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

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Truths or at least if they erre of humane frailty and not obstinately or avowedly for the Churches of Galatia had made a grievous revolt even from a fundamental Truth ver 6. and chap. 3. 1. and yet because they were rather through frailty seduced by others than active seducers of others therefore he useth much meeknesse and moderation towards them allowing them the name of Churches and exercising his Apostolick care towards them as a part of his charge and thereby keeping communion with them as with Churches which were sickly and under cure Unto the Churches of Galatia which Truth makes nothing against our separation from the Church of Rome as being after much pains taken in order to their reclaiming and not untill we were driven to it by persecution besides that the Romish Church had erred in the foundation obstinately and avowedly Vers. 3. Grace be to you and peace from God the Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ. HEre is the Salutation wherein he wisheth unto them God's gracious favour and good-will whereby He is well-pleased with the Elect in and for Christ Rom. 3. 24. and Peace that is first Peace of conscience and with God Rom. 5. 1. Secondly peace with the creatures as with the Angels Col. 1. 20. with the Godly Isa. 11. 9. with our selves all within us being conform to the rule of the renewed mind Rom. 8. ●1 and in some respect with our enemies Prov. 16. 7. and with the beasts of the field Hos. 2. 18. Thirdly Prosperity and good successe Psal. 122. 7. All which he seeketh from God the Father as the fountain of Grace and from Jesus Christ as the conduit or pipe to convey Grace from the Father unto us Job 1. 16. Doct. 1. God's gracious favour and good-will is to be sought by us in the first place whether for our selves Psal. 4. 6. or others that being a most discriminating mercy betwixt the Godly and the wicked Ephes. 1. 6. and a mercy which of any other bringeth maniest mercies alongst with it Psal. 84. 11. Yea all things are mercy to a man who hath obtained that mercy Rom. 8. 28. for the Apostle wisheth for Grace unto them first Grace and peace 2. Peace also is to be sought even Peace with God Peace with the creatures together with prosperity and good success but withall Peace is to be sought after Grace and not to be expected before it Peace without Grace is no Peace there can be no peace with God no sanctified peace with the creatures nor sanctified prosperity or successe to our undertakings except through Jesus Christ we lay hold on God's favour and grace Yea there is no peace to the wicked saith my God Isa. 57. 21. Thus the Apostle wisheth unto them also Peace but so as it flow from Grace Grace and Peace 3. Grace and Peace are such as we cannot acquire unto our selves by our own industry or pains they come from God are to be sought from Him and His blessing is more to be depended upon for attaining of any thing which cometh under the compasse of Grace and Peace than our own wisdom industry or diligence So Paul seeketh Grace and Peace from God the Father 4. Whatever favour we seek from God we are to seek it also from Jesus Christ as Mediator for He hath purchased it Eph. 1. 7. He is appointed Lord of His own purchase to bestow all Act. 5. 31. and there is no coming to or trysting with the Father but in Him Joh. 14. 6. Thus Paul seeketh Grace and peace from our Lord Jesus Christ. 5. They to whom Grace and Peace belong are such as acknowledge Christ for their Lord to command and rule them and do yeeld subjection to Him in their heart and life for while the Apostle wisheth Grace and Peace to them he doth lead them to thoughts of Christ's Soveraignity he himself taking Him up as Lord and holding Him forth so unto others From our Lord Jesus Christ. Vers. 4. Who gave Himself for our sins that He might deliver us from this present evil world according to the will of God and our Father THe Apostle having but mentioned Christ ver 3 that he may in the very entry draw the minds of these Galatians from off their errors and superstitions to imbrace Him as one in whom is fulnesse of sufficiency for the redemption and justification of lost sinners doth describe Him from one eminent action of His whereby as the great High-priest over the House of God Heb. 10. 21. He did offer up Himself Soul Isa. 55. 10. and Body Heb. 2. 14. by death upon the Crosse Joh. 19. 17 18. that He might expiate and take away Joh. 1. 29. the sins of the Elect Joh. 17. 9. and that hereby He might deliver them from this present evil world or from the sin misery and cruelty of wicked men in the world who get the name of world 1 Joh. 5. 19. and all this He did in obedience to His Father's will who had fore-ordained this to be the only way of bringing lost sinners to Heaven Heb. 10. 8 9. Doct. 1. The lively impression of Christ's worth and excellency doth ordinarily so fill the hearts of those who know Him and have tasted how gracious He is as there will be a readinesse upon any occasion of mentioning Him to breakforth in His commendation for such is the constraining power of love on Paul's heart that usually he doth not so much as make mention of Him but presently he must extoll and at large commend Him so doth he in this verse Who gave himself c. which his attainment should be our aim and his practice our copie 1 Cor. 11. 1. 2. The well-grounded knowledge of what Christ is to us and hath done for us together with the frequent remembrance of it is a soveraign Antidote against all those Errors and Superstitions which tend to draw us from Christ either in part or in whole and that both to prevent them and to purge us from them He is that Sun of righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. the arising whereof doth easily dispel and scatter all those fogs and mists Act. 19. 18 19 20. for Paul in order to this end doth in the very entry hold forth what Christ had done for them Who gave himself c. saith he 3. So deep and deadly was the guilt of sin Gal. 13. 10. So exact was the justice of God and so unalterable was His faithfulnesse in executing the judgment which was denounced for sin Gen. 2. 17. that there was no delivery to the Elect from it without the payment of a ransom and satisfaction for the wrong done by sin to the provoked justice of God for Christ gave himself for our sins that is a propitiation for them 1 Joh. 2. 2. and to cleanse us from them 1 Joh. 1. 7. 4. Nothing lesse could be a satisfying ransom to the Father's justice than the offering-up of Jesus Christ the holy harmlesse and spotlesse Lamb of God both in Soul
of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself for me HEre is a third Reason to the same purpose with the former shewing more fully that justified persons are most strictly tyed to mortify sin and lead an holy life if so they walk according to the prescript of the Doctrine of Justification which was taught by Paul for he and by consequence all real Believers were crucified with Christ to wit the old man of their indwelling corruption Rom. 6. 6. it did receive the stroke of death by His death He having by death redeemed them from the slavery of it Tit. 2. 14. which crucifixion with Christ doth not destroy the natural life of Believers for so Paul sheweth he did live only the old man of corruption doth not live in them so as to act them in what they do but Jesus Christ doth live in them He being united to them as the root to the branches or head to the members and furnishing them with spiritual life and motion whereby the very natural life which they live and those things which concern that life are ordered and gone about by vertue of strength drawn from Christ by Faith in Him and the consideration of Christ's love to them and His dying for them because he loved them is a great inducement unto justified persons so to live Now this being true in Paul and in some measure in all Believers and seing the principles of the Doctrine of Justification did bind all to this It is evident that to affirm this Doctrine did tend to foster sin is but a foulforged calumny Doct. 1. As Jesus Christ did die a most shameful painful and cursed death upon the crosse Gal. 3. 13. so in His dying He did stand not as a private but as a publick person in the room and place of all the Elect for He was their surety Heb. 7. 22. and died for them Job 11. 50. so that when they lay hold upon Him by Faith and thereby are made one with Him Eph. 3. 17 the crosse and passion of Christ as to all those benefits which were purchased by it whether in order to the removal of the guilt of sin Mat. 26. 28. or to the subduing of its strength and quickning of them in the way of holinesse 2 Cor. 5. 15. or to the purchasing of life eternal for them Joh. 3. 16. is as verily made theirs as if they had been crucified in their own persons for Paul saith of himself as an instance of all Believers I am crucified with Christ. 2. The former confideration of the Believer's right to Christ's purchase in order to the subduing of sin layeth a strong engagement on him and giveth a great encouragement unto him to oppose resist and set about the mortification of sin in himself for Paul maketh this an argument to prove that the Doctrine of Justification in its own nature is no friend to sin because according to the principles thereof the justified person is crucified with Christ. 3. God's infinit wisdom hath found out the way whereby the threatning of death Gen. 2. 17. is fulfilled in the Elect so that they die and yet their lives are spared they die and yet they live for they are reckoned in Law to have died when Christ their Surety died for them so that He was taken and they go free Joh. 18. 8. thus is that riddle solved which is here propounded by Paul I am crucified with Christ yet I live 4. Though notwithstanding of fulfilling the threatning of death upon the Elect they do live yet upon their believing in Jesus Christ the old man of corruption and power of sin is so far weakened in them that it doth not bear the chief sway in their heart to command execute and order all their actions as formerly it did Gen. 6. 5. for thus is that other riddle solved which is here propounded Nevertheless I live yet not I to wit the old I the body of death and corruption did not live in him but was mortified and the dominion thereof removed Rom. 6. 14. Dost 5. The Doctrine of Justification by Free-grace revealed in the Gospel layeth on strong obligations upon the justified person to set about the whole duties of Sanctification not only those which relate to the mortifying of sin but also to his quickning in the way of grace both those must go together and the justified man is obliged to both and furnished with help and encouragement from the Doctrine of Justification to set about both for Paul sheweth they were both conjoyned in himself the first while he saith Not I live the second while he saith Christ liveth in me whereby is meant his following the motions of Christ's Spirit as the guide of his life Rom. 8. 1. and this he speaketh of himself as a thing that he was obliged unto and furnished for by the Doctrine of Justification which he taught otherwise he should not have refuted the calumny of his adversaries 6. That Christians may live the spiritual life of grace they must 1. be united to Christ and have Christ dwelling in them by Faith Eph. 3. 17. for speaking of the spiritual life which he lived he supposeth Christ to be in him But Christ liveth in me 2. Besides this union with Christ there must be a communication of influence from the Spirit of Christ to excite them unto Cant. 5. 2. enable them for John 15. 5. make them persevere Philip. 1. 6. and effectually to order and direct them in Philip. 4. 13. the practice of every thing that is spiritually good for this is to have Christ living in them to wit as the head in the members or root in the branches which do furnish the members and branches with all things necessary for life and growth and Christ's quickning of Believers in the way of grace is frequently see forth by similitudes drawn from those Col. 2. 19. Joh. 15. 5. 3. The Believer if so he would live this spiritual life must not only have the habit of Faith in his heart but also must keep it in daily exercise so as first thereby to try what he is to do if so it be warranted by the Word of Truth and how it is to be circumstantiated Rom. 14. 23. Secondly thereby to draw furniture from the Spirit of Christ for exciting enabling and directing him in the way of duty 2 Cor. 3. 5. And thirdly to apply pardoning mercy for covering the defects of duty when he hath gone about it and for removing the guilt of all his other sins Mat. 6. 11. for this is to live by the Faith of the Son of God or in the Son of God which Paul speaketh of as a necessary ingredient in this spiritual life 4. This spiritual life and life of Faith must be extended not only to spiritual duties and of God's immediate Worship but also to all the actions of our natural and temporal life in so far as they fall under a Command even to our eating and drinking 1 Cor.
region of the air he doth exercise it also in the earth and hell 1 Pet. 5. 8. and therefore these must not be here excluded but rather included as being below the region of the air It is described also from the subjects of his kingdom to wit those who are not only so obstinate in evil that they cannot be perswaded by any means to relinquish it as the word in the Original rendred disobedience implyeth but also are judicially given over to disobedience and fully under the power of it which is expressed while they are called children of disobedience according to the custom of the holy language whereby those who are fully given over and under the power of any vice are said to be the children of that vice Hos. 2. 4. concerning which obstinat sinners the Apostle affirmeth that the spirit of Satan did uncessantly and without intermission work most powerfully in them by driving them unto all manner of evil without any stay or hinderance See Joh. 8. 41 44. Doct. 1. The depth of man's naturall misery is so great that even the renewed Children of God cannot reach it at one view nor be sufficiently convinced of it until the Word of the Lord do frequently inculcate and lay it forth in its wofull parcels yea and bear-in upon them the truth of it by most convincing reasons taken from their own sense and experience for the Apostle speaking to the converted Ephesians seeth a necessity not only to declare in the general that they had been dead in sins and trespasses but also to prove it was so and to point-forth that wofull death at large in this verse Wherein in time past ye walked c. 2. Though even the Regenerate have a body of sin and death dwelling in them Rom. 7. 24. and do sometimes actually fall in sin yea even very grosse sins 2 Sam. 11. 4. and 12. 9. yet they do not walk in sin that is sin is not to the Child of God as the way to the travellor so as to make it his daily trade and imployment Psal. 1. 1. or to sin without any reluctancy flowing from a spirituall principle against that which he knoweth to be sin Gal. 5. 17. And so as to walk after sin by making sin and suggestions to sin his guide whom he doth willingly follow Rom. 8. -1. although sin may conquer and carry him as an unwilling captive Rom. 7. -14. c. for Paul maketh their walking in sin an argument to prove that they were dead in sin and therefore it cannot fall upon the Regenerate Wherein in time past ye walked 3. Such is the power of converting grace that it causes men change their former way and course though they have been never so much rooted in it and habituated to it for while he saith Wherein in time past ye walked he implyeth there was a change wrought and that they did not so walk in the time present 4. While Scripture affirmeth that Christ hath taken away the sins of the world Job 1. -29. and is a propitiation for the sins of the whole world 1 Joh. 2. 2. it is no cogent argument to prove that Christ hath died for all and every one in the world seing the word world doth not alwayes when mentioned in Scripture comprize all who are in the world but must be astricted to the universality of some certain kind of people in the world as the nature of the purpose in hand will bear for here the world whose course the unconverted Ephesians did follow must be the world of unrenewed men only and cannot be extended so as to comprehend the godly and renewed who were also in the world Ye walked according to the course of this world 5. The Lord is so far from being moved with the merit or worth of those whom He doth convert to bestow converting grace upon them rather than on others whom He leaveth in their unconverted state that He maketh this grace of His to fall upon such as are in no respect better than those whom He passeth by for those Ephesians before conversion walked according to the course of this world that is they were behind with none in sin and wickednesse 6. As the generall corrupt custom and example of those with whom we live or who have lived in the former ages of the world before us is a strong incitement and sufficient excuse in the minds of many to follow the multitude in doing evil without further enquiry So it argueth a man to be yet in an unrenewed estate when he maketh the example of others the highest rule according to which he walketh and laboureth to conform himself unto it more than to the will of God for the Apostle sheweth the general custom and course of the world was the rule by which they walked and an encouragement to them in their walk and maketh this an argument to prove they were then dead in sins and trespasses Wherein saith he in time past ye walked according to the course of this world 7. All men in their unrenewed state are very slaves to Satan whose wofull motions and suggestions they follow and whom they resemble and imitate in their sin and wickednesse for so much is implyed while he saith They walked according to the prince of the power of the air that is the Devil 8. Though the Devils and fallen Angels have alwayes an hell horror and torment in their conscience where-ever they are 2 Pet. 2. 4. yet they are not alwayes in hell that place of torment which is prepared for Devils and Reprobates Mat. 25. 41. they are also present in the earth and air and there through divine permission have no small power even so great as they are able to move the elements bring down fire upon earth Job 1. 16. raise storms Job 1. 19. to smite mens bodies with several diseases Job 2. 7. yea and to take away the lives of men Job 1. 19. and beasts Mark 5. 13. which power of theirs in its exercise is alwayes over-ruled and limited by God Job 1. 12. and 2. 6. in so far as His most holy and over-ruling providence doth thereby bring about His own design and purpose which is either to execute deserved judgment upon the wicked Mark 5. 13 17. or to exercise and try the godly Job 1. 12 c. for Satan is called Prince of the power of the air that is who hath power in the air 9. As the Devils are of a spiritual nature and substance and cannot be seen by bodily eyes but when they appear cloathed with bodies which belong not naturally unto them but for a time are assumed by them 1 Sam. 28. 14. So the way by which Satan doth impart his temptations unto us is not alwayes sensible but often unperceivable by the outward senses he doth most certainly tempt to sin and yet the tempted sinner perceiveth him not for as this spiritual and unperceivable way of tempting doth follow upon his spirituall and immateriall substance So
wonderfull and matchlesse love for saith he For His great love wherewith He loved us 9. The Lord hath love to the Elect even when they are children of wrath and liable in the course of justice to the stroke of His vindictive anger for although God could not with safety of His own justice bestow Heaven upon them when they were actually such yet nothing hindereth why He might not love them being such that is have a will and fixed resolution even when they were liable unto wrath to bestow Heaven upon them having first from that same love given His own Son to deliver them from that state of wrath that so what eternal love had resolved to give them might be actually bestowed upon them without doing injury to divine justice for ver 3. he sheweth they were children of wrath and here that God loved them and both these before He quickned them Wherewith He loved us saith he even in the by-past time 10. The doctrine of our natural misery and spirituall death through sin is a lesson most necessary to be learned which we have no great pleasure to learn and which we are prone to forget as to a deep and lively impression of it even when it is learned for the Apostle's repeating this doctrine almost in the same words by which he had expressed it ver 1. doth hint at all these Even when we were dead in sins saith he 11. There is no application of the doctrine of God's mercy in order to our delivery from sin and misery except the doctrine of sin and misery be first applied and taken with for Paul being to apply God's mercy in quickning sinners unto himself and his country-men the believing Jews he doth first apply the doctrine of natural sin and misery unto them while he doth now speak of himself and the Jews also whereas ver 1. he spoke of the Gentiles only as appeareth by the change of the person Even when we were dead in sins hath quickned us 12. Whatever a man be before his conversion as to the point of civility and right use of his natural parts yet he is looked upon by God when He cometh to quicken him as one dead in sins who can neither help himself nor merit help at God's hand for therfore doth the Apostle assert that they were dead in sins immediatly before yea and in the act of God's quickning of them while he saith Even when we were dead in sins He hath quickned us 13. The state of grace which sinners dead by nature are brought unto at their conversion and wherein they continue untill death is a state of life the sentence of eternall death which they were liable unto ver -3. being taken off Rom. 8. 1. there being also new principles and powers infused in them at their effectuall calling whereby they are enabled to do those actions of a spiritual life Ezek. 36. 26 27. which powers are also continually actuated and excited to their work by renewed influence from the Spirit of God Philip. 2. 13. and accompanied oftimes in their actings with assurance of God's love Rom. 8. 16. peace of conscience Rom. 5. 1 2. and joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1. 8. whereby also they have not only a right unto Joh. 3. 16. but also the first fruits and begun possession of eternall life Joh. 17. 3. for the Apostle expresseth God's bringing them to and continuing them in the state of grace by His quickning of them hath quickned us saith he 14. Though love and mercy in God do set Him on work to quicken dead sinners yet this work cannot be brought about or accomplished without the intervention of Christ's merit and intercession who behoved to satisfie divine justice and thereby acquire unto us those things which love and mercy had prepared for us Isa. 53. 5. seing they were all lost in Adam Rom. 5. 15 16. and who being now exalted doth also apply them to us Act. 5. 31. for notwithstanding of what was said ver 4. of God's mercy and love as the inward impulsive causes moving God to quicken them yet the Apostle here sheweth that their actual quickning had a necessary dependance upon Christ's merit and mediation while he saith He hath quickned us together with Christ. 15. That Jesus Christ behoved of necessity to strike-in with His merit and mediation hereby to acquire and apply saving grace and salvation unto us doth in nothing hinder but that notwithstanding our compleat salvation from the first step unto the last doth wholly flow from God's free grace seing it was of grace that the Father did send the Son to die for us Joh. 3. 16. It was of grace that the Son did undertake Joh. 15. 12 13. And it is no lesse grace that what He did or suffered should be accepted in our name Rom. 3. 24 25. So that all is of grace and free good-will as to us for the Apostle having pointed at the necessity of Christ's mediation in order to their quickning doth presently adde as in a parenthesis by grace are ye saved 16. There is an infallible connexion betwixt converting grace and salvation so that all those who are now converted and quickned shall be undoubtedly saved for what the Apostle calleth quickned in the former part of the verse he calleth saved in the close so that he taketh the one for the other He hath quickned us By grace are ye saved Vers. 6. And hath raised us up together and made us fit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus HEre are the other two branches of their delivery to wit first The raising of their bodies at the last day for their spiritual resurrection from the death of sin to newnesse of life was mentioned ver 5. Secondly Their glorification in Heaven both which are yet to come 2 Tim. 2. 18. Mat. 25. 34. And yet he speaketh of them as already past when the Father raised and glorified Christ because seing Christ in His resurrection and entering of heaven did sustain a publick person representing all the Elect as their Head and Atturney-generall Job 10. 15. Therefore He was judicially looked upon by God in those actions as if all the Elect had risen when He rose and taken possession of Heaven when He did enter it Hence it is that in the close of the verse it is added in Christ to shew we are not yet raised and glorified in our own persons but in Christ our Head And the Spirit of God doth choose to set forth their future resurrection and glorification by shewing these are already accomplished in Christ their Head rather than by saying God shall raise them up and glorifie them that he may with one and the same labour point out the dependencie which their resurrection and glorification have upon Christs as the effect upon the cause the thing promised upon the pledge thereof as also the undoubted certainty that those shall come to passe a certainty greater than that of a simple prediction and
Church of Christ is a thing which ought to be prized by us highly and sought after earnestly and so much as there is nothing in our power which we ought not to bestow upon it and dispense with for the acquiring and maintaining of it for so much was it prized by Christ that He gave his own life to procure it and did beat down all His own Ordinances which stood in the way of it He even abolished in His flesh the Law of Commandments contained in Ordinances for to make of twain one new man 2. There are no divisions more hardly curable than those which are about the Religion and Worship of God in so far as they engage not only the credit but also the consciences of the divided parties hence one party so engaged doth pursue what they maintain as that wherein Gods honour and their own salvation are most nearly concerned and doth look upon the other party as an adversary in so far at least to both of those for the Apostle speaking of Christs uniting the Jew and Gentile in one Church and Religion maketh use of a word which sheweth this was a task of no small difficulty even such that no lesse than creating power was required to it while he saith for to make in Himself the word signifieth to creat in Himself of twain one new man 3. So strict and near is that conjunction and union which is especially among true believers in the Church that all of them how far soever dispersed through the world do yet make up but one man and one body as being all whatever be their other differences most strictly united as members unto one head Christ 1 Cor. 12. 27. and animated as to the inward man by the same Spirit of God residing and acting in them Rom. 8. 9. for the Apostle sheweth that all of them whether Jew or Gentile were made not only one people one nation one family but one new man For to make of twain one new man 4. As the essentiall unity of the invisible Church without which the Church could not be a Church doth of necessity depend upon and flow from that union which every particular member hath with Christ as Head seing the grace of love whereby they are knit one to another Col. 3. 14 doth flow from faith Gal. 5. -6. whereby they are united to Him Eph. 3. 17. So the more our union with Christ is improved unto the keeping of constant communion and fellowship with Him the more will be attained unto of harmonious walking among our selves suitable unto that essentiall union which is in the Church of Christ for the Apostle maketh the conjunction of Jews and Gentiles in one Church to depend upon Christ's uniting of them to himself For to make in Himself of twain one new man saith he 5. The peace which ought to be and which Christ calleth for in His Church is not a simple cessation from open strife which may take place even when there remaineth a root of bitternesse in peoples spirits Psal. 55. 21. but it is such an harmonious walking together in all things as floweth from the nearest conjunction of hearts and the total removal of all former bitternesse of spirits for the peace which Christ did make betwixt Jew and Gentile did follow upon His abolishing the enmity and making them one man so making peace saith he From Vers. 16. Learn 1. Union and peace with men even with good men is to little purpose except there be peace and friendship with God also for the Apostle sheweth that Christ in abolishing the ceremonial Law did design not only the conjunction of the Church among themselves but their reconciliation with God also and the former in subordination to the latter And that He might reconcile both unto God in one body 2. As all mankind have fallen from that state of friendship with God wherein they once were before the fall Eccles. 7. 29. So the repairing of this wofull breach and making up of friendship betwixt God and the Elect was Christ's great businesse in the world for effectuating whereof whatever He did or suffered was in some one way or other subservient for the Apostle sheweth He suffered in the flesh abolished the ceremonial Law united the two Nations that He might reconcile both unto God in one body The word rendred reconcile signifieth the making up of old friendship 3. Though the believing Jews under the Old Testament were reconciled unto God even while the ceremonial Law stood in force Psal. 32. 4. Yet the price by vertue whereof they were reconciled could not be actually payed to wit Christ's death and sufferings except the ceremonial Law had presently evanished See Ver. 15 Doct. 4. neither could Jew and Gentile be united together in one body and so reconciled to God while that Law was in force and binding See Vers. 14. Doct. 5. Therefore and in those respects it was necessary for Christ to abolish the ceremonial Law that He might reconcile both Jew and Gentile unto God for so saith Paul He abolished the Law of Commandments in Ordinances that He might reconcile both unto God in one body 4. There can be no reconciliation betwixt God and us except we be united by faith to Christ and to the body of all Believers in Him So that none can be one with God who are not of the mysticall body of His Church yea and in so far will the sense and sweet effects of reconciliation with God be interrupted and obstructed as persons reconciled do give way unto divisions rents and strifes among themselves for the Gentiles and Jews being in one body with Christ and His Church come to be reconciled unto God That He might reconcile both unto God in one body that is being united among themselves in one body under Christ the head as is affirmed vers 15. 5. As Jesus Christ did interpose as mediator and peace-maker to reconcile God and us So He behoved in order unto this end to bear the chastisment of our peace and to lay down His life by a shamefull painfull and cursed death that so the justice of God being fully satisfied for our wrong we might enjoy God's peace and favour with life for he sheweth the mean of their reconciliation was the crosse of Christ not the material tree or matter of the crosse but Christ's sufferings and death upon the crosse That He might reconcile both unto God in one body by the crosse 6. Christ in suffering Himself to be overcome by death did fully destroy sin death the ceremonial Law and every other thing which could impede the reconciliation of the Elect with God He having thereby brought-in the substance of all those legal shadows Col. 3. 17. satisfied the justice of God and purchased grace and strength which afterwards He was to convey unto all Believers for mortifying and subduing the body of sin and death in them Act. 5. 31. for saith Paul He hath slain the enmity thereby that is by the
of Christs body are by nature lost and gone even dead in sin and children of wrath Eph. 2. 1. -3. So there was no way for their recovery but by Jesus Christ His becoming man and suffering death and uniting Himself being now risen from death unto them as their head that so He may bestow the influences of spirituall life with a right to heaven upon them here and at last take them to Himself in glory hereafter for he sheweth that Christ is become the Churches head that He might be a Saviour of his lost body 6. The dominion and power which husbands have over their wives is not tyrannicall rigid or soveraign but loving gentle warm and amiable and such as the wife may look upon as a mercy to her self as well as a dignity unto her husband for it is compared here unto that sweet and naturall power which the head exerciseth over the body and Christ over His Church who maketh His people willing in the day of His power and it ought to be employed wholly for the good and safety of his wife as Christ is the Saviour of the body Vers. 24. Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be to their own husbands in every thing THe Apostle secondly repeateth the exhortation as a conclusion from the former argument that wives should subject themselves unto their own husbands and addeth two things 1. The manner of this subjection to wit such as it may resemble the subjection of the Church unto Christ which is to be understood not in all things for wives are not to subject their souls and consciences to their husbands as Believers do to Christ trusting in Him for life and salvation but in some things only to wit so as they may subject themselves willingly chearfully lovingly chastly and dutifully unto their husbands for so doth the Church subject herself unto Christ. He addeth secondly the extent of this subjection and obedience even to all things which is not to be understood of all things absolutly and without exception Acts 5. 29 but all things lawfull godly honest and which are not forbidden in the Word of God even though they crosse the humour of the wives and argue little discretion in the husband who commandeth them Numb 5. 14 15. c. for nothing is excepted here but what is contrary to that subjection which is due to Him who hath commanded this subjection of wives to their husbands as Paul commenteth upon an expression like to this 1 Cor. 15. 27. Doct. 1. As subjection in wives unto their husbands is a most necessary duty So considering the inbred pride arrogance and self-willednesse which is in all the sons and daughters of Adam by nature it is a work of no small difficulty to get wives peswaded to give that hearty chearfull loving and dutifull respect and obedience unto their husbands which both the Law of nature and the written Word of God do require from them for to what purpose else doth he reiterate this exhortation and inforce it by so strong and convincing arguments Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be unto their own husbands 2. Though there be much unmortified corruption in the Church of true Believers and a law in their members rebelling against the law of their mind Rom. 7. 23. yet God doth look upon them as true and loyall subjects to Christ in so far as with the Spirit and better part according to which God doth reckon with them they serve the Law of God Rom. 7. 25. and do groan after and long for the time when they shall be fully freed from the body of death and throughly subjected unto the will of God Phil. 1. 23. for while he saith as the Church is subject unto Christ it is supponed that the Church is subject unto Him and looked upon by God as such 3. The servants of Christ in pressing duties ought mainly to guard against that extremity which people naturally are most prone to fall into especially seing all the guards which can be used will have sufficient work to keep the heart from breaking over upon that hand for though there be some things excepted from coming under that obedience which wives do owe to their husbands as was cleared in the exposition yet because wives are more inclined to multiplie exceptions in this purpose than to diminish them Therefore he extendeth this obedience expresly to all things leaving them only to gather from the circumstances of the Text and other places of Scripture those few things which are excepted that thereby he may with one word cut off all unscriptural exceptions limitations and restrictions which imperious aspiring spirits impatient of the yoke are ready to bound and straiten this submission and obedience by Let them be subject in every thing saith he Vers. 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave Himself for it THe Apostle doth now exhort husbands to their duty which he first proponeth summarily under the name of love to their wives whereby the heart and inmost affections of the husband ought to be so inclined and disposed towards his wife as that not only he do wish her good but also endeavour unto his utmost to bring it about which is not to be so understood as if the wife were not bound to love her husband also Tit. 2. 4. But he presseth love upon the husband in particular because he is most ready to fail in this duty of love and to abuse that superiority which God hath given him over his wife by proving rigorous and bitter against her Col. 3. -19. Now this love enjoyned to husbands is not that common Christian love which is extended unto all Christians of both sexes as unto brethren and sisters in Christ Joh. 13. 34. but a speciall and conjugall love which ought to be extended unto none but unto a mans own wife and it includeth cohabitation with his wife and contentation with her love only Prov. 5. 18 19. a patient bearing with her infirmities and frailties 1 Pet. 3. 7. with a fatherly care to defend her 1 Sam. 30. 5 c. to provide for her in all things according to his power which either her necessity or dignity of her rank doth require 1 Tim. 5. 8. lovingly to govern direct and instruct her 1 Cor. 14. 35. yea and to cherish her ver 29. Next he inforceth this duty by two arguments The first whereof is proponed in this verse to wit Christ's example who loved His Church and from love gave Himself for it See upon ver 2. Which example of Christ's love doth not only inforce the duty as an argument but also point forth the right manner of the duty as a pattern In so far as the husbands love ought to resemble Christs to wit in the chastity of His love who loveth none to His Church Joh. 17. 9. the sincerity of His love who loveth the Church not for His but
the most rigid critick or Momus himself shall not find any inlack or defect in either as the word rendered without blemish will bear Doct. 1. All those who are justified and sanctified here and none but they shall be glorified hereafter for Christ must see the travel of His soul Isa. 53. 11. which is not only to sanctifie those for whom He gave Himself ver 26. but also to glorifie them and to bring them to glory by the way of holinesse That He might present it to Himself a glorious Church 2. Christ hath purchased by His death not only sanctification to His Church but also heaven it self and therefore our glory in heaven is not merited by our holinesse but being purchased by Christ is freely gifted to us Rom. 6. 23. He gave Himself for it that He might present it to Himself a glorious Church saith he 3. Though Belivers even while they are here be brought near to God in Christ by faith Eph. 2. 13. and have fellowship with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 1. -3. yet all that fellowship and nearnesse is but a distance and kind of estrangement being compared with that most perfect presence and intimate fellowship which shall be enjoyed hereafter the former being but mediate through the glaste of Ordinances 1 Cor. 13. 12. frequently interrupted Psal. 30. 7. and no wayes full 1 Cor. 13. 12. but the latter shall be immediate 1 Cor. 13. 12. constant 1 Thess. 4. 17. and so full that they who enjoy the meanest degree shall find no inlack Psal. 17. 15. for he speaketh of Christs presenting His Church to Himself in glory at the great day as if there were nothing but uncouthnesse and distance betwixt Him and the Church untill then that he might present it to himself a glorious Church saith he 4. Though every believing soul is when the Father draweth it to Christ contracted and handfasted with Him Hos. 2. 19 20. yet for good and wise reasons it pleaseth the Lord Christ to delay the taking of us home to Himself and the accomplishment and consummation of the begun marriage untill all the Elect being effectually called shall be presented to Him at once and so this spirituall marriage shall be fully accomplished betwixt Jesus Christ and the Bride the Lambs wife Rev. 19. 7. even as in earthly marriages there is first a Contract or Espousals and then for just and honest reasons some space of time ought to interveen betwixt that and the full accomplishment of the marriage Deut. 20. 7. Matth. 1. 18. for Paul sheweth that then at the great day the whole Church of real Believers shall be presented to Christ as the Bride is to the Bridegroom for the solemn consummation of the marriage That he might present it to himself a glorious Church 5. As believing souls even after their being contracted with Christ by faith and after they are renewed and cleansed in part do not get all their filthy garments put off there being a body of sin and death which cleaveth unto the best So at the finall solemnization of the marriage in the great day the Church of Believers the Bride and Lambs wife shall be clad in garments of glory being fully freed from the smallest remnant of sin and misery and made wholly glorious both in soul Matth. 22. 30. and body Phil. 3. 21. for he saith that he might present it unto himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle c. 6. Those garments of glory and needle-work wherewith the Church the Lambs wife shall be arrayed in the marriage-day are dearly purchased and freely bestowed upon her by Christ her Bridegroom and head for Paul saith Christ gave himself for the Church that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle c 7. This perfect glorious state wherein the Church shall be for ever with Christ her Lord her Head her Husband is such as none can positively declare what it is yea neither can the heart of man comprehend it and all the knowledge which can be here in our state of imperfection attained of it is not so much positive or a knowing what it is as negative or a knowing what it is not by removing all those things from it which imply the least degree of sin and misery for therefore doth Paul set it out here by four negatives Not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing and without blemish and by one affirmative only that it should be holy Vers. 28. So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies he that loveth his wife loveth himself FOlloweth the second argument to inforce this duty of love upon husbands towards their wives taken from the near conjunction betwixt husband and wife which he doth propound in this verse by shewing that the wife is the husbands body in so far as by the law of marriage which shall be explained ver 30. they two become one flesh so that in loving her he doth love himself to wit not so much because his so doing tendeth to his own good and peace though that be also truth Prov. 5. 17 18 19. as that she is his own body a piece of himself yea and his whole self or a second self they two being one flesh and therefore he ought to love her yea and to love her with the same sincerity and ardency of affection kything in the same or like effects wherewith he loveth his own body yea both his soul and body which are himself for the words as their own bodies are both an argument to inforce upon them the duty and a rule to direct them in the right manner of practising the duty Doct. 1. As love in husbands toward their wives after the pattern of Christs love unto His Church is a most necessary duty So considering the many quench-coals of love which the mutual infirmities both of husbands and wives do frequently furnish together with that naturall pronenesse which is in corrupt man being advanced and preferred above others to abuse his authority to domineer with a kind of tyranny over such as are under him it will be found a task not so easie as at the first it would appear for husbands to keep this affection and love flowing from the right fountain and manifesting it self in all its necessary effects towards their wives for to what purpose else doth he reiterate this exhortation and inforce it by so strong and convincing arguments So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies 2. That place of honour and superiority which God hath given the man over the wife as appointing him to be her head doth tye him unto answerable duty so that the greater his honour is the greater is his burden and in particular it bindeth him to love her and from love to govern instruct cherish her and provide for her and to all other things by proportion which the head doth for the body for from what he said ver
and Body as a Sacrifice by death upon the Crosse. The wrong was infinit Gen. 39. 9. and so must the price be even no lesse than the Bloud of God Act. 20. 28. Who gave himself for our sons 5. Such was the desire which Jesus Christ had to the salvation of lost sinners Prov. 8. 31. such was His care to perform what He had undertaken to the Father and what was fore-told of Him in Scripture Psal. 40. 7 8. that willingly and of His own accord without any constraint except that of love Joh. 15. 13. He did offer up himself a Sacrifice to satisfie provoked justice for He gave himself for our sins saith Paul 6. They for whom Christ did give Himself upon the Crosse are also delivered by Him from this present evil world which Christ doth not by taking them presently out of this world by death or otherwise Joh. 17. 15. But first by renewing their natures and so separating them from the condition of unregenerate men who are called the world 1 Joh. 15. 19. And secondly by guarding them against those baits and snares of sinfull temptations which are mainly prevalent in the men of this world 1 Joh. 2. 16. Thirdly by defending them so far as He seeth conducing for His own glory Psal. 76. 10. and their good Psal. 84. 11. from the malicious cruelty of wicked men of this world Psal. 105. 14. And lastly by taking them at the close of their time 2 Cor. 5. 1. from Earth to Heaven that they may be for ever with Himself Joh. 14. 3. for He gave himself that He might deliver us from this present world Doct. 7. So much do wickednesse and wicked men abound in the world Gen. 6. 5. so many are the snares and temptations to sin and wickednesse which are in it 1 Joh. 2. 16. so many also are the crosses and calamities which godly men may resolve to meet with while they are in the world Psal. 34. 19. that though the world simply in it self and as it speaketh our duration and abode in this life all the dayes of our appointed time be not evil but distinguished from evil Joh. 17. 15. Yet for those causes and in those respects the present world is an evil world for so it is here called 8. That any of lost mankind in whom by nature sin doth reign should have their natures renewed the power of sin in them mortified and so themselves delivered from this present evil world it was necessary that Christ should offer up Himself for as life eternal so also God's Image and Holinesse was forfeited by Adam's fall unto all his posterity 1 Cor. 15. 21. and so behoved to be purchased by Christ's death before ever we could attain unto it Heb. 9. 14. for saith the Apostle He gave himself that we might be delivered from this present evil world 9. This evil world wherein so much wickednesse so much misery and so many wicked men abound is but present not lasting transient not continuing it is hastening to its end Rom. 8. 19. and at last shall be consumed with fire 2 Pet. 3. 10. and a new World new Heavens and a new Earth are to succeed unto it wherein shall dwell righteousness 2 Pet. 3. 13. for he calleth this a present world importing that there is another to come 10. That Jesus Christ did offer up Himself in satisfaction to provoked Justice for the sins of the Elect was a thing decreed and appointed by the Father which as it speaketh the Fathers unspeakable love unto lost sinners Joh. 3. 16. so it sheweth the ground whereupon the satisfaction given by Christ is accepted for those who by faith lay hold on Him Joh. 6. 39 40. it was so transacted betwixt the Father and the Son even that He should give himself for our sins according to the will of God to wit the Father for when God is opposed to Christ then God signifieth the Father Yet so as the other two Persons of the Godhead are not excluded as is noted upon Ver. 1. Doct. 6. 11. By reason of this satisfaction given by Jesus Christ to provoked justice for our sins God who was before a consuming fire to sinners Heb. 12. 29. a strict sin-pursuing Judge Exod. 34. 7. becometh now our Father for justice being satisfied and that satisfaction laid hold upon by faith Rom. 5. 1. the enimity ceaseth and we become children yea heirs and joynt-heirs with Christ having received the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15 16 17. This is imported while it is said According to the will of God and our Father Vers. 5. To whom be glory for ever and ever Amen HEre is the close of the Salutation in which by holding forth his own practice for an example he comprehendeth the duty of the Redeemed they are to ascribe lasting glory and praise to God the Father for His good-will to this work of our Redemption by Jesus Christ. Doct. 1. As God in this great work of our Redemption by Jesus Christ hath made the glory of almost all His Attributes especially of His Justice as to Christ Rom. 8. 32. of His Mercy as to us Eph. 1. 7. and consequently of His infinit Wisdom 1 Tim. 1. 17. to kyth and shine forth So it ' is the duty of the Redeemed and such a duty as useth willingly to flow from the very making mention of that so excellent a Work in a heart duely affected with the worth thereof even to acknowledge that glory of His which is manifested therein and to wish that His glory may be set forth more and more both by our selves and others and this not only by speaking to the commendation of His Glory and Greatnesse Psal. 145. 5 6. but by making our whole life and conversation to be nothing else but a testimony of our thankfulnesse to Him 2 Cor. 5. 15. for the Apostle having mentioned that great Work ascribeth glory to God as God's due and his own duty To whom be glory 2. This duty of ascribing glory to God for the great and excellent work of our Redemption is such that it can never be sufficiently discharged there is no lesse required than a succession of Ages to Ages yea and Eternities leisure to ascribe glory to God for so much is imported while he saith To whom be Glory for ever and ever 3. The Glory of the Redeemer and of God who sent His Son to do that Work shall be the long-lasting and never-ending song of the Redeemed-ones through millions of imaginable ages even to all eternity so much doth the word rendered for ever and ever bear for it signifieth to ages of ages or innumerable ages 4. Our praise and thanksgiving to God must not be formal or verbal only Mat. 15. 8. but ought to be fervent and serious as proceeding from the most intimate affection of the heart Luk. 1. 46 47. signified by the word Amen that is Let it be so an earnest wish Vers. 6. I marvel that ye
who transgresseth in one thing 5. There is no person whether rich or poor noble or ignoble learned or unlearned whose sin deserveth not the forementioned curse The consideration indeed of the person of some sinners doth aggrege their sin beyond the sin of others Rom. 2. 17. to 25 but no consideration of the person of any can so far extenuate his sin as to make it not deserving of God's wrath and curse for saith he Cursed is every one without exception who continueth not 6. Not only sins of commission or doing of that which the Law forbiddeth but also sins of omission or the leaving undone of what the Law commandeth do deserve the curse for saith he Cursed is every one not only who doth what the Law forbiddeth but who continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them 7. It is not the bare knowledge of our duty nor yet a fair profession of love and respect to our duty so known which cometh up to that exact righteousnesse that the Law requireth under hazard of the curse there must be practice also according to that knowledge for Cursed is every one who continueth not to do them 8. This real obedience and practice that the Law of God requireth under hazard of the curse is universal extending it self to the conscience-making of all duties commanded together with the way wherein they are commanded Mat. 15. 8. and to the abstaining from all sins forbidden together with their occasions Job 31. 1. for Cursed is every one who continueth not in All things he saith not in some things only 9. This obedience required is also constant from the first minute of a man's life to the hour of his death so that though he should but once sin he is under the curse for Cursed is every one who coutinueth not to do them 10. It is altogether impossible for any one of fallen mankind either of himself Joh. 15. -5. or by any grace received in this life 1 Joh. 1. 8. to keep the Law perfectly or to attain to that exact measure of righteousnesse that the Law requireth which appeareth not only from what the Law requireth as it hath been formerly cleared but also from this Paul takes it here for a confessed and granted conclusion for if any could keep the Law then every man who seeketh to be justified by the works of the Law should not be cursed providing they did what they could as Paul here affirmeth seing the Law doth curse none but those who do not keep the Law For as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse for it is written c. 11. Though every man doth break the Law and so deserveth that curse which is pronounced against sin by the Law Yet all are not left to perish under this curse some are delivered from it to wit those that are of Faith or who by Faith lay hold on Jesus Christ for righteousnesse who was made a curse for them ver 13. such having fled from the sentence and curse of the Law and laid hold on the Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel shall be judged not by the Law but the Gospel which admitteth of the Righteousnesse of a Cautioner imputed Philip. 3. 9. instead of an exact personall righteousnesse required by the Law for saith the Apostle As many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse and so not they who are of Faith 12. Those who do not betake themselves to the Covenant of Grace must stand and fall according to the sentence of the Law or Covenant of Works and therefore seing the Law doth curse them as not having come up to the exact righteousnesse required in it cursed are they and cursed shall they be for saith he They who are of the Law or seek Justification by the Law are cursed because the Law seeketh more than they can perform Vers. 11. But that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for The Just shall live by Faith 12. And the Law is not of Faith but the man that doth them shall live in them IN these Verses is the fourth Argument to prove the negative part of the main Conclusion to wit That no man is justified in God's sight who judgeth not according to outward appearence but according to Truth 1 Sam. 16. -7. by his personal obedience to the Law and that because righteousnesse and life cometh from Faith as he proveth from Habbak 2. -4. and therefore not from the Law ver 11. The force of which consequence as the Apostle declareth doth ly in this that the Law is not of Faith that is the way of Justification which the Law prescribeth to wit the Law as strictly taken for the meer precepts legal promises and threatmings of the Law See chap. 2. ver 15. doth not consist with the way of Justification by Faith because the Law promiseth life to him only who observeth what the Law prescribeth and so hath a perfect inherent righteousnesse as he proveth from Lev. 18. 5. but Faith conveyeth life to him who is destitute of that righteousnesse if he believe on Him that justifieth the ungodly by Faith as he hath cleared frequently before See Rom. 4. 5. and so doth not expresse it now ver 12. Doct. 1. There is a twofould Justification of a sinner one which is in the sight of God and is here expressed whereby he is reputed and standeth righteous and just in the estimation of God the Judge whose judgment is unerring and alwayes according to Truth Jer. 11. 20. Another which is before men and is here implyed whereby the sinner is reputed and standeth righteous in the estimation of men whose judgment as flowing from charity 1 Cor. 13. 7. and grounded upon outward appearance 2 Sam. 16. -7. may frequently erre and be deceived But that no man is justified in the sight of God 2. Though God do not justifie any or esteem of him as righteous for any works done in obedience to the Law Yet that a man may be justified in man's sight because of his works is not here denied by the Apostle for Justification before men is nothing else but a charitable judgment past upon the person that God hath justified him by Faith which judgment is grounded upon the evidences of the person's faith manifested in the fruits of good works Iam. 2. -18. But that no man is justified by the Law in Gods sight c. 3. The spirit of Error being once given way to doth so far blind the understanding Isa. 44. 20. that it cannot see and so far engage the will and affections to the maintaining of it 2 Tim. 4. 3. that the person erring will not see what Scripture saith against that Error though it be never so evident to an indifferent eye for though the maintainers of Justification by Works would not or could not see it yet the Scriptures even of the Old Testament
being by Christ's death joyned in one did enjoy the Promise of the Spirit or the spiritual Promise as being now denuded of these earthly and external Ceremonies wherewith it was vailed formerly and set forth in its native and spiritual beauty and lustre both which fruits of Christ's death he sheweth are conveyed unto and enjoyed by both Jews and Gentiles only by Faith So that the Apostle in these two Verses doth not only prove the main Conclusion That Faith laying hold on Christ is that which delivereth from the Law 's curse and which conveyeth Abraham's blessing together with the Covenant-promise unto us and so doth justifie us but also indirectly and as it were at the by hinteth at two other Truths tending also to clear the main controversie between him and his adversaries which therefore he is to assert more directly afterwards to wit first That now after Christ's death the Gentiles being called by the Gospel were to be joyned in one body with the Jews and both of them to make up one seed to Abraham and equally to partake of Abraham's blessing whereof free Justification through Faith spoken of ver 9. was a main part And secondly that the Covenant-promise that God would be a God to Abraham and to his seed Gen. 17. 7. was now after Christ's death to be held forth more clearly and spiritually the types and shadows of earthly Ceremonies and of that legal Dispensation under which it was formerly hid being laid aside From Vers. 13. Learn 1. The threatnings of the Law denouncing a curse against those who yeeld not personal obedience to it did not exclude or forbid a Surety to come in the sinners room and to undergo the curse due unto Him for though it be clear from ver 10. that the Law doth curse all yet this impeded not but Christ might come to redeem us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us 2. Every man by nature the Elect not excepted Eph. 2. -3. are under the sentence of the Law 's curse whereby in God's justice they are under the power of darknesse Col. 1. 13. slavery and bondage to sin and Satan Eph. 2. -2. so to remain until they be cast in utter darknesse Jude 13. except delivery and redemption do interveen for while it is said Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law it is supposed that by nature we are under it 3. There is no delivery of enslaved man from this wofull bondage but by giving satisfaction and by paying of a price for the wrong done to Divine Justice either by himself or by some surety in his stead God's fidelity Gen. 2. 17. His righteous nature Psal. 11. 6 7. and the inward desert of sin Rom. 1. 32. do call for it for Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law the word signifieth to deliver by giving a price 4. It is not in the power of fallen man to acquire a ransom for himself by any thing he can either do or suffer whereby Justice may be satisfied and he delivered from this state of slavery and bondage The redemption of the soul is precious and ceaseth for ever to wit among men Psal. 49. 8. for if man could redeem himself Christ had not been put to it to redeem us from the curse of the Law 5. Jesus Christ the second Person of the blessed Trinity hath undertaken this great work of redeeming captive-man from his slavery and bondage and accordingly hath accomplished it The work was indeed undertaken at the appointment of all the Persons Luke 1. 68. to whom also the price was paid Eph. 5. 2. only the execution of this work was by that wise design of sending the second Person in the flesh to become man that so he might not only have right as our near kinsman Ruth 3. 12 13. but also be fitted to redeem as having a price to lay down for our ransom Heb. 10. 5. Christ hath redeemed us 1. Our Redeemer Jesus Christ is true God who being man's Creator and having entred a Covenant of friendship with man at the beginning by vertue whereof He had interest in man not only as His creature but as one in state of friendship with Himself from which blessed state man did fall Eccles. 7. 29. and so brought himself and all his posterity 1 Cor. 15. 21 to this state of bondage wherein he now is for so much is imported while Christ is said to redeem Redemption being properly of those things which once were our own but for the time are lost Christ hath redeemed us saith he 7. This work of man's Redemption undertaken and accomplished by Christ was a Redemption properly so called our freedom and delivery being obtained not by power or strong hand meerly nor yet coming from the sole condescension and pity of the injured party without seeking reparation for former injuries but by the payment of a sufficient price and by giving a just satisfaction to a provoked God as appeareth not only from the word rendred redeem which as said is signifieth to buy with a price but also from this that the price is condescended upon to wit Christ's undergoing the curse of the Law due to us and this He did for us that is not only for our good but also in our room and stead for by His undergoing this curse we are freed from it so that although to buy or redeem be sometimes taken improperly and doth signifie to obtain a thing without any price Isa. 52. 3. yet what is presently said and other circumstances do evince that in this work of Redemption performed by Christ the word must be taken properly for a delivery obtained by a payment of a just price Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us 8. The price paid by Christ in order to our redemption was no lesse than His undergoing that curse of the Law which was due to us whence it followeth that Christ's sufferings by way of satisfaction were not only in His body but also in His soul He did not only wrestle with the fear of death Heb. 5. -7. but was also deprived of that joy and comfort or the sense and feeling of God's favour and help which He formerly enjoyed and had His own sad conflicts and agonies arising in His Soul hereupon Mat. 27. 46. which though in us they would necessarily produce sin yet in Christ they did not Heb. 4. -15. because of His most pure nature Heb. 7. 26. for He was made the curse of the Law for us Now the curse of the Law did reach to the terrors of the soul as well as to the pains of the body 9. Though Jesus Christ as considered in His own Person was altogether holy and innocent Isa. 53. -9. and alwayes even when He was made a curse most beloved of the Father Mat. 3. 17. yet being considered as our Surety Heb. 7. 22. and sustaining our person He was the object of sin-pursuing justice
works of that kind So it is lawfull for Christians to have an eye to this reward as a motive whereby to work up their backward hearts unto a willing complyance with expensive duties of that sort providing first it be not looked at as a thing to be merited by their good works Rom. 6. 23. Nor secondly as the only or chief motive 2 Cor. 5. 14. for the Apostle by this similitude doth minde them of the promised reward as an argument exciting them unto beneficence Whatsoever a man soweth that shall be also reap Vers. 8. For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting VVHat the Apostle spoke generally concerning that proportion which shall be betwixt a man's future reward and his present work he doth now following the same metaphor of sowing and reaping make it more clear by distinguishing several sorts of sowers seeds grounds and several sorts of harvests answerable to each of those The plain meaning whereof is 1. That carnal and unregenerate men who take no other care but to spend their wit strength time and particularly their means upon the service of their own fleshly lusts such as are reckoned forth chap. 5. 19 20. they shall at last reap no fruit thereby but corruption that is eternal perdition for corruption is here opposed unto eternal life and this they shall reap from the flesh that is their own inbred corruption which with the sinfull effects thereof is the true seed of death and perdition And secondly that renewed and spirituall men who imploy their whole life study and labour and particularly their worldly substance for advancing the works of the Spirit whether in themselves or others such as are reckoned forth chap. 5. 22. and particularly for upholding the Gospel and a painful Ministry they shall receive the reward of eternal life and this from the Spirit that is the grace of God in them which is the true seed of eternity not by way of merit as destruction and corruption follow upon the flesh but from God's mercy and free gift as the Apostle doth in plain and proper terms put the difference Rom. 6. 23. according to which this metaphorick allegory must be expounded and may not be set in opposition to it Doct. 1. The whole world are comprized in one of two ranks they are either sowing to the flesh living in their unregenerate state and in slavery to their lusts whose end shall be perdition or they are sowing to the Spirit truly regenerate and imploying themselves for the advancing of things spiritual whose end shall be eternal life There is no neutral or midstate for Paul distinguisheth all in these two He that soweth to his flesh and he that soweth to the Spirit 2. It may be frequently observed that they who have not an heart to part with any thing of their temporall goods for God and pious uses but plead present poverty necessity and fear of future want when God doth call them to any thing of that kind are notwithstanding most profuse and lavish in spending their means to make provision for the flesh and to uphold the beastly lusts thereof for he that soweth not to the Spirit soweth to his flesh 3. Though carnal men do think their own way the only wisest while they spend their wit and substance for attaining present profit pleasure and preferment and do judge the way of the Godly but meer folly while they imploy their strength and means for things spiritual and such as God's honour is mainly concerned in and are not attended with an income of worldly advantage but rather of losse and detriment yet the end shall prove that those who thought themselves only wise men and gainers have been but meer fools and greatest losers and that those others whom they looked upon as mad-men and bad managers of their worldly affairs have been the greatest gainers and wisest adventurers for he that soweth to his flesh shall reap corruption but he that soweth to the Spirit shall reap life everlasting 4. The state of the wicked after death is a state of corruption wherein though the substance of their soul and body shall not be annihilated but shall be upheld unto all eternity by the mighty power of God in the midst of unutterable torments Mark 9. 44. yet all their glory pleasure and gain wherein they placed their happinesse and for attaining whereof only they spent their time and strength Psal. 49. 11. shall then be consumed 2 Pet. 3. 10. and they themselves made to languish and pine away under the wrath of an highly provoked and then unreconciliable God 2 Thess. 1. 9. for saith he The wicked shall reap corruption meaning their state after death 5. The state of the Godly after death shall be a state of life the life of Grace being then swallowed up and perfected in the life of Glory which consisteth in perfect freedom from sin and misery Eph. 5. 27. in unconceivable joys Psal. 16. 11. and the full enjoying of God 1 Joh. 3. 2. which happy state of theirs shall be eternal they shall never weary nor yet be deprived of it for saith he the Godly shall reap life everlasting 6. Whatever sin a man committeth it is most properly his own work as flowing from the root of his own corrupt flesh but the good which he doth is not so properly his own as Gods in so far as it floweth from the Spirit of God and habits of Grace which were wrought in him by the self-same Spirit Philip. 2. 13. Col. 3. 10. for speaking of the flesh he setteth it forth by the appropriating Pronoun his He that soweth to his flesh but not so while he speaketh of the Spirit He that soweth to The Spirit not to his spirit Vers. 9. And let us not be weary in well doing for in due season we shall reap if we faint not THe Apostle from what he hath presently spoken of the reward of eternal life attending those who sow in the Spirit inferreth the former exhortation propounded ver 6. and enlargeth it by recommending unto them according to the sense given of the former similitude the study of good works and especially of beneficency in the general under the name of well-doing whereby he meaneth not only the outward work but also the doing of it in a right manner Mat. 6. 1. c. and that they would persevere to the end in that study notwithstanding of all contrary discouragements without base and cowardly ceding unto them and inforceth the exhortation by putting it above all question that they shall gather the fruit which God had promised though not presently yet in the due time that is the time which God doth judge most convenient but withall he addeth a condition of reaping in due time required on their part to wit if they continued constant in well-doing even the same unto which he had exhorted them in the former part
yet the ceremonial Law the keeping whereof they urged so much upon others but did usually and without challenge neglect it among themselves and where they knew none were to publish it abroad Mat. 23. 4. Secondly he mentioneth the third principle from which they were acted in their so vehement urging of Circumcision upon others even their ambition and desire of vain-glory that they might have whereof to glory and boast in the multitude of Proselytes among the Gentiles who received Circumcision in their flesh at their instigation and thereby did evidence that they were converted or rather perverted unto Judaism Doct. 1. As we would not lightly and without evident cause charge any with hypocrisie dissimulation and pretending of zeal for God and respect to conscience when there is no such thing in reality and truth So this is ground sufficient for any to susspect and for those who are otherwise called unto it to affirm That they who give little o 〈…〉 o evidence of zeal to God or respect to conscience in the ordinary strain of their conversation are not acted from zeal and conscience in those particulars wherein they would seem most zealous and conscientious and more especially when Ministers do make bold without challenge to neglect those things the practice whereof they presse most vehemently upon others it cryeth aloud that they are men destitute of conscience and that they speak and preach not because they believe but for other base ends for Paul having charged his adversaries with hypocrisie in their so much urging of Circumcision ver 12 he giveth a reason for his so doing to wit their godlesse conversation and carelesse neglect of those things which they so much pressed upon others For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the Law 2. The Word of God in the mouthes of His Servants is quick and powerfull and sharper than any two-edged sword so as it entreth in upon a man's very soul and spirit and maketh that difference appear which is betwixt his false though fair pretences and his real though foul intentions the latter whereof lay lurking under the former but this searching Word taketh off the visard and maketh them appear in their foulest colours for the Word of God in Paul's mouth discovereth the secret foul intent even of the very hearts of his adversaries having laid aside their fair pretexts They desire to have you circumcised that they may glory in your flesh saith he 3. Where the spirit of schism and Church-renting hath once possessed a soul it causeth the man in whom it is to refuse no pains trouble or toil for gaining of many followers and to look upon those whom he so gaineth as so many trophees of his victory and speaking proofs of his unparalleled abilities and parts wherewith he is so much taken up himself that he cannot dissemble his earnest desire to have all others taken up with admirationat them also for those schismatick Church-renters chap. 4. ver 17. did desire yea ver 12. constrained men to be circumcised that they might glory in their flesh Vers. 14. But God forbid that I should glory save in the crosse of our Lord Jesus Christ by whom the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world THirdly in the Conclusion the Apostle doth oppose his own truly christian and apostolick conversation and carriage to those sins of hypocrisie carnal policy and vain-glory which he hath shown to be in the false Apostles And first in opposition to their vain-glory mentioned ver -13. he declareth that the matter of his gloriation and boasting was only in the crosse of Christ that is the all sufficient expiatory and satisfactory sacrifice of Christ upon the Crosse with the whole work of our Redemption which is also hereby synecdochically understood and rejecteth all other sorts of boasting as a thing abominable for so much doth his usual expression God forbid import Rom. 3. 4 6 31. and 6. 2. Secondly he sheweth in opposition to their hypocrisie and desire to make a fair shew in the flesh that by Christ or by His Crosse for the article in the Greek language may relate to either the world was crucified to him that is all that is in the world and in so far as it is opposed to the Kingdom of Christ as honour riches pomp pleasure the favour fear wrath praise or dispraise of men all were undervalued and despised by him to wit in comparison of Christ and the excellency and worth of His sufferings Philip. 3. 8. and hereby also he was crucified unto the world that is undervalued and despised by the men of this world for to be crucified in both sentences signifieth the same thing even to be contemptible and undervalued as those were who died by that ignominions and cursed death upon the Crosse Deut. 21. 23. Doct. 1. It is praise-worthy in a Minister and advanceth much the conviction of those whose sins he reproveth when his own carriage is so exemplary as the holding forth of it may point out their duty and wherein they come short of their duty for the Apostle having mentioned the sins of his adversaries ver 12 13. doth here hold forth his own practice wherein as in a glasse they and others might see their duty in opposition to those sins But God forbid saith he that I should glory c. 2. Though the goodnesse or badnesse of men who maintain and labour to propagate opinions are not sufficient arguments to prove either the truth or falshood of what they maintain seing even the Godly may erre and men otherwise carnal may discern what is Truth or Error right or wrong in some particulars better than they 2 Sam. 24. 2 3. yet when Truth is already demonstrated to be Truth and Error to be Error by sound and solid arguments from Scripture and Reason then is it lawfull and opportune to compare the pious conversation of those who are for Truth with the impiety pride and vain-glory of those who are for Error that hereby some taking weight may be added unto those former arguments especially in the minds of those who are prejudged against the Truth for the Apostle in the body of the Epistle having confirmed his own Doctrine and refuted the Error of his adversaries by solid and nervous reasons doth now in the conclusion compare his own life with theirs and opposeth his christian ingenuity and freedom from vain-glory to their hypocrisie basenesse and vanity and this to make his former arguments weigh more with those prejudicate Galatians as appeareth by comparing the two former verses with this and those which follow But God forbid that I should glory c. 3. Though it be lawfull in some cases for men to glory in the good things of God bestowed upon them See ver 4. doct 5. yet it is altogether unlawfull yea no lesse than abominable to glory in any thing so as that we place our confidence in it for making us accepted to and righteous before God but
own House and Family which is the Church to whom He dispenseth and distributeth all her mercies comforts and crosses with no lesse yea with infinitly greater care wisdom and foresight than any man doth care provide for and govern his own family So among other things He dispenseth and ordereth times and seasons for his Church as not only having fixed in his eternal counsel the general periods of the Churches time how long the Church should be in her state of infancy how long under the bondage of the Law and how long she shall continue in her more grown and perfect age under the Gospel but also the time and season for bestowing of particular mercies and inflicting corrections and chastisements for the word rendred dispensation signifieth the way of administrating the affairs of the family by the master thereof and the times come under those things which are administrated by God That in the dispensation of the fulnesse of times 7. As every time chosen of God for bestowing of any mercy is the full and fittest time for his bestowing of it So the time of Christ's incarnation is in a speciall manner the full time and fulnesse of time and that not only because it was that full time which God had appointed in his decree and for reasons known to his own unsearchable wisdom condescended upon as the most fitting time for that great work but also because all the fore-going prophecies promises and types of the Messias were fulfilled in those times Luke 24. 27. and the will of God concerning man's salvation was then and not till then fully revealed Heb. 1. 2. for the Apostle calleth those times the fulnesse of times That in the dispensation of the fulness of times 8. Though the benefits purchased by Christ and particularly that of effectuall calling and gathering together unto God those whom sin did separate from Him be intended for and accordingly doth light only upon few Mat. 7. 14. Yet the Gospel and Promise by which Christ and the benefits purchased by Him are revealed is drawn up in the most comprehensive expressions And this of purpose that none may hereby be excluded from laying hold upon that gracious offer but such as do exclude themselves Joh. 5. 40. for saith he That he might gather together in one all things both which are in heaven and which are on earth by which broad expressions are meaned only the Elect for there is an universality and world even of those 2 Cor. 5. 19. and not all the creatures not Devils or Reprobates Joh. 17. 9. yea to speak properly not yet the elect Angels who being never separated from God by sin cannot be gathered to him by Christ though they may improperly and in some respects be said to be so to wit because of those advantages which they have by Christ as that they are now most perfectly and inseparably united with God without hazard of being separated from Him Mat. 18. 10. and have attained the knowledge of that wonderfull plot of Man's Salvation through Jesus Christ which was a mysterie even to them Eph. 3. 10. and a greater measure of joy than formerly they had upon Christ's converting and saving of lost sinners Luke 15. 7 10. Doct. 9 All who belong to God's purpose of Election and who are or shall be gathered together in Christ are either in heaven or earth Paul knew no purgatory or third place for the souls of the Elect to go unto after death to endure the temporal punishment due to their sin for he divideth those all things which were to be gathered into things in heaven and things on earth 10. There is an union betwixt the Saints departed now in heaven and those who are yet alive upon the earth so as they make up one mystical body under one head Christ to whom the Saints departed are united though not by faith 1 Cor. 13. 10. yet by sense as we are united to Him by faith and as they are united to Christ so also one to another and to us by love for charity never faileth 1 Cor. 13. 8. from which union there floweth a communion betwixt them and us whereby they do pray for the Church in general Rev. 6. 10. though not for the particular conditions and persons of men upon earth whereof they are ignorant Isa. 63. 16. and the Godly upon earth do in heart and affection converse with them in heaven Philip. 3. 20. desiring continually to be dissolved and to be with Christ Philip. 1. 23. though they are not to pray unto them or give them religious worship Rev. 19. 10. for saith he That in the dispensation of the fulnesse of times he might gather together in one things in heaven and things on earth 11. Jesus Christ is that person in and by whom we are gathered together unto God by faith in Him and to the Angels and also among our selves by the grace of love He having united the two dissentient parties God and man in His own Person Mat. 1. -23. and having satisfied justice for that wrong which caused the rent Isa. 53. 5. and working in us by His Spirit those graces of faith and love whereby we are made one with God and among our selves Act. 5. 31. and having by His death taken away that wall of partition and enimity which was betwixt Jew and Gentile Eph. 2. 14 15 16. it being also necessary that we be in Him by faith before we be united to God through Him for the Apostle is so much delighted with this Truth himself and would so gladly have it well known believed by others that he doth inculcate it twice in this one vers That he might gather together all things in Christ and again even in Him Vers. 11. In whom also we have obtained an inheritance being predestinated according to the purpose of Him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. THe Apostle having hitherto spoken of all the Elect in general doth now make application of the former doctrine first to the Jews and next to the Gentiles and hereby he doth yet further and thirdly inforce the fore-mentioned scope while he sheweth in effect that the prerogative of the Jews above the Gentiles made not grace the lesse free to them and that nothing which the Gentiles could pretend to beyond the Jews made it lesse free to them either And first he applyeth it unto the Jews whereof Paul was one and therefore he speaketh of them in the first person We. And first he sheweth that they to wit Believers among them as is explained ver -12. had in Christ and by vertue of His merit and intercession obtained an inheritance to wit of Heaven and Glory Col. 1. 12. and by consequence all the fore-mentioned blessings which lead to it and this not from their own merit or free choice but freely and as it were by lot wherein least of man is seen
to a stately edifice founded upon Christ ver 20 21. And shewing they were a part of this building ver 22. Vers. 1. ANd you hath He quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins THe Apostle being yet further to establish those Ephesians in the doctrine of salvation by free grace in Christ and for this end to set forth the happinesse of that estate in which free grace had placed them sheweth the misery of their former estate before conversion even that they were dead not naturally but spiritually there being nothing of that spiritual life in them which consisteth in the union of the soul with God Joh. 5. 40. and in a vertue and power of the soul flowing from this union to do those things which are spiritually good and acceptable unto God Joh. 15. 5. even as the natural life consisteth in the union of the soul with the body whereby the man is inabled to move speak and do such other actions as are competent to that life so that their spiritual deadnesse doth speak a separation from God Psal 53. 3. and total inability to do any thing which is spiritually good Rom. 8 7. The efficient and formall cause of which death he sheweth to have been their sins and trespasses whereby under two words used indifferently in Scripture to expresse one and the same thing and both of them in the plural number is set forth the multitude of sins under which they lay in this their dead condition as their original sin their actual sins sins of omission commission and especially their manifold idolatries which are chiefly pointed at as those sins wherein not only the Ephesians but the world in general did wallow before Christ came in the flesh Act. 17. 29 30. Hence Learn 1. It is not sufficient that the Servants of Jesus Christ do only preach priviledges and hold-forth unto Believers that happy estate unto which they are lifted-up through Christ It is necessary also that joyntly herewith they be calling them to minde their wofull miserable and lost estate by nature that the one being set foregainst the other both may more clearly appear in their own colours and that those dangerous rocks of growing vain because of what they now are 2 Cor. 12. 7. and of turning discouraged and diffident because of what they once were Psal. 25. 7. may be eschewed for the Apostle in the preceeding chapter having spoken much of those high priviledges unto which the Ephesians were advanced by Christ he doth here minde them of that miserable state wherein God found them And you who were dead in sins and trespasses 2. There is nothing contributeth more to commend the doctrine of free grace to peoples consciences and so to commend it as to make them closely adhere unto it both in profession and practice than the serious perpending of mans wofull and altogether hopelesse estate by nature This alone would do much to scatter all that mist whereby humane reason doth obscure the beauty of this truth by extolling man's free will as a co-worker with grace Rom. 3. 19 20. and would necessitate the lost sinner to imbrace it and to venture his otherwise hopelesse salvation upon it 1 Tim. 1. 15. for this is the Apostle's scope through this whole Chapter even from the consideration of the wofull estate of those Ephesians before conversion to illustrate this doctrine of salvation by free grace and to confirm them in it And you who were dead in sins and trespasses 3. Believers in Jesus Christ are not to look upon their lost and miserable estate by nature separately and apart from but joyntly with God's free grace and mercy which hath delivered them from that misery for otherwise the thoughts of sin and misery may if God should give way swallow them up Mat. 27. 4 5. Hence is it the Apostle hath so contrived his discourse here that all-alongs while he speaketh of their misery in the first three verses the mind of the Reader is kept in suspense without coming to the perfect close of a sentence untill God's mercy in their delivery from this misery be mentioned ver 5. for the Original hath not these words he hath quickened in this verse but the Translators have taken them from ver 5. to make up the sense without suspending the Reader so long untill he should find them in their own proper place And you who were dead c. 4. Every man by nature and before conversion is dead not to sin for that is proper to the Regenerate only See Rom. 6. 2. where the grammatical construction is the same in the Original with that which is here only the sense is much different but in sin whereby he is wholly deprived of all ability and power to convert himself Rom. 9. 16. or to do any thing which is spiritually good Rom. 8. 7. for while he saith the Ephesians were dead in sins before God did quicken them he speaketh of a thing common to them with others and therefore he reckoneth himself and the other believing Jews with them ver 3. And you who were dead in sins 5. As the fountain-cause of this spiritual death was Adam's sin in whom all have sinned Rom. 5. 12. through the merit of whose sin imputed to us we are deprived of original righteousness Rom. 7. 18. and a perverse inclination unto all evil hath come in its place Gen. 6. 5. So every mans own particular actual sins do lay him lower under this state of death and make his delivery from it more difficult Jer. 13. 23. for saith he Ye were dead in sins and trespasses under which are comprehended as we shew both their original and actual sins Vers. 2. Wherein in time past ye 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 HE proveth they were thus dead in sins and trespasses from their walking in and making a daily trade of sin without striving against it or any through remorse for it which wofull walk of theirs he doth illustrate from two guides which they followed and by which they were carried-on and incouraged in their sinfull course The first was the universal corrupt course and custom of the world that is of wicked men in the world Psal. 17. 14. in all ages which had become a Law for them to walk by The second guide was Satan who is here called a prince not only because there being a number of those unclean spirits they are joyned as one politick body among themselves under one who is as prince and head of the rest Mat. 12. 24. and 25. 41. but also and mainly because of that power which all the Devils and chiefly their head and prince have over wicked men in the world Joh. 14. 30. 2 Cor. 4 4. even over the children of disobedience which princely power of his is described from the place where by God's permission he doth exercise it to wit the
be totally exstinct but was to be preached believed and obeyed in some 〈…〉 es at least of the world throughout all ages to the worlds end for the Apostle sheweth it was Gods design to have the exceeding riches of His grace shown forth in all succeeding ages and generations that in the ages to come he might shew 5. Gods bypast dealing whether in mercy or judgement 1 Corinth 10 6. are speaking lessons unto those who are in the ages following as holding forth both matter of praise unto God manifested in those Psal. 136. 10 c. as also matter of instruction in our duty to us 1 Cor. 10. 6. So that the after-ages in this respect are better ages than the former in so far as the latter have the advantage of those examples in the former ages which they themselves did want for the Apostle sheweth the benefit of God's gr 〈…〉 ious dealing with Believers in the present age should accresce unto the following ages That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace 6. As all those benefits which come to Believers do flow from the kindnesse of God or His native willingnesse to imploy what goodnesse is in Him for the good of His creatures So though the effects of His generall kindnesse and benevolence which are common to all the creatures Psal. 145. 9. do flow from God as Creator in the channel of common providence Psal. 104. 28. yet the effects of His speciall kindnesse and such as relate to life and godlinesse do all of them flow from God as reconciled through Christ and are convoyed through the conduit of Christs merit and intercession for the Apostle summing up all these saving benefits together with the way how they are convoyed he saith In his kindnesse towards us through Christ Jesus 7. The lively and serious consideration of those excellent benefits flowing from Gods mercy grace goodwill and bounty together with the consideration of the vileness and wretchednesse of those upon whom those excellent benefits are bestowed and of the way which infinit Wisdom set on work by eternal love hath found out for convoying those so excellent mercies to such base and unworthy objects even the incarnation obedience sufferings and high exaltation of Jesus Christ I say it is the consideration of all those joyntly which tendeth to set forth most convincingly how exceedingly gracious God is for the Apostle sheweth this convincing evidence doth lye in those three first in his kindnesse secondly towards us thirdly through Jesus Christ. Vers. 8. For by grace are ye saved through faith and that not of your selves it is the gift of God THe Apostle Fourthly While he giveth a reason of what is said ver 7. as appeareth by the causall particle for doth sum up all which hath been spoken from ver 4. in this one comprehensive proposition that their compleat salvation from the first step unto the last did flow from Gods grace and favour for by grace here must be meaned Gods free favour and grace in him not the effects of this grace good works or grace inherent in us for those are expresly excluded ver 9. and withall that they were so saved by grace as faith was not excluded This grace of faith being the hand or instrument whereby we lay hold upon and apply to our selves Jesus Christ and His righteousnesse offered freely in the Gospel in order to our salvation Rom. 3. 25. And Secondly Because the establishing of them in this truth is his main scope through the whole first part of the Epistle therefore he doth here not only explain in what sense salvation doth flow from grace but also doth expresly confirm it by arguments First by removing all things in generall which could be called theirs whether prerogative priviledge naturall or acquired worth from being the meritorious procuring cause of their salvation or of any part of it the truth whereof is more than evident from what is said of their spirituall death in sins and trespasses ver 1 2 3. and therefore he needeth not bring any new argument to prove it Secondly by asserting from that same ground that their salvation was Gods gift and therefore it behoved to be free and of grace else it could not be a gift Doct. 1. Though the ascribing of salvation unto works is not wholly inconsistent with and destructive of Gods grace from having any influence upon salvation seing Adam's salvation even according to the tenor of the Covenant of works had been also of grace in some respect it being of grace that God did enter any Covenant with man at all and of grace also that He did accept even of mans perfect obedience so as upon his performance of it to make him sure of eternall life yet the ascribing of salvation or any part of it unto the merit or worth of works doth obscure and is inconsistent with that exceeding riches of grace which God intendeth to set forth by that way of salvation which is propounded in the Covenant of Grace for the Apostle being here to prove that Gods way of saving those Ephesians was a fit mean to set forth the exceeding riches of His grace giveth this for a reason even that their salvation did flow only from grace and from nothing in themselves nor any work of theirs So that if it did not flow only from grace and from nothing in themselves it could not demonstrate those exceeding riches of His grace for saith he ye are saved by grace and that not of your selves not of works 2. Whatever differences may be among severall persons in other things yet all come of Adam by ordinary generation are equall as in their common misery by nature so in the way of their delivery from that misery by free grace through a Redeemer there being no other name under Heaven given among men whereby we can be saved but the name of Jesus Act. 4. 12. for therefore doth the Apostle so frequently change the person in this first part of the Chapter while he sometimes speaketh of the Ephesians and Gentiles alone in the second person as ver 1. sometimes of himself and of the Jews with them in the first person as ver 5 6. not as if some part of the purpose did belong only to the one alone and some part of it unto both joyntly for in one and the same purpose he changeth the person as while he giveth a reason in this verse of what he spoke ver 7. but rather to shew that the purpose here insisted on which is mans misery by nature and their delivery from that misery by free grace and Christ doth belong equally to Jew and Gentile and therefore he standeth not much to which of them he doth speak for by grace are ye saved saith he 3. As Believers are in some sense already saved not only because they have salvation begun in their new birth which is a passing from death unto life 1 Joh. 3. 14. but also they
do enjoy communion with God and especially in the confident bold and reverent exercising of their faith both as to the change of their state in justification Rom. 5. 2. and as to their sanctification and all the duties thereof Philip. 4. 13. which accesse to God is chiefly attained in the duties of prayer and praise as having God for their direct and immediate object This is that accesse which in some measure floweth from peace and reconciliation with God and is an evidence of it for the Apostle proveth that the Gospel was effectually preached in order to their peace and reconciliation because they had accesse to God We both have accesse to the Father 2. There can be no accesse or familiar approaching unto God by sinners who are not in Jesus Christ and come not to God through Him seing God is a consuming fire unto such Heb. 12. 29. Their sins having divided betwixt Him and them Isa. 59. 2. and so closed up all accesse unto God untill Jesus Christ do apply unto them the merit of His death whereby He blotteth out their sin Rom. 3. 25. and bringeth them unto a state of favour with God and so maketh a patent door for accesse unto Him Rom. 5. 1 2. and keepeth it alwayes patent by His continued intercession Heb. 7. -25. which their renewed provocations would otherwise dayly and hourly close and obstruct 1 Joh. 2. 1. for saith he through Him that is Christ we both have an accesse to the father 3. Christ is the only Mediator betwixt God and man by whom alone we have accesse and liberty to approach unto God in the exercise of our graces whether in the duty of prayer or any other way and not by the mediation of Saints or Angels for saith he through him we have an access or manuduction to the father 4. This accesse and approaching unto God is not locall by passing from one place to another especially seing there is no place wherein accesse to God may not be had Joh. 4. 21. 23. but it is spirituall consisting in the motion of the heart towards God in the exercise of saving and spirituall graces for so much is implied while this accesse is ascribed unto the Spirit as the efficient thereof We have an accesse by the spirit 5. It is not sufficient in order to our accesse unto God that obstructions be removed and a door made patent by Christs merit and intercession through which we may enter but such is partly our impotency Joh. 15. -5. and partly our aversnesse from making use of the offered opportunity Luk. 14. 17 18 c. that except the Spirit of God do cause us enter by creating spirituall graces in us Ezek. 36. 26. by actuating and exciting those graces Cant. 4. 16. and especially by helping our infirmities in prayer and stirring up a vehement flame of holy and ardent affections which may serve as wings to elevate our spirits to God Rom. 8. 26. Except I say the Spirit of the Lord did thus we could not otherwise have any accesse unto God for he saith through him we have an accesse by one spirit 6. As it is one and the self same Spirit of God who breatheth upon the graces of Gods people Cant. 4. 16. and thereby giveth them accesse unto God So it concerneth us much as we would find accesse and liberty of approaching unto God to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace there being nothing that marreth accesse to God and fellowship with Him more than imbittered spirits and division of heart among the people of God 2 Corinth 13. 11. for therefore doth the Apostle mention the one Spirit of God to shew that the Spirit doth unite those among themselves upon whom this rich blessing of accesse is bestowed We both have an accesse by one Spirit 7. As there are three distinct persons in the Godhead the Father Son and Spirit So the enjoying of the Father is the highest happinesse which can be attained and in which the soul doth rest content when it is attained the Son again is the way by which we come to the Father and the Spirit our guide which causeth us enter this way and go alongs in it all which is clearly hinted at here through Him that is Christ we have an accesse by one Spirit to the Father Vers. 19. Now therefore ye are no more strangers and forreigners but fellow-citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God HEre beginneth the fourth branch of the second part of this Chapter where by way of a conclusion drawn from what is said in the six former Verses the Apostle setteth forth that excellent and blessed state wherein the Ephesians now were which though in some respects and in some things at least by proportion it may be applied to the state of the visible Church to wit in so far as the members thereof had all those priviledges here spoken of in their offer upon the terms held forth in the Gospel and were under the drop of those means which the Lord doth ordinarily blesse and make effectuall for working a saving interest in and right unto all those yea and had a present actuall right to the external part of those priviledges even the visible Church being in some respects Gods City Houshold and Temple at least the suburbs utter-court and porch thereof and having her own answerable priviledges which are in some measure proportionall to those of the invisible Church yet seing as was shewed formerly upon the exposition of ver 13. those excellent things here spoken of are not fully and to their outmost perfection verified in any but in the invisible Church and the truly regenerate the members thereof Therefore I shal open up the mind of the Spirit of God as aiming mainly at those and give the meaning of those excellent things here mentioned as they appertain chiefly to such in the mean time leaving it unto the judicious Reader to gather from what is said how and in what respects they are applicable unto the visible Church And so that we may enter the exposition of the words The Apostle setteth forth their present happy condition first negatively by shewing what they were not neither strangers nor forreigners whereby with allusion to those who are not free-men of an Incorporation or City but either strangers that is such who have neither the freedom of the City nor a place of habitation in it but have their residence far from it or forreigners that is such who though they have their residence in the City yet are not free-men but sojourners for a season he sheweth that the second branch of their former misery spoken of ver 12. which includeth all the rest even their being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel deprived of all union and communion either with the invisible or visible Church was now removed Secondly he setteth forth their present blessed condition positively under three similitudes whereof two are in this verse In the first
without any reserve or limitation and the practice of any other is to be followed but so far as their example is conincident with Gods Word and practice See 1 Cor. 11. 1. where Paul commandeth them to follow him with an expresse limitation to wit as he was a follower of Christ but here his command is absolute and unlimitted Be ye followers of God 5. The Lord doth enter into most intimate friendship with and taketh on most neer relations unto those whose sins He pardoneth So that He doth not only free them from deserved wrath but placeth them among the children and maketh them adopted sons and daughters unto Himself for here he calleth them God's dear children of whom He said chap. 4. 32. that God had forgiven them for Christs sake 6. All those who are dear children to God by adoption should look upon their highest priviledges as strongest engagements to duty and particularly set themselves to imitate Him in the exercise of mercy kindnesse forgivenesse and of such other duties as He hath made lovely and amiable by His own example for Paul maketh their priviledges an engagement to duty and to imitate God in particular Be ye followers of God as dear children 7. It is not sufficient that we set our selves to imitate God except we do it as dear children that is first humbly Matth. 18. 2. 3. and next with a kind of naturall affection and propension for so do children affect to imitate and by imitation to please their parents and not as servants and slaves by compulsion Hence he saith as dear children pointing not only at the reason why but the manner how they should follow Him Vers. 2. And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour HE doth next illustrate yet further that precept given chap. 4. ver 32. and joyntly sheweth wherein they were to imitate God to wit not only in forgiving but also in loving one another and so as they should walk in love whereby is meaned that all their actions towards their neighbour ought not only to be good in themselves but also flow from a principle of love to his good and edification which duty or constant task of walking in love is inforced by a new argument taken from Christ's example who loved us and did evidence His love by giving Himself freely and of His own accord Job 10. 18 even unto death for us or for our sins Gal. 1. 4. which action of Christ is illustrated first from the end for which He did give Himself even to be a propitiatory sacrifice unto God for expiating all the sins of the Elect as was fore-signified and typified by all those expiatory levitical sacrifices under the Old Testament whether those which were generally called by the name of offering under which were comprehended all sacrifices both of living beasts and of things destitute of life as flowre oyle frankincense and such-like or those which were more strictly called by the name of sacrifice and were of living beasts and therefore conjoyned with shedding of bloud as the word in the original implyeth which cometh from a root signifying to kill and slay hence it is that our crucified Lord doth here get the name both of an offering and sacrifice This action of Christ is illustrated next from its fruit and efficacy to wit the rendering of God well-pleased with Christ His offering up Himself and with the persons and performances of true Believers for His sake as sweet smelling odours by reason of their likenesse unto and agreement with our spirits are well-pleasing and satisfying unto such as find them Doct. 1. Whatever duties of mercy and kindnesse we do discharge unto our neighbour we do not sufficiently imitate God therein neither perform service acceptable to Him if they flow not from a principle of love to our neighbours good and edification and be not directed thereunto as the great end of our work next to the glory of God and therefore a man may do many externall duties of love and yet not be accepted of God when his great aim is to be seen of men Matth. 6. 2. or to merit heaven by his good works Rom. 9. 31 32. without any inward compassion or affection to his neighbour or a sincere aim towards his good for the Apostle sheweth we do only then rightly imitate God in the duties of kindnesse and love when all we do floweth from the inward affection of love and is from love to our neighbour directed to his good while he saith walk in love 2. Our walking in love to our neighbour as it is formerly explained and when it floweth from the fountain of love to God is an evidence of adoption and of one who is a dear childe to God for having spoken of their near relation to God as being His dear children he presently enjoyneth them to make so much evident by their walking in love 3. That God the Father doth pardon the sins of the Elect having given His Son unto death to purchase pardon for them doth speak His love unto those whom He doth pardon and that Jesus Christ did willingly give Himself to death for them doth no lesse speak His unspeakable love unto them also So that they are equally loved both by the Father and the Son for he saith as Christ also hath loved us the particle also relateth to the love of the Father in pardoning for Christs sake whereof he presently spoke 4. So necessary is love among Christians together with those many duties which flow from it So many are the snares and difficulties which Satan our own corrupt natures and our mutual infirmities do create in our way to keep us from it that God seeth it necessary to propose the love both of the Father and the Son as two most powerfull adamants to draw our backward hearts up towards it for saith he Walk in love as Christ also hath loved us 5. As Christs love to lost sinners being firmly believed is a strong argument constraining those whom He hath so loved to walk in love towards others that being one of the great things required by Him from those whom He loveth Joh. 15. 12. So this love of Christ to us ought to be a pattern and copy to which we are to be conformed in our love towards others and therefore our love ought to be free for so was His Job 15. 16 It ought to be fruitfull for so was His Gal. 1. 4. it ought to be constant for so was His Job 13. 1. it ought to be discreet not encouraging or humouring the person beloved in sin for so was His Matth. 16. 23. And walk in love as Christ hath loved us saith he 6. Then do we consider the love of Christ aright and so as to be effectually incited to our duty from the consideration of it when we look upon it in those effects which flowed from it and especially
10. 16. but also to confirm the grant of them to us if we believe Rom. 4. 11 yea and to exhibit a greater measure of those saving graces unto us upon our right using of them 1 Cor. 11. 24. therefore is it that the thing signified is ascribed unto the sign and seal Now the Apostle doth mention Baptism only and not the Lords Supper either because there is the same reason for both and therefore it was sufficient to expresse the one or because Baptism is the first and leading Sacrament and sealeth up our regeneration and new birth in a peculiar manner Tit. 3. 5. and therefore it is most appositly mentioned here where he speaketh of God's work in bringing sinners out of nature unto the state of grace The second mean and instrument which God maketh use of is the Word to wit the Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel and preached by sent Ministers Rom. 10. 15. which the Lord doth blesse for conveying grace to gracelesse sinners and so for sanctifying and cleansing them not by any vertue in the sound syllabs or sentences of this Word but by the effectuall working of His own Spirit Acts 16. 14. whereby He doth accompany His Word when and where He pleaseth Joh. 3. 8. Doct. 1. The love which an husband carrieth unto his wife ought to make it self evident not only in these things which tend to her welbeing in things temporall but also and chiefly in his sincere endeavours to bring about her spiritual and eternall good by labouring to instruct her in the saving knowledge of God in Christ 1 Pet. 3. 7. lovingly to admonish her for her faults Job 2. 10. and to pray with her and for her 1 Pet. 3. -7. for the example of Christs love to His Church which he is to imitate doth teach so much seing He from love gave Himself for the Church that He might sanctifie and cleanse her 2. As Gods Image was lost and forfeited by Adam's fall unto all his posterity so there was not any possible way for our recovering of it except a price and no lesse price than the bloud of Christ had been first payed to provoked justice for it for Christ behoved to give Himself and thereby purchase sanctification for us that so He might sanctifie and cleanse the Church 3. Our dying Lord had an actuall intention in due time to sanctifie and accordingly doth regenerate justifie and sanctifie yea and bring unto glory all those for whom he died and gave Himself a sacrifice and offering unto God for His intentions cannot be frustrated but He must see the travell of His soul Isa. 53. 11. Now that He intended to sanctifie all such is clear For He gave Himself for it that He might sanctifie and cleanse it 4. As all those for whom Christ our Lord did from love give Himself and whom by His death He intended to sanctifie were in themselves polluted and unclean lying in their bloud defiled both with the guilt of sin already committed and with the filthy vilenesse of sin yet indwelling Eph. 2. 1 -3. So such was the fervency of love in Christ to lost sinners and such was the vertue of His merit that no uncleannesse of this kind did make Him loath them or despare of getting them made clean For that He gave Himself for the Church to cleanse it supponeth that they were unclean and yet He loveth them and from love setteth about to cleanse them 5. The stain and blot of sin both in its filth and guilt hath so much sunk down in and polluted the whole man in soul and body that no liquor under heaven can wash it out or cleanse the soul from it but only the washing cleansing vertue of Christs most precious bloud For He gave Himself for the Church that He might cleanse it 6. This precious liquor of Christs bloud did not cleanse and sanctifie all those for whom He gave Himself so soon as it was shed upon the crosse no there neither was nor can be any cleansing of any by the bloud of Christ untill it be effectually applied unto the filthy soul for he mentioneth the Word and Sacraments as the means whereby Christ applieth the vertue of His death and ascribeth therefore this effect of cleansing unto them He gave Himself that He might cleanse it by the washing of water by the word 7. As this work and duty of applying the cleansing vertue of Christs death by a lively faith Act. 15. 9. is of all the other most difficult So the goodnesse of God hath provided many means by the help whereof we may be carried on towards it the chief whereof are the Word preached and the Sacraments administrated the former containing the charter or grant of Christ and of all His benefits from God unto every one who will receive Him Job 3. 16. The latter being the great seal of heaven annexed to this grant Rom. 4. 11. that thereby we may be more and more confirmed in the faith of it for His providing these means doth point at both the difficultie of applying Christ and his care to have us brought up to it That He might cleanse it by the washing of water and by the word 8. The Spirit of God prescribeth means unto Himself by which He bringeth about the work of grace in gracelesse sinners not to ty Himself absolutely and in all cases to such means but that we may be tyed to depend on Him in the use of them His ordinary way being to convey grace by these for though He may sanctifie some from the womb before they hear the Word or receive any Sacrament Jer. 1. 5. yet He holdeth these forth as the ordinary means by which He cleanseth even the washing of water by the word Vers. 27. That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish HEre is the second end of Christs giving Himself for His Church as also of His sanctifying it which end is not attained untill the life to come for besides that he hath spoken of the Churches state of grace ver 26 the words here used are so comprehensive and large that they cannot be well understood to have their full accomplishment untill Believers be brought by Christ unto that full perfection in grace which shall be attained in glory Which state of perfection is here set forth by that most perfect union and conjunction which the Church shall have with Christ being presented to Him as the Bride to the Bridegroom for the through accomplishing of the marriage by vertue of which most perfect union the Church shall be glorious that is perfectly holy and happy as he after explaineth shewing all evil whether of sin or misery shall be removed even the least spot of sin or wrinkle through old age or misery not excepted and that all contrary good shall be bestowed both perfect holinesse and happinesse in such a measure that
subject to her own husband so that what ever wives be otherwise for parts for birth for beauty for thrift for breeding if this be inlaking they want their chief ornament are dishonourable to God and a disgrace to their husbands for Paul doth hold it forth as their great lesson and the sum of all their duty Wives submit your selves unto your own husbands 4. There is no wife what ever be her birth parts or any other priviledge who is exempted from this ty of subjection to her own husband The law of nature God's ordinance and her own voluntary covenant do bind her to it for he speaketh indefinitely to all wives submit your selves 5. There is not any husband to whom this honour of submission from his own wife is not due no personall infirmity frowardnesse of nature no nor errour in the point of Religion doth deprive him of it 1 Cor. 7. 13. for he speaketh indefinitely also of husbands Wives submit your selves unto your own husbands 6. A wife can never discharge her duty in any measure of conscientious tendernesse towards her husband except she have an high esteem of the Lord Christ and be in the first place subject unto Him that so from love to Him she may subject her self to her husband not going without those bounds of submission which are consistent with her love to Christ for while he biddeth submit themselves unto their husbands as unto Christ he supposeth they had submitted to Christ already and speaketh to them as such Vers. 23. For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the Church and he is the saviour of the body THe Apostle doth next enforce this duty of submissive obedience upon wives from the ordinance of God who hath made the husband to be an head to his wife which similitude of an head taken from a naturall or politick body implyeth first the husbands eminency by reason of his sex the woman being the weaker vessel 1 Pet. 3. 7 and made for the man to wit an helper to him Gen. 2. 18. and the man not for the wife 1 Cor. 11. 9. as the head is more eminent than the body 2. It implyeth the husbands power and authority of government over his wife as the head hath power over the body to rule and direct it in which respect the man is called the image of God in a sense peculiar to himself which agreeth not to the woman 1 Cor. 11. 7. And it implyeth thirdly that ordinarily men are at least should be endued with a greater measure of knowledge prudence and other parts which they are to employ for the behoof of their wives 1 Cor. 14 35. even as the head is the seat of wisdom knowledge nerves and senses sending down influence for sense and motion to all the members upon all which grounds women ought in reason to be subject to their husbands Which argument he doth illustrate and enforce from the similitude of Christs headship over the Church whereof see chap. 1. ver 22 so that wives ought to submit themselves because God will have some resemblance of Christs authority over the Church held forth in the husbands authority over the wife I say some resemblance only for the comparative particle as holdeth forth not an equality but a similitude and likenesse and in some things only betwixt Christs headship over the Church and the husbands over the wife even in those things which I presently shew are implyed in the husbands headship which are some shaddows only of that eminency power and fulnesse of grace and perfections which are in our head Christ. But besides those the Apostle doth here expresse one thing wherein this resemblance doth also hold to wit that Christ as head is the Saviour of the body thereby implying that as Christs dominion over the Church His body doth tend to and is exercised in procuring and bringing about the Churches good and salvation So the husbands authority and eminency are given him for the like end even to procure the good and safety of his wife in defending her from injuries 1 Sam. 30. 18. providing for her 1 Tim. 5. 8. directing her in things necessary c. 1 Cor. 14. 35. and therefore the wife upon this consideration also ought to subject her self seing the husbands power and authority over her are given for her good Besides those doctrines which the Text thus explained doth expresly hold forth we may gather these consequences from it 1. It is not sufficient that wives do subject themselves to their husbands from respect to their own peace ease credit or to any thing of that sort but their subjection ought to flow from the conscience of and respect to that state and dignity wherein God hath placed their husbands above them so that their personall infirmities do not prevail so much to make them despise them as the dignity of their state to beget respect reverence and obedience towards them for Paul enforceth such a subjection as floweth from this ground while he saith for the husband is the head of the wife 2. There is no society though never so strictly tied together with strongest bonds which can comfortably subsist and keep together for any space of time except there be different degrees of superiours and inferiours some to govern and others to obey in the Lord among them for the wise Lord did see it necessary so to ordain even in conjugall society of husband and wife who are so strictly tied that both are but one flesh See ver 31. and yet the husband is made the head of the wife 3. Christians ought to be of such an heavenly frame of spirit as to take occasion from things civil or naturall which do occur in their ordinary employments to ascend to heavenly contemplations of things spirituall which have some resemblance to these other things which are among their hands for the Apostle teacheth so much while he leadeth husband wife from the consideration of the union order and duties of married parties to contemplate that sweet union and order which is betwixt Christ and His Church both here and in the following verses Even as Christ is the head of the Church saith he 4. Husbands and consequently other Superiours have a speciall piece of the image of Christ put upon them in respect of their power and authority over their inferiours given them of God whereby both inferiours may be afraid to vilifie and contemn their authority lest they be therein found defacers of the image of God and they themselves also may be taught to resemble Christ whose image they bear in employing their state and dignity so as they walk answerably to it if they would have that submission and respect from inferiours which is due unto it for Paul maketh that eminency and authority which husbands have over their wives a shaddow and resemblance of Christs power over His Church even as Christ is the head of the Church 5. As the members