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A66966 An historical narration of the life and death of Our Lord Jesus Christ in two parts. R. H., 1609-1678. 1685 (1685) Wing W3448; ESTC R14750 308,709 352

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Priest that after their second Captivity at Babylon conducted the People again into the land of promise and rebuilt the Temple of the Lord formerly demolished Against whom in the visions of the Prophet Zachary cloathed in poor and filthy Garments Satan before the Lord bringing great Accusation God rebukes him Satan for it and commands Joshuahs filthy Garments to be taken away from him and him to be clothed with change of Raiment and a Miter and Crown to be set upon his head See Zach. 3.3 c. and 6.11 c. In both which places is joined a promise concerning this our Jesus called there by the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Oriens Or as the Hebrew Germen who was typified by the other and who is our everlasting High Priest That he should build the Temple of our Lord and should bear the Glory and should sit and rule upon his Throne and be a Priest upon his Throne c. § 59 But tho Jesuses these two were before him and both sent deliverers of Gods people after a Captivity and both reconductors of Gods people into Canaan yet far short they came of this Jesus who saved mankind from a far higher slavery and of another kind than those other were and indeed from the only Captivity that could make us truly miserable Viz from the Captivity of sin Satan and death Triumphing in his Cross and Resurrection and descent of the Holy Ghost over these three the only terrible enemies of poor mankind who before that this Saviour came sat in chains and darkness and in the shadow of death trembling under Gods wrath and appointed to eternal torments § 60 This great Saviour came saith the Apostle 1 Thes 1.10 that he might save us from the wrath to come 1 For our salvation from Satan By him saith the Apostle Col. 1.15 we are delivered from the powers of Darkness And 1 Jo. 3.8 for this was he made manifest that he might destroy the works of the Devil And Col. 2.15 He spoiled Principalities and Powers and made an open shew and spectacle and triumph over them both in his life and in a Resurrection from the death that they had most cruelly contriv'd against him 2 And so for our saving from sin Sermo omni acceptione dignus saith the Apostle 1 Tim. 1.15 a comfortable saying beyond all other sayings this that Jesus came into the world to save sinners Especially when our conscience adds Quorum ego primus 3 Lastly for the salvation from death O Death saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.55 where is now thy sting O Grave where thy victory Thanks be to God who giveth us the victory over these thro our Lord Jesus And for the manner also of our Salvation by this Jesus much more misterious miraculous and indearing it was as to the delivered than that of any other Saviour whatever hath or can be For this Jesus came if I may so say not so much with his power to save us as with his patience and conquered not by his enemies sufferings but his own 1 To conquer those powerful spirits he took upon him weak flesh by this flesh they conquered us and in this flesh he redeemed us 2 To conquer Death Himself under-went and suffered Death but it could not hold him Act. 2.24 and by this his death destroyed Him that had the power of death Heb. 2.14 To save our lives he laid down his own Jo. 10.15 and healed our wounds with his own stripes Esay 53.5 3 So for sin He came in the likeness of sinful flesh to condemn sin in the flesh Rom. 8.3 And to free us from a Curse became himself a Curse for us Gal. 3.13 Such was this Salvation of this Jesus and such the way of it worthy a God O Blessed Jesu O ever blessed Name A name and the mistery thereof hid from ages and from generations and now made manifest and revealed What comfort could any other name expressing perhaps the Majesty or power or holiness or justice or eternity of this Prince have afforded to a poor guilty sinner trembling and despairing for the judgment to come but only this Or what comfort would this have aforded if it had bin only a Jesus from some temporal Tyranny from a Pharaoh or a Nabuchadnezzar or a Cesar and not a Jesus from the Devil or Hell or the Grave to which these other deliverances though for a time never so glorious would have left us still in bondage and in fear all our lives after a few daies to be devoured and swallowed up by them for ever Blessed name at which all the Spiritual Apolluons and destroyers of mankind all spiritual Pangs and anguishes of souls all the corporal messengers and arrows of death are afraid and tremble and from which only pronounced they do so often fly away Blessed name a poor sinners only consolation on his death-bed when the Grave opens her mouth for him and these spiritual Foes on every side invade him and Hell-fire eternal burns before him Blessed therefore be this name Jesus and exalted above all names at which Name let every knee bow of things in heaven in earth and under the earth and every tongue confess this Jesus Lord to the Glory of God the Father Amen § 61 After our Lord thus had received Circumcision as a Son of Abraham and entered into Gods Covenant and the name of Jesus as ordained the Saviour of the World and whilst Joseph and Mary abode still at Bethleem because this City near to Jerusalem and their own country very remote expecting the appointed time of the Purification of the Mother and presentment of the Child in the Temple certain persons both rich noble and Learned and probably much addicted to the study of Astronomy being directed by a Star came from the Oriental parts much more famed for wisdom to adore and do homage to this new-Born King and to present him with the most precious things those Countries afforded in behalf of the Gentiles as the poor and simple Shepheards being instructed by an Angel had done formerly in behalf of the Jews The Divine Providence so disposing it that our Lord to the Gentiles more contemplating the Creature should be manifested by a Star rather and the Jew as acquainted with the true worship of the Creatour by an Angel For both Jew and Gentile were now to have an equal share and a General Union in this Prince of Peace And the event corresponding exactly to these beginnings hath shewed us that after some few for the most part poorer and meaner and so humbler sort of the Jewish Nation were for the present by our Lord and his followers converted to the Faith represented by the Shepheards the riches and wisdom of the Gentiles hath bin brought into the obedience of the Gospel represented by the Magi till a compleat harvest of both shall be reaped by the Addition to them of the full Body of the Jews § 62 Now the Adoration and doing homage of the
An Historical Narration OF THE LIFE and DEATH OF OUR Lord Jesus Christ IN TWO PARTS Printed at the Theater in Oxford 1685. A brief account of what is contained IN THE FIRST PART of The History of our SAVIOURS LIFE § 1 OUR Saviour came about the year of the world 4000 § 2 when the Scepter of Judah was in the hand of Herod a stranger § 3 S. John Baptist being sent before § 4 an extraordinary person both as to his birth and manner of living § 5 but especially as to his preaching § 6 Virtues actions § 7 and sufferings § 8 Our Saviours conception in Galilee § 9 Of a most pure and holy Virgin § 12 of mean condition § 13 espoused to an husband § 14 and informed by an Angel of this great favour intended her by God § 15 whereupon she went to visit her cousin Elizabeth mother of the Baptist § 16 conversing with her § 17 three months § 18 Whence she with some apprehensions returned to her husband § 19 but he being a very discreet righteous and holy person whilst he was thinking of dismissing her privatly § 20 was admonished by an Angel not to do it because that her conception was by the Holy Ghost § 21 to whom Joseph most readily obeyed and continued to cohabit with her § 22 at Nazareth till the time of her delivery drew neer which was § 23 to be at Bethlehem § 24 whither an Edict of Augustus forced them to go § 25 and there they were necessitated to lodg very meanly § 27 in a Stable § 28 where our Saviour was born § 29 A great exaninition and humiliation of the Son of God! § 31 his parents onely being present and adoring him § 33 Mean-while an Angel published this birth to certain Shepheards there in the field watching their flocks § 35 and was seconded by many more § 36 who glorified God for this birth in a song § 36 as all the host of Heaven rejoyced for and in it § 38 The Shepheards immediatly came to Bethlehem to see and worship this new-born child § 39 Gods great wisdom in thus ordering these affairs § 41 The shepheards relation was a great consolation to both the Parents § 42 But his Mother especially kept this and such other favours of God to her self and pondered them in her heart § 43 our Lord was Circumcised § 46 to 55 A Digression concerning circumcision the nature and effects of it § 55 to 61. Of the giving him the name Jesus and his saving his people from their sins § 61 to 71. The history of the coming of the Wise men § 71 to 77 Of the presentation of him in the Temple § 77 to 80 whom Simeon took up in his arms and openly confessed § 80 as did also Anna a Prophetess § 81 Which publick testimonies alarmed Herod § 82 wherefore the Parents being returned to Bethlehem with him § 83 the Angel of the Lord warned Joseph to flee with them into Egypt § 84 to 89 which they did immediatly and 89 to 94 whilst Herod out of great fury slew all the children in Bethlehem hoping thereby to have slain our Lord himself § 94 they arrived safe in Egypt § 95 where they staied not long till § 96 to 100 Herod miserably died and 100 Joseph was commanded to return into his own countrey § 101 Who hearing that Archelaus reigned in Judea durst not go thither but retired into Galilee to his own city Nazareth § 102 Which seems foretold by the Prophets § 103 and prefigured by Samson § 104 Little written of his life or actions there till 30 years old § 105 Tho he was then also filled with all wisdom and knowledg § 108 onely at 12 years old he went up to Jerusalem where he § 109 staied after his Parents were gone away § 112 For supposing him in the company they went homeward without him but returning § 113 to Jerusalem found him among the Doctors § 114 Whereat his mother wondring demanded why he had so used his Parents to whom he answered that he must be about his Fathers business § 115 which answer they seemed not fully to comprehend but his mother § 116 laid this up in her heart where the Doctors and learned men seemed to take notice of his great wisdom After this he went § 117 to Nazareth with his Parents was obedient to them and increased in wisdom but the entire history of his life and actions from this his return to Nazareth till his baptism is not written by the Evangelists § 118 yet by some passages in scriptures divers particulars may be collected § 126 In that time seems to have happened the death of S. Joseph § 127 Our Lord being shortly to manifest himself and enter upon the exercise of his calling John Baptist was sent whose mission and preaching in described § 137 our Lord being to enter upon his ministery went to John to be baptized of him § 139 thence immediatly retiring to prayer the Father gave testimony to him by a visible descent of the Holy Ghost in the resemblance of a Dove and by an audible voice from heaven § 141 Which voice was afterwards several times reiterated and § 142 himself often urgeth it in his preaching § 143 But our Lord in the vehemency of the same spirit newly received departed immediatly into the wilderness where he remained in fasting prayer and other spiritual exercises till § 150 The Devil came to tempt him which he failed not to do divers waies till being foiled in all he departed and § 163 John continuing his preaching and openly testifying of our Saviour § 165 our Lord returned out of the wilderness § 166 shewed himself unto John and § 167 the next day entertained two of Johns Disciples one of them S. Andrew § 168 who brought in his brother Simon and § 170 shortly after our Lord himself called S. Philip and he Nathanael § 172 to whom our Lord forerepresented his future glory § 173 Our Savour going thence to Galilee arrived at Cana § 174 where he wrought the first miracle of changing water into wine § 176 thence to 〈…〉 § 177 with his Mother brethren and Disciples § 178 some whereof also were women § 179 Thence he went up to Jerusalem § 180 Where he first clensed the Temple and afterwards preached to the people § 181 Some of whom desired of him a sign for the confirmation of his authority § 182 But he onely told them that if they destroyed the temple of his body he would raise it again in three daies § 183 Yet some did believe in him § 184 particularly Nicodemus a Ruler with whom our Lord held a long discourse § 186. After the Paschal feast our Lord not trusting to the Hierosolymites went and preached in the countrey of Judea § 187 and ordered his converts to be baptized § 188 Whereupon John withdrew further towards Herods Jurisdiction § 189 Meanwhile there growing a little emulation of some of Johns Disciples seeing
fulfilled to stand silent by and hear his sweet colloquies with his Bride Jo. 3.29 § 7 2 Lastly after the like vertues and actions to our Saviors John also run before him in the like sufferings Persecuted by the Pharisees and call'd by them a Demoniack as our Savior was Luk. 7.30 34 persecuted by Herod and ungratefully imprisoned by him at the solicitation of his Wife whom before he had heard gladly and in many things obeyed his Holy Counsel Mark 6.20 and afterward kill'd by him only for bearing witness unto the truth a year before our Savior a well-dancing Girle being preferred before this great Prophet Kill d whilst Herods conscience pleaded for him as Pilat's did for Jesus and both were by both out of a base fear destroyed Kill'd at a solemn Feast in Galilee that was kept on Herods birth day as our Savior was at the Pascal feast none of the many great Guests there opening their mouth for him beheaded in prison privatly and unheard condemn'd without witnesses as Jesus by false ones Put to death by Herod partly out of religion too to keep his oath forsooth as Jesus was by the Jews to preserve their Law And then his Reverend Head and countenance which living none beheld without a religious awe and respect not committed to a decent Grave but carried away in triumph and serv'd up in a dish at Herods bloody Table who now feared no more his righteous Tongue there rejoiced over and made merry with the fate of great Saints Rev. 11.10 and exposed to the derision and abuse of his malicious enemies as also our Saviors sacred Head and countenance was treated but this when alive both by his blind folders and his Crowners hands knocked spit on peirced by them at pleasure and lastly as it was exposed to derision also for many hours upon the Cross With such sufferings God here rewards his worthiest Servants And thus much being said in honour of this great I know not whether I may say in some manner the greatest excepting the Blessed Virgin of Saints the Baptist Now let us turn our eyes toward our Blessed Lord that followed him § 8 Six months after the conception of the Baptist the same glorious Angel Gabriel was sent to an opposite side of Palestine far distant from the country of the Baptist that the validity of his testimony concerning Jesus might not be weakned by any acquaintance between these two Kinsmen to Nazareth a small and contemptible City see Jo. 1.46 of Galilee by the Jews a much despised Country see Jo. 7.41 52. a place the farthest remote from the Royal City and the Temple and from the noble Tribe of Judah and the Linage of David from which was expected the Messias and a place of extraordinary darkness and ignorance as we may gather from Mat. 4.15 16. a people that sat in darkness and in the region and shadow of death bordering upon and being it self half Gentile And this remote ignoble Region Gods wisdom chose for the habitation and education of his own Son and the Lord of all the Earth For which country of his our Savior suffered much mortification and scorn all his life from the great ones of the Jews saying that the Messias could not come from such a place and was also afterward by the enemies of Christianity Julian and others reproachfully call'd the Galilean And this we may imagine done by the Divine Wisdom for many reasons First that his own Son might here in all things represent to us the greatest humility and man might hereafter be ashamed to be proud and boast himself of the Nobleness of his City or Country And secondly that he might here the better be concealed and live in obscurity who was to suffer death from sinners before his publick exaltation and glory 3ly Again that where more darkness was there they might enjoy the more light and the efficacy of the Divine Grace more manifest it self in Mans weakness much of our Saviors teaching being spent amongst this dull and ignorant people and that the more to exalt Gods power from this dark region those persons should cheifly be taken by our Savior being his own Country-men who should enlighten the whole world 4ly And lastly that by this Countries confinment upon and mixture with the Gentiles God might shew his Son a common Savior coming to all not only the Jew but us Gentiles § 9 Hither was this great Angel sent from God in his name to salute and in a special manner espouse unto Him if I may use the expression of the Prophets Ezech. 16. Hos 2.19 that holy Virgin Mary a Daughter of David found out in this obscure corner so far removed from the Tribe and house of her progenitors and kindred a person singled and chosen out of all the daughters of Adam of all generations curiously viewed by his all-searching eies whom he thought the most worthy to make the Holy Mother of his only Son and the second Eve to bring salvation to mankind as the first had caused their ruin Which person since she was thus singularly gratious in Gods eies above all mortals that ever were and destined to that high honor as never any other creature was to have a God to be her Son and cloth himself with part of her substance to be nourished with her milk to hang on her Brests and to be carried about in her armes And since God makes all things proportionable and fit for the ends he designs them to we may justly imagine her purity and cleanness from sin her graces and perfections in all vertues to have surpassed those of the greatest Saints whatever And all those enamoured praises which God giveth in the Canticles to his Spouse the Church Behold thou art fair my Love behold thou art fair thou hast Doves eies Thou art all fair my Love there is no spot in thee A garden inclosed is my Spouse A spring shut up a Fountain sealed How fair and how pleasant art thou O Love for delights looking-forth as the morning fair as the Moon and clear as the Sun c. Cant. 4.1 7 12. 7.6 We may conceive in a singular manner to be verified above all other faithful in this Blessed Virgin the most high and the most elevated amongst all the members of this his Spouse the Church If therefore the Baptist who was to be but our Saviors Messenger was for this office filled with the Holy Ghost from the womb Luk. 1.15 Surely so was she who was to be his Mother and probably this is the reason that when as the Evangelist saith of Elizabeth and of Zacharie before their Doxologies and Hymns and of Peter and others before their Sermons that they were filled with the Holy Ghost yet no where is such expression used of this Blessed Virgin either before her Magnificat or on any other occasion because she from her very beginning was so § 10 And then she being supposed so sanctified from the womb First what holy stories see
Roman Governour of Syria for a punishment of this Fact caused two thousand more of them to be crucified And Archelaus going to Rome there to solicit an establishment of his Kingship from the Emperour tho the Jews there also supplicated against him for the liberty of their Nation at least to be freed from any particular King and to be subjected only to the Roman President of Syria and also the more to promote their sute displayed before the Emperour and his Court the divine hand being in it all the tyrannical and luxurious life of Herod his Father yet their designs were totally frustrated And so were Archelaus his too For Augustus saith Josephus Antiq. l. 17. c. 17. Archelaum quidem Regem non pronunciavit Dimidiae vero Judeae regionis quae Herodi tributa reddebat Toparcham constituit Spondens et Regiam quoque dignitatem si laboribus favoribus circa semetipsum meritus appareret But the issue concerning him was that after about nine years continuance in this Dignity upon a new complaint of the Jews for his crimes he was deposed and banished and his Estate confiscated by Augustus and the like was the fate of his Brother Herod the Tetrarch of Galilee And the Jews still became more immediatly subject to the Roman Yoke § 99 It is also observed by some for the perfect fulfilling of the prophecy of Esay chap 7.14 15 16. which is expressly applyed to the Blessed Virgin Mary and our Lord Mat. 1.23 That as there before Esaiah's child the type of our Lord Esai 8.18 and born of a Prophetess and Holy-woman Esai 8.4 5 representing our Blessed Lady was two years old so as to discern food grateful from ungrateful or so as plainly to speak my Father and my Mother the two Kings of Samaria and Damascus that were enemies to Gods Church were to be taken away by the Executioner of the Divine Justice the King of Assyria so before our Lord came to the same age Herod who was King of Samaria as well as Judea and Oboda the King of Damascus some few months before Herod see Josephus Antiq. l. 16. c. 10. were removed by death and their Kingdomes also by Augustus the King then also of Assyria taken away so as that their posterity did not succeed in the same Title or extent of Power The Mystical signification of all which is that the former Kingdom of Satan should now be destroyed and he cast out upon the coming and Birth of our Lord. At this very time also One Judas in Galilee under pretence of recovering liberty gathered forces and pillaged the Country against whom Varus the Roman Prefect of Syria sent part of his Army thither besieged and took Sephoris and subdued the Rebels See Antiq. l 17. c. 15. Josephus also mentions many others every where raising tumults in the absence of Archelaus during all which frights and the sword travelling through the coasts of Judea to revenge their contempt of the new-born Messiah the Blessed Virgin with our Lord and S. Joseph enjoyed in Egypt a peaceful security § 100 Herod in being thus taken away who was the last King of the Nation of the Jews for Archelaus as is said was not admitted to the same Dignity nor had the same extent of Dominion being made by Augustus Toparcha or chief Governour of Judea not Galilee all tumults there quieted and Joseph and Maries country now under anothers command the news thereof was brought by the Angel to Joseph that he should return into the land of Israel with this Child that was the true King thereof for that they were dead now that sought his life And this return of our Lord we find lively prefigured in Moses Exod. 4.19 a Deliverer also of Gods people and a Type of our Lord who when Pharaoh as here Herod a little before this deliverance had taken order for all the Male-children of the the Israelites to be put to death miraculously escaped and who afterward for his safety had fled to Midian from whence God commanded him to return unto his people for that they were now dead that sought his life Where also we may observe the way by which God usually delivers and provides for his Servants when in any strait Viz. not on a suddain and in hast and by main strength and force when as indeed all things are alwaies universally subject to his power but tacitly and without any disturbance of the course of other human affairs and as it were attending an opportunity by a secret but effectual flection and winding of these not so easily discernable by men in all things to serve his designs § 101 Joseph also retaining some dread of Archelaus one who had already shed much blood in quelling an Insurrection of the Jews was also admonished by the Angel Matt. 2.22 not to return again to Bethleem tho perhaps he might have had some thoughts thereof as imagining it Gods pleasure that this child should be educated in that honourable City of David where he was born and which was so near to the Royal City of Jerusalem but rather to his own City Nazareth where also the strange occurrences in our Lord's birth were utterly unknown And indeed this obscure and rude place in the out-skirts of the Nation was preordained by the Divine wisdom for the place of our Lords Education as necessary for the accomplishing of his sufferings and the redemption of the world by his Death that the grosly-unbelieving Jews and obstinate Pharises notwithstanding all the wisdom and mighty works that appeared in him might be the more blinded and our Lord less suspected for what he was For so still sometimes by good men it was argued against him Num ex Nazareth potest aliquid boni esse Jo. 1.46 and Jo. 7.52 Scrutare vide said the High Priest and Pharisees to Nicodemus quia à Galilea Propheta non surget § 102 Yet S. Matthew Mat. 2.23 observes First that the Prophets also have given some prenotice of this his Habitation and Title chap. 2.23 that he should be called a Nazareen perhaps alluding to Esai 11.1 calling him Nazar Flos surculus or Germen de radice Isai exurgens with which agrees Zech. 3.8 6.12 Behold the Lord whose name is the Branch Whence also Nazareth is supposed to take its Name the territory there being observed to abound exceedingly with variety of odoriferous Plants and Flowers to this day Of which thus Eugen. Rogerus in his Description of the Holy-Land who lived at Nazareth for some time in an house of his Order there This City is well called a Flower for I might aver saith he that having run through many Realms and viewed many Provinces as well of Asia as Africk and Europe I never saw any comparable to this of Nazareth for the great number of fair and pleasant Odoriferous Flowers and Plants which grow there through all the seasons of the year For from the Month of December even to April all the little Hills Fields
me to the people by the Holy Ghost in the shape of a Dove sitting upon him and I saw and now bear record that this is the Son of God c. § 167 Upon which speeches concerning him remaining at some distance t is probable that our Lord intending the disclosing of himself only by certain degrees without any nearer approaches to John presently left him and the multitude admiring but not yet following him and retired himself where God his Father had provided him an entertainment till the next day toward evening When as two of Johns frequent Auditors and Disciples were standing with him which Disciples our Lord meant to receive into his own service he again on a suddain shewed himself Jo. 1.36 Whom John beholding as he walked at a distance iterated his former testimony concerning him And joyfully said to them that there went the Lamb of God whom and not him the world was to adore and follow So that his two Disciples one of which was Andrew Simon Peters Brother the other not named by John is supposed to be himself especially since he so punctually relates the Circumstances as if himself present much moved herewith and perhaps also expresly directed by the Baptist to apply themselves to this most Holy Master so much excelling him with much reverence straight made toward and silently followed our Lord not presuming as yet to say any thing to him but observing his motions that they might not lose him and this perhaps might be because the day before upon Johns like Encomiums he had suddainly with-drawn himself from the People Our Lord looking back upon them asked them whom or what they sought for they calling him Rabbi a Title given to no ordinary person Mat. 23.7 desired to know his lodging and where they might repair to him it wanting then only two hours of night since they had heard from the Baptist such a Testimony of the supreme dignity of his person and were by him referred to his conduct He courteously invited them to it and there they staid with him the short remainder of the day where by his heavenly Discourse to them we may imagine such as to Nicodemus concerning the Kingdome of God and his comeing into the world for the Redemption of man they were exceedingly confirmed in the belief of John's testimony and had their hearts enflamed by his discourses in such a manner as those that went with him to Emaus as may be gathered from Andrew's language afterward to his Brother Peter Jo. 1.41 § 168 The next morning or perhaps the same night Andrew repairing to his Brother Simon Peter For it seems their extraordinary piety as also it seems a special Divine Providence had brought both of them from their fishing-trade for a time to hear and follow the Baptist told him the joyful news of their having found the Messias upon their Masters the Baptists indication of him and the familiar entertainment they had received from him Simon with his wonted fervour presently desired to be brought to him Our Lord at the first sight of him to increase his faith called him by his name and told him whose son he was and also then prophecied the fore-seen good pleasure of God his Father concerning him that he should be called Cephas and should be the principal Foundation-stone of his Church as our Lord more at large expounded it unto him afterward in Mat. 16.18 § 169 Here were now three Disciples gathered to our Lord sufficiently confirmed in their belief from his manifesting to them his knowledg of every thing concerning them the like to which they had not seen in the Baptist This day probably spent in instructing these Neophyts the next morning our Lord to check a little for the present the spreading of his Fame this Sun of righteousness being sometime to shine forth and then again to be veiled and so by degrees to discover his glories as not to hinder his sufferings which were also to be fulfilled and to leave John a more free Testimony of him in his absence purposed to withdraw himself for a while from so great a conflux of People and from these parts so near Jerusalem into Galilee for the consolation of his Holy Mother and kindred after a long absence and whither also the domestick affairs of his newly admitted Disciples Galileans as well as he made them most ready to accompany him Who also had already learnt either from himself or the Baptist his Name Parents Education at Nazareth c. § 170 Setting forth this day for his journey our Lord cast his eies upon Philip a Galilean also and fellow-Townsman of Peter and Andrew perhaps then found in their company as a familiar acquaintance and with whom they had already entertained some discourse concerning Jesus otherwise Philip could not have bin so punctual in that which he said to Nathaniel Our Lord seeing his faith and interiour inclinations presently called and admitted him into the Society who was afterward a chief person among the Apostles by whom the devout strangers that came to Jerusalem to worship Jo. 12.20 made their addresses to our Lord. He presently set all on fire to carry it more forward went to seek out Nathaniel an intimate friend of his and it seems also a man of letters Who is probably conjectured from his early calling here and from Jo. 21.1 14. to have bin one of our Lords twelve Apostles called Bartholomew so as Simon Peter is Bar-Jona in which Roll of them he is still coupled to Philip. See 2. Part. § whom espying alone under a fig-tree perhaps at his Devotions he called him to him and told him the Messias that Moses and the Prophets had spoken so much of was come into the world and that this person was Jesus of Nazareth the son of Joseph For thus much he and the rest had learnt concerning our Lord's secular condition Nathaniel as the more learned commonly are less credulous put a check to Philips forwardness especially when naming Moses and the Prophets to him telling him that surely there was no Prophet that foretold the Messias should come out of Nazareth which thing indeed was a great blind not only to Nathaniel here but generally to the learned Jews that they would not believe Jesus the Christ and so darkned in this proceeded to fulfil the other prophecies in working his death Philip without farther disute bid him but approach to him and he would be abundantly satisfied So soon as our Lord beheld him he manifested to him his exact knowledg whom he saw wavering in faith of all the former course of his life and that he saw him and what he was doing when alone under the Fig-tree before Philip called him To this omniscience of our Lord Nathaniel now as Simon Peter a little before astonished thereat yeilds up himself and contemning his scruple about Nazareth made a most noble Confession of our Lord doubtless from the same Spirit of God in him as S. Peter did afterward Mat.
most unreasonably a further sign from him and urged that Moses had given them Manna from Heaven and there also in like manner our Lord presently told them of his Death and his feeding them with his Flesh and Blood and then of their having everlasting life by it and his raising them up at the last day things at which some of them also then took great offence So here also they whether misconstruing his words as if he had said first that he would destroy their Temple for this at his Death they urged against him and the false witness Mark. 14.5 to speak home interposeth that he said he would destroy the Temple made with hands and in three daies raise up another made without hands and then that he in three daies would build it again a Temple that they said was forty six years in building in the one made him impious in the other ridiculous and so turned his mention of this his greatest work for the salvation of mankind into a great scorn and flighting of him and into the cause of a quarel against him till at last they contrived his Death the destroying of the Temple he here speaks of and brought these his words against him to justify it and so He in raising up again this Temple of his Deity thus destroyed exhibited to the World this great Sign which at this beginning of his preaching he engaged here This was the success of our Lords first Sermon and appearance amongst them as to the Pharisees and their followers already much degusted with him and filled with envy § 183 Yet many others there were that seeing his Miracles believed on him at least that he was some great Prophet sent from God among whom was Nicodemus But our Lord saith the Evangelist did not commit himself unto them admitting them not into his familiar society nor relied on their fidelity for he knew well what was in them and that several of them would fall away and especially in his last tryal most unworthily desert him Therefore our Lord usually when at Jerusalem after his publick teaching them in the Temple and his daies work there done withdrew himself and had no private meetings and conferences as he said at his tryal that in secret he had said nothing and many times at night removed with his Disciples out of the City neither though several in the Country are mentioned do we hear of our Lords admitting any entertainments in the City though we may presume he wanted not some Invitations And all this was but necessary for deferring the Conspiracies of his enemies till the due time of his offering-up appointed by his Father § 184 Our Lord continuing his publick teaching in the Temple and doing Miracles during the Paschal feast Nicodemus a Pharisee a ruler of the Jews as he is stiled here vers 1. One of the Sanedrim and a person studied in the law for our Lord chap. 3. vers 10. stiles him a Master in Israel shewing also herein to him that he knew who he was and on that account blames his ignorance being already a Convert as it is said Jo. 12.42 many other among the chief Rulers were afterward but timorous to confess him came privatly to our Lord by night for fear of losing his Reputation with his fellow-Rulers which shews a great envy and hatred toward our Lord already kindled in them to be farther instructed of him in the matters of the Kingdom of God and life eternal confessing to him that his Miracles had convinced him that he was an extraordinary Teacher sent from God Our Lord very courteously received him and in a few words manifested to him fully who himself was and the whole substance of the Gospel At the first he began to acquaint him with the first Foundation of the Christian Religion Regeneration which at the beginning he proposed some what obscurely perhaps to humble Nicodemus his too much conceit of his own knowledg telling him that to enter into the Kingdom of God one must necessarily be born again which word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated here again signifies also from above which Nicodemus much wondring at and speaking of entring again into our Mothers womb our Lord graciously explained it to him that he must be born again not of a woman or the flesh which would produce nothing but flesh but of water the external Ceremony appointed by God to be used in the new birth signifying a being cleansed and purifyed from former sin and of the Spirit which might render a man spiritual and enabled therewith to bring forth good works which spirit inspires as it pleaseth 1 Cor. 12.4 Mark 4.27 unperceived by sense and being as the wind of which we know not whence or whither it goes but by its effects do discern the presence thereof and then gently reflected on Nicodemus his ignorance so to render him more docible and humble that he being a Master in Israel should know nothing of this For this Holy Spirit and our Renovation by it is frequently spoken of in the Old Testament and so also many types of Baptism and of the Sacraments of the new Testament found there See Psal 50.12 13 14 9. 142.10 11. Ezec. 11.36 1 Cor. 10.2 3 4. Further told him that these things he now spake to him were the lowest matters but that there was much higher that he came to reveal to mankind from Heaven and from God his Father For that he was the only begotten Son of God descended from Heaven and again ascendeth thither and which also according to his Divinity remains alwaies there who spake nothing but what he knew and had seen with the Father See the like vers 32. and Jo. 8.38 5.19 30. Because God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that men might not perish but have everlasting life i. e so many as believed in him and that as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the Wilderness so he was to be lifted up See the like Jo. 8.28 So acquainting him but obscurely with his death sufferings That whosoever stung with sin beheld and believed on him might not perish but that those whoso did not believe on him were already condemned by occasion of his preaching to them not for their former sins which he came to take away but for their disbelief See Jo. 9.39 12.47 48. without which belief in him no forgiveness of Sin That he was the Light that was come into the world avoided only by those whose works were evil and so who feared the discovery of them by it and therefore made such opposition to him But that he that did truth would come to it as not fearing the manifesting of his deeds by it § 185 All these things he gratiously revealed to Nicodemus which delivered with his accustomed Majesty and Power must needs elevate Nicodemus into the highest admiration and reverence of his person love and gratitude towards his mercy and familiar condescendence especially having already seen his mighty
take up his bed and walk Upon which the impotent man was instantly cured and carrying his bed on the Sabbath was presently questioned by the Jews probably these inquirers being either the Pharisees great zelots for the Sabbath or some of their Disciples for the breach of it in so doing who answered them that he was bid to do so by the person that cured him But our Lord there being a throng of people in the place he presently conveyed himself away and returned into the Temple All which occasioned the cure to be more taken notice of and the person looked after that had done it nor could the poor man give any account of him But a little after he repairing also to the Temple probably there to render more solemn thanks to God for his cure Our Lord now discovers himself to him and minding him of the mercy he had received exhorted him to amendment of life least a worse thing yet should happen unto him in die irae if not in this Rom. 2.4 5. yet after this life § 245 The man after he had paid his due adoration and thanks hasted to the former busy enquirers after the Author of his cure and told them it was Jesus doubtless thinking he should advance his honour and esteem with them thereby But it happened much otherwise for instead of this they sought his death for his own breaking in doing this cure and causing the other man also to break the Sabbath Our Lord then questioned by them concerning it as he was often for the like and made them great variety of answers and defences for it by which they were still silenced at this time answers them as absolute Lord of the Sabbath that he was to do the works for which God his Father had sent him among which was restoring the lame giving sight to the blind c. Mat. 11.5 whether this were on Sabbath or week daies or whoever should suffer scandal thereat But his answer now again was made by them worse than his fault collecting hence an higher accusation for destroying him because faith the Text he not only hath broken the Sababth Jo. 5.18 but said also that God was his Father and made himself equal with God which equality had the Jews miscollected from our Lords words as the Arrians say they did probably our Lord or the Evangelist would have reflected on it § 246 But our Lord well knowing his time not yet come of being delivered into their hands with the same undaunted courage and infinite charity and zeal after their salvation prosecuted his former discourse and took this opportunity to declare to them plainly and fully who he was his Union and intimacy with God his Father and why he was sent by and from him into the world and with what authority and power that all might provide for their Salvation by the believing in and the honouring of him as they did the Father See his Sermon made to them Jo. 5. The chief Contents whereof were these That in nothing he sought his own will our Lord having the same natural affections as other men but these in all things subjected to the Divine good pleasure and disposal but the will of his Father That he did nothing of himself but what he saw his Father do and that as he heard of him so he judged that all judgment also was by the Father committed into his hands see the like Mat. 11.27 Jo. 3.35 and the power of doing whatever the Father doth That every one who heard his words and believed that God had sent him should not come into condemnation .i. e. for his former sins now remitted in him but was passed from death to life speaking of death and life spiritual and eternal and of their regeneration thereto by the Spirit See 1 Jo. 3.14 that they who marvelled now so much at the present works he did namely in curing of diseases c. should yet hereafter see far greater from him namely upon the hearing of his voice by the Archangel all that are in their graves coming forth and receiving from him their final doome the good to the resurrection of life the evil to the resurrection of damnation the like things of his hereafter coming in the clouds c. he told to them before his passion Mat. 26.64 and to Nathanael Jo. 1.51 Angels waiting upon him and going hither and thither as he sent them that therefore it was the Fathers pleasure that all should believe in and do honour unto the Son as they did to the Father whose words and actions were the same and they saw and heard God the Father in the Son And concerning his being such a person and the words he spake to them Truth that they had an abundant testimony though considering his person his own was sufficient Jo. 8.14 16. First from his Father 1 both that which he gave them from heaven concerning him at his Baptism the like to which was done twice afterwards at our Lords tranfiguration before three witnesses Mat. 17.5 which is mentioned again by S. Peter 2 Epis 1.16 17. and at his solemn entrance into Jerusalem before his passion God the Father then from heaven speaking to him Jo. 12.20 23. perhaps for a testimony also to the Greeks or Gentiles see Jo. 7.35 who then first admitted by the Apostles came to worship and to make their humble addresses to him which foresignifyed salvation to be shortly after communicated to them by his now approaching death And a-again 2ly that testimony which his Father gave to him in the Miracles which he wrought by him which testimony he frequently urgeth See Jo. 10.25 38. 15.24 2ly A Testimony from John the Baptist though having that of God he needed not that of men which John was sent before him amongst them as a burning and shining light till the time he was to be eclipsed and silenced and they some of them at least were willing for a season to rejoyce in his light 3ly Testimony also from the Scriptures in which they thought were contained the way to eternal life which Scriptures had they duly searched they might have found them abundantly witnessing of him Lastly testimony from their lawgiver Moses in whom they had so much confidence who also spake clearly of him Jo. 1.45 Deut. 18.15.18 where upon petitioning that they might not hear again the voice of God nor see that terrible fire c he tells them that God would raise them up a Prophet like unto him and would put his own words into his mouth c and to him they should hearken whose words would sufficiently accuse unto God his Father their infidelity though our Lord should hold his peace But that notwithstanding such witness and evidences they would not believe because they had not the love of God in them nor as our Lord did sought the honour that only cometh from him through whatever worldly disesteem but was envious ambitious which shews he spake chiefly to the Pharisees and
meo custodiam cum consisteret Peccator adversum me Psal 37.13 Opprobrium insipienti dedisti me And obmutui non aperui os meum quia tu fecifti Qui inquirebant mala mihi locuti sunt vanitates dolos c. Ego autem tanquam surdus non audiebam sicut mutus non aperiens os suum And Factus sum sicut homo non audiens non habens in ore suo redargutiones Ego in flagella paratus sum dolor meus in conspectu meo Quoniam iniquitatem meam That of the whole world taken upon me annuntiabo cogitabo pro peccato meo i.e. meorum § 34 This silence as the High Priest much wondred at so he little imagined the reason of it seeing the great advantages he had of a Reply And convinced already without his Plea of the vanity and contradiction of the accusation deviseth another way that might succeed better and being the main matter upon the stage that had bin many times undoubtedly heard from him and which either affirmed or denyed must equally ruin him And that he might no way be defeated by his silence he solemnly adjures him by the living God a custome amongst the Jews in their Courts where wanting some other Evidence see 1 Kings 8.31.32 Numb 5.19 1 Thess 5.27 to declare then openly whether indeed he was the Messias and the Son of God Which if he now denyed having before professed it he might pass for a grand Impostor and Deceiver formerly or if he confessed it with the Court it amounted to blasphemy and the punishment thereof Death and which the divine Wisdom then so ordered That what our Lord had so often declared in his life and confirmed with Miracles he might also witness before all the world at his Death and seal this great truth with his blood for the greater confirming of true Believers and greater conviction of all Opposers at the day of Judgment § 35 Thus therefore our Lord presently confessed openly what he was without those qualifications with which formerly he was wont sometimes to veil it thereby not to prevent or anticipate his sufferings His answer there Thou sayest that I am being amongst the Jews a modest way of Asseveration concerning a thing that includes some self-dignity or commendation Thou sayest that I am being as much as thou sayest that which I am See the same language used by our Lord before to Judas Mat. 26.25 and the High Priest his renting his clothes for Blasphemy shews our Lords Answer to be understood as a clear confession Therefore S. Mark puts instead of it more breifly I am And it may be here observed that when as he said the same thing often in his life time and they upon it had charged him with blasphemy and so went about to stone and kill him see Jo. 5.18 Jo. 10.32 c. He there confuted them and stopped their mouths by many proofs that this was no falshood or blasphemy viz. by his so many miraculous works by the Testimony of the Holy Baptist by the immediate testimony of his Father from heaven lastly by the infallible Scriptures calling those Gods to whom God had given some extraordinary commission or authority whereas himself had received beyond them such a Plenitude of Sanctification appearing by the Descent of the Holy Ghost upon him at his Baptism by the Purity of his life and Doctrine and mighty works see Jo. 5.20 21 33 37. the 10.33 37 yet here at their crying Blasphemy he repeats no such defence notwithstanding all the Nation could witness the truth of it but retireth again to his former silence as loath to disappoint their purpose now his hour was come § 36 Only in great pity and charity to his impious oppressors and to remove the scandal taken at that which ought to be infinitely admired his present voluntarily-assumed humiliation he modestly tells them that although these titles he owned might seem somewhat disfutable to his present low condition yet one day their eyes should behold this now so mean a Son of man exalted to sit on the right hand of Power as David had foretold of the Messias Psal 109.1 which Messias his sitting on the right hand of Power and so being Davids Lord the Pharisees could not reconcile with the Messias being also Davids Son when our Lord asked them this question Mat. 22.44 No more than they could now his bonds with it and that they should also see him come in the clouds of heaven as Daniel had foretold of the Messias Dan. 7.13 to judg the world and even them his then Judges Of which he had also in his preaching told his auditory many times before see Mat. 16.27 Where advising them not to mind the gain of this world but to save their poor Souls in the next he tells them that the Son of man for so he stiles himself also there shall come in the glory of his Father which shewed him the Son to another higher than man with his Angels and then reward every one according to his works And this his premonition here given to his unjust Judges shall again bear witness against them in that his day of Judgment when saith the Prophet Zachary chap. 12. Aspicient in eum quem transfixerunt And Ecce venit in nubibus videbit eum omnis oculus qui eum pupugerunt saith S. John Apoc. 1.7 Nay a-modo saith S. Matthew chap. 26.64 very suddenly within three daies after his saying this they should see the beginning of this his Exaltation and Glory He being exalted by the right hand of God saith S. Peter Acts 2.33 after his Resurrection and Ascension hath shewed forth this ye now see and hear In which speech of our Lord thus standing at the bar we may observe that his singular modesty was accompanied with a great freedom Authority and Majesty Nor had their treatment any way daunted him or remitted the resolution and courage belonging to an innocent person to the dignity of his office and to the necessary confession of truth as appears in his whole carriage at his apprehension Are ye come out as against a Theif c. I sate with you teaching in the Temple c. And here at his appearance before the High Priests and Jewish Courts Askest thou me ask them that heard me And afterwards before the Roman Governor sayest thou this of thy self c. And for this cause come I into the world c. And every one that is of the Truth heareth my voice And Thou couldest have no Power against me but what is given thee from above Jo. 19.11 § 37 But this forewarning them of his Exaltation and judgment to come which should have struck some fear into them and in which his Servant S. Paul had better success Acts 24.25 their malice made also ill use of and improved it so much more to compleat his blasphemy And presently the High Priest fell a rending his clothes as it was the manner
cepissent jam spacium crucibus deerat corporibus cruces and this misery brought upon them when at this great Festival the whole body of the Nation as it were was gathered together in Jerusalem and so was encompassed and shut up there by the Romans See Euseb Ecclesiast Hist lib. 3. cap. 5. and Joseph de Bell. Judaic lib. 7. cap. 17. Ab omnibus regionibus ad Azymorum diem festum congregati bello subito circumfusi sunt c. Thus they devoted themselves here to God's Justice and thus it happened to them But their words taken in a better sense and as the divine goodness and pity is pleased to interpret them for all Penitents are a Prayer piously offered not only by them but the whole world to his offended Majesty to be saved through the sprinkling upon them of the blood of Jesus Our Lord's blood also crying to God from the Earth not as that of Abel or any other just Person 's shed by the impious for vengeance but for Mercy Nor hath the whole world any salvation or shelter but from his blood being upon it and its children for ever who also all had a hand both Jew and Gentile in offering it and in this sense God also will admit this prayer to be fulfilled see Rom. 11. but in the last place upon this most miserable Nation § 80 The Governour after having thus washed his hands sate down again and gave the final sentence upon our Lord released to them their precious choice Barabbas and committed Jesus to the Centurion and his Soldiers to be crucified according to their request § 81 Now this death on the Cross which our Lord was sentenced to and the Jews with so great clamour called for as it was often foretold expressly by our Lord see Mat. 20.19 Jo. 18.32 and other-while called by him his Exaltation Jo. 12.32 And I if I be exalted from the earth will draw all men unto me signifying saith the Evangelist what death he should die and by the context vers 34. it appears the people well understood his language And again Jo. 8.28 When ye have saith he exalted the Son of man then shall ye know that I am he So was it foresignified by many expressions in the Old Testament See Psal 21.17 The Council of the malignant hath besieged me they have digged my hands and my feet they have numbred in that racking posture all my bones they have beheld and considered me every limb of me stretched out before them and then speaking of his being stript of his cloaths They have divided my garments amongst them and upon my Vesture they cast lots To which stripping of him also that expression seems chiefly to relate where he saith Psal 68.8 That Confusion covered his face See Zachary 13.6 where the Prophet mentions this smiting of his Pastor and the man that clave to him and so scattering of his sheep vers 7. speaking thus of his being treated by his nearest relations as a false Prophet that he shall be asked What are these wounds in the midst of thy hands and he shall answer with these was I wounded in the house of my friends To which wounds also is applied that loving expression Esay 49.16 Ego tamen non obliviscar tui in manibus meis descripsi te I have engraven thee upon the palmes of my hands See Zech. 12.10 where speaking of the conversion of the Jews in the latter times and the great sorrow they shall then have for their crucifying their Messias the Prophet saith Et adspicient ad me quem confixerunt plangent eum planctu quasi unigenitum c. See Jer. 11.19 Ego quasi agnus mansuetus qui portatur ad victimam cogitaverunt super me consilia dicentes mittamus lignum in panem ejus for his bread eradamus eum de terra viventium To it likewise seems to relate Esay 52.13 Ecce intelligit servus meus exaltabitur elevabitur sublimis erit valde For it follows Sicut obstupuerunt super te multi inglorius erit inter viros aspectus ejus forma ejus inter filios hominum like to vers 2. of the next chapter Iste asperget gentes multas And Esay 11.12 Et levabit signum in nationes Concerning his thirst also in the violent and fervorous heat of such lingring pains see Psal 21.16 Aruit tanquam testa virtus mea lingua mea adhaesit faucibus meis And Psal 68.22 Dederunt in escam meam fel in siti mea potaverunt me aceto Typified also this death of the Cross was by many instruments of the peoples preservation in the Old Testament By the Tree of life provided to remedy the mischiefs done by the Tree of Good and Evil by the blood of the Lamb sprinkled upon the posts of the door that the destroying Angel seeing it might pass-over Gods people by Moses his Rod smiting the Rock and bringing out of it a fountain of water for refeshing the people By the Brasen Serpent listed up on high and fastned to a pole curing all that looked upon it of the other fiery Serpents bitings which our Lord also mentions as a Type of his own Elevation and drawing the eies of all upon him Jo. 12.32 Jo. 3.14 Sicut Moyses exaltavit serpentem in deserto ita exaltari oportet filium hominis ut omnis qui credit in ipsum looks upon him with the eie of faith non pereat By the Expansion of Moses his Armes and Hands on high made in the Mount for the conquest of Amalek which posture of his also by others help was continued for several hours and being any way altered changed presently the fortune of the battel By Elias his lying with armes stretched out upon the Child to raise him again to life By marking with the letter Thau the form of a cross the foreheads of those that were to be saved from the slaughter of the six destroying Angels Ezech. 9.4 Lastly by Abraham's only Son Isaac carrying the wood upon which he was afterwards laid and destined to be Sacrificed But God was more favourable and kind to Abraham if I may so say than to himself § 82 And as this manner of death was often foresignified and typified in the Old Testament so doth it seem before all other to have bin chosen by the Divine Counsel and our Lords designment who as he voluntarily suffered for us so what death he pleased for many special reasons First because his suffering being to save us and we by our sins having incurred the curse of God and so he for us taking this curse upon himself this was that special death which had Gods curse annexed to it Deut. 21.23 when upon some grievous crime God required the Malefactor to be hanged up upon a Tree before the Sun and as it were openly in his sight to be hanged up as unworthy to touch or tread upon the Sanctified land and not to be dispatched in a moment as by stoning or
this Mary had bin the Blessed Virgin 's own sister her Name would not have bin also Mary this being not usual or convenient to call two sisters undistinguishable by the same Name There was also present Salome John's Mother and others and John likewise our Lords beloved Disciple whose confidence above the rest we saw in the High Priests Palace was there with them but likely none other of the Eleven at least so near affraid of being apprehended if they should have appeared and perhaps John more presuming here as in the Palace because known to the High Priest Here then stood the sad Mother of our Lord beholding and hearing all that was done to and said against her Son with the like patience and resignation as he suffered it and ready with Abraham for the love of God to have offered him up her self had he commanded it Here she and the rest heard also that admirable confession of our Lord by the penitent Thief and our Lord 's gracious answer to him which must needs be a great consolation to them After which Answer our Lord looking down upon his Mother and compassionating her condition as well as Grief spake to her first and calling her Woman perhaps for preventing those affronts to which her near relation to him hated of all if it had bin known made her liable recommended John his beloved Disciple to her love and affection instead of himself as one that thence forward would perform the duty and observance to her of a Son and then speaking to John recommended to him the care and providing for her now aged about fifty and a desolate widow Joseph being formerly dead and now also her only Son taken from her as his Mother he being a single person and Virgin as she and having no Wife or family of his own to take care of as many others had and by reason of his wealthy parents out of which wealth also Johns mother formerly made provision many times for our Lord having the command of so much maintenance as was necessary for their decent subsistance Which recommendation of our Blessed Lady to John shews that notwithstanding the mention we find of her sister and four of our Lords Brethren yet that they were not of so near a Relation as that our Lords Mother after the death of Joseph had any family of her own or these had any constant habitation with her so as that she might rather have bin committed to their care and provision in her now declining age § 101 Our Lord having thus made his Will and disposed of his onely charge his dear Mother whom St. John took to himself and served with all fidelity and supplied with all necessaries till her death spake not at all after this for near the space of three hours from about the sixth till the ninth hour a little before he gave up the Ghost but continuing in silence and prayer and his countenance lift up towards heaven went on finishing that Sacrifice which was to be the redemption of the world consuming and melting away in the flames of Gods wrath toward sinners now in its effects seizing on him in their stead for all the offences of all mankind that had or should be When as he grew nearer to his end the Sun now at midday see Amos 8.9 and when not capable of any natural Ecclipse the Moon being now at the full and at its greatest distance from it began to be darkned and to lose its light this noblest body of the Creation sympathizing as it were with its Lord and covering its face at such a horrid Spectacle and indicating to the hard-hearted Spectators the true Sun of righteousness and that true Light that enlightneth every one that cometh into this world to be now setting and its glory ecclipsed so far as the malice of the Prince of Darkness and his Instruments could effect it and intimating now also the cheif reign of the power of darkness permitted by God to the Prince thereof § 102 All things were now full of terrour and amazement and mens hearts with fear began now to melt and relent and their former taunts and merriments to be changed into a deep silence and expectation what would be the Issue suspecting more miraculous things to follow when about the ninth hour or three of the clock in the afternoon the solemn time of offering up the Evening Sacrifice our Lord when now seeming to be quite spent and near his expiration cried out with a loud and strong voice and such as was not usual to such a manner of death exhausting all their spirits and strength before taking away their life to shew that he laid his life down not compelled but when he pleased though without shortning the time of the sufferings belonging to that cruel death and to testify also against Hereticks the Reality of his sufferings saying with great force that all the multitude heard him those first words of the Psalm penned by the Holy Ghost for a Description of his Passion Eloi Eloi lamma Sabbacthani My God My God why hast thou forsaken me expressing the last pangs of death now approaching and the inexplicable torments and anguish of Body and Soul due to our sins that now lay upon him which he calls his sins in the following part of this verse of that mourning Psalm longe a salute mea verba delictorum meorum and which sin of ours made this patient Lamb of God after three hours silence so break out into this complaint under them where more greivous than the corporal sufferings was the interior anguish of Spirit in his Divinity its suspending from his Humanity all those consolations which might any way relieve its sorrows and with which his Servants in their greatest sufferings are usually refreshed This like to that his Agony in the Garden but now without an Angel where the Apostles mention Heb. 5.7 of our Lord in the daies of his flesh offering up to God prayer and supplications with strong cryes and with tears may well be understood as of the tears and prayers and strong cryes made and shed in the Garden so of these now iterated on the Cross for the weight of Gods wrath lying on our sins which he assumed is inexplicable These words of that prophetick Psalm might have hinted to the learned High Priests and Elders that the Tragedy of this Psalm was just now acted and lively expressed in every part of it and they those miserable Wretches by whose persecutions this prophecy was fulfilled and so might have begotten some compunction in them But either they so blinded as not to understand those words or the other common-people at least mistaking them nor knowing them for the beginning of the Psalm and hearing them pronounced with such a loud voice thought from the similitude of the word Eloi twice repeated that our Lord called upon Elias that he would not forsake him in this his misery but come to help him For it was the common belief that
carnal Sacrifices any more but in spirit and in truth 3. To signify that God was now departed from the Jews and left the place of his former residence amongst them as also Josephus saith that a little before the destruction of the City a voice was heard in the Temple Eamus hinc because they had forsaken his laws refused the Gospel and crucifyed his Son for which this Garment of the Temple was also rent as in a time of Mourning § 105 Whilst these things happened the Roman Centurion that stood over against the Cross of our Lord and commanded the Guards which watched him having learnt before both from their mocking and from his accusation in the Court that he made himself the Son of God and hearing from him such a loud and strong Cry at his giving up the Ghost and considering the darkned Sun the Earth-quake that followed it and the renting the very rock he stood upon Luk. 23.47 surprized with great fear in the midst of these hard-hearted Spectators Glorified God saith St. Luke and said that certainly this was a righteous man Nay further confessed that surely he was the Son of God as he had in his arraignment confessed himself to be and the Guards also that attended there sore affraid made the same confession with their Commander saith another Evangelist Mat. 27.54 that truly he was the Son of God The common people also that came together to this sight filled with terror and their hearts accusing them for what they had either done or consented to not shaking their heads at him as they had done a few hours before in derision but smiting their breasts Mat. 27.39 went away mourning and sorrowful as they came full of jeers and merriment § 106 Our Lord 's blessed Mother and the other Galilean women his former Attendants and St. John stood there still by him though not having so much as his dead body in their power nor knowing how to recover it out of the hands of Justice but waiting on the Divine providence and good pleasure concerning it To whom it was some consolation to see his heavenly Majesty shew himself by these strange accidents so sensible of the cruel execution of his only Son and to hear after that of the penitent Malefactor the confession of our Lords Deity come from those strangers the Roman Centurion and Soldiers and to behold the peoples resentment at last of their former cruelties done to him though now too late for the preservation of his life Meanwhile of the repentance and relenting of the Governors of the Jews we hear nothing who probably in seeing these wonders said of these at his death as they had of those in his life that all came from the Devil That this darkness Earthquake and renting the Rocks were effects of the rage of Satan thus deprived by their Justice of his prime Minister and Instrument for overthrowing of their law or else that they were expressions of the Divine displeasure against such an Impostor and Blasphemer as almost all prodigies and strange accidents receive a double and contrary interpretation as the person wisheth their prognostication and so predictions hinder not events though after these they manifest the divine predisposal of them wherein also they were the more confirmed by that high affront that seemed to be done to his Divine Majesty in the renting of the Sacred Veil that covered his Sacred presence in the Temple For otherwise if this man had bin so dear and nearly related to God why did he not rather save his life And if these things were done by his power why not he rather by it unfasten his nails and descend from the cross § 107 These Governors therefore nothing dismayed and as religious observers in every thing of their law hasted to Pilat to request him for the taking down of the Malefactors from the Cross assoon as might be lest their hanging longer might pollute that great high Festival that approached which began over night at the Vespers of the former day On which day also being the Sabbath they might not be taken down which also was desired according to what God had expresly commanded in Deuteronomy chap. 21.23 that the body should not remain all night upon the Tree but that they should in any wise bury it that day for he that is hanged is accursed of God that the land might not be defiled Thus the Text. They besought him therefore that though some of them not yet dead they might by all means be taken down having their legs first broken to hinder if any strength yet left in them their escape from the Guards well knowing also that their cheifest prize our Lord was made sure and dead already the mangling of whose body also thus though no torment yet might be a further disgrace The Roman Governour at their request presently sending such order to the Soldiers of breaking the Malefactors legs and taking them away they executed it upon the two Thieves who they saw as yet have some life in them but when they came to our Lord already deceased they forbare this because indeed it was his Fathers good pleasure that his body should not be mangled nor a bone of him broken which was also punctually observed in the rosted Paschal Lamb the Type of him This thing was done saith St. John Jo. 19.36 Exod. 12.46 that the Scripture might be fulfilled A bone of him shall not be broken to which end also his death was hastened inflicted on the others in whom they perceived some life § 108 Thus our Lord's Body in which were to remain the scars of his Passion being not disfigured by any bone broken only one of the Soldiers wantonly with his Lance pierced his side from the opening of which gusht out a stream of blood greater doubtless then what the piercing of a dead body could naturally send forth falling down and poured out as that of the Sacrifices was at the foot of this Altar on which this Lamb of God was laid Our Lord by this precious stream washing away all our filthiness and this his blood spilt not as Abels calling aloud for vengeance but pardon Of which what can we imagine less than that it was though invisibly received and recollected by the Angels and so afterwards presented by our ascending Lord in the Sanctum Sanctorum not made with hands above when he entred into it before the Throne of God his Father whereby the Celestials themselves are said to be purified and prepared for our Lords Pontifical service of Intercession for us there Heb. 9.23 which sprinkling of the blood of Jesus upon us saith St. Peter 1 Pet. 1.2 Sanctifieth us with his spirit And we are now come to the Mediator of the new Testament and to the sprinkling of blood that speaks better things than that of Abels saith S. Paul Heb. 12.24 and by which blood we also have confidence of entring into the Sanctum Sanctorum now with our prayers hereafter