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A35951 An expositon of all St. Pauls epistles together with an explanation of those other epistles of the apostles St. James, Peter, John & Jude : wherein the sense of every chapter and verse is analytically unfolded and the text enlightened. / David Dickson ...; Expositio analytica omnium Apostolicarum Epistolarum. English Dickson, David, 1583?-1663.; Retchford, William.; Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. 1659 (1659) Wing D1403; ESTC R7896 807,291 340

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rest and now hee sheweth the stability of the gripe which the Beleever taketh of these grounds in the similitude of the gripe which a Ships Anchor taketh being cast on good ground In the former Verse by Hope was meant the thing hoped for and laid hold on by Hope In the Relative which in this Verse hee understandeth the Hope which doth lay hold In the similitude of an Anchor cast out of a Ship Hee giveth us to understand 1 That albeit wee have no● gotten full Possession of the Promises in this life yet wee get a gripe of them by Faith and Hope 2. That Hopes gripe is not a slender imagination but solid and strong like the gripe of an Anchor 3. That the Beleever is not exempted from some tossing of trouble and temptations while hee is in this World yea subject rather to the same as a Ship upon the Sea 4. That whatsoever tossing there be yet all is safe The Souls Anchor is cast within the Heaven The Soul is sure 2. Hee giveth the Anchor all good properties It is weighty solid and firm It will not drive nor bow nor break it is so sure and stedfast Again it is sharp and peircing It is entred into that within the Veil that is into Heaven represented by the Sanctuary beyond the Veil And so the ground is good as well as the Anchor to hold all fast Vers. 20. Whither the Fore-runner is for us entred even Iesus made an High-Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedec 2. Hee commendeth our Anchor-ground for this that Christ is there where our Anchor is cast as our Fore-runner In continuing the Comparison and calling Christ our Fore-runner hee bringeth to mind 1. Christ being once in the Ship of the Militant Church tossed and tempted as others albeit without sin 2. That hee is now gone ashore to Heaven where the ship of the Church is seeking to land 3. That his going ashore is as our Fore-runner and so his landing is an evidence of our landing also who are to follow after him 4. That his going before is to make easie our Entry Hee is the Fore-runner for us for our behoof to prepare a place for us 5. That our Anchor is where Christ is and so must be the surer for his being there to hold all fast till hee draw the Ship to the shore 2. Christ is entred into Heaven and made an High-Priest for ever Then 1. CHRIST in Heaven is invested in an office for us 2. His Office is the High-Priesthood The Truth and Substance of the typical Priesthood 3. His Office is for ever and so for the benefit of all Ages that wee now as well as others before us may have the benefit of his intercession 3. Hee is said to be made an High-Priest after his entry in Heaven Then albeit Christ was Priest for his Church from the beginning yet was it never so declared as after his Ascension when hee sent down blessings sensibly upon his Church since which time hee doth so still The Summe of Chap. VII I Brake off my speech of Melchisedec will the Apostle say now I return to him again and in his Excellency will shew you Christs Excellency who is Priest after his order Wee have no more of him in Scripture but what wee finde Gen 14.19 20. And there hee is King and Priest both vers 1. Bearing a mystery in his Name and Office vers 2. Without Father or Mother or end of life as hee standeth in Scripture that hee might resemble Christ vers 3. Acknowledged to be superiour to Abraham by his paying of tythes unto him vers 4. Even as Levi for that same cause is superiour to the Brethren vers 5. Superiour also because hee blessed Abraham vers 6 7. Superiour to Levi for his typical immortality vers 8. And for his taking tythes of Levi in Abrahams loyns vers 9 10. Yea the Priesthood of Levi because imperfect calleth for a Priest of another Order to give perfection which is Christ vers 11 12. And so both the Priesthood and all the Ordinances thereof are abolished by the Messias who behoved to be of another Tribe than Levi vers 13 14. And of another Order also vers 15. Bodily shadows were in the Priesthood of Levi but endless Truth in Christ vers 16. As Davids words do prove vers 17. By which also it is prophesied That Aarons Priesthood shall be disanulled when Christs Priesthood is come because it was not able to do mens turn under the Law as Christs doth under the Gospel vers 18 19. And God obliged not himself to make Aarons Priesthood stand as hee sware to establish Christs vers 20 21. And so the Covenant under the Messias is declared to be better than under Levi vers 22. Again the Priesthood of Levi had sundry Office-bearers but Christ hath none in his Priesthood with himself nor none after himself vers 23 24. Therefore he is able alone to work out our salvation throughly vers 25. For such a Priest have wee need of who needeth not offer up daily his Sacrifice for hee hath offered one and never more vers 26 27. And no wonder for under the Law mortal men might be Priests but under the Gospel onely the Son of God is Priest and that for evermore vers 28. The Doctrine of Chap. VII Vers. 1. For this Melchisedec King of Salem Priest of the most High God who met Abraham returning from the slaughter of the Kings and blessed him BY saying FOR hee giveth a reason why hee calleth Christ a Priest after the Order of Melchisedec because such a one was Melchisedec his Type therefore such a one it behoved Christ in Truth and Substance to be as the Type imported hee should be 1. Hee repeateth from Gen. 14.18 19 20. as much as served to resemble any thing in Christ but never a word toucheth hee of Melchisedec's bringing forth of Bread and Wine to Abraham Therefore hee did not account this any typical action having any resemblance of that which was to be done of Christ his Anti-type for then should hee not have failed to mark it seeing hee observeth the mystery of his Name and place of dwelling which is less 2. Melchisedec and the Church in Salem where Melchisedec was Priest were not of Abrahams family Therefore albeit God did chuse Abrahams Family as the Race wherein hee was to continue the ordinary Race of his Church yet had he Churches and Saints beside 3. This meeting of Abraham and entertaining him and his company with Bread and Drink being the exercise of an ordinary virtue sheweth That it is the duty of all men and namely of Kings Great men and Church-men to countenance and encourage according to their place and power those who hazard themselves in Gods service and good causes 4. To come to a particular Comparison of the Type and the Truth 1. As Melchisedec was King and Priest in his Kingdome so is CHRIST King and Priest in his Kingdome both to
speaks in the singular number The first triumph is over all enemies together in one by reason of the conjunction of those that are justified with God If God bee for us who shall bee against us i. e. Seeing God is for us about to fulfil in us his eternal purpose of sanctification and glorification who or men or Devils may rise up against us to hinder our salvation Vers. 32. Hee that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall hee not with him also freely give us all things The second triumph is concerning the want of some good necessary to salvation leaning upon such great love of God towards us that hee gave his Son to death for us After this manner God who spared not his own Son than whom hee hath nothing dearer but gave him up to death for the salvation of all the Elect cannot but give us his Son and with him all other gifts necessary to salvation and lastly salvation and glory it self what therefore can bee wanting to us to salvation Vers. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is God that justifieth The third triumph is over every accuser the Devil the World our own conscience leaning upon the absolving sentence of God justifying us Who shall lay any thing to the charge of those whom God hath elected That is none will do it but in vain It is God that justifies i. e. from our sins and from any action brought against us hee absolves the Elect Therefore in Christ wee triumph over all Vers. 34. Who is it that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that it is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for you The fourth triumph is over every judge or any one that shall assume that office and shall undertake to condemn those that are justified Seeing God hath justified us who shall dare to condemn us Seeing Christ is dead for us yea as a Conquerour is risen from the dead and ascended into Heaven and there in glory intercedes for us no condemnation is to bee feared by us unless wee should say that the death resurrection and ascension of Christ his sitting in glory and intercession is in vain which is blasphemous Therefore wee triumph in Christ. Vers. 35. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword The fifth triumph is over outward afflictions whereof hee reckons up six kinds wherein hee comprehends all adversities with which Christians in any kind by the unthankful world are used to bee persecuted for Righteousness sake Denying concerning all that any enemy by these evils can hinder the fullest effect and sweetest sense of divine love towards us but that wee should at length partake of it Vers. 36. As it is written for thy sake wee are killed all the day long wee are accounted as sheep for the slaughter Lest hee should seem to triumph over a feigned enemy hee proves out of Psal. 44.22 That all the true servants of God which then lived were liable to all those miseries that they may apply to themselves the words of the Psalm saying For thy sake O God! are wee killed all the day long and are handled as if wee were sheep for the slaughter Vers. 37. Nay in all these things wee are more than Conquerours through him that loved us Hee follows his triumphing declaring the excellency of the victory which Christians in his time had over these evils by the power of Christ for they returned alwaies from the battel more than Conquerours neither wounded nor wearied suffering no loss but more healthy and strong more holy and increased in every grace even then when they seemed to the world to bee most overcome the glory of which triumph hee wholly ascribes to the love of Christ. Vers. 38. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor principalities nor powers nor Angels nor things present nor things to come 39. Nor height nor depth nor any other Creature shall bee able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. The sixth and last act of triumph is over unbeleef and all doubtings which might arise from any Creature or any present or future cause By Life and Death hee understands prosperity and adversity by which wee might bee either allured or affrighted By Angels hee understands good and evil spirits if it was possible they should concur to the separating of us from Christ. By Principalities and Powers hee means the power of Kings Emperours Governours Tyrants in the whole world By things present and things to come hee understands all those occurrences which had already fallen out or might before death come upon us By height and depth hee means the creatures placed above or below us By any other Creature any created thing universally in the whole world or any thing besides God that may seem terrible Over all these in a full confidence of Faith hee triumphs because of the powerful and efficacious certain and immutable love of God whereby hee is pleased to promote us to Eternal Life from the embracing of whose love and a saving sense thereof nothing shall ever separate those that are justified by Faith in Christ. Whereof hee gives this reason because the efficacy of Gods free love conveyed unto us is founded in Christs infinite merit and omnipotent power whereby wee are kept through Faith unto salvation CHAP. IX THe sixth and last Confirmation remains of free Justification by faith in Christ and not of works from EXPERIENCE Partly of the rejected Israelites who seeking after Righteousness by Works did not attain it or were not justified at all Partly of the beleeving GENTILES who being destitute of works are justified by faith in Christ without the works of the Law whence it follows that justification by Faith in Christ without the works of the Law onely is true and solid Because hee saw this Argument liable to several cavils hee is careful every way to fortifie it and opens it in the three next Chapters There are three parts of the Chapter In the first four Objections are preve●●ed against the Doctrine of the Apostle touching the rejection of the Jews In the answering whereof hee exactly handles the doctrine of Predestination to vers 24. In the second hee proves out of the Scriptures the rejection of the Jews and the calling of the Elect of the Jews and Gentiles to vers 30. In the third to confirm the Doctrine of Justification by Faith without works hee produces the EXPERIENCE of the Jews who seeking for Righteousness by works are not justified and the EXPERIENCE of the beleeving Gentiles who being destitute of the pretence of works are justified by Faith in Christ. Vers. 1. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience also bearing mee witness in the Holy Ghost In the first part of the Chapter hee
the world to confound the wise and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty 28. And base things of the world and things which are despised hath God chosen yea and things which are not to bring to nought things that are With this Argument hee brings in the tenth from the subalternate end of this Counsel of God viz. that hee might shew that hee nothing esteemed those things which were highly valued by men that so whoever swelled with pride because of these things might bee ashamed confounded and looked upon as vile and of no account neither is it therefore to bee wondred at that God hath chosen this plain manner of preaching and that I should stick to it that the vain wisdome of words might bee shamed seeing that all the pomp of words is found only to tickle the fancies of men and avails nothing to the conversion of the heart Vers. 29. That no flesh should glory in his presence Argum. 11. From the ultimate end of Gods good pleasure in chusing things and persons and weak means to salvation which end is here negatively propounded lest any should glory in himself No wonder therefore that God hath sent mee to preach not with wisdome of words lest I should glory in my self when any are converted by my preaching Vers. 30. But of him are yee in Christ Iesus who of God is made unto us wisdome and righteousness and sanctification and redemption In the mean time hee comforts the Corinthians against this their abasement and mean condition before the World granting to them by way of recompence of nobleness of stock in regeneration riches in wisdome and righteousness and finally freedome from all sin and misery in Christ and for the greater confirmation of their faith hee discovers that Christ was appointed by God and given to them for righteousness and life for Christ is made all these things by merit imputation application and effectual accomplishment to the use of all the faithful Vers. 31. That according as it is written Hee that glorieth let him glory in the Lord. Hee sets down affirmatively the ultimate end of Gods good pleasure in chusing weak means and persons and in debasing all men in themselves that as it is Ier. 9.23 all the glory might bee given to God from whence arises the twelfth Argument God so orders all things that no man should glory save in the Lord Therefore it 's no wonder that God sent mee not to preach the Gospel with wisdome of words that in the success of the Gospel wee might all glory in God alone CHAP. II. HEe goes forward to confirm the same doctrine which hee delivered in the foregoing Chapter viz. That in the preaching of the Gospel he rejected Rhetorical Elegance but was pleased with plainness and spiritual demonstration not that the Apostle defends the rashness or rawness of any in preaching as if wee might speak whatsoever comes to the tongues end without Method or sense in a rude stile and contemptible kind of speaking for the right way of preaching hath it's excellency which neither approves of dissembling or sordidness but condemns the affectation of eloquence which causes the hearer more to admire him that speaks than that which is spoken for the truth thought upon and rightly understood when the Preacher delivers it out of Faith and Love the simple willingly follow it and a speech fitted to the building up of all auditors which relishes better with the wisest hearers than all the flourishes of Rhetoricians This plain kind of preaching hee proves more excellent than artificial eloquence by eight Arguments the former of which are taken from the experience of Paul himself and the Corinthians to whom hee writes Vers. 1. And I Brethren when I came unto you came not with excellency of speech or of wisdome declaring unto you the testimony of God The first Argument I Paul when I came to you Corinthians to preach the Gospel by which you were converted to the Faith did advisedly abstain from the eminency of eloquence Therefore plainness of speech in preaching the Gospel is better than artificial Rhethorick Vers. 2. For I determined not to know any thing among you save Iesus Christ and him crucified Argum. 2. I did not at all value it to shew amongst you or discover of my self the knowledge of any thing save of the person offices efficacy and vertue of Jesus Christ and specially of his Passions and Humiliation Therefore this way of preaching is most excellent Vers. 3. And I was with you in weakness and in fear and in much trembling I being mindful of humane infirmities in the midst of dangers composing my self to humility without pride preached amongst you and carried my self pensively and tremblingly in my duty Therefore the preaching of the Gospel plainly is the excellentest way Vers. 4. And my speech and my preaching was not with entising words of mans wisdome but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power My speech and preaching never glistered with the acuteness of wit or humane Philosophy nor with fineness of words fitted for perswasion but in the evidences of Scripture and sound truth in which the Spirit shewed himself powerfully and worked in your hearts Therefore this kind of preaching is most excellent Vers. 5. That your faith should not stand in the wisdome of men but in the power of God Giving a reason of his practice why hee refrained himself from Humane Eloquence in his speeches hee adds the fift argument If I had made use of artificial expressions to convert you to the Faith Humane Eloquence had been the cause of believing the Gospel amongst you Corinthians and not the naked truth which is said to bee the power of God because God works powerfully by it in his people and so the Faith of the Corinthians had been grounded upon the deceitful foundation of Humane Eloquence but when any one by Eloquence is moved to believe hee may bee moved also by greater Eloquence to forsake the truth of Faith Therefore it follows that this plain way of preaching is most excellent Vers. 6. Howbeit wee speak wisdome amongst them that are perfect yet not the wisdome of this world nor of the Princes of this world that come to nought Argum. 6. From the comparing the Gospel and Humane Wisdome together That the Gospel hath its own proper wisdome eloquence and lustre in this plain kind of preaching any one of years may bee judge neither can it more admit of the dressing of Humane Wisdome than the most beautiful face admits of painting In those that undertake to preach the Gospel the help of Humane Wisdome is requisite not the splendour of it in preaching Wisdome His comparison of Divine Wisdome in its plainness of speech with worldly wisdome is eightfold The first Comparison They that are perfect or grown up in the School of Christ which have their senses exercised to discern good and evil this Wisdome of the Gospel they
sake shee was created is seen to whom shee ought to profess subjection by the covering of herself Therefore seeing the woman behaves herself otherwise amongst you shee is blamed for uncomeliness This does not any whit hinder but the woman is created in respect of her Soul and spiritual state to the glory and Image of God as well as the man Vers. 8. For the man is not of the woman but the woman of the man Argum. 5. The man is the material principle of the woman because shee was made out of the ribs of man Therefore it becomes the man and the woman to testifie the priviledge of their original in the observation of the aforesaid decency Therefore you are guilty of undecency which do otherwise Vers. 9. Neither was the man created for the woman but the woman for the man Argum. 6. Seeing the man hath the respect of the end and the woman is destined for the end it is fitting that this difference of their excellency should bee expressed by the observance of decency Therefore when it is not observed you are deservedly to bee reproved Vers. 10. For this cause ought the woman to have power on her head because of the Angels Argum. 7. Even because of the Angels who behold and are witnesses of comely and uncomely deportment● in the Church although you would not regard that me● look upon you yet it 〈◊〉 Women to te●●ifie the subjection of their Sex 〈…〉 power of the M●n by putting a veil over their 〈…〉 a sign of it Therefore you are guilty of indecency 〈◊〉 your behaviour 〈◊〉 otherwise Vers. 11. 〈…〉 neither is the 〈◊〉 without the Woman 〈…〉 Woman without 〈◊〉 Man in the Lord. 12. For as the Woman 〈◊〉 of the Man even 〈◊〉 is the Man also by the Woman but all things of God That this comparing of the Man and the Woman may not bee drawn out further to the despising of the Woman in a threefold respect hee equals the Woman to the Man First In respect to Christ our Lord or in respect to our state of Grace in Christ The Man and the Woman are equal bought with the same price and alike ordained to the service of Christ. Secondly In respect to the same Original for as in the Creation the Woman is of the Man so by ordinary propagation the Man is by the Woman Thirdly In respect to the first and principal efficient cause i. e. God who hath made the Man and the Woman and all things else the Man and the Woman are equal Vers. 13. Iudge in your selves is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered 14. Doth not even nature it self teach you that if a man have long hair it is a shame unto him 15. But if a woman have long hair it is a glory to her for her hair is given her for a covering Argum. 8. Common sense and nature it self or natural inclination so hee calls setled custome and agreeable to nature in respect to what is comely dictates that it is unseemly for a woman to pray uncovered or that a man should wear long hair and the contrary is decent Therefore you observe no decorum when you behave your selves otherwise Hair is said to bee given to the woman for a covering because it is given to that end that shee may know her head ought to bee covered Vers. 16. But if any man seem to bee con●entious wee have no such custome neither the Churches of God Argum. 9. If any perhaps should not bee moved by these Arguments but should contend the Apostle opposeth to their contentious Apologies the received and established custome of the Jews and the rest of the Churches Other Churches have no such custome that women should bee present at publick assemblies with their heads uncovered and the man with his head covered Therefore your custome not agreeing with decency either according to natural use or of the Churches is altogether unseemly The second Part. Vers. 17. Now in this that I declare unto you I praise you not that you come together not for the better but for the worse The second part of the Chapter follows concerning the right administration of the Lords Supper in which hee doth not commend but discommend the Corinthians First In general that their comming together was not for the better but for the worse Vers. 18. For first of all when you come together in the Church I hear that there bee divisions among you and I partly beleeve it Secondly More specially that they came together to ●oment Schisms as hee heard and did in part beleeve Vers. 19. For there must bee also Heresies among you that they which are approved may bee made manifest unto you Hee gives a Reason why hee beleeved Schisms to bee amongst them viz. Because by the malice of the Devil and men out of the just judgement of God not onely Schisms in their affections arose but also Heresies or Sects which must bee and to that end are they permitted of God that approved and sincere Christians maintaining that which is right in the contending for parties may bee manifestly known and to the greater glory of God and the conservation of true Religion in purity they might appear sincere to the whole world Vers. 20. When yee come together therefore in one place this is not to eat the Lords Supper Thirdly Hee most specially dispraises their prophaning the Holy Supper as if it had not been the Lords Supper for when they met together in one place they behaved themselves in the assembly of the Saints so irreligiously as if they had not celebrated a Religious Supper Vers. 21. For in eating every one taketh before other his own Supper and one is hungry and another is drunken This hee demonstrates in four notable faults amongst them in the celebration of the Lords Supper The first is That every one of them with his faction excluding the other members of the Church did take the holy Supper Schismatically Secondly They mixed with the Sacrament of the Lords Supper their own Supper or their common Feasts which were called Love-Feasts Thirdly The poorer sort were excluded whilst the rich feasted Fourthly In their feastings they drank to drunkenness Vers. 22. What have yee not houses to eat and to drink in or despise yee the Church of God and shame them that have not what shall I say to you shall I praise you in this I praise you not Therefore hee reproves that fashion among them of celebrating their Love-Feasts publickly in the Church as unbecomming the publick Assembly thinking fitter to send them back to their private houses adding a reproof that they had a low esteem of that grave Assembly of the Saints and exposed those to contempt that were given to riotousness when they ought to have attended onely to Religion As also Because in those their feastings the poorer sort which could not bee at that cost were shamed Vers. 23. For I have received of the Lord that which also I delivered
hee could not any where rest also that great hope of promoting the Gospel being offered as in Troas until hee had known of Titus whom hee had sent to Corinth concerning their affairs for the cause of meeting him hee went into Macedonia that by him hee might bee made more certain concerning the affairs of the Corinthians and that hee might learn whether as yet it was a convenient time to come to the Corinthian● All which signs of his ready mind towards the Corinthians being considered the Apostle perswadeth himself that the suspicion that his mind was alienated from them was removed The second Part. Vers. 14. Now thanks bee unto God which alwaies causeth us to triumph in Christ and maketh manifest the savour of his knowledge by us in every place The second part of the Chapter follows in which hee defendeth his Ministery and proveth it to bee commendable by five Arguments intimating by the way that hee whilst hee was absent from them was not idle but was busied in the work of the Lord with success Argum. 1. Because Christ in his Ministery and hee himself in Christ did triumph concerning his enemies by snatching many out of the power of Satan and by bringing them to the Faith of the Gospel The savour Argum. 2. Because by his Ministery whatsoever the success were the sweetness of the Gospel and its efficacy was manifested in every place whilst the knowledge of Christ did breathe a quickening life by which sinners are quickened and converted unto God Vers. 15. For wee are unto God a sweet savour of Christ in them that are saved and in them that perish 16. To the one wee are the savour of death unto death and to the other a savour of life unto life and who is sufficient for these things By preventing an Objection that the Apostles and their preaching would give an ill savour to many Hee answereth and adds Argum. 3. That notwithstanding the Apostles themselves with their Ministery were acceptable unto God and through Christ brought an acceptable savour to God no less in the conviction and perdition of the Reprobates to which the Gospel by accident was a savour of death than in the faith and salvation of those that beleeve and are saved to whom the Gospel both in its own nature and proper effect was a quickening savour to life and salvation Who is sufficient Argum. 4. Because seeing that few were fit and sufficient Ministers as the interrogation shews whose Ministery God might prosper and accept that hee was in the number of those that are made fit for these things which are spoken of secretly checking the false Apostles which were not fit Ministers for the conversion of sinners although they did prefer themselves before the Apostles Vers. 17. For wee are not as many which corrupt the Word of God but as of sincerity but as of God in the sight of God speak wee in Christ. Hee confirms the next Argument more openly noting his enemies and those that envy him and also adds Argum. 5. From the unlikeness betwixt himself and many Preachers if they did not mix false doctrine yet they did mingle their own passions with true Doctrine serving their ambition and covetousness and bending the Doctrine to the favour of men But the Apostle 1 In Sincerity i. e. neither mixing false doctrine nor corrupt affections 2 Of God i. e. with confidence and authority knowing from whence it came 3 In the sight of God i. e. calling God to witness and looking at his glory 4 In Christ i. e. hee did speak in the virtue of Christ and acknowledgement of his strength From which it follows that his Ministery was commendable and not to bee contemned in any wise CHAP. III. HEE proceeds to defend his Ministery against slanderers There are two parts of this Chapter In the first hee proveth his Ministery to bee commendable by five Arguments to vers 6. In the second hee illustrateth and confirmeth the last Argument by comparing the Legal Ministery or the Covenant of Works with the Gospel or the Covenant of Grace Vers. 1. Do wee begin again to commend our selves or need wee as some others Epistles of commendation to you or Letters of commendation from you Argum. 1. Of the commendation of his Ministery containing also his clearing himself from the desire of vain-glory The efficacy of my Ministery is so apparent to all the Churches that I need not any commendatory Letters from any particular person or from you or from others neither do I say these things because I care for vain-glory but that I may defend my Ministery against my enemies for your good Therefore my Ministery is commendable Vers. 2. Yee are our Epistle written in our hearts known and read of all men Argum. 2. Because your conversion O Corinthians to the profession of the Faith by my Ministery sufficeth in my conscience and yours for a commendatory Epistle which is understood and acknowledged amongst all Vers. 3. Forasmuch as yee are manifestly declared to be the Epistle of Christ ministred by us written not with Ink but with the Spirit of the Living God not in Tables of stone but in fleshy Tables of the heart Argum. 3. by confirmation of the former Because my Ministery was effectual not onely in bringing you to the profession of the Faith but also to your saving regeneration by the speciall operation of Christs Spirit this is that which hee saith that they were the Epistle which Christ himself by his Ministery hath written by writing his will in their hearts by the Holy Ghost after a more excellent manner than any thing was wont to bee writ with Ink upon Paper or Tables of Stone Vers. 4. And such trust have wee through Christ to God-ward 5. Not that wee are sufficient of our selves to think any thing as of our selves but our sufficiency is of God Argum. 4. Because hee himself as it becomes a faithful servant doth not ascribe the whole confidence of glorying to himself but to his Lord Jesus Christ in the sight of God Which Argument hee illustrates partly by confessing his natural impotency to think that which is good or to the least beginnings of a good work much less to the converting the Corinthians partly by acknowledging the Grace of God as the fountain of his sufficiency in that hee is fitted to communicate so much Grace to others Vers. 6. Who also hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament not of the Letter but of the Spirit for the Letter killeth but the Spirit giveth l●fe Argum. 5. Because his Ministery is the Ministery of the New Covenant not of the Law and Covenant of Works Hee confirms this Argument with a seven-fold Comparison of the Ministery of both Covenants The second Part. Not of the Letter Compar 1. The Ministery of the Law or the Covenant of Works is onely the Letter written or spoken without efficacy without all spiritual virtue to perform that which it commands But the Ministery of
for this end that my fatherly care towards you O Corinthians might appear to all sincere and approved in the sight of God Vers. 13. Therefore wee were comforted in your comfort yea and exceedingly the more joyed wee for the joy of Titus because his spirit was refreshed by you all The objection being solved hee adds the fourth cause of his consolation I understand sayes hee that yee have taken in good part my reproof and now have received consolation Of titus The fifth cause of his consolation because all yee have endeavoured to refresh the spirit of Titus Vers. 14. For if I have boasted any thing to him of you I am not ashamed but as wee speak all things to you in truth even so our boasting which I made before Titus is found a truth The sixth cause That yee would prove in very deed that which I boasting of you confidently fore-told to Titus Vers. 15. And his inward affection is more abundantly towards you whilst hee remembreth the obedience of you all how with fear and trembling yee received him The seventh cause Because you have engaged to you by your respects and goodness the mind of Titus which you may esteem as great gain For they reverenced Titus as an Evangelist and a servant of God sent to them extraordinarily and so they had reconciled the mind of Titus to themselves Vers. 16. I rejoyce therefore that I have confidence in you in all things The eighth cause of consolation That I being incouraged by this experience for the future I may dare to promise the best things whatsoever of you all both to my self and others CHAP. VIII THe second part of the Epistle wherein the Corinthians being confirmed touching his love towards them doth exhort them to the giving of Alms with a cheerful mind to the use of the poor Jews For this end there are thirteen arguments used in this Chapter to which hee adds more in the Chapter following Vers. 1. Moreover brethren wee do you to wit of the grace of God bestowed on the Churches of Macedonia Argum. 1. From the example of the Macedonians the Churches of Macedonia have contributed And therefore do yee the same thing whose liberality hee commends by nine reasons Grace The first Reason Because it was the gift of Gods grace that they contributed any thing for the use of the poor Jews Vers. 2. How that in a great trial of affliction the abundance of their joy and their deep poverty abounded unto the riches of liberality Reason 2. Because Alms was given by them in that time when they were tried with heavy afflictions Ioy Reason 3. Because they contributed with joy Deep Reason 4. Because in poverty they were liberal Vers. 3. For to their power I bear record yea and beyond their power they were willing of themselves Reason 5. Because they were willing to give more bountifully than they were able Vers. 4. Praying us with much intreaty that wee would receive the gift and take upon us the fellowship of the Ministering to the Saints Reason 6. Because they offered freely not provoked by others examples but rather were Leaders to others lest they should bee wanting in this duty of charity With entreaty Reason 7. Because they were instant in prayers that what they gave might bee received Fellowship Reason 8. Because they did entreat the Apostle that hee together with others would take upon them the charge of gathering and dispensing that which they and others were about to give Vers. 5. And this they did not as wee hoped but first gave their own selves to the Lord and unto us by the Will of God Reason 9. Because beyond the Apostles expectation they consecrated themselves and all theirs to God and did commit themselves to the Apostle that they might bee ruled by him in all things according to the Will of God Vers. 6. Insomuch that wee desired Titus that as hee had begun so hee would also finish in you the same grace also Argum. 2. To a liberal contribution Because at the entreaty of the Macedonians I have desired Titus that hee would take care to accomplish your alms which thing hee hath undertaken already Therefore take yee care lest this our labour bee in vain Vers. 7. Therefore as yee abound in every thing in faith and utterance and knowledge and in all diligence ●ad in your love to us see that yee abound in this grace also Argum. 3. Because seeing that you excel others in many virtues it becometh you to do your endeavour lest in this yee fail or seeing that the gifts of the Spirit abound in you the faith of miracles the gifts of knowledge and eloquence endeavour concerning the Salvation of the Brethren and charity towards mee yee must have a care lest this gift bee found wanting to you Vers. 8. I speak not by commandment but by occasion of the forwardness of others and to prove the sincerity of your love Argum. 4. Because now the sincerity of your Christian love is to bee proved in the distribution of this alms for which thing sake I exhort you diligently at the desire of the Macedonians commanding nothing imperiously Therefore shew a proof of your liberality Vers. 9. For yee know the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ that though hee was rich yet for your sakes hee became poor that yee through his poverty might bee rich Argum. 5. Christ hath made himself poor that you might bee rich Therefore it is meet that for his sake yee give alms when it is required of you Vers. 10. And herein I give my advice for this is expedient for you who have begun before not only to do but also to bee forward a year ago Argum. 6. Because I know it is profitable for you both in respect of your praise and in respect of the blessing that will follow that in this business in no wise yee bee wanting but at length yee accomplish this collection already begun Vers. 11. Now therefore perform the doing of it that as there was a readiness to will so there may bee a performance also out of that which you have 12. For if there bee first a willing mind it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that hee hath not 13. For I mean not that other men bee eased and you burdened Argum. 7. Because it is meet and comely that your ready will which yee shewed the last year might bee actually compleated and it will bee uncomely if it otherwise fall out Which yee have Argum. 8. Because nothing is required but that which your selves may see to bee equal for it is desired that you give according to your abilities out of equity without your prejudice a little from the poor sort if they give with a willing mind shall bee accepted of God Although they have not given much which have it not For if a willing mind bee not present nothing is respected by God how much soever is given Therefore bee not here
hence arose the unlike disposition of Ishmael and Isaac so great a discord that Ishmael persecuted Isaac and the dissimilitude of both their conditions in the upshot Ishmael is cast out of the family but Isaac obtains the Inheritance by which type God did figure out the divers conditions of the visible Church sprung from divers principles and causes For 1. As there are two wives Hagar and Sarah so there are two Covenants of God with men the Covenant of works or legal the Covenant of grace or the Evangelical 2. Both the wives had off-spring so both the Covenants had their worshippers and professors as born of the Covenant 3. As Hagar a young woman according to nature and the flesh brought forth but Sarah barren and an old woman according to the power of the divine promise So the Law or Covenant of works hath the ordinary strength of nature or the powers of free will for its foundation But the Gospel or Covenant of grace hath for its foundation the special grace of God 4. As Ishmael was of a servile and malicious disposition that hee would persecute his brother but Isaac indued with an ingenuous and godly disposition patiently indured persecution so how many justiciaries so ever seeking righteousness by works are of a servile and perverse disposition and they do vexe the true faithful of God But the truly faithful and Sons of the promise worship God with an ingenuous piety and do suffer persecutions as it behoves them Vers. 24. Which things are an allegory for these are the two Covenants the one from the Mount Sinai which gendereth to bondage which is Hagar In the third place the Apostle expounds the signification of the type as much as belongs to the present purpose and first hee shews that the two Wives are figures of the two Covenants whereof one is the Covenant of Works represented by Hagar The other is the Covenant Grace or faith represented by Sarah As to Hagar and the Covenant of Works the Apostle teacheth First That Covenant had its rise from Mount Sinai because in that mountain the Law was given and this Covenant was established betwixt God and his people Secondly hee teaches that this Covenant generated an off-spring to bondage or did render the Disciples and professours of it onely servants i. e. Mercenary worshippers of God who do nothing but the external work and brought to that either by fear or hope of a reward and they heing ignorant that this was the end of the Law that being sensible of our sins we might flye to Christ do abuse the Law being meer hypocrites seeking by it righteousness which they never obtain but being not freed remain in their sins Vers. 25. For this Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia and answereth to Ierusalem which now is and is in bondage with her children Hee shews the convenience of the exposition 1. From this because Mount Sinai situated in Arabia and far removed from the promised Land was called by the Arabians and Caldeans Hagar by the special providence of God 2. That it had affinity with the earthly Ierusalem as it was in the Apostles time or with the Jewish Synagogue which is said to bee in bondage with her children because shee was tenacious of the Covenant of works and continued with her Disciples in a servile condition strangers to the Redeemer and free deliverance by him Vers. 26. But Ierusalem which is above is free which is the mother of us all Hee expounds what is figured by Sarah the free-woman viz. The Covenant of Faith or Grace whereof the Church of the truly faithful is very tenacious which is the heavenly Ierusalem that is above created by God and studious of heavenly things the mother of all the faithful called both of Iews and Gentiles Vers. 27. For it is written Rejoyce thou barren that bearest not break forth and cry thou that travellest not for the desolate hath many more Children than she which hath an husband In the fourth place The Apostle proves the Exposition give● out of Isaiah 54.1 where the Church of the faithful the upper Ierusalem our Mother is represented by Sarah barren as if shee had been a Widow And the Synagogue of the Jews unfaithful and tenacious of the Covenant of Works is represented by fruitful Hagar dwelling with her Husband But the Church of the faithful before the comming of Christ was compared as it were to a barren Widow because her Husband the Covenant of Grace was unknown almost to all except a few who dispersed hither and thither did not make a company neither did Grace appear but lay hid like an Husband absent or dead under the covers of Ceremonies The Synagogue of unbeleeving Justiciaries is compared to a fruitful Wife dwelling with her Husband viz. the Covenant of Works conspicuous in the external dispensation of the Law And it is fore-told by the Prophet that it should come to pass that the Church of the faithful made fruitful by the Promises of God shall bring forth more children under the Gospel than the Synagogue hath brought Servants under the Law and therefore is commanded to rejoyce and praise God Vers. 28. Now wee Brethren as Isaac was are the children of Promise In the last place hee applies this typical history and partly admonishes the truly faithful Christians and partly comforts them by four Arguments Argum. 1. That wee are redeemed children justified by Faith and truly free born and regenerated by virtue of Evangelical Promises to the similitude of Isaac who is elder than those other Citizens of the heavenly Ierusalem that were after him Vers. 29. But as then hee hat was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit Argum. 2. Of consolation That suffering persecution by false Brethren Patrons of free will and Righteousness by Works were finde nothing unlike to Isaacs condition For when in Abrahams Family hee who is onely begotten by the ordinary strength of nature persecuted him who is begotten by a divine and spiritual way what wonder then if the same now bee usual amongst us Vers. 30. Nevertheless what saith the Scripture cast out the bond-woman and her Son for the Son of the bond-woman shall not bee heir with the Son of the free-woman Argum. 3. That the persecutors of the faithful and Patrons of Righteousness by Works seeing they are not set at liberty by the Son are to bee cast out of the society of the Saints and the inheritance of life eternal as it was figured by the sentence of God concerning the casting Ishmael with his Mother out of the family and excluding him from the inheritance that was to bee enjoyed with Isaac Vers. 31. So then Brethren wee are not children of the bond-woman but of the free Argum. 4. From the comparing of this verse with the former that seeing wee are not children of the bond-woman but of the free certainly wee shall obtain an inheritance of life eternal which Argument with the former as it
and accepted with God in whom the Father is fully satisfied and pleased as one in our stead 3 In him and by him sin is removed which might hinder the course of Grace towards us 4 Hee intimates that by Christ and in Christ the cloud of sin being dissolved the Grace of God shines upon us and wee are embraced and entertained as reconciled as now pleasing and acceptable in Christ who a● our Surety and common Parent comprehends us all in himself Vers. 7. In whom wee have Redemption through his blood the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his Grace Argum. 6. In Christ by the rich Grace of God wee receive Redemption and pardon of sins Therefore wee should give praise to the rich Grace of God onely in our salvation And to this purpose all the parts of this reason tend Redemption 1 Wee were in our selves lost and held captives under the bonds of blindness sin wrath and death whence wee could by no means free our selves whence there had been no comming forth if Grace had not both opened the way and led us out Therefore our salvation is of Grace In whom 2 Christ alone redeemed us without any merit or help from us the price of our salvation being both covenanted for and paid by himself alone lest any praise should bee given to any thing besides his Grace Through his blood 3 Wee are not redeemed with Silver or Gold but with the Blood of Christ that so the price might shew the danger wherein wee were and exalt Gods Grace The forgiveness 4 The Blood of Christ is that which procures for us in particular the pardon of our sins in which wee lay polluted and which was all the riches God saw in us wee being void of every good work that the Grace of God might bee more apparent in our sins and unworthiness In whom 5 This Redemption and remission of sins wee being once become Beleevers have not in our selves without reference to Christ but in Christ as our Surety Redeemer and Head wee being united and graffed into him by Faith The riches of 6 The onely cause and measure of so great a benefit is the rich Grace of God according to the abundance whereof Christ and Redemption in Christ is bestowed upon us Therefore Gods Grace onely may deservedly bee praised as the cause of our salvation Vers. 8. Wherein hee hath abounded toward us in all Wisdome and Prudence Argum. 7. From this abundant Grace as from a fountain Christ or the Father in Christ hath according to his great wisdome communicated to us in our effectual Vocation all Wisdome and Prudence that is hath given us saving Faith in the object whereof consists the summe and perfection of all Wisdome and Knowledge for though saving Faith bee in it self imperfect yet by it wee apply a known Christ to our selves who is the treasure of all saving Wisdome and Prudence as a general medicine and remedy for all evils which is an abbreviate of Wisdome and Prudence In this Argument the particulars prove the same also Towards us 1 Wee who as well as the rest of the world were ignorant imprudent and foolish erring in the blindness and vanity of our minds It is of Grace therefore that wee are endowed with Wisdome Hee hath abounded 2 Christ the Author first comes to us and bestows Faith upon us which consists in the Knowledge and Application of the saving Truth of God which is true Wisdome and Prudence Therefore it is of Grace Wherein viz. In which Grace 3 Here Grace is expresly mentioned hee out of his Grace hath plentifully bestowed upon us this Wisdome and Prudence Hath abounded 4 Hee who was full of Grace hath shewn himself to bee such in this as if hee could not any longer restrain his Grace within himself but it overflowing brake forth upon us Therefore Grace is the sole cause in effectual Vocation and Donation of Faith and so deservedly to bee praised Vers. 9. Having made known unto us the mystery of his Will according to his good pleasure which hee hath purposed to himself Argum. 8. The manifestation of Gods secret Will touching salvation to bee obtained by Christ to the communicating of Faith or Knowledge and Prudence to his is of the meer Will of God according to his good pleasure which hee had purposed in himself Therefore the Grace of God is worthily to bee praised under the name of Gods revealed Will and of Faith bestowed upon us To this end all the parts of this Argument refer The Mystery 1 The Will of God touching the business of Salvation to bee accomplished by Christ was a secret Mystery sealed up from all eternity in the breast of God which neither Angels nor men could ever have brought to light but that God out of his Grace revealed it Having made known 2 God took care not onely that this Mystery should bee revealed but out of his Grace hee provided that the blindness both of our minds and hearts being taken away wee should understand it Unto us 3 Hee hath manifested the Gospel of Grace to us rather than to others Good pleasure 4 God freely brought this to pass not being induced or excited thereunto by any external cause but according to his good pleasure or gracious predestination and his eternal purpose in himself Therefore wee ought deservedly to give praise to Gods Grace Vers. 10. That in the dispensation of the fulness of times hee might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in Heaven and which are in Earth even in him Argum. 9. It depends meerly upon Gods Will and pleasure to appoint a full and fit time wherein this Mystery of his Will should come to mans knowledge what how much and when to what age and to what particular person this Mystery should bee dispensed Therefore the Will of God prevails in assigning the time in which Faith is to bee given and in this respect also Gods Grace is praise-worthy The several particulars in this Argument confirm the same also In the dispensation 1 The Grace of God is to bee acknowledged because here is an oeconomy or as the Master of a Family a free disposing of his domestick things whereby every one orders them as hee pleases which liberty as it is by right to bee granted to every housholder so to God also that hee may act according to his own pleasure The fulness 2 There is a mature and fit opportunity of time in which it is in Gods power alone to determine what and how much of his secret Will it is fitting to reveal to every age and to each man And therefore whatsoever and how much soever is revealed to us it is of Grace For the good pleasure of God which hee had purposed in himself of which vers 9. belongs to this ordering of the time Therefore his Grace deserves here also to bee taken notice of That hee might gather Argum. 10. The gathering and manifestation of this gathering the elect
and hypocritical faith but the lively faith effectually working by charity towards all Saints and openly manifested to mee an Apostle and others Therefore you Ephesians should bee confirmed in the faith Vers. 16. Cease not to give thanks for you making mention of you in my prayers Arg. 2. You are esteemed worthy that thanks should bee daily given unto God for you even as I do Therefore you ought to bee strengthened in the faith of the Gospel Mention Argum. 3. Because the sincerity of your faith is manifested in the love of the Saints I continually keep you in my memory and make daily mention of you in my prayers begging that the work of God may bee perfected in you and your faith confirmed Therefore unless you think the motion of the Spirit in mee who pray for you bee in vain you ought to have your faith strengthened Vers. 17. That the God of our Lord Iesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of Wisdome and Revelation in the knowledge of him Now hee comes to set down the summe of his prayers which hee put up for them wherein are contained the other Arguments for the confirmation of their faith Give unto you Arg. 4. In praying that God would give them the Spirit of Wisdome and Revelation hee intimates that they have more and greater causes viz. in the Scripture which is the fountain of Wisdome and the summe of saving Revelation for the confirmation of their faith than they did yet understand You have such and so many Arguments in Scripture for your confirmation in faith that I cannot wish any thing more to the strengthening of faith than a larger measure of the working of the Spirit of God that having more wisdome given you and the mysteries of the word being more clearly disclosed to you you may know what is the mind of God and Christ towards you Therefore even from this my evidence and prayer for you you ought to bee confirmed in the faith The God of our Lord Arg. 5. Drawn from the description of God of whom this gift is craved God who bestows the Spirit of faith or of wisdome on the Saints is the glorious God and Father of our Lord and of all us the servants of Christ who both out of Covenant as hee is our God and out of fatherly affection as hee is our Father will give the Spirit of faith to you upon our request for it Therefore even from those relations which pass between God Christ and you you should bee strengthened in faith Vers. 18. The eyes of your understanding being inlightned that yee may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints Argum. 6. It is not possible that I should express with tongue what and how great those good things which God by calling you to Christ hath commanded you to hope for or how glorious the riches of that inheritance are which is prepared for you in the sanctuary of heaven I only beg that your eyes may bee inlightned that yee may apprehend them Therefore c. Vers. 19. And what is the exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who beleeve according to the working of his mighty power Argum. 7. That power of God is unspeakable which hee hath put forth into act in the converting you to and in thus long upholding you in the faith and which hee hath in a manner bound himself that hee will put forth that so by the infinite power and efficacy of his strength beleevers may bee carried on to salvation I onely pray for the illumination of your eyes that yee may know it Therefore c. This Argument hee confirms by a threefold comparison 1. Of the power of God with the adversaries power and with the Ephesians weakness in which respect hee calls the greatness of that power super-excellent which was actually apparent in them that they might know there was no power in Satan the world sin death or any other hindrance without them which the greatness of the power of God doth not and will not for ever overcome 2. Of the powerful work of God in their conversion with the original of that work that is Gods Omnipotency in which respect hee makes mention of the efficacy or working of his mighty power that they might know the work of God in converting them and induing them with faith and holiness was such a manifestation of that working which proceeds from the actual and exerted power of the Omnipotent God as was suitable to Omnipotency and becoming an Omnipotent God in a word it was a work very well befitting God 3. Of the power of God now actually declared in their conversion with that power which God had shewn in raising Christ from the dead 1. That they might know that as a great power was required to a mans conversion regeneration and endowment with faith and other saving graces as to revive one dead and buried 2. That they might know the very same power was exercised in our conversion as in Christs Resurrection 3. That they might understand it was no less easie for God to bring to pass all other things which pertained to the perfecting of our salvation than it was for him to perform the fore-mentioned particulars Vers. 20. Which hee wrought in Christ when hee raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in heavenly places Argum. 8. Taken from the raising up of Christ our Head Christ our Head who was killed in our stead God raised from the dead in our stead and for our good unto eternal life Therefore you who are his members even in the midst of afflictions and in death it self should bee stedfast in Faith touching your deliverance And set him Argum. 9. From Christs ascension and sitting at the right hand of the Father Christ our Redeemer is ascended into Heaven and reigns with the Father being partner in that great authority that hee might take us into fellowship in that happiness and make us partners of that condition in which hee is Therefore you ought to bee confirmed in the Faith and hope of your future glorification in Heaven unless you imagine Christs dominion is to no purpose Vers. 21. Far above all Principality and Power and Might and Dominion and every name that is named not onely in this world but also in that which is to come Argum. 10. Christ even in his flesh is exalted far above all both Angels and Men so that nothing should bee so high so powerful so excellent either in the earth this present world or in Heaven the world to come as that Christ should not bee infinitely higher even as hee is man and therefore there is not any thing wanting in him to the perfecting nor can any thing oppose him to hinder him from perfecting our salvation Therefore you should bee strengthened in the Faith of the Gospel Vers. 22. And hath put all things under his feet
and gave him to bee the Head over all things to the Church Argum. 11. All our enemies the Devil the wicked in the world Persecutors Hereticks and Impostors the power of sin in us prisons banishments all kinds of death are put under Christs feet that hee may order them and dispose of them to our good and put them under our feet Therefore c. The Head Argum. 12. Christ is appointed Head over all things in the Church that is the Father hath committed the full power and administration of all things unto him that hee onely should bee the most near Head of the Catholick Church for the illumination of the Church and all its members for the vivification exciting to all spiritual duties and preservation of spiritual life in them by the immediate presence and operation of his Spirit in the whole Church and its several members Therefore unless you will doubt of your Heads Wisdome Power and Faithfulness in his office you should bee strengthened in Faith Vers. 23. Which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all Argum. 13. The Church is the mystical body of Christ and all beleevers are his members Therefore you should not doubt but hee will look to and have a care of your salvation unless you will deny that Beleevers are his members The fulness Argum. 14. The Church is the fulness of Christ so far as hee is its mystical Head so that hee doth not judge himself to bee perfected and completed till all and every of the Elect bee gathered into one united to him have attained that full encrease suitable to and appointed for every member and till at last they enjoy with him a plenary happiness Therefore you should bee as sure of the perfecting of your salvation as you are that Christ will not suffer himself to bee incompleat imperfect and maimed Filleth Argum. 15. Christ filleth all in all that is according to every Creatures capacity as hee is the God of Nature hee works all things as hee is the Head of the Church hee perfects all things which belong to the Spiritual Life Sanctification and Salvation of Beleevers filling all his members by degrees Therefore it is not to bee questioned but hee will accomplish the begun work of Faith Sanctification and Salvation in you This that hee filleth all in all is adjoyned by way of correction or exposition to the former phrase of the fulness of Christ by the Church lest wee should conceive that Christs or our perfection depends upon any besides himself who of his own free love hath brought this necessity upon himself of communicating himself to us unworthy wretches who stirred up this desire of us in himself who himself hath the power to satisfie this his own desire and who by degrees fulfills his desire of sanctifying us and induing us with Faith and will proceed to fulfil it till hee hath performed all things necessary to the perfecting of salvation and that in all the faithful the greatest and least To him bee the glory of his Grace his power and his constancy for ever and ever Amen CHAP. II. THe Apostle proceeds to prosecute the same Argument proving sometimes in the Supposition that the beleeving Ephesians sometimes possitively that all Beleevers are saved by Grace The Proposition to bee made good is this you O Ephesians are saved by Grace or Beleevers are saved by Grace His Arguments are fifteen upon the last whereof hee insists to the latter end of the Chapter Vers. 1. And you hath hee quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins Argu. 1. If you O Ephesians are considered in the common State of Nature you will bee found to have been in that condition that you could not have recovered thence but by Grace There are seven parts of this Argument every one whereof heightens our first misery and proves Grace to bee the onely cause of salvation Dead 1 In the State of Nature you were not onely defiled with but dead in sin and not onely judicially dead because guilty of or liable to death but also really in effect spiritually dead so that the dead could as easily raise themselves to life or perform actions of being as you could free your selves from this death or do any good deed Therefore you are saved by Grace Vers. 2. Wherein in time past yee walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the Air the Spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience 2 In reference to this natural life you did wholly pass that in sin being wholly busied and walking in them or else waxing worse and worse Therefore c. Of this world 3 You walked in the waies of worldly and carnal men who favour this natural life onely and followed their manners and customes as the rule of life Therefore c. The Prince 4 You followed the Captain of this way the Devil the Prince of unclean spirits who with his Executioners or other evil Angels flying in the Air rules and governs effectually Which worketh 5 The Devil did reign and execute his will in you as now hee doth in the disobedient Therefore c. Vers. 3. Among whom also wee all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of our flesh and of the mind and were by nature the children of wrath ever as others 6 You did fulfil the lusts of your flesh and wallowing in them did commit whatever your vain mind dictated whatever your corrupt appetite and affections of the flesh prescribed To these the Apostle adds himself before his conversion that they might see this Argument propounded in an Hypothesis would serve to confirm the general Thesis Children 7. By nature yee were children of wrath that is guilty of death and liable to divine wrath which God might justly pour upon us even to our utter destruction Hereunto hee joyns all other men as they are considered in the state of nature Therefore wee are beholding to Grace for our salvation Vers. 4. But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith hee loved us Argum. 2. God out of his rich mercy and love hath delivered us who beleeve from this most miserable condition Therefore our salvation is of Grace The several parts of this Argument manifest the same God 1. Hee shews God to bee the sole Author of our deliverance who alone is meet for so great a work Rich 2. That Grace might appear the cause of our salvation is mentioned to bee the abundant or rich mercy of God whereby as it were touched with a sense of our miserie hee is moved to deliver us For his 3. The love of God wherewith he loved us from eternity is annexed as the cause both of mercy and salvation Us 4. It was of mercy that God was pleased to take us rather than others and choose us for his sons Therefore c. Ver. 5. Even when we were dead in sins hath quickened us
preserved in spiritual life by Christ the living foundation 3 This Temple is vegetable or growing and thriving like a Tree because the whole building encreaseth by the addition of stones or converted Beleevers and by the nourishment of the Word of God which all the living stones as boughs from a tree draw from Christ by the Holy Ghost and holding Christ the Head and being fastened to Christ the root do continually grow in holiness 4 This Temple is rational and spiritual because it is a holy Temple that is not a society of earthly prophane and unclean men but a spiritual society of holy men as it were a heavenly habitation in which God truly dwells is truly known loved called upon and worshiped Vers. 22. In whom you also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit Hee applies these to the Ephesians contracting all the parts of the Argument into one that the happiness of their condition in Christ might at once appear that they might know they were Gods dwelling-place or a part of this Temple and communicated with the Catholick Church and that themselves were partakers of the properties of the Church by the Holy Ghost dwelling in them from all which wee may conclude that the Ephesians had so much and so great happiness that nothing else but Grace could bestow upon them CHAP. III. IN this Chapter the Apostle exhorts the Ephesians that having overcome the scandal of the Cross of Christ for the defence of the Gospel they should constantly persevere in maintaining the Grace of God that is that they should stedfastly beleeve openly confess and in all streights exactly defend that wee elected in Christ through Grace redeemed through Grace called through Grace justified through Grace indued with Faith through Grace regenerated through Grace have all things perfected in us through Grace that wee are saved by Grace alone and shall hereafter bee glorified in Christ through Faith and not by Works and that Faith is not of our selves but is the gift of God that in the whole business of our salvation Gods Grace alone might have glory The summe of all is that they should live without offence and make proficiency in the Faith of the Gospel There are two parts of this Chapter In the first lest the Ephesians should bee offended at the scandal of the Cross and of the Apostles captivity hee shews them the glory of his Ministery and of his bonds to vers 14. In the second part wee have the Apostles prayer for the Ephesians perseverance and progress in the Faith unto the end The chief matter of the first is comprehended in this Enthymeme My Ministery and my bonds are a great glory to mee I intreat you therefore bee not offended at my afflictions The Antecedent reaches to vers 13. the consequent wee have in vers 13. Vers. 1. For this cause I Paul the prisoner of Iesus Christ for you Gentiles Hee alledges twelve Arguments for the commendation of his Ministery For this cause Argum. 1. Because I am bound to preach the Truth before described that the Gentiles as well as Jews may obtain salvation by Faith in Christ and therefore I am the captive of Christ or for maintaining the glory of Christ and of you Gentiles or for maintaining your right unto salvation with the Jews Therefore you at least should esteem my Ministry Vers. 2. If you have heard of the dispensation of the Grace of God which is given mee to you-wards Argum. 2. I am peculiarly appointed by Christ to bee an Apostle of the Gentiles if yee have rightly understood the dispensation of Grace or the Evangelical Doctrine which was committed to mee that I should preach it unto you Therefore my Ministery should bee had in estimation by you Vers. 3. How that by revelation hee made known unto mee the Mystery as I wrote afore in few words Argum. 3. The knowledge of the Gospel with which I am endued was most certain for I received it by extraordinary revelation immediately from God and not from men Therefore c. Vers. 4. Whereby when you read yee may understand my knowledge in the Mystery of Christ. Argum. 4. The measure of my understanding and knowledge by which I know the revealed Mystery of Grace is not ordinary as will manifestly appear to those who attentively read what I have writ in the first and second Chapters of this Epistle Therefore c. Vers. 5. Which in other ages was not made known to the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit Argum. 5. The Mystery of this Gospel hath not been made known to many nor so plainly to any age before us as it is now revealed by the Holy Ghost to us Apostles and Prophets to whom God hath extraordinarily granted the knowledge of the Scriptures and of his will touching mans salvation Therefore c. Vers. 6. That the Gentiles should bee fellow-heirs and of the same body and partakers of his Promise in Christ by the Gospel Argum. 6. That part of the Mystery which is touching the accomplishment of all the Promises of Grace in Christ and touching the calling of the uncircumcised Gentiles into the fellowship of the heavenly Inheritance that they should bee admitted by God equally with the Israelites themselvess into the union of the Israelitish Church and the participation of Christ by the Faith of the Gospel without circumcision and other ceremonies I say this part was not before manifested Therefore c. Nay Peter himself who was an Apostle also did not admit this till hee was taught it by a special revelation Act. 10. Vers. 7. Whereof I was made a Minister according to the gift of the Grace of God given unto mee by the effectual working of his power Argum. 7. The authority committed to mee to dispense this Grace of God is joyned both with gifts necessary to an Apostolical function and with the effectual blessing of God wheresoever and whensoever I have opportunity of preaching Therefore c. Vers. 8. Unto mee who am less than the least of all Saints is this Grace given that I should preach among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ. Agum 8. The Grace 〈◊〉 mee in calling mee to the Apostleship is so much the more excellent by how much the more deadly an enemy I was to the Church and in this respect I am inferiour to all Saints and by how much the greater the number of the Gentiles is and lastly by how much the more glorious the matter which I preach viz. the unsearchable riches of the Grace of Christ Therefore c Vers. 9. And to make all men see what is the fellowship of the Mystery which from the beginning o● the world hath been hid in God who created all things by Iesus Christ. Argum. 9. The ends of my Ministry are glorious 1. That the secret things which lye hid in the counsel of God should bee brought to light 2. That the blinde
the Spirit not of the flesh by Faith and not by any natural bond or tye Vers. 33. Nevertheless let every one of you in particular so love his Wife even as himself and the Wife see that shee reverence the Husband Letting the mystery pass hee returns to the Precepts touching the duties of Husband and Wife and in the last place adds Precept 3. wherein hee reduces all the duties of the Husband to sincere love such as is the love wherewith hee loves himself and this love hee presses upon them On the other side hee reduces all the duties of the Wife to fear and reverence towards her Husband that shee offend him not but indeavour in the Lord to please him in all things CHAP. VI. HEE proceeds to give Precepts touching oeconomical and common Christian duties There are two parts of the Chapter The first contains four Precepts touching oeconomical duties to vers 10. The other is the conclusion of the Epistle containing some common duties unto the end Vers. 1. Children obey your Parents in the Lord for this is right Precept 1. to children that they should honour their Parents and yeeld reverence and obedience to them in all things so far as is possible and pleasing to God the reasons hereof are four 1 Because it is required by all Law both of God and of Nature that children should obey their Parents Vers. 2. Honour thy Father and thy Mother which is the first Commandement with Promise Reas. 2. Because the obedience of children is expressly mentioned in the Commandements as a part of honour due to Parents and commanded in the Law Which is Reas. 3. Because this is the first command which hath a particular promise particularly applyed Vers. 3. That it may bee well with thee and thou mayest live long on the earth Reas. 4. Because the obedience of children towards their Parents conduces to the childrens good and hath a special blessing the lengthening of temporal life which Promise is either simply fulfilled or else by change of the benefit for one much better of a better life Vers. 4. And yee Fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Prec 2. Touching the part and duty of Parents towards their children that on the one side by too much severity towards their children they abuse not their Fatherly power lest they drive their childrens affection from them and on the other side that by too much indulgence they do not nourish any childish malepertness in their children but that rather they strive to correct their vices and instruct them in good manners in the fear of the Lord. Vers. 5. Servants bee obedient to them that are your Masters according to the flesh with fear and trembling in singleness of your heart as unto Christ Prec 3. Of the duty of Servants towards their Masters the parts whereof are six 1 That they obey their Masters acknowledging their external servile condition to bee from God and that they are not freed from a political servitude by Christ who neither takes away nor changes Governments 2 That they remember that their Masters are not Masters of their consciences but of the flesh or outward man and in things which concern this life 3 That they serve them in reverence and in fear of their anger 4 That laying aside deceit they deal truly and sincerely with their Masters 5 That they serve them with reference to Christs command and so in obeying them they will serve Christ. Vers. 6. Not with eye-service as men-pleasers but as the servants of Christ doing the Will of God from the heart 5. With good will doing service as to the Lord and not to men 6 That without flattering deceit they take care of their Masters business no less in their absence than when they are present to over-look them and not onely that they may please their Masters but that they may please God Lastly That they serve not out of self-love or meer fear but out of good will as those that serve God and not men for hee serves God who obeyes him commanding him to serve his Master Vers. 8. Knowing that whatsoever good thing man doeth the same shall hee receive of the Lord whether hee bee bond or free Besides the Arguments which are tacitly couched in what went before to confirm this Precept hee adds the hope of reward which they shall receive from God who liberally rewards the works of his servants whether they bee free or bond in the flesh Vers. 9. And yee Masters do the same things unto them forbearing threatning knowing that your Master also is in Heaven neither is there respect of persons with him Prec 4. Concerning the duty of Masters towards their servants That proportionably making use of the same virtues they should exercise their masterly power over their servants after a Christian manner and particularly that they should bee moderate in threatnings lest they rule tyrannically over them Knowing Hee adds two reasons 1 Because they have the Lord above them who is able to revenge their weak tyranny 2 Because God is just who doth not respect the person of the Master or servant but beholds the cause and work of both according to equity The Second Part. Vers. 10. Finally my Brethren bee strong in the Lord and in the power of his might The other part of the Chapter contains the conclusion of the Epistle which hath in it four points In the first hee exhorts them to constancy in Faith and Holiness of life and to put on the spiritual armor against our enemies with whom wee must grapple as long as wee live Brethren saith hee bee yee strengthened in the Lord. The Arguments to press on this Exhortation are three Argum. 1. Because they have communion with the Lord in whom is power and strength in whom if yee continue by Faith and make use of his Grace hee will bee ready to help you with his power and effectual operation that so you will both dare to venture on and bee able valiantly to oppose all your enemies and hinderances Therefore bee yee strengthened in the Lord. Vers. 11. Put on the whole Armour of God that yee may bee able to stand against the wiles of the Devil Argum. 2. Because you are armed with all sorts of weapons which are necessary for your war which weapons hee exhorts them to put on that they may bee able to stand in the fight against the Devils assaults and treachery Vers. 12. For wee wrestle not against flesh and blood but against principalities against powers against the rulers of the darkness of this world against spiritual wickedness in high places Argum. 3. Because our strife is not meerly with men or against our own flesh or against men onely such a fight might seem tolerable but wee are to fight against the author of all these evils the Devil and the whole army of unclean spirits who are no weak and ordinary souldiers but all of them
Reasons of the Admonition are three Knowing Reas. 1. Because they ingender strifes and contentions not without the loss of Christian peace and charity Vers. 24. And the servant of the Lord must not strive but bee gentle unto all men apt to teach patient Reas. 2. Because strife doth not become the Minister of Christ who himself was most meek and the Lord of Peace Gentle Reas 3. Because the contrary virtues become a Minister whereof hee recites four 1. Meekness towards all sorts of men which comprehends courtesie and affability 2. Aptness to teach or a disposition to teach rather than compel 3. Patience towards them that are evil that hee may overcome them that are froward and averse from the Truth with gentleness if there bee any hope of their salvation Vers. 25. In meekness instructing those that oppose themselves if God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the Truth 4. Meekness in reproving those that are otherwise minded that hee do not presently use sharpness but propound sound Doctrine to them with gentleness and so rebuke them that they may understand that their salvation and amendment is earnestly sought The Reasons why hee should indeavour after this last virtue and use meekness towards those that were otherwise minded are three If peradventure Reas. 1. Because the conversion of obstinate persons is p●ssible nor must wee hastily despair of it God Reas. 2. Because repentance and the acknowledgement of the truth and every act of Faith is the gift of God Vers. 26. And that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the Devil who are taken captive by him at his will Reas. 3. Because their condition is to bee pittyed for they abide in the snares of the Devil acted according to his will so long as it shall seem good to God to suffer it CHAP. III. IN this Chapter hee strengthens and confirms Timothy and in him all Pastors against false Brethren Schismaticks and Hereticks and against troubles which they were like to create to the sincere servants of God 1 Describing their dispositions and manners to vers 8. 2 Comforting and arming him against the dispositions and arts of false Teachers to the end which are the two parts of the Chapter Vers. 1. This know also that in the last daies perilous times shall come The first part of the Chapter and the first way of arming him is a fore-warning him of false brethren that should arise and were then risen up and of the troubles which they should cause that being fore-seen they might the less hurt The last daies are the time which remains after the ascension of Christ to his second comming The summe of his fore-warning is this The times are dangerous and troublesome wherein it is an hard thing to bee advised how to carry thy self towards these kind of Monsters which shall come out of the bosome of the Church with whom to conflict is most troublesome Therefore thou hadst need arm thy self Vers. 2. For men shall bee l●vers of their own selves covetous boasters proud blasphemers disobedient to Parents unthankful unholy The faults to which the false Brethren were addicted hee recites nineteen 1 They are lovers of themselves i. e. they mind their own private advantage not regarding the salvation and benefit of others 2 They are covetous or lovers of mony 3 Boasters or disdainful who betray the inward pride of their minds by disdainfulness 4 Proud preferring themselves before others and contemning them in comparison with themselves 5 Blasphemers who make nothing of injuring the reputation of others 6 Disobedient to Parents i. e. Despising the lawful authority of those who ought to bee honoured by them as if they were Parents 7 Unthankful whom thou canst not hire with good turns to require thee with love 8 Unholy or destitute of the true desire of holiness Vers. 3. Without natural affection truce breakers false accusers incontinent fierce despisers of those that are good 9 Without natural affection so much that they regard not the bonds of nature 10 Truce-breakers who make no account of covenants but violate them 11 False accusers who with feigned calu●●ies 〈◊〉 the innocency of others 12 Incontinent who let out themselves to all kind of carnal pleasures 13 Fierce who are of a rugged and ill-natured disposition 14 Despisers of those that are good who because of their different dispositions abhor the friendship of good men and hate them Vers. 4. Traitours heady high-minded lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God 15 Traitors who hazzard the lives of their friends that deserve well from them 16 Heady or rash who are carried which way soever the force of their lusts drive them 17 High-minded who please themselves most out of a vain opinion of their own excellency 18 Who prefer their own pleasures before the will and commands of God Vers. 5. Having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof from such turn away 19 Having a form of godliness which they make shew of in words and profession the power whereof in their works they so little regard that they seem to abjure and deny it Hee commands him to shun these i. e. After admonitions and reproofs by the gender censures of the Church at length being excluded the Church by excommunication to beware of them and restrain them and by any other prudent course repress them that the Church may not receive any detriment by them Vers. 6. For of this sort are they which creep into houses and ●ead captive silly women laden with sins led away with divers lusts Hee proceeds in his describing the false Brethren and in the example of some deceivers of his time hee sets them out as it were before their eyes who for their bellies sake did cunningly insinuate themselves into the families of others and led captive certain of the lighter sort of women and did not free them from or unburthen them of their sins wherewith they were laden as they promised but brought them into greater servitude and multiplied their sins Hee propounds two causes of the deceiving these women 1 Because those women were transported with divers lusts and affections which they could not subdue Vers. 7. Ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the Truth 2 Because not contented with the Doctrine received from the Apostles through the curiosity and instability of their minds alwaies sought after now thing● accommodated to their lust Therefore though they seemed willing to learn yet it was impossible for them to attain to the Knowledge of saving Truth The Second Part. Vers. 8. Now as Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses so do these also resist the Truth men of corrupt minds reprobate concerning the Faith The second part of the Chapter follows wherein hee comforts Timothy or the faithful Pastor against the prevalency of this evil and that by ten Arguments All which prove that hee ought to bee comforted in the midst of his conflicts Now as Arg. 1. Because
because converted by my Ministery and art bound to lay out thyself and all thou hast in my service much more to receive a fugitive servant upon such equal tearms Therefore c. Vers. 20. Yea Brother let mee have joy of thee in the Lord refresh my bowels in the Lord. Argum. 14. I shall receive fruit of thy Faith in the Lord if thou grant this to mee thou shalt refresh his bowels and mine for Christs sake Therefore Onesimus ought to bee received into favour Vers. 21. Having confidence in thy obedience I wrote unto thee knowing that thou wilt also do more than I say The third part of the Epistle follows being the conclusion wherein are four Articles 1 In the first the Apostle professes his hopes of obtaining pardon for Onesimus and of more favour than hee had requested Vers. 22. But withall prepare mee also a lodging for I trust that through your prayers I shall bee given unto you 2 Wherein hee desires him to provide him a lodging that Philemon might know that the Apostle would come to his greater consolation if hee gratified him in the contents of this Epistle In the mean time hee inserts two causes of his deliverance out of bonds which are the gifts and the grace of God or the prayers of the Brethren Vers. 23. There salute thee Epaphras my fellow-prisoner in Christ Iesus 24. Marcus Aristarchus Demas Lucas my fellow-labourers 3 Wherein salutations are sent to Philemon by those which were in Pauls company all which make to the scope of this Epistle as also those which are premised in the Preface viz. to excite the mind of Philemon to receive Onesimus into favour Vers. 25. The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with your spirit Amen 4 Wherein comprehending Philemon and Apphia under his Apostolical benediction hee concludes his Epistle The Epistle of Paul to the HEBREWS Analytically expounded THE CONTENTS ALthough Paul seeing hee knew himself hated by all the Hebrews not yet converted and suspected also by many of the weaker Beleevers too much addicted to the observation of Legal Rites chose to suppress his name in the beginning of this Epistle that without prejudice they might the more easily entertain the Truth yet without controversie hee intimated his name by messengers to some chief and eminent Brethren in the Church to whose hands this Epistle was first to come and that it was known appears in the end of the Epistle But after demonstration of the same Spirit in this as in the other of Paul's Epistles the Authority of the Apostle Peter may satisfie us who by a singular providence of God in the third Chapter of his second Epistle to the same scattered Hebrews witnesseth concerning the Epistle of Paul written to the same which was in their hands and openly acknowledged to bee Pauls which Epistle Peter there commends with the rest of Paul's Epistles as divinely inspired by the same Spirit of Wisdome as now brought into the Canon of the Scripture and unanimously with his other Epistles acknowledged and received by the Church wee must of necessity own this for the very Epistle unless wee will undervalue the faithfulness of the Church and the Providence of God in keeping the Canon of the Scripture and the Oracles delivered to the Church The scope of the Epistle is this To strengthen the Hebrews that were weak in faith and for the most part addicted to legal Rites not sufficiently instructed about the Excellency of Christ and further also troubled every where with persecutions by Infidels and to encourage them against all fear to perseverance in the faith and obedience of the Gospel The parts of the Epistle as of the other Epistles of Paul are two The one for the forming and confirming of their faith to Chap. 12. The other tends to holiness and bringing forth fruits of faith in their lives and conversations Chap. 12 13. As to what appertains to the Doctrine of faith hee instructs the Hebrews how great the Excellency of Christ is in his Prophetick and Priestly Office As for the Excellency of Christs Prophetical Office hee shews it to bee incomparable and far to exceed all both Men and Angels Chap. 1. In the three next Chapters hee makes a fourfold use of this Doctrine in a fourfold Exhortation The first Exhortation is Not to Apostalize from the Christian faith 2 That they detract not from the honour of Christ because of his sufferings in the flesh Chap. second 3 That they constantly cleave to the Profession of the Christian faith Chap. third 4 That they make haste by faith to enter into the rest which God hath promised whilest they hear the voyce of Christ Chap. 4. As to the Priestly Office of Christ That the Iews ascribe not too much to the Levitical Priesthood and pertinaciously adhere to the Ceremonies thereof Hee proves Christ to bee the chief Priest more excellent than any typical high Priest even that true Melchizedeck In the mean time hee rebukes the ignorance of the Hebrews who could not comprehend the things hee had to say touching the Excellency of Christ Chap. 5. From whence hee draws an Exhortation to growth in the knowledge and faith of the Gospel Chap. 6. Hee proceeds to demonstrate the eminency of Christ above the Levitical Priests as well in respect to his Person as also his Priestly Office Chap. 7 8 9. And in the beginning of the tenth This Doctrine hee makes application of exhorting them to go forward confidently and patiently in the profession of the true Religion imitating the faithful Confessors and Martyrs who departed in the faith before the birth of Christ in the latter end of Chap. 10 and Chap. 11. In the second part of the Epistle divers Exhortations to Christian duties are laid down which also may bee reckoned amongst the Uses which hee makes of the former Doctrine Chap. 12 13. CHAP. I. IN this Chapter hee proves by nine Arguments the incomparable Excellency of the Prophetical Office of Christ especially because of his Deity The last whereof is confirmed with eight Reasons Vers. 1. God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets Arg. 1. Christ the Son of God is more excellent than all the Prophets by whom God spake to the ancient Church or the Fathers hee hath made our condition under the Gospel better than the condition of the Fathers under the Law For first they were Prophets by inspiration not when they would but as they were acted by the Spirit of Christ and spake as the Ministers of God but Christ is the Son of God and chief of the Prophets who spake by his own Authority no less than in his Fathers Name Secondly Those Prophets were many by whom heretofore at sundry times and in various wayes of Revelation by parts and degrees God manifested to the Church the Doctrine of salvation But the Son is one by whom the Father once fully plainly and finally hath declared to us
holiness dwells yet our High Priest is merciful and sometime felt those temptations in his flesh which wee feel yet without sin Therefore wee may boldly press unto him and wee ought to endeavour to enter into that rest Vers. 16. Let us therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace that wee may obtain mercy and finde Grace to help in time of need Argum. 11. God doth not sit in the Throne of Justice upon our approaches to him in Christ but in the Throne of Grace that hee may communicate help to us in time of need under all our necessities Therefore wee ought to come with boldness to the Throne of Grace that wee may rest under the wings of the Propitiatory which is the same with entring into Gods Rest by Faith CHAP. V. THe Excellency of Christs Prophetical Office and the necessity of cleaving to him and his Doctrine who is the Apostle and great Prophet of our Profession hath been spoken to The Excellency of his Priestly Office follows There are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee proves Christ to bee the chief and great Priest more excellent than any typical Priest that hee might instruct the Hebrews to moderate their thoughts about the Levitical Priesthood which they too highly esteemed of to the prejudice of Christ to vers 11. In the second part ●ee reproves the slothfulness of the Hebrews that hee might render them more attentive to the following Doctrine And hee proves the Excellency of Christs Priesthood above the Levitical by nine Arguments Vers. 1. For every High Priest taken from among men is ordained for men in things pertaining to God that hee may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins 2. Who can have compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the way for that hee himself also is compassed with infirmity 3. And by reason hereof hee ought as for the people so also for himself to offer for sins Argum. 1. The perfections which were required in the Levitical Priests vers 1 2. were joyned with some notes of imperfection and with the sins of the Priests vers 2 3. Therefore Christ which was declared a Priest without sin in the end of the former Chapter is more excellent than the Levitical Priests Among men The Perfections of the Levitical High Priest were four 1 The Levitical Priest was taken from among men and was chosen one of many 2 Was ordained for men in those things which appertained to God i. e. That in the place and name of the people hee should administer about the worship of God praying to him for the people teaching the people in the name of God and that hee should by all possible means promote the Glory of God and the salvation of the people 3 Hee offered gifts of inanimate things and sacrifices of beasts sometimes burnt-offerings for the sins of the people sometimes peace-offerings for the obtaining of benefits sometimes thank-offerings for benefits received other whiles sacrifices for special sins By all which the virtues of Jesus Christs Sacrifice was dimly shadowed out Have compassion 4 The fourth perfection requisite in the Priestly Office is a sympathy and commiseration proportioned to the greatness of the peoples misery wherewith they ought to bee touched towards sinners whether sinning out of ignorance or voluntary errour and deliberate counsel For that There are two notes of Imperfection in the Priest-hood 1 That they themselves were obnoxious to the same infirmities i. e. of ignorance and errours and the miseries consequent to sin So also 2 This second n●●e demonstrates the former That they are obliged out of duty to offer Sacrifices no less for their own sins than the sins of the people This is the first Argument Vers. 4. And no man taketh this honour unto himself but hee that is called of God as was Aaron 5. So also Christ glorifieth not himself to bee made an High Priest but hee that said unto him Thou art my Son to day have I begotten thee Argum. 2. As the lawful Priests were called to the honour of this office so Christ was not onely lawfully called by the Father as Aaron but also further was acknowledged and declared the onely begotten Son of God in this Priestly office Therefore hee is much more excellent than the Levitical Priests The Antecedent is proved out of Psalm 2. where the Father speaking to his Son vers 7. calls him his Son whom hee begot before hee command him vers 8. to ask of him the ends of the earth or intercede for the salvation of men which are parts of the Priests office Therefore in this Psalm hee is not onely called by the Father to his Priestly office but also is acknowledged his Son and so more excellent than the Levitical Priests Vers. 6. As hee saith also in another place Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Argum. 3. From Psal. 110. Christ is appointed by the Father a Priest for ever of whose Priest-hood there is no end according to the order of Melchisedec the type Therefore hee is more excellent than the Levitical High Priests Vers. 7. Who in the daies of his flesh when hee had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death and was heard in that hee feared Argum. 4. This Argument consists of five Branches which may bee so many Arguments 1 Christ is so the Son of God that hee is man also the Son in our flesh the infirmiti●s whereof sometime hee felt without sin and so is a more excellent man than the Levitical Priests 2 Hee offered up prayers and supplications and himself to death for his people and so offered a more excellent Sacrifice than the Levitical Priests 3 Hee interceded with a greater sense of our misery and guilt with strong crying and tears and so in his sympathy towards us excelled the Levitical Priests 4 With greater confidence hee pleaded our cause than any of the typical Priests could even then when in the pangs of death and sense of the Divine wrath or curse due to our sins his sanctified humane nature conflicted with the terrours of death 5 Hee prayed with greater efficacy and fruit than any typical Priest For hee was freed according to his prayer from fear which the sight of an angry God put upon his sense and holy reason because having paid a sufficient price for us all cause of anger and fear was taken away Therefore Christ is a far more excellent Priest than the Levitical Priests Vers. 8. Though hee were a Son yet learned hee obedience by the things which hee suffered Argum. 5. Drawn from the former which with the removal of the scandal of the Cross shews also the excellency of Christs Priest-hood Christ was not imployed in beholding of the Sacrifices slain and himself free from all suffering as the Levitical Priests in the slaying of Sacrifices but although hee was the Son of God yet hee really felt by
esteemed by us Vers. 10. For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many Sons unto glory to make the Captain of their Salvation perfect through sufferings 1. Another reason of Christs Suffering This way of our saving by Christs Sufferings made for the Glory of God and our good Then When the reasons of Christs Death are seen the scandal of his Cross ceaseth 2. There is a work to do here a great many of Sons to bee brought to glory Then 1. All the Elect and saved Souls are in the rank of Children 2. Albeit they bee few in comparison of the world yet are they many of them all together 3. There is not one of them all who can go to Heaven or Salvation but by Christs leading and conduct 3. The Captain of their Salvation must bee made perfect through suffering Then 1. How perfect soever Christ be in himself yet before his suffering hee lacked one thing which his Office towards us required to wit experimental suffering of such sorrows as his souldiers and followers are subject unto 2. When his sufferings were ended hee was perfectly fitted to comfort us seeing hee found our sorrows in himself sometime 4. Hee saith It became God for whom and by whom are all things that the matter should bee so brought about Then 1. All things are for Gods Glory at the end and so should the manner of our salvation bee also 2. All things are by Gods Hand and Power brought about and reason too that hee dispose of the means of our salvation as hee pleaseth 3. This way became God most of any It brought him greatest Glory by the Shame Sorrow and Death of one to bring Glory and Joy and Life to many Vers. 11. For both Hee that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one For which cause hee is not ashamed to call them Brethren 1. If any should further ask how could hee die or how could Iustice accept him in our stead Hee answereth Because hee is one of our kind and nature Then 1. There is a natural Band betwixt Christ and his Followers They are of the same stock of the same natural substance 2. Christs natural Band with us maketh him a direct entress to redeem us 2. Hee calleth Christ him that sanctifieth and the Beleevers they who are sanctified Then 1. The Band of Nature betwixt Christ and Men is reckoned unto those onely who are sanctified with none other will Christ reckon Kindred 2. Therefore they must study to Holiness that would claim Kindred to Christ. 3. The sanctification which it behoveth us to have must proceed from Christ no holiness until a man bee in him 3. Hee saith Christ is not ashamed to call the Sanctified Brethren Then 1. As Christ hath dimitted himself to our Nature so also to the stiles of consanguinity with us 2. Christ is as kindly affectioned to his Followers as ever Brother was to another hee will not misken his own albeit unworthy 3. That which may serve to our glory and comfort Christ will think it no disgrace to himself Vers. 12. Saying I will declare Thy Name unto my Brethren In the midst of the Church will I sing praise unto Thee Hee proveth that hee calleth us Brethren from Psal. 20. vers 22. The Messias there taketh upon him to preach to men and to praise the Father Then 1. With our Nature Christ took on also the Yoke of the Exercises of Religion 2. Hee joyneth with us in the Discharge of them 3. Hee is first in the Exercise not onely because hee discharged them in his own proper person but also because still by his Spirit where two or three are gathered together in his Name hee is in the midst of them moving and moderating the Spirits of his own delectable Organs Vers. 13. And again I will put my trust in him And again Behold I and the children which God hath given mee 1. The next proof is from Psal. 18. Vers. 2. Where Christ under the type of David promiseth to beleeve in the Father Then 1. Christ is one of the number of Beleevers one of the Covenant of Grace confederate by Faith and therefore hee behoved to be a man to this end 2. Then have wee in the sense of our unbeleef the comfort of the soundness and strength of Christs beleeving as well as of his other Perfections 2. The third proof is from Isa. 8.18 Wherein Christ under the type of the Prophet Isaiah presenteth himself with his chosen Children before the Father Then 1. Christ is our Father also and wee his Children 2. Wee are given to him of the Father 3. Wee are not presented before the Father without our Mediatour Christ. 4. Christ and wee his little ones joyned together and separated from the world are a pleasant sight for the Father to behold Vers. 14. Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood Hee also Himself likewise took part of the same that through death Hee might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil 1. Hee giveth further reasons of his Incarnation And first hee behoved by death to destroy the Devil that had the power of death and so behoved to bee a Man that hee might dye Then 1. Sinners without Christ are under the sentence of death temporal and eternal 2. Satan hath power of Death as the Burrio hath power over the Pit and Gallows at death to take them away to torment who are not delivered from his power 3. Christ hath destroyed Satans power and tyranny in this point in behalf of all his Elect and true Beleevers 4. The way how Christ hath overcome Satan is by his own death ransoming his own 5. For as death behoved to bee the way it behoved also Christ to bee a mortal man as well as God that hee might dye 2. Again hee saith Christ took part of flesh and blood with the Children that is with the Elect given to him Then 1. Love to the Elect made the Son of God come down and make himself a Man also 2. Christ in his humane Nature is as kindly a Man as any of the Elect having flesh and blood and bones as well as wee His flesh and blood is not onely like to ours but is a part of our substance who is come of the same stock of Adam and Eve as surely as ours and not made either by Creation of nothing or by trans-substantiation of some other things than our substance Vers. 15. And deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage Another fruit of Christs death is the delivery of Beleevers from the bondage of the fear of death wherein they do lye before Beleef Then 1. There is a natural fear of Death and the Devil and Hell rooted in all men alwaies albeit not as yet felt yet easily wakened 2. This fear putteth men in bondage that they dare not meditate on Death or Gods
conscience which in every condition can inwardly give you a good testimony Therefore ought yee to follow after these virtues They may bee ashamed Argum. 8. By the following after these virtues yee will stop the mouthes of the enemies of the Gospel who lye in wait to defame you and speak ill of you as of evil doers Vers. 17. For it is better if the will of God be so that yee suffer for well doing than for evil doing Argum. 9. For it is far better that yee following after these virtues should be afflicted for well doing if the will of God be so than for doing evil For from hence ar●s●s praise and commendation from the other judgement and disgrace Therefore yee ought to follow these virtues Ve●s 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that hee might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit Argum. 10. Christ hath once suffered for the expiating of sins Therefore yee Beleevers being exempted from the punishment of sins are obliged if God will so have it to suffer troubles for the following of these virtues Iust Argum. 11. Christ being just and innocent hath suffered for us being unjust Therefore wee being beleevers who are not altogether innocent are bound for righteousness sake not to refuse the suffering of what God will have us suffer That he might bring us Argum. 12. Christ the just one hath suffered that hee might confirm us being justified and suffering afflictions to himself and bring us to God Therefore beleevers are bound to follow him in the pursute of virtue and patience of afflictions for weldoing Quickened Argum. 13. Seeing that the issue of Christs sufferings was happy because although he is dead by reason of the infirmity of our flesh yet he rose from the dead by the virtue and power of his Spirit or Deity ye beleevers suffering afflictions for Christ and his righteousness without doubt shall also obtain a joyfull issue out of your sufferings and death it self Therefore ye ought to follow after these virtues although for that cause yee bee afflicted Vers. 19. By which also hee went and preached unto the Spirits in prison 20. Which sometimes were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the days of Noah while the Ark was a preparing wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water 21. The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us not the putting away of the filth of the flesh but the answer of a good conscience toward God by the resurrection of Iesus Christ. Argum. 14. The spirits or soules of those unbeleeving and disobedient men are now in prison or hell to which Christ by his spirit in times past by Noah the preacher of righteousness came and preached repentance and following after righteousness because in times past to wit in the time of Noah they were disobedient abusing Gods long suffering towards them whilst the Ark was preparing Therefore it is expedient for you Hebrews to obey this exhortation to the study of virtue lest yee bee involved in the same punishment Few Argum. 15. As those few soules which were in the Ark were saved in the deluge of waters by the Ark So all beleevers being baptized are preserved that they perish not in any afflictions by baptism which answers to the Type of the Ark Therefore yee that follow after righteousness ought to fear nothing although yee suffer for righteousness sake Not the filth of the flesh Hee explains this argument shewing that hee doth not understand the outward baptism which consists in the washing away of the filth of the body but the inward baptism which consists in the washing away of sins or the filthiness of the soul the sign and proper effect whereof is the engagement of a good conscience towards God or that confidence which a good conscience purged by Faith hath towards God by and through the resurrection of Christ. Hee also adds Argum. 16. Now yee are endued with that confidence which a good conscience purged by Faith hath towards God by and through the resurrection of Christ Therefore there is no cause that for the following after the Scriptures yee should fear afflictions Hee adds by the resurrection of Christ partly because in Christs resurrection was declared the sentence of God absolving us in Christ from sinne and death partly because Christ being raised from the dead hath powerfully perfected those things in and for beleevers which by his death hee merited and obtained for them Vers. 22. Who is gone into Heaven and is on the right hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him Argum. 17. Confirming the former and also the exhortation to the following after virtue although for that cause afflictions were born Christ the Author of our salvation is lifted up into Heaven to the highest glory of ruling over all things and obtain supream and everlasting power over all Creatures not any of the Angels excepted Therefore yee Beleevers ought strongly to prosecute the study of virtue against all dangers and terrours being assured of your salvation because you have such a Saviour in Heaven CHAP. IV. HEE here prosecutes the same Argument which hee handled in the former Chapter There are two parts of the Chapter in the first are contained Exhortations to holiness to vers 12. The other is consolatory against persecutions to the end The exhortations to holiness are six The first is more general to vers 7. the rest more especial Vers. 1. Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves likewise with the same mind for hee that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin The Arguments to holiness in general are seven which that they may be the better conceived wee must maintain that Christ hanging on the Cross hath after four manner of waies acted in our behalf First That hee judicially representing us and bearing our person did bear the guilt of our sins and punishment due to them 2. That hee being a Surety for us did take upon himself the mortifying or crucifying of our old man by the virtue of his crucifixion 3. Hee set forth himself an efficacious example to us whereto wee might conform our selves in the denying our selves and renouncing all things which might hinder us in our progress towards Heaven 4. As a Surety Advocate Patron Father Husband Head and common person hee did binde us with many bonds to deaden us to sin and to use all means whereby that might be effected These presupposed the following Arguments more strongly binde Argum. 2. Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh and publickly acted in our behalf after those foresaid waies Therefore yee beleeving Hebrews ought to arm your selves with this meditation of Faith against all temptations that yee may dye to the lusts of the corrupt flesh Who hath suffered Argum. 2. Confirming the former from the judicial uniting of Beleevers