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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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serve our neighbours Vers. 22. Wives submit your selves unto your own Husbands as unto the Lord. Now follow the oeconomical Precepts 1 That Wives should bee in subjection to their own Husbands chastly sincerely and in lawful things The reasons whereof are four As unto the Lord Reason 1. Because Christ commanded that the Wife should bee subject to her Husband and accounts of that subjection as if shee yeelded obedience to himself and in like manner looks upon the Wives rebellion against her Husband as rebellion against himself Vers. 23. For the Husband is the Head of the Wife even as Christ is the Head of the Church and hee is the Saviour of the body Reas. 2. Because the Husband is in honour and authority over the Wife as the head is over the body Therefore it is meet that the Wife ●●ould bee in subjection to him As Christ Reas. 3. Because 〈◊〉 will have the Husbands authority over the Wife to ●ee a similitude of Christs authority over the Church And hee is Reas. 4. The same similitude is illustrated As Christ is the Head of the Church for its good so the Husband is the Head of the Wife for her good whom hee ought in all things to defend ch●rish and comfort And as it is expedient for the Church to bee obedient to Christ so it is for the Wife to bee obedient to her Husband Vers. 24. Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the Wives bee to their own Husbands in every thing From these reasons hee inferrs the conclusion that it is necessary for the Wife to bee obedient to her Husband in all things which hinder not her due subjection unto God and Christ. Vers. 25. Husbands love your Wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it Prec 2. Which is given to men that they should love their Wives the reasons thereof are five As Reas. 1. From the example of Christs love towards the Church which love the Apostle commends from these four marks 1 That Christ out of his love offered himself for the Church which was then lost Vers. 26. That hee might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word 2 That hee loved his Church and offered himself for it to the end that hee might sanctifie it or of a prophane and impure Church make it a holy one Washing 3 That Christ doth effectually cleanse his Church by virtue of his blood and of his free promise which hee applies to us by the ordinary means of Baptism and of the Word as by instruments of his Spirit ordained for the confirmation of Faith and the communication of virtue Vers. 27. That hee might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinckle nor any such thing but that it should bee holy and without blemish 4 That hee hath loved his Church for this end that hee might at length present it glorious in Heaven without any mark or token either of sin or misery and hee will ever prosecute this his work till hee hath brought it to pass Vers. 28. So ought men to love their Wives as their own bodies hee that loveth his Wife loveth himself Reas. 2. Of the Precept given to men touching loving their Wives Because Wives are the bodies of their own Husbands according to that Law of God They two shall bee one flesh Hee that loveth Reas. 3. Because hee which loveth his Wife loveth himself and performs the office of love unto himself for that love of a mans own Wife doth every way redound to the Husbands good Vers. 29. For no man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it even as the Lord the Church Reas. 4. Because it is as unnatural to a Wife and good Husband not to love his Wife as it is to hate his own flesh and it is as agreeable to reason to favour and make much of his Wife as it is to regard his own flesh As Hee confirms and illustrates this reason by the example of Christ which hee wills us alwaies to have in our eye as the most perfect example of love Vers. 30. For wee are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Hee proves that Christ loved us as his own flesh and that it was not possible for him to hate us but hee was as it were constrained out of love to maintain and cherish us because wee are members of his body flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone that is wee are as nearly joyned to him as Eve was to Adam for what Eve owed to Adam in the flesh wee owe to Christ in the regeneration of our spirit and much more In the forming of Eve Adam lost onely one rib but in the reforming of the Church Christ lost his life Onely the matter of Eve was from Adam but the Church hath from Christ its natural formation and spiritual reformation in respect of both the body and soul of every member Vers. 31. For this cause shall a man leave his Father and Mother and shall bee joyned unto his Wife and they two shall bee one flesh Reas. 5. Where hee proves both that the Church owes its beginning to Christ and that Husbands ought to love their Wives even from the institution of marriage which requires that by reason of the streight knot between Husband and Wife a man shall leave Father and Mother and bee joyned to his Wife and they two shall bee united into one flesh by the bond of wedlock by which they now have a mutual right to and power over one another the words of this institution have a typical sense for God in that saying Gen. 2.23 Thou art flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone intended to represent the union of Christ and the Church and to shew that wee are bone of Christs bone and flesh of Christs flesh that is that wee are most nearly united to Christ because in the speech of Adam to Eve it was prefigured that Christ as hee was one flesh with us and made us one flesh with himself by a spiritual wedlock did as it were leave his own Father laying aside after a manner that glory which hee had with the Father abasing himself when hee was in the form of God and taking upon him the form of a servant Also it was prefigured that Christ should leave Mary his Mother that by dying hee might buy the Church to bee his Spouse with which hee would bee one flesh Vers. 32. This is a great mystery but I speak concerning Christ and the Church The Apostle viewing this last thing not the carnal wedlock but the union of Christ with the Church calls it a great mystery and lest any one should otherwise understand his saying hee signifies in express words that hee doth not speak this of the mystery touching the carnal marriage of Husband and Wife but concerning the spiritual conjunction of Christ and the Church which is made by virtue of
as the body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so also is Christ. Argum. 8. Christ Mystical or Christ is one Body with the Church consisting of many members and they instructed with variety of gifts Therefore as in the humane so in the Mystical Body there ought to bee concord in the use of gifts Vers. 13. For by one Spirit are wee all baptized into one body whether wee bee Jews or Gentiles whether wee bee bond or free and have been all made to drink into one Spirit Argum. 9. All the faithful are joyned together in the Sacrament of Baptism and the Lords Supper or the union of all the Faithful into one Church and partaking of one life in one body and one Spirit is signified in the Sacraments Therefore you ought not to disagree amongst your selves about the diversity of gifts Vers. 14. For the body is not one member but many 15. If the foot shall say Because I am not the hand I am not of the body Is it therefore not of the body 16. And if the ear shall say Because I am not the eye I am not of the body Is it therefore not of the body Argum. 10. Seeing the condition of the body requires necessarily plurality of members and by consequence diversity it will follow that the meanest offices in the least gifts are as well of the body as the most excellent offices and gifts And if they should exclude themselves they would not do less foolishly than if the foot should deny that it was the hand or the ear deny that it was the eye and for this cause should conclude that it is not of the body Therefore there ought to bee no dissention amongst you because of the diversity of gifts Vers. 17. If the whole body were an eye where were the hearing If the whole were hearing where were the smelling 18. But now hath God set the members every one of them in the body as it hath pleased him 19. And if they were all one member where were the body 20. But now are they many members yet but one body Argum. 11. Even as if the body was one member three inconveniences would follow 1. The rest of the members should bee excluded and the more noble senses ver 17. 2. The change should bee made contrary to the wise dispensation of God who hath otherwise appointed diversity of members ver 18. 3. The change should bee contrary to the nature of an organical body for the very organical body should bee destroyed ver 19. Because God hath made one organical body of many members ver 20. So in Ecclesiastical Functions if there was but one Function three inconveniences would ensue 1. The other offices would bee extinct 2. The dispensation of God would bee destroyed 3. The Organical Church it self would bee overthrown which now consists of many offices united together into one body Therefore concord and agreement is to bee regarded Vers. 21. And the eye cannot say to the hand I have no need of thee nor again the head to the feet I have no need of you 22. Nay much more those members of the body which seem to bee more feeble are necessary Argum. 12. As in a natural body the superiour and more excellent members cannot bee without the inferiour which are most necessary therefore they are friendly each to other so it is in Ecclesiastical functions therefore ought they to bee assisting one to another Vers. 23. And those members of the body which wee think to bee less honourable upon those wee bestow more abundant honour and our uncomely parts have more abundant comeliness 24. For our comly parts have no need but God hath tempered the body together having given more abundant honour to that part which lacked Argum. 13. As in the body natural that there may bee an agreement those members which are more infirm are most honoured and necessary by the appointment of God so ought it to bee in Ecclesiastical functions Therefore in the chusing of Deacons rather than Pastors care must bee had that other things being alike men of the fairest fortunes may bee elected for the adorning of this inferiour office Vers. 25. That there should bee no Schism in the body but that the members should have the same care one of another Argum. 14. As the Natural body would come to ruine by Schism if the members should strive among themselves and should not regard each other So in Ecclesiastical functions Therefore concord is to bee highly regarded Vers. 26. And whether one member suffer all the members suffer with it or one member bee honoured all the members rejoyce with it 27. Now yee are the body of Christ and members in particular Argum. 15. As amongst the superiour and inferiour members of the body there is a sympathy in joy and grief so it ought to bee amongst the Governours and Ministers of the Church Therefore the greatest accord Hee gives the Reason of it Because yee saith hee are the body of Christ and members in particular i. e. such as ought as members to agree with the whole body the Church and amongst your selves And here is the common Apodosis of the whole similitude taken from the body from vers 12. to this 27. verse Vers. 28. And God hath set some in the Church first Apostles secondarily Prophets thirdly Teachers after that miracles then gifts of healings helps governments diversities of tongues Now in order hee reckons up the Ministers of the Church as much as might bee sufficient to restrain the ambition and envy that was among the Corinthians The Authority of Paul by name and of the other Apostles was prejudiced by the subtil and Eloquent Doctors amongst the Corinthians as is manifest in the second Epistle Therefore hee asserts the dignity of the Apostles in the first place as those that were appointed of God to lay the foundation of all the Churches Concerning the Evangelists and Prophets extraordinary either there was no question amongst them or the dignity of the Ministers of the Gospel extraordinary being asserted in the vindication of the Apostolical office concerning the authority and dignity of the Evangelists and Prophets extraordinary whose Ministery was common to all the Churches and subservient to the Apostles it was manifest and apparent enough Secondly Hee determines concerning Prophets by which name as shall appear chap. 14. hee understands Pastors who applied in their Sermons the doctrine to usefulness whose gift was the word of wisdome as verse 8. In the third place hee names Teachers who although they were not eloquent and prudent for the application of the doctrine to all the uses of the Church yet they had a word of knowledge that they were able to apply the general Doctrine to the capacity of the Church These are the functions which were imployed in the Word and Doctrine and therefore the more eminent In the fourth place hee sets down those who in the
The solidity of this his confidence or perswasion is confirmed by seven Signs all which did stir up his mind to faithfulness Sign 1. Is a desire of departing out of this life that hee might obtain immortality or bee endued instead of a corruptible body with immortal glory An Argument certainly of a mind conscious of its sincerity and certified of future happiness Vers. 3. If so bee that being clothed wee shall not bee found naked Hee limits this sign and priviledge of being endued with future glory That it may belong to those onely who departing out of this life to an immortal and immutable state are not found naked i. e. not destitute of that true covering whereby our filthy nakedness is covered which covering is Christ or Christs Righteousness which can alone cover our sins wherein our nakedness consists This therefore is the second Sign of his solid desire of going out of this life and of a mind very conscious of the faithful administration of his office that hee knew himself to bee in the number of those to whom alone the certainty of being cloathed upon with glory belonged to wit of those who are cloathed already with that covering whereby the foul nakedness of sinners is covered i. e. the Righteousness ●f Christ with which except a man bee cloathed in this life hee shall bee found naked in the other and shall remain naked for ever Vers. 4. For wee that are in this Tabernacle do groan being burdened not for that wee would bee uncloathed but cloathed upon that mortality might bee swallowed up of life Sign 3. That the desire of his departing this life arising from this confidence was holy i. e. it was derived not so much from the weariness of natural life but from the hope of a better This is that which hee saith although hee groan and bee sorrowful in his body yet hee would not bee uncloathed of this body but that this body might bee cloathed upon with immortality and that mortality might bee swallowed up of immortality Vers. 5. Now hee that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is God who also hath given unto us the earnest of this Spirit Sign 4. That this desire is not natural but the supernatural work of God stirred up and formed in the hearts of his own by the special work of God It is God that hath wrought formed and created us for this thing His confidence therefore is solid Who also Sign 5. That this confidence of a better life is sealed by the earnest of the Spirit having as it were a taste and experience of that life in the peace and joy of the Spirit i. e. in the first fruits of that happiness which is to come Vers. 6. Therefore wee are alwaies confident knowing that whilst wee are at home in the body wee are absent from the Lord. Sign 6. That this confidence is firmly grounded in the certain perswasion of his nigher access to the Lord which should bee vouchsafed to him after death when doubtless even as in one house hee should dwell with God who now in the body is as absent from the Lord. Vers. 7. For wee walk by Faith not by sight 8. Wee are confident I say and willing rather to bee absent from the body and to bee present with the Lord. Sign 7. Confirming the former that hee knoweth himself to walk by Faith in this life and not by sight of the beatifical vision which abideth for us in the life to come who in our sense are absent from the Lord while wee are present i● the body Therefore more vehemently and confidently hee did both desire and chuse to go to the Lord rather than to remain in the body Vers. 9. Wherefore wee labour that whether present or absent wee may bee accepted of him That this confidence confirmed by so many signs of sincerity was the impellent cause to his faithfulness in his Ministery hee now expresly declares Because whatsoever change towards life or death did happen to him out of this confidence hee did indeavour to please God with no less diligence than those which contend for honour that both in this life or pilgrimage and in his death or approaching to God hee might bee made acceptable to him Vers. 10. For wee must all appear before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done whether it bee good or evil His second impellent cause to faithfulness in his Ministery is the consideration of punishments and rewards which abide every one according to their works at the last judgement in which God will inflict punishments upon the wicked but to the godly whose good works after their sins are pardoned onely remain hee shall render rewards Vers. 11. Knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord wee perswade men but wee are made manifest unto God and I trust also wee are manifest in your consciences He shews by calling God and the consciences of the Corinthians to bee his witnesses that this Argument hath urged him to faithfulness in the Ministery For the apprehension of that future terrible judgement hath affected this that he exhorted all to reconciliation with God by Faith Vers. 12. For we commend not our selves again unto you but give you occasion to glory on our behalf that you may have somewhat to answer them which glory in appearance and not in heart He solves two Objections which his adversaries may object against him so earnestly glorying of his faithfulness Object 1. Thou O Paul gloriest some one may say whilst thou commendest thy self Hee answers that hee did not say these things for that end but that the Corinthians may have that for his defence whereby to repress their vain and boasting Teachers who did diminish the authority of the Apostle amongst them and did glory in the presence of men otherwise than their conscience and the truth of the matter did permit For they being destitute of piety or matter of glorying in heart they gloried in their adulterated eloquence Vers. 13. For whether wee bee besides our selves it is to God or whether wee bee sober it is for your cause Object 2. But O Paul thou art besides thy self who doest so openly confute such Teachers Hee answers that hee did not dispute but give a reason of the fact as it did become a wise man to wit that hee uttered those things for the glory of God and their salvation For sayes hee if I praise my Ministery which seems to bee the part of one besides himself I do it for the Glory of God lest my Gospel should bee undervalued If I speak humbly of my self as sober men use to do I do it for your good Vers. 14. For the Love of Christ constraineth us because wee thus judge that if one d●ed for all then were all dead The third impellent cause to faithfulness containing a reason of the former saying is his love wherewith hee loved Christ which did cast
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
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
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
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
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
are bound to follow after piety and the profession of grace Therefore c. Do not fashion Argum. 4. Seeing it cannot consist with the obedience of children that ye fashion your selves to the former lusts which ruled in you before conversion Vers. 15. But as he which hath called you 〈◊〉 holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation 16. Because it is written Be ye holy for I am holy Argum. 5. Ye ought to answer your holy vocation in all kinde of holy conversation Go forward therefore c. As Argum. 6. Confirming the former There ought to be some similitude betwixt you and the Holy God who hath called you Therefore ought ye to labour after this conformity He confirms this Argument from the testimony of Scripture Lev. 11.44 Mat. 5.17 Vers. 17. And if you call on the Father who without respect of persons judgeth according to every mans work pass the time of your sojourning here in fear Argum. 7. God is the Judge of every mans works and more severely requires holiness from those that draw nigh to him and call him their Father Therefore ye ought to pass the time of your sojourning here in this life in the fear of God Vers. 18. Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers Argum. 8. Ye are redeemed from all manner of vain conversation in Legal purifications separated from the thing signified and placed in humane traditions which are of no value although it may be commended to you by the example of your Fathers and by tradition Therefore unless ye would frustrate your redemption ye ought to endeavour after true piety and renounce a vain conversation Redeemed Argum. 9. By redemption ye are the hired servants of God that ye may no longer live according to your own will or the world or the Devil but according to the will of him that redeemed you Therefore ye ought to live in the faith and obedience of Christ. Vers. 19. But with the precious blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot Argum. 10. The blood of Christ the Son of God dying represented by the typical Lamb is of so much excellency that it far exceeds the most precious things in this world Therefore ye ought to stand in the grace of Christ and endeavour after holiness unless ye will vilifie this price Vers. 20. Who verily was fore-ordained before the foundation of the world but was manifest in the last times for you Argum. 11. Although Christ from eternity was fore-ordained to the work of Redemption yet he was not manifested until the last times and that especially for your sakes who were even as the lost sheep of Israel Therefore ye are chiefly bound to glorifie God by your holiness Vers. 21. Who by him do believe in God that raised him up from the dead and gave him glory that your faith and hope might be in God Argum. 12. Christ was not onely manifested for your good that are believers but also by Christ or the merit and operation of Christ that same faith whereby ye believe in God is obtained and produced in you Therefore it is meet that ye should live to God in holiness Hath raised God by raising Christ the Redeemer from the dead and by glorifying him with that glory which he had with God from all eternity hath demonstrated unto you and to all the world that Christ is truly the Son of God or truly God that your faith whereby ye believe in Christ might be found to be faith in God and so the solidness of your faith might appear to you for your greater comfort and glory Therefore ye faithful Hebrews who live after Christ is risen are so much the more bound to follow after faith and holiness that ye may please God Vers. 22. Seeing ye have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit unto unfeigned love of the brethren see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently The Second Exhortation more especially to brotherly love There are three branches of this Exhortation Branch 1. That they love fervently not coldly not remisly as if they were ready upon small cause to hate 2. That they love with a pure heart endeavouring the good of one another not onely aiming at private advantage 3. That without hypocrisie they follow after brotherly love loving not onely in word and tongue but shewing love in deed without dissimulation without deceit Souls There are three Arguments of the Exhortation Argum. 1. It is to be presupposed that ye being justified by faith in desire in purpose and an inchoate endeavour through the virtue of the Holy Spirit have purified your souls to the sincere love of the brethren Therefore ye ought exceedingly to love one another Vers. 23. Being born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever Argum. 2. This brotherhood of believers is more excellent than that which is after the flesh in as much as it doth not rise from natural generation but from spiritual regeneration which requires a more firm mutual and excellent love Therefore ye ought to love one another fervently Word Argum. 3. Confirming the former This fraternity of believers as it hath its rise from an incorruptible principle so it will never perish The word of God which is the seed of our regeneration is not corruptible like the seed of natural generation Therefore ye ought exceedingly and carefully to love one another Vers. 24. For all flesh is as grass and all the glory of man as the flower of grass The grass withereth and the flower thereof falleth away He confirms both parts of the comparison from the testimony of Scripture And first he proves the corruptibility of natural seed from Isa. 40.6 which declares the glory of all flesh and consequently all relation of fraternity founded in flesh to be corruptible Vers. 25. But the word of the Lord endureth for ever And this is the word which by the Gospel is preached unto you He proves that the seed of Regeneration is incorruptible from the testimony of the same Prophet Isaiah because the Word of the Lord abides for ever But he affirms that this is spoken touching the word of the Gospel as the matter stands because the preaching of the truth concerning salvation by Christ vouchsafed to believers is operative for the bringing of believers to life eternal Therefore it is incorruptible CHAP. II. HE proceeds in his Exhortation to duties of Piety and Holiness This Chapter contains four Exhortations Vers. 1. Wherefore laying aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies and envies and evil speakings The first Exhortation is to love and desire of the Divine Word which he had of late commended There are two branches of the Exhortation The first touching the shunning and laying aside the vices that are familiar to corrupt nature
conscience which in every condition can inwardly give you a good testimony Therefore ought yee to follow after these virtues They may bee ashamed Argum. 8. By the following after these virtues yee will stop the mouthes of the enemies of the Gospel who lye in wait to defame you and speak ill of you as of evil doers Vers. 17. For it is better if the will of God be so that yee suffer for well doing than for evil doing Argum. 9. For it is far better that yee following after these virtues should be afflicted for well doing if the will of God be so than for doing evil For from hence ar●s●s praise and commendation from the other judgement and disgrace Therefore yee ought to follow these virtues Ve●s 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that hee might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit Argum. 10. Christ hath once suffered for the expiating of sins Therefore yee Beleevers being exempted from the punishment of sins are obliged if God will so have it to suffer troubles for the following of these virtues Iust Argum. 11. Christ being just and innocent hath suffered for us being unjust Therefore wee being beleevers who are not altogether innocent are bound for righteousness sake not to refuse the suffering of what God will have us suffer That he might bring us Argum. 12. Christ the just one hath suffered that hee might confirm us being justified and suffering afflictions to himself and bring us to God Therefore beleevers are bound to follow him in the pursute of virtue and patience of afflictions for weldoing Quickened Argum. 13. Seeing that the issue of Christs sufferings was happy because although he is dead by reason of the infirmity of our flesh yet he rose from the dead by the virtue and power of his Spirit or Deity ye beleevers suffering afflictions for Christ and his righteousness without doubt shall also obtain a joyfull issue out of your sufferings and death it self Therefore ye ought to follow after these virtues although for that cause yee bee afflicted Vers. 19. By which also hee went and preached unto the Spirits in prison 20. Which sometimes were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the days of Noah while the Ark was a preparing wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water 21. The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us not the putting away of the filth of the flesh but the answer of a good conscience toward God by the resurrection of Iesus Christ. Argum. 14. The spirits or soules of those unbeleeving and disobedient men are now in prison or hell to which Christ by his spirit in times past by Noah the preacher of righteousness came and preached repentance and following after righteousness because in times past to wit in the time of Noah they were disobedient abusing Gods long suffering towards them whilst the Ark was preparing Therefore it is expedient for you Hebrews to obey this exhortation to the study of virtue lest yee bee involved in the same punishment Few Argum. 15. As those few soules which were in the Ark were saved in the deluge of waters by the Ark So all beleevers being baptized are preserved that they perish not in any afflictions by baptism which answers to the Type of the Ark Therefore yee that follow after righteousness ought to fear nothing although yee suffer for righteousness sake Not the filth of the flesh Hee explains this argument shewing that hee doth not understand the outward baptism which consists in the washing away of the filth of the body but the inward baptism which consists in the washing away of sins or the filthiness of the soul the sign and proper effect whereof is the engagement of a good conscience towards God or that confidence which a good conscience purged by Faith hath towards God by and through the resurrection of Christ. Hee also adds Argum. 16. Now yee are endued with that confidence which a good conscience purged by Faith hath towards God by and through the resurrection of Christ Therefore there is no cause that for the following after the Scriptures yee should fear afflictions Hee adds by the resurrection of Christ partly because in Christs resurrection was declared the sentence of God absolving us in Christ from sinne and death partly because Christ being raised from the dead hath powerfully perfected those things in and for beleevers which by his death hee merited and obtained for them Vers. 22. Who is gone into Heaven and is on the right hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him Argum. 17. Confirming the former and also the exhortation to the following after virtue although for that cause afflictions were born Christ the Author of our salvation is lifted up into Heaven to the highest glory of ruling over all things and obtain supream and everlasting power over all Creatures not any of the Angels excepted Therefore yee Beleevers ought strongly to prosecute the study of virtue against all dangers and terrours being assured of your salvation because you have such a Saviour in Heaven CHAP. IV. HEE here prosecutes the same Argument which hee handled in the former Chapter There are two parts of the Chapter in the first are contained Exhortations to holiness to vers 12. The other is consolatory against persecutions to the end The exhortations to holiness are six The first is more general to vers 7. the rest more especial Vers. 1. Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves likewise with the same mind for hee that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin The Arguments to holiness in general are seven which that they may be the better conceived wee must maintain that Christ hanging on the Cross hath after four manner of waies acted in our behalf First That hee judicially representing us and bearing our person did bear the guilt of our sins and punishment due to them 2. That hee being a Surety for us did take upon himself the mortifying or crucifying of our old man by the virtue of his crucifixion 3. Hee set forth himself an efficacious example to us whereto wee might conform our selves in the denying our selves and renouncing all things which might hinder us in our progress towards Heaven 4. As a Surety Advocate Patron Father Husband Head and common person hee did binde us with many bonds to deaden us to sin and to use all means whereby that might be effected These presupposed the following Arguments more strongly binde Argum. 2. Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh and publickly acted in our behalf after those foresaid waies Therefore yee beleeving Hebrews ought to arm your selves with this meditation of Faith against all temptations that yee may dye to the lusts of the corrupt flesh Who hath suffered Argum. 2. Confirming the former from the judicial uniting of Beleevers
Diotrephes who endeavours to have the preheminence over all the rest of his fellows may undervalue both mee and my Letters of commendation Vers. 10. Wherefore if I come I will remember his deeds which hee doth prating against us with malicious words and not content therewith neither doth hee himself receive the brethren and forbiddeth them that would and casteth them out of the Church The Apostle adviseth him that hee will deal with this ambitious lover of preheminence before the Church when hee comes and gives five reasons of his purpose Reas. 1. Because Diotrephes did many evil deeds 2. Because hee did prate against the Apostles with malicious words and namely against Iohn whom he knew to be an enemy to ambition and humane Episcopacy creeping into the Church through the ambition and devices of these kind of men 3. Because hee did neither entertain nor did bestow any kinde of respect upon the true Christians that held fast the Doctrine of the Apostles in all things 4. Because by his tyrannical injunctions and constitutions threatning excommunication and casting out of the Church hee prohibits who entertained and received those Preachers with all Christian offices that were 〈◊〉 by the Apostles if they did contrary to his commands 5. Because hee did imperiously excommunicate those that transgressed his commands and did entertain this kind of Brethren Vers. 11. Beloved follow not that which is evil but that which is good Hee that doth good is of God but hee that doth evil hath not seen God Argum. 9. Thou oughtest not to follow the evil carriage of thy Pastor Diotrephes or obey his wicked commands because this would bee evil and contrary to true Faith and love towards God but thou oughtest to follow that onely which is good and agreeable to sound Doctrine Therefore go on in exercising the duties of love Hee that doth good Argum. 10. Confirming the formee hee that indeavours to do good is born of God but hee that doth evil is void of the true and saving knowledge of God or faith in him Therefore go thou on to do good that thou mayest approve thy self to bee of God Vers. 12. Demetrius hath good report of all men and of the Truth it self yea and wee also bear record and yee know that our record is true Argum. 11. Thou oughtest rather to imitate Demetrius his kindness towards the Saints and poor strangers of whom all and the very truth of the thing shewing it self in deeds gives testimony and I my self who am not wont to affirm unless it be those things which are true and I know by experience do give testimony of his praise Therefore imitate him and go on in the duties of Charity Vers. 13. I had many things to write but I will not with Ink and Pen write unto thee 14. But I trust I shall shortly see thee and wee shall speak face to face The conclusion remains wherein are two Articles In the first hee excuses the shortness of his Epistle hoping to see and talk face to face with him Vers. 15. Peace bee to thee Our Friends salute thee Greet the friends by name In the second Article 1. Hee salutes Gaius by wishing peace to him i. e. the blessing of God in all things 2. Hee doth hearty commendations to Gaius from his friends viz. the Saints who were his true friends 3. Hee wills him to salute in his name particularly and by name all his friends i. e. who loved him The Epistle of IUDE the Apostle Analytically Expounded THE CONTENTS CErtain masters of Heresies arose who abused the grace of God to the liberty of the flesh and under the pretence of the Gospel let loose the reigns to all manner of wickedness and plainly mocked at the holy conversation of true Beleevers as of simple Idiots which were ignorant of true Christian liberty Against these pestilent inventions God stirred up Peter the Apostle and this Jude who is here and Act. 1. called the Brother of James the less called Alpheus Hee was the Kinsman of our Lord Mat. 13.55 who is named Lebbeus and Thaddeus Mat. 10.3 This our Apostle exhorts the Faithful to whom hee writes that they would constantly stand up for the defence of the Doctrine of the Gospel against false Teachers of whom Peter had warned them 2 Pet. 2. handling the very same Argument There are three parts of this Epistle A Preface vers 1 2. An Exhortation to contend for the true Faith against Impostors to vers 24. The Conclusion in the two last verses Vers. 1. JUde the servant of Iesus Christ and Brother of Iames to them that are sanctified by God the Father and preserved in Iesus Christ and called The Preface contains an inscription and salutation The inscription shews the direction of this Epistle from whom and to whom it was written The writer of this Epistle is 1 described from his name 2 from his Apostolical office under the name of a servant in which title hee more glories than in the natural relation which was betwixt him and Christ the Lord. 3 From the distinction of himself from Iudas the Traitor from whom not onely in his disposition but also in his name hee desired to bee differenced Those to whom hee writes are described from four properties of the Elect. 1 They are in God the Father i. e. reconciled by Christ they have communion or an holy fellowship with God 2 They are sanctified by the special operation and inhabitation of the Holy Ghost 3 Preserved by the gift of perseverance from Christ the Redeemer who suffers none of his to bee taken out of his hand 4 Called not onely with an outward call but with an inward and effectual calling Vers. 2. Mercy unto you and Peace and love be multiplied In his salutation by Apostolical authority hee does not onely wish but applies to the confirmation of their Fait● 1 The Mercy of God which heal● all our evils viz. our sin and misery 2 Peace which comprehends the parts of our Reconciliation and felicity 3 And Love which as the spring of all good things comprehends grace and all those effects which conduce to our sanctification and the compleating of our salvation Hee desires that all these may bee multiplied in respect to the degrees of increase and manifestation in other various effects such as the glory of God and their salvation should require Vers. 3. Beloved when I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common salvation it was needful for mee to write unto you and exhort you that yee should earnestly contend for the Faith which was once delivered unto the Saints The body and substance of the Epistle follows wherein hee propounds the cause and scope of his writing which hee further prosecutes Two Reasons of his writing hee sets down 1 His earnest desire not onely in respect to his office in preaching the Gospel wheresoever occasion was offered but also of writing concerning the common Salvation of the Elect obtained by Christ and by degrees
rest and now hee sheweth the stability of the gripe which the Beleever taketh of these grounds in the similitude of the gripe which a Ships Anchor taketh being cast on good ground In the former Verse by Hope was meant the thing hoped for and laid hold on by Hope In the Relative which in this Verse hee understandeth the Hope which doth lay hold In the similitude of an Anchor cast out of a Ship Hee giveth us to understand 1 That albeit wee have no● gotten full Possession of the Promises in this life yet wee get a gripe of them by Faith and Hope 2. That Hopes gripe is not a slender imagination but solid and strong like the gripe of an Anchor 3. That the Beleever is not exempted from some tossing of trouble and temptations while hee is in this World yea subject rather to the same as a Ship upon the Sea 4. That whatsoever tossing there be yet all is safe The Souls Anchor is cast within the Heaven The Soul is sure 2. Hee giveth the Anchor all good properties It is weighty solid and firm It will not drive nor bow nor break it is so sure and stedfast Again it is sharp and peircing It is entred into that within the Veil that is into Heaven represented by the Sanctuary beyond the Veil And so the ground is good as well as the Anchor to hold all fast Vers. 20. Whither the Fore-runner is for us entred even Iesus made an High-Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedec 2. Hee commendeth our Anchor-ground for this that Christ is there where our Anchor is cast as our Fore-runner In continuing the Comparison and calling Christ our Fore-runner hee bringeth to mind 1. Christ being once in the Ship of the Militant Church tossed and tempted as others albeit without sin 2. That hee is now gone ashore to Heaven where the ship of the Church is seeking to land 3. That his going ashore is as our Fore-runner and so his landing is an evidence of our landing also who are to follow after him 4. That his going before is to make easie our Entry Hee is the Fore-runner for us for our behoof to prepare a place for us 5. That our Anchor is where Christ is and so must be the surer for his being there to hold all fast till hee draw the Ship to the shore 2. Christ is entred into Heaven and made an High-Priest for ever Then 1. CHRIST in Heaven is invested in an office for us 2. His Office is the High-Priesthood The Truth and Substance of the typical Priesthood 3. His Office is for ever and so for the benefit of all Ages that wee now as well as others before us may have the benefit of his intercession 3. Hee is said to be made an High-Priest after his entry in Heaven Then albeit Christ was Priest for his Church from the beginning yet was it never so declared as after his Ascension when hee sent down blessings sensibly upon his Church since which time hee doth so still The Summe of Chap. VII I Brake off my speech of Melchisedec will the Apostle say now I return to him again and in his Excellency will shew you Christs Excellency who is Priest after his order Wee have no more of him in Scripture but what wee finde Gen 14.19 20. And there hee is King and Priest both vers 1. Bearing a mystery in his Name and Office vers 2. Without Father or Mother or end of life as hee standeth in Scripture that hee might resemble Christ vers 3. Acknowledged to be superiour to Abraham by his paying of tythes unto him vers 4. Even as Levi for that same cause is superiour to the Brethren vers 5. Superiour also because hee blessed Abraham vers 6 7. Superiour to Levi for his typical immortality vers 8. And for his taking tythes of Levi in Abrahams loyns vers 9 10. Yea the Priesthood of Levi because imperfect calleth for a Priest of another Order to give perfection which is Christ vers 11 12. And so both the Priesthood and all the Ordinances thereof are abolished by the Messias who behoved to be of another Tribe than Levi vers 13 14. And of another Order also vers 15. Bodily shadows were in the Priesthood of Levi but endless Truth in Christ vers 16. As Davids words do prove vers 17. By which also it is prophesied That Aarons Priesthood shall be disanulled when Christs Priesthood is come because it was not able to do mens turn under the Law as Christs doth under the Gospel vers 18 19. And God obliged not himself to make Aarons Priesthood stand as hee sware to establish Christs vers 20 21. And so the Covenant under the Messias is declared to be better than under Levi vers 22. Again the Priesthood of Levi had sundry Office-bearers but Christ hath none in his Priesthood with himself nor none after himself vers 23 24. Therefore he is able alone to work out our salvation throughly vers 25. For such a Priest have wee need of who needeth not offer up daily his Sacrifice for hee hath offered one and never more vers 26 27. And no wonder for under the Law mortal men might be Priests but under the Gospel onely the Son of God is Priest and that for evermore vers 28. The Doctrine of Chap. VII Vers. 1. For this Melchisedec King of Salem Priest of the most High God who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the Kings and blessed him BY saying FOR hee giveth a reason why hee calleth Christ a Priest after the Order of Melchisedec because such a one was Melchisedec his Type therefore such a one it behoved Christ in Truth and Substance to be as the Type imported hee should be 1. Hee repeateth from Gen. 14.18 19 20. as much as served to resemble any thing in Christ but never a word toucheth hee of Melchisedec's bringing forth of Bread and Wine to Abraham Therefore hee did not account this any typical action having any resemblance of that which was to be done of Christ his Anti-type for then should hee not have failed to mark it seeing hee observeth the mystery of his Name and place of dwelling which is less 2. Melchisedec and the Church in Salem where Melchisedec was Priest were not of Abrahams family Therefore albeit God did chuse Abrahams Family as the Race wherein hee was to continue the ordinary Race of his Church yet had he Churches and Saints beside 3. This meeting of Abraham and entertaining him and his company with Bread and Drink being the exercise of an ordinary virtue sheweth That it is the duty of all men and namely of Kings Great men and Church-men to countenance and encourage according to their place and power those who hazard themselves in Gods service and good causes 4. To come to a particular Comparison of the Type and the Truth 1. As Melchisedec was King and Priest in his Kingdome so is CHRIST King and Priest in his Kingdome both to
care for the Religion and outward conversation of his subjects to the weal of their souls and bodies both amongst men and towards God in this life and hereafter 2. As Melchisedec is the blesser of Abraham the Father of the faithful in the type So is Christ in truth the blesser of Abraham and all the faithful the fountain of all blessing in whom alone every one is blessed who getteth blessing Vers. 2. To whom also Abraham gave a tenth part of all first being by interpretation King of Righteousness and after that also King of Salem which is King of Peace 1. To go on in the Comparison As Melchisedec the Type was honoured by Abrahams paying of Tythes unto him So is Christ to be honoured by all Abrahams children by giving of their Substance and worldly Goods what is sufficient to maintain the honour of his Kingdome amongst them 2. Presuppose the Type were laid aside yet this thankful meeting that Abraham gave to the man whose office was to bless him in the Name of the Lord doth teach All the faithful Abrahams true seed a duty of Thankfulness to Gods servants set over them to bless them in the Name of the Lord even to honour them by giving of their goods for their sufficient maintenance 3. As Melchisedec the Type is by interpretation King of Righteousness So is Christ in truth King of Righteousness 1. For the personal Righteousness in himself 2. Because hee is the Righteousness of his Subjects made of God unto us Righteousness by imputation 3. Because hee frameth his Subjects peece and peece unto a righteous disposition by sanctifying them 4. As Melchisedec the Type is King of Salem that is King of Peace So is Christ in truth King of Peace to his Subjects by reconciling them to the Father by giving peace of conscience within themselves by making all the Creatures at peace with them and all things turn together for their good and by working still on their eternal welfare and blessedness until hee perfect it 5. As Melchisedec was first King of Righteousness and then King of Peace in the Type So is Christ in truth in this Order first King of Righteousness to his Subjects to take away their sins and to give them Righteousness And then King of Peace because hee giveth them his Peace as the fruit of Righteousness This is the order of his Kingdome Righteousness and Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Vers. 3. Without Father without Mother without Descent having neither beginning of daies nor end of life but made like unto the Son of God abideth a Priest continually 1. Melchisedec certainly was a very Man King and Priest in such a City if wee consider him in his natural being But if wee consider him in his spiritual being as hee standeth in Scripture under this name hee hath neither Father nor Mother beginning nor end There is no more mention of him what hee was or of whom hee came or of his death but these three verses of Genes 14. As then hee is in a typical being in Scripture So is Christ in truth in his personal being as God without Mother as Man without Father as God without beginning as God and man without ending of life 2. As Melchisedec looking how hee standeth in his Scriptural being abideth a Priest continually so that wheresoever hee is named in Scripture there hee is eve● found a Priest also and never a word of his laying down of the Priesthood Even so is Christs Priesthood unseparable from his person Hee abideth a Priest continually in real accomplishment 3. By saying Hee is made like unto the Son of GOD hee giveth us to understand That Gods purpose was in those particulars so to describe him as hee might resemble the Person and Offices of the Son of God And so is a Type of Gods own appointment 4. And if hee was made a likely Type of Christ in his Office of Priesthood then it followeth a● Melchisedec had neither any joyned with him in his Priesthood nor Deputy nor Vicar under him in it nor Successor to his Office So neither hath Christ any joyned with him or Substitute or Successor to him in his Priesthood Vers. 4. Now consider how great this man was unto whom even the Patriarch Abraham gave the Tenths of the Spoils To shew Christs Excellency hee draweth them to consider Melchisedec's Excellency above Abrahams that so they might see Christs Excellency to be far more The reason in force goeth thus 1. If Melchisedec the Type be more excellent than Abraham much more must Christ of whom hee is a Type 2. And if Melchisedec's greatness be not easily perceived except there be a due consideration of it much more Christs greatness requireth consideration and is worthy of contemplation 3. If Abraham by paying of Tythes acknowledge Melchisedec's superiority Much more should all Abrahams Off-spring acknowledge Christs Superiority whom Melchisedec typically represented by paying of what is due for the maintenance of his Service and bestowing on his Ministers who are appointed to bless in his Name whether it bee less or more which they bestow in such a manner as it vilifie not nor disgrace their high Employment which Christ hath put upon them and so dishonour him whose Servants they are Vers. 5. And verily they that are of the Sons of Levi who receive the Office of the Priesthood have a Commandement to take Tythes of the people according to the Law that is of their Brethren though they come out of the loyns of Abraham Hee proveth that in Tythes taking Melchisedec was greater than Abraham who did pay Tythes Because for the same respect the Levites by taking Tythes of their Brethren as Priests had a Superiority over them for their office sake who otherwise were their equals Then 1. The Priestly office lifted up the Levites above their Brethren who were sprung of Abraham as well as they 2. The command of taking Tithes was annexed to the office of the Priesthood in token of their superiority by office over them who by nature were at least their equals Vers. 6. But hee whose descent is not from them received Tythes of Abraham and blessed him that had the promises 7. And without all contradiction the less is blessed of the greater Hee proveth again Melchisedec to be greater than Abraham and so greater than Levi because hee blessed him and therefore behoved to be greater Then 1. Abraham notwithstanding hee had the promises yet got hee the blessing by Melchisedec in type and from Christ represented by him in truth 2. If Melchisedec was greater because hee blessed him as type Then Christ far more who blesseth in effect Now there are sundry sorts of blessings 1. There is a blessing of reverence and worship So men bless God This sort importeth no greatness in the blesser but subjection 2. There is a blessing of Charity So men bless one another by mutual prayer This sort importeth no Superiority neither 3. There is a blessing of authority