds four Reasons of this his admonition First because such men whoever they bee serve not God but their own belly minding worldly things i. e. their own lusts and advantages but not the welfare of the Church Reason second Because unless they bee observed by the wiser sort the more simple are easily deceived by their feigned words by which means they make a schism in the Church Vers. 19. For your obedience is come abroad unto all men I am glad therefore on your behalf but yet I would have you wise unto that which is good and simple concerning evil Reason the third Because there was danger le●t the commendable readiness of the Romans to beleeve the Preachers might bee exposed to some impostures unless they were wary viz. except they tempered that simplicity with prudence respecting simplicity onely as to mischief but in other things following after prudence lest they bee wronged by the subtilty of others Vers. 20. And the God of Peace shall bruise Satan under your feet shortly The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with you Amen The fourth Reason Because although wee must conflict with Satan the author of contentions yet the Go● of Peace will give victory to us when wee have a while combated with those that trouble us which Argument the Apostle concludes with an Apostolical benediction Vers. 21. Timotheus my work-fellow and Lucius and Jason and So●ipater my kinsmen salute you The Parenthesis being shut up hee subjoyns the salutations of other Saints with him to the Romans the first of wh●m is Timothy the Evangelist after him Lucius who as it seems is that Cyrenean Act. 13.1 Iason of whom Act. 17.5 Sosipater of whom Act. 20.4 Vers. 22. I Tertius who wrote this Epistle salute you in the Lord. Tertius Pauls Secretary who wrote this Epistle in honour of his Ministery hee receives this mentioning of himself from the Holy Ghost as it were in reward of his faithfulness Vers. 23. Gaius mine Host and of the whole Church saluteth you Erastus the Chamberlain of the City saluteth you and Quartus a Brother 24. The grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with you all Amen Gaius of whom Act. 20.4 and 1 Cor. 1.14 commends himself to the Romans and in the mean while is commended by Paul to the Romans that his house did not onely give entertainment to Paul but also the whole Church in which they met for the performance of religious duties Erastus the Chamberlain of the City of Corinth to whom is added Quartus a Brother by name hee shuts up these salutations repeating his Apostolical wish Vers. 25. Now to him that is of power to establish you according to my Gospel and the preaching of Iesus Christ according to the revelation of the mystery which was kept secret since the world began In the three last verses hee concludes this excellent Epistle with a solenm thanksgiving in which hee asserts the Faith and the certainty of the Romans salvation against all fear which dangers persecutions Impostors Schismaticks or their own infirmities or any other temptations might cause in them and that by reason of the power and good pleasure of God which God by the Gospel set down in this Epistle as it were holds forth his arms for their salvation and also hee commends his Gospel upon a sixfold account First Because it is the preaching of Jesus Christ 2. Because it is the Revelation of the Grace of God which was kept secret for although Grace was made known
Reason 4. Because what hee was about to write appertained not onely to the Church of Corinth but to all the Saints and Churches in all Achaia to wit to know this asserted truth which hee was about to write Vers. 2. Grace bee to you and Peace from God our Father and from our Lord Iesus Christ. Reason 5. Comprehended in the salutation or Apostolical benediction Because Paul the Author of this Epistle would not that the dignity of the Church of Corinth should any waies bee eclipsed although hee knew there were most corrupt persons among them not onely which lay hid but openly shewed themselves enemies to the Apostle but constantly accounted the Church at Corinth a true Church to which by his Authority hee applied the benediction of the Gospel and doubted not to wish them all good things Therefore they were obliged to receive the things which hee wrote with that submission and readiness of mind that was fitting The first Part. Vers. 3. Blessed bee God even the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of mercies and the God of all comforts In the first part of the Chapter the Apostle proves that the Corinthians ought not to despise him by reason of the Cross or afflictions and that by twelve Arguments Argum. 1. In the midst of afflictions I find God the Father most merciful and abundant in all consolation so that I have cause rather to bless God than to complain of my calamities sent of God Therefore ought you not to contemn mee or to bee offended because of my afflictions Vers. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation that wee may bee able to comfort them which are in any trouble by the comfort wherewith wee our selves are comforted of God Argum. 2. By the experience which I have in afflictions I am made more fit to minister comfort 〈◊〉 others that are afflicted Therefore ought you not to bee offended in mee c. Vers. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ. Argum. 3. Afflictions are a part of Martyrdome and for the Gospel or for Christ are inflicted upon mee with honour that they may bee called the afflictions of Christ by way of participation For what things are inflicted upon the Martyrs Christ takes upon himself as Act. 9. Saul Saul why dost thou persecute mee Therefore c. In us Argum. 4. Christ gave testimony from his superabundant and seasonable consolations towards mee in the midst of my afflictions that the miseries which I suffer are inflicted upon mee for the defence of the Gospel Therefore c. Vers. 6. And whether wee be afflicted it is for your consolation and salvation which is effectual in enduring the same sufferings which wee also suffer or whether wee bee comforted it is for your consolation and salvation Argum. 5. Those afflictions as also these comforts tended to the benefit of the Corinthians who might bee strengthened in the Faith and built up divers waies to salvation and take comfort from the Apostles experience Therefore ought they not to bee offended in the Apostles sufferings Which effectually produceth Argum. 6. Because the salvation of the Corinthians was effectually to bee promoted by his suffering such kind of afflictions by which as by the way to salvation freely given they were earnestly to strive Therefore c. And the hope Argum. 7. I have certain hope of you that you will not despise us nor take ill the afflictions which yee shall suffer Therefore yee are bound not to frustrate our hope concerning you Vers. 7. And our hope of you is stedfast knowing that as you are partakers of the sufferings so shall you bee also of the consolation Argum. 8. I know that you are made both partakers of our sufferings by your sympathy and shall partake of our consolations Therefore you are bound not to despise us because of the afflictions which wee suffer Vers. 8. For wee would not Brethren have you ignorant of our trouble which came to us in Asia that wee were pressed out of measure above strength insomuch that wee despaired even of life 9. But wee had the sentence of death in our selves that wee should not trust in our selves but in God which raiseth the dead 10. Who delivered us from so great a death and doth deliver in whom wee trust that hee will yet deliver us Argum. 9. From his special example and late sufferings in Asia So far am I from being ashamed of my afflictions that I am desirous all should understand how great they are and also my infirmity that God may bee glorified the more Therefore ought you not to despise mee for my afflictions Hee shews the greatness of his afflictions and his own infirmities in this that in the tumult at Ephesus whereof hee speaks Act. 19.23 or some such like danger hee kn●w not which way to turn himself to escape the danger of his life expecting in himself nothing but certain death That wee should not trust Argum. 10. I have learned by this experience and the like not to confide in my self but in God alone who can deliver from imminent death those that are ready to dye and raise up them which are dead to which end God was pleased to bring mee into danger Therefore yee ought not to despise my affliction Wee hope Argum. 11. By this late experience and such like God hath stirred up in mee a firm hope of my deliverance for the future though I fall into new calamities Therefore ought you not to despise my affliction Vers. 11. You also helping together by prayer for us that for the gift bestowed upon us by the means of many persons thanks may bee given by many on your behalf Argum. 12. Because the knowledge of his sufferings and his deliverance should stir up the Corinthians among others to pray for him and so to obtain his deliverance for the future and by consequence also to thanksgiving by many unto God which Argument being considered the Corinthians could not despise Paul for the afflictions which hee suffered at least they ought not to bee offended in him The second Part. Vers. 12. For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdome but by the Grace of God wee have had our conversation in the world and more abundantly to you-wards The second part of the Chapter followes wherein hee removes their suspition of his estranged mind from them which the false Apostles his adversaries seem to f●ment with frivolous Arguments and proves that they ought not to surmise any change of his carriage towards them or that his mind was alienated from them by six Arguments after which hee answers two or three Objections which were brought to the contrary by his adversaries Argum. 1. Wherein hee gives an account why his safety ought to bee commended to them all and also proves that hee continued the same as the Corinthians had found him in so
Conversion and Salvation of so many men should bee ascribed to the virtue of the Apostle that it should bee wholly ascribed unto God for by so much the more the Power of God is conspicuous in great works by how much the weakness of the Instrument more evidently appeareth Vers. 8. Wee are troubled ●n every side yet not distressed wee are perplexed but not in dispair 9. Persecuted but not forsaken cast down but not destroyed Hee answers 3. That all his afflictions are moderated and hee himself is upheld by God in all things that hee is not destitute of the help of God doth not sink under his burthen that hee doth not forsake God nor dispair is not forsaken of God not left or lost Therefore it matters nothing how weak he is in himself Wee are afflicted hee saith yet not distressed i. e. on every side wee are troubled with adversity but wee are not brought into such streights as to bee over-whelmed but wee are preserved by the help of God in the midst of afflictions Wee are perplexed but not in despair i. e. wee doubt sometimes what may bee done in the dangers of this life but wee are not so destitute that wee are void of all counsel Wee are persecuted but not forsaken i. e. God permits us to bee vexed and evil intreated by the enemies of the Gospel but hee neither permits us to bee slain before the time by him determined neither doth hee withdraw his consolations from us Wee are cast down but not destroyed that is wee sometimes seem presently ready to perish but God helping us wee are kept from perishing Vers. 10. Alwayes bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Iesus that the life also of Iesus might bee made manifest in our body Hee answers 4. That his afflictions make for the glory of Christ because the Image of Christ suffering and dying may bee seen in them and that the virtue and strength of Christ living may appear in supporting him under so many afflictions Therefore it matters not how weak hee may bee in himself Vers. 11. For wee which live are alway delivered unto death for Iesus sake that the Life also of Iesus might bee manifest in our mortal flesh Hee confirms this from hence that the Apostles who lived in the midst of troubles by the strength of Christs Spirit for the cause of Christ daily undergo danger that the quickning Virtue of Christ may more and more appear in sustaining their fleshly infirmities obnoxious to that miserable condition Vers. 12. So then death worketh in us but life in you Object 2. But not necessarily because thou art the Servant of Christ therefore thou shouldest bee also miserable and contemned For wee Corinthians are Christians and yet wee live more prosperously Hee answers four manner of wayes 1. By granting it to bee so yet by the Wisdome of God it comes to pass that in some stronger Christians as the Apostles the Image of Christ dying might rather appear at least to the world But in others as the weaker Corinthians the efficacy of Christs Life supporting them under extreme afflictions might bee more apparent to the world Vers. 13. Wee having the same spirit of Faith according as it is written I believed and therefore have I spoken wee also believe and therefore speak 14. Knowing that hee which raised up the Lord Iesus shall raise up us also by Iesus and present us with you Hee answers 2. Although the Apostles may bee afflicted more than the Corinthians yet there is the same Spirit of Faith both in them and in the Corinthians by which Faith believing with David Psalm 116. ver 10. The Apostle dare promise to himself together with the Corinthians a glorious Resurrection although now hee is more pressed under the Cross than they Vers. 15. For all things are for your sake that the abundant grace might through the thanksgiving of many redound to the glory of God Hee answers 3. That hee was afflicted for their consolation and confirmation as also that from his afflictions and deliverances occasion of praying and suffering together with the Apostles might not onely bee given to the Corinthians But also occasion of thanksgiving with them for their eminent deliverances from trouble which God forthwith granted to him with the rest of the Apostles and was about to grant Vers. 16. For which cause wee faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day Hee answers 4. That hee was not tyred nor wearied by his afflictions whereof hee subjoyns three Reasons Reason 1. Because as much as was diminished of those goods that made for the maintaining the State of this present life so much was added to his holiness for the increasing of his spiritual life Vers. 17. For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory Reason 2. Because it did procure an unspeakable weight of glory to the promoting of which afflictions help as instruments and means both of mortification and glorification so that no afflictions are to bee accounted of yea truly the lightness of afflictions which is but for a moment clearly vanisheth and becomes as nothing in comparison with future glory Vers. 18. While wee look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Reason 3. Why hee doth not wax faint is Because saith hee by Faith I look at things eternal and invisible by reason of which I despise all temporal and visible i. e. both Riches Honours and Profits c. I do not look at because those are onely durable for a time but I have my mind intent upon those good and eternal things which God hath promised Therefore I do not weigh the loss of temporal things by all which the Apostle confirmeth the Corinthians lest they should bee offended at his afflictions CHAP. V. HEE goes on to shew more fully his faithfulness in the Ministery by mentioning seven impellent causes whereby hee was moved to faithfulness in the discharge of his duty Vers. 1. For wee know that if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved wee have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens The first impellent cause to faithfulness in the Ministery is his certain confidence of a blessed immortality which after death remains for him and all the rest of the faithful Ministers of Christ of which felicity also the body shall bee partaker in the Resurrection I am perswaded saith hee that after the dissolution of this my frail body I shall continually injoy felicity of soul and the glorious immortality of a raised body why should not I therefore bee faithful so long as I dwell in this mortal body Vers. 2. For in this wee groan earnestly desiring to bee cloathed upon with our house which is from Heaven
upon him as it were bonds and constrained him that hee being unmindful of himself did both speak and do those things onely which might promote the Glory of Christ and the good of the Church Vers. 15. And that hee died for all that they which live should not henceforth live to themselves but unto him which died for them and rose again Hee giveth a reason of his love and adds the fourth impellent cause to wit the love of Christ to us Christ saies hee when wee were all dead in respect of our desert and the justice of God alone died in the room of all of us that beleeve in him That wee being delivered from deserved perdition should not serve our selves but Christ our Redeemer why therefore should not I bee faithful in the business of Christ Vers. 16. Wherefore henceforth know we no man after the flesh yea though we have known Christ after the flesh yet now henceforth know wee him no more Hee prevents an Objection to this end that hee might give account why hee checked those glorious Corinthian Doctors not regarding his esteem with the ignorant So that hee might promote the Glory of Christ and the Churches safety Some one might say but it behoved him to regard the dignity of so many worthy Teachers amongst the Corinthians who shined with Eloquence Learning Riches Honours and Nobility of Parentage For some of these were of the Jews and perhaps did boast that they were of the Tribe of Iudah and did arrive to Christs kindred as it is credible from what follows Hee answers three waies drawing every one of his answers as conclusions from vers 12. Answ. 1. That hee doth not look at Riches Honours Parentage Eloquence and the rest neither did hee esteem any man from outward things by which the esteem of men is encreased or diminished with worldlings and those that are carnal Tea Answ. 2. That hee did not judge any more of Christ himself according to his external condition or detract from his estimation by reason of his poverty and ignominy in the world as in times past hee esteemed being in a mistake And therefore hee did not esteem any one more valuable because of his Riches Honours and Parentage c. Vers. 17. Therefore if any man bee in Christ hee is a new Creature old things are passed away behold all things are become new Answ. 3. Shewing the duty of the faithful ingrafted into Christ to bee this that as new Creatures they should labour for the newness of a right judgement and an holy life And that these worldly things should not bee so highly esteemed hee proves from Isa. 65.17 where God promiseth an abolition of old things and that hee will make a new Heaven and a new Earth i. e. all things new under the Kingdome of Christ Whence it follows that those things onely are to bee had in estimation amongst Christians which reach to a new Creature or Regeneration For all things are made new to those that are renewed when they are reconciled to God they have all Creatures as it were reconciled to them and now they use them after a new manner for the Glory of God and their own salvation setting a price upon every thing according as it makes or not makes for the promoting of the Kingdome of God in themselves and others Vers. 18. And all things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Iesus Christ and hath given unto us the Ministery of reconciliation The fifth impellent cause to faithfulness in his Ministery is the grace and goodness of God towards him which cause returning to his purpose and looking up to God hee asserts the Author of the New Creature whereof hee had even now spoken and of all graces Because the Grace of God towards him had brought to him a double priviledge to wit reconciliation by Christ and a Ministerial office for the reconciliation of others from hence hee acknowledges a twofold Obligation for his faithfulness in the Ministery Why therefore should not hee approve himself faithful Vers. 19. To wit that God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation The sixth impellent cause is the excellency of preaching of which hee propounds a short collection wherein 1 The Father who by reason of sin was removed far from us declares himself to come near unto us in Christ who is the true IMMANUEL God with us 2 The Father reconciled as for his part declares himself to do that in Christ for the Elect world that they beholding their enmities betwixt themselves and God as for their part may come again into favour and bee reconciled with God through Christ. 3 The means is shewn by which men may bee reconciled to God viz. by remission or a not imputing of sins which God most graciously doth offer 4 The instrument of applying the Grace of reconciliation obtained by Christ is shewn viz. the word of reconciliation committed to the Apostles and to the other Ministers In which so excellent and so necessary a Ministery hee could not bee but faithfull when hee set those things before him Vers. 20. Now then wee are Embassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us wee pray you in Christs stead bee yee reconciled to God The seventh impellent cause to faithfulness is the excellency of the person which hee represents which cause hee propounds and together with the whole precedent Doctrine hee makes use of by which very thing shewing the endeavour of his faithfulness To this end hee importunes all and diligently urges all with his authority as an Embassadour and also submissively and lovingly as bearing the Image of God that every one would more heartily accept the reconciliation offered of God that the remainders of enmity being taken away which unbelief cherisheth within all may become the same Spirit with God Vers. 21. For hee hath made him to bee sin for us who knew no sin that wee might bee made the righteousness of God in him Lastly That hee may perswade to the obedience of Faith and to the receiving of a fuller measure of reconciliatio● hee sheweth that an open and expedient way to reconciliation is because Christ the innocent Mediator and pure from sin by his consent and agreement with the Father in a judicial manner is accounted guilty of our sin yea truly hee was made an Expiatory Sacrifice for our sin expresly for that end that wee believing in Christ may bee made partakers of Christs righteousness judicially by imputation and so may bee made perfectly righteous and as it were by that righteousness which chiefly pleases God through this excellent and divine way of reconcilement which the wisdome of God hath invented and grace hath made ours But hee adds this in him that wee might necessarily understand that wee are engraffed into Christ by Faith by which this righteousness may bee ours because from our conjunction
and the body also and endeavours the perfecting of holiness going forward and proceeding in the fear of God using one Argument for all The Promises fore-spoken of made to you by God do justly require that from you Therefore apply your selves diligently to these duties Vers. 2. Receive us wee have wronged no man wee have corrupted no man wee have defrauded no man In the rest of the Chapter hee endeavours to oblige the hearts of the Corinthians to him the signs of his love towards them being produced in the unfolding of which hee insists to the end The Proposition is clearly propounded which is to bee confirmed O Corinthians yee ought to receive us i. e. to bee perswaded of my love towards you yee ought to love mee again and to lay up my exhortations in your enlarged hearts Three Arguments are taken from the three Signs of the Apostles good will towards them No man Argum. 1. That they should receive the Apostle and the first Sign of his little ill towards them Because I do not ill deserve of any one either by bringing reproach or corrupting by perverse Doctrine or defrauding any one by any means Vers. 3. I speak not this to condemn you for I have said before that you are in our hearts to dye and live with you Argum. 2. Sign 2. Because when I speak of the things fore-going it was onely for the clearing of my self I am so far from condemning the Church of the beleeving Corinthians that out of love I have determined the contrary to cleave to you in prosperity and adversity in life and death that no change at any time may draw my affection from you Vers. 4. Great is my boldness of speech toward you great is my glorying of you I am filled with comfort I am exceeding joyful in all our tribulation Argum. 3. Sign 3. Because news being received concerning your repentance my heart so rejoyceth in the midst of afflictions that I dare safely speak the confidence of my mind towards you concerning your perseverance and glory of you amongst others Vers. 5. For when wee were come into Macedonia our flesh had no rest but wee were troubled on every side without were fightings within were fears 6. Nevertheless God that comforteth those that are cast down comforted us by the comming of Titus Hee being about to explain the experiment of his good will towards them propounds his afflictions wherewith hee was pressed in Macedonia whilst hee expected news from them hee was oppressed partly by persecution of the enemies partly by the intestine evils of the Church partly by the anxiety of his mind and also with the troubles of his body that there was no rest to his outward man Against all which troubles by mercy of God consolation was sufficiently administred to him by the comming of Titus who had now returned from the Corinthians and brought joyful news concerning their state Vers. 7. And not by his comming onely but by the consolation wherewith hee was comforted in you when hee told us your earnest desire your moarning your fervent mind toward mee so that I rejoyced the more The Apostle reckoneth eight causes of his joyfulness whereof many were signs of his good will towards them 1 Because Titus was returned safe 2 Because Titus had received consolation from you Corinthians 3 Because I had heard by Titus concerning your pious affection towards mee and desire of seeing mee concerning your weeping for the wickedness committed amongst you concerning your zeal against the Incestuous person and against my back-biters from whence hath abounded joy to mee much surpassing all that grief which I have taken for that matter Vers. 8. For though I made you sorry with a Letter I do not repent though I did repent for I perceive that the same Epistle hath made you sorry though it were but for a season Before hee propounds the fourth cause of his consolation hee solves an Objection which solution did make much to the purpose They might say Thou hast made us sorrowful in the former Epistle The Answer is fourfold Answ. 1. I was compelled and not without grief have I made you sad but this grief through your repentance hath ceased For when the Apostle writ the Epistle being uncertain concerning the event hee was sad i. e. that hee saith that hee himself repented but when hee saw the event hee was freed from grief i. e. Now hee saies hee did not repent Answ. 2 That sadness which was moved by my Epistle was short Vers. 9. Now I rejoyce not that yee were made sorry but that yee sorrowed to repentance for yee were made sorry after a godly manner that yee might receive dammage by us in nothing 10. For godly sorrow worketh repentance to salvation not to bee repented of but the sorrow of the world worketh death Hee answers 3. That sadness is turned into joy both to you and mee because it is found now good and profitable to repentance which hee proves because it brought forth repentance not to bee repented of otherwise than worldly sorrow is wont which onely encreaseth sin and misery and bringeth death as well to the soul as to the body Vers. 11. For behold this self-same thing that yee sorrowed after a godly sort what carefulness it wrought in you yea what clearing of your selves yea what indignation yea what fear yea what vehement desire yea what zeal yea what revenge in all things yee have approved your selves to bee clear in this matter Hee proveth that their sadness was after God or pious because it produced seven Effects in them even so many signs of their repentance whereof the first was the shaking off security with a carefulness to mend what was amiss 2 Is an Apology that now by no means they approve either the fact of the Incestuous person or their own negligence 3 Is an indignation against the sin both of the Incestuous person and their own in suffering him 4 Is a fear lest they should be compassed with divine justice or a new sin 5 Is a desire of taking off the scandal and satisfying all good men 6. His zeal and fervent desire in prosecuting all means for the removing of evil and repairing of the damage 7. Is his revenge in chastising the incestuous person and all their dulness in all which the Corinthians had declared their repentance and had shewed themselves no ways delighted with wickedness but that they were clear Vers. 12. Wherefore though I wrote unto you I did it not for his cause that had done the wrong nor for his cause that suffered wrong but that our care for you in the sight of God might appear unto you The fourth answer to the objection is I have not written that Epistle either only or chiefly that in chastising of the incestuous person satisfaction might bee given to the Father with whose wife the son had committed adultery or that the incestuous person might bee corrected which truly was not to bee neglected but especially
there are three chief parts In the first hee deals with the Galatians that they would renounce the errours which they had drunk in but by the way that hee might prevent those that accuse him hee couragiously asserts his Apostleship lest hee should give place to those three chief Apostles in his Apostolical authority In the first Chapter and the first part of the second In the second part hee purposely disputes of Iustification by Faith and of the temporary use and abrogation of the Mosaical Law in the latter part of the second Chapter also in the third and fourth Lastly In the third part his Exhortation for perseverance in Christian Liberty being premised hee counsels them to use it well and shews which are the true exercises of Christians lest either by a dissolute licentiousness or the superstitious observation of Ceremonies they should neglect the chief Christian duties In the fift and sixt Chapter CHAP. I. THere are three parts of the Chapter In the first is a Preface to vers 6. In the second hee begins to deal with the Galatians that they return into the way from their errour in observing the Levitical Law and that imaginary conjunction of Iustification by Works with Iustification by Faith as if this had been possible some Arguments to this end being propounded to vers 13. In the third part the Apostle confirms the last Argument from signs concerning the divinity of his Doctrine to the end Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Iesus Christ and God the Father who raised him f●om the dead The whole Preface is ordered for the preparing the mind of the Galatians to obey his Doctrine concerning the Grace of Christ. The scope may bee perceived in this or the like Proposition to the same sense Yee ought to beleeve and obey mee admonishing you of the true cause of Justification and Sanctification Eight Arguments are intimated to this end whereof some are contained in the inscription vers 1 2. Some in the salutation vers 3. Some in the description of Christ vers 4. Some in the doxology vers 5. An Apostle Argum. 1. I Paul which write these things unto you am an Apostle of supream authority in the ministery of the Church Therefore you must beleeve and obey mee Neither of men Argum. 2. My office is not of humane invention or is not founded in humane authority but God is the Author of it so that my Doctrine cannot bee contemned without injury done to God Therefore except you would reject God that sent mee yee must hearken to mee Neither by man Argum. 3. I am not mediately or by the Ministery of men called but immediately by God viz. Christ by him now raised from the dead and by God the Father who gave testimony to the Doctrine of his Son by raising him from the dead Therefore yee must beleeve and obey my Doctrine Vers. 2. And all the Brethren which are with mee unto the Churches of Galatia Argum. 4. I have called all the Brethren which are with mee to the society of this admonition written to you all the Brethren with mee which together with my self salute you will sometimes bee witnesses against you unless you obey my Doctrine Therefore yee ought to beleeve and obey mee Churches Argum. 5. Although yee bee infected with a dangerous errour yet I think you are to bee accounted in the number of the Churches Therefore recompence mee and acknowledge mee as an Apostle sent to the Churches to bee obeyed and believed Vers. 3. Grace bee to you and peace from God the Father and from our Lord Iesus Christ. Argum. 6. I according to the authority bestowed upon mee by the providence of God do not doubt to give you right to the blessing of the Gospel and to intreat Grace i. e. a more plentious acknowledgment sense and fruit of Gods free mercy reconciliation and forgiveness of sins and the other effects of the Grace of God conducing to sanctification Together with peace or a sound tranquillity of heart and other good things which appertain to your happiness that all things may bee derived to you from the God of Peace and from the Lord Christ the Mediatour the onely Fountain of Grace and Peace Therefore I ought to bee beleeved while I open to you the reason of this Grace and Peace communicated to you Vers. 4. Who gave himself for our sins that hee might deliver us from this present evil world according to the Will of God and our Father Hee makes a description of Christ from the work of Redemption that hee might shew that our whole salvation by the Grace of God comes to us through his merit from whence Argum. 7. Our salvation or redemption from that lost condition of the wicked who are of this world without Christ is obtained by the death of Christ alone and that by the decree and institution of God the Father who hath ordained this onely free cause of salvation Therefore I ought to bee beleeved and obeyed admonishing you that you would acknowledge this the alone cause of your salvation Vers. 5. To whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen Argum. 8. God is worthy and Christ also to whom for such a gift and ineffable Grace Glory should bee given by all for ever Therefore I ought to bee beleeved by you vindicating this glory of the Grace of Christ amongst you lest it should bee obscured or taken away by the merit of humane works The second Part. Vers. 6 I marvel that you are so soon removed from him that called you in the Grace of Christ unto another Gospel The second part of the Chapter follows wherein hee proves that the errour concerning that imaginary and impossible conjunction of justification by works and justification by Grace or by Faith in Christ must bee renounced in which errour now they were entangled by the false Apostles who taught the observation of the Mosaical Law to bee also necessary for the salvation and justification of those that beleeve in Christ The Arguments which hee urges that they may renounce this errour are nine Of whom some are used by way of reprehension others are openly brought in the disputation following I marvel Argum. 2. Your revolting O Galatians from the Grace of Christ to the merits of humane works Is to bee wondred that so soon as ever the Faith of Christ was admitted and Grace for your conversion received yee fell from it Therefore yee must renounce this errour Removed Argum. 2. By this your errour yee have forsaken God who hath called you into the Grace of Christ and have betaken your selves to humane works Therefore you must renounce this errour Removed away Argum. 3. By this errour yee are removed from the Gospel of Christ into another I know not what Gospel feigned by men Therefore you must renounce this errour Vers. 7. Which is not another but there bee some that trouble you and would pervert the Gospel of Christ. Arg. 4. There is
to a Preacher did glorifie God All which signs do assure you of the heavenly original of his Doctrine CHAP. II. THere are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee proceeds to write the history which hee declared and to add the other signs of his Apostleship or his divine Doctrine to vers 15. In the remaining part of the Chapter hee confirms that Righteousness is by Faith and not by the works of the Law Vers. 1. Then fourteen years after I went up again to Jerusalem with Barnabas and took Titus with mee also 2. And I went up by revelation and communicated unto them the Gospel which I preach among the Gentiles but privately to them which were of reputation lest by any means I should run or had run in vain Six Signs of the heavenly and divine Doctrine of the Apostle went before five others follow Sign 1. That God directed the course of his Ministery by special revelation that hee might know from whence and wherefore hee came The example whereof hee shews in his ascending to Ierusalem by revelation which revelation was a divine approbation of his Apostleship and Doctrine Communicated Sign 2. That hee communicated to the Apostles the manner of his doctrine delivered amongst the Gentiles that his consent with them might bee made manifest and namely with Peter Iames and Iohn lest hee should bee deprived of the fruit of his Ministery amongst some by the calumnies of his Emulators who falsely said that the Doctrine of the Apostle Paul did disagree from the Doctrine of the rest of the Apostles Vers. 3. But neither Titus who was with mee being a Greek was compelled to bee circumcised 4. And that because of false Brethren unawares brought in who came in privily to spie out our liberty which wee have in Christ Iesus that they might bring us into bondage 5. To whom wee gave place by subjection no not for an hour that the Truth of the Gospel might continue with you Sign 3. That in the presence of the Apostles hee pleaded this very cause in the person of Titus of freeing Christians from the yoak of Circumcision and defended him lest hee should bee circumcised against the false Brethren who went about to take away Christian Liberty from Beleevers that they might bring the Churches of Christ into bondage to whom the Apostle does not in the least give place that the sincerity of the Doctrine of the Gospel might remain pure amongst the Gentiles and namely amongst the Galatians which was an evident sign of his heavenly and divine Doctrine wherein hee had instructed the Galatians Vers 6. But of these who seemed to bee somewhat whatsoever they were it makes no matter to mee God accepteth no mans person for they who seemed to bee somewhat in conference added nothing to mee Sign 4. Whereof there are four Branches 1. That the Apostles which were called chief Peter Iames and Iohn having heard his Doctrine corrected nothing added nothing to his knowledge In the mean while hee prevents an Objection concerning their personal prerogatives of which hee will not speak as of those that had seen Christ in the flesh that were called to the Apostleship before him that were nearer of kin to Christ c. Because these and such like did conduce nothing to their doctrine to their Apostolical authority to the commendation of man before God seeing that God doth not accept the persons of men Vers. 7. But contrariwise when they saw that the Gospel of the uncircumcision was committed unto mee ●s the Gospel of the Circumcision was to Peter 8. For hee that wrought effectually in Peter to the Apostleship of the Circumcision the same was mighty in mee towards the Gentiles 2 That those three Apostles acknowledged the Apostleship of Paul amongst the Gentiles to have no less authority and efficacy from God than the Apostleship of Peter amongst the Jews Vers. 9. And when James Cephas and John who seemed to bee Pillars perceived the Grace that was given unto mee they gave to mee and Barnabas the right hands of fellowship that wee should go unto the Heathen and they unto the Circumcision 3 That those three Apostles perceiving the gifts and signs of Apostleship in Paul gave to Paul and Barnabas the right hand of fellowship that with the like authority they should execute their Apostolical charge amongst the Gentiles as they amongst the Jews Vers. 10. Onely they would that wee should remember the poor the same which I also was forward to do 4 Those three desired Paul and Barnabas that they would procure a Collection to bee made by the Churches of the Gentiles for the use of the poor Jews that which Paul and Barnabas have faithfully performed Vers. 11. But when Peter was come to Antioch I with-stood him to the face because hee was to bee blamed Sign 5. Of his heavenly and divine Doctrine namely in the Article of shunning the Ceremonial Yoak of Moses That Paul openly reprehends Peter himself turning off from this Doctrine and brings him into the way again which that it may better appear the things that follow are observeable By the decree of the Synod at Ierusalem Act. 15. the necessity of the Ceremonial Law amongst the Jews is abrogated and liberty is left to the Jews of using ceremonies for a time all observation of the Levitical ceremonies amongst the Gentiles is expelled from the Christian Churches as from those to whom the Law of Ceremonies was never designed nor given They are onely commanded to abstain from some meats le●t they use their liberty to the scandal of the weaker Jews and that by force of the Moral Law which in matters simply indifferent doth circumscribe the use of liberty with the bounds of scandal Peter the Apostle going down to Antioch by the sentence of the Synod at Ierusalem useth his liberty and eats meat with his Brethren the Gentiles some who held the Ceremonies of Moses went down in the mean while to Antioch from Iames Here Peter ought not to counterfeit his Christian Liberty which the day before hee professed but to remain in fellowship with the Christian Gentiles and to defend his fact by the authority of the Synod But Peter fearing le●t hee should incurr the hatred of the Jews which came down from Iames with-draweth himself from the Table of the Christian Gentiles and eateth no more with them others imitate the example of Peter The evil spreads abroad to the drawing Barnabas into the same dissimulation by this example scandal was given to the Jews to the confirming of them in Judaisme and not put away the yoak of Moses already broken and dissolved by the Authority of God in the Synod Scandal also is given to the Christian Gentiles who are compelled by the example of so great an Apostle either to take upon them the yoak of Ceremonies or renounce the society of the Apostle what could Paul do in this case certainly as it became him hee resisted Peter to his face and reproved
hence arose the unlike disposition of Ishmael and Isaac so great a discord that Ishmael persecuted Isaac and the dissimilitude of both their conditions in the upshot Ishmael is cast out of the family but Isaac obtains the Inheritance by which type God did figure out the divers conditions of the visible Church sprung from divers principles and causes For 1. As there are two wives Hagar and Sarah so there are two Covenants of God with men the Covenant of works or legal the Covenant of grace or the Evangelical 2. Both the wives had off-spring so both the Covenants had their worshippers and professors as born of the Covenant 3. As Hagar a young woman according to nature and the flesh brought forth but Sarah barren and an old woman according to the power of the divine promise So the Law or Covenant of works hath the ordinary strength of nature or the powers of free will for its foundation But the Gospel or Covenant of grace hath for its foundation the special grace of God 4. As Ishmael was of a servile and malicious disposition that hee would persecute his brother but Isaac indued with an ingenuous and godly disposition patiently indured persecution so how many justiciaries so ever seeking righteousness by works are of a servile and perverse disposition and they do vexe the true faithful of God But the truly faithful and Sons of the promise worship God with an ingenuous piety and do suffer persecutions as it behoves them Vers. 24. Which things are an allegory for these are the two Covenants the one from the Mount Sinai which gendereth to bondage which is Hagar In the third place the Apostle expounds the signification of the type as much as belongs to the present purpose and first hee shews that the two Wives are figures of the two Covenants whereof one is the Covenant of Works represented by Hagar The other is the Covenant Grace or faith represented by Sarah As to Hagar and the Covenant of Works the Apostle teacheth First That Covenant had its rise from Mount Sinai because in that mountain the Law was given and this Covenant was established betwixt God and his people Secondly hee teaches that this Covenant generated an off-spring to bondage or did render the Disciples and professours of it onely servants i. e. Mercenary worshippers of God who do nothing but the external work and brought to that either by fear or hope of a reward and they heing ignorant that this was the end of the Law that being sensible of our sins we might flye to Christ do abuse the Law being meer hypocrites seeking by it righteousness which they never obtain but being not freed remain in their sins Vers. 25. For this Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia and answereth to Ierusalem which now is and is in bondage with her children Hee shews the convenience of the exposition 1. From this because Mount Sinai situated in Arabia and far removed from the promised Land was called by the Arabians and Caldeans Hagar by the special providence of God 2. That it had affinity with the earthly Ierusalem as it was in the Apostles time or with the Jewish Synagogue which is said to bee in bondage with her children because shee was tenacious of the Covenant of works and continued with her Disciples in a servile condition strangers to the Redeemer and free deliverance by him Vers. 26. But Ierusalem which is above is free which is the mother of us all Hee expounds what is figured by Sarah the free-woman viz. The Covenant of Faith or Grace whereof the Church of the truly faithful is very tenacious which is the heavenly Ierusalem that is above created by God and studious of heavenly things the mother of all the faithful called both of Iews and Gentiles Vers. 27. For it is written Rejoyce thou barren that bearest not break forth and cry thou that travellest not for the desolate hath many more Children than she which hath an husband In the fourth place The Apostle proves the Exposition give● out of Isaiah 54.1 where the Church of the faithful the upper Ierusalem our Mother is represented by Sarah barren as if shee had been a Widow And the Synagogue of the Jews unfaithful and tenacious of the Covenant of Works is represented by fruitful Hagar dwelling with her Husband But the Church of the faithful before the comming of Christ was compared as it were to a barren Widow because her Husband the Covenant of Grace was unknown almost to all except a few who dispersed hither and thither did not make a company neither did Grace appear but lay hid like an Husband absent or dead under the covers of Ceremonies The Synagogue of unbeleeving Justiciaries is compared to a fruitful Wife dwelling with her Husband viz. the Covenant of Works conspicuous in the external dispensation of the Law And it is fore-told by the Prophet that it should come to pass that the Church of the faithful made fruitful by the Promises of God shall bring forth more children under the Gospel than the Synagogue hath brought Servants under the Law and therefore is commanded to rejoyce and praise God Vers. 28. Now wee Brethren as Isaac was are the children of Promise In the last place hee applies this typical history and partly admonishes the truly faithful Christians and partly comforts them by four Arguments Argum. 1. That wee are redeemed children justified by Faith and truly free born and regenerated by virtue of Evangelical Promises to the similitude of Isaac who is elder than those other Citizens of the heavenly Ierusalem that were after him Vers. 29. But as then hee hat was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit Argum. 2. Of consolation That suffering persecution by false Brethren Patrons of free will and Righteousness by Works were finde nothing unlike to Isaacs condition For when in Abrahams Family hee who is onely begotten by the ordinary strength of nature persecuted him who is begotten by a divine and spiritual way what wonder then if the same now bee usual amongst us Vers. 30. Nevertheless what saith the Scripture cast out the bond-woman and her Son for the Son of the bond-woman shall not bee heir with the Son of the free-woman Argum. 3. That the persecutors of the faithful and Patrons of Righteousness by Works seeing they are not set at liberty by the Son are to bee cast out of the society of the Saints and the inheritance of life eternal as it was figured by the sentence of God concerning the casting Ishmael with his Mother out of the family and excluding him from the inheritance that was to bee enjoyed with Isaac Vers. 31. So then Brethren wee are not children of the bond-woman but of the free Argum. 4. From the comparing of this verse with the former that seeing wee are not children of the bond-woman but of the free certainly wee shall obtain an inheritance of life eternal which Argument with the former as it
passing by chose us Therefore wee are chosen out of grace 2. Hee chose us in Christ as in the head who was first chosen as in the common Parent root and fountain of the elect After whom wee in the consideration of dignity and order and in whom wee as his body members and off-spring are afterwards chosen in the order of nature Therefore our election is free there being no cause of it in us which is to bee sought for in God alone 3. Hee chose us before the foundation of the world that is from eternity before the world was much more before any works of ours were Hee chose us before any matter of the created world was existent much more before any matter of our works or workings could bee existent for hee elected us in order of nature before hee decreed that the world should bee For the decree of the creation of the world was subservient as a means to bring to pass the already decreed salvation of the elect Therefore hee chose us of grace and not for fore-seen works Hee chose us that wee might bee holy 4. Hee did not choose us because wee were holy or because hee fore-saw that wee would bee holy but hee chose us without any consideration of any holiness at all in us nay hee chose us as not having holiness to the end that being chosen wee should bee made holy and should become unblameable in his sight that is that being consecrated to God wee should bee by degrees truly and sincerely sanctified and should at last bee presented fully and perfectly holy in heaven Yea further that being unblameable without spot without wrinkle not onely of sin but also of all misery wee should at length appear together before him blessed and glorious Therefore our election is not from faith fore-seen or works fore-seen but of meer grace which as it is the cause of election so of all holiness and happiness which follows election In love Love or charity is meerly free in which as hee hath chosen us that wee should bee made holy and unblameable so also that in that his love we should perfect this our happiness which love God will then fully put forth when hee shall fully consummate our holiness and happiness And so the charity or love of God is hoth the cause of election and the completing or perfecting of those good things which follow election and by consequence election is not onely of grace but is for the perfect possession of free happiness in the sight of God Vers. 5. Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Iesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his will Arg. 3. Thus God of his grace hath blessed us in time so also of grace hee hath predestinated us to the inheritance of Sons which was to bee obtained by Christ in his own person according to the good pleasure of his will Therefore wee should celebrate his grace The parts of this reason prove the same that the whole reason it self doth Having predestinated us 1. As our election before time was free so is our predestination also before ages unto life eternal and to fit means which should bee effectual to bring us to that end Therefore predestination is free in that it doth not onely assign the end and persons but also appoints the means by which wee must attain that end Unto the adoption of children 2. Here also the Apostle manifests the grace of God Wee are predestinated not because wee are fore-seen as Sons but that being not as yet Sons wee should by Grace attain the Adoption of Sons Now the Adoption of Sons includes these four things 1 An effectual Calling or Faith to imbrace the offered communion with Christ the onely begotten Son 2 A towardliness and good disposition of Sons or the renovation of our nature that wee might love God as our Father 3 The dignity and honour of Sons 4 The Riches or Inheri●ance of Sons even to the glorifying of our Bodies Rom. 8.23 Therefore both our Predestination and Adoption is free and not for any work of ours By Christ 3 And this doth make much for the advancement of Grace Wee are predestinated that wee may obtain the Adoption of Children by Iesus Christ who is the first-begotten and onely-begotten Son that by his merit and efficacy wee might obtain all the fore-said degrees of Adoption Therefore our predestination is from meer Grace To himself 4 That Grace might appear he shews the end of Adoption God hath predestinated us that wee should obtain the Adoption of Children by Christ to himself or to his use viz. to the honour of him that predestinateth or of Christ by whom hee communicates to us Grace and the Glory of the Sons of God Therefore our predestination is free for otherwise honour would not accrew to God or Christ by our Adoption According to the good pleasure of his Will 5 Here hee excludes all causes besides God and makes the Grace of God the onely cause For hee predestinated us according to the good pleasure of his Will Therefore onely Gods Grace onely his Will onely his good pleasure is the cause of our predestination and not any work of ours Vers. 6. To the praise of the glory of his Grace wherein hee hath made us accepted in the Beloved Argum. 4. God to that end and purpose that hee might bring praise to his glorious Grace chose and predestinated us to the Adoption of Sons It necessarily follows that God hath elected and predestinated us out of Grace For else hee could never attain that end and consequently ought wee to give praise to Gods Grace and to bless God who hath thus blessed us Of the Glory of Words of this Nature have an Emphasis for 1 This Grace hath glory in it self that is it is every way glorious and most worthy in it self that wee should highly esteem it acknowledge and publish it because who is most great and most good hath vouchsafed to advance us who are most vile and most unworthy unto the dignity of sons the riches of the inheritance of sons To the praise 2 God doth both intend and expect from us the praise of this his glorious Grace that wee should acknowledge the benefit in words and deeds and that by all means possible wee should give praise to this wonderful Grace of God Wherein Argum. 5. In this Grace whereby God hath chosen and predestinated us to holiness and happiness I say in this very Grace hee hath made us welcome and acceptable to himself in his beloved Son Therefore wee should celebrate this Grace of God In which reason hee intimates four things 1 That God did of his Grace intend our salvation in election and predestination and doth actually and in deed begin to put forth and exercise Grace in our effectual Vocation to Faith 2 That Christ not onely as Son but as Mediatour undertaking for us and paying the price of our Redemption for us is beloved
and accepted with God in whom the Father is fully satisfied and pleased as one in our stead 3 In him and by him sin is removed which might hinder the course of Grace towards us 4 Hee intimates that by Christ and in Christ the cloud of sin being dissolved the Grace of God shines upon us and wee are embraced and entertained as reconciled as now pleasing and acceptable in Christ who a● our Surety and common Parent comprehends us all in himself Vers. 7. In whom wee have Redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his Grace Argum. 6. In Christ by the rich Grace of God wee receive Redemption and pardon of sins Therefore wee should give praise to the rich Grace of God onely in our salvation And to this purpose all the parts of this reason tend Redemption 1 Wee were in our selves lost and held captives under the bonds of blindness sin wrath and death whence wee could by no means free our selves whence there had been no comming forth if Grace had not both opened the way and led us out Therefore our salvation is of Grace In whom 2 Christ alone redeemed us without any merit or help from us the price of our salvation being both covenanted for and paid by himself alone lest any praise should bee given to any thing besides his Grace Through his blood 3 Wee are not redeemed with Silver or Gold but with the Blood of Christ that so the price might shew the danger wherein wee were and exalt Gods Grace The forgiveness 4 The Blood of Christ is that which procures for us in particular the pardon of our sins in which wee lay polluted and which was all the riches God saw in us wee being void of every good work that the Grace of God might bee more apparent in our sins and unworthiness In whom 5 This Redemption and remission of sins wee being once become Beleevers have not in our selves without reference to Christ but in Christ as our Surety Redeemer and Head wee being united and graffed into him by Faith The riches of 6 The onely cause and measure of so great a benefit is the rich Grace of God according to the abundance whereof Christ and Redemption in Christ is bestowed upon us Therefore Gods Grace onely may deservedly bee praised as the cause of our salvation Vers. 8. Wherein hee hath abounded toward us in all Wisdome and Prudence Argum. 7. From this abundant Grace as from a fountain Christ or the Father in Christ hath according to his great wisdome communicated to us in our effectual Vocation all Wisdome and Prudence that is hath given us saving Faith in the object whereof consists the summe and perfection of all Wisdome and Knowledge for though saving Faith bee in it self imperfect yet by it wee apply a known Christ to our selves who is the treasure of all saving Wisdome and Prudence as a general medicine and remedy for all evils which is an abbreviate of Wisdome and Prudence In this Argument the particulars prove the same also Towards us 1 Wee who as well as the rest of the world were ignorant imprudent and foolish erring in the blindness and vanity of our minds It is of Grace therefore that wee are endowed with Wisdome Hee hath abounded 2 Christ the Author first comes to us and bestows Faith upon us which consists in the Knowledge and Application of the saving Truth of God which is true Wisdome and Prudence Therefore it is of Grace Wherein viz. In which Grace 3 Here Grace is expresly mentioned hee out of his Grace hath plentifully bestowed upon us this Wisdome and Prudence Hath abounded 4 Hee who was full of Grace hath shewn himself to bee such in this as if hee could not any longer restrain his Grace within himself but it overflowing brake forth upon us Therefore Grace is the sole cause in effectual Vocation and Donation of Faith and so deservedly to bee praised Vers. 9. Having made known unto us the mystery of his Will according to his good pleasure which hee hath purposed to himself Argum. 8. The manifestation of Gods secret Will touching salvation to bee obtained by Christ to the communicating of Faith or Knowledge and Prudence to his is of the meer Will of God according to his good pleasure which hee had purposed in himself Therefore the Grace of God is worthily to bee praised under the name of Gods revealed Will and of Faith bestowed upon us To this end all the parts of this Argument refer The Mystery 1 The Will of God touching the business of Salvation to bee accomplished by Christ was a secret Mystery sealed up from all eternity in the breast of God which neither Angels nor men could ever have brought to light but that God out of his Grace revealed it Having made known 2 God took care not onely that this Mystery should bee revealed but out of his Grace hee provided that the blindness both of our minds and hearts being taken away wee should understand it Unto us 3 Hee hath manifested the Gospel of Grace to us rather than to others Good pleasure 4 God freely brought this to pass not being induced or excited thereunto by any external cause but according to his good pleasure or gracious predestination and his eternal purpose in himself Therefore wee ought deservedly to give praise to Gods Grace Vers. 10. That in the dispensation of the fulness of times hee might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in Heaven and which are in Earth even in him Argum. 9. It depends meerly upon Gods Will and pleasure to appoint a full and fit time wherein this Mystery of his Will should come to mans knowledge what how much and when to what age and to what particular person this Mystery should bee dispensed Therefore the Will of God prevails in assigning the time in which Faith is to bee given and in this respect also Gods Grace is praise-worthy The several particulars in this Argument confirm the same also In the dispensation 1 The Grace of God is to bee acknowledged because here is an oeconomy or as the Master of a Family a free disposing of his domestick things whereby every one orders them as hee pleases which liberty as it is by right to bee granted to every housholder so to God also that hee may act according to his own pleasure The fulness 2 There is a mature and fit opportunity of time in which it is in Gods power alone to determine what and how much of his secret Will it is fitting to reveal to every age and to each man And therefore whatsoever and how much soever is revealed to us it is of Grace For the good pleasure of God which hee had purposed in himself of which vers 9. belongs to this ordering of the time Therefore his Grace deserves here also to bee taken notice of That hee might gather Argum. 10. The gathering and manifestation of this gathering the elect
and redeemed together into Christ their Head otherwise wandring and separated from God is the summe and end of the revealed Mystery Therefore wee ought to render praise to Gods Grace by which wee are gathered together as well as others It is true that by the sin of Angels and Men the whole world like a mangled and almost dead body whose members are pulled asunder and torn one from another was almost brought to destruction but Christ confirmed the Elect Angels and stayed the perishing world but here the Apostle chiefly respects the restoring of elect men whereby Christ reconciled the men gathered to him unto God and compacted as it were into one Kingdome the elect Angels and spirits of just men in Heaven the Jews and Gentiles in Earth with a most strict union amongst themselves Vers. 11. In whom also wee have obtained an Inheritance being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things according to the counsel of his own Will Argum. 11. Applying it to the Jews The Inheritance of eternal life in Christ is given to us elect Jews not of works or is it gotten by the power of our free will but is bestowed by divine order and dispensation upon us who are predestinated according to the purpose of God who worketh all things according to the counsel of his will Therefore wee Jews and all others ought to give praise to Gods Grace These things make for the advancement of Grace Wee have obtained an Inheritance 1 Eternal life or glorification is an Inheritance which wee have not procured to our selves but have attained to it by divine appointment and dispensation 2 Wee are not able of our selves so much as to receive this Inheritance when offered to us nor can wee so much as take possession of this Inheritance though it bee setled on us but wee are made possessors of it by appointment for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a passive What then is here which is ours and is not of Grace Being predestinated 3 Wee were predestinated by God that wee should bee called to this Inheritance God did not take us into counsel with him when hee decreed our happiness Worketh 4 God who predestinated us to this happiness worketh all things not alone by preparing this happiness for us nor onely by framing and fitting us for it but also by effectually ordering all those means which should conduce to the bringing of us into the possession of it After the counsel 5 Nor doth God go out of himself to seek causes of his purpose or of his operation but hee works all things after his counsel or after his free and most wise will Therefore our glorification or salvation is of Grace and not of Works nor from the choice of our free will for that our will is carryed to the choice of good and of life and that wee perform any good works is of the meer free good pleasure of God who worketh all good things after the counsel of his Will Therefore Grace is praise-worthy Vers. 12. That wee should be to the Praise of his Glory who first trusted in Christ. Argum. 12. From the last end of the Calling of the Predestinated Jews unto the possession of this Inheritance As God hath performed this Grace to us elected Jews that first or that before the Gentiles wee should beleeve in Christ to come and also that wee should first beleeve in him present or already come so according to the prerogative which by grace is granted to our Nation hee hath chosen us first into the right of the heavenly Inheritance to the end that hee might obtain the glory of his Grace in us and from us Therefore wee Jews and all others deservedly ought to bless and adore God and to give praise unto his Grace Vers. 13. In whom yee also trusted after that yee heard the Word of Truth the Gospel of your Salvation in whom also after that yee beleeved yee were sealed with the holy Spirit of Promise Argum. 13. This is applied to the Gentils and particularly to the Ephesians You Gentiles also lately strangers to the Common-wealth of Israel are now called and chosen into the right of this Inheritance to the same end viz. the praise of the glorious Grace of God Therefore both you Gentiles and wee should joyn together to declare and set forth the Grace of God Now hee proves that the Ephesians were made partakers of this Inheritance as well as the Jews by six Reasons Yee trusted Reason 1. Yee have beleeved in Christ Therefore yee are made partakers of this inheritance Heard Reas. 2. God hath sent the word of his truth or saving Gospel to you that hearing yee should beleeve and obtain salvation Therefore you are not now as of old like Proselytes but had in equal honour with the Jews you do partake of the same inheritance Sealed Reas. 3. Taken from the pledge and earnest of salvation given them and from its first use After that yee had beleeved yee were sealed as peculiar ones to God by the gift of the Holy Ghost Therefore you are partakers of the same inheritance Of promise Reas. 4. From the other use of sealing The promises of the inheritance are sealed to you by the promised Spirit who confirms the promises to beleevers Therefore you also c. Vers. 14. Which is the earnest of our inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession unto the praise of his glory Reas. 5. From the third use of sealing or of the pledge of salvation given to us The gift of the Holy Ghost is the earnest of our inheritance to wit the pledge and part of our happiness which shall bee consummate hereafter Therefore c. Untill the Redemption Reas. 6. From the fourth use of sealing The Spirit shall remain with you for your comfort and not depart from you untill the covenanted Redemption bee fully perfected and compleated in an absolute freedome of your souls and bodies from all the bonds of sin and misery Therefore you have a right unto this inheritance To the praise In the last place hee shews us that the end of all these benefits is the praise of Gods glorious grace that God should bee blessed and acknowledged and his grace have the praise in all the fore-mentioned particulars viz. in our Election Predestination Redemption Vocation Donation of Faith remission of sins Adoption gathering unto Christ and fellowship with his people participation of the inheritance and sealing by the holy Ghost Vers. 15. Wherefore I also after I heard of your faith in the Lord Iesus and love unto all the Saints The Apostle proceeds to the second part of this Chapter where hee endeavours to strengthen the Ephesians faith the proposition to bee confirmed may bee taken into this sense in this or the like Rule you Ephesians ought to bee confirmed in the faith of the Gospel The Arguments to prove this proposition are Fifteen Faith in Argum. 1. Your faith in Jesus Christ is not that dead
Saints cannot finde out nor the needs of all men exhaust or consume Vers. 4. And this I say lest any man should beguile you with intising words 5 The endeavour and care of the Apostle is that the Colossians may not bee seduced by the false Apostles and that they might bee fortified against all the Impostures of them who by teaching that which Christ hath not taught did draw the unstable and unwary from Christ partly by Paralogisms and Sophistical Argumentations partly by insinuating and covering their errours with a painted eloquence to which subtilties of the false Apostles hee aims in the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beguile and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enticing words Vers. 5. For though I bee absent in the flesh yet am I with you in the Spirit joying and beholding your order and the stedfastness of your Faith in Christ. 6 His endeavour concerning their salvation The joy which he received concerning the Doctrine and Discipline rightly setled amongst them not onely from the relation of Epaphras but from a Prophetical Spirit or the inspiration of the Holy Ghost dictating this Epistle for although hee was absent in body yet hee beholding all things by the Spirit hee did greatly rejoyce upon the observation of the most beautiful order in all Ecclesiastical things and of their solid Faith in Christ So that hee could not but bee careful concerning the preservation of so famous an heavenly work amongst them left this order bee disturbed or his Doctrine corrupted by the subtilties of the false Apostles and arts of the Devil The Second Part. Vers. 6. As yee have therefore received Christ Iesus the Lord so walk yee in him The second part of the Chapter follows in which from his endeavour for their salvation and from the causes of this disputation undertaken against the false Apostles hee inferrs an exhortation to persevere in the Faith of Christ and to beware of corruptions The parts of his Exhortation are five 1 That they hold fast Christ Jesus already received by Faith who is the onely and true Saviour and admit no other invented by the false Apostles 2 That they being ingrafted into Christ by Faith so abide and lead their lives according to his prescription following the guidance of the Spirit of Christ. Vers. 7. Rooted and built up in him and stablished in the Faith as yee have been taught abounding therein with thanksgiving 3 That they endeavour for a most near and firm conjunction with Christ through the strengthening of their Faith according to the Doctrine of Epaphras Hee illustrates this soundness of Faith by a similitude taken partly from the firmness of trees spreading their roots deep in the earth partly from the stability of buildings solidly founded Abounding 4 That they bee not onely confirmed in the Faith but also make progress in it and abound to a fuller knowledge of the mysteries of Christ and that with a daily thanksgiving to God the Author of this so great a benefit Vers. 8. Beware lest any man spoil you through Philosophy and vain deceit after the tradition of men after the rudiments of the world and not after Christ. 5 That they take heed to themselves touching seducers who take the people of God by their Impostures as beasts are taken in nets and make a prey of them Hee reckons three kindes of impostures whereof the first is Philosophy or a vain deceit so called not simply but as it exceeds its bounds and aspires to heavenly and spiritual things and doth from the model of corrupt and carnal reason determine concerning the doctrine in the word of God In which respect although it shews openly the form of wisdome yet it is found to bee vain deceit The other kinde is The tradition of men concerning the vain and superstitious rites invented by humane wit The third sort is the injunction of Legal or Levitical rites which are called here the Rudiments of the world because they are the earthly and carnal Rudiments of the ancient people by whom as by a Schoolmaster they were lead before the coming of Christ which after his coming vanished away like shadows Vers. 9. For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the God-head bodily Hee adds ten Arguments of his Exhortation all which prove that they must not go so much as a nails breadth from Christ Argum. 1. It is in vain to seek any thing necessary to salvation out of Christ seeing that in him or in his person the fulness of the God-head hypostatically united to the humane nature is founded so that hee necessarily seeks something to salvation out of God who seeks things that may bring salvation out of Christ Therefore wee must not depart from Christ. Vers. 10. And yee are compleat in him which is the head of all Principality and power Argum. 2. Christ is not onely a most full fountain in himself but also hee fills all the faithful beleeving in him insomuch that hee communicates to them righteousness and life eternal which hee hath in himself first by way of imputation further by the infusion of grace for grace till at length they are perfected Therefore wee must not seek for any thing out of him The head Argum. 3. Hee is the head of all Principality and Power even of the most excellent creatures in heaven and earth partly because hee created and governs all things even the Angels themselves partly because by the influence of his power hee upholds even the Angels and also men communicating to them whatsoever they injoy Therefore from him alone and in no wise from the most excellent Angels do wee expect any good Vers. 11. In whom also yee are circumcised with the Circumcision made without hands in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the Circumcision of Christ. Argum. 4. The truth of all Legal ceremonies is in Christ for in him the faithful have that which is prefigured by them as for example they have spiritual Circumcision wrought by the Spirit of Christ in the heart which consists in the subduing of the old man or the flesh or the body of sin which Circumcision was prefigured in the carnal Circumcision made by hands Therefore it is not fit that you should in the carnal Circumcision of those that Judaize seek anything out of Christ. Vers. 12. Buried with him in Baptism wherein also you are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God who hath raised him from the dead Argum. 5. Yee that beleeve in Christ are baptized which is the lawful sign of internal Circumcision set up in the place of Circumcision by Christ so that neither the internal thing yea nor the external sign of an internal thing is to bee sought after without Christ Therefore you must not depart from Christ. Buried Argum. 6. Yee beleevers have right to Christ dead and buried and communion with him in his death and burying and so right to all the benefits and effects of his death and burying in baptism
hope through Grace 17. Comfort your hearts and stablish you in every good word and work The third way of confirming their Faith is Prayer to God that hee would effectually comfort their hearts and stablish them in the Faith of the Gospel or of all sound Doctrine and in holiness of life The Arguments of his praying and confirmation of their Faith are four Arg. 1. From the relation of God and Christ to them Jesus Christ is our Lord and God the Father is our Father Therefore hee will confirm us in the Faith or will stablish you with us Hath loved Argum. 2. Because God hath loved us Hath given Argum. 3. Because God hath given us solid reasons of perpetual consolation and right to all those which may everlastingly comfort us And hope Argum. 4. Because God hath given us good hope i. e. not onely the best object of good hope or the best reasons or causes of hoping well but also a large measure as to the habit of this hope and because hee hath granted all these things to us out of his grace and meer favour induced by none of our good deservings which are none or hindred by our evil deserts which are great and many Therefore hee will confirm you together with us lest yee bee deceived by the errours of Antichrist and perish CHAP. III. HEe exhorts in this Chapter partly expresly partly indirectly to some Christian duties after which hee shuts up the Epistle The Exhortations are seven Vers. 1. Finally brethren pray for us that the word of the Lord may have free course and bee glorified even as it is with you Exhort 1. That they ask these two things 1 That by the Apostles Ministry the Gospel might bee speedily and fruitfully propagated and bee magnified amongst other Nations as it was magnified amongst them Vers. 2. And that wee may bee delivered from unreasonable and wicked men For all men have not faith 2 That God would keep the Apostle and deliver him from the snares of his enemies who without all reason perversely opposed themselves against him Hee gives the reason of their hostile minde because many were destitute of true faith Therefore that they might bee delivered from them there was need of Divine assistance Vers. 3. But the Lord is faithful who shall stablish you and keep you from evil Exhort 2. Indirect To confidence and courage of minde lest being fore-warned touching the Infidelity and Apostacy of some and hearing of the dangers which the Apostle underwent they should bee shaken in minde or some way made weaker For which end hee would have them certified and confirmed touching the purpose of God ●●wards them viz. That hee will establish them in goodness i. e. in faith and holiness and will defend them from the evill dangers or temptations of Satan and his instruments whereof hee gives a reason because that hee who had effectually called them is constant and faithful for the promoting his work and compleating it in them Vers. 4. And wee have confidence in the Lord touching you that yee both do and will do the things which wee command you Exhort 3. To the performance of obedience to Apostolical commands which hee had given to them in the Name of the Lord or should give Hee propounds this Exhortation indirectly by commending their readiness to obey of which alacrity hee was already perswaded Vers. 5. And the Lord direct your hearts into the love of God and into the patient waiting for Christ. Exhort 4. To the love of God and patience untill the Lords coming folded in a prayer to the Holy Ghost whom hee calls the Lord praying for them that the Lord would go before them in the way and keep and direct them in streight paths Vers. 6. Now wee command you brethren in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ that yee with-draw your selves from every brother that walketh disorderly and not after the tradition which hee received of us Exhort 5. That they by Ecclesiastical censures would restrain the sluggish and drones eating up the honey and by fit course● would correct all that are imployed in no honest labour or business but covered after other mens goods The censure of these the remedies of lighter censures and admonitions being premised is excommunication For hee forbids their being familiar with them viz. after their rejection of private admonitions and the publick sentence of the Church And that they withdraw themselves from them nor admit them to their society which is the consequent of excommunication The reasons of the Precept are five Reas. 1. Because this is the will of Christ in whose authority hee comm●nds that Disorderly Reas. 2. Is contained in the description of sin because whosever lives disorderly and not according to the rule of the Doctrine delivered to the Church by mee are to bee excommunicated Vers. 7. For your selves know how yee ought to follow us for wee behaved not our selves disorderly among you 8. Neither did wee ●at any mans bread for nought but wrought with labour and travel night and day that wee might not bee chargeable to any of you Reas. 3. Because hee that liveth disorderly doth not carry himself according to my example who have laboured day and night that I might not bee burdensome to any one Vers. 9. Not because wee have not power but to make our selves an ensample unto you to follow us The confirmation of the reason by preventing an Objection from that that the Apostle might use his own liberty and require wages due to him from them yet hee of his own accord departed from his right that he might propose an example to them Therefore these sloathful Drones profitable to none were bound to work that if they would not bee helpful unto others at least-wise they should not bee burdensome to them Vers. 10. For even when wee were with you this wee commanded you that if any would not work neither should hee eat Reas. 4. Because it is meet that hee should not eat who withdraws himself from honest labour as I have heretofore advised you Vers. 11. For wee hear that there are some which walk among you disorderly working not at all but are busie bodies Reas. 5. Wherein hee alleadges the cause why hee urges this Precept Because sloathful idleness nourisheth busie curiosity as they had sufficient testimony of it by some examples amongst themselves For some known well enough to them worked not honestly in their affairs but busie bodies wandring up and down were curious about the affairs of others which did nothing belong to them Vers. 12. Now them that are such wee command and exhort by our Lord Iesus Christ that with quietness they work and eat their own bread For the sake of this idle sort of persons hee repeats and applies the Exhortation Vers. 13. But yee brethren bee not weary in well-doing Exhort 6. Lest in the mean while they should bee weary of well-doing to them that had need poor indeed who were not brought to
the office of an Apostle that I might wholly attend to the preaching of the Gospel separated from the world to this business who is it therefore that dares detract from my authority Vers. 13. Who was before a blasphemer and a persecuter and injurious but I obtained mercy because I did it ignorantly in unbeleef Reas. 4. Notwithstanding the wickedness and the evil deserts of my former life God is not hindred from taking mee into his service who was in times past an enemy Who therefore will disparage my authority upon the wickedness of my former conversation Ignorantly Hee prevents an Objection Some man might say how could so open an enemy of Christ obtain pardon Hee answers that his sin was out of ignorance and so hee proves that it was not that unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost or a malicious insurrection against Christ which the devilish enemies of the Gospel knowingly practise in opposition to the Kingdome of Christ but sin committed out of ignorance while hee was yet an unbeleever Vers. 14. And the Grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant with Faith and Love which is in Christ Iesus Reas. 5. God hath vouchsafed mee more than an ordinary measure of Faith and Love and hath abundantly shewed forth his Grace in the bestowing of his saving gifts Therefore there is no reason that any one should detract from my Apostolick authority from my former conversation Vers. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Iesus came into the world to sav● sinners of whom I am chief Reas. 6. Christ through his eminent mercy towards mee hath effected this that being taught by experience I should bee drawn first as the chief of sinners in my o●n opinion to subscribe to that sentence of the Gospel concerning the person of Christ his office comming virtue merit and efficacy to save sinners so that I cannot but declare openly to the whole world the truth and benefit of that sentence for by experience I speak It is a faithful saying c. Therefoee no disparagement ought to bee offered to my authority who not onely beleeve my self what is committed to mee but I also preach what I have experience of Vers. 16. Howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy that in mee first Iesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a patern to them that should hereafter beleeve on him to life everlasting Reas. 7. The Lord hath set mee for an example of his long-suffering mercy goodness and admirable grace that sinners to the end of the world who shall hear of my wonderful conversion and the bounty of God towards mee may bee abundantly confirmed in the love of Christ and expect the like goodness towards themselves looking upon mee as a type and exemplar of unspeakable mercy Therefore am I most fit to bee made a Preacher of that grace and far bee it from any one to detract from my authority because of my former conversation while I was an unbeleever Vers. 17. Now unto the King eternal immortal invisible the onely wise God bee honour and glory for ever and ever Amen Th● Apostle now affected with the greatness of the benefit not satisfying himself in the amplification of it with a pathetick thanksgiving he concludes his speech with an illustrious celebration of Christ concerning whom hee produces four Epithites which are so agreeable unto Christ that they may also bee ascribed to the Father and to the Holy Ghost 1 God or Christ as God is King of ages i. e. by an Hebraism the eternal King that hee may bee distinguished from mundane and mortal Kings 2 Immortal because God is without all alteration change and corruption and alwayes the same like himself 3 Invisible because hee cannot bee comprehended by the eyes or any senses because their faculties are corporeal and circumscribed with narrow limits 4 Hee is onely wise because hee alone knows all things not by objects nor by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ratiocination but in and by and of himself as one in whom are all things as in their first efficient and their ultimate end Hence the Apostle ascribes honour to God or a testification to his eminency Glory a celebrious fame with praise which is eternally due unto God adding Amen as a seal of his faith and willingness to glorifie God The Third Part of the Chapter Vers. 18. This charge I commit unto thee son Timothy according to the Prophecies which went before on thee that thou by them mightest war a good warfare The third part contains his Exhortation to Timothy that hee would behave himself couragiously in his Ministry viz. That hee would war a good warfare or that hee would prepare himself to fight against all enemies and all impediments and would use all diligence that the Church might receive no detriment by any one According The Arguments of his Exhortation are two Arg. 1. Because certain things are foretold Prophetically of pious men by a kinde of divine instinct which afford great hope of famous actions to bee done by thee as appears out of Act. 16.2 Therefore war a good warfare Vers. 19. Holding fast faith and a good conscience which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwrack Hee explains his Exhortation by shewing the manner of warring to wit that hee would defend faithfully and profess sound Doctrine and by an holy life according to the truth preached by him that hee would maintain the light and peace of a good conscience which would inwardly acquaint him with his duty towards God and men if hee would attend to it and would administer comfort to him if hee suffered for defending the truth Which being put away Arg. 2. Because ●●less thou behave thy self with a good courage and observest this law of war concerning the joyning of a good conscience with the profession of the faith there is danger upon the loss of a good conscience that thou make shipwrack of sound Doctrine or the profession of the faith as some have done Therefore war a good warfare In the mean time hee casts in no scruple here to Timothy about the uncertainty of perseverance but uses the best and most effectual argument to perswade him to it For it makes nothing in Hypothetical propositions that the parts of it taken by themselves and Categorically may bee false or impossible It is sufficient to the truth of the rule annexed that the connexion of the parts is certain Vers. 20. Of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander whom I have delivered unto Satan that they may learn not to blaspheme The Apostle names two Apostates for example Hymeneus and Alexander whom hee had not long before delivered unto Satan i. e. excommunicated For they that are cast out from the face of God shining in the Church fall into the kingdome of Satan as to the condition of the outward man or the enjoyment of Church priviledges The end of this Excommunication hee shews to bee this That being led to repentance they might return
God and his Doctrine bee not blasphemed Precept 1. Concerning the instructing of Christian servants who are servants by condition and under the yoak of another the Precept is this That they account their own Masters though Infidels worthy of all honour whom they serve as those that are placed by the providence of God in a degree above them That the name of God The reason of the Precept is this lest if they should do otherwise the Gospel might bee evil spoken of and reproached by Infidels through the miscarriage of Christian servants Vers. 2. And they that have beleeving Masters let them not despise them because they are brethren but rather do them service because they are faithful and beloved partakers of the benefit These things teach and exhort But if their Masters bee beleevers Hee retorts what servants were ready to object And because being Brethren in Christianity doth not take away diversity of conditions in civil policy hee forbids servants to despise their Masters upon that account because they are equal in Christ and he commands that they serve them so much the more readily because their Masters were faithful and beloved of God and for this cause so much the more worthy to receive the fruit of their service Hee enjoyns Timothy himself to teach these things and to exhort other Pastors to teach the same Vers. 3. If any man teach otherwise and consent not to wholesome words even the words of our Lord Iesus Christ and to the Doctrine which is according to godliness Precept 2. Of a voiding perverse Teachers i. e. to put them from or to eject them out of the Ministery or to excommunicate them from the Church Many such there were in those times who taught otherwise who departed either from the Apostolical verity in the matter of their word or from Apostolical simplicity in the manner of their teaching other things or otherwise than the Apostles not resting satisfied in the simplicity of Christian Piety from whose carriages and manners the meritorious causes of the chastisem●nt hee gives six Reasons And consent not Reas. 1. They are obstinate who submit not themselves to the wholesome words of Christ or to sound Doctrine which in the ma●●er and manner of teaching is after Godliness Vers. 4. Hee is proud knowing nothing but doting about questions and strifes of words whereof cometh envy strife railings evil surmisings Reas. 2. Because they are proud puffed up with a vain opinion of their own knowledge whereas they know nothing solidly in the mystery of the Gospel Doting Reas. 3. They are of such a contentious disposition that they dote about foolish questions and strifes of words Whereof Reas. 4. Because by these cavillations they stir up envy contention railing evil surmizings Vers. 5. Perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth supposing that gain is godliness from such withdraw thy self Reas. 5. Because by their perverse disputings they discover themselves to bee of a perverse and corrupt mind destitute of the truth and more studious of gain than godliness yea to bee such who make a gain of godliness Whereupon hee infers the censure of withdrawing from them which is the consequence of excommunication Vers. 6. But godliness with contentment is great gain Precept 3. Of following after godliness as the greatest gain and avoiding covetousness The Reasons of the Precept are eight Reas. 1. Because godliness is such a gain sufficient to it self rendring the mind contented in every condition or it is a gain that carries along with it true sufficiency and contentment Vers. 7. For wee brought nothing into this world and it is certain wee can carry nothing out Reas. 2. Because riches onely have their use in this life not after death Therefore wee ought not to hunt after riches Vers. 8. And having food and raiment let us bee therewith content Reas. 3. Because wee may bee without riches even in this life and ought to bee content with meat and cloathing whatever it is Vers. 9. But they that will bee rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtful lusts which drown men in destruction and perdition Reas. 4. Because they that most mind getting of riches and resolvedly hunt after them are near to the greatest sins vexations of mind and misery in this world and eternal perdition hereafter Vers. 10. For the love of mony is the root of all evil which while some coveted after they have erred from the Faith and peirced themselves thorough with many sorrows Reas. 5. Because the love of mony is the root of all evil as of ungodliness lying perjury cruelty and tyranny c. Which some Reas. 6. From the experience of some who being covetous of mony fell away from the Christian Religion and became most miserable Vers. 11. But thou O man of God flee these things and follow after Righteousness Godliness Faith Love Patience Meekness Reas. 7. With a special Application Because this vice is unworthy a Minister who is a man of God and separated to the heavenly imployments of God who therefore ought to avoid covetousness and earthly desires Follow Reas. 8. Because it becomes the man of God or Minister of the Gospel to bee in love with the riches of virtue and to accumulate these one upon another whereof hee enumerates six Vers. 12. Fight the good sight of Faith lay hold on eternal life whereunto thou art also called and hast professed a good profession before many witnesses Precept 4. That all lawful means being used for the propagating of the Gospel and defending the truth of his Doctrine hee should strive against all adversaries and impediments whatsoever Good The Reasons of the Exhortation or Precept are four Reas. 1 Because this fight is good commendable and profitable Life Reas. 2. Because so thou shalt lay hold on eternal life Whereunto Reas. 3. Because thou art called to the defence of the Gospel to the partaking of life or faith Professed Reas. 4. Thou hast already before many witnesses published a famous testimony of thy Faith Therefore go on to fight that good fight of Faith Vers. 13. I give thee charge in the sight of God who quickeneth all things and before Christ Iesus who before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession 14. That thou keep this Commandement without spot unrebukeable until the appearing of our Lord Iesus Christ Precept 5. With a most grave and vehement charge before God and Christ the Mediatour hee exhorts Timothy and all Pastors after him and all others upon whom the care of the Church lyes whom hee speaks to in his person that they observe these commands or that they so discharge the office committed to them faithfully observing these Rules touching the governing of the Church that they may bee found unblameable and unreproveable in doctrine and manners And because that which hee exhorts to was difficult hee laies down six Arguments of the Precept all which prove that all the former commands are
and hath brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel Reas. 5. Proving the position shewing also that all the favours which are bestowed upon us are from Grace Because the abolishing of death life and immortality and the rest which concern our salvation were unknown to us till revealed by Christ and brought to light being all acted and finished by him Therefore considering this Grace conferred upon us wee ought not to be ashamed of his Gospel Vers. 11. Whereunto I am appointed a Preacher and an Apostle and a teacher of the Gentiles Reas. 6. God so much esteems the Testimony of the Gospel that hee appointed Paul an Apostle to declare it to the whole world and specially to the Gentiles Therefore let not Timothy bee ashamed or any other of this Gospel or of Paul a Minister of it although afflicted for the Testimony of the Gospel Vers. 12. For the which cause I also suffer these things nevertheless I am not ashamed for I know whom I have beleeved and I am perswaded that hee is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day Reas. 7. From the example of the Apostle I my self suffer bonds for the Gospel and yet I am not ashamed Therefore in like manner ought Timothy to bee of good courage and not bee ashamed in the cause of the Gospel I know Reas. 8. Also from Pauls example confirming the former I Paul have committed my body and soul to God who is faithful and powerful to keep what I have betrusted him with to the day of judgement And I am perswaded that I shall bee kept Therefore neither ought I to bee ashamed nor thou O Timothy whatever befalls us for the Testimony of the Gospel Vers. 13. Hold fast the form of sound words which thou hast heard of mee in faith and love which is in Christ Iesus Admon 3. That hee retain and follow that same way of teaching both as to Doctrine and the manner of teaching which hee had learnt from Paul and that hee set it forth as near as hee can to the quick Hee adds in faith and love which is in Christ Iesus that hee may set forth the Summary of Doctrine which may bee wholly reduced to Faith and Love flowing from the knowledge of Christ. Vers. 14. That good thing which was committed unto thee keep by the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in us Admon 4. More general That hee faithfully preserve both the sincerity of the Christian Doctrine and the gifts of the Spirit in his Ministry lest by his slothfulness or ●imorousness any prejudice might accrue to it but that hee should secure it against the snares and force of the enemies of the Gospel The Arguments of the Exhortation are five all which prove that the form of sound Doctrine is to bee held fast Argum. 1. This form is that which is deposited or that which God hath committed to thy trust who will take an account of thee for what hee hath committed to thee Therefore this form of Doctrine is to bee held fast By the Holy Ghost Argum. 2. Although thy own strength should fail thee in the defence of thy Doctrine yet the assistance of the Holy Ghost dwelling in thee will bee at hand for the upholding of his sincere servant if thou implore his aid Therefore this form of sound Doctrine is to bee held fast Vers. 15. This thou knowest that all they which are in Asia bee turned away from mee of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes Arg. 4. On this hand temptations are in readiness by which thou mayest bee drawn away unawares from the defence and profession of the Gospel as thou hast been taught by the example of the brethren of Asia by name Phygellus and Hermogenes by whose example thou and all other the Ministers of the Gospel being warned shouldest bee watchful Therefore c. Vers. 16. The Lord give mercy unto the house of Onesiphorus for hee oft refreshed mee and was not ashamed of my chain Arg. 5. On the other side the Spirit and grace of God is so prevalent in thee and others that are faithful to constancy in trialls that if yee bee watchful yee need not fear the losing of sound Doctrine Therefore yee ought to endeavour the holding fast the form of sound Doctrine Vers. 17. But when hee was in Rome hee sought mee out very diligently and found mee 18. The Lord grant unto him that hee may finde mercy of the Lord in that day and in how many things hee ministred unto mee at Ephesus thou knowest very well Hee propounds and confirms this Argument in Onesiphorus who saith hee boldly professed the faith and was not ashamed of my chains nor did hee fear bonds himself but at Ephesus and Rome shewed himself the same in the profession of the Gospel For whom I pray God that hee may finde mercy both hee and his whole houshold in the day of the Lord Hee wills Timothy to take courage by this mans example as also all Teachers to constancy in the profession of the faith and the keeping that good thing which is committed unto them and the defence of the Doctrine of the Gospel That which the Apostle draws from hence in the beginning of the Chapter following CHAP. II. IN this Chapter hee proceeds to instruct Timothy in the due management of his Ministry adding four Admonitions more to them that hee had laid down in his former Discourse Vers. 1. Thou there fore my son bee strong in the grace that is in Christ Iesus Admon 1. That hee endeavour the propagation of the Gospel not onely by himself but also by others that were to succeed him in the Ministry standing upon no pains that were requisite for the promoting of it There are three branches of this Admonition Branch 1. That hee arm himself with strength to the work of the Ministry and put on courage and address himself to manage his affairs well Hee insinuates two Arguments Son Arg. 1. Because it becomes Pauls Son to put on courage and bee valiant In the grace Arg. 2. Because the grace which is in Jesus Christ alone will not bee wanting to thee when thou preparest thy self for thy work Vers. 2. And the things that thou hast heard of mee among many witnesses the same commit thou to faithful men who shall bee able to teach others also Branch 2. That hee teach not the people only Sermon-wise but also Scholastically instruct the Candidates in Divinity or those that are designed for the Ministerial function by opening the Apostolical Doctrine and betrusting it as it were with faithful Depositaries which may teach others the same Doctrine that so the Doctrine of the Gospel may bee delivered and propagated from hand to hand Hee adds an Argument from his own example who had instructed Timothy and many others his fellow-disciples in this Doctrine not onely teaching them publickly together with the people but also instructing them Scholastically apart from the people Vers. 3. Thou therefore indure
is made in his book Vers. 14. Alexander the Copper-Smith did mee much evil the Lord reward him according to his works 15. Of whom bee thou ware also for hee hath greatly withstood our words Artic. 2. It relates to Alexander the Copper-Smith an enemy to the Gospel who earnestly withstood the Apostle in his preaching and was very troublesome to him to whom out of well-tempered zeal in the Spirit of God hee wishes divine revenge as to a malicious and obstinate enemy and hee warns Timothy to take heed of him lest hee receive the like injuries from him Vers. 16. At my first answer no man stood with mee But all men forsooke mee I pray God that it may not bee laid to their charge Artic. 3. Hee mentions four remarkeable things which befell him at his first defence when hee first pleaded his cause before Neroes judgement seat The first is that none in the Church at Rome assisted him or became any waies helpful to him which is an Argument that hee did not succeed Peter there nor that hee was Bishop of Rome which desertion of him hee imputes to the infirmity of the Saints at Rome Therefore hee intercedes to God for them and beseeches him to pardon them Vers. 17. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with mee and strengthened mee that by mee the preaching might bee fully known and that all the Gentiles might hear and I was delivered out of the mouth of the Lion The second is That the Lord was his help in the defence of his cause and supported him by his Grace against all accusations whereof hee gives the Reason That so the Lord did more illustriously confirm and commend the preaching of the Gospel amongst the Gentiles Out of the mouth The third is That God delivered him from the present danger of death or from the cruelty of Nero and his adversaries which accused him as it were out of the mouth of the Lion Vers. 18. And the Lord shall deliver mee from every evil work and will preserve mee unto his heavenly Kingdome to whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen The fourth is That by this experience God had confirmed his Faith in him that hee would preserve him lest daunted with any danger hee should defile himself in any evil work even until hee should translate him into his heavenly glory upon which account hee gives thanks to God with confidence Vers. 19. Salute Prisca and Aquila and the houshold of Onesiphorus 20. Erastus abode at Corinth but Trophimus have I left at Miletum sick 21. Do thy diligence to come before Winter Eubulus greeteth thee and Pudens and Linus and Claudia and all the Brethren Artic. 4. It contains the salutations sent to Prisca or Priscilla and her Husband Aquila and to the houshold of Onesiphorus Trophimus Artic. 5. Wherein to hasten the comming of Timothy hee mentions the absence of Erastus and Trophimus who might minister unto him and supply the place of Timothy Salutes Artic. 6. It contains the salutations sent from some Saints at Rome who were with the Apostle while hee writ these things Vers. 22. The Lord Iesus Christ bee with thy spirit Grace bee with you Amen Artic. 7. Hee concludes his Epistle wishing the presence of Christ with the spirit and soul of Timothy and praies for grace to the whole Church whom it concerned to understand the Doctrine set down in this Epistle that with the greater reverence they might receive the Ministery and acknowledge the authority of Timothy The Epistle of Paul to TITVS Analytically expounded THE CONTENTS WHen Paul had onely laid the foundation of a Church in the Isle of Crete which is also called Candia making haste to some other place as it became the Apostle of the Gentiles hee leaves Titus and enjoyns him as an Evangelist to prosecute the work But when Paul understood that hee was contemned by some and that hee might bee brought into further contempt by those that were obstinate as if hee had been a common Pastor Paul invests him with Authority and puts upon him as it were his own person as well in making Ministers as in the whole administration of the Church and encourages him to go forward in the work of the Lord. Besides the Preface and Conclusion there are three parts of the Epistle according to the number of the Chapters The first is concerning the Election of Ministers Chap 1. The second is concerning the duties of each ranck in the Family Chap. 2. The third is concerning the duties of all Christians Chap. 3. CHAP. I. AFter the Preface to vers 5. Hee instructs Titus about the chusing of Pastors shewing who are to bee admitted to vers 10. and who are to bee rejected to the end Vers. 1. Paul a servant of God and an Apostle of Iesus Christ according to the Faith of Gods Elect and the acknowledging of the Truth which is after godliness The Preface contains three things 1 A description of the Pen-man vers 1 2 3. 2 A description of him to whom hee writes 3 A salutation with an Apostolical benediction vers 3 4. In the description of the Pen-man Paul his authority is asserted from these eight heads 1 That hee is a servant of God and that is maintained against the Jews who reproached him as a deserter of the Religion of his Country 2 That hee is an Apostle of Iesus Christ who by an immediate commission to all Nations held the supreme degree of Ministry in the Church 3 That his Doctrine agrees with the Faith of Abraham and the Fathers and all the Elect which every one of them that are elected would receive none but Reprobates would reject because it contains nothing but the known and acknowledged Truth instructing men to godliness and the pure worship of God Vers. 2. In hope of eternal life which God that cannot lye promised before the world began Hee adjoyns the remaining commendations of his Doctrine and the Arguments of his Authority 4 That it brings a lively hope of eternal life to Beleevers 5 That it is upheld by the testimony of God that cannot lye or it is impossible for him to lye or to speak what is not or not to bee able to effect what hee saith 6 That the original of this Truth is most Ancient inasmuch as God hath promised eternal life not onely in the beginning of the world preaching it to our first Parents in paradise but also covenanting with his Son designed to bee our Mediatour about it before the world was made in the Covenant of Redemption 7 That this Truth was most wisely revealed i. e. by degrees and in convenient seasons as it seemed good to God it was made known and now is openly manifested by the preaching of the Gospel Vers. 3. But hath in due times manifested his word through preaching which is committed unto mee according to the Commandement of God our Saviour 8 That the charge of preaching this Gospel by special Ordination and deputation of our Saviour Christ was committed to
led to salvation conceive the same of other means which are not from our selves but the Holy Ghost or God the sole Author who alone without us instituted the layer of Baptism for a Sacrament and the grace signified by Baptism viz. the washing of us from the filth of our sins and the renewing of the Image of God in righteousness and holiness hee alone works in us Vers. 6. Which hee shed on us abundantly through Iesus Christ our Saviour Reas. 8. From the meritorious cause of the graces of the Spirit plentifully shed upon us which is Jesus Christ our Saviour both the fountain from whom and the chanel through whom the grace of God is conveighed to us Vers. 7. That being justified by his grace wee should bee made heirs according to the hope of eternal life Reas. 9. From the nature of free Justification seeing wee are justified not by works but by the grace of Christ. Reas. 10. From the manner of entring upon life eternal to the possession whereof wee are admitted not as buyers or Merchants but as heirs appointed Reas. 11. From the instrumental cause hope or faith which relye upon the free promises of God not any of our merits and altogether exclude our works so that wee are made heirs of life according to the hope which the promises of God have given to us Vers. 8. This is a faithful saying and these things I will that thou affirm constantly That they which have beleeved in God might bee careful to maintain good works these things are good and profitable unto men 9. But avoid foolish questions and genealogies and contentious and strivings about the Law for they are unprofitable and vain The third Precept is this That hee conjoyn with the Doctrine of faith the Doctrine of good works proceeding from faith and urge it with Authority and see that the faithful maintain or bee Patrons of good works seeing life is freely bestowed upon them Hee gives two Reasons of the Precept Reas. 1. Because this saying concerning this Precept is a faithfull saying or worthy to bee beleeved and most necessary and true which cannot frustrate or deceive those that obey it Good Reas. 2. Because this kinde of Doctrine is good and profitable unto men because it tends to the glory of God the confirmation of our selves touching the certainty of salvation and to the edification of others in the faith and the conversion of Infidels Foolish Precept 4. That hee restrain foolish questions wherewith men use to intangle themselves and to hinder themselves from holding any thing firmly in the known truth Such are Genealogical questions or Chronological and contentious disputations and strivings about Law-ceremonies or the like For they are Hee adds the Reason Because though those questions make a shew of wisdome yet they are foolish and vain and unprofitable nothing tending to edification in faith and holiness of life Vers. 10. A man that is an heretick after the first and second admonition reject Precept 5. Wherein the Apostle enjoyns Titus to reject by Excommunication the man that is an Heretick or that holds contrary to sound Doctrine and makes a division or sect in the Church or breaks the unity of the Church by any errour of his when hee is openly convicted before the Presbytery and admonished the first and second time and neither trouble himself and the Church more than needs with the disputations of such kinde of men or spend that time which is appointed for instructing of the Chuch in vain disputations with these perverse men Vers. 11. Knowing that hee that is such is subverted and sinneth being condemned of himself Hee subjoyns a Reason because it is in vain to dispute against one convinced of obstinacy already for hee hath fallen from the truth and is so overthrown that hee will not indure to bee edified any longer and rejecting the light offered in the admonishing of him hee makes it plainly appear that hee doth violence to his own conscience Vers. 12. When I shall send Artemas unto thee or Tychicus bee diligent to come unto mee to Nicopolis for I have determined there to Winter Precept 6. Concerning private affairs whereby hee recalls Titus from Crete and wills him to come to Nicopolis where the Apostle seems not to have been when hee wrote these things as the addition of some unskilful Scribe hath set it down in the end of the Epistle but there hee intended to Winter Vers. 13. Bring Zenas the Lawyer and Apollos on their journey diligently that nothing bee wanting unto them Precept 7. Concerning private matters also That hee would assist Zenas and Apollos in their journey men very well skilled in the Scripture but no wise wealthy Vers. 14. And let ours also learn to maintain good works for necessary uses that they bee not unfruitful Precept 8. That hee instruct not onely the faithful amongst the people but also the Preachers of the Gospel or those that are of the Pastoral order that they go before others in the communication of their goods and distributing according to necessity The reason whereof is given lest whilst they exhort others to good works they themselves should bee without fruit Vers. 15. All that are with mee salute thee Greet them that love us in the faith Grace bee with you all Amen Hee concludes the Epistle 1 With commendations sent to Titus from the Brethren 2 With salutations sent from himself to the faithful in Crete 3 With an Apostolical benediction where hee comprehends not Titus onely but the Churches also to whose use this Epistle was written sealing up his wish and the truth of the whole Doctrine with his AMEN The Epistle of Paul to PHILEMON Analytically expounded The Contents PHilemon one of the Colossian Pastors had a servant called Onesimus who being guilty of theft came to Rome and by the special providence of God upon his hearing of Paul who preached the Gospel at Rome in bonds hee is converted to the Faith This Onesimus the Apostle sends back to his Master Philemon and earnestly with many Arguments pleads his pardon that hee might bee received into favour And because the Holy Ghost in the business of Onesimus would set forth an instance both of his divine love and of our duty towards penitent sinners though of the meanest rank amongst men therefore for the universal and perpetual edification of the Church God would admit this among the other Canonical Epistles THe parts of the Epistle are three The first is a Preface accommodated to the purpose in hand to vers 8. The second contains the Arguments of his request that Onesimus might be restored to vers 21. The third is the Epilogue or Conclusion Vers. 1. Paul a prisoner of Iesus Christ and Timothy our brother unto Philemon our dearly beloved and fellow-labourer The direction of this Epistle hath the same persons sending their salutations as the Epistle to the Colossians hath which together with this seemes to bee written and sent by Tychicus and this Onesimus
another World in effect of that which was of old changing the holding and nature and use of all things to his Subject● For a man ere hee come in to Christ is Gods enemy and to him all things in the World are enemies the Host and Souldiers of his dreadful Judge But after a man is made Christs Subject they turn all to bee his Friends and his Fathers servants working altogether for his good That is another and a new World indeed 2. It is called the World to come because albeit this change began with the work of Grace before Christ came yet it was nothing in comparison of the World i● come under the Messias And that which is now under the Gospel is little or nothing in comparison of that glorious change of the nature and use of all things unto Christs Subjects which is to bee revealed at his last coming Then whatsoever thing wee have hitherto found to our good since wee knew Christ it is but little to what shall bee our World is but to come 1 Cor. 15.19 3. The World is put in subjection to Christ that hee may dispose of it at his pleasure Then Christ is twice Soveraign Lord of the World once as Creator again as Mediator in his Manhead to make all the creatures in heaven and earth serve nill they will they to farther the work of full Redemption which hee hath undertaken 4. Hee excludeth the Angels from this honour Then In Christs Kingdom the Angels are in subjection to Christ for the good of his Subjects no less than sheep and oxen as the Psalm saith and not to bee adored with him as Soveraigns over us Vers. 6. But one in a certain place testified saying What is man that thou art mindful of him Or the Son of man that thou visitest him 7. Thou madest him a little lower than the Angels Thou crownedst him with glory and honour and didst set him over the works of thine hands 1. Being to prove by Scripture his purpose hee citeth neither Book nor Chapter but the words which are of the eighth Psalm and fourth Verse Then The Apostle will have the Church so well acquainted with text of Scripture that at the hearing of the words they might know where it is written though neither book nor verse were cited 2. The Prophet looking on man even on Christs manhead wherein hee was humbled hee wondereth to see mans nature so highly dignified above all creatures Then 1. The baseness of mans natural being compared with other more glorious creatures maketh Gods love to us above all other creatures so much the more wonderful 2. Christs Humiliation and Exaltation were both foreseen and revealed by the Prophets Vers. 8. Thou hast put all things in subjection under his feet For in that hee put all in subjection under him hee left nothing that is not put under him But now wee see not yet all things put under him 1. Hee proveth that Angels are in subjection to Christ because the text of the Psalm saith All is put in subjection and so neither Angels nor other creatures are excepted Then 1. For understanding of the meaning of Scripture it is necessary to consider not only what it saith expresly but also what it sai●h by consequence of sound reason 2. And whatsoever is rightly deduced by evidence of sound reason of the words of Scripture is the meaning of the Scripture as if it were spoken expresly 2. H●e saith There is nothing left that is not put under Christ. Then Not good Angels only but all Spirits and all that they can do also are subject to Christ and hee can make them nill they will they contribute to the furtherance of his own purpose for the good of his Subjects and hurt of his foes 3. Because Christs enemies are still troubling his Kingdome hee moveth a doubt saying Wee see not yet all things put under him Then 1. The troubles of Christs subjects hinder the natural mind to perceive the Glory of Christs advancement 2. Carnal reason the Proctor of mis-belief will admit no more of divine truth than it is capable of by sense Vers. 9. But wee see Iesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with Glory and Honour that hee by the Grace of God should taste death for every man 1. Hee answereth the doubt saying Wee see Jesus crowned with glory and honour and so a course taken for putting all that oppose him farther and farther under him Then 1. The subjection of all things to Christs Throne cannot bee seen but in the exaltation of his person 2. When wee see his person exalted to such high dignity in heaven it is easie to see him put all under that riseth up against him 3. That which may bee taken up of Christ partly by his word and doctrine partly by his miraculous works and extraordinary gifts of the Spirit powred out upon the Primitive Church partly by his ordinary and powerful working upon the souls of his own since that time unto this day humbling and comforting changing and reforming mens hearts and lives I say these evidences of his Power do make a spiritual eye in a manner to see Jesus the worker of these works crowned with glory and honour 2. Hee meeteth another doubt arising from the abasement of Christ in his sufferings and death to which hee answereth in the words of the Psalm first that it was fore-told in that same Psalm that hee was to bee made for a little lower than the Angels to wit by suffering of death Then 1. The Cross of Christ is a ready stumbling block for a carnal mind else what needed the removing of the scandal 2. It is true indeed Christ in his humiliation was abased under the Angels and emptied 3. This abasement was but a little and for a short time 4. It was fore-told in the Psalm that speaketh of his Exaltation 5. If wee look to the Scripture fore-telling wee shall not stumble at Christs Humiliation 3. Hee giveth a farther answer by shewing the end of Christs Suffering to bee for our cause in the favour of God to us That hee should by the Grace of God taste Death for every one of us Then 1. Christs suffering was not for his own deserving but for ours and therefore should bee glorious in our eyes 2. Every Believer and Elect Soul hath interest in that death of his and so every man bound to love him and magnifie him for it and to apply the fruit of it to himself 3. This death was but a tasting of death because hee continued but a short time under it for his short suffering was so precious that hee could not bee holden by the Sorrows of Death but Death for a little was sufficient and therefore should diminish no mans estimation of him 4. It was by the Grace of God that his Death for a short should stand for our Eternal and therefore gracious and glorious should these his sufferings bee
As Beleef draweth us to an Union with God so misbeleef maketh a Separation 2. Mis-beleef is a special part of the hearts wickedness bewraying the enmity which naturally wee have against God as much as any ill For Mis-beleef denyeth to God the Honour of Truth Mercy and Goodness and importeth Blasphemies in the contrary 3. Mis-beleef is an ill in the heart making the heart yet worse and worse where it is and barring forth all the Remedies which might come by Faith to cure the heart 2. Hee warneth to take heed lest there be such an heart in any of them at any time Then 1. Mis-beleef is a subtil and deceitful sin having colours and pretences a number to hide it and must bee watched over lest it deceive and getting strength overcome 2. The Watch must bee constant at all occasions lest this ill get advantage when wee are careless and unattentive at any time 3. Watch must bee kept as over our selves so also over others lest any others mis-beleef not being marked draw us in the same snare with them 3. Hee describeth Apostacy by Mis-beleef and departing from the Living God Then 1. Beleeving is a drawing near to the Living God and staying with him 2. The loss that Mis-beleef bringeth should scare us from so fearful a sin 3. Departing from the true Christian Religion is a departing from the Living God whatsoever the Apostate or his Followers do conceive for God is not where Truth is not Vers. 13. But exhort one another daily while it is called To day lest any of you bee hardened through the deceitfulness of sin 1. Hee prescribeth a Remedy to prevent this ill to wit That they exhort one another daily while it is called To day That is Beside the publick Exhortation from their Preachers that every one of them mutually confer and stir up one another by speeches that make for decyphring the deceitfulness of Sin or preventing hardness of heart or confirming one another in the Truth of Religion and constant profession thereof Then 1. Private Christians not onely may but should keep Christian communion amongst themselves and mutually exhort and stir up one another 2. This is a necessary mean of preserving people from Defection 3. And a duty daily to bee discharged while it is to day that is as oft and as long as God giveth present occasion and opportunity for it lest a scattering come 2. The inconvenience that may follow if this be neglected is Lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin Then 1. There is none even the strongest of the Flock but they have need of this mutual help of other private Christians 2. Neither is there any so base or contemptible but the care of their standing in the Faith and of their safety belongeth to all 3. Sin hath many waies and colours whereby it may beguile a man and therefore wee have need of more Eyes than our own and more Observers 4. If it be not timeously discovered it will draw on hardness of heart so as a man will grow senseless of it confirmed in the habit of it and loath to quit it 3. In the former verse hee warneth them to beware of Apostasie in Religion and in this verse That they take course that they be not hardened in any sin in their conversation Then The ready way to draw on Defection in Religion is Defection from a godly Conversation And the way to prevent Defection in Religion is to study to Holiness of Conversation Vers. 14. For wee are made partakers of Christ if wee hold the beginning of our Confidence stedfast unto the end To stir them up to Perseverance hee layeth a necessity of holding fast gripe of the Principles of Christian Religion whereby they were perswaded to become Christians because onely so fellowship with Christ is gotten The Truth wherby they were begotten to Christian Religion hee calleth The beginning of our Confidence yea and of our Spiritual Subsistence as the word in the Original importeth Then 1. The Gospel is the beginning of our Confidence yea and of our Spiritual Subsistence of our new being that wee have as Spiritual Men in the State of Grace 2. The Man that renounceth the Grounds of the Gospel and persevereth not was never partaker of Christ. 3. Christian Religion is not a thing that a man may say and unsay keep or quit as Prosperity or Adversity Threatnings or Allurements do offer But such as must in all Estates upon all Hazzard be avowed Vers. 15. Whilest it is said To day if yee will hear his Voice harden not your hearts as in the Provocation 16. For some when they had heard did provoke howbeit not all that came out of Egypt by Moses Now the Apostle draweth Collections from the words of the Prophet in the Psalm repeating the words of the Text● which spea● of the Provocation of the Fathers vers 25. Whereupon hee inferreth that there were some at least hearers of the Word which provoked God ●lbeit not all For whose cause David had reason to give Advertisement to their Posterity to beware of the like and the writer of the Epistle reason to apply the same unto them vers 16. Then 1. From the Apostles handling of the Text which hee hath in hand all must Learn not lightly to pass Scripture but to consider both what is said expresly in it and what is imported by consequence 2. Preachers practice is justified when they consider the circumstances of a Text and do urge duties upon their people or teach them Doctrine from the Text. Vers. 17. But with whom was Hee grieved forty years Was it not with that had sinned whose carcasses fell in the Wilderness Hee observeth another thing in his Text upon the persons with whom God was grieved that first they are marked to have sinned and afterwards punished Leaving to them to Gather That where Sin went before the Anger of God would follow upon the Sin and after the grieving of God Judgement light upon the Sinner Vers. 18. And to whom sware Hee that they should not enter into His Rest but to them that beleeved not 19. So wee see that they could not enter in because of unbeleef Hee hath yet another Observation upon the nature of the Sin whereby God was provoked to swear their damnation that sinned that is it was unbeleef vers 8. And formally deduceth his Doctrine by consequence That Misbeleef did stop the Sinners Entry into the Rest and made the Sinner to lye under an impossibility of entring vers 19. The use of which Doctrine hee presseth in the next Chapter Then 1. The Apostle leaveth us to gathe● That above all other Sins Mis-beleef provoketh God to indignation most 2. That as long as this Sin lyeth on and getteth way it is impossible for a man to enter into Gods Rest. This Sin alone is able to seclude him The Summe of Chap. IV. HEE presseth the use of the former Doctrine saying in substance Therefore be feared to be debarred
that is from the Doctrine of Grace in begun Knowledge Faith Love Renovation or any measure thereof Then 1. Albeit the Elect cannot fall away fully and finally yet some Professors in the visible Church may fall away from their Profession and what degrees of Grace they had attained unto for whose cause warning must be given to all as a mean to keep the Elect from a fall 2. Albeit the Elect cannot fall away finally from Grace yet may they fall for a time from the purity of the Doctrine of Grace and from some degrees of the work of Grace from the measure of their first love and zeal and at length fall into scandalous sins He joyneth another point of advertisement with the former That they beware lest any bitter root break forth whereby many be defiled that is left any scandalous sin break forth amongst them Then 1. As men do fall from any measure of the work of Grace so doth the bitter root of unmortified sin spring out and grow The ones decreasing is the others encreasing 2. When any scandal breaketh forth in the Church it troubleth the whole body and polluteth them by the contagion thereof till it be removed 3. Watch must be kept diligently by every man ●o curb this bitter root preventing the out-shooting thereof Vers. 16. Lest there be any fornicator or prophane person as Esau who for one morsel of meat sold his birth-right He expoundeth this bitter root in the example of fornication and prophanity like Esaus Then 1. Fornication and prophanity are the bitter roots of other evils and able to defile a Congregation 2. Such as count more of the satisfaction of their sensual lusts than of their spiritual Prerogatives do prove themselves prophane persons and are justly ranked in with Esau. Vers. 17. For ye know how that afterwards when he would have inherited the blessing he was rejected for he found no place of repentance though he sought it carefully with tears He sheweth Gods judgement on Esau to terrifie all men to hazard upon the sinful satisfaction of their own lusts at any time Then 1. Esaus judgement should be a terrour to all men to keep them from presuming deliberately to commit that sin which they know may cut them off from the Blessing because sundry times albeit not always God doth punish presumptuous sinners with giving over the man to his own ways and final impenitency 2. Esaus example sheweth how justly they may be deprived of the Blessing annexed to any Sacred Symbole or gracious Mean who do despise the mean whereby the Blessing is conveyed For the Birth-right amongst the Patriarchs was a pawn of the Blessing of being an Heir of Promise and therefore was Esau counted to reject the Blessing when he counted light of the Birth-right 3. His example sheweth how little sinners consider for the present what Merchandize they are making with Satan when they meddle with known sins and how they will be made to know it afterwards 2. He saith that afterwards he would have inherited the Blessing but was rejected Then It agreeth with the prophane mans disposition to desire the Blessing and yet despise the means whereby the Blessing is gotten ●o satisfie his fleshly lusts for the present and to desire the Blessing withall afterwards But God will neither sever the means from the Blessing nor joyn the Blessing with the satisfaction of mens lusts Therefore he who will have the Blessing must use the means to obtain the same and renounce the satisfaction of his sinful lusts or else be rejected when he thinketh to get the Blessing 3. He saith He found no place of repentance albeit he sought the blessing with tears That is he could not obtain that his father should repent the bestowing of the blessing beside him nor that God should repent his righteous judgement on him For repentance here is recalling the sentence given out And why Because he for all his tears and untimeous seeking of his sold blessing repented not himself of his sin for he continued as prophane as before and resolved to murther his brother as soon as he found opportunity Then 1. Esau did rue his deed but repented not his sin It is one thing to rue a deed done and another thing to repent the sin in doing of the deed and every known sin for that sins cause 2. Tears may follow upon ruing as well as on repenting and it is possible that the loss or harm procured by sin may draw forth the tear and not the sorrow for the offending of GOD by the sin 3. Esau here is not brought in dealing with God for pardon of sin and the heavenly inheritance but with the man who had the ministry of dispensing the earthly blessing onely We read then that a blessing was sought carefully from a man with tears and not obtained but we read not that Gods Mercy and Blessing was ever sought from himself carefully and not obtained Vers 18. For ye are not come unto the Mount that might be touched and that burned with fire not unto blackness and darkness and tempest Beside the example of Esau's judgement here is another reason to move us who are under the Gospel to beware of licentiousness and prophanity because we are delivered from the terrour of the Law ver 18 19 20 21. and brought by the Gospel to the society of so holy a company as beseemeth no prophane man to enjoy vers 22 23 24. The sum tendeth unto this You are not under the Law but under Grace Instead of saying whereof he saith You are not come unto Mount Sinai but unto Mount Sion For the LORDS manner of dealing with the people at Mount Sinai represented the state of men in nature under the Law liable to the Curse His manner of dealing with them at Mount Sion represented the state of men reconciled through Christ and under Grace Let us take a view of both as the Apostle setteth them before our eyes And first how the state of man unreconciled in Nature and under the Law and Curse thereof was represented 1. Before we come to Christ we have to do with God as a terrible Judge sitting on the Throne of his Justice shadowed forth by Mount Sinai 2. Our Judge is offended with us his wrath is kindled ready to consume us as his adversaries in our transgressions represented by the burning of the Mount 3. When God beginneth to shew himself as our Judge offended with us we are filled with confusion and perplexity and fire represented by Blackness and Darkness and Tempest Vers. 19. And the sound of a Trumpet and the voyce of Words Which Voyce they that heard entreated that the Word should not be spoken to them any more 20. For they could not endure that which was commanded And if so much as a Beast touch the Mountain it shall be stoned or thrust thorow with a dart What further 4. There is no flying from compearance before our Judge Summons and Citations go forth from
unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ Grace unto you and peace be multiplied In the first place Peter the Penman of the Epistle in the inscription is described from the Office of his Apostleship that he might give authority to this Epistle Moreover the Hebrews to whom he writ are described first from their outward low condition that they were strangers scattered through the Regions here mentioned not excluding the rest that lived otherwhere The second from the inward spiritual and excellent state viz. that they were elected foreknown sanctified partakers of the obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ For to be elected through Sanctification of the Spirit to the obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus is to be elected that we by way of Sanctification might come to a full participation of the fruits of Christs obedience and sprinkling of his blood or the imputed righteousness of Christ made obedient to his Father for us unto the death of the Cross And so there are set down four causes of the excellent condition of the believing Hebrews or our spiritual state 1. The election of God he Father comprehending both the eternal election wherein God from eternity would have them before others separated for the obtaining salvation in Christ and that temporal wherein God by an efficacious calling actually separated them from others 2. The other cause is the foreknowledge of God by which he means the act of Divine predilection or eternal love whereby he determined in himself or willed out of his meer love to do good to all his sheep and namely to them 3. The Sanctification of the Spirit by which he means the whole progress of the spiritual change of our state from the beginning of our conversion even unto perfect holiness and glory 4. The obedience of Christ and the sprinkling of his blood whereby is meant both the active and passive righteousness of Christ as some distinguish yea the whole work of redemption together with his application to their Justification and Reconciliation unto God which causes of Salvation are illustrated by naming the three Divine Persons to which distinctly indeed but without division or separation of persons those causes in their order are ascribed whereby we may very easily perceive the distinction grace vertue and the order of their working For fore-knowledge and election is ascribed to God the Father as to the Fountain of our felicity To Christ Reconciliation as M●diator meriting and purchasing that felicity and to the Holy Ghost as an Executor applying that to us And so the causes of our Righteousness and Salvation the original obtaining and application are wholly placed in the alone good pleasure of one God electing us out of his meer favour From whence our efficacious calling flows and true Sanctification as a certain fruit of our election But the onely means whereby the vertue and efficacy of our election to Sanctification and Salvation is derived to us is the mediation of Christ or our reconciliation made in him In the benediction or salutatory prayer he wishes for encrease and multiplication of the effects of Divine favour towards them in all things which may compleat their Sanctification and Salvation Vers. 3. Blessed be God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead The first part of the Chapter follows wherein that he may confirm them in the faith and grace of Christ wherein they stood he thanks God as the Father of Jesus Christ for spiritual benefits in Christ bestowed upon them in this state of grace The reasons of his thanksgiving and also of the confirmation of their faith are sixteen all which prove that they ought to give thanks to God and be confirmed in faith Vs Reas. 1. God hath no less regenerated you than the rest of the Saints yea no lest than the Apostles themselves Therefore ye ought to bless God and to be strengthened in faith The Father Reas. 2. He hath regenerated as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ i. e. he hath by Regeneration put you into the society of the Covenant of Christ and hath received you into the fellowship of Christs Sonship by adoption Therefore c. Out of his abundant Reas. 3. He hath out of his abundant mercy regenerated you i. e. not induced by any deserts nor hindred by any of your unworthiness or ill deservings hath given unto you the benefit of Regeneration Therefore ye ought to bless God and to be strengthened in faith Vnto Hope Reas. 4. God hath regenerated you unto a certain lively hope of eternal life which shews it self in the works of spiritual life Therefore c. By Reas. 5. God hath solidly founded the lively certainty of your hope upon Christs Resurrection from the dead which is both the cause and pledge of your resurrection from the dead Therefore ye ought c. Vers. 4. To an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you Reas. 6. God hath regenerated you unto life eternal which freely he bestowed upon you by the will and testament of your Father as an inheritance gotten by none of your merits and which is not earthly but heavenly incorruptible undefiled immarcessible excelling all worldly possessions even that condition of life which Adam had in his innocency as that which is incident to no change and whereunto nothing is wanting as to its full perfection Therefore ye ought to bless God and to be strengthened in faith Vers. 5. Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time Reas. 7. God hath bestowed perseverance upon the regenerate and hath established the gift keeping you to salvation as with an armed Garrison and supporting your faith lest ye fail from the way of salvation and that by his most firm decree whereby he hath both prepared that salvation for you and also appointed a certain time for the communicating of it viz. the day of judgement Therefore ye ought to bless God and to be strengthened in faith Vers. 6. Wherein ye greatly rejoyce though now for a season if need be ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations 7. That the tryal of your faith being much more precious than of gold that perisheth though it be tried with fire might be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. Reas. 8. The condition of the faith and grace of Christ wherein ye stand is solid matter of your rejoycing and triumph Now if Reas. 9. The grace in which ye stand administreth to you joy even when ye are tossed with manifold afflictions and sorrows it gives you solid arguments of consolation Such as these four 1. The shortness of your afflictions 2. Intermission of your afflictions 3. And the necessity of them For ye are now in
and gave him to bee the Head over all things to the Church Argum. 11. All our enemies the Devil the wicked in the world Persecutors Hereticks and Impostors the power of sin in us prisons banishments all kinds of death are put under Christs feet that hee may order them and dispose of them to our good and put them under our feet Therefore c. The Head Argum. 12. Christ is appointed Head over all things in the Church that is the Father hath committed the full power and administration of all things unto him that hee onely should bee the most near Head of the Catholick Church for the illumination of the Church and all its members for the vivification exciting to all spiritual duties and preservation of spiritual life in them by the immediate presence and operation of his Spirit in the whole Church and its several members Therefore unless you will doubt of your Heads Wisdome Power and Faithfulness in his office you should bee strengthened in Faith Vers. 23. Which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all Argum. 13. The Church is the mystical body of Christ and all beleevers are his members Therefore you should not doubt but hee will look to and have a care of your salvation unless you will deny that Beleevers are his members The fulness Argum. 14. The Church is the fulness of Christ so far as hee is its mystical Head so that hee doth not judge himself to bee perfected and completed till all and every of the Elect bee gathered into one united to him have attained that full encrease suitable to and appointed for every member and till at last they enjoy with him a plenary happiness Therefore you should bee as sure of the perfecting of your salvation as you are that Christ will not suffer himself to bee incompleat imperfect and maimed Filleth Argum. 15. Christ filleth all in all that is according to every Creatures capacity as hee is the God of Nature hee works all things as hee is the Head of the Church hee perfects all things which belong to the Spiritual Life Sanctification and Salvation of Beleevers filling all his members by degrees Therefore it is not to bee questioned but hee will accomplish the begun work of Faith Sanctification and Salvation in you This that hee filleth all in all is adjoyned by way of correction or exposition to the former phrase of the fulness of Christ by the Church lest wee should conceive that Christs or our perfection depends upon any besides himself who of his own free love hath brought this necessity upon himself of communicating himself to us unworthy wretches who stirred up this desire of us in himself who himself hath the power to satisfie this his own desire and who by degrees fulfills his desire of sanctifying us and induing us with Faith and will proceed to fulfil it till hee hath performed all things necessary to the perfecting of salvation and that in all the faithful the greatest and least To him bee the glory of his Grace his power and his constancy for ever and ever Amen CHAP. II. THe Apostle proceeds to prosecute the same Argument proving sometimes in the Supposition that the beleeving Ephesians sometimes possitively that all Beleevers are saved by Grace The Proposition to bee made good is this you O Ephesians are saved by Grace or Beleevers are saved by Grace His Arguments are fifteen upon the last whereof hee insists to the latter end of the Chapter Vers. 1. And you hath hee quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins Argu. 1. If you O Ephesians are considered in the common State of Nature you will bee found to have been in that condition that you could not have recovered thence but by Grace There are seven parts of this Argument every one whereof heightens our first misery and proves Grace to bee the onely cause of salvation Dead 1 In the State of Nature you were not onely defiled with but dead in sin and not onely judicially dead because guilty of or liable to death but also really in effect spiritually dead so that the dead could as easily raise themselves to life or perform actions of being as you could free your selves from this death or do any good deed Therefore you are saved by Grace Vers. 2. Wherein in time past yee walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the Air the Spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience 2 In reference to this natural life you did wholly pass that in sin being wholly busied and walking in them or else waxing worse and worse Therefore c. Of this world 3 You walked in the waies of worldly and carnal men who favour this natural life onely and followed their manners and customes as the rule of life Therefore c. The Prince 4 You followed the Captain of this way the Devil the Prince of unclean spirits who with his Executioners or other evil Angels flying in the Air rules and governs effectually Which worketh 5 The Devil did reign and execute his will in you as now hee doth in the disobedient Therefore c. Vers. 3. Among whom also wee all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of our flesh and of the mind and were by nature the children of wrath ever as others 6 You did fulfil the lusts of your flesh and wallowing in them did commit whatever your vain mind dictated whatever your corrupt appetite and affections of the flesh prescribed To these the Apostle adds himself before his conversion that they might see this Argument propounded in an Hypothesis would serve to confirm the general Thesis Children 7. By nature yee were children of wrath that is guilty of death and liable to divine wrath which God might justly pour upon us even to our utter destruction Hereunto hee joyns all other men as they are considered in the state of nature Therefore wee are beholding to Grace for our salvation Vers. 4. But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith hee loved us Argum. 2. God out of his rich mercy and love hath delivered us who beleeve from this most miserable condition Therefore our salvation is of Grace The several parts of this Argument manifest the same God 1. Hee shews God to bee the sole Author of our deliverance who alone is meet for so great a work Rich 2. That Grace might appear the cause of our salvation is mentioned to bee the abundant or rich mercy of God whereby as it were touched with a sense of our miserie hee is moved to deliver us For his 3. The love of God wherewith he loved us from eternity is annexed as the cause both of mercy and salvation Us 4. It was of mercy that God was pleased to take us rather than others and choose us for his sons Therefore c. Ver. 5. Even when we were dead in sins hath quickened us
together with Christ by grace yee are saved Argum. 3. In the instant of our Redemption by Christ and Regeneration by the Spirit of Christ wee as dead in sins were quickned together with Christ that is in Christ and by Christ Therefore wee are saved by grace For it is of grace that in the Covenant made between God and the Mediator wee who were dead in sins were given to the Son the appointed Redeemer that by him we might be restored to life It is of grace that in the payment of the agreed-upon price of our Redemption life in Christ who was raised from the dead should be adjudged to bee given to us It is of Grace that in the application of Redemption and in the moment of Regeneration life should bee communicated to us in and from Christ that together with other Saints wee should bee grafted into Christ enjoy the common spiritual life with them and thrive and waxe stronger in him For which reasons our life ever depends on the life of Christ and coupled with it in an indissoluble knot Vers. 6. And hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Iesus Argum. 4. God in Christ who was raised up hath raised us up also and in Christ who is placed in the heavens hath placed us together with him Therefore hee hath saved us of his grace For as whatever Christ either did or suffered in our name and place is reckoned ours in Gods account so what ever Christ received in our name and place is reckoned ours also Therefore in the Resurrection of Christ by the Covenant of Redemption the Redeemed did also rise with him judicially or in a judicial way In Christs ascension into heaven the Redeemed judicially ascend with him In Christs sitting or glorious possession of eternal life the Redeemed in a judicial way do sit and are placed with him This right is obtained for beleevers by Christ before faith bee actually given but in conversion this right before obtained by faith by a special act is applied to us that as Christ ascending might say from the Covenant made between God and the Mediator or from the Covenant of Redemption I ascend in the name of the Redeemed for whom I have gotten this right that they may bee reckoned to ascend in mee so those that flye to and beleeve in Christ may say now I have gotten right from the Covenant of salvation made by the Mediator between Christ and the Church that I may reckon the Resurrection of Christ rightfully mine I may reckon the ascension of Christ rightfully mine and so in the rest What abundance of grace is here Vers. 7. That in the ages to come hee might shew the exceeding riches of his Grace in his kindness towards us through Christ Iesus Argum. 5. The end for which wee lost sinners both Jews and Gentiles even after wee have so wickedly led our lives should have salvation bestowed upon us in Christ is that those which shall live in after-ages may see and acknowledge the superabounding grace of God and that by our example they may learn to come unto God who is the fountain of salvation in Christ that they also might in like manner though most unworthy obtain Grace Therefore you are saved onely by Grace Vers. 8. For by Grace are yee saved through faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God Hee repeats the proposition to bee proved in the very terms and adds Arg. 6. Yee are saved by faith and therefore by Grace for faith disclaimes our merits and relies only upon the free and gracious promise of God and that God hath appointed faith to bee an instrument of our salvation the nature whereof requires that forsaking our own works and strength our own wisdome and honour wee should go out of our selves and seek salvation in God is also of Grace It is the gift Arg. 7. Neither our salvation nor our faith is from our selves or our own natural strength but like as salvation so is faith the free gift of God Therefore wee are saved by Grace For when the Spirit of God begins to work conversion in us it findes us dead in sins and unless wee are quickned by him wee cannot contribute any thing to our own regeneration or salvation nay wee are not able so much as to act faith on the promises of God unless faith and the act of this faith bee granted us from above Vers. 9. Not of works lest any man should boast Argum. 8. Wee are not saved by works Therefore by Grace for these do mutually take away one another Lest any one Argum. 9. If wee were saved by works and not by meer grace wee might have occasion and cause to boast but this is absurd Therefore c. as in Rom. 3. Vers. 10. For wee are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus unto good works which God hath before ordained that wee should walk in them Argum. 10. So far as wee are regenerated so far as indued with spiritual life wee are grafted into Christ wee are the work of God and a new creature being anew created by the power of God alone before wee are able to do any good work Therefore wee are not saved by the merit of works but by meer Grace Created Argum. 11. In Christ wee are created to do good works and by the same grace by which wee are grafted into Christ wee are ordained unto the performance of good works Therefore wee are not saved by any vertue of our good works Hath before ordained Argum. 12. Those works which wee are to do after regeneration are prepared by God that wee should do and perform them to which end our understanding is prepared our will is prepared and formed and power is prepared to bee given us of God who works in us both to will and to do Therefore wee are not saved by works but by Grace alone Should walk Argum. 13. The end of these prepared good works is that being quickned and planted into Christ and new born and justified and having gotten a full right to obtain Righteousness and Salvation in Christ wee should walk in them as in the Royal way and rode to the possession of salvation already bought by Christ and granted to us in Christ Therefore c. Vers. 11. Wherefore remember that yee being in time passed Gentiles in the flesh who are called uncircumcision by that which is called circumcision in the flesh made by the hands Argum. 14. Which contains an amplification of Grace towards the Ephesians in respect of their former condition in Gentilisme If you Ephesians bee considered in your special estate as yee were Gentiles your condition will appear so miserable and deplorable that you could not bee otherwise delivered from it than by Grace Therefore the very changing of your condition will evidently shew that your salvation is of Grace Hee sets forth this miserable state in these eight things 1 They were in the flesh living