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A41197 A brief exposition of the Epistles of Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians by James Fergusson. Fergusson, James, 1621-1667. 1659 (1659) Wing F772; ESTC R27358 577,875 820

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the hearing of Faith HE again returneth to the Argument for Justification by Faith set down ver 2. and enlargeth it thus That the Lord had not only accompanied that Doctrine among them with the fruits of the Spirit of Regeneration and saving Graces wrought by it but also with other extraordinary gifts of the Spirit such as the working of miracles speaking with strange tongues curing of diseases which were so many confirmations that the Doctrine was of God Doct. 1. Though the saving Graces of God's Spirit are conveyed to the hearts of hearers by the preaching of the Gospel Yet God is the author and worker of them and the Gospel only a mean by which He worketh for having spoken of their receiving the Spirit when he first propounded this Argument ver 2. he doth here in the resuming of it explain how they received it to wit by God's bestowing of it He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit 2. When the Doctrine of the Gospel as it is now dispensed under the New Testament did first break up the Lord to confirm the Truth thereof did accompany the preaching of it with the working of miracles which properly are works above natures strength and so could be wrought by none but God and this that hereby the truth of the Doctrine might be confirmed which being once sufficiently done there is no further use for miracles now for the Apostle sheweth that miracles were wrought among the Galatians by the hearing of Faith and that this was one Argument of the divinity of that Doctrine while he saith He that worketh miracles among you doth He it by the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith 3. So strong and provalent is the spirit of Error where it is letten loose and so weak are the best in themselves to resist it that for love to Error they will quit Truth though formerly never so much confirmed and sealed unto them by the saving fruits of God's Spirit in their hearts accompanying it for though these Galatians had the Doctrine of Justification plainly preached ver 1. and sealed to them by the saving Graces of God's Spirit and by many miracles wrought among them yet they make defection from it He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit and worketh miracles among you c. Vers. 6. Even as Abraham believed God and it was accounted to him for righteousness 7. Know ye therefore that they which are of Faith the same are the children of Abraham HAving put a close to that Argument which he brought from their own experience proving that we are justified by Faith and not by Works he addeth another from a Scripture-example of Abraham to confirm the same Truth who though he did abound in many vertues and good works yet he was not justified by these but by Faith only which he proveth by the testimony of Moses Gen. 15. 6. where it is affirmed that Abraham believed in the Lord to wit not only by giving assent unto the Promise spoken of immediately before about the multiplication of his seed and giving unto them the Land of Canaan Gen. 15. 5 7. but by assenting unto and imbracing of the prime Promise of the Covenant made by God with him that in the Messias who was to come of him he himself and the Nations were to be blessed Gen. 12. 3. of which Promise this of the multiplication of his seed was but a dependent and the means to effectuate it which Faith of Abraham's or the thing believed and laid hold upon by Abraham's Faith to wit the obedience of the Mediator the blessed Seed was imputed unto him for righteousnesse or accepted of God as his obedience for his Justification ver 6. from which he inferreth or rather the matter being so evident he exciteth themselves to infer the conclusion which he intendeth to prove That only they who are of the Faith or seek after Justification by Faith are children of Abraham by following of his steps and succeeding to him in the inheritance of that blessing of free-gifted Righteousnesse and Justification thereby which he enjoyed for an equivalent phrase to this here is that which is ver 9. They are blessed with faithfull Abraham ver 7. Doct. 1. Though saving Faith hath for its general object the whole Word of God consisting of Histories Threatnings Commands and Promises both of temporal and eternal blessings for Faith giveth firm assent unto the whole Word because of that divine Authority which revealeth it Act. 24. -14. yet the principal object of justifying Faith is the Word of Promise holding forth Christ and His Righteousnesse as the meritorious cause of the Believers Salvation for this Promise which Abraham did believe and the Faith wherof was imputed to him for righteousnes had Jesus Christ in its bosom it being a Promise of giving unto Abraham a numerous seed Gen. 15. 4 5. and so a Promise of Jesus Christ to come of him in whom all the Nations Act. 3. 25. and Abraham himself ver 9. were to be blessed Even as Abraham believed God 2. That it may go well with a soul and be accepted in God's sight who can endure no unclean thing Hab. 1. 13 it is necessary that it be cloathed with some righteousnesse of one sort or other for Faith was accounted unto Abraham for righteousnesse 3. It being wholly impossible for fallen man to attain unto that personal perfect righteousnesse which the Law requireth Rom. 3. 10 c. the Wisdom of God hath found out another way of making him righteous to wit that whereby Faith is imputed reckoned or accounted unto him for righteousnesse for Abraham's Faith was accounted unto him to wit by God for righteousnesse 4. Faith is not in a proper sense imputed to the Believer for righteousnesse as if the work of Faith it self were imputed to us and accepted of God whether freely or because of the merit of Christ for our total and perfect righteousnesse but it 's imputed in a figurative sense with respect had to that which Faith apprehendeth and layeth hold upon to wit the obedience and sufferings of Jesus Christ these being laid hold on by Faith become our righteousnesse Rom. 5. 19. and 10. 4. for the Apostle all alongst this Chapter opposeth Faith and Works now his Arguments would be of no force if Faith did justifie as a work and for any worth in it self It was accounted to him for righteousness 5. In the matter of Justification Faith is opposed not only to those Works which go before Conversion but to those also which follow after it and are the real fruits of God's Spirit in the Believer all Works whether of the one sort or other are excluded for even to Abraham many years after his Conversion when he had abounded in good Works and many gracious Vertues Gen. 12 13 14 chapters his Faith was accounted for righteousnesse 6. As there is a second and reiterated Justification of one and the same person in this sense that upon our renewed
bitter and implacable persecutors as having some respect to conscience in other things and being acted in this from the principles of a deluded conscience Joh. 16. 2. which of all other ties doth most strictly bind and most effectually drive forward to fulfill its dictates especially in things of religious concernment Act. 13. 50. for Paul who profited in the Jews Religion above his equals and was exceedingly zealous did persecute the Church 9. The life and way of some who are engaged in a false Religion may be so blamelesse and according to the dictates of their deluded conscience so strict as that it may be a copie unto those who professe the true Religion and a reproof to many such for their palpable negligence so was Paul's way while he was a Pharisee even such as may serve for a copie unto Christians to walk by in several things as first to be active in spreading the true Religion in our places and stations and bearing down of contrary Errors as he was in persecuting the Christian Church because it was opposite to the Jewish Religion professed by him Secondly that what we do in Religion or for God we do it not negligently but with all our might Eccl. 9. 10. and to the uttermost of what our power can reach as he did persecute the Church not lazily but above measure or extreamly Thirdly that we labour to profit advance and grow in Religion both as to the knowledge of Truth contained in it Heb. 6. 1. and practise according to those Truths 2 Pet. 1. 5. as he profited in the Jewish Religion Fourthly that in the matter of growth there be an holy emulation and strife with others that we may outstrip them as he profited above many of his equal● Fiftly that we be zealous for our Religion as having love to it and to the honouring of God whether by our selves or others according to it Act. 15. 3. together with grief and anger when God is dishonoured and Religion wronged Joh. 2. 15 16 17. as Paul was zealous of the Traditions of his fathers for zeal hath in it a mixture of love and anger Doct. 10. As love to the honour of God may engage a man sometimes to speak to his own commendation So there would be that modesty and sobriety of spirit as it may appear he doth not speak from arrogancy or pride and that he seeketh not his own commendation in speaking for Paul commendeth his own diligence and abilities that thereby he may commend Free-grace which delivered him out of that state but with great modesty for he saith not he profited more than all but more than many and not more than his superiours but more than his equals to wit for time and age and those not in all the world but of his own nation 11. As our affections of joy love hatred anger and grief are by nature so corrupt Eph. 2. 3. that even the choicest of them if they be not brought in subjection to the Word by the Spirit of God will lay forth themselves rather upon forbidden and unlawfull objects than that which is warrantable and commanded by the Lord So our zeal and fervency of spirit in particular will bend it self more toward the maintenance of Error than of Truth for Error is the birth of our own invention Gal. 5. 20. and hath the rise from some unmortified lust within which it doth gratifie 2 Tim. 4. 3. so is not Truth Thus Paul sheweth that his zeal tended more to maintain that part of the Jewish Religion which was unwarrantable to wit the unwritten Traditions than all the rest of it And was much more zealous of the Traditions of my fathers saith he Vers. 15. But when it pleased God who separated me from my mothers womb and called me by his grace 16. To reveal his Son in me that I might preach Him among the Heathen immediately I conferred not with flesh and bloud 17. Neither went I up to Jerusalem to them which were Apostles before me but I went into Arabia and returned again unto Damoscus HEre is a second Evidence of the truth of what he formerly asserted ver 11. and 12. to wit that as God in His providence had been making way both in Paul's birth and education for that which He had purposed to imploy him in so when it pleased God at the time of his gracious and effectual calling ver 15. to make Christ and the doctrine of Redemption by Christ known unto him by extraordinary and immediate revelation Act. 9. 4. that as an Apostle immediately called by God ver 1. he might publish the knowledge of Christ among the Gentiles he was so much perswaded of his immediate Call from God that he did not debate the matter neither with himself nor others who might have disswaded him from giving obedience to it ver 16 but immediately went about the discharging of his Apostolick Office not without great hazard and pains to himself in Arabia and Damascus without so much as once visiting any of the Apostles ver 17. far lesse went he to be instructed in the knowledge of the Gospel by them or to receive Ordination unto the Ministerial Office from them as his adversaries did falsly alleage of him the falshood whereof he is here making evident From Vers. 15. Learn 1. Such is the power of God's good pleasure whereby He doth whatsoever He willeth in Heaven and Earth Ps. 135. 6. that the will of man though never so deeply engaged in the course of sin and wickednesse cannot resist it but most willingly doth yeeld unto it whenever the Lord thinketh fit to let forth that His good pleasure in its gracious and powerfull effects of drawing a sinner out of Nature to the state of Grace as it appeareth from the adversative particle But whereby the Apostle opposeth Gods pleasure to his own former weaknesse as prevailing over it But when it pleased God c. 2. The fountain-fountain-cause of man's salvation and of all things tending to it especially of his effectual calling and of that whereby he is made first to differ from another is God's good-pleasure and nothing present Eph. 2. 1. or foreseen to be Rom. 9. 11. in the person who is called for the Apostle ascribeth all of that kind in himself to the pleasure of God But when it pleased God to reveal His Son in me 3. The disposing of events or of things which shall fall out together with the time when they shall fall out are wholly ordered by God's will and pleasure for this pleasure of His circumscribeth even the time of Paul's calling But when it pleased God then and neither sooner nor later was Christ revealed to him 4. The Lord by His working in us and particular acts of providence towards us is often making way for some hid design and purpose of His about us which for the time we are ignorant of but when it appeareth by the event a wonderfull contexture of providences making way for it and
10. 31. duties of our lawful imployments Heb. 11. 33. and to our carriage under crosses Heb. 11. 24 25. for by the life which Paul lived in the flesh is meaned this natural life Heb. 5. 7. 1 Pet. 4. 2. and his living this spiritual life of Faith was extended even to the things of that life The life which I now live in the flesh is by the Faith of the Son of God Doct. 7. As Jesus Christ did give Himself a Ransom for the Elect See chap. 1. 4. so no worth in us no good which He expecteth from us or need which He stood in of us but only love in Him to us did move Him so to do He loved me and gave Himself for me 8. Though the full perswasion and assurance of Christ's special love unto and His dying for me in particular is not the very essence and being of saving Faith Eph. 1. 13. for saving Faith may be without it Isa. 50. 10. Yet it is a thing which may be had without extraordinary revelation the Spirit of God enabling the Believer to discern in himself those graces 1 Cor. 2. 12. which are set down as marks of His special love and favour in Scripture 1 Joh. 3. 14 18 19 21 24. and bearing witnesse with His Spirit that he is a childe of God Rom. 8. 16. and this assurance should be aimed at in the right method by all 2 Pet. 1. 10. for Paul speaking in the name of other Believers sheweth he had attained it Who loved me and gave Himself for me saith he 9. This full perswasion and assurance in its own nature is so far from making those who have it loose the reigns to wickednesse and security that upon the contrary it serveth as a strong incitement to make them mortifie sin and live that spiritual life of Faith which is here spoken of for it served for this use unto Paul I live by the Faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself forme Vers. 21. I do not frustrate the grace of God for if rightebusnesse come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain HAving removed the objection the Apostle proceedeth to establish Justification by Faith and not by the Works of the Law by a second argument to this purpose If we be justified by the Law or works done in obedience to the Law Then those two absurdities would follow 1. God's free grace and favour should be rejected despised frustrated and made uselesse for the word signifieth all these and the reason of the consequence lyeth in this That if Justification be by Works Then it cannot be by Grace Rom. 11. 6. 2. Christ's death had been in vain without any necessary cause or reason if the Justification of finners could have been attained by Works or by any other mean Doct. 1. They who have attained unto the perswasion and full assurance of God's favour and love in Christ ought above all others to maintain the glory of His Grace and Mercy in saving of sinners freely not admitting of any thing whether in practice or opinion whether in themselves or so far as is possible in others which may incroach upon it obscure it or weaken the thoughts of the excellency of it in the minds of men for Paul who was perswaded of Christ's love ver 20. doth look upon this as his duty flowing from that assurance I do not frustrate the Grace of God saith he 2. The joyning of Works with Faith in the matter of Justification is a total excluding of God's Free-grace and favour from having any hand in this Work for Grace admitteth of no partner so that if Grace do not all it doth nothing if any thing be added to it that addition maketh Grace to be no Grace Rom. 4. 4. for the Apostle reasoning against those who would have made Works to share with God's Free-grace and favour in Justification sheweth his joyning with them in that opinion would be a total rejecting and making uselesse of God's Grace I do not frustrate the Grace of God 3. That the Apostle doth exclude in this dispute from having any influence in Justification the Works not only of the Ceremonial but also of the Moral Law appeareth from this That he opposeth the Merit of Christ's death to all Merit of our own whether by obedience to the one Law or to the other neither can any reason be given for which our meriting by obedience to the Ceremonial Law maketh Christ to have died in vain which is not applicabl to the Moral Law For if righteousness come by the Law then Christ died in vain 4. That he excludeth also not only the Works of the Moral Law which are performed by the natural and unregenerate man but also those which the Godly do perform by vertue of Faith drawing influence from Christ appeareth from this that the Apostle useth this argument taken from the uselesnesse of Christ's death not against the unconverted Jews who had not received the Gospel and so would easily have granted that Christ was dead in vain but against those who had received the Gospel and so would never have pleaded that any Works done by a natural man but those only which flow from the Grace of Christ could justifie a sinner and yet Paul reasoneth against those If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain 5. That he doth exclude also all Works of ours whatsoever from being the meritorious cause of our Justification not only in whole and their alone without the Merit of Christ but also in part and joyntly with His Merit appeareth from the former ground that he is reasoning against professed Christians who doubtlesse did give Christ's Merit and Death some share at least in Justification else the absurdity which is deduced from their Doctrine by Paul should have had no weight with them as being no absurdity in their mind Then Christ is dead in vain 6. If there had been any other way possible in Heaven or Earth by which the Salvation of lost sinners could have been brought about but by the Death of Christ then Christ would not have died our disease was desperate as to any other cure for while he saith If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain he affirmeth two things 1. That to suppose Christ hath died in vain or without cause is a great absurdity no wayes to be admitted of 2. If the Justification and Salvation of sinners could have been attained by Works or any other mean then His Death had been in vain and so that it were an absurd thing to suppose he would have died in that case CHAP. III. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle having sharply rebuked these Galatians for their defection ver 1. useth five other Arguments to prove that we are justified by Faith and not by Works First They had received the saving Graces of God's Spirit by hearing the Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not by Works ver 2.
did give clear testimony against that Error and for the contrary Truth It is evident saith Paul for the Just shall live 4. The Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not by Works is no new-fangled opinion the Scriptures even of the Old Testament give testimony to it as the only way of Justification before God which then was for Paul proveth that none are justified by the Law from an Old Testament-Scripture cited out of Hab. 2. -4. The Just shall live by Faith 5. The Scripture cited teacheth first That the way of justifying a sinner or of making him righteous under the Old Testament and under the New is the same and therefore we may safely draw arguments from the one to the other for so doth the Apostle here It is evident for The Just shall live by faith Secondly Faith in God and His Promises especially these wherein Jesus Christ and His Righteousnesse are offered is that which maketh a sinner just and righteous in God's sight for the words may be rendred thus The Just by Faith shall live so that they shew what that is which makes a man just and righteous Thirdly The man who is thus just by Faith is recovered from that state of death wherein every man by nature lyeth Eph. 2. 1. and doth live which life of his doth also flow from faith for both righteousnesse and life are here ascribed to faith The Just shall live by Faith Fourthly This life by Faith which the Believer doth enjoy is such as furnisheth him with comfortable through-bearing in the midst of hardest dispensations without apostasie and fainting in so far as he doth not walk by present sense but taketh up God as reconciled to him in Christ 2 Cor. 4. 18. and looketh upon his present crosse as an evidence of God's fatherly love Heb. 12. 6. and knoweth it will have a blessed event to him in God's way and time Rom. 8. 28. and that his life is hid with God in Christ Col. 3. 3. far above the reach of any trouble for this is the Prophet's scope from whom this place is cited even to shew that the Just shall so live by Faith as to ride out the storm arising from the present trouble which was to overwhelm others See Hab. 2. 4. The Just shall live by Faith Fifthly This life of the Believer which he enjoyeth by Faith though it be begun here in the knowledge of God and Jesus Christ Joh. 17. 3. and in freedom from the deserved sentence of death Rom. 8. 1. whereupon followeth a right to eternal life Joh. 3. 3. and in the lively practice of all commanded duties to which the Believer is enabled by drawing life and vertue out of Christ through Faith Philip. 4. 13. Yet this life is not circumscribed with the present time it 's to be perfected afterward in Glory so that the life flowing from Faith is a lasting never-ending ever-continuing and eternal life for the Promise is extended unto all imaginable future duration without any restriction The Just shall live by Faith From Vers. 12. Learn 1. Though the Law and Faith or the Gospel which is the Doctrine of Faith be not contrary each to other both of them being the Truths of God but are mutually subservient one to another in many things the Law making sin known Rom. 3. -20. the Gospel holding forth the remedy of sin Joh. 1. 29. the Law pointing forth our need of Christ Rom. 10. 4. and the Gospel giving us an offer of Christ for life and righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1. 30. The Law again holding forth those duties wherein the man made righteous by Faith ought to walk and to testifie his thankfulnesse Eph. 5. 1 2. and the Gospel or Faith in Jesus Christ offered in the Gospel furnishing him with spirituall strength to walk in these duties which the Law prescribeth 2 Cor. 3. -6. Yet the Law and Faith are mutually inconsistent in the point of Justification so that if Justification be sought by the works of the Law it cannot be had by Faith and if it be had by Faith it cannot be attained by the works of the Law there can be no mixture of Law and Gospel Faith and Works in this matter for in this sense the Apostle affirmeth The Law is not of Faith 2. The Law doth offer life to none upon easier terms than perfect obedience and the constant and universal practice of whatsoever the Law prescribeth for the voice of the Law is The man that doth them to wit those things that the Law enjoyneth shall live in them or attain eternal life by his so doing 3. The way of Justification by Faith doth wholly exclude our doing and works and those of every sort from having influence as causes or conditions either in part or in whole upon our Justification before God for the Apostle proveth the inconsistency of the Law and Faith in the point of Justification from this that the Law suspendeth our right to life upon the condition of doing and works and therefore the way of Justification by Faith must wholly exclude Works else the Apostle should not cogently have proved the thing intended to wit That the Law is inconsistent with Faith from this That he who doth them shall live in them Vers. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree 14. That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through Faith HE addeth a fifth Argument to prove the affirmative part of the main Conclusion to wit That we are justified by Faith and withall sheweth how Faith doth justifie not for any merit or worth in it self but as it receiveth Jesus Christ whereby all the blessings purchased by Him are applied to Believers for the Apostle obviating an objection which he foresaw might arise from ver 10. to wit If the Law do curse all men how then are any freed from the curse sheweth that Jesus Christ hath delivered us from God's wrath or the sentence of the Law 's curse by taking upon Himself the curse due to us while He was obedient to death even the death of the crosse Philip. 2. 8. Which kind of death was pronounced to be accursed as he proveth from Deut. 21. -23. This is contained ver 13. And hence he shewes a double fruit did flow the first to the Gentiles the blessing of Church-priviledges divine Ordinances and of Reconciliation Adoption Grace here and Glory hereafter promised to the Nations in Abraham Gen. 22. 18. being now purchased by Christ and residing in Him as the Head and Fountain did come through Him to the unrighteous Gentiles who before the time of Christ's death were strangers to Christ and to Abraham's blessing purchased by Christ Eph. 2. 12. The second fruit of Christ's death did accresse to the Jews among whom he reckoneth himself joyntly with the Gentiles who
of the body 1 Thess. 5. 23. for saith he Because ye are sons He hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts 6. According as Beleivers do attain to a larger insight in this excellent benefit of Adoption and a greater measure of the fruits of it there will be a proportionable measure of the Spirit 's in-dwelling and manifesting of Himself in His gracious operations especially in His assisting and furnishing for the duty of Prayer for he proveth they had received a clear insight in this priviledge of Adoption and the more free use and fruition of it because the Spirit was more plentifully bestowed to dwell in their hearts And because ye are sons saith he God hath sent forth c. 7. Though the exercise of Faith Love Hope and other graces in the duty of Prayer and at other occasions doth flow from the renewed soul as the proper inward and vital cause of those actions so that properly we and not the Spirit of God are said to believe repent pray c. Rom. 10. 10. Yet because the Spirit doth not only create and preserve those gracious habits in the soul Ezek. 36. 26. but also exciteth the soul to act and assisteth it in acting according to them Philip. 2. 13. without which actuating exciting and assisting grace habitual grace in us could do nothing Joh. 15. 5. Therefore is it that the exercise of those graces is ascribed to the Spirit of God as the external efficient cause thereof for which reason our affectionate and believing Prayers are ascribed here unto Him God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son crying Abba 8. There is an holy vehemency and fervor required in Prayer opposit to carelesse formality and deadnesse for praying is here called crying which is an usual evidence of fervency and earnestnesse and the doubling of the word Father maketh for the same purpose Crying Abba Father or Father Father 9. This holy vehemency and fervor consisteth not so much in the lifting up of the externall voice as in the inward bensal and serious frame of the spirit it is a cry not of the mouth but of the heart Into your hearts crying 10. Besides this fervency and earnestnesse requisit in Prayer there would be also a confident familiar owning of God joyned with reverence to Him as a Father for the Spirit maketh them to call upon Him by the name of Abba Father Vers. 7. Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God through Christ. HEre he concludeth from what is said first That under the New Testament we are no more servants as being redeemed from that legal yoke of bondage under which the ancient Church was And secondly That we are sons and by consequence heirs of God which is verified mainly in real Believers under the New Testament in so far as they are sons come to age and heirs past tutory actually partaking of their father's inheritance in a larger measure than Believers did under the Old Testament as was explained ver 5. All which priviledges are bestowed upon us through Christ and through vertue of His coming unto the flesh Doct. 1. It is a safe way of reasoning upon the observation of the saving effects of God's Spirit in our selves to conclude that we are in a state of grace even the adopted Children of God for the Spirit of God by the Apostle doth so reason in this place Because He hath sent forth His Spirit into your hearts wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son 2. The rare priviledges which are bestowed upon Believers chiefly under the New Testament as they do exceed in some degrees those which the generality of Believers enjoyed under the Old so they are many and all of them so linked together as in one golden chain that where one of them is the rest are also and it is our duty having attained to know our enjoying of any one of them thence to gather that we have all the rest for the Apostle reckoneth a number of such priviledges which as to the degree wherein they are bestowed are proper to the dayes of the Gospel and doth alwayes from the former infer the latter Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God 3. Though the natural Son of God be only one even Jesus Christ the only begotten of the Father Joh. 1. 14. yet every man who hath the Spirit of God dwelling in his heart is His son by grace and adoption even they who by nature are children of wrath Eph. 2. 3. for from God's sending forth His Spirit into their hearts he concludeth Wherefore thou art a son 4. Our right to the heavenly inheritance as also the possession of it whether that which is begun here in the Kingdom of Grace or which shall be compleated hereafter in the Kingdom of Glory doth follow upon our sonship and adoption so that God of rebels doth first make up sons and then none can challenge Him of injustice for bestowing upon us the inheritance of children And if a son then an heir of God saith he 5. As none since the fall ever was or shall be lifted up to that high dignity of being sons and daughters to the Lord Almighty or could lay any just claim to Heaven and Glory as his inheritance but by vertue of Christ's obedience and death whereby all those high and precious priviledges being formerly forfeited and lost were again recovered So the actual exhibition of Christ in the flesh and the real payment of the price by Christ did bring with it God having so appointed a larger measure and higher degree of those priviledges to be bestowed upon Believers after that time than was ordinarily enjoyed by Believers formerly for he is speaking here mainly of that higher degree of freedom and of that more evident and clear fight of and right to the inheritance together with the fuller measure of its possession in the Graces of God's Spirit which is proper to the dayes of the Gospel and sheweth all this cometh through Christ to wit His actual incarnation obedience and death Vers. 8. Howbeit then when ye knew not God ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods 9. But now after that ye have known God or rather are known of God how turn ye again to the weak and beggerly elements whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage THe Apostle having now sufficiently confirmed by Scripture and Reason the Churche's freedom from that ancient legal dispensation and more especially from the Ceremonial Law doth now in the second part of the chapter labour upon their affections to work them up towards the imbracing of this Truth both by sharp reproofs and most affectionate insinuations And first that he may fasten a reproof upon them for their begun defection the more convincingly he sheweth when that legal dispensation was in force they to wit the Galatians who were of
the yoke with cords or somewhat else that they may not shake it off Vers. 2. Behold I Paul say unto you that if ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing HE addeth a second argument to inforce the exhortation wherein having opposed his own Apostolick Authority for confirming the truth of what he is to say against all who would contradict it he affirmeth that the observing of any one Ceremony and especially of Circumcision to wit as of a thing which ought of necessity to be done and as a part of a mans righteousnesse necessary to salvation in which sense it was pressed by the false Apostles Act. 15. 2. did cut off the observer from all benefit by Jesus Christ. The reasons of which sentence are first the holding up of Circumcision and by consequence the whole bulk of that Mosaical Dispensation did say in effect that Christ was not yet come seing all those were to be done away at His coming Heb. 9. 10. Secondly Christ must either be our whole righteousnesse and compleat Saviour or not at all Act. 4. 12. Isa. 42. 8. So that by joyning Circumcision with Christ as a necessary part of their righteousnesse and a cause of salvation Christ did cease from being a Saviour to them at all Doct. 1. A Minister of Jesus Christ ought not to satisfie himself in this that what he speaketh is pertinent and apposit to the present purpose but would also endeavour that those to whom he speaketh may with attention and faith receive it off his hand In order to which it is not inconvenient that all-alongs his discourse he labour to quicken their attention by speaking somewhat for that very end especially when he is to utter any Truth of singular concernment or from receiving whereof he apprehendeth the hearers may be somewhat averse for such a truth is here delivered by Paul and therefore he prefixes a note of attention to it Behold saith he 2. A Minister ought to be so confident of the truth of his doctrine and of his own authority from Christ to deliver it that although his doctrine be contradicted and his authority undervalued he may yet with boldnesse assert both the one and the other for though Paul's Apostolick Authority was questioned See upon chap. 1. ver 12. and the Truth which he here holdeth forth much contradicted Act. 15. 2. Yet he opposeth his own Authority for the confirmation of this Truth against all who would oppose it Behold I Paul say unto you if ye be circumcised 3. That Paul in this dispute excludeth from Justification not only works flowing from the strength of man's free-will without grace but also those which flow from a gracious root wrought in the heart by Christ appeareth from this that those against whom he disputeth professed faith in Christ and so could not maintain that the works of a natural man destitute of Christ did justifie otherwayes this had been no cogent argum 〈…〉 t to refute their opinion that if they were circumcised Christ should profit them nothing 4. Many do professe Christ who shall receive no saving advantage by Him especially they who rely upon any thing besides Him or joyntly with Him as the meritorious cause of their salvation for saith he If ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing Vers. 3. For I testifie again to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to do the whole Law HEre is a third Argument to which also Paul premitteth his Apostolical Authority seriously affirming and by a publick profession confirming for so the word rendred testifie doth signifie that whosoever now Christ the substance being come did observe Circumcision to wit in the way wherein it was urged by the false Apostles Act. 15. 2. he was thereby engaged to keep the whole Law and this the whole Ceremonial and Judicial Law Circumcision being the initiatory Sacrament engaging the Receiver to the whole Mosaical Pedagogie Exod. 12. 48. and the whole Moral Law and that under the hazard of condemnation The reason whereof is That no lesse than universal and perfect obedience to the Law in all its precepts is required unto this that a man be justified by Works Gal. 3. 10. Doct. 1. Of how much the nearer concernment unto the salvation of hearers any Truth is the Minister of Christ ought so much the more to insist upon it and with so much the greater seriousnesse and fervency to inculcate and presse it as a matter of life and death that people may know he believeth and therefore speaketh and consequently may be the more moved with what he speaketh for Paul speaking of a Truth the not-receiving whereof would have condemned those Galatians he doth with much vehemency insist upon the pressing of it I testifie again saith he to every man that is circumcised 2. Because it is a matter of no small difficulty to get those reclaimed who are engaged in an evil course Jer 13. 23. therefore frequent testimonies would be given by Christ's Ministers against them in it that hereby the guilty party may have the lesse of ease and peace in their way and thereby through God's blessing upon His own mean be made to quit it 2 Tim. 2. 25. And at least the Lord's Servants may be the more exonered Ezek. 3. 19. and others of the Lord's People preserved from being infected with that sin which they do so much and so frequently testifie against 1 Tim. 5. 20. for in order to those ends Paul having once and oftener both in this Epistle and by his preaching doubtlesse while he was with those Galatians testified against this dangerous error of theirs doth here give further testimony against it while he saith For I testifie again to every man 3. It is wholly impossible for any meer man to keep the Law of God perfectly in this life and to obtain salvation by so doing Paul taketh this for granted otherwise this argument that circumcision did engage them to keep the whole Law under hazard of condemnation had not been cogent He is a debtor to do the whole Law 4. Though Believers in Jesus Christ be not delivered from their obligation to the least duty which is required by any precept of the Moral Law Mat. 5. 19. yet they are not under that exact rigor and condemning power of the Law whereby eternal wrath is denounced against the sinner for the meanest breach of the Law Deut. 27. 26. for while he speaketh of their being debtors to do the whole Law as a sad terrifying consequence of their being circumcised it must be understood not simply of their obligation to obedience but of an obligation under the penalty of the Law 's curse and hereby it is imported that sincere Believers are not under this obligation else the argument were of no force Vers. 4. Christ is become of no effect unto you whosoever of you are justified by the Law ye are fallen from Grace FOlloweth a fourth Argument to wit Whosoever did observe the Levitical
only the merit and satisfaction of Jesus Christ the accomplishment whereof was upon the Crosse Joh. 19. 30. for in opposition to the false Apostles their boasting in Circumcision as the meritorious cause of their Salvation See chap. 5. ver 4. doct 1. doth the Apostle here say God forbid that I should glory save in the Crosse of our Lord Jesus Christ. 4. A holy heart which hath experimentally tasted the worth that is in Christ cannot easily think upon Him and especially upon His Satisfaction and Sufferings but it must be enlarged towards Him and have high thoughts of that excellency and worth which is in Him joyned with an earnest desire of a more near union with Him and with an acquiescence in Him as its own if so the heart be already perswaded of interest in Him yea and will sometimes expresse those thoughts of Him to the full when occasion is offered to make any mention of Him for so Paul having occasion to speak of Christ designeth Him so as he expresseth not only those high thoughts which he had of His Excellency and worth while he calleth Him Lord and Jesus and Christ but also the acquiescing of his heart in Him as his own while he saith Our Lord Jesus Christ. 5. The crosse and sufferings of Christ effectually applyed by faith have that much power and vertue in them as to make all things worldly even the very applause and glory of the world contemptible unto and to be actually abhorred by a sincere Believer in so far as the power terror beauty allurements credit pleasure or profit of those things would interpose to mar that high esteem he ought to have of Christ's satisfaction and sufferings or his right use-making of them or his seeking after God's glory as the chief end of all his actions and above all those things for in those respects the world was crucified or as a dead carrion to Paul wherein he could take no pleasure and this by Christ and the vertue of His sufferings and nothing else By whom or by which crosse the world is crucified unto me 6. The more that high esteem of and glorying in Jesus Christ doth grow in the heart of any the more will our accompt of all things worldly being compared with Him and opposed to Him decay And where esteem of those things is upon the growing hand that high accompt which ought to be had of Jesus Christ cannot but be decaying much for with Paul I glory in the crosse of Christ and the world is crucified to me did go together 7. As a man truly godly and renewed by the Spirit of Christ and in so far as he is renewed at least cannot but be unsavoury unto and vilipended by the world and wicked men in the world So this also doth come from the death and sufferings of Christ not indeed as from a working cause for Christ by His death doth work no such malicious disposition in wicked men towards His People but as from an occasion for from those gracious effects flowing from the Spirit of Christ and wrought in those who are renewed wicked men do take occasion to hate abhor and to take no pleasure in them no more than they were the dead carrions of some notorious malefactors put to a shamefull death by the hand of Justice By whom saith he I am crucified unto the world Vers. 15. For in Christ Jesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but a new creature HE giveth a reason why he gloried only in the crosse of Christ and not in those fleshly priviledges or ordinances and why the world was crucified unto and undervalued by him to wit because those things which were matter of gloriation to the false Apostles and by making an outward shew whereof they gained the world's applause one instance whereof he giveth in Circumcision and illustrateth it by its contrary uncircumcision under which may be comprehended the simple want of this ordinance and all other things which the uncircumcised Gentiles boasted of as wealth wisdom strength policy and whatsoever is glorious in the eyes of the world all which things he affirmeth to be of no account or worth in Christ Jesus to wit so as to make a man accepted of Christ or to evidence his acceptation by Him or interest in Him and withall sheweth that the new creature or the renovation of the whole man by God's omnipotent creating power in knowledge Col. 3. 10. righteousnesse and true holinesse Eph. 4. 24. is only that in opposition to those external and worldly things which maketh a man acceptable to God in Christ and especially doth evidence his acceptation by and interest in Christ. Doct. 1. As those things are most applauded unto by men of this world which are most remote from and have least relation unto Jesus Christ and peoples interest in Him So for that reason a godly heart will be more dead unto and lesse taken up with applause from them whether he have it or want it for Paul giveth this for a reason why the world was crucified unto him Even that those things which had most of the world's applause did no wayes evidence a man's interest in Christ as the new creature did as appeareth by the causal particle for For in Christ Jesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision 2. Though other things besides the work of Regeneration and saving Grace such as wealth honour wisdom strength are of good use for the affairs of this life Eccles. 9. 15. Yet none of these nor any other thing else if separated from the work of saving grace are of any worth or account to commend us to God or to evidence a saving interest in Jesus Christ and in those saving benefits which are purchased by Him for in this respect he saith In Jesus Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision 3. As we are so far dead in sins and trespasses Eph. 2. 1. that no lesse than almighty creating power is requisit for working of a gracious change in us So this gracious change thus wrought doth reach the whole man his soul and all the faculties thereof his body and all the members thereof are renewed and changed 1 Thess. 5. 23. for this gracious change hath the name of a new creature importing it to flow from God's creating power and that it is extended to the whole man 4. This gracious change of the whole man is for singular use and advantage to the man who hath it though not to give him a right to Christ or to justifie him except in so far as the grace of Faith is included in it for Faith alone doth intitle a man to Christ 1 Joh. 5. 12 13. and justifie him Gal. 2. 16. yet to evidence unto his own conscience that he hath that right and is a justified person 1 Joh. 3. 7 14. for with respect to this he saith That in Jesus Christ a new creature doth avail with a little variation of the sense and
in the lesser Asia Rev. 1. 11. and having foreseen by the Spirit of prophesie that though this Church as appeareth from the strain of the whole Epistle was for the time free from schism and constant in the doctrine of the Gospel yet false teachers in progress of time would arise among them to pervert them Act. 20. 29 30. And fearing also lest his own present sufferings he being now a prisoner at Rome chap. 3 1. should make them faint and sit up in their christian course chap. 3. 13. Therefore and upon these occasions be writeth this Epistle unto them His scope wherein is to excite them unto constancy and further progresse in faith and piety as appeareth from the subject matter of the whole Epistle and more especially from chap. 3. 13 c. and chap. 4. 1. In order to which scope after the Inscription ver 1 2. chap. 1. he propoundeth to their view a short sum of the doctrine of faith and salvation by Christ which he doth several wayes illustrate commend extend both to Jew and Gentile and guard from contempt occasioned by the crosse exhorting them of times indirectly to cleave unto it and make progresse in the knowledge of it to the end of chap. 3. After which he inciteth them to the study and practice of holinesse both in the general and special duties of a christian life chap. 4 5. and to ver 21. of chap. 6. And so having recommended some private affairs of his own to the care of Tychicus ver 21 22. he concludeth the Epistle with almost the same salutation by which be made his entry to it ver 23 24. CHAP. I. IN the first part of this Chapter after the Inscription ver 1 2. the Apostle unfoldeth the grounds and causes of the salvation of sinners ascribing all unto God's free grace in Christ which he doth first generally by way of thanksgiving unto God ver 3. Secondly more particularly and first he treateth of the grounds causes and means of salvation as they were prepared in the eternal decree of election which he describeth from those ends which God intended in that decree as our sanctification ver 4. our adoption or glorification ver 5. and the glory of His grace ver 6. Next as they were purchased by Christ in the work of redemption ver 7. And lastly as they are applyed unto the Elect in their effectual calling ver 8. which is illustrated from the mean made use of for bringing it about to wit the revealing and publishing of the Gospel ver 9. and from the end intended by God in the use of this mean even the gathering together in one of all the scattered Elect ver 10. And thirdly he cleareth yet further the former doctrine concerning the freedom of God's grace through Christ in our salvation by giving some instances of it 1. In the believing Jews ver 11 12. Next in the believing Gentiles ver 13 14. In the second part of the Chapter he doth indirectly incite them to constancy and progresse in the knowledge of this doctrine first by shewing how he blessed God and prayed unto Him for them ver 15 16. Secondly by holding forth a short sum of his prayer unto God on their behalf even that God would bestow a greater measure of wisdom and saving knowledge upon them ver 17 18 whereby they might know those good things which they were to partake of in Heaven ver -18. together with the working of Gods mighty power in and towards Believers ver 19. Thirdly by commending this power of God unto them from its mighty working in order to Christ's exaltation ver 20. which exalted state of Christ he sheweth doth include power and superiority over all creatures in general ver 21 22-and over His Church in particular ver -22 23. Vers. 1. PAUL an Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God to the Saints which are at Ephesus and to the faithfull in Christ Jesus 2. Grace be to you and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ. IN these two Verses is the Inscription of the Epistle containing first a description of the Pen-man from his name Paul from his office an Apostle and call to his office by the will of God Secondly a description of those to whom the Epistle was directed from the place of their habitation at Ephesus and their spiritual state they were Saints and faithfull ver 1. Thirdly the Apostle's usuall salutation or comprecation whereby he prayeth for grace and peace unto them ver 2. Besides what hath been already observed upon the Inscriptions of the Epistles to the Galatians Philippians and Colossians Learn 1. The wisdom of God hath judged it most convenient to teach His People not immediately by Himself or by the ministry of Angels but of men like unto our selves hereby to try His Peoples obedience Mat. 10. 40. and because their infirmity could not well endure the ministry of others Exod. 20. 19. For Paul is imployed by God to instruct those Ephesians by writing this Epistle Paul an Apostle by the will of God to the saints 2. It doth not follow hence that every man who thinketh himself sufficiently gifted may take upon him the office of the Ministry except he be called unto it of God for Paul sheweth he was called to the office of an Apostle before he did meddle with it An Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God 3. The power of God not only can but also frequently doth gather and preserve a Church to Himself even where Satan's seat is and wickednesse of all sorts doth most abound hereby fulfilling what was long since foretold Psal. 110. -2. that Christ should rule in the midst of His enemies for there was a Church of Saints even at Ephesus a City famous for Idolatry and Witchcrafts Act. 19. v. 19 24 34 35. To the Saints which are at Ephesus 4. Even those who are Saints and Believers do stand in need of God's grace and favour both to pardon and subdue sin seing the best of them are but sanctified in part 1 Cor. 13. 12. having the dregs of corruption alwayes remaining and frequently stirring in them Rom. 7. 23. for the Apostle's wish in behalf of the Saints at Ephesus and faithfull in Christ Jesus is Grace be to you Vers. 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ. THe Apostle's scope being to establish those Ephesians in the sincere doctrine of the Gospel already received by them and for this end to unfold the grounds and causes of their salvation together with the freedom of God's grace in Christ upon which salvation with all its causes and every step tending towards it is founded he doth first propound the grounds and causes in general and this not warshly and in a coldrife manner but with an open mouth and a more enlarged heart by way of thanksgiving to God whom he describeth
blessings according as He hath chosen us in Him 6. God did not choose or elect us because we were holy or because He did foresee we would be holy but that we might be holy so that neither fore-seen holinesse good-works nor fore-seen faith were the causes of Election but effects and fruits flowing from it for saith he God hath chosen us that we should be holy 7. God hath elected none to enjoy everlasting glory after this but such as He hath chosen to be holy here And therefore a man may safely and certainly conclude he hath been elected from all eternity if he be sanctified and renewed by the Spirit of holinesse in time and whatever assurance of Election is pretended unto by any who lead an unholy life it is but a strong delusion a vain presumption and no well-grounded perswasion for He hath chosen us as to Heaven and glory so also that we should be holy 8. This real and saving holinesse from which a man may conclude his own Election is joyned with an honest endeavour after such a conversation as is blamelesse and obnoxious unto no just reproof from men It is not only inward and in the heart but outward also and in the hand and tongue for saith he He hath chosen us that we should be holy and without blame to wit from men as the word is taken Luke 1. 6. 1 Tim. 3 2. Doct. 9. Where this real and saving holinesse the fruit of electing love is there will not only be a blamelesse conversation before men but also sincerity of heart before God which doth not imply perfection in holinesse for none should then be holy before Him in this life 1 King 8. 46 but ingenuity and singlenesse of spirit opposit to a double heart and hypocrisie even such ingenuity as a man dare appeal to God to judge of his honest endeavour after that in reality and in deed which he pretendeth unto in the wayes of God for those words before Him expresse such sincerity of heart See 2 King 20. 3. Psal. 18. 23. we should be holy before Him 10. Sound holinesse and sincerity of heart are most manifested in the duties of love to our neighbour flowing from our love to God for external duties of Religion may be diligently followed even by hypocrites Isa. 1. 11. And the inward substantial duties thereof are not so easily discerned neither by others nor yet by our selves as when they are accompanied with the painfull and conscientious practice of those duties which love to our neighbour doth enjoyn for therefore doth the Apostle give an instance of this holinesse in love rather than in any other duty And without blame before Him in love Vers. 5. Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to Himself according to the good pleasure of His will IN this Verse the Apostle doth first expresse Gods eternal decree of Election formerly mentioned by another word to wit Predestination which setteth forth the same decree and purpose together with its eternity and extent not only to the end proposed by God but to the whole progresse of convenient means by which the end intended was infallibly to be brought about Secondly he further describeth this decree of Election and Predestination from another end which God designed to be brought about by it even the Adoption of children by Jesus Christ to be bestowed upon the Elect whereby is meaned not only that begun Adoption which Believers possesse here Joh. 1. 12. and whereby they have a right to the heavenly inheritance Rom. 8. 17. but also and mainly that compleat and perfect Adoption whereof the Elect shall partake hereafter even the actual possession of their glorious inheritance See the word so taken Rom. 8. 23. He describeth it also from the causes moving God to elect any or one more than another which are set down first more briefly to himself it is better rendred in himself whereby are excluded all causes moving God to this act without Himself Secondly more largely and expresly to wit God's absolute and soveraign will swayed with favour and goodwill towards those whom He did choose Doct. 1. God hath not only decreed to set forth the glory of His mercy by bestowing Heaven and Glory upon some of mankind Luke 12. 32. but in that same wise and eternal counsel of His He hath forecasten and accordingly decreed by what means and helps the person so elected may come to Heaven and shall undoubtedly obtain it And therefore none can warrantably expect that this decree of Predestination will bring them to Salvation if they live in the prophane neglect and contempt of those means which do lead unto it for the force and usual acception of the word predestinated is extended to the means aswell as to the end Having predestinated us 2. No not the Elect themselves are children to God by nature they are not born sons but made to be sons by grace and adoption who before were heirs of hell and children of wrath Eph. 2. -3. for a childe by adoption is opposed to a childe by nature men are not said to adopt their own children but strangers Exodus 2. 10. Now God hath predestinated the Elect unto the adoption of children 3. God is graciously pleased in time not only to call and justifie those whom he did choose for Himself before all time Rom. 8. 30. but also to make them partakers of the grace of adoption whereby a further dignity is put upon them than formerly was even that being already drawn out of nature to grace in their effectual calling and reconciled to God in their justification they are now advanced to the dignity of sons and children to the most High and have a right to all the priviledges of sons as the Spirit of Adoption whereby they cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. fatherly pity from God under their infirmities Psal. 103. 13. protection from the rage of enemies Prov. 14. 26. provision and furniture for their straits and necessities Mat. 6. 30 32. necessary chastisment from God as their Father Heb. 12. 6. and a right to the inheritance of life eternal Heb. 1. 14. not only as they are friends with God and clothed with a perfect righteousnesse which they have by justification but as God's own sons and heirs which inheritance being once possessed their adoption which is now but begun shall be full and compleat Rom. 8. 23. for saith the Apostle He hath predestinated us unto the adoption of children 4. Besides those other differences which are betwixt God's adopting of the Elect to be His own Children and one man's adopting of another to be his son and heir this is one Men do adopt children because they have none of their own but God doth not adopt the Elect from any such indigence or want as having a natural Son of His own even Jesus Christ the only begotten of the Father for the Apostle having spoken of the Adoption of the Elect doth presently make mention of
and freedom through vertue of that price Thirdly he sheweth the impulsive cause which moved God to bestow such a benefit even the riches of that same grace and free-favour in God formerly spoken of By all which he carrieth on his main scope which is to confirm those Ephesians that salvation and all the steps leading to it do flow from God's free-grace in Christ. Doct. 1. All men the Elect themselves not being excepted are by nature under slavery and bondage to sin Joh. 8. 34. Satan Eph. 2. 2. and to God's wrath Joh. 3. 36. for redemption presupposeth bondage In whom we have redemption 2. There was no delivery to be had from this bondage by prayer and intreaty nor by exchange of prisoners as in wars nor yet by strong hand and meer force but by paying of a price not to Satan who detaineth the Elect in slavery as a rigid Tyrant or mercilesse Jaylor from whom they are delivered by force Heb. 2. -14. but to God Eph. 2. 2. whose justice was wronged by the sins of the Elect and therefore behoved to be satisfied for redemption according to the force of the original word is a delivery by ransom and price 3. Jesus Christ is that Person by whom we have redemption from the fore-mentioned slavery this work by the counsel of the whole Trinity being put over upon Him as one who not only had right both of property to redeem the Elect being His creatures Heb. 1. 10. and of kinred Lev. 25. 48. as being our brother and of the same nature with us Heb. 2 14 but was also fitted to be our Redeemer a price to wit His humane nature being put in his hands to lay down Heb. 10. -5. and was able to redeem as being also God whereby His sufferings as man became a ransom of infinit value Act. 20. -28. for by saying In whom or in Christ we have redemption he saith that we have it by Him 4. We have this redemption not only by Christ but also in him which holdeth also in forgivenesse of sins He being the common store-house wherein the Elect have all their spiritual blessings treasured up even before they take their spiritual being from Him or get those blessings actually applied unto them as Adam's posterity have their original guiltinesse whence all actual transgressions flow treasured up in Him before they take their natural being from Him Rom. 5. 12. As also because this redemption and the fruits of it are not actually applied to the Elect until they be in Christ and by faith united to Him Joh. 3. 36. for saith he In whom meaning Christ we have redemption and forgivenesse of sins 5. The wrong done to infinit justice by our sin was so great that nothing performed by Christ could be a sufficient ransom in order to our redemption except he had crowned all his other actions and sufferings by laying down his life and undergoing a bloudy and violent death for We have redemption through his bloud to wit not as excluding his former obedience Rom. 5. 18 19. nor yet his other sufferings especially his soul-sufferings Isa. 53. 10. but as being the head-stone and compleating of all Joh. 19. 30. Doct. 6. Sin is a debt as being a wrong done against God obliging the sinner to repair God in his honour or otherwayes to underly the wrath of a provoked God for ever Rom. 6. 23 for the word forgivenesse in the Original and as it is used in Scripture is taken from those who are loosed out of a prison for debt The forgivenesse of sins 7. There is no delivery from this debt of sin and obligation to wrath because of sin but by pardon and forgivenesse It is an infinit debt and so cannot be satisfied by finit creatures for thus doth Paul expresse the way how the debt is removed even by forgivenesse of sins 8. Though the guilt of sin be removed by forgivenesse and therefore freely as to us yet that sin might be thus freely forgiven with the good leave of provoked justice forgivenesse of sin was purchased at a dear rate by Christ for as we have redemption through his bloud so also forgivenesse of sins 9. Jesus Christ hath this rich treasure of forgivenesse of sins which he hath bought by his bloud laid up in himself so that whensoever a sinner sensible of this weighty debt doth lay hold upon Christ by faith and is thereby ingraffed in Him his sins are freely pardoned and his debt remitted for In him saith he we have forgivenesse of sins 10. As that grace favour and good-will which God manifested in the salvation of sinners is a rich copious and abundant grace so nothing argueth the riches of this grace more than that from it do flow such excellent effects as the giving of Christ the Son of God to redeem slaves and rebels together with forgivenesse of sins they being infinit wrongs and there being many of them in every pardoned sinner Psal. 19. 12. And those not only ordinary infirmities but sometimes also heinous transgressions Psal. 51. 14. and yet free-grace pardoneth all and this not only in one but in all Believers in all ages and doth yet remain as full and overflowing in God to pardon self-condemned sinners as ever all which doth argue no lesse than a copious rich and abundant grace for the Apostle speaking of grace with relation to those two redemption and forgiveness which flow from it he calleth it a rich grace According to the riches of his grace saith he Vers. 8. Wherein the hath abounded toward us in all wisdom and prudence THe Apostle doth thirdly speak of those spirituall blessings which were prepared in Election and purchased in that excellent work of Redemption as they are conveyed and applyed unto the Elect in their effectual calling whereby he carryeth-on his fore-mentioned scope in shewing That as God did give evident proofs of his free-grace and favour in all the former steps tending to salvation so he had manifested the abundant riches of his grace in the effectual calling of those Ephesians in so far as his eternal love which was before alwayes hid in a decree did no longer contain it self but overflowed in its effects towards them or in them as the word may be rendred which effects wrought by Gods grace in them he sheweth to be all wisdom and prudence under which are comprehended all the saving graces of God's Spirit in Believers if we take as we safely may take wisdom for the saving knowledge of divine mysteries and of such religious truths as are only to be believed and fall not under practice And prudence for that grace and vertue whereby we know our respective duties both to God and man and our actions and practices are ruled and ordered according to the prescript of God's Word for so the words are taken Col. 1. -9. Doct. 1. Whosoever are elected from eternity and for whomsoever Christ did give a ransom to provoked justice in the fulnesse of time all such in
Rom. 10. 14 15. for the Apostle having already spoken of God's bestowing all saving grace upon them doth here condescend upon the mean made use of by him in that work Having made known unto us the mysterie of his will 4. There is nothing which moveth God to reveal his Gospel unto one people and not to another or more obscurely to one and more clearly unto another but only his own good will and pleasure so to do neither doth the Lord any thing contrary to justice hereby seing he is not obliged to send the Gospel unto any Rom. 11. 35. and all have more knowledge of God by nature than they make good use of Rom. 1. 21. for this alone is here given as the reason of his making known the mysterie of his will even according to his good pleasure 5. So carefull is God to maintain the interest of his free-grace in our salvation as being the only supream and fountain-fountain-cause thereof that he thinketh it not sufficient once to assert in the general that salvation and all the means and steps tending towards it do flow from his free-grace but that this be again and again inculcated and all the particular steps which lead to salvation being condescended upon that his free-grace favour and good will be held out as the fountain of each step in particular for the Apostle doth so and that by an heavenly and divine artifice sliding down from one step to another from Election to Redemption and from Redemption to effectual calling and from effectual calling unto God's bestowing the outward mean of salvation the Gospel not only ascribing all to God's free-grace but making grace the mid-link of the chain whereby he joyneth the several parts of his discourse together so ver 8. Wherein he abounded and here According to the good pleasure of his will and which he purposed in himself as having no cause without himself to set him on work 6. As the decrees of God are firm fixed and unchangeable So he doth nothing in the matter of man's salvation even to the least circumstance but what he hath decreed to do which as will appear from ver 11. doth hold in all other things which God doth for by God's purpose is meaned his eternal decree with respect had to its stability and unchangeablenesse there being neither want of fore-sight nor of power in God to occasion the alteration of his purpose which are the causes why men are frequently necessitated to alter theirs and this purpose and decree is spoken of here as the rule according to which God of his good pleasure did make known the mysterie of his will unto those Ephesians in order to their salvation Which he had purposed in himself saith he Vers. 10. That in the dispensation of the fulnesse of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him HEre is the intended effect which God did aim at in His gracious purpose of making fully known the mystery of the Gospel both to Jew and Gentile to wit That at the full time and season which God had dispensed measured out and pitched upon as most fitting for the businesse in hand to wit the time of Christ's incarnation and sufferings Gal. 4. 4. He might gather together in Christ all His own Elect whether already glorified or yet upon earth who before were separated from God and one from another and might make them one with God being united with Christ their head by faith Eph. 3. 17 and one among themselves being united by love Col. 3. 14. Now the Apostle affirmeth this gathering of all the Elect was to be in the fulnesse of times for though many of them were already actually gathered and glorified to wit the things in Heaven before that time yet the exhibition of that by vertue whereof they were gathered was at and not before that time to wit the time of Christ's incarnation obedience and sufferings Heb. 9. 15. Doct. 1. All mankind by nature and being considered in themselves are under a fearfull dissipation and scattering Sin hath rent and separated them from God from man and from the blessed Angels for gathering presupposeth a foregoing scattering and the word rendred gather together in one being taken from a word which signifieth the head of a natural body or a short sum of a sparse discourse and so signifying here to gather together under one head to wit Christ and unto one sum and body amongst themselves it supposeth that they are separated from God from Christ one from another and from the Angels also for they were to be gathered into one body with those That he might gather together in one c. 2. The Lord hath not left all mankind in this wofull separation and scattered condition but as He hath firmly purposed and decreed from all eternity so in time He setteth about to gather together some of scattered mankind and to unite them to Himself one to another and to the blessed Angels for the word rendred to gather implyeth a gathering unto all these as is said And he hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 3. The gathering together of the scattered Elect and making of them one with God and among themselves doth not depend upon the choice of their own free-will which could do no other but refuse to be gathered Mat. 23. 37. and so Christ should not have seen of the travel of His soul and been satisfied contrary to what is promised Isa. 53. 11. But upon the fixed and unchangeable purpose of God which engageth His Omnipotency to make them willing to be gathered Psal. 110. 3. and therefore they shall be infallibly gathered for the Apostle as appears from the context maketh this gathering depend on Gods purpose He hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 4. It is only God who by His omnipotent power doth gather together the scattered Elect and maketh them one with Himself and with one another in Himself We do so much love to wander Jer. 14. 10. that we would live and die estranged from God if the Lord by strong-hand did not reclaim us from our wandrings for saith Paul He hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 5. The preaching of the Gospel and making known that blessed mysterie is the mean which God maketh use of in this work of gathering the scattered Elect because though our actuall gathering be an act of Gods omnipotent power yet He dealeth with us as with rational creatures by giving us an offer of His friendship commanding us to accept of it as it is offered and in the mean time sending forth his power with the command whereby He maketh us to accept Act. 16. 14. for as is clear from the connexion God's end intended in making known the mysterie of his will is That he might gather together in one 6. As God is the great Master of his
a right unto Him Job 3. 36. with 1 Joh. 5. 11 12. and to all those excellent saving priviledges which were purchased by Him Job 1. 12. So whoever would receive this gift aright must receive Him as their head to quicken them to rule them and to be reverenced by them for He gave Him to be head to the Church 2. The power and superiority which Christ hath over His Church chiefly the invisible Church of reall Believers as head is of another kind than that which He hath over all other creatures besides as being more intimate amiable and in a manner more native and natural and accompanied with willing subjection in His Church Psal. 110. 3 even as the superiority which the King's head hath over his own body or his royal consort being compared with that which he hath over his subjects or rather his subdued enemies for He gave Him to be head over all to the Church Over all that is in a singular and eminent manner above the domination which He hath over all other creatures 3. None in any sense can be an head to the Church unto whom the Church in that same sense is not a body so that if the Church be not the Pope's body the Pope cannot be the Churches head for there is a reciprocation betwixt the head and body in this purpose as Christ is the Churches head so the Church is His body He gave Him to be head to the Church which is His body 4. None can draw comfort from those sweet relations of head husband king c. which Christ hath taken upon Him towards His Church but they who stand under a correspondent relation towards Him as being His body spouse and subjects and who make conscience of such duties as each of these relations do bind unto for as Christ is an head to the Church so the Church is His body Which is His body saith he 5. As Christ by taking upon Himself those relations towards His Church which are found amongst men doth stand obliged unto those duties which men are bound to by vertue of such relations Psal. 23. 1 c. So the Lord's People are allowed and commanded to search unto the duties and priviledges following upon such relations among men and from thence to learn what to expect from Christ by vertue of that relation and what honour and priviledges they do enjoy by standing under that relation to Christ for from this that Christ and the Church stand under the relation of head and body the Apostle inferreth that the Church hath this priviledge of being Christ's fulnesse even as the shoulders arms breast belly legs and thighes are the fulnesse of the natural body so that mystical Christ made up of head and members is not compleat and full without the Church or the least Believer in the Church Which is His body the fulnesse of Him saith he 6. In searching forth the grounds of these similitudes or relations taken from amongst men whereby Christ setteth forth to our capacity what He himself is to His People we would carefully guard lest by pressing them too far we ascribe any thing to Christ which is not according to the analogie of Faith or in any measure dishonourable to Him for Paul having stretched-forth that similitude of the head and body so far as to infer thence that the Church is the fulnesse of mystical Christ he carefully guardeth against a mistake whereby people might think that then some perfection were wanting in Christ to be supplyed by His Church while he saith that Christ filleth all in all 7. As even Believers in themselves are empty creatures till they be filled being destitute of all good which they may call their own Rom. 7. 18. and unable to help themselves if it were but with one right thought 2 Cor. 3. 5. So there is a supply to the full of all their emptinesse in Christ who is made of God unto them wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor 1. 30. and communicateth largely and to the full of His own fulnesse unto such as are sensible of their own emptinesse Joh. 1. 16. Psal. 81. -10. for He filleth all in all 8. Before that Christ do thus supply our emptiness out of His own fulness He must first be in us and united to us by faith Eph. 3. 17. for He is in all whom He filleth He filleth all in all CHAP. II. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle doth commend the doctrine of salvation by free-grace first from the consideration of that misery under which not only the Ephesians and other Gentiles were before conversion as being spiritually dead ver 1 following the corrupt custom of the world and Satan's suggestions v. 2. but even the Jews also as being inslaved to their own corrupt lusts v. 3. Secondly from the consideration of that delivery from sin and misery which was common to them both And first he mentioneth the first fountain and internal impulsive cause of that delivery to wit God's free-grace ver 4. Secondly the several branches of it as their quickning in the way of grace ver 5. the resurrection of their bodies and their glorification in heaven ver 6. Thirdly the final cause of this delivery to wit the manifesting of God's rich grace ver 7. And fourthly he cleareth and proveth they were saved only by grace by removing all other things inconsistent with grace from having influence upon our salvation And that first generally ver 8. and then particularly their good works because first otherwise they should have had matter of gloriation in themselves as to this purpose the contrary whereof is intended by God ver 9. Secondly power to do good works was given them in regeneration So that though they be necessary yet they are not meritorious ver 10. In the second part of the Chapter he maketh a more particular application of the former purpose unto the Ephesians and in them to all the Gentiles And first he layeth forth that misery which was in a great part peculiar unto them as they were Gentiles and this both more generally ver 11. and more particularly in five several branches ver 12. Secondly he declareth their present happy estate of nearness to God and His Church through Christ briefly ver 13. and explaineth more fully that Christ was the peace-maker and in order to His making peace had abolished the ceremonial Law ver 14 15 and sheweth a twofold necessity of Christ's so doing both for uniting of Jew and Gentile in one Church ver -15. And for reconciling both of them to God ver 16. Thirdly he sheweth that this benefit of nearnesse was published and actually communicated unto them by the preaching of the Gospel ver 17 which he proveth from the accesse which both Jew and Gentile had to God ver 18. And lastly he concludeth from what is said that the Ephesians were now in a blessed state comparing the whole Church to a city a family ver 19. and
be totally exstinct but was to be preached believed and obeyed in some 〈…〉 es at least of the world throughout all ages to the worlds end for the Apostle sheweth it was Gods design to have the exceeding riches of His grace shown forth in all succeeding ages and generations that in the ages to come he might shew 5. Gods bypast dealing whether in mercy or judgement 1 Corinth 10 6. are speaking lessons unto those who are in the ages following as holding forth both matter of praise unto God manifested in those Psal. 136. 10 c. as also matter of instruction in our duty to us 1 Cor. 10. 6. So that the after-ages in this respect are better ages than the former in so far as the latter have the advantage of those examples in the former ages which they themselves did want for the Apostle sheweth the benefit of God's gr 〈…〉 ious dealing with Believers in the present age should accresce unto the following ages That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace 6. As all those benefits which come to Believers do flow from the kindnesse of God or His native willingnesse to imploy what goodnesse is in Him for the good of His creatures So though the effects of His generall kindnesse and benevolence which are common to all the creatures Psal. 145. 9. do flow from God as Creator in the channel of common providence Psal. 104. 28. yet the effects of His speciall kindnesse and such as relate to life and godlinesse do all of them flow from God as reconciled through Christ and are convoyed through the conduit of Christs merit and intercession for the Apostle summing up all these saving benefits together with the way how they are convoyed he saith In his kindnesse towards us through Christ Jesus 7. The lively and serious consideration of those excellent benefits flowing from Gods mercy grace goodwill and bounty together with the consideration of the vileness and wretchednesse of those upon whom those excellent benefits are bestowed and of the way which infinit Wisdom set on work by eternal love hath found out for convoying those so excellent mercies to such base and unworthy objects even the incarnation obedience sufferings and high exaltation of Jesus Christ I say it is the consideration of all those joyntly which tendeth to set forth most convincingly how exceedingly gracious God is for the Apostle sheweth this convincing evidence doth lye in those three first in his kindnesse secondly towards us thirdly through Jesus Christ. Vers. 8. For by grace are ye saved through faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God THe Apostle Fourthly While he giveth a reason of what is said ver 7. as appeareth by the causall particle for doth sum up all which hath been spoken from ver 4. in this one comprehensive proposition that their compleat salvation from the first step unto the last did flow from Gods grace and favour for by grace here must be meaned Gods free favour and grace in him not the effects of this grace good works or grace inherent in us for those are expresly excluded ver 9. and withall that they were so saved by grace as faith was not excluded This grace of faith being the hand or instrument whereby we lay hold upon and apply to our selves Jesus Christ and His righteousnesse offered freely in the Gospel in order to our salvation Rom. 3. 25. And Secondly Because the establishing of them in this truth is his main scope through the whole first part of the Epistle therefore he doth here not only explain in what sense salvation doth flow from grace but also doth expresly confirm it by arguments First by removing all things in generall which could be called theirs whether prerogative priviledge naturall or acquired worth from being the meritorious procuring cause of their salvation or of any part of it the truth whereof is more than evident from what is said of their spirituall death in sins and trespasses ver 1 2 3. and therefore he needeth not bring any new argument to prove it Secondly by asserting from that same ground that their salvation was Gods gift and therefore it behoved to be free and of grace else it could not be a gift Doct. 1. Though the ascribing of salvation unto works is not wholly inconsistent with and destructive of Gods grace from having any influence upon salvation seing Adam's salvation even according to the tenor of the Covenant of works had been also of grace in some respect it being of grace that God did enter any Covenant with man at all and of grace also that He did accept even of mans perfect obedience so as upon his performance of it to make him sure of eternall life yet the ascribing of salvation or any part of it unto the merit or worth of works doth obscure and is inconsistent with that exceeding riches of grace which God intendeth to set forth by that way of salvation which is propounded in the Covenant of Grace for the Apostle being here to prove that Gods way of saving those Ephesians was a fit mean to set forth the exceeding riches of His grace giveth this for a reason even that their salvation did flow only from grace and from nothing in themselves nor any work of theirs So that if it did not flow only from grace and from nothing in themselves it could not demonstrate those exceeding riches of His grace for saith he ye are saved by grace and that not of your selves not of works 2. Whatever differences may be among severall persons in other things yet all come of Adam by ordinary generation are equall as in their common misery by nature so in the way of their delivery from that misery by free grace through a Redeemer there being no other name under Heaven given among men whereby we can be saved but the name of Jesus Act. 4. 12. for therefore doth the Apostle so frequently change the person in this first part of the Chapter while he sometimes speaketh of the Ephesians and Gentiles alone in the second person as ver 1. sometimes of himself and of the Jews with them in the first person as ver 5 6. not as if some part of the purpose did belong only to the one alone and some part of it unto both joyntly for in one and the same purpose he changeth the person as while he giveth a reason in this verse of what he spoke ver 7. but rather to shew that the purpose here insisted on which is mans misery by nature and their delivery from that misery by free grace and Christ doth belong equally to Jew and Gentile and therefore he standeth not much to which of them he doth speak for by grace are ye saved saith he 3. As Believers are in some sense already saved not only because they have salvation begun in their new birth which is a passing from death unto life 1 Joh. 3. 14. but also they
have compleat salvation in right and title 1 Corinth 3. 21 22. and in the earnest of it Eph. 1. 14. So the whole work of their salvation from its first step in regeneration unto its last step in their glorification doth intirely flow from Gods free grace and from none of their worth for he saith ye are saved in the time bypast and ascribeth it to grace by grace ye are saved 4. The maintaining of the interest of free grace in our salvation as being the alone impulsive cause thereof in opposition to our worth is a thing that the Spirit of the Lord is very carefull of the glory of His free grace being all which He seeketh after in our salvation chap. 1. 6. and a thing which men do naturally encline to intrench upon and to rob Him of either in whole or in part Rom. 10. 3. for therefore doth the Apostle so frequently shew the dependance which salvation hath upon Gods mercy love and free grace ver 4. -5. and here by grace are ye saved 5. Free grace and faith do well agree in the bringing about our salvation neither is salvation the lesse of free grace that it is also of faith seing faith is not only a fruit of Gods grace in us Phil. 1. 29. but also and mainly because faith doth not justifie or save us for any worth in it self or as it is a work for all works are excluded ver 9. but for the worth of its object Jesus Christ and of His righteousnesse Rom. 5. -19. which faith apprehendeth Philip. 3. 9. for the Apostle ascribeth their salvation both to grace and faith ye are saved by grace through faith 6. Though Gods free grace favour and goodwill doth freely bestow that salvation upon the Elect which Christ by His merit hath purchased yet the Wisdom of God hath thought it fitting that this salvation shall not be actually bestowed untill the person to be saved do lay hold by faith upon the offer of salvation in the Gospel and of Christs righteousnesse whereby salvation is acquired that so the heirs of glory may not only have a right to heaven by faith before they come to the actuall possession of it Joh. 3. 16. but also be made meet to partake of that heavenly inheritance Col. 1. 12. their natures being renewed when the habit of faith is wrought in them by God 2 Corinth 5. 17. and their hearts also being purified by the exercise of that grace Acts 15. 9. for saith he by grace are ye saved through faith 7. The ascribing of salvation to Gods free grace though it doth not exclude Christs merit and the act of faith as imbracing the righteousnesse of Christ See Doct. 5. Yet it excludeth all things in our selves whether dignity of our natures the enjoyment of civil or ecclesiastick priviledges nobility of discent all our common or more speciall gifts and induements whether of nature or grace from having any meritorious or causall influence in bestowing either a right to salvation or the possession of it for Paul opposeth these two by grace are ye saved and that not of your selves 8. As heaven and salvation are Gods gift so they are such a gift as is freely given by God who is not induced thereto by any thing in the person to whom it is given whether sense of benefit already received or hope of any benefit to be received from Him in time coming which occasioneth the bestowing of gifts among men salvation is indeed a gift but not such a gift for it is a gift without all rise from any thing in our selves And that not of your selves it is the gift of God saith he Vers. 9. Not of works lest any man should boast HE further explaineth in what sense their salvation did come from free grace and proveth it by other two arguments which do also confirm the two former The first taken from the removeall of those things in particular from having any meritorious or causall influence upon their salvation which all men have a kind of naturall propension to rely upon for salvation to wit their works and those even their good works for so doth he explain himself ver 10. whence it followeth that they were saved of grace and not of themselves The second is taken from the end aimed at by God in contriving the plot of lost mans salvation to wit that all ground of gloriation might be taken away from man as being in the meanest respect a saviour to himself and that all the glory might be ascribed compleatly unto God in Christ See 1 Cor. 1. 30 31. which end could not have been obtained except they had been saved by grace and not of themselves Doct. 1. Though the word grace in Scripture be somtimes taken for the saving graces of Gods Spirit in us 2 Pet. 3. 18. yet when salvation is ascribed unto Gods grace we are alwayes to understand grace in God that is His free favour and goodwill and not grace inherent in us or good works the exercise of that grace for the Apostle establisheth grace ascribing our salvation to it and excludeth grace inherent and good works which were inconsistent if they were the self same thing Not of works saith he 2. The salvation of Believers doth so much flow from free grace as that all works of theirs even their good works are thereby excluded from having any meritorious influence upon it for even our best works are imperfect Isa. 64. 6-they are a debt which we owe unto God Luk. 17. 10. the power and activity whereby we do them is given of God Phil. 2. 13. and therefore we can merit nothing and least of all salvation by them at Gods hand Thus the Apostle explaineth how we are saved by grace even so as to exclude all works Not of works saith he 3. Though a man may boast and glory of the good things which God hath given him in some respects See upon Gal. 6. ver 4. doct 5. Yet the way wherein salvation is conveyed unto sinners is so contrived that no ground is left for man to boast in himself for any thing which his wisdom goodnesse power or worth do contribute for bringing of his own salvation about either in part or in whole From the first step thereof election unto the last his glorification man and his worth are still depressed and God and His free grace alwayes exalted for the Apostle sheweth this was the end God did aim at even least any man should boast 4. In so far as works even good works have place in the matter of mans salvation so far hath man mater of boasting and ascribing the glory of his salvation to himself and holding back the glory of it from God for although good works do come wholly from the Spirit of God in so far as they are good yet they are our works in so far as they are wrought by us being now renewed and enabled to work by influence from God and therefore heaven and salvation
should in that case be given unto us for the vertue and worth of somewhat which is ours for Paul affirmeth that works even good works which we are created unto in Christ Jesus ver 10. are excluded from having any causall influence upon salvation lest any man should boast implying if works were not excluded man should have ground of boasting See Rom. 3. 27. Vers. 10. For we are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them LEst the Apostle by commending grace and excluding works from being the cause of their salvation should have seemed to justle out works and an holy life as altogether unnecessary Therefore in this verse he sheweth that the study of good works is of absolute necessity required in those who are to be saved because all such whether Jew or Gentile for he speaketh in the first person including himself and the believing Jews are Gods workmanship that is renewed and made over again by Gods createing power through the interveening mediation of Christ Jesus and this of purpose that they may make conscience of good works yea and further God who had predestinated them to heaven had also decreed and prepared good works for them as the way wherein they behoved of necessity to walk in their journey to heaven which as it proveth the undeniable necessity of good works so it also confirmeth that they neither were nor could be saved by works because the power whereby they did good works did follow upon their regeneration and was given them freely by God As also God had prepared good works that they should walk towards heaven in them but not to merit heaven by them Doct. 1. Believers are Gods workmanship not only by naturall creation but supernaturall renovation they are not only once made but made over again not by having the substance of their soul and naturall powers thereof destroyed and new ones substantially different from those substituted in their place but by having the vitious qualities which were in those subdued and weakened and contrary graces and vertues implanted in their stead Eph. 4. 22 23 24. for saith Paul we are His workmanship the word signifieth a thing of His making whereby he meaneth not Gods first making of them as men but His making of them over again as renewed men which appeareth from what followeth His creating them in Christ and unto good works 2. As the making of sinners over again and new creatures is only Gods work So the power whereby He so maketh us is no lesse than creating power much like unto that power whereby in the beginning He made some things of nothing and some things of pre-existing matter but such as was wholly unfit and indisposed for those things to be made of it Gen. 2. 7. 22. considering that in this great and mighty work of God He maketh those who were wholly indisposed to good and averse from it Psal. 81. 11. yea perverse resisters of all motions towards that which is godly and holy Job 21. 14. to be true lovers of it and walkers in its for this much is implyed while he saith we are His workmanship created c. 3. Christ behoved to strike in as Mediator betwixt God and us before we could be made this new workmanship the life which we have by this new creation being purchased by His death 1 Joh. 4. 9. and applied unto us by His power after He is now arisen from death Act. 5. 31. The furniture whereupon the actions of this life are performed coming also from Him Joh 15. -5. for saith he we are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus 4. Believers are made new creatures not to live idlely or to work wickedly but that they may in the whole course of their life make conscience of good works which are not only works of charity or duties of immediate worship but every duty whether of worship Act. 10. -2. or of our callings Act. 9. 36. 39. whether to God or man or to our selves Tit. 2. 12. which is warranted in the Word as lawfull or commanded as necessary Mic. 6. 8. gone about by a man regenerate and in Christ Mat. 7. 17 18. by vertue of influence from the Spirit of Christ Phil. 2. 13. for Gods glory as the main end of the worker 1 Cor. 10. 31. and with due respect had to all necessary circumstances Psal. 1 -3 every duty of that kind so gone about is a good work which Paul saith they were created unto in Christ Jesus even unto good works 5. Though many actions of unregenerate men are materially good and very usefull both for themselves and others Rom. 2. 14. yet no unregenerate man can do any work which is spiritually good and acceptable to God even their good works are but shining sins as being destitute of a great part of these necessary requisites unto a good work mentioned in the former Doctrine for Paul sheweth that a man must be a new creature and Gods workmanship before he can do a good work for we are saith he Gods workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works 6. Though good works be not necessary to merit or purchase salvation yet are they necessary unto those who are justified and saved in severall respects not only as they are the necessary fruit and end of regeneration and as they are the way which leadeth to heaven their necessity in both which respects is grounded upon the present Scripture but they are necessary also as evidences of our right to salvation 1 Joh. 3. 14. as a guard to preserve peace with our own consciences 2 Cor. 1. 12. as evidences of our thankfulnesse to God and Christ who hath freely saved us 1 Pet. 2. 9. and for the edification of others Matth. 5. 16. for the Apostle's scope is to prove that as we are not saved by works so that good works are necessary in other respects We are created unto good works which He hath fore-ordained that we should walk in them 7. Christians are like unto those who walk in a journey from one place unto another through a streight and beaten way which lyeth betwixt in so far as they advance from sin Ezek. 18. 31. to heaven Phil. 3. 14. in the way of holinesse and good works for the word rendered to walk whereby he expresseth what should be the daily exercise of a renewed man is a metaphore taken from those who travell in a journey and he maketh the way wherein they walk to be good works which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them 8. The Lord hath prepared and made ready good works as a beaten path wherein His renewed people may walk without any discourageing or perplexing difficulty in so far as He not only hath ordained in His eternall and unchangeable decree that they shall make conscience of good works which seemeth to be mainly meaned by His fore-ordaining of good works here spoken of but He doth also hold forth
of old as now under the Gospel ver 5. and giveth a brief sum of this mysterie as to that part of it which was most controverted to wit the calling of the Gentiles to the free enjoyment of Gospel-priviledges ver 6. Next by shewing his call from God and authority to dispense this furniture where he taketh occasion to extol and magnifie his Office and the grace of God which called him to it from eight distinct considerations First from the gifts wherewith he was furnished to discharge it Secondly from the powerfull assistance of Gods Spirit which wrought in him and by him in the discharging of it ver 7. Thirdly from his own unworthinesse who was intrusted with it Fourthly from the excellency of the subject matter which he was to set forth even the unsearchable riches of Christ ver 8. Fifthly from the great benefit which by his conscientious discharging thereof was to accresce unto men even their more clear understanding of that mysterie ver 9. Sixthly from the same benefit which did thereby redound to the glorified Angels ver 10. Seventhly from the eternity of Gods purpose to intrust him in that office for bringing about the forementioned ends ver 11. And lastly from three excellent priviledges boldnesse accesse confidence whereof Believers did partake by the means of his Ministery as being thereby brought to Christ in whom they enjoyed all those ver 12. From all which grounds he dehorteth them from fainting notwithstanding of his present sad sufferings in discharging so honourable an employment ver 13. In the second part of the Chapter he doth indirectly incite them to persevere and make progresse in the experimentall knowledge of and in communion with Christ by giving a sum of his fervent prayers unto God for them to that purpose The occasion of which prayer is ver 1. his gesture in prayer and to whom he did pray to wit God described from his relation to Christ and the Church are ver 14. 15. The particulars prayed for are 1. Their strengthening in the inward man by the Spirit ver 16. 2. Christs inhabiting their heart by faith ver 17 3. Their experimentall knowledge and comprehension of Christs boundlesse love flowing from their firm adhering to the love of God in Christ by faith ver -17 18 19 4. Their full replenishing with the perfection of all graces in glory ver -19. The conclusion of his prayer containeth a description of God taken from His almighty power to do above our petitions and conceptions ver 20. and a thanksgiving unto God so described and upon that ground ver 21. Vers. 1. FOr this cause I Paul the prisoner of Jesus Christ for you Gentiles THis verse belongeth to the purpose contained in the second part of the Chapter which being begun here is interrupted untill ver 14. The reason whereof shall be shown ver 2. In the mean time he doth here declare the occasion of his following prayer to God on their behalf to have been even that which he hath but presently spoken concerning them to wit their being already builded upon Christ by faith together with all true Believers for the words for this cause relate to the close of the preceeding Chapter And withall that his praying to God so fervently for them may have the more weight in order to their up-stirring to endeavour after that which he prayeth for he describeth himself who is to pray for them from his present captivity and bonds under which he was at Rome for the truth of Christ and for the behoof and edification of the Gentiles of whom these Ephesians were a part for Paul being intrusted in a peculiar manner to be the Apostle and Doctor of the Gentiles 1 Tim. 2. 7. it followeth that all his sufferings in discharge of that trust were for their sake Besides that the nearest cause of his sufferings from the Jews his chief adversaries was his carrying of the Gospel unto the Gentiles Act. 22 21 22. Doct. 1. The pains of Ministers with and for the Lords people are so far from being at an end when people are brought to Christ and built upon Him by faith that even their being brought this length doth lay a new tye upon their Ministers both to deal with God on their behalf and to labour with themselves so much the more earnestly that not only they do not losse those things which are already wrought 2 Joh. ver 8. but also they may make progresse answerable vnto their fair beginnings lest otherwise they mar their own comfort Psal. 51. 12. make the name of God to be evil spoken of 2 Sam. 12. 14. and thereby draw down sore corrections upon themselves 2 Sam. 12. 10. for the Apostle his praying so fervently upon their behalf and thereby stirring them up to endeavour after that themselves which he did pray for was occasioned by their being built upon Christ for an habitation unto God for this cause saith he I Paul do bow my knees as it followeth ver 14. which closeth up the sentence begun here 2. Such powerfull influence hath God upon hearts that He can make those who for the time are cruel persecuters of truth prove afterwards famous Martyrs and sufferers for it for Paul was once a bloudy persecuter Gal. 1. -13. but is now a famous sufferer I Paul the prisoner saith he or as it is in the Original that prisoner implying he was no ordinary but a noted sufferer his sufferings being in a manner singular 2 Cor. 11. 23 c. 3. Sufferings for Christ and truth are so far from being cause of just reproach to those who suffer from others or from being matter of shame and blushing to themselves That they are rather a glory unto them yea and sometimes will be gloried in by them as that wherein their chiefest honour standeth for Paul after the example of Kings and Nobles who design themselves by their most honourable stiles doth in place of all take this one of a prisoner for Truth unto himself I Paul the prisoner of Jesus Christ. 4. So far ought people be from stumbling at truth because of the oppressed and suffering lot of those who preach it that even their sufferings for truth should make their pains the more acceptable and adde a weight unto the Word of truth in their mouth for Paul describeth himself from his present suffering lot that both his person and pains might have the more weight and efficacy with them I Paul the prisoner of Jesus Christ. 5. The Lord doth sometimes give so far way to the rage of persecuters as that the choisest instruments for carrying on His work may be for a season restrained in their liberty and so laid aside as uselesse even in a time when there is greatest need of their pains and diligence for Paul an eminent instrument 1 Corinth 15. 10. was at such a time cast in prison I Paul the prisoner of Jesus Christ. 6. No afflictions or sufferings do loose a Pastor from his duty
called Ministers by God to hold forth unto the Lords People than the doctrine of Salvation through free grace the greatest of all trusts So whatever is committed or given by God unto them is not for themselves alone but for the good of those also unto whom they are sent and therefore God doth usually deal the better with Ministers for the Peoples sake for the relative which doth relate to the antecedent grace and Paul saith This grace or the doctrine of the Gospel is given me to you-ward Vers. 3. How that by revelation he made known unto me the mysterie as I wrote afore in few words 4 Whereby when ye read ye may understand my knowledge in the mysterie of Christ. THe Apostle being in the second branch of the first part of the Chapter to ver 13. more largely to illustrate what he did but briefly assert ver 2. to wit that the Apostolick office of dispensing the Gospel to the Gentiles was committed unto him doth first shew to ver 7. that he was sufficiently furnished by God with knowledge and insight in the Doctrine of the Gospel concredited to him And in those two verses he declareth not only the nature of this Doctrine that it is a mysterie or sacred secret but also that it was made known unto him by God together with the manner how he came to the knowledge of it to wit by extraordinary revelation from God and not by ordinary means as is more clearly expressed Gal. 1. 12. and for proof of his knowledge and insight in this mysterie he referreth them to what he hath written succinctly of it in the two former Chapters in which he hath by a most divine and ravishing strain set forth the grounds causes and means of salvation and made application of all both to Jew and Gentile which is the very comprehensive sum of this mysterie ver 3. from which two preceeding Chapters being diligently perpended and read by them he doubteth not but they should find he had not arrogantly and without ground ascribed to himself a great measure of knowledge and insight in that mysterie which he calleth the mysterie of Christ because Christ is the chief subject of the Gospel 1 Cor. 2. 2. and the very mysterie of that mysterie 1 Tim. 3. 16. This is contained ver 4. From ver 3. Learn 1. Whoever are called by God to undergo any office in His house they are in somemeasure greater or lesser competently furnished and fitted by Him for that imployment And therfore giftlesse Ministers were never sent by God for Paul having shown that the Apostolick Office was committed unto him by God ver 2. he now declareth how God had furnished him for it How that by revelation He made known unto me the mysterie 2. That the Gospel is a mysterie and in what respects it is so see chap. 1. ver 9. doct 1. He made known unto me the mysterie 3. The Lord doth usually manifest Himself more or lesse unto His Servants according to the nature weight and difficulty of those imployments unto which He doth call them for He maketh Himself manifest to Paul by extraordinary revelation because he was to serve Him in an extraordidary embassage as an Apostle How that by revelation He made known unto me 4. As Christ's Ministers may sometimes in sobriety speak to the commendation of their own knowledge and of their other ministerial abilities to wit when they are necessitated to assert and avow their calling from God So it is most safe to speak no further to that purpose than they have formerly given some proof of in discharge of their calling to which they may appeal as an undeniable confirmation of what they affirm lest otherwise their bare assertion be taken for vain vaunting and arrogant boasting for Paul being called to speak of his own knowledge and abilities as an evidence of his calling from God referreth them to that proof which he had given thereof in his former writings while he saith As I wrote afore in few words 5. The Doctrine of salvation revealed unto and Preached by the Apostles is contained in their writings and therefore there is no necessity of unwritten traditions for the Apostle proving that this mysterie was revealed to him he doth not refer them to what he had preached unto them for the space of two years Acts 19. 10. but to his writings which had been no adequate proof except he had written the sum of all which was revealed unto him at least of so much as was necessary for them to know As I wrote afore in few words 6. The Spirit of God speaking in Scripture hath comprised large and comprehensive purpose even the whole plot of mans salvation and the sum of mans duty in a small bulk and few words as knowing that reading much would be but wearisomenesse to the flesh Eccles. 12. -12. and intending that the gift of interpretation and exponing Scripture should have place in the Church 1 Corinth 12. 8. for Paul the pen-man of the Spirit of God giveth a comprehensive sum of the whole Gospel in the two first Chapters with relation to which he saith here I wrote afore in few words From ver 4. Learn 1. The brevity of Scripture and comprehensive largenesse of the purpose contained in it do not occasion any such obscurity in Scripture but by diligent reading the mind of God therein may be found out and understood for notwithstanding Paul hath shown he had comprehended that whole mysterie in few words yet saith he Whereby when you read ye may understand 2. The Word of God therefore ought to be frequently read and diligently perused by all the Lords people this being one mean and second to none except publick preaching Rom. 10. 14 15. which the Lord doth blesse as for other ends So for attaining to know and understand the purpose and subject-matter contained in the Word for Paul supponeth it was their duty to read what he had written and sheweth by reading they should understand his knowledge in the mysterie 3. Even private Christians through diligent reading of Scripture may attain to such a measure of knowledge and understanding as may enable them to judge of the abilities gifts and doctrine of Ministers for Paul speaking even to private Christians amongst those Ephesians saith Wherby when ye read ye may understand my knowledge in the mysterie of Christ. 4. Though private Christians are not to sist themselves as publick judges of the doctrine of Ministers 1 Cor. 14. 32. neither should they delight much in venting their private judgement especially their carping censures Iam. 1. 19 yet they are not as stupid blocks without triall and examination to receive what-ever the Minister saith but ought to passe a private judgment of discretion upon what they hear whether it be truth or error right or wrong in so far at least as may regulate their own practice in choosing or refusing what they hear 1 Thess. 5. 21. for Paul alloweth unto those Ephesians
in dispensing grace and salvation now in a way diverse from what He did formerly any should suspect that therefore God had altered His purpose he sheweth here all this had come to passe according to His eternal purpose 4. As it is but small comfort unto a Minister that he is intrusted to carry unto others an excellent message and glad tydings of the plot and draught of mans salvation surely grounded upon Gods purpose and infallibly executed by Christ in all its steps except he make application and take a share of those glad tydings unto himself So the way for either Pastor or People to apply the Gospel and all those rich treasures of spiritual blessings contained in it unto themselves is by taking hold upon Christ and pleading a well-grounded interest in Him as theirs for if Christ be ours all things are ours Rom 8. 32. Hence is it that Paul having magnified his Ministery and Message doth make application of those precious things which he was intrusted with unto himself by pleading an interest in Christ as his while he calleth Him Jesus Christ our Lord. Vers. 12. In whom we have boldnesse and accesse with confidence by the faith of Him HE doth magnifie his Office eighthly from three excellent priviledges whereof Believers among them some in a greater some in a lesser measure some at one time some at another did partake by the means of his Ministery as being thereby brought to Christ in whom they enjoyed all these 1. Boldnesse or liberty to speak all their mind freely as the original word doth bear whereby as it is distinguished from the other two is meaned that holy freedom and boldnesse which is in reconciled souls to speak their whole heart to God both in the duty of prayer and thanksgiving and is opposed to misbelief terror of conscience or to whatsoever doth straiten the heart or stop the mouth in discharging these duties 2. Accesse to wit unto God See chap. 2. 18. which is larger than the former as comprehending freedom and liberty of spirit in reconciled souls to exercise all their saving graces in the exercise whereof communion with God doth consist 3. Confidence or a well-grounded perswasion that both our persons and performances are accepted of God All which priviledges he sheweth were enjoyed by them by vertue of their being in Christ of whom he spoke ver 11. and by the exercise of faith relying upon Him Doct. 1. Whatsoever worldly disadvantage may follow upon the preaching of the Gospel unto a People Matth. 10. 34 35. yet those excellent and spiritual priviledges which are conveyed thereby unto them who receive the Gospel may and ought sufficiently commend the Ministery of it unto all for Paul doth here commend his Office from these spiritual fruits which were enjoyed by it as their being in Christ in whom they had boldnesse and accesse with confidence 2. And more particularly liberty and freedom to speak our heart to God in all our concernments and accesse to God or fellowship with Him in the exercise of all our graces all obstructions arising either from the apprehension of Gods terror and our own guiltinesse or from our inability backwardnesse of spirit to good or from those impediments which the devil the world or our own hearts do create and cast in our way being removed Those I say together with confidence and a well-grounded perswasion that both our persons and duties are accepted of by God may and will abundantly serve to commend the Ministery of the Gospel unto those who have found it accompanied with such effects to their own hearts whatever other troubles they may be under for their receiving of it for the Apostle commendeth his Ministery from their enjoying of those priviledges in particular by the means thereof In whom we have boldnesse c. 3. The more a Christian doth find his heart enlarged and his tongue loosed to speak unto God in the duties of prayer and praise he will find the more of accesse unto and of fellowship with God in the exercise of all His saving graces and the more a man be restrained of liberty in those duties he will readily find himself the more restrained from the exercise of faith hope patience humility meeknesse or any other of His saving graces for the Apostle conjoyneth boldnesse or liberty in prayer and praises with accesse or freedom of spirit to approach unto God in the exercise of saving graces In whom we have boldness and access 4. A well-grounded perswasion of our acceptation with God both as to our persons and actions doth serve exceedingly to furnish the heart with boldnesse in prayer and with familiar accesse unto and fellowship with God in so far as a great many of those obstructions which 〈◊〉 boldnesse and accesse do arise from diffidence misbelieving doubts or ignorance whether God accepteth of us or not Rom. 10. 14. for the Apostle speaketh of confidence or of this well-grounded perswasion as having some influence upon the other two while he saith boldnesse and accesse with confidence 5. Those excellent priviledges of boldnesse accesse and confidence are not only purchased and conveyed unto sinners by Christ as was explained in the point of accesse chap. 2. ver 18. doct 2. but also they are enjoyed by none but such as are in Christ and united to Him by a lively and saving faith and all who are not so in Christ are estranged from spirituall liberty and boldnesse in prayer though they be never so much flowing in eloquence and discourse They are estranged also from accesse unto God being banished from His favour and presence Psal. 58. 3. and have no well-grounded confidence that God doth accept either of their persons or actions seing He is well-pleased only in Him Matth. 3. 17. for he saith In whom meaning Christ we have boldnesse and accesse with confidence They were first in Him 6. Faith in Jesus Christ whereby we receive Joh. 1. 12. and rest upon Him for salvation Isa. 50. 10. is one thing and confidence or perswasion of our acceptation with God is another the former being the cause root and fountain of the latter For Paul sheweth that confidence floweth from faith while he saith with confidence by the faith of Him or faith in Him See Gal. 2. 20. 7. As faith in Jesus Christ is that grace which uniteth us to Him So it not only goeth before our boldnesse accesse and confidence but also maketh way for and is the cause of those and therefore the more that faith is keeped in exercise there will be the more of liberty and boldnesse the more of accesse to God and nearnesse and the more of a well-grounded perswasion of our acceptation by God and confidence for he ascribeth their being in Christ their accesse boldnesse and confidence unto faith while he saith by the faith of Him Vers. 13. Wherefore I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for you which is your glory THe Apostle having now sufficiently magnified
Apostle while he seeketh increase of spirituall strength unto those converted Ephesians he prayeth that God would grant or give it as a gift for the word signifieth so much and that from the inexhaustible fountain of His glorious grace That He would grant unto you according to the riches of His glory not according to your worth 6. As all the attributes of God and especially His mercy and power are not onely altogether glorious because the glory of God is manifested unto the creatures in their severall wonderfull effects Psal. 19. 1 c. but are also infinite and without measure as being indefatigable in working wholly insuperable by any impediment or opposition whatsoever and inexhaustible by supplying any want in the creature So in making our approaches unto God for seeking any good and especially saving good it is most necessary that we lift our eyes above any thing that is ours whether our good or our evil and fasten them by faith upon that inexhaustible fountain of mercy and power in God whereby he is not only willing as mercifull but also able as omnipotent to bestow what ever we shall ask according to his will for the Apostle in seeking spirituall strength for those Ephesians doth look to the inexhaustible riches of Gods mercy and power called here His glory that He would grant according to the riches of His grace 7. It is the Spirit of God the third person in the blessed Trinity who taking up His place of abode in the truly regenerate 1 Joh. 4. 13. doth make it His work to renew their strength by upholding and actuating their graces and making them advance from strength to strength in despite of all imaginable difficulties neither is there any other strength or might whether naturall or acquired which can sufficiently furnish us to rancounter all those difficulties which are incident in our Christian course but that whereof the Spirit of God residing in us is the author and giver for he prayeth they may be strengthened with might in the inner man from the spirit 8. Though Christians are not to neglect their outward and bodily concernments 1 Tim. 5. 8. 23. yet the spirituall estate of their eternall souls is to be cared for most and so much as if it go well with that and if the soul be strengthened with might for carrying on the concernments thereof their outward concernments may trouble them the lesse and especially the care of Ministers should be employed about the inward and spirituall estate of their flock for Paul prayeth they may be strengthened in the inner man his care did run most upon that Vers. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith HEre is the second petition of the Apostle's prayer wherein he seeketh that which is the cause of strengthning and corroboration by the Spirit spoken of ver 16. even that Jesus Christ by vertue of a continued act of lively faith in Him might be perpetually present in His Vertue Grace and Spirit working not only in their tougnes and brains but also and mainly in their hearts Doct. 1. That we may partake of any saving benefit purchased by Christ and particularly that we may be strengthened with might by the Spirit in the inner man for doing any thing that is spiritually good it is most necessary that we partake first of Christ Himself being most strictly united to Him and even as the members are to the head from which they receive sense and motion Christ giveth nothing of His purchase unto any but to whom He giveth Himself first 1 Joh. 5. 11 12. and to whomsoever He giveth Himself upon those He bestoweth all things Christ in us being the hope of glory Col. 1. 27. the fountain of life Gal. 2. 20. and of all things needfull 1 Job 4. 4. for Paul having prayed that they may be strengthened with might in the inner man subjoyneth the way and manner how this strength was to be conveyed unto them even by Christ's dwelling in their hearts by faith 2. There is a strict conjunction and near familiarity between Christ and Believers even such in some sort as is between an indweller and the house wherein he dwelleth whereby Jesus Christ God and Man in one person is present with the Believer not in His substance only as He is God for so He is every where Jer. 23. 24. nor in His substance at all as He is Man for so the heavens do contain Him Act. 3. 21. but by His gracious operation and speciall influence upon them whereby He quickeneth them Rom. 8. 10. ruleth them Act. 9. 6. and liveth in them Gal. 2. 20. for he prayeth that Christ may dwell in their hearts which petition is granted in behalf of all Believers seing he prayed in faith 3 Though Christ doth thus familiarly communicate Himself unto all Believers so as to dwell in them by His gracious presence yet not unto all alike but unto some in a larger measure than unto others according as He worketh more and more effectually in some than in others for though Christ did already dwell in those converted Ephesians chap. 2. 22. yet Paul doth pray that Christ may dwell in them which therefore must be understood of a greater measure and degree of His indwelling presence than formerly they had 4. Where Jesus Christ doth once take up His abode and dwelling in the heart there He remaineth constantly and flitteth not in so far as though sometimes He withholdeth that gracious influence of His which is necessary only to the wel-being flourishing and vigorous thriving of grace in the heart Cant. 5. 6. yet He never withdraweth that influence which is necessary to the being of grace and without which grace would utterly die and perish Psal. 73. 23. for the word rendered to dwell signifieth to take up a fixed and immovable habitation and differeth from another word very like unto it which signifieth to sojourn in a place only for a season 1 Pet. 1. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts 5. Though even the bodies of Believers be temples of the holy Ghost and consequently of Jesus Christ for Christ dwelleth in them by His Spirit 1 Cor. 6. 19. yet the heart will and affections of man are the chief place of His habitation wherein He resideth as in His strong citadel from which He commandeth the other faculties and members And without His presence there He cannot have any habitation in any part of the man elsewhere the tongue cannot receive Him by speaking nor the understanding by knowing nor the hand by external working except He be received in the heart from which proceed the issues of life Pro. 4. 23. for he prayeth that Christ may dwell in their hearts 6. Though Jesus Christ doth make His first entry unto and dwelleth in Believers by His Spirit 1 Joh. 4. 13. whereby He uniteth them to Himself quickeneth and ruleth them yea and worketh the grace of faith in them Joh. 6. 44. yet faith being so wrought the
other things Gen. 4. 21 22. yet in those things they were altogether vain and wilde Rom. 1. 21. And secondly that they were estranged from and wholly destitute of the life of God or that spirituall life begun in regeneration Joh. 3. 3. and consisting in the saving knowledge of God and the severall pieces of Gods image Col. 3. 10. called the life of God because not only God is the author of it as He is of our naturall life but also it floweth both in its being and operation from the gracious presence of God dwelling in us by His Spirit Gal. 2. 20. And thirdly he sheweth that the cause of those former two was their ignorance of God and of those things belonging to the worship of God and their own salvation to wit both simple ignorance or want of the knowledge of those things which ignorance is in all by nature and ignorance affected and delighted in whereby the things of God are judged foolishnesse 1 Cor. 2. 14. from which ignorance of theirs did flow a further degree of darknesse in the understanding and of alienation from the life of God than what was naturall unto them And fourthly that this their ignorance with both the forementioned effects did flow from their blindnesse or rather as the Originall doth read hardnesse of heart whereby their heart or that part of the soul which chooseth and refuseth good or evil did obstinately and against all means used to the contrary refuse the light of God which was proffered unto them and were wholly inflexible to good being obdured and hardened not only naturally from their birth Psal. 51. 5. but also voluntarily by themselves Exod. 8. 15. and judicially by God Exod. 9. 12. Doct. 1. That the vileness of sin may be sufficiently seen and so as we may abhor and detest it it is not sufficient to take a general view of it and in the bulk except we also dive into the particular branches pieces and degrees of it and by ripping up the womb of that abominable monster look upon the vile intrals of it that so we may be made to detest and hate it with a perfect hatred for therefore Paul being to deterre these Ephesians from walking as the Gentiles doth not only give a brief sum of their wickednesse in the bulk ver 17. but also here and ver 19. doth more distinctly lay open the several branches and degrees of it Having the understanding darkned c. 2. Man considered in his natural state is so vile and loathsom by reason of sin that being rightly anatomized and deciphered there is nothing to be seen in him but what may make himself and others to abhor him there being no part of him neither in soul nor body free from those wounds bruises and putrifying sores which sin hath brought upon him as appeareth by this discovery which in these two verses the Spirit of God by Paul maketh of him his understanding is darkned his heart hardned his conscience past feeling c. for he speaketh this of all the Gentiles who were not yet converted and consequently of all men in their unrenewed state and though all such have not arrived at the utmost height of that wickednesse which some of those expressions hold forth yet that vain mind spoken of ver 17 which is the root of all the rest is in every unrenewed man 1 Cor. 2. 14. and every such man is posting towards all that wickednesse here expressed yea and would arrive at the utmost height of all if restraining grace did not hinder him Gen. 20. 6. and therefore in Gods sight he may be justly charged with all having the understanding darkned c. 3. As every man by nature is wholly unskilfull to discern the things of God or to improve those lurking principles of the knowledge of a Godhead and of right and wrong remaining after the fall Rom. 1. 20. by drawing solid conclusions from them for rules to direct him in the matter of worship and walking in the way to salvation So this unskilfulnesse and darknesse of his doth daily increase and the longer he liveth and exerciseth himself in finding out what is right and acceptable to God in those things by the direction and guidance of his natural light only he is the further from the mark for he speaketh of a further darkening of their understanding than what was naturall to them even that which did flow from ignorance and hardnesse of heart as is clear from the construction of the words Having their understanding darkened through the ignorance that is in them 4. As all men did once in their common root and first father Adam partake of the life of God consisting in Gods image Eccles. 7. 29. and are now by Adams fall from their very conception and birth deprived of it Rom. 5. 12 13 14. So the longer they live in their unrenewed state they are the more estranged from it while every sin they commit doth make them in a further degree uncapable of it for he speaketh of a further degree of alienation from the life of God than what was naturall to them even that which was afterward contracted by their ignorance and hardnesse of heart Being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them 5. Hardnesse of heart is a wofull evil and the root and fountain of severall other evils in so far as when a man doth obstinatley refuse light and walketh contrary to light and so hardeneth his heart to do mischief he thereby provoketh the Lord to give him over to ignorance and to lose the small measure of knowledge which he formerly had Rom. 1. 28. And thus hardnesse is the cause of ignorance and being thus both hardned in heart and blinded in mind he is further removed and estranged from the life of God which consisteth in the saving knowledge of God in Christ Joh. 17. 3. and his understanding and reason rendered more dark and unskilfull to find out what is truth or errour right or wrong the common principles which were left in him after the fall concerning those things being now through a continued custome of obstinacie in sin almost wholly obliterated and blotted out for if we look exactly to the construction of the words we will find that the blindnesse or hardnesse of their hearts is mentioned as the cause of that ignorance which was in them and both hardnesse and ignorance as the cause of their alienation from the life of God and the darkning of their understandings Vers. 19. Who being past feeling have given themselves over unto lasciviousness to work all uncleanness with greediness HE doth here set forth some other and those higher branches and degrees of their impiety profanity and godlesse conversation which did follow upon and flow from the former As 1. They had lost all remorse of conscience fear of Gods judgement and so did sin without inward check or challenge And secondly which followed upon the former they gave themselves with