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A36033 Pious annotations, upon the Holy Bible expounding the difficult places thereof learnedly, and plainly: vvith other things of great importance. By the reverend, learned and godly divine, Mr. Iohn Diodati, minister of the gospell; and now living in Geneva. It is ordered this 11. of Ianuury, 1642, by the committee of the House of Commons in Parliament, concerning printing, that this exposition of the book of the Old and new Testament, be printed by Nicholas Fussel, stationer. Iohn White.; Annotationes in Biblia. English Diodati, Giovanni, 1576-1649.; Hollar, Wenceslaus, 1607-1677, engraver. 1643 (1643) Wing D1510; Wing D1509A; ESTC R5893 1,521,231 922

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but one may gather by the Iewes practice that in the thirteenth day of the moneth which day the slaughter of the people should have been they did ordinarily fast in remembrance of the danger V. 32. In the book of the statutes and observations of the Iewes besides Moses Lawes CHAP. X. VER 3. SPeaking peace or speaking of peace to all c. studying and appointing such things as belonged to the prosperity and safety of them THE BOOK OF IOB The ARGUMENT THis Book containeth a true History and not as some have believed a fiction or morall parable as appeares by the Scripture it selfe Ezech. 14. 14. and Iam. 5. 11. The time when this hapned seemes to be when the people journeyed in the wildernesse after their deliverance out of Aegypt whereof there are manifest tracks in this book as of a thing newly done and yet fresh in mens memories The most common opinion is that Moses hath been the authour of it having written the narration in prose and the discourses which were held upon this subject in heroick verse fitting with the dignitie and gravity of the matter There bee therefore two parts in this book one is the history of what hapned to Iob an Edomite by Nation but faithfull in his religion and holy in his conversation who from the very heigth of an exceeding great happinesse which he enjoyed with a very pure conscience was by the Devills inducement and Gods permission upon a sudden plunged into an abisse of miseries corporall and spirituall internall and externall for the space of divers Months with a long and exceeding stronge tryall of his faith and pietie which had been calumniated by the Devill and termed mercenary Hypocrisie in which tryall and combate he at last remained victorious through his faith and perseverance though much shaken and tottered in the f●esh through its thoughts and motions And after he had been approved of by God hee was miraculously raised and super abundantly rewarded The second part containeth the opinions motions disputes and discourses of Iob and foure friends of his upon this subject The summe whereof is that Iob fully cetified by the holy Ghost of Gods grace in the promised Mediator apprehended by a lively faith a treasure preserved in a good conscience cannot reconcile this harsh outward usage with that inward seale And therefore hee most bitterly torm●nts and grieves himselfe and complaines of God to God himselfe urging him either to admit him to come before him to justifie himselfe or to know the causes of this so unaccustomed and strange manner of government Wherein though he shew the invincible force of his faith and uprightnesse of his conscience yet can he not be excused from excesse in his termes and words Contrariwise three of his friends grave and wise persons which came to comfort him seeing his tragicall and terrible calamities and hearing his immoderate discourses accuse him to have been a prophane and wicked man or a dissembling hypocrite seeing that Gods providence and justice which rewards every one according to his works did punish him with evident tokens of revenge beyond the temperatenesse and measure of the corrections and proofes of the faithfull And therefore they exhort him to convert himselfe to God and give glory to him in all humility and so to expect his deliverance from him But Iob re●ells these temerary accusations and absolutely denies their maxime namely that God doth alwayes make the rewards and punishments equall to mens deeds which is contradicted by the common expeience of all Ages He also refuseth to acknowledge himselfe to have been a wicked man contrary to his own conscience for that would have been a denying of the seale and witnesse of Gods Spirit in his heart depriving himselfe of the onely stay and comfort he had in all his evils and casting himselfe headlong into dispaire And therefore he granteth unto his friends that as he is a creature he will not nor cannot contend with his Creator if he please to treat with him in his Majesty and according to that soveraign right and power which hee hath over his creatures and also as a sinner by his own nature he yeeldeth unto the rigor of Gods Law if he will proceed against him as a Iudge but if he please to seat himselfe upon the throne of grace and from thence heare him as a sonne and a believer he is ready to lay himselfe open unto him and maintaine his innocencie and beare away the victory on his side And having thus stopped the mouth of his three frends Elihu the fourth stepts in reproving the three other for not having rightly debated this controversie and for being by that meanes forced to abandon Gods cause which they had undertak●n to defend And takes another way namely to leave to God and Iobs conscience to judge of that part of his life which was past and doth rebuke him for his present excesses and unreverences against Gods Majesty shewing him that it was no way incompatible but rather a very ordinary thing to be faithfull and yet grievously punished by God for triall and exercise or for correction and extirpation of some internall vice and defect not known or unequally weighed in mans own conscience Therefore he exhorteth Iob to silence humility and profound adoration of Gods judgements Finally Iob opposeth his faith and certaine assurance of Gods grace to his so severe visitations His three friends doe oppose the profession which hee made of piety faith and innocencie by reason of these his afflictions Elihu contrariwise maintaines that the one may subsist with the other and that in such perplexities the onely remedy is quietly to put ones selfe into the hands of God without any murmuring and contradiction approving of all that he dot● as most just Which also is the true and certaine decision of the question To which Iob submitting himselfe with silence the Lord appeares and doth stronglier confirme it by his sentence calling Iob and his three friends to a godly correcting of their opinions and to a friendly concord of wills CHAP. I. VER 1. OF Vz a part of the countrey of Edom Lam. 4. 21. which took its name from and was inhabited by the children of Vz of Esaus race Gen. 36. 28. see Ier. 25. 20. V. 3. His substance the Italian his cattell or his wealth and that as hee had houshold his number of servants as Gen. 26. 14. or husbandry of the East in respect of the land of Canaan as Judg. 6. 3. 1 Kings 4. 30. V. 4 Went at certaine times of the yeere they met at feasts of charity and brotherly conversation V. 5. Sanctified them prepared them by ceremoniall exercises and purifications as fasts abstinences and washings as Exod. 19. 10. and especially by internall and spirituall ones of prayers mortifications and meditations Gen. 35. 2. that they might without pollution or uncleannesse bee partakers of their fathers offerings burnt offerings see Lev. 1. 3. cursed God the Italian spoken evill of
Saviour as in time they they will make it fully appear V. 16. They shall be namely the Babylonians and other idolatrous people V. 17. Be saved he chiefly meanes the deliverance which Christ obtained for his Church whereof the deliverance from Babylon was but a figure and gage V. 18. To be inhabited by men who reaping benefit from all the other creatures ought also in the name and behoof of all the rest to obey and acknowledge the Creator V. 19. I have not the promises which I have made to my people are publikely and openly made wherefore when I shall have accomplished them there will bee no cause to doubt of mine eternall deitie see Isaiah 41. 23. and 43. 9 12. and 48. 16. Seek ye me looke after me onely and not after idols Righteousnesse in constant loyalty without any fraud or variation V. 20. Draw neer let all men that remaine in the world after Gods great judgements come in the time of the Messias and hear the voice of the Gospel which shall condemne and beat downe all manner of idolatry Revel 14. 7. That set up the Italian that carry in pompe and procession upon your shoulders V. 21. Take counsell to defend the idols cause if they can Isa. 41. 28. Declared this namely the Churches deliverance by Christ. V. 22. Look by faith conversion and service forsaking idolatry V. 23. In righteousnesse namely by a decree which hath the force of everlasting Law and is the rule of all manner of justice and righteousnesse see Isa. 42. 6. Shall sweare shall acknowledge me for the onely true God whose name alone is and ought to be taken in all lawfull oaths Gen. 31. 53. see Isa. 19. 18. and 65. 16. V. 24. Shall men come to yeeld unto him and to acknowledge him V. 25. Seed of Israel namely of the Israel according to the Spirit and Faith which is the whole Church of Gods Elect. Be justified that is to say they shall obtain remission of their sinnes and right unto everlasting life by vertue of the Son of Gods righteousnesse which shall be applied to them by faith to justification of life CHAP. XLVI Vers. 1. BEl Nebo names of chiefe Idols of Babylon Isaiah 21. 9. Jer. 50. 2. and 51. 44. Is bowed down that is to say the Babylonians seeing their City taken have thought to save their gods taking them down and speedily loading them upon beasts of carriage V. 2. They sloop namely all those idols They could not namely the Babylonians Others the idols themselves Themselves namely the idols which the heathen were wont to carry away captive together with the conquered nations 1 Sam. 5. 2. Jer. 43. 12. Dan. 11. 8. Hos. 10. 6. V. 3. Which are I have not born you as idolaters do bear their idols but I have borne you my selfe that is to say have taken you even from your first beginning into my care and protection see Exo. 19. 4. Deut. 1. 31. Psal. 22. 10. and 71. 6 18. Isa. 63. 9. V. 4. I have made and not you me as the idolaters do their gods Now this ought to be understood as well of the naturall creation as of the spirituall regeneration see upon Isai. 29. 23. V. 5. That we may or to make us alike or equall one with the other V. 8. Remember hee directs his speech to the people of Israel which were run into idolatry exhorting them to conversion Shew your selves men the Italian be upon good ground forsaking the vaine prejudices of customs examples traditions and opinions take the word of God and true reason for the grounds of your discourses and resolutions V. 9. Former things namely the workes and miracles formerly done for the deliverance of my people by which I have shewed my selfe to be the true everlasting God V. 11. From the East namely out of Persia which is easterly from Babylon Bird namely Cyrus who shall fall upon Babylon like a Falcon or some such like ravenous bird My counsell whom I have chosen in my counsell or who shall put my decree in execution Have purposed it namely appointed and determined it within my selfe V. 12. That are far who through your misdeeds make your selves unworthy to be dealt withall by me as innocents with favour and clemency and to be defended by me V. 13. My righteousnesse namely my grace and good will which in Scripture is often called righteousnesse CHAP. XLVII Vers. 1. COme down thou shalt be beaten down from thy great and flourishing Empire and shalt never have any power to rise again see Jer. 48. 18. Uirgin the Scripture calleth often so those Nations and States which had continued as they were at the first under their naturall Princes and had never been subdued nor conquered by others There is no namely for thee nor for thy Nation for after the taking of Babylon by Cyrus the Chaldean Empire did never rise again though the City subsisted a long time after V. 2. Take the thou shalt be brought into subjection and as a slave shalt grind at the hand-mils Exod. 11. 6. Judg. 16. 21. Math. 24. 41. Uncover like unto bond-women which went with their haire loose and bare-foot Isa. 20. 24. Passe over to goe into captivity into a far Country V. 3. Shall be an ordinary disgrace done to women prisoners see upon Isa. 20. 4. Jer. 13. 22 26. Will not meet thee I wil use thee as an enemy in wrath and as God in my power without any moderation see 2 Sam. 7. 14. Isa. 13. 6. 27. 7 8. V. 5. Sit lay downe thy pomp and pride and bring thy selfe into a vile and abject state V. 6. Polluted I tooke away from her all that should make her holy and inviolable namely my presence grace and vertue and did use her like unto a prophane and uncleane thing see Isa. 43. 28. Thou didst shew thou didst mixe thine owne proper passions of cruelty and inhumanity with the execution of my judgements and didst not take example by me to use mercy and clemency see Psal. 69. 26. The ancient under which name are comprehended all other wretched persons see Deut. 28. 50. V. 9. The losse of by children he seems to meane the people and by the husband the King For the multitude that is to say notwithstanding all thy divellish arts which thou makest use of to keepe thy selfe up For sorcery was frequent amongst the Chaldeans Dan. 2. 2. 5. 7. and Southsayers did beare a great sway in the publique government vers 13. V. 10. None seeth I know no Godhead to whom I should give any account Thy wisedome namely these unlawful arts which thou hast termed wisedome in which thou hast trusted V. 11. It riseth Heb. the morning thereof by which may also be understood the day in which it should happen V. 12. Stand now a scoffe for the Chaldeans vaine confidence V. 14. They shall be that is to say both they and their accursed arts perished and could not save themselves nor bring any ease
hee wipes of this scandall shewing how that Gods promises were neverthelesse firme towards them to whom they were destined by him at the first in his secret counsell namely to all true Israelites in spirit created and framed by him to bee his true people Aud that therein appeared Gods Soveraigne power to be adored with all humilitie in chusing from everlasting and saving in his due time those which were acceptable unto him from amongst the whole masse of humane generation which was corrupted and lost in Adam Leaving the rest to the rigour of his justice against their sinne brought up to a fulnesse in many by a voluntary and obstinate refusall of the remedy of his grace Whereby the one have no reason to complaine of Gods justice nor the others to extoll themselves thorow pride Seeing that lying in the same perdition they are delivered out of it thorow meere mercy And therefore hee exhorteth the Gentiles who are called in stead of the Iewes to a deepe humilitie perseverance and holy use of Gods grace And on the other side he comforteth the Iewes because that even from that time God verified his promises towards many of them called and converted to the faith and would at his appointed time restore and bring againe the whole body of the Nation together with the Gentiles into the possession of his covenant Then he goeth on to exhort to Christian duties as well towards God as in themselves and towards other men brethren or enemies Princes and Magistrates weake members of the Church in knowledge and faith especially concerning the use of Mosaicall ceremonies concerning which there were great contentions and scandalls in the Church in those dayes And in conclusion he recommends them to the grace of God and himselfe to their prayers CHAP. I. VERSE 3. WHich was made namely in his humane nature which is a meere creature and was assumed by the sonne of God in unity of person see Joh 1. 14. Gal. 4. 4. V. 4. declared as by asolemne and soveraigne sentence Psalm 2. 7. to be the true sonne of God against all false judgments calumnies contradictions and doubts of the world Luke 1. 35. 1 Tim. 3. 16. According to namely according to his divine nature called Spirit 1. Tim. 3. 16. Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. which was before covered under the infirmity of the flesh but in his resurrection and after it manifested and shewed in power of divine glorie by effects which we are in altogither to bee admired V. 5. Grace namely this singular gift of beeing his Apostle Or the guifts necessarie for so eminent an office for obedience to cause the Gentiles to Submite unto and receive the Gospell by faith thorow which Gospell Christ raigneth over men all nations namely the heathen ones whose Apostle especially Saint Paul was acts 9. 15. Gal. 1. 16. 1. Tim. 2. 7. 2. Tim. 1. 11. for his name the Italian by his name to cause him to be acknowledged Or by him in his name by his authoriie and comimssion V. 6. Called manifest ye are para●rkers of his covenant and members of his Church by his word directed to us and made effectuall by his spirit V. 8 Through Jesus Christ who is the means of this great good for which I give thankes and in whose name all prayers ought to be presented to God if we intened to have them heard and all our thanks-giving if wee mean they shall be acceptable to him the whole amongst the church Scattered overall the world V. 9. With my spirit the Italian in my spirit namely in my soul which is as it were the spirituall truth in which God is served by beleevers Or with my spirit that is to say with mine heart and intimate affection V. 13. That I might have that I might cause my ministerie to bring forth fruit amongst you to the advancement of Christs glorie and the salvation of his Church V. 14. Deb●our namely bound by mine office of Apostle to procure the salvation of all men and to communicate unto them the talent which for that purpose I have received of God to the uttermost of my power without any destinction of nations or conditions V. 16. The power namely the only most effectuall means to save man so he have faith in Christ who is therein proposed whereas man in his owne nature was not sufficient thereunto Rom. 5. 6. and the law of God it self was weak through the flesh Rom. 8. 3. to the Jew to which nation the Gospell was first to be preached See acts 13. 46. to the Greek under this name are comprehended all the Gentiles whereof the greatest part and nearest and best knowne to the Iews were native Greekes and spake the Greek tongue V. 17. For therein is the he proves that by the Gospell man obtaines life and salvation namly because it presents unto 〈◊〉 the onely meanes and cause of life namely the true righteousnesse which is Christ imputed to man through grace and imbraced by him by a lively faith whereunto Habakuks saying hath a relation who attributing the meanes of obtaining and professing a spirituall life unto faith doth consequently also attribute unto it the meanes of obuining righteousnesse which is the onely cause of the said life Gal. 3. 26. So that faith vivifieth in so much as it justifieth Now this righteousnesse is called Gods righteousnesse because he is the supreame Author of it having appointed his sonne who was true God for to fulfill and acquire it and that hee out of his meere grace bestoweth it upon his elect and accepts of it for their absolution and that it alone can subsist before his judgement Dan. 9. 24. and finally because it is the accomplishment of all his promises Gods righteousnesse being oftentimes taken for his loyalty and mercy Rom. 3. 26. From saith that is to say more and more according as the faith increaseth and groweth strong so it doth more and more enjoy the benefit of this righteousnesse Or the revolution of his righteousnesse is receaved by a continuall act of faith which never ought to cease unall it be come to its fulnesse and accomplishment in the life everlasting V. 18. For the he proves that men have need of this imputed righteousnesse for to bee ssved because that of themselves they are all unrighteous as it appeareth by Gods evident judgements upon all mankinde From Heaven as from the throne of his justice Seeing the effects thereof can no way have a relation to inferior causes or evidently as comming down from heaven Ungodlines and unrighteousnesse these are the two kinds of sin wherof the 〈◊〉 is against the first Table of the Law and the other gainst the second Who hold as being in bondage to their owne perversitie and malice by which they binder the truth from having dominion over their actions The truth namely all that light knowledge of God and of his nature judgment and will as hath remained in them after sinne ver 25. See Rom. 2.
because that the Law of Moses gives a man no strength nor helpe towards the accomplishing of it and yet doth inexorably require perfect obedience the Law of Christ contrariwise worketh in man the power of doing that which it commands and besides commandeth with mildnesse tempered according to mens weaknesses and ignorances In regard of the end because Moses his Law is to gain a right to life or to be condemned by it the Law of Christ to frame and direct man to the exercise and actions of life which is already given him by grace V. 20. I am I participate of his death as well in the expiation of my sinnes as in the gift of his Spirit which mortifieth in me the strength of sin and ingenders a new life in me of which Christ is the Root and Spring and that by vertue of the communion which I have with him as member of his bodie the band and tie whereof in this life is faith Ephes. 3. 17. V. 21. I do not that is to say I teach this that the Doctrine of Gods grace in Christ which is the onely cause of salvation may remain safe and untouched Rom. 4. 14 16. Righteousnesse namely the meanes whereby man is justified before God By the Law either wholly according the Pharisees opinion or in part according the error of those false Doctours now these two meanes of Faith and of Workes cannot either by Gods order or by the nature it selfe of the things be mixed together in causes of justification Rom. 4. 4. and 5. 6. 11. Wherefore if the least cause of righteousnesse and life be attributed to Workes it must wholly be attributed unto them and so Christ profiteth nothing Gal. 5. 2 3 4. And so likewise whosoever hath a recourse to Christ must absolutely renounce all considence in his own proper Workes Phil. 3. 8 9. CHAP. III. VER 1. SEt forth lively represented unto you with his death and passion and with the vertue and use thereof V. 2. Receiv●d you you have not received the spirit of regeneration from God nor the miraculous gifts thereof by meanes of the Jewish doctrine of Workes nor by your endeavouring to do them nor your adhering to them but by meanes of the Gospell embraced by faith then seeing that God hath ratified this Doctrine onely by this divine seal you ought not any way to doubt of it and you do very ill to varie therein V. 3. Begun the course and state of your vocation in Christianitie In the Spirit namely by faith regeneration and other effects of the Holie Ghost in which consists the substance and truth of the Gospell Iohn 4. 23. 2 Cor. 3. 6. 8. Made perfect you let the false Apostles perswade you that you may receive some addition of perfection by the observation of legall ceremonies as by a thing necessarie to mans righteousnesse and holinesse By the flesh by externall and corporall things such as those ceremonies were especially after their figurative and sacramentall use was nullified by Christ to establish new Sacraments See Phil. 3. 4. Heb. 7. 16. and 9. 10. V. 4. In vain namely for a Doctrine which now you renounce for the Jewes sakes who were the first authours of the Christians persecutions or without any fruit for the reward is promised to them which persevere If it be and not rather to your greater condemnation being that the abandoning of the truth after such great progresses therein and such strong proofes cannot chuse but be imputed for a far greater fault as there being greater violence and ruine therein as in a building alreadie raised to a great height more malignitie ingratitude towards God and more scandall towards men V. 5. Miracles the Italian powerfull workes that is to say high and noted miracles which in those beginnings were frequent in the Churches See 1 Cor. 12. 10. V. 7. Know yee the Italian yet you know that is to say this Doctrine is clear and resolved upon amongst Christians that the true children of Abraham comprehended in the covenant which God made with him and his posteritie are not the carnal Jewes which are borne of him or joyned to him by circumcision and by the professing of their ceremonies but all such as according to Abrahams example do renounce all confidence in their own proper Workes and put it wholly in Gods promises and grace in Christ as Abraham was made a father example and paragon of faith to all those to whom the covenant made with him was to appertain Of faith namely of the number and on that good side of those which follow that onely meanes of salvation See Rom. 4. 16. V. 8. The Scripture namely God speaking by it Rom. 9. 17. Gal. 3. 22. did formerly reveal his intent to Abraham to call the Gentiles at his appointed time through faith in his Son Preached before the Gospell namely he did propound unto him this Euangelicall promise In thee namely in so much as they shall be thy children and joyned to thee by communion and imitation of faith V. 10. For as many seeing there never were but these two meanes of obtaining Gods blessing but Workes and Faith and that through sin man hath made himselfe utterly uncapable of the first and therefore remaines accursed there is no way for him but either to remain in perdition without redemption or to have recourse unto the other meanes which is Faith Of the Workes namely of the number of their opinion and of their side who found the confidence of the righteousnesse and life upon their own Workes Rom. 4. 4 and 10. 3. For it is he doth presuppose it as a clear thing that no man after sin can persevere that is to say can accomplish the course of obedience in all its heads V. 11. But that no man let no man deceive himselfe in believing that the aforesaid sentence is onely pronounced against wicked men who are altogether given to evill the most righteous and holie do not live before God and consequently are not justified but onely by Faith seeing that righteousnesse is the onelie and perpetuall cause of life See Rom. 1. 17. as it appeares by this passage of Hab. 2. 4. V. 12. And the Law the Italian but the Law let everie one also beware of thinking to mix both the meanes together namely of Workes and of Faith in causes of life and justification for in this regard and for this effect Workes have no communitie with Faith neither in their own nature seeing they present to God mans own righteousnesse and Faith receives Christs righteousnesse for a gift nor by Gods order which makes these two meanes incompatible one with the other Rom. 4. 4 5. and 10. 5 6. and 116. But the man that is to say the substance and sum of the Law consists in mans own proper Workes contrarie to this reception by Faith in meer gift V. 13. Christ now he comes again to shew how a blessing comes upon the spirituall children of Abraham by Faith v. 9.
the members and they likewise in right and in vertue of the infallible cause and in certainnesse of hope are already raised up and glorified and at the appointed time shall be so in effect 1 Cor. 15. 12 15 20 22. Through Christ namely in the benefit of our redemption through him V. 8. By grace which holds the place of principal cause as faith is the meanes on mans side to receive and applie unto himselfe the feeling and fruition of that salvation which is presented unto him in Christ. Of your selves of any merit worth invention or worke of yours V. 10. For we are He proves that our own workes cannot be the cause of our salvation for we our selves that do them have been made that is to say regenerate and sanctified by his grace and have been made fit to do them by his Spirit besides that the use of them is not of merit to acquire right to salvation but onely a way to come to the fruition of it Before ordained to worke them in us and to be wrought by us God having by one and the same will and councell ordained the end of salvation and the meanes to attain to it V. 11. Wherefore seeing God hath done us al in generall so many favours you Gentiles who were furthest off and most unworthy of them ought to thinke your selves most obliged for them In the flesh wanting the circumcision in your flesh which was the Sacrament of Gods Covenant and therefore likewise under the name of uncircumcised you were abhorred of the Jewes who for their honour were called the circumcised people so that you had no part nor communion with Gods Church neither outwardly nor spiritually v. 12. V. 12. Ye were ye had neither union nor communion with Christ Head of the Church Founder and Mediatour of the Covenant and Spring of all spirituall and everlasting blessings Aliens and therefore separate from the bodie of it namely of the Church to which onely he communicates his grace and which at that time was restrained within the Jewish nation onely See Ezech. 13. 9. Strangers Having no interest nor portion in the goods promised in the Covenant of grace which was made with Abraham and so many times reiterated and confirmed Of promise namely of grace See Rom. 4. 13 14. and 9. 8. To hope of salvation and eternall goods Without God without any knowledge or worship of the true God 1 Corinth 8. 5 5. wherein consists the interchangeable dutie of those who are in this covenant V. 13. In Christ not onely by his meanes but also by vertue of the union which you have with him by faith Farre off namely from God from his Covenant and from the Church as he had said vers 12. By the blood by his death which he suffered for you and hath been applied unto you by faith you have been reconciled to God and re-united into one bodie of a Church with the believing Jewes this seemes to be added to shew that the Gentiles were no more engrafted in the Church by circumcision and by ceremonies as anciently the proselites were but by Christs passion shadowed by those figures V. 14. Our peace the tie and foundation of the true union of the Gentiles with the Jewes into one and the same Church The middle wall He hath questionlesse a relation to the wall which was in Solomons Temple between the peoples and the Gentiles court which hindred all manner of passage sight or communication between them Ezech. 42. 20 the meaning is that the Gentiles have by the Gospell gotten free accesse to the Church and the goods thereof being no more held to be prophane persons V. 15. In his flesh namely in the sacrifice of his bodie by which he hath disannulled all ancient ceremonies which were a signe and a meanes of the separation of the two people Gentiles and Jewes and the occasion of great hatred betwixt them the Jewes detesting the Gentiles and their manner of worship as unclean and prophane and the Gentiles abhorring the Jewes and all their observations as absurd and contrary to those of all other nations Acts 10. 28. To make the Italian to create that is to say to make by a manner of new creation these two nations regenerated by his Spirit a new bodie of a Church united in Christ who is the Head thereof and the Foundation of all its subsistencie V. 16. In one being so united to shew that none can have part in Gods peace unlesse he be united to the Church seeing that there being but one covenant and one head thereof namely Christ it is impossible it should be made with men that were divided By the crosse namely by his sacrifice upon the altar of the crosse Slain having by vertue of his death which was the destruction of the kingdom life of sin Rom. 6. 6. Gal. 6. 14. taken away the cause of Gods enmitie with sinfull men and of the Church with life of unbeleevers and heathens which is no other but only the uncleannesse of sin and hath established the true foundation of peace which is righteousnesse and holinesse considered in its reall truth of Faith and Spirit and no more in the ancient outward signes of Mosaicall Ceremonies Gal. 6. 15. Thereby the Italian in himself namely in his own death or in it namely in the Crosse. V. 17. And came in his own person by taking upon him humane flesh and the office of a messenger of pence and afterwards by sending his Apostles Luke 24. 47. see 1 Pet. 3. 19. Unto you namely to the Gentiles in generall who were separate from God from his covenant and salvation To them to the Jews a people joyned to God by a speciall covenant V. 18. For through he proves that peace is truly made with God because he now admits all nations indifferently unto him to present their prayers and worship to him By one namely by vertue of the holy Ghost which is one and the same in all beleevers and works all the foresaid things in them by the same consent and will V. 20. Are built your faith by which you subsist in the communion of Saints hath for its foundation for infallibility immoveable rule the doctrine of the old and new Testament the principall subject whereof is Christ who in his person is the essentiall foundation as it were the corner Stone in which consists the chief strength of a building binding the two walls together which are the two nations of the Jews and the Gentiles whereof the Church is composed and alwayes bearing and withstanding all manner of dangerous encounters which are more dangerous at the corners of buildings then at any other part of them see Cant. 8. 9 10. V. 21. In whom upon whom or by vertue of whom and of the conjunction with him Groweth advanceth and raiseth it self untill it come to its perfection in Heaven Revel 21. 3. V. 22. In whom this seems to be added to shew that whilest the mysticall Temple
appeared nor the glorious manifestation thereof all that is yet in safe custody with God in Christs person Strive therefore to attaine to that Soveraigne end by a continuall exercise of holinesse Phil. 3. 11. 12. 14. V. 4. Who is our namely in the communion of whose Spirit you subsist in this state of spirituall life whereof Christ is as it were the root and spring which gives and preserves it V. 5. Your members namely all the affections motions and concupiscences of corrupt nature whereof is composed all that masse of vice which is called the body of sinne Rom. 6. 6. Col. 2. 11. Or by members he meanes all the vicious actions of the body Rom. 8. 13. V. 6. The children See upon Eph. 2. 2. 5. 6. V. 7. Walked that is to say which you sometimes practised Ye lived when you see all your heart and delight in them and were wholly given to them as men in whom sin raigneth V. 10. Which is renewed the renewing of which is not fulfilled in an instant but goeth forward by degrees in holinesse according as the lively enlightening of the Holy Ghost encreaseth by meanes whereof all the remainder of the worke of regeneration is accomplished Rom. 12. 2. 2 Cor. 3. 18. Eph. 4. 23. V. 11. Where there is in which worke of sanctification all these regards conditions and qualities doe neither availe nor hurt And God in producing of it hath no respect unto them But Christ Christ alone apprehended by faith for the remission of sinnes is the onely spring and cause of all good and salvation to all believers and living and working in them by his Spirit to regeneration V. 14. Above all these the Italian instead of all these to the end that you may worke all these particular things Get you a habit of charity which is the root of all these vertues The bond namely the only meanes of a true and perfect union which ought to be between believers aboue all humane conjunctions and which containeth perfectly in it selfe all the duties whereby men are joyned with God and one with the other V. 15. Of God namely that holy tranquillity in your Spirits and that spirituall concord which God requires and creates in his beleevers Rule namely governe and temper all your affections so that they may all yeeld and have a relation thereunto In one body namely in the communion of the Church which is Christs body Thankefull for the benefits received from God and men V. 16. Let the word namely the doctrine of the Gospell have a firme seate in your hearts and in the middest of your Church and as the soule dwels in the body to preserve it alive to cause it to grow and operate by it So let this active truth be in you in abundant fruits of good workes With grace in a godly gracious manner which may allure and edifie the hearers See Luke 2. 52. Acts 2 47. Ephes. 4. 29. Colos. 4. 5. In your hearts by a lively feeling of the soule and not with the lips onely V. 17. In the name calling upon his holy Name and according to his command and to his honour and service V. 18. In the Lord namely as it is fitting for women that are in Christs communion as members of his Church Or according to his command Or in respect and by vertue of him V. 20. In all things which belong to the right of parents and whereunto children are lawfully bound Ephes. 5. 24. V. 21. Lest they be lest they put off all manner of affection and desire of being thankfull to you Despairing through your immoderate rigor of obtaining your good wils Or lest they lose all joy of heart and so run into precipitate resolutions V. 22. In all things as v. 20. According to the namely your corporall and worldly masters As Eph. 6. 5. Eye service See upon Eph. 6. 6. V. 24. Of the inheritance namely the heavenly inheritance which though beleevers doe obtaine meerely by vertue of their adoption yet it is promised unto them likewise by the name of reward and guerdon for to incite them to doe well The Lord who being the Soveraigne Lord of all giveth and appointeth to every one his vocation and thereby exerciseth his command in the world CHAP. IV. Vers. 1. EQuall that is to say all enterchangeable duties of masters to servants V. 2. Watch being alwaies attentive and ready and fittingly prepared to present them unto him V. 3. Unto us as to other Apostles and Evangelists who are not prisoners as I am A doore namely that he will give us opportunity and occasion to preach his Word being at libertie V. 5. Without namely infidels and those that are strangers to the Church to give them no cause of offence or of hating persecuting and slandering the Church but rather to gaine them to you and edifie you V. 6. With grace with holie and spirituall mildenesse and in a fitting manner With Salt namely with wisedome and discretion or with good understanding which may excite and please the taste of the hearers See Marke 9. 50. V. 7. In the Lord in his worke or in the communion of his mysticall body V. 9. Onesimus some thinke it is the same as is spoken of Philem. 10. V. 11. Of the that are Jewes converted to Christianity These onely are Or mine onely workecompanions In Gods Kingdome which have been c. That is to say those that are with me and are worthie workmen The Kingdome namely in preaching the Gospell by which God gathers together and governes his Church and distributeth his everlasting goods V. 12. Labouring servently the Italian fighting assisting you in your troubles and oppositions with his servent prayers to God Perfect being no longer children but of full age in strength and understanding to know and performe the will of God See Matth. 5. 48. 1 Cor. 14. 20. V. 13. Laodicea these two Cities were neere Colosse Col. 2. 1. 16. From Laodicea it may be understood of some Epistle that the Apostle writ to the Laodiceans which was to be communicated to the Colossians and is now lost like divers more 1 Cor. 5. 9. Phil. 3. 1. yet without any diminution of the perfection of holy Scripture which consists not in a certaine number of bookes but in the full revelation of all the doctrine which is necessary to salvation and questionlesse hath in other places the same doctrines as were contained in those Epistles which are lost V. 17. In the Lord namely in his worke and service Or looke to the degree of service which thou holdest in the communion of his body V. 18. Remember that you may assist me with your prayers to confirme you in the faith by mine example and to give me occasion of comfort by your perseverance and other vertues Grace namely the grace of God in Christ. THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. PAUL the Apostle to the THESSALONIANS ARGUMENT SAint Paul as Saint Luke reports Acts 17. had by his preaching converted divers Iewes
right and the Consciences duty on the one side and thy wise and innocent civill accommodation with men on the other side He that feareth True piety doth indeed save a man from the said inconveniences but it is by means of this holy wisdome to intimate unto us that these two vertues ought to be joyned together V. 19. Strengtheneth Against all assaults and dangers Mightie men The Italian Governour that is to say politicke Magistrates or Commanders of warre V. 21. Also Seeing that all men are subject to errors there is great reason they should also be apt to forgive one anothers faults especially those which are most common and into which a man may fall suddainely and unawares such as are the errors of the tongue Jam. 3. 2. V. 23. Have I pro 〈…〉 ed I have meditated upon and put in practice all these precepts by meanes of that wisdome which God hath conferred upon mee a 〈◊〉 still with such imperf●ction as is inseparably joyned to humane nature V. 25. The wickednesse Namely that which is absolutely vicious in the common course of life to beware of it and therein to use the severe remedies of mine office tolerating in the meane time many things that proceed from ignorance and weakenesse V. 26. The woman The strump●t that knowes all the wayes how to entice ens●are and catch men V. 27. This have I Namely those things which I have spoken of and which are but a parcell of that perfection which I sought after to the height of which I could never attaine v. 23. V. 28. Have I found I have found but few men capable of these first instructions of wisdome but almost not any woman V. 29 This onely The onely point that I have well apprehended is that God had at the beginning endowed man with divine wisdome for to direct him to the end of his happinesse but hee hath lost this gift through sinne and rebellion and in stead of that he hath gotten false carnall wisdome which is the cause of all his evills and strayings Iavention The Italian Discourses Namely vaine and false imaginations thoughts and councells See Psalme 119 113. Rom. 1. 21. CHAP. VIII VERS 1. VVHo is Though mans wisdom be so imperfect yet it is of great esteeme Who knoweth Besides he that is wise To shine It causeth a tranquillitie of spirit in him which appeares by his cleere and jocond aspect contrary to the fierce and sad lookes of those men who are possessed with turbulent passions V. 2. The oath Namely the oath of alleagiance which the subjects sweare to their Prince not onely for feare of men but chiefly for feare of wronging thy Conscience towards God Rom. 13. 5. V. 3. Bee not hastie Bee not rash nor hastie to be angry with thy Prince upon a pretence of any injury done to thee by him forsaking his service if thou be one of his houshold servants or flying from his obedience if thou be one of his subjects In an evill thing That is to say having committed any misdeed having beene faultie in any businesse Others do not persist in any evill action that is to say if thou beest in disgrace with thy Prince seeke to appease him as soone as thou canst Prov. 25. 15. that thou mayest not feele the thunder of his absolute power V. 5. The commandement Namely of God Shall feele Shall keep himselfe from committing any fault as may provoke the Princes just wrath and indignation against him The meaning is that pietie towards God shall by him bee rewarded with such wisdome as may be applyed to any occasion V. 8. No man It is true that by wisdome many evills may be avoided but the punishment of impiety cannot bee avoided no more than the course of the wind can be stayed death shunned or fighting avoyded by a Souldier that is enrolled in some day of battell This he saith to confirme that which he had said before ver 5. that innocency was the spring of mens safeties V. 9. Have I seene I have considered of all these good meanes which man may use to live peaceably under a reasonable and a just Prince and I have also perceived that there are some tyrants that bring nothing but ruine upon their subjects and under which none attaine to any promotion but onely wicked men V. 10. Buried That is to say which lay hidden for feare of the Lawes or were kept under and obscure being not admitted to any dignity or Office From the place Namely from Gods Temple as it happened to David in Sauls ●ime 1 Sam. 26. 19. Vam●●e That is to say one of the disorders of the world by which may be perceived how much names and outward shewes may vary from the truth even in the highest and most excellent things such as publicke governments are V. 14. Which is done By men especially by evill Princes who doe often time reward vice and persecute vertue Others take this to be spoken of Gods providence which prospereth the wicked and afflicteth good men which is a vanitie not in respect of the providence it selfe which is alwayes most just and most wise but in respect of those worldly goods and evills which it disperseth so contrary to that which seemes convenient whence it appeares that they are not reall goods nor evills V. 15. Then I Seeing so many unavoidable evils I resolved to set my minde at rest and take honest pleasures referring all to Gods providence Vnder the Sunne in respect of this corporall life and the goods of this world Shall abide with him The Italian hath it Which is lent him Whereof he hath but a little fruition as it were through favour and for a time and no true and constant propriety V. 16. Seeth sleepe Never rests from this deepe meditation V. 17. All the worke All the ground of his government and providence his counsells ends reasons and meanes CHAP. IX VERS 2. FOr all this Hee gives a reason of what hee had said concerning Gods unsearchable providence because that he himselfe though endowed with so much wisedome could not conceive his intentions towards the good and the wicked in the chances of this life No man knoweth Namely by his owne ba●e understanding by the naturall light and by the bare consideration of the chances of this world without the guide of Gods Word and spirit All that is It seemes that goods and evills doe meet confusedly and by chance before the one and the other in the course of this world V. 2. That sweareth Falsly or in vaine That feareth Because of the respect hee beareth to Gods holy name he forbeareth to heare unlesse it be in cases of necessitie V. 3. While they live By reason of this indifferencie of events worldly men doe daily in their wickednesse whereby they die in the state of damnation V. 4. For to him that is joyned The Italian For he that is ch●sen I speak so of men in generall for the number of Gods elect which are redeemed from sin
makes it more glorious and se●● it in greater esteeme amongst men Sinners that is to say guilty and c●lpable having not as yet rece●ved he gift of absolution and pardon and being yet under the king●●me of si● V. 〈◊〉 By 〈◊〉 namely by vertue of th●t satisfa●●ion● which he hath made to God by his death 〈◊〉 wrath namely from eternall damnation and punishment Matth 3. 7. Rom. 2. 5. The meaning is that as it is more easie to keep a man from execution that is freed and absolved by the judg then for to get a guilty man absolved and freed by the iudge so after we have received pardon which is the greater we ought much now to be perswaded that we shal be freed from the punishment which is the lesser and that we shall have all good things Rom. 8. 32. V. 10. By his life namely by him living and raigning and communicating his life to all his members Iohn 6. 5. 7 and 14. 19. 2. Cor. 4. 10. 11. V. 11. And not onely besides that we gloriously triumph over all afflictions thorow a certain confidence of the everlasting crowne Wee have also whereof to boast our selves to bee happy in the whole course of our lives by the present feeling of Gods grace V. 12. Wherefore a generall conclusion of the presedent treatie of justification by faith in which the Apostle breifely running over those things which he had said doth withall set doune the ground of them which is that God hath of his owne good will established Christ to be the head of grace and the spring of righteousnesse and life to all his elect thorow the impution of whose righteousnesse they are restored into Gods favour and concequentlie sanctified and glorified as Adam was made the naturall head and root of all mankind whereupon by his sinne imputed to al his Seed it was all under Gods curse deprived of originall righteousnesse corruption its whole naturall and subiect to death V. 13. For untill this originall corruption is verified by the effects of all mens actuall Sinnes in al ages even before the law of Moises which sheweth that there was before that another generall law namely that of nature the reliques of which doe yet remaine in man Rom. 2. 14. 15. against which Adam having actually sinned hath enfolded all his posteritie in the same fault and hath propagated originall sinne in it is not imputed that is to say is not reputed to be truely sinne which is nothing but a transgression of the law Rom 4. 15. 1. Iohn 3. 4. nor man is not called to account upon it to be therefore condemned to death V. 14. Neverthelesse he doeth moreover shew that there was an universall defect in all mankind against the said law which was imputed unto him to condemnation seeing they are all dead and that death is the reward of sinne Rom. 6 23. over them namely over little children who weare not come to the age of iudgment and consequently could not bee guilty of an actual deliberate and voluntarie sinne such a one as Adams was and yet for all that they are dead wherefore wee must conclude that there was in them some other sinne which is the originall sinne of him namely of Christ the second Adam the head of the spirituall off spring of this elect as Adam was the natural head of all men Now the conformitie of them both consisteth in this that either of them by the order of God justification hath communicated his estate to all his V. 15. But not though these two Adam the head of sinne and death and Christ the head of righteousnesse and life doe agree in this prosperity of communicating their conditions to those who are theirs yet there is great deale of difference between them First in that in Christ the power is all divine and therefore infinitely more active and effectuall and then also in the excellencie and abundance of gifts and good things which he communicates to his above all that which man had lost in Adam manie bee namely all men the children of Adam v. 12. The grace namely Gods mercie and good will which is the Soveraigne cause the gift namely the application and free imputation of Christs righteousnesse which is the meritorious cause by grace for love and by vertue of that perfect righteousnesse and obedience which Christ yeelded his father in his humane nature by which he hath merited and possesseth all his grace and love Matth. 3. 17. Iohn 1. 16. Ephes. 1. 6. Vnto many namely to all believers Gods spirituall children in Christ whereof he had spoken before V. 16. And not there is likewise another difference namely that Adam did indeed by his offence make all his posterity guilty but they have aggravated their iudgement by their owne proper and voluntary sins But Christ iustifieth not onely from the sin which proceeded from Adam but likewise from all other personall sins The judgment namely God proceeding as a iust iudge hath imputed this one offence of Adams to all his posteritie and hath condemned it to lose the state of originall righteousnesse and consequently life The free gift the Italian The grace the same God proceeding in his grace hath absolved all his elect from al their sinnes for to behold them just and innocent V. 17. For if this ought not to seeme strange for God hath infinitely more beene appeased in Christ then hee was offended and provoked by Adam Of righteousnesse namely Christs righteousnesse which is given that is to say imputed out of meere grace to all believers V. 18. By the righteousnesse of one by Christs perfect obedience God hath poured out his free mercy upon all men to absolue them from sinne and give them right to eternall life vpon all to all manner of persons indifferently though not to all universallie Or he means all those which belong to Christ. v. 15. 17. V. 19. Mary see v. 15 were made that is to weare reputed for such and doe as such appeare before Gods judgement Shall manie henceforward Christ having ben manifested and his righteousnesse fulfilled and preached to the world by the Gospell all those who shall receive it shall be reputed righteous before God in him V. 20. The law because he had said v. 13. that before the law of Moses sinne had raigned against the law of nature he doth now obviate an objection wherefore then was Moses his Law added Hee answeareth because the Law of nature might be restored to its naturall light and vigor and repaired in the breaches which ignorance forget fullnesse evil manners and erroneous opinions of men had made in it And that by this light of Gods law renewed in man and yet with stood by him with a greater malice then before his wickednesse should appeare to be growen up to the height whereby he might have no other way of restauration but onely to 〈◊〉 to Gods grace in Christ whose power overcomes all the power of sinne V. 21. Unto death shewing its
Sam. 4. 21. Psal. 26. 8. and 78. 60. and 106. 20. the covenants namely the severall tokens and seales of the covenant of grace Or the Law of God and the tables thereof Deut. 9. 11. The promises of the Messias and of the spirituall and everlasting goods V. 5. The fathers namely those reverend patriarches Abraham Isaack and Iacob and others who have had so many singular priviledges and are perpetuall patternes and lights of the church over all or over all things V. 6. Not as though here ought to bee supplied Though I see the body of my nation fallen from their right of beeing Gods people which causeth this extreame grief in me yet will I not inferre thereupon that God hath failed in his promises of grace which he had made vnto them because I Know that they were directed and are appropriated to the spirituall Israel onely by faith and not to the bodyly Israel by corporall generation of Israel namely issued corporally from Iacob or of the people of Israel V. 7. But in as the promises which Godmade to Abraham to continue his covenant and the blessed seed in his posteritie did not belong to all his posteritie in differentlie but unto Isaack alone excluding Ismael and others to the promises of Gods grace in the Messias are not for all those which descended from Israel but for these who are answering to Isaack in that manner as is hereafter set downe V. 8. Of the promise namely that are made 〈◊〉 and are brought forth by a speciall grace of God which unfoldeth it self first in a singular and voluntarie promise and then in a powerfull and true effect As Isaack was born by miracle whereas Ismael was borne by the accustomed course of nature V. 9. For this namely this appeares in Isaacks generation which ought to be the blessed branch for whose generation God made this promise which he performed by his almighty power Rom. 4. 21. having made none for Ismael V. 10 And not only because that it might seeme in the example of Isaack and Ismael that the preferring of the one was because he was borne of the lawfull vife and the other of aco 〈…〉 the Apostle confirmes that which he had spoken by the example of of two twinnes borne of the same father and mother and yet distinguished by Gods soveraigns will in the acceptation of them in his covenant and in the continuance of the body of the holy stock V. 11. Neither having done God considering them in their natural state wherein they were both the sonnes of Adam equally sinners and corrupt having done no actuall good nor evil one more then the other which should merit this distiuction that the purpose God pronounced this his decree concerning the preferring of the younger before the elder whilest they were yet both in the wombe that it might appeare it was grounded vpon his absolute pleasure and will and not upon any merit or desert of theirs according to the election namely by which he had determined to chuse the one and leave the other not of workes namely not by vertue of any observation of condition depending upon mans will which might have made the decree wavering and uncertain being that man is variable in all things which he doth but of him namely Gods power who in time executs by his calling that which from everlasting he had determined by his election that calleth he that by his almight power causeth what he pleaseth to be born and have being which of it self is nothing nor cannot make it self See Rom 4. 17. V. 12. Shall serve namely shall lose his right of first borne in signe that the part and right of being the blessed stocke shall be taken away from him and his posterity and shall be in the world as a servant in the fathers house in comparison of Iacob who shall be as the true sonne and heire V. 13. As it is that word of serving must hee expounded by this other passe for a privation from Gods fatherly love V. 14. Is there namely in not shewing equall favour 〈◊〉 persons which are equally sinnefull and wretched V. 15. For he saith by this passage it appeares that the difference which God makes betweene men being a worke of meere grace and mercy is without any obligation that in it he hath no regard of mans merit Of whom I will of whomsoever I will have it according to my will and pleasure V. 16. It is not seeing that the election is of pure mercy i● cannot bee attributed to any will or endeavour of man V. 17. For the same appeares by the rejection of some persons as of Pharaoh a professed enemy of God whom God had determined to leave in his natural malignity ●●●hout correcting it by his grace that passing to the supreme degree he might combat him by his power to the greater manifestation of his glory The scripture namely God in the scripture Raised thee willingly suffered thee to bee borne in the world exalted to the kingdome and effect thy wickednesse against me V. 18. Hardneth not mollifying his rebellious heart inclining it to obedience whereby all those objects which God outwardly makes use of though excellent good and most holy are by man converted to ●●●gmentation of hardnesse and rebellion V. 19. Why an objection either of a carnall mans ignorance who doth not apprehend the Apostles true meaning in this aforesaid will of God and 〈◊〉 of man or of a reprobates rage who im 〈…〉 his perdition to God because hee hath not pardoned him his sinne which is the onely true cause thereof Finde fault with those that are hardened by his will for to punish them V. 20. Nay but to answere such false opinions and wicked objections of the reprobate it is sufficient to say that the worke of grace is of meere free will t'wherefore if he doth deprive some of it hee both them no wrong seeing hee is not bound to it and that he proceeds against them in justice for their so of which this privation is no cause Made me no● that God doth indeed make a man a sinner or that hee is author of sin but by this word of making is here meant the appointing of mans last end according to the state which hee is in either of grace to life or of sin in which God hath left him to death See Prov. 16. 4. V. 21. The clay which here represents humane na●e in its universall corruption there being no other difference in it but onely what God makes by his free ●ill and destination Vnto honour for honourable ●ses as vessells to ear and drinke in vessels for ornament c. which is correspondent to the end of eternal glorie To dishonour namely for filthie and base 〈◊〉 which is correspondent to the reprobates everlasting ignominie Isa. 66. 24. Dan. 12. 2. V. 22. What if God is there any cause of contending 〈◊〉 God seeing that in the most free exercise of his Soveraigne right in saving the
Gospel preached by Christ man and by the Apostles The world he ●als the state of the world ●o being by Christ restored from its ruine and spoil which through sin and death had befallen it as it had been foretold by the Prophets that it should be under the Messias the accomplishment whereof shall not be till his last comming Isai 65. 17. and 66. 22. Rom. 8. 20. Rev. 21. 1. V. 6. But one that is to say he hath subjected it to man in Christs person as it appeares by that passage of the Psalmist What is man See the Exposition of this upon Psal. 8. 4. V. 7. Thou madest him Though the humane nature which Christ hath taken upon him of it selfe be inferiour to the Angels who are spiritual creatures more sublime potent and glorious than man yet the universall Kingdom is attributed to Christ Man and not to the Angels A little this if it have a relation to Christ signifies the time of his humiliation V. 8. For in that in this universalitie of things which are subject to Christs Kingdom the Angels themselves are comprehended But now though for the present we do not yet see the accomplishment of this Kingdom the Church being as yet not wholly gathered together nor glorified nor joyned with God nor all her enemies beaten down and destroyed yet Christ reigneth powerfully and fulfilleth every thing from time to time according to his will and pleasure V. 9. We see by the high effects made manifest and considered by faith For the See upon Phil. 2. 9. That he now he proceeds to set down why Christ was made man namely that he might suffer death for sinfull men By the grace which is the first cause of salvation by Christ which he gives unto man for the price of his redemption and likewise accepts of it for satisfaction of his debt Should taste should die and should feel the extreme paines of death as it is joyned with Gods wrath and with his curse upon sin for which he had made himselfe a suretie and therefore is likened to a bitter cup Matth. 20. 22. and 26. 39. 42. For every man namely for every one of them whom his father hath bestowed upon him in which is comprehended the universaltie of his bodie and of his Kingdom John 6. 45. and 10. 15. and 12. 32. Rom. 5. 11. V. 10. It became it was a thing conformable and agreeable with his justice that Christ should make satisfaction for the sinnes of men Him for namely God the Father who is the soveraigne Authour and cause of all things and chiefly of the Elects salvation to whose glorie all things ought to be directed and referred as to their last end Rom. 11. 36. whereupon for the glorie of Christ our sureties great righteousnesse and of his infinite mercie towards men this meanes of salvation hath been most fitting and convenient To make the Italian to consecrate● namely to make him perfectly fitting and sufficient to be the Authour of eternal salvation to the Elect by the sacrifice of himselfe Isai 53. 10. and by it install him in his Kingdom a terme taken from the ancient consecrations of Priests Exod. 29. The Captain the Italian the Princé namely Christ Jesus who by his Priesthood hath obtained right to everlasting salvation for Gods chilrden and by his Kingdom brings them to the perfect fruition of it V. 11. For As he had in the former verse declared that it was convenient that Gods justice should receive satisfaction so now he further sheweth that it ought to be done by one who was likewise of humane nature as he was to whom the Law was given He that sanctifieth namely Christ according to the flesh in whom and by whom the guilt of sin hath been expiated and the corruption purified And they namely Gods elect Are all are all come from one father namely Adam V. 13. I will put my trust because David in all that eighteenth Psalme was the figure of Christ these words of the Psalme also ought to be applied to Christ to shew that he is not onely become Man but hath also taken the condition of Man upon him by being subject to the Law and bound to fulfill it upon confidence of the reward promised therefore Gal. 4. 4. Or to a man in a lowly estate weaknesse and miserie who did not for the present enjoy those goods which he expected and depended upon God and craved for assistance from his power and rested upon him And again in this passage Isai his children were also a figure of Christ being given by God for a token and assurance of a temporal deliverance which was the figure of the Everlasting which is promised together with it Isai 8. 10. V. 14. The children namely Isai his children Are partakers the Italian were partakers were very men subject to the same chances and dangers and were tokens pledges of a deliverance and not Angels nor glorified men He also that is to say Christ hath likewise been very man as we all are to be not onely the signe or token but also the Authour and Foundation of salvation Through death that by it having expiated the elects sinnes and appeased Gods wrath he might disannull the devils power over them which he exercises onely to death and destruction as minister of Gods wrath upon sin V. 15. Them the Italian all them this must be restrained onely to the elect as verse 9. Rom. 11. 32. Col. 1. 20. Through fear who even in this world carried the devils bonds and prison in their consciences by the terrours of everlasting death the true fore●unners of hell torments which was figured by the besieged Jewes terrour Isai 7. 2. to whom Isai with his children were sent to encourage them Isai 8. 12. 18. V. 16. For verily He confirmes that which he had said verse 14. of Christs communion in the selfe same humane nature for it is never said in the Scripture that he took upon him the nature of Angels in a personall union as he is foretold and represented true Man the Son of David and of Abraham V. 17. Wherefore seéing he hath made himselfe true man to save us it behoved him also to put on all our conditions not onely the natural ones but also those that are come upon us by reason of sin excepting sin it selfe That he might be that being touched with a lively feeling of the miseries of humane nature he might the rather be induced to free it from them by the sacrifice of himselfe and by his intercession wherein he should shew great mercie towards men and perfect loyaltie and obedience to God in performing the taske which was imposed upon him Pertaining to every Priest being a M●diatour between God and men to offer unto God sacrifices prayers and intercessions and to do all other religious actions Heb. 5. 1. and to bring men tidings of Gods peace and grace and to blesse and instruct them in his Name See Exod. 18. 19. V. 18. For