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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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of the blood of Iesus for remission of sins after this hearty application of Christs blood the conscience is furnished with a good answer unto all challenges and so is made good a comfortable conscience absolving the man through faith in Jesus whom it tormented with challenges before it ran to the blood of Jesus for sprinkling Then whensoever the conscience is evil accuseth and vexeth let the vexed heart run to Christs blood and then shall it be free from an evil conscience for the blood of Jesus cleanseth us from all sin Let the heart be sprinkled and the conscience will be good 6. The fourth thing required in him that draweth near as he should is That his body be washed with pure water That is That according to the signification of that Legal Rite their outward conversation be blameless and holy sin being so curbed within that it reign not in their mortal body so foughten against within as it break not forth in scandalous works of Darkness in the actions of the body Then 1. With a sprinkled conscience within men must joyn an holy and blameless conversation without 2. The washing of the conversation without must proceed from an heart sensibly acquainted with the power of the blood of Jesus 3. And this outward holiness of the body must be wrought with pure water that is by the Spirit of Sanctification to distinguish the reformation of a believer from a counterfeit who without may look like a righteous man but within be as a whited Tomb full of rottenness Verse 23. Let us hold fast the Profession of our Faith without wavering for he is faithful that promised Another Exhortation to avow the faith of Christ that is the doctrine of Christ the truth received from Christ and believed and not to quit it in the time of tryal upon any condition 1. The requiring to hold fast the confession of our Faith or Hope as the word importeth teacheth 1. That a true Christian must not onely hold the truth of Christ secretly but must confess it profess and avow it openly where Gods glory and others good requireth the same 2. That he must look for adversary powers and temptations to take that truth or at least the confession of it from him 3. That in these tryals and essays he must hold the faster gripe and avow it so much the more stedfastly as he is tempted to quit it 4. That when he is put to the tryal of this Confession of any point of his Faith hee is also put to the tryal of the confession of his hope whether his hopes of the promised salvation in Jesus be stronger to keep him stedfast or the terror and allurement from men stronger to make him quit the point of truth converted 5. That nothing but this hope is able to make a man stand out in tryal if hee be hardly urged 2. Hee will have the avowing of the truth of Christ to be without wavering Then 1. Men must so learn the Truth that they need not to change again that is must study to know the Truth soundly and solidly 2. And having learned it must not say and unsay one day avow it and another day quit it For so God getteth not his due glory Beholders are not edified the mans testimony wanteth weight with the adversary But hee must be invincible in the truth who will neither alter nor change or diminish any thing of it for fear or favour 3. Hee giveth this for a ground of constancy For hee is faithful who hath promised That is the promises which Iesus hath made to such as constantly beleeve in him shall be surely performed that no constant professor of his Truth shall be ashamed Then 1. Where wee have a promise of any thing made unto us in Scripture wee may be confident to obtain it and bold to avow our hope thereof against such as would teach us the Doctrine of Doubting whereunto wee are of our selves prone and inclined and against such as shake the assurance of the Saints perseverance 2. The ground of our confidence is not in our selves but in the faithfulness of Jesus Christ who hath promised such graces to his children 3. Our bold avowing of our hope is not a bragging of our own strength but a magnifying of Christs faithfulness Vers. 24. And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and unto good works Hee strengtheneth his former Exhortation by giving of directions to further their obedience thereunto And first for mutual up-stirring one of another Whereof wee learn 1. That mutual edification of Christians amongst themselves and sharpening one of another is a special help to constancy in true Religion and a preservative against Apostacy 2. Prudence is required hereunto that mutually wee observe one anothers disposition Gifts Experience Virtues and Faults that wee may the better fit our selves to do good each one of us unto another and to receive good each one of another in our Christian conversing together 3. A godly striving one with another who shall be first in love and well-doing is better than the ordinary strife who shall exceed others in vanity and superfluity of apparel and fare Vers. 25. Not forsaking the assembling of our selves together as the manner of some is but exhorting one another and so much the more as yee see the day approaching Another mean to this same end is the frequenting of Christian Assemblies and Meetings which may further this purpose of mutual edification And therefore 1. Church-Assemblies must be well kept by such as do minde to prove constant in the true Religion 2. Christian Meetings also of private Christians for mutual conference and exhorting one of another is not to be neglected nor forsaken but to be used for keeping unity in the Church and not to foster Schism or hinder the publick Assemblies 2. Hee taxeth the fault of some amongst them who in Schism or purpose of Apostasie withdrew themselves from all Church-Assemblies and Christian-Meetings and fell back again or were in the way of falling back to the denial of Christ openly Then 1. Separation from the true Church and Christian society of the faithful is a remarkable evil 2. The Schism or Apostasie of others should not weaken us in following any good mean of edification but rather stir us up unto more diligence lest by negligence wee fall peece and peece back after their example 3. Hee maketh the approaching of the day to wit of Gods Iudgement a special motive to use the means diligently and make us constant in the Faith Then 1. The day of Gods Judgement should still be looked unto as a thing near hand even at the doors because it is but a very little and our day shall come yea and but a little time till our Lord shall come to judgement 2. The consideration of the day of judgement is a fit mean to sharpen us unto all good Duties which may make our reckoning to be furthered at that day and to make us boldly
maintain the Truth against all fear of men Vers. 26. For if wee sin wilfully after that wee have received the knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for sins Another Motive to constancy in the Truth of Religion taken from the fearful case of wilful Apostates who sinning the sin against the Holy Ghost are secluded for ever from Mercy I say the sin against the Holy Ghost because wee shall finde the sin here described not to be any particular sin against the Law but against the Gospel Not a sin against some point of Truth but against Christs whole Doctrine Not of infirmity but wilfulness Not of rashness but of deliberation wittingly and willingly Not of ignorance but after Illumination and Profession Such as Iews turned Christians revolting from Christianity back again to their former hostility against Christ did commit It is true many who commit lesser sins get never grace to repent and many who make defection in some point of their profession may be secluded from mercy thereafter but this sin here described is a wilful rejecting of Christ and the Benefit of his Sacrifice after Illumination and Profession of the Faith of Christ. Then 1. As Apostacy from the true Religion lyeth nearest unto this sin so they who desire to be freed of this sin must be the more careful to be constant in the profession of every point of the Truth of the Gospel 2. If a man reject the Benefit of that once offered Sacrifice of Christ there is no other Sacrifice for sin after that nor any other mean to help him But if a man seek unto Jesus Christ and will not quit Him whatsoever hee may think of the hainousness of his own sins the Sacrifice which Jesus offered for sins remaineth whereby hee may be saved Vers. 27. But a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery Indignation which shall devour the Adversaries Having secluded the Apostate from Mercy hee goeth on in these words to shew his miserable estate Whereof wee gather 1. That the wilful Apostate from the Faith of Christ is also a wilful Adversary to Christ of the highest sort Partaker of Satans sin and Satans Profession 2. That every Apostate of this sort is destitute of Gods Peace self-condemned desperate of salvation hopeless of Relief without all purpose of Repentance or using means of help stricken with the fore-sight of the Wrath coming upon him and made to expect it although hee should dissemble it never so much 3. The Apostates fear shall come upon him judgement answerable to his sin the indignation and wrath of God yea fiery indignation the most terrible that can be thought upon which hee shall not escape but it shall devoute him swallow him up and feed upon his body and soul even for ever 2. In that hee maketh this the judgement of Christs Adversaries Wee learn That the soul which loveth Christ and cannot qui● Him cannot endure to think of a separation will not quit the true Religion nor any known point of Christs Truth and is using the means to get Gods Peace albeit it might seem to it self because of the present sense of wrath to be in the self-same estate that is here described yet it is ●ree as yet of the sin against the Holy Ghost and not to be reckoned amongst adversaries but amongst the friends and lovers of Christ how vehemently soever Satans suggestions bear in the contrary 3. In that by setting before them the fearful estate of Apostates from the known Truth of the true Religion hee Laboureth to strengthen them against the fear of persecution Whence wee learn That if Apostates before they make Apostasie from the true Religion did fore-see their own danger as after Apostasie they are made to fore-see their own condemnation all the terrour of all the torment which man could put them unto and all the allurements which this world could give them would not move them to quit the least point of the Truth of true Religion Vers. 28. Hee that despised Moses Law died without mercy under two or three witnesses 29. Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall hee be thought worthy who hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the Blood of the Covenant wherewith hee was sanctified an unholy thing and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace 1. Hee proveth the equity of their judgement by the proportion of their punishment who despised the Law of Moses Then As sins are greater so must the punishment be greater and the conscience being posed as here cannot but subscribe to the proportion 2. To make the sin appear the better hee pointeth out some particular sins involved within this great sin For clearing whereof it may be asked How can the Apostates tread the Blood of the Son of God under foot c. I answer They cannot indeed by physical action but by doing the equivalent sin they are accounted of God to do it by judicial interpretation Their Apostasie importeth their agreeing to do Christ as much indignity as if they did offer Him this personal violence Their deeds shew that they have this base estimation of Christ and His Blood and no better For what saith the Apostate of Christ by his deed but That Hee is not worthy to be professed or avowed or followed And what is this in effect but to tread Him under all these base things which the Apostate preferreth before Him And so is to be understood of the Blood of Christ and His Spirit Quest. But how can the Reprobate be said to be sanctified by the Blood of the Covenant I answer There is a sanctification to the purifying of the flesh and a sanctification to the purifying of the conscience from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9.13 14. The sanctification external to the purifying of the flesh consisteth in the mans separation from the world and dedication unto Gods service by Calling and Covenant common to all the members of the visible Church and it is forcible thus far as to bring a man into credit estimation as a Saint before men and unto the common Priviledges of the Church whereupon as Men so God also speaketh unto him and of him as one of His People and dealeth with him in his external dispensation as with one of His own People In this sense all the Congregation of Israel and every one of them is called holy yea Core also and his followers Num. 16.3 The Sanctification internal by renovation consisteth in a mans separation from the state of Nature to the state of grace from his old conditions to be a new creature indeed By this latter sort a Reprobate cannot be called Sanctified but by the former hee may be called Sanctified and that by virtue of the Blood of the Covenant albeit hee should not get any further good thereby For as the Blood of CHRIST hath virtue to cleanse the conscience and renew the soul which commeth unto it truly and spiritually so it
given him about restraining certain perverse Zelots of the Law and admonishing them that they teach no Doctrine diverse from that which is Apostolical In prescribing of which the Apostle chuses to use words of beseeching and intreating rather than to speak imperiously that hee might supply the stead of Timothy who could scarcely bee loosed from the most sweet society of Paul not for a time even by the intreaties of the Apostle Vers. 4. Neither give he●d to fables and endless genealogies which minister questions rather than godly edifying which is in Faith so do For example Hee commands that Fables and Jewish Genealogies bee avoided i. e. newly devised opinions or traditions besides the holy Scriptures and curious speculations about unnecessary things such are very many Talmudical and Cabali●tical such also are to bee found amongst the School-men Endless The Reasons of his admonition are six Reas. 1. Because those vain speculations are idle and endless whereof there is no use Which rather Reas. 2. Because they beget curious and contentious questions nor do they promote the knowledge of piety which lead unto God for edification proceeds not from probable and dubious questions but by the solid beleeving of the Word of God Vers. 5. Now the end of the Commandement is charity out of a pure heart and a good conscience and of Faith unfeigned Reas. 3. Because those Teachers that are wholly exercised in discussing of smaller matters which may bee fetched from the Law though they seem to bee carried with a Zeal to the Law of Moses yet they refer not the Law to its true end or to the proper scope of the whole Scripture which is that men by the Law being led to the knowledge of sin and deserved misery may seriously betake themselves to Christ by Faith unfeigned Charity This Faith hee describes from a three-fold effect 1 That true Faith in the propitia●ory blood of Christ renders the conscience good or peaceable and quiet 2 That the conscience being now pacified Faith will not suffer that the heart bee any longer delighted in evil but rather endeavours after purity and that it may bee purged from all evil affections 3 That true Faith is not idle in that which is good but stirs up a man diligently to labour in the obedience of every Precept by love to God and men Vers. 6. From which some having sw●rved have turned aside unto vain jangling Reas. 4. Confirming the former Because it is approved by the experience of some that unless Teachers abstain from their vain curiosities and intend more earnestly the edification of m●n in Faith and Charity they cannot but bee drawn away from the simplicity of Doctrine into vain babling for where there is vanity there verity is not Vers. 7. Desiring to bee Teachers of the Law understanding neither what they say nor whereof they affirm Reas. 5. Because it is also known by experience that those ambitious Teachers while they affect a new kind of teaching and seek after applause from their knowledge of the Law betrayed their ignorance whilst they understood not the questions whereof nor the Arguments from which they disputed Therefore avoiding idle speculations Timothy was to take care that in the Apostolick Doctrine or the manner of teaching it no innovation was made by any one Vers. 8. But wee know that the Law is good if a man use it lawfully Hee answers an Objection Therefore are thou against the divine Law who so earnestly rebukest the Teacher● of it The Apostle answers that hee did not at all detract from the Law reproving those that abuse it but rather commends and teaches the right use of the Law Vers. 9. Knowing this that the Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient for the ungodly and for sinners for unholy and prophane for murderers of Fathers and murderers of Mothers for man-slayers 10. For Whore-mongers for them that defile themselves with man-●ind for men-stealers for lyars for perjur●● persons and if there ●ee any other thing that is contrary to sound Doctrine 11. According to the glorious Gospel of the blessed God which was committed to my trust Hee confirms the Answer with three Reasons The first is from the end of the Law or the Legal Covenant so far as it is opposed to the Gospel the Law is established not that the faithful justified by Faith in Christ should bee justified by the Law as the perverse Teachers of the Law intended but that the unrighteous and unbeleevers as are all wicked and prophane persons condemned by the Law might acknowledge their unrighteousness and deserved condemnation repent and flye unto Christ Therefore the Apostles Doctrine detracts nothing from the Law According Reas. 2. All sins which are forbidden by the Law are also prohibited by the sound Doctrine of the glorious Gospel and all the duties which are commanded by the Law are earnestly urged and taught in the Gospel so much as concerns the performance of our obedience unto God the demonstration of our thankfulness and the proof of the sincerity of Faith in the fruits of holiness Therefore the Doctrine of the Gospel detracts nothing from the Law Committed Reas. 3. I an Apostle to whom the Gospel of God in himself most blessed and the Author of all blessings towards us is committed do no less urge this wholesome doctrine of Sanctification and all good works which in the Law are commanded than any Zelot of the Law although not to the same end Therefore the Apostolical Doctrine nothing at all detracts from the Law The Second Part. Vers. 12. And I thank Iesus Christ our Lord who hath enabled ●ee for that hee coun●ed mee faithful putting mee into the Ministery The second part of the Chapter follows which contains the vindication of the authority of his Apostleship against those that denied it or in consideration of his fore-acted life did lessen it and that with thanksgiving for the Grace that was bestowed upon him Seven Reasons are laid down of his thanksgiving All which prove that his Apostleship is in no wise to bee disparaged Reas. 1. Christ by the grace of his Spirit hath strengthened mee an infirm man and heretofore a slave to sin the Devil and the world appointed an Apostle by him that as a leader I should with an invincible courage stand up for the defence of the Gospel against all the insul●●tions of the world the flesh ●nd the Devil Therefore thanks are to bee given for my confirmation in the Apostleship so little reason is there that any thing should bee detracted Accounted mee faithful Reas. 2. Christ hath endued mee being appointed an Apostle with the gifts of his Spirit and hath so far honoured mee that hee made and accounted mee his faithful friend who would commit to mee the Gospel to bee dispensed to the souls of his Elect Therefore my authority is not to bee disparaged Hath appointed Reas. 3. Christ the Lord hath placed mee in the Minist●ry i. e. in
without blood which hee offered for himself and for the errours of the people Hee proceeds in describing the anniversary rites which were of this sort 1 The High Priest alone without any companion 2 Once a year not oftener 3 Never without the offering the blood of a Calf and an Hee-Goat in a basin 4 This blood hee offered for his own sins great and small and for the sins of the people All these outward worldly and shadowy things were in no wise efficacious in themselves For they prefigured the entring of Christ into Heaven by his own blood the true Propitiatory This is the first Argument of the earthly imperfection in the Levitical Priesthood Vers. 8. The Holy Ghost this signifying that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Argum. 2. Propounded by way of exposition of the next mystery In the time of the Levitical Priesthood while it obtained a standing Tabernacle and that Ceremonial worship about the Sanctuary the way to Heaven or the true Sanctuary was not manifestly declared as it is now under the Priesthood of Christ That which the Holy Ghost taught by excluding the Priests from the inward Sanctuary by admitting the High Priest once a year the Sanctuary remaining shut all the year after Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 9. Which was a figure for the time then present in which were offered both gifts and Sacrifices that could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience Argum. 3. The rites of the foresaid expiatory and the other such exercises of the Levitical High Priest were typical and parabolical and a meer pattern of those things which were to bee performed by Christ Therefore the excellency of the Levitical Priesthood is no waies to bee equallized with the Priesthood of Christ. For the time Argum. 4. The things which were done by the High Priest and the Levitical Priests served onely for the time present of the Law institution viz. in the infancy and beginning of the Church wherein gifts and typical Sacrifices were offered Therefore the Levitical Priesthood is far inferiour to the Priesthood of Christ. Could not Argum. 5. The gifts and sacrifices which were offered by the Levitical Priesthood could not sanctifie the conscience of him that worshiped or take away the evil conscience of sins committed Therefore the Levitical Priesthood c. Vers. 10. Which stood onely in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal ordinances imposed on them until the time of reformation Argum. 6. Confirming the former Those things which were offered by the Levitical Priest consisted onely in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal rites which did not commend a man to God 1 Cor. 8.2 but onely they did these things as sanctified in the flesh ceremonially they might bee accounted pure worshipers Therefore the Levitical Priesthood is nothing being compared to the Priesthood of Christ. Until Argum. 7. These gifts and sacrifices and the other offices of the Levitical Priests were imposed as a yoak and burden onely till the time of Reformation i. e. till the comming of Christ who would reform the imperfect sacrifices and gifts of the old Priesthood and they being abolished hee would introduce a more perfect gift and sacrifice Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more perfect c. Vers. 11. But Christ being come an High Priest of good things to come by a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is to say not of this building Argum. 8. Christ is the High Priest not of types but of spiritual good things of Justification Sanctification and Salvation which were figured by the types Therefore c. By a greater Argum. 9. Christ had a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands not of a common structure viz. the Tabernacle of his body which was formed in the womb of the Virgin by the Holy Ghost after a special manner without the spot of Original sin in which Tabernacle the fulness of the Godhead dwels Therefore his Priesthood is far more excellent than c. Vers. 12. Neither by the blood of Goats and Calves but by his own blood hee entred in once into the holy place having obtained eternal redemption for us Argum. 10. Christ offered not the blood of Bulls or Goats as the Levitical Priests but his own blood and the same is made the Priest and the Sacrifice Therefore his Priesthood c. Once Argum. 11. Christ hath once entred into the true holy place i. e. Heaven and there abides not often as the Levitical Priests into the typical holy place Therefore his Priesthood c. Eternal Argum. 12. Christ hath purchased eternal Redemption with his own blood which was impossible for the Levitical Priests Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent than c. Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of 〈◊〉 Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the Living God Shall purge Argum. 13. Confirming the former The blood of Christ purges the conscience partly as the conscience seeing full satisfaction made in the death of Christ to divine Justice for it self closeth with its perfect discharge and rests therein partly as the power of sanctifying the heart to the service of God flowes from him For if Hee confirms this Argument a minori The blood of Bulls and other types performed what they were appointed to viz. Ecclesiastical purification of the outward man that hee might be sanctified to the works of external worship how much more shall the blood of Christ the Antitype perform that which is signified by the types viz. The purifying of the conscience from sins to the service of God Sins are called dead works because they deserve death and make sinners guilty of death By the Spirit Argum. 14. In the Sacrifice of Christ the Eternal Spirit or Christ as God acted the chief parts of the Priest and offered up himself as a man without spot for a Sacrifice Therefore his Priesthood is so much the more excellent than the Levitical as God is more excellent than man and his holy humanity than a beast Vers. 15. And for this cause hee is the Mediatour of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Argum. 15. Under the Old Covenant neither Remission of sin nor the Inheritance of Eternal Life was given to them that were called but for the sake of Christs death interceding under the New Covenant to which end hee being now the Mediatour of the New Covenant is ordained for all them that are called Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent
repeated But Christs entry into Heaven to be perfect because but once not to be repeated 3. The Levitical Priests entred by the blood of Goats and Calves But Christ entred by his own blood 1. And if Christ entred but once into Heaven after his Suffering Then Wee must not think that his Body is any where else but in Heaven onely wherein it is once onely entred 2. If the blood whereby Christ entred into Heaven was his own blood Then 1. Verily Christs Body was like ours in substance having blood in it as ours and wee must not conceive otherwise of his body than to be of the same substance and substantial properties with ours 2. The blood belonged to the same person to whom the properties of God belongeth so often in this Epistle attributed unto Christ. His Blood was the blood of God Act. 20.28 That is the same Jesus was God and man with flesh and blood in one person 3. The Fruit of Christs bloody Sacrifice hee maketh The Eternal Redemption of those for whom hee offered it And to the typical Sacrifice hee ascribeth no redemption at all in the comparison Thereby giving us to understand 1. That from the worlds beginning to the end thereof salvation of sinners is by way of Christs Redemption That is by his loosing them through payment of a price 2. That the Redemption was manifested to have force when after his bloody Sacrifice hee entred into Heaven 3. That such as are once redeemed by Christ are Eternally Redeemed not for a time to fall away again but eternally to be saved most certainly Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh Vers. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God To prove that eternal Redemption is the fruit of Christs Sacrifice he reasoneth thus If the Typical Sacrifices and Rites of old were able to work that for which they were ordained that is external Sanctification Much more shall Christs true Sacrifice be able to work that for which it was appointed that is Eternal Remission of sins and inward Sanctification unto eternal life Then there are two sorts of Sanctification One external of the flesh which maketh a man holy to the Church whatsoever he be within Another internal of the conscience and inner man which maketh a man holy before God 2. The purifying of the flesh he maketh to be by the exercise of such and such Ordinances of Divine Service for the time Then External or Church-holiness of the outward man is procured by such and such exercises of Divine Ordinances in the Church as serve to make a man to be reputed and holden for clean before men and so to be received for a member of the Church as is to be seen Numb 19. 3. From his form of reasoning we learn That whatsoever liberty and access of coming to the Church was made to the Jew of old by these ceremonies of the Law as much and more liberty is made to the Christian to come in to God by the blood of Christ. 4. In describing Christs Sacrifice he saith Christ through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God Then 1. Christ is both the Sacrifice and the Priest in one person He offered himself as man through the Eternal Spirit that is by the vertue and power of his own Godhead by which he preached before his Incarnation to sinners 1 Pet. 3.19 2. His sacrifice was without spot He was that spotless Lamb in whom was no sin nor imperfection nor defect of any thing that the sacrifice required 3. The vertue of the sacrifice which made it to purchase Eternal Redemption unto us floweth from the infinite worth of his Eternal Godhead 4. Albeit Christs two natures have their distinct respects in the actions of his Office yet Christ is one and undivided in the execution of his Office 5. The fruit and force of the sacrifice is set down in this that this Blood shall purge our conscience from dead works to serve the living God That is shall both absolve a man from his foregon sin and also enable him to serve God for time to come Then 1. Sins are but dead works flowing from nature dead in sin and not onely deserving but also drawing on death upon the sinner 2. The conscience lieth polluted with the filthiness of dead works till the vertue of the blood of Jesus applied bring intimation of absolution 3. Christs blood doth not purge the Conscience from dead works that a man should go wallow in them again but that he may serve the living God more acceptably 4. The purging vertue of Christs blood is joyned with the sanctifying and renewing of the absolved sinner and what God hath conjoyned let no man put asunder Vers. 15. And for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions which were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Now lest any man should stumble at Christs death he sheweth a necessity thereof in respect of his office of Mediation and the purchase to be made by his Redemption The force of the reason is this Remission of sins could not have been given under the Law except the Mediator had been to pay the price of the same under the Gospel Nor could the faithful and called ones either then or now obtain eternal life for an inheritance otherwise than by the Mediators death Therefore it behoved the true Mediator by means of death to pay the promised price of the purchase of remission of sins and eternal life Then 1. The remission of transgressions and the inheritance of eternal life are both fruits of Christs Passion 2. The fruits of his Passion extended themselves unto them who were under the Old Testament as well as unto us under the New 3. The way of purchase of these benefits was by Redemption that is to say by lawful purchase such as might satisfie justice 4. The way in special was by means of the Mediators death His life was laid down to redeem ours His one life as good as all ours 5. For this cause Christ took the office of a Mediator unto himself that he might have right and interest by death to make this purchase 6. And therefore except he had really died the purchase could not have been lawfully made Vers. 16. For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator Another reason to prove the necessity of Christs death from the force of the word Covenant which signifieth also a Testament The force of the reason is this Christ Jer. 31.31 promised to make a New Covenant and therefore also a New Testament i● to make a New Testament then also he promised
of the true Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the World And therefore when Attonement and expiation of sin is attributed to the Levitical sacrifices as Lev. 17.11 the form of speech is Sacramentall the property of the thing signified being ascribed to the sign as was marked before Quest. But do not we Christians make a commemoration of our sins year by year yea daily remembring even the sins of our youth deprecating the wrath which they deserve I answer It is true we do but not by way of offering a sacrifice as they for of them it is said here In those sacrifices there is a remembrance of sin Quest. What is the difference betwixt commemoration of sin without renewd sacrifice and commemoration of sin with renewed sacrifices betwixt the Jews commemoration of sins year by year spoken of in this place and the commemoration which true Christians do make I answer The Iew in his solemn Commemoration of sin by renewed sacrifice did really profess two things One That no sacrifice formerly offered was sufficient to expiate his sin or cleanse his conscience Another That he had not sufficiently holden by Faith that signified sacrifice which was to come but had need through the Spectacles and Transparent of these typical sacrifices enjoyned for his help to take a new view of that true sacrifice which was to come of both which the repeated sacrifice did bear witness But we by commemoration of our sins and not sacrificing profess That by Christs sacrifice already past Gods justice is so well satisfied as there is no need of new sacrifice nor of●ner offering of that one And therefore that we desire no other ransome but Christs which is payed already on the Cross but onely crave to have by Faith a better hold of Christ who hath payed the ransome for us that we may finde the vertue of his ransome yet more and more in our selves Quest. But what if with the commemoration of sins year by year and day by day we should pretend to joyn a Sacrifice that new expiation might be made by offering of Christ over again as is pretended to be done now adays I answer By so doing we should take away the Difference which the Apostle here putteth betwixt the Levitical sacrifices and Christ and make Christs no better than theirs We should avow That Christs sacrifice on the Cross done by himself was not a full ransome for our sins but that a mans offering were able to do that which Christs sacrifice on the Cross had not done Finally with the Iew we should avow that the true and satisfactory sacrifice were not as yet come nothing heretofore being done which were able to pacifie God or purge the Worshippers from the Conscience of sin For if a man think that the price of expiation of sin be already payed he doth but mock Gods justice and disgrace the Price payed if he presume to pay the Price over again Vers. 4. For it is not possible that the blood of Bulls and of Goats should take away sins He giveth a Reason why these Sacrifices could not pacifie the conscience even because it is not possible that they should take away sin Then 1. The conscience can never be purged except it see sin taken away by a perfect sacrifice and a ransome so worthy as justice may be satisfied 2. It is impossible that Attonement was properly made by the Levitical sacrifice but onely figuratively because here it is said It was impossible they could take away sins 3. Sin is not wiped away by any unworthy mean for sin being the breach of the Law of nature and of the written Law Gods Majestie so glorious his Justice so exact his Truth in threatning death to the offender so constant no less worthy sacrifice can expiate sin than that which is of value to answer all these Vers. 5. Wherefore when he cometh into the world he saith Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not but a body hast thou prepared me 6. In burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure He proveth by testimony of the 40 Psalm vers 6 7 c. That these sacrifices did never by themselves pacifie God and therefore were not to endure longer than Christ should come to fulfil what they did signifie and so abolish them Then of necessity the Old Church was not altogether ignorant of the imperfection of their Legal service for removing of their sins and that the true expiation of their sins signified by these sacrifices was to be sought in the Messias 2. Christ is brought in by the Prophet coming into the world that is taking on our nature and manifesting himself in the flesh because by the Word he is set before the Church of that time as incarnate removing the Levitical Sacrifices and offering himself in their place Then the Word of God bringeth all Divine Truth to a present being unto Faith and so by prophecie made Christ incarnate present unto the Faith of the Fathers under the Law 3. Christs words unto the Father are Sacrifice and oblation thou wouldest not but a body hast thou prepared me Which is in substance the same with Mine ear hast thou opened or bored unto me in the Hebrew Psal. 40.6 For if the Father open the ear of his son by making him a wise servant for the work of Redemption If he bore his ear by making him a willing and obedient Servant then must he also prepare a Body unto him and bring him into the world by incarnation that he may accomplish that service as became Then 1. Christs Body is of Gods preparation and fitting made of God so holy and harmless so free of sin as it should be fit to be joyned with the God-head of the Son and fit to be an expiatory Sacrifice for sin 2. The Sacrifice of Christs Body and the obedience done to God in it by him is the Accomplishment and Substance of these Sacrifices 3. God was never pleased nor pacified by these Sacrifices in themselves but by Christs Sacrifice signified by them 4. God prepared a Satisfaction to himself for us when wee could not Vers. 7. Then said I Loe I come in the Volume of Thy Book it is written of Mee to do Thy Will O God Then said Christ Lo I come to do Thy Will O God That is When the Legal Sacrifices are found and declared unable to pacifie God Christ Then findeth it the fit time to come into the world and to do that which the Sacrifices did fore-signifie but could not effectuate Then 1. Christ did not think it the due time for himself to come into the world till it should be found that without him neither God could be satisfied nor man saved by any other mean but by his obedience 2. Christ assumed our nature and offered himself in our room to the Father willingly ready to perform what the Fathers Will could exact of us yea earnestly desired he to discharge that service for us Blessed
for ever to help them all to Heaven who seek unto God through him onely 2. Because life is here in Christ as in the fountain that hee may give life to whomsoever hee will that is unto all that come unto him 3. Because it giveth life and refreshment to the weary passenger and quickneth his dead and dumpish heart when hee considereth that his Saviour is a man indeed so earnest to have us saved that hee hath yoaked himself in communion of nature with us thereby to save us It is meat indeed to his soul that the Word is made flesh It is drink indeed to consider that hee hath suffered for our sins As Elias Chariot so is Christs Man-head and sufferings Get up here by Faith in him and thou shalt go up to God This way is that of Eagles wings Lay first hold upon Jesus Christ God manifested in the flesh and hee will mount up with thee and carry thee through the wilderness to Canaan from the natural misery and sins which thou lyest in unto Heaven 6. This Way leadeth through the Veil to teach us That wee comming to Christs Man-head must not subsist there but by this mean seeking to God who dwelleth in him that our Faith and Hope may be in God Wee enter by the Man Christ and do rest on God in Christ on the fulness of the God-head which dwelleth bodily in Christ. This is to distinguish the Natures of Christ and to keep the unity of his Person rightly Vers. 21. And having an High Priest over the House of GOD. For our further satisfaction he giveth us Christ over again to make yet more use of him to direct guide and convoy us in the way to lead us to the Father in Heaven through the Courts of his Dwelling and to bring us in to him and make us welcome there 1. We have Christ for a Priest to us whose lips do always preserve knowledge in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge who will inform our mindes and perswade our hearts to believe and obey who will reconcile by his once offered sacrifice the Believer will intercede for the reconciled to keep him still in grace will bless us with all spiritual blessings will take our prayers thanksgiving and the spiritual sacrifice of all the good works of our hands and wash the pollutions from them will offer them in our name with the incense and perfume of his own merits and lead our selves in where our Lamps shall be furnished and our Table filled till we go into Heaven and there he will welcome us in a Mansion prepared for us 2. He is a High Priest adorned with all Authority and all Perfections having all in substance which the types did signifie who beareth our names yea our selves on the shoulders of his power and in the breast of his hearty love who beareth the iniquity of the holy things and holiness in his forehead for us In whom the Father is well pleased with us and hath made us acceptable as in his well-beloved 3. He is over the House of God He hath authority and power to bring in whom he pleaseth and to give forth of the Treasure as much as he will All the Mansions in his Fathers dwelling Ho●se are his and all at his disposing to open so as none shall shut To him belongeth to give forth the sentence of Admission to Heaven and to say Come you blessed of the Father Yea to make this his authority manifest he will come again and take us unto himself that where he is we may be there also 4. We have this High Priest that is he is ours because 1. Taken out from amongst us one of our number albeit not of our conditions of our nature but separate from our sinful manners holy and harmless 2. Because he is for us in things appertaining to God to imploy his means and power for our behoof towards God 3. Because bound in all bands with us of nature of grace and good will of the Fathers gift and appointment and his own Covenant and special Contract with us So that albeit an uncouth man may possible leave a stranger in his journey alone yet Christ cannot chuse to do so to us but for the Bands betwixt him and us he will never leave us nor forsake us Vers. 22. Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water From these Priviledges he presseth an exhortation To draw near to God and prescribeth the disposition required of us in our drawing near 1. This exhortation sheweth 1. That true Christians are oftentimes so sensible of their own unworthiness that under that sense they are inclined of themselves to stand afar off and have need of encouragement and invitation to draw near 2. That such as are most sensible of their own unworthiness are most called to come forwards unto GOD for he giveth grace to the humble 2. He layeth down the Priviledges in the former verses and in this draweth on the Exhortation To teach us 1. That such priviledges as are granted unto us in Christ must be received and believed as truth 2. That we must study to make use of our priviledges and challenge them for our own 3. That the weakest of true believers in Christ may thrust in themselves at the doors of grace amongst the holy Apostles For the Apostle putteth the Hebrews with himself in the exhortation for this end 3. For our disposition and sitting to draw near he requireth first That we have a true heart He saith not a sensless heart but a true heart that is such a heart as in the matter of believing mindeth no confidence but in Gods grace through Christ onely And in the matter of Gods service mindeth onely his will in its aim and alloweth onely that which is his will in its c●nsure Then an honest heart which honestly acknowledgeth its own sins and flyeth to Christs blood for sprinkling whose aim is upright endeavours upright and censure of it self upright allowing in itself nothing but what God alloweth and displeased with that which displeaseth God albeit many ways weak and imperfect yet hath liberty to draw near unto God 4. The next thing he requireth is full assurance of faith That is a settled and full perswasion to be accepted even through Jesus Christ. Then albeit the Lord will not despise the weakest measure of faith and will not quench the smoaking flax yet it pleaseth him better yea it is his commandment that men study unto the full assurance of faith for the more thou restest on Gods Covenant with thee in Jesus Christ the more thou sealest his truth glorifiest him becomest the more like unto faithful Abraham and gettest the deeper rooting in Christ. 5. The third is That the heart be sprinkled from an evil conscience The heart is sprinkled when a sinner sensible of sin maketh hearty application to himself
Yea now under the Gospel coming unto Christ we are in better case than they who lived before Christ because they were bound to all the Ceremonial and Typical Ordinances of the Law under the Old Covenant But we are exempted from that Old Covenant and are entred into the New which freeth us from that yoke which the Israelites could never bear 16. Without Christ we stand alone and none to plead for us before our Judge But when we come to Christ we finde him a Mediator both to deliver us from the Old Covenant and to take burthen for us for keeping of the New Covenant 17. Without Christ unrighteous and unholy When we come to Christ we come to be sprinkled with his blood for Justification and Sanctification also and for receiving of all other benefits bought by that blood He compareth this blood with Abels as speaking better things For albeit we by our sins have made our LORD to serve yea and to dye also ye doth his blood not speak against us as Abels did speak against Cain and the Earth for drawing down of a curse on both But speaketh to GOD still to pacifie his wrath and to pardon us and to our conscience to cleanse it and make it quiet within us From this comparison of men under the Law and under Grace we learn 1. That the impenitent and unrenewed man how secure soever he ●it yet he is in a fearful estate the wrath of the Judge from his Justice Seat being ready to break out upon him 2. That the wakened conscience lying in the sense of its own sins and fear of the offended Iudge is much to be pitied 3. That the holiest man on earth if GOD reveal unto him the terror of his Justice he will be shaken with fear 4. That the onely remedy against the challenge of the Conscience and fear of the Law and Wrath is to have recourse to JESUS CHRIST 5. That he who is fled as a true penitent to JESUS CHRIST for refuge to be saved and directed and ruled by him is a true Member of the true Catholick Church of the Elect whatsoever be mens estimation of him 6. That the more graciously we be dealt with under the Gospel the more must we beware of Fleshliness and Prophanity For to this end all his speech doth tend Vers. 25. See that ye refuse not him that speaketh for if they escaped not who refused him that spake on earth much more shall not we escape if we turn away from him that speaketh from Heaven From these considerations he chargeth them to beware le●t they make light account of Christs Doctrine The word importeth a shifting off Christ speaking by some excuse or pretence Then 1. The way to eschew Prophaness and Apostasie is to embrace and make much of Christs speaking unto us in his Word 2. Whatsoever pretences and excuses a man use to cloak his not-giving hearty obedience to the Doctrine of Christ it is but a refusing of him and a turning away from him make of it what he will 2. Hee urgeth this by threatning more certain and heavy judgements than upon the despisers of Moses who is said to speak on Earth because he was but the earthen vessell which carried Gods will to his people and by earthly Types and Figures made offer of Grace unto them But Christ as God by his own Authoritie casting Heaven open in the plainness and spirituality of the Doctrine is said to speak from Heaven Then As much as Christs person is more excellent than Moses and His Authority above his and the Heavenly clearness of Christs gracious Offer above his dark Types As much more heavy and certain Wrath shall overtake the despisers of his Doctrine than the despisers of Moses Law 3. Hee joyneth himself in the same danger with the people if He should turn away or refuse Then Preachers shall do well to lay the edge of their threatnings to their own hearts and to enroll themselves amongst the threatned That bitterness towards the people may be seen to be removed and their own sluggishness may be roused up seeing they have none to prea●h unto them but themselves Vers. 26. Whose voyce then shook the Earth But now Hee hath promised saying Yet once more I shake not the Earth onely but also Heaven To put an edge upon the Threatning he sheweth how terrible Christ is in shaking of the Earth by His Voice at Mount Sinai and by the shaking of Heaven and Earth at the Day of Iudgement Then 1. The terrible quaking of the Earth and burning of the Mount Sinai was pronounced by the Voice of Christ who therefore is declared to be the Lord God for so Exod. 19. is he called 2. His Terrour at the Day of Judgement may be seen in that little resemblance of Mount Sinai 3. The Terribleness of Christ should make us stand in awe of His Word Vers. 27. And this Word Yet once more doth signifie the removing of those things which are shaken as of things which are made that those things which cannot be shaken may remain Hee commenteth upon the testimony of Haggai Chap. 1. 6. and from this word Once concludeth that Heaven and Earth shall passe away and be changed at the power of Christs uttering of his voyce That these changeable Heavens and Earth being removed he may make a new Heaven and a new Earth wherein his Subjects and his Kingdome over them may remain for ever setled Then 1. It is a good mean to get the understanding of Gods mind in the Scripture to consider and weigh the force of the words thereof and what they do import by due consequence 2. No more change shall be of any thing after the day of Judgement because Once more and no oftener is Christ to shake the same 3. It is for the standing of Christs Kingdome that the creature is moved shaken and chan●ed y●ed All things made shall be shaken But Christs Kingdome and the salvation of his subjects shall never be shaken Vers. 28. Wherefore wee receiving a Kingdome which cannot bee moved let us have grace whereby wee may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear From the nature of this Kingdome granted unto us in Christ and from his terribleness he exhorteth us to stedfastness of Faith and humble obedience Hee saith Wee have received it because wee have received the Right and Title by the Gospel and some beginning of it Then As we receive Christ in the Gospel wee receive the Kingdome of Heaven with him in Right and Title yea in begun possession which groweth by degrees 2. Hee requireth of a receiver of this Kingdome a reverent serving of God Then right is given to this Kingdome before our service be done Not because we have se●ved heretofore but to oblige us to serve God hereafter 3. Hee will have us to serve God acceptably that is pleasantly and chearfully Next with reverence or shamefastness and godly fear Then 1. It is not enough that wee do
often with a lively voice partly making it manifest in his whole doctrine that hee is the same which came out of his Fathers bosome and laid open his counsel touching mans salvation Hee that cometh from above hee that cometh from Heaven is above all Ioh. 4.31 3 The Holy Ghost bears record that Jesus Christ is the Son of God partly by his descending upon him in his Baptism partly by his descending upon his Apostles and Disciples in the day of Pentecost partly by inspiring the doctrine of Christ into the Pen-men of the Scripture and by commending it to the world that it might teach men and perswade and confirm them touching that truth as truly divine By which hee may gather a Church and lead it into all truth to eternal life These three are said to bear record in Heaven 1 Because they immediately bear witness from Heaven as from their Throne 2 Because the Majesty of these witnesses chiefly shines in Heaven 3 Because this testimony is not heard observed acknowledged unless by souls lifted up to Heaven Lastly Because this testimony for the most part is perfected in Heaven although it should never bee received on earth Therefore yee ought to beleeve in Christ for his testimonies sake Vers. 8. And there are three that bear witness in earth the Spirit and the Water and the Blood and these three agree in one Argum. 4. Because three witnesses in earth consent together to prove that Christ is the Son of God viz. the Spirit and the Water and the Blood which are called witnesses in earth 1 Because this testimony is mediate and is produced out of the works which are to bee seen in the earth 2 Because uttering of this testimony is written in men that are in the earth and is acknowledged by the Visible Church Lastly Because this testimony doth not onely sound in the Church but also utters its voice amongst the men of the world and is heard of them to their conviction For 1 The Spirit or manifestation of the Spirit partly in miraculous gifts which are shed abroad in the Church even to the amazement of the world for many years after Christs ascention Partly in ordinary gifts which as yet flourish in the Church and suffice both to testifie that Christ who is preached amongst us is God and to draw an acknowledgement from them who are without the Church that God is in us who beleeve in Christ 1 Cor. 14. Furthermore the operation of the Spirit in the hearts of the faithful doth so quicken the words of Christ and by them doth so instruct comfort and confirm the elect that it leaves no doubt as touching the Divinity of Christ. As for Water which is the virtue of Christ sanctifiing his it so expresly speaks of Christ that those also who are without the Church seeing the light of good works in Christians are forced to glorifie our Father and the Father of Christ who is in Heaven so that also being even perceived in women it brought their unbeleeving husbands to God who at the first did not acknowledge the Word of God 1 Pet. 3.1 Lastly As for Blood which is the price of redemption and the virtue of Christ expiating sins and reconciling men to God that blood speaks better things than the blood of Abel so that it makes the consciences of the faithful quiet and peaceable and opens a way to the Throne of God and so confirms their hearts against the world and all things which are evil in it that they may bee bold and able to resound even with their own blood this testimony to those enemies that hear them in the midst of torments with joy Rev. 12.11 Therefore wee ought to beleeve in Christ as the Son of God Vers. 9. If wee receive the witness of men the witness of God is greater For this is the witness of God which hee hath testified of his Son Argum. 5. For the sake of the testimonies of faithful and true men wee beleeve their assertions Therefore for the sake of the testimony of God which is greater testifying of his Son we ought to beleeve in Christ as the Son of God Vers. 10. Hee that beleeveth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself hee that beleeveth not God hath made him a lyer because hee beleeveth not the record that God gave of his Son Argum. 6 Hee that beleeves in Christ as the Son of God is so much rectified that hee rests in the witness of the Spirit in●ardly confirming this truth of the Divine Word Therefore c. Hee that beleeveth not Argum. 7. Hee that doth not beleeve in ●hrist as the Son of God doth really accuse God of a lye because hee rejects the testimony concerning his Son as if it were false Therefore wee must beleeve in Christ as the Son of God Vers. 11. And this is the record that God hath given to us eternal life and this life is in his Son Argum. 8. Those that beleeve in the Son have right to eternal life which is in the Son as in the Fountain Procurer Giver and Conserver given to them by grace and confirmed by the constancy of Gods testimony Therefore c. Vers. 12. Hee that hath the Son hath life and hee that hath not the Son hath not life Argum. 9. Hee that truly embraces the Son by Faith hath also eternal life not onely as to the right of it but also to 〈◊〉 inchoate possession and hee that hath not the Son by Faith or seeks life in another rather than in him is destitute and shut out from all spiritual life Therefore c. Vers. 13. These things have I written unto you that beleeve on the Name of the Son of God that yee may know that yee have eternal life and that yee may beleeve on the Name of the Son of God Argum. 10. For this end all these things are written to the faithful from the Holy Ghost by the Apostle the Pen-man that they might bee certain that they have eternal life already and might more and more beleeve in the name of the Son of God Therefore yee must beleeve in Christ. Vers. 14. And this is the confidence that wee have in him that if wee ask any thing according to his will hee heareth us Argum. 11. Hee that beleeveth in Christ hath confidence in his approaches to God in prayer and that hee shall have Gods favourable ear in every petition which is put up according to the will of God Therefore c. Vers. 15. And if wee know that hee heareth us whatsoever wee ask wee know that wee have the p●titions that wee desired of him Argum. 12. Explicating and unfolding the former Hee that beleeves in Christ by knowing that God will bee propitious to him in his lawful or well-ordered petitions hee may also bee certain that the petitions which hee hath offered according to the Promises of God are already granted by him before they bee finished and so hee may bee assured of the success