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

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unto you that the Lord Iesus the same night in which hee was betrayed took bread 24. And when hee had given thanks hee brake it and said Take eat this is my body which is broken for you this do in remembrance of mee That hee may correct these errours First hee sets down the institution of the Sacrament to vers 27. and then hee exhorts them to and teaches them the lawful use of this Sacrament to the end As for the institution of the Supper hee shews that the Lord Jesus being about to suffer by way of Testament set his seal to the Covenant of Grace which by his mediation hee entred into between God and the Church Whereby the glorious memory of his death might bee celebrated in the world till his second comming and might bee delivered to the faithful and being delivered it might judicially confirm a right to his person and the benefits of his sufferings and a living virtue flowing from his death resurrection and exaltation to the sanctification and salvation of Beleevers and that by the symbols of this holy Banquet and holy Communion with God and amongst themselves To which end Christ sitting at Table with his Disciples after the eating of the Paschal Lamb First Took Bread and sanctified it by giving of thanks brake and gave it to his Disciples commanding them to take and eat further hee declared the Bread received and eaten to bee his body represented after a Sacramental manner that i● being given for our Redemption and after a judicial manner applied to us and last●y hee commanded that his Disciples or all the faithful should imitate this his action in the Church in remembrance of him who had paid the price of Redemption by the sufferings of his body Vers. 25. After the same manner also hee took the Cup when hee had supped saying This Cup is the New Testament in my blood this do you as oft as yee drink it in remembrance of mee That which concerns the other part of the Supper follows In the same Supper viz. after the Paschal Supper when the Bread was distributed Christ took the Cup with Wine sanctified by the giving of thanks gave it to the Disciples to drink further concerning the Cup hee declared That it being taken and drunk was that new Covenant of Grace between God and the Church established Sacramentally by his blood i. e. As it is ratified on Gods part that gives so it is confirmed on the beleevers part that receives and judicially applied and sealed Lastly Hee commanded that his Disciples should frequently imitate him in this action in remembrance of him who had paid the price of Redemption for the Church by the shedding of his blood Vers. 26. For as often as yee eat this Bread and drink this Cap yee do shew the Lords death till hee come And that wee might acknowledge that of two Elements Bread and Wine one Supper frequently to bee celebrated in the Church ought to bee made the Apostle would have perpetuated in the Church a publick commemoration of our Lords death by the often reiteration of this Sacrament and that because Christ would not bee present in his body with the Church before the last judgement by this Sacrament hee would that the memorial of the Churches redemption by his death might bee preserved and celebrated until hee come out of Heaven in the last day Vers. 27. Wherefore whosoever shall eat this Bread and drink this Cup of the Lord unworthily shall bee guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. After the Apostle had repeated the institution of this Sacrament hee exhorts and instructs the Corinthians in the right use of it and that in six waies First Shewing the danger of guilt which they are liable to who prophane this Sacrament For whosoever without preparation and reverence otherwise than becomes such an Ordinance approaches so great mysteries abuses the Sacrament despiseth Christ and comes near to the wickedness of those that crucified Christ. Vers. 28. But let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup. Secondly Shewing the easiness of preparation that every one may worthily receive this Sacrament Onely saith hee set every man examine himself that being sensible of the greatness of his sin and misery hee may see how much need hee hath of a remedy by Christ and let him consider with what Faith and purposes of holiness hee is bound to approach communion with Christ who is a thousand times lost without him and when hee hath examined himself so let him eat and drink in that holy Banquet i. e. so let him apply the thing signified with his participation of the sign that hee consider what need hee hath of it Vers. 29. For hee that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself not discerning the Lords body Thirdly Having shewed the punishment of eating unworthily That hee brings judgement or temporal and eternal punishment unless hee repent upon himself by unworthy eating and drinking who participates of the outward Sacrament without examination of himself because hee discerns not this Feast or the thing signified from his own common Supper but comes to the Lords Table no otherwise than to some common one Vers. 30. For this cause many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep Fourthly Shewing before their eyes the examples of Gods temporal anger in diseases and death it self inflicted already upon many of the Corinthians for their prophanation of the Sacrament Vers. 31. For if wee would judge our selves wee should not bee judged Hee clears from severity this infliction of temporal judgement First From the equity of it That God justly punishes those that judge not themselves or repent not but lye securely in their sin which hee would not do if they repenting would judge themselves Vers. 32. For when wee are judged wee are chastened of the Lord that wee should not bee condemned with the world Further That the inflicting of these punishments is a fatherly chastisement whereby the faithful may bee brought to repentance and not perish with the world Vers. 33. Wherefore my Brethren when yee come together to eat tarry one for another Fifthly The Apostle directs the Corinthians to a right use of the Supper giving a Precept to avoid Schism that they would tarry one for another and would partake of the holy Supper together and every man take not his supper asunder because the Supper of the Lord is a common action of the Church in the publick Assembly to bee celebrated after the manner of a Feast Vers. 34. And if any man hunger let him eat at home that yee come not together unto condemnation And the rest will I set in order when I come Sixthly By forbidding their manner of feasting in publick by their feasts of charity before the holy Communion and commanding that if need were they would eat at home to satisfie their hunger repeating the danger of prophaning the Supper and of the
of Christs obedience upon his And it is meer that as one sin of Adam was imputed to his children to condemnation and death so the intire obedience of Christ only should bee imputed to his sons to Justification and the obtaining of Eternal Life Vers. 20. Moreover the Law entred that the offence might abound but where sin abounded grace did much more abound 21. That as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Iesus Christ our Lord. Hee illustrates and concludes this whole comparison by shewing the abundance of sin in those that are justified renders the grace of Christ more illustrious and this hee does by answering an objection concerning the end and use of the published Law It may bee questioned if death reigned by the Law of Nature not written before Moses what need was there of any written Law and seeing righteousness comes not by the Law as is said before to what end was the Law Hee answers by shewing a three-fold end of giving the Law First The Law entred that the offence might abound i. e. The Law forbidding sin and enjoyning righteousness in that space of time betwixt Adam and Christ came in that sin which was daily committed and yet because of ignorance not acknowledged might bee known to bee sin and that the natural wickedness of men might appear which occasions that by how much the more the Law requires righteousness by so much the more concupiscence is stirred up aga●nst the Law and that by this the sin which lyes hid in men might bee manifested and known to abound But where The second end that from the abundance of sin in those that were to bee justified the exceeding abundant grace of Christ towards those that are justified might appear seeing that where sin abounds in the conviction of men that are to bee justified there the grace of Christ justifying is found to super-abound Even as The third end that the power of sin as a King by the Law might more clearly appear shewing forth its condemning power the power of the righteousness of Christ as a Superiour King held forth in the Gospel might bee more ●minent prevailing not only to the abolishing of the Kingdome of sin but also to the conferring of Eternal Life upon those that are justified Therefore by how much the more the force of sin reigning over men not justified crowding them to the prison of Eternal death might more clearly appear by so much the more the virtue power and excellency of the grace of Christ overcoming and subduing sin leading men powerfully unto Eternal Life might more manifestly bee declared CHAP. VI. THe third proof of the Doctrine of Iustification freely by Faith in Christ in that it conduceth very much to the promoting of Sanctity and Holiness There are two PARTS of the Chapter In the first hee shews that by Faith in Christ or the Doctrine concerning the free ground of Iustification several wayes promotes endeavours after Sanctification to verse 12. In the other part hee exhorts those that are justified to follow after holiness to the end Vers. 1. What shall wee say then Shall wee continue in sin that grace may abound 2. God forbid how shall wee that are dead to sin live any longer therein By answering an objection which seems to arise from this Doctrine hee sets down a confirmation of the Proposition That this Doctrine of Grace or of Free Justification makes for the promoting of holiness Some may say Shall wee persevere in our sins wee that are justified by Faith that the grace of God may appear more abundant as this Doctrine of Free Justification by the imputation of the Righteousness of Christ seems to intimate Hee answers by denying and rejecting Far from us bee such a thought As if hee had said They that are justified by Faith ought not to indulge themselves in any sin but to endeavour after holiness And this Proposition hee confirms by ten Arguments Argum. 1. Wee are dead unto sin in as much as when wee gave up our names unto Christ that wee might bee justified and sanctified by him wee renounced sin that wee might not have any more to do with it than the dead have with the living Therefore wee that are justified ought not any longer to live in sin Vers. 3. Know you not that so many of us as were baptized into Iesus Christ were baptized into his death Argum. 2. Wee as you know which are freely justified by Faith in Christ are also taken into the fellowship of his Death by Baptism by which Sacrament wee have bound our selves to die unto sin and Christ hath bound himself unto us to communicate the power of his Death that wee might die unto sin Therefore wee ought not to undulge our selves in our sins but endeavour after holiness Vers. 4. Therefore wee are buried with him by Baptism into death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so wee also should walk in newness of life Argum. 3. Our communion with Christ in his Death is sealed to us in our Baptism for the abolishing of the old Man of Sin i. e. Not only that wee might bee bound to mortifie the old man but also that wee might bee made certain concerning the mortifying and subduing of sin by virtue of Christs Death Therefore wee ought not to indulge our selves in sin but endeavour the mortifying of it Argum. 4. As our communion with Christ in his Death is sealed to us in our Baptism so also in his Resurrection that as Christ was raised from the dead to a blessed and immortal life by the glory of the Father who powerfully raised him so should wee endeavour by Faith applying the virtue of Christ to arise from sin and to walk in newness of life to the glory of the Father powerfully renewing us Therefore ought wee not to continue in sin but follow after holiness Vers. 5. For if wee have been planted together in the likeness of his death wee shall bee also in the likeness of his resurrection Argum. 5. Drawn from our spiritual and neerest union with Christ by Faith which union is the ground of the communication of that virtue which flows from the Death and Resurrection of Christ for by Faith wee are planted into Christ as the Branch into the Vine and this ingrafting brings us into that conformity with the Death and Resurrection of Christ that wee dying unto sin Christ dying and following after newness of life Christ rising again may bee clearly seen in a certain likeness to himself Hence hee confirms his former Argument when wee are planted together with Christ by Faith wee are so neerly united to him that there follows of necessity a conformity with him in his death to the mortification of sin and in his resurrection to newness of life Therefore unless wee will acknowledge no union with him and implanting into him wee must renounce all sin and
manner The first comparison is in the opposite state of a natural and a spiritual body The first Adam was made a living soul not giving life which had a life indeed but supported as other creatures are with meat and drink c. And not such as could continue life to the body without nourishment But Christ the last Adam is made a quickning Spirit who could communicate virtue to those that were his by his Spirit that without nourishments of the body the most blessed union of body and soul may bee preserved Vers. 46. Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual but that which is natural and afterward that which is spiritual The second comparison in respect to Order The first Adam had the precedency in the natural state of the body The second Adam was latter in the spiritual state of the body for the imperfect state ought to precede so God is wont to proceed to the highest perfection Hee saith not simply that Adam was before Christ but that the Natural state of the first Adam is first in time in Adam in Christ and in us And our Spiritual state which is from Christ is latter Vers. 47. The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from Heaven The third comparison in the order and dignity of the person The first-Man meer man is of the earth earthy whose body rose out of the earth and is resolved again into earth upon the substraction of food whereupon hee could communicate unto us nothing but a terrene life But the second Adam is both man and God from Heaven who although hee hath a body from the earth yet because hee is God from Heaven and therefore is called heavenly as hee could support his body that it should not see corruption though in its own nature terrene and resoluble into dust and as it being raised out of the grave hee could make it every way glorious immortal and heavenly not needing earthly supports So in like manner can hee make our bodies such Vers. 48. As is the earthy such are they that are earthy and as is the heavenly such are they also that are heavenly From these hee proves the future mutation of the qualities of the body from earthly to heavenly from natural to spiritual by four Arguments Argum. 1. Such as was the earthly Adam the head of our stock after the fleshly propagation such it became us to bee born viz. mortal Therefore as the heavenly Adam our head in respect to regeneration and glorification is after his resurrection viz. Spiritual glorious incorruptible immortal such shall wee bee that are born again of him after our resurrection Vers. 49. And as wee have born the image of the earthy wee shall also bear the image of the heavenly Argum. 2. From its future certainty As sure as wee bear the image of the first Adam in the qualities of our substance being made conform to him in soul and body so sure shall wee bear the image of the second Adam in the glorious qualities of our substance Vers. 50. Now this I say Brethren that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdome of God Neither doth corruption inherit incorruption Argum. 3. The promises of glorifying our bodies or of bringing us into the glorious Kingdome of God ought to bee fulfilled But flesh and blood i. e. our bodies as now they are corruptible cannot enter into the Kingdome of God unless they bee fitted for that glorious state Therefore our bodies shall bee made meet by the mutation of their qualities to enter into the Kingdome of Glory Corruption By way of confirmation to this reason hee adds Argum. 4. Corruption cannot inherit incorruption Therefore necessary it is that our bodies bee changed in their qualities from corruptibility to incorruptibility Vers. 51. Behold I shew you a mystery wee shall not all sleep but wee shall all bee changed Objection 3. What shall become of those that are alive at the comming of our Lord How shall they arise which shall not dye but bee found alive by the Judge at his comming Hee answers by opening the mystery viz. that all shall not die nor rise again but they shall bee taken that remain alive at the comming of our Lord and changed into an eternal state of immortality either in glory or torments which change shall bee in stead of death and a resurrection Vers. 52. In a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last Trumpet for the Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall bee raised incorruptible and wee shall be changed Hee shews the manner of this change that it shall bee in the twinckling of an eye i. e. in a moment all that are alive and dead shall be summoned by a fearful alarum to the judgement of God Vers. 53. For this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality Hee gives two Reasons of this change First Mortality must bee swallowed up of immortality and this mortal body must put on immortality Therefore they shall bee changed that are found alive at the comming of our Lord. Vers. 54. So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption and this mortal shall have put on immortality then shall bee brought to pass the saying that is written Death is swallowed up of victory 55. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Reason 2. The Prophecie of Hosea ought to bee fulfilled chap. 13. v. 14. who fore-told our full victory over death and the grave Therefore they that are alive shall bee changed at the comming of the Lord which shall bee in stead of death Vers. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law That this victory may appear the greater hee intimates the victory wee shall have over sin and the Law without which the grave cannot prevail any thing over us for unless satisfaction bee given to the Law sin wrath and death remain in full power But after satisfaction is made to the Law for us sin and wrath are taken away wherewith death is armed as with a sting which being disarmed is abolished and triumphed over Vers. 57. But thanks bee to God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. Hee shews a twofold use of this victory The first is that thanks may bee given to God who hath given us through Christ victory over death sin and the Law yea verily hee hath imputed the victory of Christ to us and hath made it ours for hee hath died for us and by his resurrection hath obtained for us victory over death that hee might make us conquerours Vers. 58. Therefore my beloved Brethren bee yee stedfast unmoveable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Another use of this doctrine is this That under hope of the free gift at the day of resurrection wee would persevere constantly in the Faith of the Gospel
the second assertion follows from a solid consolation which this way of our Iustification affords against wrath and sin The parts of the Chapter are two In the first is propounded a consolation in repeating the several fruits of our Righteousness by Faith in Christ to verse the sixth In the other is set forth the solidity of this comfort to the end of the Chapter Vers. 1. Therefore being justified by Faith wee have peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ. The first part of the Chap. in which hee recites nine benefits or fruits which depend upon each other to shew the consolation which Justification by Faith in Christ afford● to us The first fruit is peace or reconciliation with God now appeased by our Mediator or through Christ who hath made peace for us Vers. 2. By whom also wee have access by Faith into his Grace wherein wee stand The second fruit is a daily leading by the hand as it were through Christ by Faith into the favour and grace of God that wee might use and enjoy it more and more and bee even wholly taken into it Stand The third fruit is the confirmation of us in this state of grace that wee may not fall from it but constantly stand And rejoyce The fourth fruit is a rejoycing in the most assured hope of enjoying of celestial glory hereafter with God Vers. 3. And not only so but wee glory in tribulations also knowing that tribulation worketh patience 4. And patience experience and experience hope The fifth fruit is a glorying in all tribulations and that in the midst of afflictions to which wee are lyable in this life after wee are justified Knowing The sixth fruit is the giving occasion of rejoycing in tribulations upon a certain knowledge or perswasion of persevering in holiness by the Cross. Because thereby God teacheth us patience and by patience in us affords us new instructions of his grace towards us giving us experience and by experience encreaseth and confirms our faith and hope of present and full freedome hereafter from tribulations Vers. 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us The seventh fruit is a certainty of the possession of the good hoped for or freedome from being ashamed which the frustration of conceived hope causeth for hope arising from Justifying Faith after this manner stirred up and encreased deceiveth not nor maketh him that hopes ashamed Shed abroad The eighth fruit confirming the former is a sense of Divine Love towards us shed abroad in our hearts and filling them which as a certain earnest stablisheth us in the hope of future good things The Spirit The ninth fruit is the Holy Ghost more plentifully given to us who believe in Christ which Spirit works in us this sense of Divine Love towards us and witnesses together with our Spirits that wee are the sons of God and works in us all his other works belonging to Regeneration Consolation and Salvation All that are justified by Faith have right to all these priviledges If there bee any that are Babes in Christ or under any tentation and know not that they are justified and are not acquainted with the Consolations of the Spirit and sorrow under their sins no wonder that they receive no comfort from these fruits Vers. 6. For when wee were yet without strength in due time Christ died for the ungodly 7. For scarcely for a righteous man will one die yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die 8. But God commendeth his love toward us in that while wee were yet sinners Christ died for us 9 Much more then being now justified by his Blood wee shall bee saved from wrath through him The second Part. The second part of the Chapter wherein hee shews the solidity of Consolation against wrath and sin by a two-fold comparison whereof the first is of Christ with Christ to ver 12. The other is of Christ which is the second Adam with Adam our first parent to the end There are three members of the comparison of Christ with Christ wherein is proved that they which are justified shall bee saved from wrath by three Arguments The fi●st member of the comparison is of the efficacy of Christs love towards us before Justification with the efficacy of his love towards us after our Justification To this sense when wee lay in misery and sin destitute of all strength to deliver our selves Christ in the fulness of time died for us sinners ver 6. Such great love amongst men is scarcely found towards a righteous man unless perchance for a good man and some way profitable to us some would dare to die ver 7. Whereupon the love of Christ is commended to us from this that when wee were yet sinners not yet justified Christ died for us that wee might bee delivered from wrath ver 8. Therefore much more effectual shall the love of Christ bee towards us now justified by his blood that wee might bee delivered by him from wrath ver 9. The Argument is sufficient because the love of Christ towards us now justified cannot bee less than it was towards us when wee lay in our sins This is the first Argument Vers. 10. For if wh●n wee were enemies wee were reconciled to God by the Death of his Son much more being reconciled wee shall bee saved by his life The second member of the comparison is the efficacy of Christs death before Justification and of his life after Justification after this manner If when wee were enemies the Death of Christ was effectual for the reconciling of us unto God it shall bee effectual to free us from wrath now being justified and reconciled because it is absurd to determine that Christ being raised from the dead and living in heaven should not preserve us from wrath for whom that wee might bee freed hee both died and arose from the dead And this is the second Argument Vers. 11. And not only so but wee also joy in God through our Lord Iesus Christ by whom wee have now received the attonement The third member of the comparison is of the efficacy or virtue of Christ to procure and effect that God might bee ours as a thing properly our own which is greater with the virtue and efficacy of Christ to preserve us from wrath which is less To this sense wee have not this advantage only by Christ that wee should bee preserved from wrath but that which is chi●fest of all wee make our boast or rejoyce in God as our peculiar possession through our Lord Jesus Christ who hath not only obtained reconciliation for us but hath applyed it to us now justified by Faith and hath made God reconciled peculiarly ours therefore wee are sure to bee preserved from wrath And this is the third Argument In all which is shewed the solid consolation of those which are justified by Faith Vers. 12. Wherefore as by
one man sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Another comparison is of Christ and Adam tending to shew that the righteousness of Christ is no less effectual to save those that are justified by Faith than the sin of Adam was of force to destroy those that are not justified There are six parts of the Comparison The first As by one man viz. Adam sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men that are the sons of Adam by nature in as much as in him as in a common parent all have sinned so by one man Christ Jesus the second Adam Righteousness entred into the world and Life by Righteousness and so life was communicated to all men which are the sons of Christ by grace such as all are which are justified by Faith in as much as in him as in a common parent surety and advocate all are justified This Antithesis remains to bee collected from what follows and especially from the end of ver 14. where Christ is made the Anti-type of Adam because hee is the Gate and Fountain of Righteousness and Life as Adam was the Gate and Fountain of sin and death Vers. 13. For until the Law sin was in the world but sin is not imputed when there is no Law 14. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression who is the figure of him that was to come Hee proves that sin entred into the world by one man Adam and was propagated to his posterity For from Adam to the Law written by Moses sin was in the world and imputed and that could not bee unless there had been some Law at least unwritten and innate for had there been no Law neither written nor innate sin could not bee imputed ver 13. but it was imputed because the punishment was inflicted If so bee the wages of sin is death it reigned from Adam to Moses not only over those that were of riper years but also over infants which sinned originally in him seeing all men were in Adam one man though not actually or after the similitude of Adams actual transgression ver 14. The sum of all is there was death the wages of sin therefore there was sin therefore a Law and sin from one passed unto all Hee calls Adam a type of him that was to come viz. of the second Adam Christ that wee might understand how Christ ought to answer in his saving effects to those destructive effects of Adam and that by the purpose of God who would represent Christ the Saviour of men in the lost original of mankind that Christ might bee no less acknowledged the Fountain Head and Root of Righteousness and Life to bee derived to those that are his as Adam was the Fountain Head and Root of propagating sin and death to his Vers. 15. But not as the offence so also is the free gift for if through the offence ●f one many be dead much more the grace of God and ●he gift by grace which is by one man Iesus Christ hath abounded unto many The second member of the Comparison wherein they disagree which is first briefly propounded afterward more largely explained The offence is not like the gift of God for that good which proceeds from God is of Divine efficacy and virtue therefore infinitely surpasses the evil which is from man Wherefore if the offence of one man i. e. Adam could bring forth death to many that were naturally propagated from him much more the infinite grace of God and the free gift of one m●n Jesus Christ who also is God shall abundantly convey life to them which are spiritually born of Christ. The sum of all is Hee would have us know that the grace of Christ is more potent to save than the sin of Adam to destroy and the gifts which are bestowed through the grace of God are more excellent than those which Adam lost Vers. 16. And not as it was by one that sinned so was the gift for the judgement was by one to condemnation but the free gift is of many offences unto Iustification The third branch of the Comparison shewing the dissimilitude between the evil that entred only by Adam sinning and the gift which is by Jesus Christ because the just judgement of God from one sin of Adam proceeded to the just condemnation of himself and of all that by the Law of Nature were comprehended in his loyns But grace or the free gift of God not only frees us from that one Original sin but from a multitude of actual sins committed by every one to a full justification from all sin The sum of all is condemnation is from one offence but the gift of grace is an acquittal from all offences Vers. 17. For if by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one Iesus Christ. The fourth branch of the Comparison with a confirmation of the former after this manner If by one only sin of Adam death entring as a King subdued mankind to it much more being justified by Faith receiving that abundant grace of God and the gift of Righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ By how much the more excellent therefore the Kingdome of Life is which makes its Subjects Kings and companions with Christ in Life Eternal than the Kingdome of death which destroyes all its subjects by so much the gift of Christ in respect to its efficacy excells the offence of Adam Vers. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgement came upon all men to condemnation even so ly the righteousn●ss of one the free gift came upon all men unto ●ustification of Life The fifth branch of the Comparison As by the fall of Adam only the guilt came upon all that sprang of Adam by a natural propagation to their condemnation so by the obedience of Christ only wherein hee was obedient to his Father unto the death the satisfaction came to justification of all men which spring of Christ by a spiritual regeneration Vers. 19. For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many bee made righteous The sixth branch of the Comparison illustrating and ●onfirming the former after this manner As by the disobedience of Adam only it comes to pass that many are accounted and dealt with in the judgement of God as sinners because they are derived from him according to the flesh so by the obedience of Christ only many shall bee made righteous that is shall bee accounted as righteous to wit all they that are in Christ by Faith born of him after the Spirit For equal it is that the poyson of sin should not pierce deeper or the sin of Adam spread further upon his Off-spring than the virtue
endeavour after holiness Vers. 6. Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might bee destroyed that henceforth wee should not serve sin Argum. 6. From that judicial union which wee have with Christ crucified The force of which Argument that it may bee seen four things are to bee maintained 1. That Christ hanging upon the Cross as our Surety sustained our persons before Gods Tribunal 2. That hee under-went the punishment due to our corrupt nature or the old man so called because the evil of nature in those that are regenerated waxeth old and hastens to destruction 3. That hee took upon him to slay the old man in us 4. In that hee took upon him to represent our persons wee are thereby obliged to labour after mortification of sin by his Spirit that after Justification wee should no longer serve sin From hence the Argument wee know or believe that our old man is crucified judicially with Christ to this end that in us who are justified by Faith might bee weakned the body of death so that filthiness of habitual corruption compacted as it were into one monstrous body prepared with all its members to actual sinning that wee should no more after wee are justified serve sin Therefore wee ought to endeavour the mortification of sin unless wee will cast away the Faith of our judicial union with Christ hanging upon the Cross. Vers. 7. For hee that is dead is freed from sin Argum. 7. From the fruit of this union with Christ dying on the Cross whosoever is dead to his old Lord sin is justified and freed from the yoke and dominion of sin that hee might not serve it any longer nor obey the commands of it You may assume But wee are justified by Faith in Christ dying for sin upon the Cross wee are dead to ●our old Master Sin therefore wee are justified and freed from the yoke and dominion of sin that wee should not any longer obey its commands for what service can sin further exact from us whom Christ in his death upon the Cross hath slain as it were Vers. 8. Now if wee bee dead with Christ wee believe that wee shall also live with him Argum. 8. If wee die with Christ i. e. are united to him dying in his power endeavouring to mortifie sin wee need not doubt but wee shall live a spiritual new and heavenly life with him therefore it behoves us to endeavour the mortifying of sin Vers. 9. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Argum. 9. Confirming the former Wee believe that Christ rose to an immortal life neither is hee for ever hereafter lyable unto death but alwayes living hee both will and is able to perpetuate in us a new life that death may no more have dominion over us Therefore as wee do not believe in vain that by his power wee shall live a new and eternal life so ought wee to labour that the new life to which wee have risen with Christ may bee continued not to suffer sin should any more prevail or have dominion over us Vers. 10. For in that hee died hee died unto sin once but in that hee liveth hee liveth unto God 11. Likewise reckon yee also your selves to bee dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Argum. 10. As Christ died but once to wash away and abolish sin and rising from the dead hee lives for ever to the glory of God so you that are justified by arguments of Faith gather and reckon your selves in the death of Christ to bee once dead nor to bee obliged to dye for sin any more that yee were once dead by the dethroneing of sin neither are yee bound to serve sin any longer that yee were once dead to the destroying of sin nor can yee bee destitute of the strength of Christ to mortifie sin but in his resurrection yee are bound to live unto God or the glory of God and that yee might so live yee have strength and help enough by Jesus Christ our Lord. Therefore the Doctrine of free Justification by Faith is so far from opening a door of liberty to sin that on the contrary nothing is more effectual and conducible to the promoting of Sanctity and Holiness Second Part. Vers. 12. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies that you should obey it in the lusts thereof The second part of the Chapter follows wherein the Apostle infers out of what went before an exhortation to all that are justified by Faith that they follow after Holiness The Proposition to bee proved is the same with the former viz. They that are justified ought not to continue in sin but labour after Holiness Hee produceth thirteen Arguments whereof the three former are included in the following Exhortation The branches of this Exhortation are three and the Arguments as many couched in the Exhortation to the confirming of the Proposition The first branch of the Exhortation is that they would not obey sin by indulging the sinful lusts of the body Argum. 1. The first Argument is this To obey the sinful lusts of the body is to suffer in your mortal body the reign of sin or of the Devil from whence yee are freed which they that are justified should tremble at Therefore being now justified you ought not to follow after sin but holiness Vers. 13. Neither yeeld you your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yeeld your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God The second branch of the Exhortation is that they would not fight for this Tyrant viz. sin making use of the faculties of their souls or bodies as servants to contend for it wherein is the second Argument To serve sin is to yeeld the faculties of the Soul and members of the body as weapons of iniquity to fight for sin and the Devil against God and our own Salvation which all that are justified ought to abhor Therefore they that are justified ought not to serve sin Yeeld The third member of the Exhortation that they would yeeld themselves Souldiers and Servants unto God who hath freed them from death wherein is the third Argument God hath called you back from death in sin and Eternal Perdition unto Life that you might bee Servants unto righteousness and might contend for God against his enemies therefore ought you to labour after Holiness Vers. 14. For sin shall not have dominion over you for yee arae not under the Law but under Grace Argum. 4. If you contend and fight against sin the Tyrant shall not recover his dominion over you which hee hath lost neither shall sin reign over you but you shall become Conquerours through Christ therefore ought you to labour after Holiness For you are not Argum. 5. Confirming the former you are not under the Law under the Covenant of works wherein
the Commandment exacted strict obedience but affords no strength to assist in our obedience but you are under Grace or the Covenant of Grace wherein the Grace of God with the Command confers life to Believers and strength to obey therefore certain of the victory against sin yee ought to endeavour after Holiness Vers. 15. What then shall wee sin because wee are not under the Law but under grace God forbid Hee repeats and rejects the absurd objection of Libertines who take occasion from the grace of God to sin more freely when the contrary follows viz. because wee are under grace therefore wee ought not to indulge to our selves a liberty of sinning Vers. 16. Know you not that to whom you yeeld your selves servants to obey his servants yee are to whom yee obey whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness Argum. 6. Serving by the way to confute the objection seeing there is a necessity that you bee servants to him whom you obey and that you receive a reward proportionable to your work whether you obey sin or the Divine Commands unless you will bee accounted the servants of sin and will receive the reward of eternal death it behoves you to beware that you indulge not your selves in sin and if you will bee accounted the Servants of God that you may bee pronounced Righteous and Heirs of Life of necessity you must labour after Holiness Vers. 17. But God bee thanked that yee were the servants of sin but yee have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered to you Argum. 7. By the grace of God the time of your bondage is past in which you were servants to sin before your regeneration and now converted you have begun to yeeld sincere obedience to the Gospel the impression whereof you have received as from a print Therefore to return to the service of sin or to depart from the sound Doctrine is unworthy but it behoves you to persevere in your obedience to the Doctrine into which you were delivered Vers. 18. Being then made free from sin yee became the servants of righteousness Argum. 8. Being now freed from sin by the Omnipotent Arm of God yee are servants of righteousness to holiness Therefore by the Law of servitude being servants to righteousness yee are bound to become servants also unto holiness Vers. 19. I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh for as yee have yeelded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yeeld your members servants to righteousness unto holiness After his excuse of his homely similitude which in many things holds no proportion with these spiritual things yet notwithstanding the Holy Ghost is pleased to use because of the infirmity of the Romans for the sake of those that were carnal which could not so easily apprehend an higher or more spiritual way of speaking Hee repeats the exhortation and addeth Argum. 9. You have sometimes yeelded your members unto uncleanness and have been altogether servants to unrighteousness therefore now 't is fitting that with equal industry at least you yeeld your members servants unto righteousness and to holiness not to bee less studious of doing well than heretofore you have been of sinning and doing ill Vers. 20. For when yee were the servants of sin yee were free from righteousness Argum. 10. Confirming the former When you were servants of sin yee were free from righteousness for you were not at all servants unto righteousness Therefore now 't is equal seeing you are the servants of righteousness that you should bee free from sin and not at all servants unto it Vers. 21. What fruit had you then in those things whereof yee are now ashamed for the end of those things is death Argum. 11. You have gained no other fruit for your former sinful course of life but shame which is now upon you nor could you expect any other fruit for the future but eternal death which is the end of sin Therefore it behoves you to beware that you serve sin no longer Vers. 22. But now being made free from sin and become servants to God yee have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life Arg. 12. After you gained your liberty from the bondage of sin you became servants unto God and have your fruit unto holiness encreasing and abounding daily therein at length you shall obtain eternal life therefore ought you diligently to follow after holiness Vers. 23. For the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Arg. 13. Confirming those which went before after this manner Whatsoever hath hitherto been spoken in this Argument is sufficient and firm for it is decreed by a Divine Sentence to render a reward to sinners according to their deserts which is eternal death and to bestow life eternal with Justification and Sanctification which are chained to eternal life not of debt but freely of his grace and that no way but in our Lord Jesus Christ Therefore ought wee not to continue in sin lest wee perish but with Faith in Christ wee must joyn the practice of holiness which holiness with eternal life God will freely give to those that believe in Christ and follow after holiness as it is largely proved before CHAP. VII IN the former Chap. hee exhorts those that are justified by Faith to Holiness and because they who most follow after Holiness are most sensible and lament the power of sin dwelling in them not yet extinguished Therefore for the sake of these ariseth the fourth Confirmation of the Doctrine of Free Iustification by Faith in Christ in that it yeelds consolation to the afflicted consciences of the Saints by reason of their imperfect obedience to the Law and the reliques of sin that dwell in them There are three parts of the Chapter in the first that they who are justified should take comfort against their imperf●ct obedience to the Law hee handles the freedome of justified persons from the Covenant of Works and their interest in the Covenant of Grace which is the first place of Consolation to ver 7. The second contains an Apology for the Holiness of the Law two objections against the Law being answered to verse 14. In the third is contained the second place of Consolation wherein from the Doctrine of Iustification by Fait● in Christ the Apostle propounds the wrestling which hee had with the remnants of sin and the victory which hee gained that by his example and experience troubled consciences might take comfort The first Part. Vers. 1. Know yee not Brethren for I speak to them that know the Law how that the Law hath dominion over a man as long as hee liveth 2. For the Woman which hath an Husband is bound by the Law to her Husband so long as hee liveth but if the Husband bee dead shee is loosed from the Law of her Husband 3. So then if while
speaks in the singular number The first triumph is over all enemies together in one by reason of the conjunction of those that are justified with God If God bee for us who shall bee against us i. e. Seeing God is for us about to fulfil in us his eternal purpose of sanctification and glorification who or men or Devils may rise up against us to hinder our salvation Vers. 32. Hee that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall hee not with him also freely give us all things The second triumph is concerning the want of some good necessary to salvation leaning upon such great love of God towards us that hee gave his Son to death for us After this manner God who spared not his own Son than whom hee hath nothing dearer but gave him up to death for the salvation of all the Elect cannot but give us his Son and with him all other gifts necessary to salvation and lastly salvation and glory it self what therefore can bee wanting to us to salvation Vers. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is God that justifieth The third triumph is over every accuser the Devil the World our own conscience leaning upon the absolving sentence of God justifying us Who shall lay any thing to the charge of those whom God hath elected That is none will do it but in vain It is God that justifies i. e. from our sins and from any action brought against us hee absolves the Elect Therefore in Christ wee triumph over all Vers. 34. Who is it that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that it is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for you The fourth triumph is over every judge or any one that shall assume that office and shall undertake to condemn those that are justified Seeing God hath justified us who shall dare to condemn us Seeing Christ is dead for us yea as a Conquerour is risen from the dead and ascended into Heaven and there in glory intercedes for us no condemnation is to bee feared by us unless wee should say that the death resurrection and ascension of Christ his sitting in glory and intercession is in vain which is blasphemous Therefore wee triumph in Christ. Vers. 35. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword The fifth triumph is over outward afflictions whereof hee reckons up six kinds wherein hee comprehends all adversities with which Christians in any kind by the unthankful world are used to bee persecuted for Righteousness sake Denying concerning all that any enemy by these evils can hinder the fullest effect and sweetest sense of divine love towards us but that wee should at length partake of it Vers. 36. As it is written for thy sake wee are killed all the day long wee are accounted as sheep for the slaughter Lest hee should seem to triumph over a feigned enemy hee proves out of Psal. 44.22 That all the true servants of God which then lived were liable to all those miseries that they may apply to themselves the words of the Psalm saying For thy sake O God! are wee killed all the day long and are handled as if wee were sheep for the slaughter Vers. 37. Nay in all these things wee are more than Conquerours through him that loved us Hee follows his triumphing declaring the excellency of the victory which Christians in his time had over these evils by the power of Christ for they returned alwaies from the battel more than Conquerours neither wounded nor wearied suffering no loss but more healthy and strong more holy and increased in every grace even then when they seemed to the world to bee most overcome the glory of which triumph hee wholly ascribes to the love of Christ. Vers. 38. For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor principalities nor powers nor Angels nor things present nor things to come 39. Nor height nor depth nor any other Creature shall bee able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. The sixth and last act of triumph is over unbeleef and all doubtings which might arise from any Creature or any present or future cause By Life and Death hee understands prosperity and adversity by which wee might bee either allured or affrighted By Angels hee understands good and evil spirits if it was possible they should concur to the separating of us from Christ. By Principalities and Powers hee means the power of Kings Emperours Governours Tyrants in the whole world By things present and things to come hee understands all those occurrences which had already fallen out or might before death come upon us By height and depth hee means the creatures placed above or below us By any other Creature any created thing universally in the whole world or any thing besides God that may seem terrible Over all these in a full confidence of Faith hee triumphs because of the powerful and efficacious certain and immutable love of God whereby hee is pleased to promote us to Eternal Life from the embracing of whose love and a saving sense thereof nothing shall ever separate those that are justified by Faith in Christ. Whereof hee gives this reason because the efficacy of Gods free love conveyed unto us is founded in Christs infinite merit and omnipotent power whereby wee are kept through Faith unto salvation CHAP. IX THe sixth and last Confirmation remains of free Justification by faith in Christ and not of works from EXPERIENCE Partly of the rejected Israelites who seeking after Righteousness by Works did not attain it or were not justified at all Partly of the beleeving GENTILES who being destitute of works are justified by faith in Christ without the works of the Law whence it follows that justification by Faith in Christ without the works of the Law onely is true and solid Because hee saw this Argument liable to several cavils hee is careful every way to fortifie it and opens it in the three next Chapters There are three parts of the Chapter In the first four Objections are preve●●ed against the Doctrine of the Apostle touching the rejection of the Jews In the answering whereof hee exactly handles the doctrine of Predestination to vers 24. In the second hee proves out of the Scriptures the rejection of the Jews and the calling of the Elect of the Jews and Gentiles to vers 30. In the third to confirm the Doctrine of Justification by Faith without works hee produces the EXPERIENCE of the Jews who seeking for Righteousness by works are not justified and the EXPERIENCE of the beleeving Gentiles who being destitute of the pretence of works are justified by Faith in Christ. Vers. 1. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience also bearing mee witness in the Holy Ghost In the first part of the Chapter hee
Scripture calls Reprobate silver that which is not true and genuine and that Approved which is sincere so the Apostle calls him Reprobate who answers not 〈◊〉 profession and is not sincere and as hee ought to bee If wee should imagine that here hee takes Reprobate in an absolute sense wee are to take notice of nothing but the necessary connection betwixt a prophane life if it bee supposed to continue to the end and Reprobation For whoever dies in his sins shews himself to bee a reprobate For it is absurd and no waies agreeable to the writings of this our Apostle to affirm that hee made any doubt of his Election or thought the decree of his Election changeable For on the other side Because hee was perswaded of his Election and Regeneration the demonstration whereof hee gave in the holiness of his life taking all heed lest by an evil life hee should shew forth in himself the signs of Hypocrisie not in any wise of Reprobation CHAP. X. HItherto hee hath spoken of things offered to Idols by way of Concession as if they were indifferent In this Chapter hee sets down a twofold use of things offered to Idols The one publick in the Idols Temple simply unlawful to vers 23. The other private in their houses which without the case of scandal was lawful but in case of scandal unlawful from which hee dehorts to the end That which pertains to the publick eating of things offered to Idols in the Idols Temple hee disswades from by five Arguments Vers. 1. Moreover Brethren I would not that you should bee ignorant how that all your Fathers were under the cloud and all passed thorough the Sea 2. And were all baptized to Moses in the Cloud and in the Sea Argum. 1. There is danger lest you fall into those sins and punishments into which the Israelites fell if you proceed to participate of and bee present at Idolatrous Banquets and covet after things offered in Sacrifice to Idols Therefore you ought not to eat things sacrificed to Idols in the Idols Temple That the likeness of the Israelites example may appear hee shews that they had the like priviledges with us because the Iseaelites were our Fathers not of the Israelites onely but also of the Christians amongst the Gentiles viz. in the profession of the true Religion and propagation of them to us their posterity for as they are wont to bee called Fathers who lived in ancient times with some certain relation of propagating Religion to us So hee calls the Israelites our Fathers because they went before us in the partaking of the same Religion the same Covenant and like Sacraments For the walking under the cloud and the Sea which was over their heads as if they had with us been bapized into the doctrine and outward profession of Moses of obtaining salvation by the Messias Vers. 3. And did all eat the same spiritual meat 4. And did all drink the same spiritual drink for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them and that Rock was Christ. 5. But with many of them God was not well pleased for they were overthrown in the wilderness They did also as it were partake of the same Supper of the Lord with us eating Manna and drinking out of the Rock or waters gushing out of the Rock which followed the Camp of the Israelites which are called spiritual meat and drink because they had a spiritual meaning figuring the same Grace of Christ which the Supper of the Lord doth yet notwithstanding many of those Israelites because they displeased God perished in the wilderness Vers. 6. Now these things were our examples to the intent wee should not lust after evil things as they also lusted Furthermore hee reckons up the sins for which God inflicted punishments and death it self upon them for an example to posterity from which sins the Apostle dehorts the Corinthians lest they also perish and first hee exhorts them in general lest they covet evil things as they did i. e. lest they indulge their fleshly lusts as those ancient Israelites did who by their lusts were hurried beyond the bounds appointed by God Vers. 7. Neither bee you Idolaters as were some of them as it is written The people sate down to eat and drink and rose up to play 8. Neither let us commit fornication as some of them commited and fell in one day three and twenty thousand 9. Neither let us tempt Christ as some of them also tempted and were destroyed of Serpents 10. Neither murmure yee as some of them also murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer More especially hee admonishes them that they bee not Idolaters or Fornicators or Tempters of Christ trying how true and just Christ is and that by unlawful waies or murmurers against the providence of God as the Scripture witnesses of the Israelites The meaning of this dehortation is this That you bee not amongst any Idolatrous Banquets made in the honour of any Idol lest yee suffer that which the Israelites did sacrificing to the honour of the Golden Calf whose indulging their gluttony and sport was in stead of Religion vers 7. Bee not taken with the desire of pleasing Idolaters that for their sakes you bee mixed with them in Idolatrous Banquets lest God also deliver you to your hearts lusts that together with the pollution of your souls you defile also your bodies by Fornications Adulteries and so perish with those Israelites vers 8. Tempt not Christ by abusing of his knowledge and pretending Christian liberty for your lusts which is nothing else than to provoke Christ to anger As the Israelites in the wilderness provoked the Angel of the Covenant or Christ who went before them in the wilderness and perished by Serpents vers 9. Lastly Murmure not because it is not lawful to you by Christian Religion to bee present at the Idolatrous feasts of your friends in the Idols Temple lest you perish with the murmuring Israelites Vers. 11. Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples and they are written for our admonition upon whom the ends of the world are come 12. Wherefore let him that thinketh hee standeth take heed lest hee fall Further hee shews that the use of these examples belong unto all men living and those that shall live hereafter hee declares the danger of falling into the same sins and the same punishments if they shall mix themselves with Idolatrous Feasts rebuking in the mean time their vain confidence who feared not the danger but fed securely upon things offered to Idols in the Idols Temple Vers. 13. There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man but God is faithful who will not suffer you to bee tempted above that you are able but will with the temptation also make a way to escape that yee may bee able to bear it Hee prevents an Objection from the fear of evil things which did hang over them from the Idolaters their fellow Citizens if they should
the dead Argum. 13. That there is a future Resurrection hee proves after this manner Unless there bee a Resurrection of the Dead what benefit will accrew to those that are tossed with the waves of Persecution for some that are dead i. e. for Christ and the Saints that are dead whose Resurrection while they defend they profess and assert the Resurrection of Christ past and of the Saints hereafter for so the word To bee baptized is taken Mar. 10.38 and the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies for Act. 9.16 And it is absurd that they who suffer Martyrdome for defending the Resurrection of the Dead should bee disappointed of their hope Therefore there shall bee a Resurrection Vers. 30. And why stand wee in jeopardy every hour Argum. 14. Hee confirms in this the sense of his former Argument If it seem not absurd that other Martyrs should lose their labour all Christians will at least think it absurd that wee Apostles should lose our labour who Preaching and hoping for the Resurrection of the Dead are in continual dangers Therefore there shall bee a Resurrection Vers. 31. I protest by your rejoycing which I have in Christ Iesus our Lord I die daily This Argument hee confirms by the testimony of his own experience seriously affirming how certainly hee gloried with the Corinthians in Christ so certainly did hee dayly undergo one death after another for the Gospel being every day cast into new dangers of his life Vers. 32. If after the manner of men I have fought with beasts at Ephesus what advantageth it mee if the dead rise not Let us eat and drink for to morrow wee die 33. Bee not deceived evil communications corrupt good manners In particular hee gives instance of a notable danger in fighting with beasts at Ephesus in a plain sense and as men ordinarily understand this phrase for to condemn to the beasts was an usual kind of death which Christians were allotted to as Histories make mention What need the Apostle undergo this danger To what purpose had this been unless a Resurrection had been to bee hoped and defended Let us eat Argum. 15. If the dead arise not the gluttonous Religion of Epicures was best Let us eat and drink for to morrow wee shall die as some amongst them like hogs began to grunt But this is absurd Therefore the dead shall rise Instead of the Assumption hee forbids that they attend not to these rotten kind of speeches which might infect them either with false doctrine or vicious manners Vers. 34. Awake to righteousness and sin not for some have not the knowledge of God I speak this to your shame Further intimating that the Authors and Fomenters of this Error amongst them were sleeping in their ignorance of God in both bodily and spiritual intemperance of this world drunk with pleasures hee therefore exhorts them that they would awake to righteousness i. e. That they which minded their own matters pleasing themselves in their own wit would shake off slothfulness and imploy their wit about good and holy matters rather upbraiding all of them as a shameful thing to suffer those Atheists the Authors of this error Vers. 35. But some men will say how are the dead raised up and with what body do they come The third part of the Chapter follows wherein hee answers three Objections of the Adversaries The first is this It seems impossible that the dead should arise for how should it bee Object 2. No man can describe with what bodies they shall arise Object 3. Vers. 51. What shall become of those that are alive at the coming of the Lord they therefore because they die not cannot rise again Vers. 36. Thou fool that which thou sowest is not quickned except it die Hee answers to the first Objection It is not impossible that the dead should arise because the seed dies yearly and rises again as it were Vers. 37. And that which thou sowest thou sowest not that body that shall bee but bare grain it may chance of Wheat or of some other grain 38. But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him and to every seed it s own body Hee answers the second Objection That our bodies the same in substance but diverse in quality shall rise again This hee confirms four waies First By the example of Grains of Corn as a bare Grain dry and hard c. It is raised in substance and kind the same but diverse in quality so our bodies the same in substance but of most different qualities shall arise Vers. 39. All flesh is not the same flesh but there is one kind of flesh of men another flesh of beasts another of fishes and another of birds Secondly From the like example of flesh As God can and daily doth produce not onely divers seeds but also divers kinds of flesh for all flesh is not of the same kind so hee can raise the same flesh of the self same man changing his qualities 40. Vers. There are also celestial bodies and bodies terrestrial But the glory of the terrestrial is one and the glory of the celestial is another 41. There is one glory of the Sun another of the Moon and another glory of the Starrs for one Starre differeth from another Starre in glory 42. So also is the resurrection of the dead it is sown in corruption it is raised in incorruption 43. It is sown in dishonour it is raised in glory it is sown in weakness it is raised in power 44. It is sown a natural body it is raised a spiritual body There is a natural body and there is a spiritual body Thirdly From the like difference betwixt Stars and terrestrial bodies As God hath beautified celestial bodies with a celestial and terrestrial bodies with a terrestrial glory and hath distinguished celestial bodies amongst themselves with a different glory as is to bee seen in the Sun Moon and Stars So also the body in the resurrection when it is raised it shall differ from it self falling into the grave as that which is incorruptible from that which is corruptible as that which is comely from that which is filthy powerful from that which is weak spiritual from that which is natural That is called a natural body which is quickened by the soul after the manner of living Creatures by means of meats elements c. And that is a spiritual body which retaining the soul is supported by the Spirit of God without means as the Angels Vers. 45. And so it is written The first man Adam was made a living soul the last Adam was made a quickning Spirit Hee explains this last difference betwixt a natural and a spiritual body and proves it because the phrase might seem somewhat harsh by leading us to the first Adam as to the Original of our first State in a natural body and to CHRIST the second Adam as to the Original of our second State in a spiritual body and compares these two in a three-fold
The solidity of this his confidence or perswasion is confirmed by seven Signs all which did stir up his mind to faithfulness Sign 1. Is a desire of departing out of this life that hee might obtain immortality or bee endued instead of a corruptible body with immortal glory An Argument certainly of a mind conscious of its sincerity and certified of future happiness Vers. 3. If so bee that being clothed wee shall not bee found naked Hee limits this sign and priviledge of being endued with future glory That it may belong to those onely who departing out of this life to an immortal and immutable state are not found naked i. e. not destitute of that true covering whereby our filthy nakedness is covered which covering is Christ or Christs Righteousness which can alone cover our sins wherein our nakedness consists This therefore is the second Sign of his solid desire of going out of this life and of a mind very conscious of the faithful administration of his office that hee knew himself to bee in the number of those to whom alone the certainty of being cloathed upon with glory belonged to wit of those who are cloathed already with that covering whereby the foul nakedness of sinners is covered i. e. the Righteousness ●f Christ with which except a man bee cloathed in this life hee shall bee found naked in the other and shall remain naked for ever Vers. 4. For wee that are in this Tabernacle do groan being burdened not for that wee would bee uncloathed but cloathed upon that mortality might bee swallowed up of life Sign 3. That the desire of his departing this life arising from this confidence was holy i. e. it was derived not so much from the weariness of natural life but from the hope of a better This is that which hee saith although hee groan and bee sorrowful in his body yet hee would not bee uncloathed of this body but that this body might bee cloathed upon with immortality and that mortality might bee swallowed up of immortality Vers. 5. Now hee that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is God who also hath given unto us the earnest of this Spirit Sign 4. That this desire is not natural but the supernatural work of God stirred up and formed in the hearts of his own by the special work of God It is God that hath wrought formed and created us for this thing His confidence therefore is solid Who also Sign 5. That this confidence of a better life is sealed by the earnest of the Spirit having as it were a taste and experience of that life in the peace and joy of the Spirit i. e. in the first fruits of that happiness which is to come Vers. 6. Therefore wee are alwaies confident knowing that whilst wee are at home in the body wee are absent from the Lord. Sign 6. That this confidence is firmly grounded in the certain perswasion of his nigher access to the Lord which should bee vouchsafed to him after death when doubtless even as in one house hee should dwell with God who now in the body is as absent from the Lord. Vers. 7. For wee walk by Faith not by sight 8. Wee are confident I say and willing rather to bee absent from the body and to bee present with the Lord. Sign 7. Confirming the former that hee knoweth himself to walk by Faith in this life and not by sight of the beatifical vision which abideth for us in the life to come who in our sense are absent from the Lord while wee are present i● the body Therefore more vehemently and confidently hee did both desire and chuse to go to the Lord rather than to remain in the body Vers. 9. Wherefore wee labour that whether present or absent wee may bee accepted of him That this confidence confirmed by so many signs of sincerity was the impellent cause to his faithfulness in his Ministery hee now expresly declares Because whatsoever change towards life or death did happen to him out of this confidence hee did indeavour to please God with no less diligence than those which contend for honour that both in this life or pilgrimage and in his death or approaching to God hee might bee made acceptable to him Vers. 10. For wee must all appear before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done whether it bee good or evil His second impellent cause to faithfulness in his Ministery is the consideration of punishments and rewards which abide every one according to their works at the last judgement in which God will inflict punishments upon the wicked but to the godly whose good works after their sins are pardoned onely remain hee shall render rewards Vers. 11. Knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord wee perswade men but wee are made manifest unto God and I trust also wee are manifest in your consciences He shews by calling God and the consciences of the Corinthians to bee his witnesses that this Argument hath urged him to faithfulness in the Ministery For the apprehension of that future terrible judgement hath affected this that he exhorted all to reconciliation with God by Faith Vers. 12. For we commend not our selves again unto you but give you occasion to glory on our behalf that you may have somewhat to answer them which glory in appearance and not in heart He solves two Objections which his adversaries may object against him so earnestly glorying of his faithfulness Object 1. Thou O Paul gloriest some one may say whilst thou commendest thy self Hee answers that hee did not say these things for that end but that the Corinthians may have that for his defence whereby to repress their vain and boasting Teachers who did diminish the authority of the Apostle amongst them and did glory in the presence of men otherwise than their conscience and the truth of the matter did permit For they being destitute of piety or matter of glorying in heart they gloried in their adulterated eloquence Vers. 13. For whether wee bee besides our selves it is to God or whether wee bee sober it is for your cause Object 2. But O Paul thou art besides thy self who doest so openly confute such Teachers Hee answers that hee did not dispute but give a reason of the fact as it did become a wise man to wit that hee uttered those things for the glory of God and their salvation For sayes hee if I praise my Ministery which seems to bee the part of one besides himself I do it for the Glory of God lest my Gospel should bee undervalued If I speak humbly of my self as sober men use to do I do it for your good Vers. 14. For the Love of Christ constraineth us because wee thus judge that if one d●ed for all then were all dead The third impellent cause to faithfulness containing a reason of the former saying is his love wherewith hee loved Christ which did cast
themselves fairly before men Onely Sign 2. That they compel the Galatians to admit of Circumcision not out of love but onely lest they should suffer persecution by the Jews for the Doctrine of the Cross or free justification by the death of Christ and not by the works of the Law Vers. 13. For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the Law but desire to have you circumcised that they may glory in your flesh Sign 3. That although they were circumcised long since yet they little care for the observance of the Law which they required of others But desire Sign 4. That they seek occasion from the circumcision of the Galatians to glory amongst the Jews that they had converted many Proselytes to the Law Vers. 14. But God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Iesus Christ by whom the world is crucified unto mee and I unto the world In the other part of the comparison the sincerity of the Apostle is shewn in these two things 1. That hee onely glories in his free Redemption by Christ crucified and in his sufferings for the Doctrine 2. That hee doth not affect earthly pomp but contemn the world with all its pomp and glory which persecuted and despised him for the Doctrine of the Cross sake and by the Cross learnt daily more and more to contemn the world Vers. 15. For in Christ Iesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but a new creature Hee gives four Reasons of his endeavour which are so many signs of his sincerity Reason 1. I know that in the Kingdome of Christ neither Circumcision nor Uncircumcision is respected by God but a new creature i. e. I know that it is necessary when any one is admitted by faith into the Kingdome of Christ and justified that hee should bee more and more renewed and sanctified but other priviledges are of no value without newness of life Therefore I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ. Vers. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace bee on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Reas. 2. The rule of my intention is the summe of the whole Canonical Scripture to which as to one onely rule or one onely Canon the Doctrine and life of all is to bee conformable Therefore I will only glory in the Cross of Christ c. Peace Reas. 3. I am perswaded that whosoever shall order their faith and life by this rule they shall also obtain peace i. e. a sense of their reconciliation to God all kinde of blessings or an accumulation of good things and mercy or a remedy for the purging away all evills Therefore I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ. Israel Reas. 4. They are alone the true Israel of God that follow this Rule Therefore all things laid aside I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ by c. Vers. 17. From henceforth let no man trouble mee for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Iesus After the Comparison as a Conquerour hee triumphs over his Emulators forbidding them to make him any further work either by gain-saying his Doctrine or by detracting from his Authority because hee bare the ensign of his Felicity towards Christ viz. the mark of a servant most devoted to Christ i. e. Hee hath all the signes of an Apostle and a faithfull Witness clearly to bee seen in him Vers. 18. Brethren the Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with your spirit Amen Hee shuts up the Epistle with his accustomed seal wishing that the Grace of Jesus Christ manifested beleeved and effectual might abide in their mindes hearts and whole life that from thence they may draw consolation both in life and death to which Amen is subjoyned as a testimony of his vote and the faith of an Apostle and for a seal of the truth of the precedent Doctrine The Epistle of Paul to the EPHESIANS Analytically expounded The Contents THe City of the Ephesians was the Metropolis of Lesser Asia in which the Apostle two whole years preached the Gospel Act. 19. And when lastly hee went up to Jerusalem hee fore-told a change of the Church to the Ephesians Act. 20. Against which hee fortifies them by this Epistle when hee was now held captive at Rome and plainly despaired of his return hee endeavoureth diligently to confirm their minds in Faith and Truth There are two principal parts of the Epistle besides the Preface and the Conclusion The first is The Doctrine of Grace for the confirmation of their Faith to Chap. 4. The other is the Doctrine of gratitude and thankfulness tending to holiness of life to the end of the Epistle That which belongeth to the first part First of all hee shews that the whole reason of our salvation is free and solidly founded on Christ in the first Chapter Furthermore hee amplifies this Grace from the former misery of the Ephesians Chap. 2. Thirdly The scandal of the Cross lying upon him being taken away hee exhorts them to constancy and progress in the Faith by the glorious commendation of his Ministery and by manifesting the cause for which hee suffered Chap. 3. In the second part hee gives Precepts of keeping the unity of the Church of holiness of life as well in general as in particular in the shunning of evil and following after virtue by which the life of every one is ordered in a Christian manner Chap. 4. and in the former part of Chap. 5. After these hee descends to houshold duties to which and all other Christian duties that are to bee performed hee arms the faithful in the latter part of Chap. 5. and in the former part of Chap. 6. CHAP. I. THis Chapter besides the Preface contains two parts In the first is a thanksgiving tending to prove that the whole business of salvation both of Iews and Gentiles is meerly of Grace and wholly built on Christ to vers 15. In the other is a commemoration of the Apostles continual thanksgiving and prayer offered to God for the Ephesians tending to the confirmation of Faith the assurance of their salvation and of the perseverance of all truly faithful unto the end The Preface in the two first verses contains a direction of the Epistle and a salutation of the Ephesians which is very short because hee hath not to do here with envious persons or enemies but with conformable and obedient men to whom it would bee sufficient briefly to intimate his divine authority in writing this Epistle and the Apostles good will towards them and opinion of them Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the Will of God to the Saints which are at Ephesus and to the faithful in Christ Iesus In the direction of the Epistle wee have the description of the Writer from his Name Office and Authority And then of those to whom hee writes from the condition in which they stood towards God and from the place which they did inhabit on the
back of Epaphroditus the Philippians Pastor who had brought mony for Pauls use and for a time had ministred to him in prison Hee commends him in five honourable Epithites or Titles 1 His Brother 2 His companion in labour 3 Fellow-souldier 4 The faithful messenger of the Philippians And 5 The publick Minister to the Apostles necessity in prison Vers. 26. For hee longed after you all and was full of heaviness because that yee had heard that hee had been sick Hee adds four causes of sending him back which would serve also for his commendation 1 The Pastoral love of Epaphroditus towards the Philippians 2 His trouble for the Philippians grief because hee knew they would hear certainly of his sickness but nothing of his recovery Vers. 27. For indeed hee was sick nigh unto death but God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on mee also lest I should have sorrow upon sorrow Hee confirms the tydings of Epaphroditus his sickness and commends the special grace of God shewn to Epaphroditus and himself whereby God was careful to restore Epaphroditus to health lest the Apostle should bee too much afflicted Vers. 28. I sent him therefore the more carefully that when yee see him again yee may rejoyce and that I may bee the less sorrowful 3 The joy of the Philippians was another cause 4 The ease of the Apostles sickness who for the Philippians sake would deprive himself of Epaphroditus his service otherwise very necessary to him rather than hee would suffer them any longer to want their Minister Vers. 29. Receive him therefore in the Lord with all gladness and hold such in reputation Hence hee wisheth them to receive him according to his worth and to esteem of him and such Ministers as Jewels and treasures Vers. 30. Because for the work of Christ hee was nigh unto death not regarding his life to supply your lack of service towards mee Hee adds four Reasons of his desire 1. Because hee had carried on the work of Christ in comforting the Apostle 2. Because hee had ministred to the Apostle with danger of his life 3. Because hee preferred the service hee undertook before his own life being more heedless of his own health than of taking care of the Apostles business 4. Because hee had supplied the Philippians absence who as they ought did earnestly desire to serve the Apostles necessities CHAP. III. IN this Chapter the Apostle exhorts them joyfully to relye upon Christ alone or onely upon his Righteousness Grace and Vertue as abundantly sufficient for holiness and happiness that they would beware of false Apostles and follow the examples of the Apostles and faithful Ministers of Christ. There are three members of the first Exhortation contained in the three first verses 1. That they would rejoyce in Christ alone 2. That they would take heed to themselves of false Iewish teachers 3. That they would imitate the example of the Apostles and faithful who do wholly adhere unto Christ. The Arguments of this Exhortation are nine all which do urge that cleaving unto Christ they should follow the example of the Apostles Vers. 1. Finally my brethren rejoyce in the Lord to write the same things to you to mee indeed is not grievous ●ut for you it is safe The first member of the Exhortation That they would rejoyce in Christ that is that with joy they would rest upon his Righteousness and Vertue nor seek for any other helps to their salvation besides him This is propounded as the end of the whole former Doctrine and as a brief of all Christian duties The same things Argum. 1. By prevention of an Objection This Exhortation is so profitable for you that it is not at all troublesome to me to inculcate repeat it often to you nor should it bee tedious to you to hear the same often Therefore cleave unto Christ earnestly imbracing this Doctrine of his sufficiency Vers. 2. Beware of Dogs beware of evil workers beware of the concision The second member of the Exhortation is That they would beware of false Apostles who endeavouring after an impossibility would joyn righteousness by the works and ceremonies of the Law with free justification by faith Dogs Argum. 2. These false Apostles that act the part of Jews confounding the righteousness of the Law with the righteousness of faith and so teaching that wee must not rest only on Christs righteousness are not holy worshippers of God as they pretend but unclean Dogs barking at the pure Doctrine of the Gospel and defaming the sincere servants of Christ with their revilings They are not upholders of good works but evill workers they are not worthy to have the honour of Circumcision but they shall bee called authors of Concision and perdition because that by their false doctrine they do ruine and separate both themselves and others from Christ and of these you must take heed by reason of the imminent danger Therefore you must relye only upon Christs Grace and Vertue Vers. 3. For wee are the Circumcision which worship God in the Spirit and rejoyce in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the flesh The third member of the Exhortation is wherein hee proposeth the example of the Apostles and faithful who do wholly cleave unto Christ first in general then more particularly further repeating the Exhortation unto vers 18. Wee are Argum. 3. Onely wee Apostles and other beleevers who rest upon Christs righteousness are to bee honoured with the title of truly Circumcised viz. Those 1. who worship God with an internal and spiritual affection of the heart And 2. who glory in Jesus Christ as the only and sufficient Saviour 3. Who do not place our confidence in Ceremonies in carnal Circumcision in any external priviledges or any other such Helps Therefore you should as wee do onely rest upon the Grace and Vertue of Christ if yee will bee accounted truly Circumcised Vers. 4. Though I might also have confidence in the flesh if any other man thinketh that hee hath whereof hee may trust in the flesh I more Argum. 4. From the particular example of the Apostle preventing an Objection I Paul who have more cause to glory in fleshly or external priviledges than any false Apostles can have do nevertheless renouncing all confidence in priviledges or my works only relye on Christ and endeavour through Christ alone to make progress in holiness unto salvation Therefore you ought to acquiesce with mee in the Grace and Vertue of Christ alone Vers. 5. Circumcised the eighth day of the flock of Israel of the Tribe of Benjamin an Hebrew of the Hebrews as touching the Law a Pharisee 6. Concerning zeal persecuting the Church touching the righteousness which is in the Law blameless Hee clearly explaines this example by reckoning up eight causes of carnal boasting vers 5. 6. 1. I am circumcised and so brought into the number of Gods people 2. I was circumcised the eighth day exactly according to the Law not as a
is made in his book Vers. 14. Alexander the Copper-Smith did mee much evil the Lord reward him according to his works 15. Of whom bee thou ware also for hee hath greatly withstood our words Artic. 2. It relates to Alexander the Copper-Smith an enemy to the Gospel who earnestly withstood the Apostle in his preaching and was very troublesome to him to whom out of well-tempered zeal in the Spirit of God hee wishes divine revenge as to a malicious and obstinate enemy and hee warns Timothy to take heed of him lest hee receive the like injuries from him Vers. 16. At my first answer no man stood with mee But all men forsooke mee I pray God that it may not bee laid to their charge Artic. 3. Hee mentions four remarkeable things which befell him at his first defence when hee first pleaded his cause before Neroes judgement seat The first is that none in the Church at Rome assisted him or became any waies helpful to him which is an Argument that hee did not succeed Peter there nor that hee was Bishop of Rome which desertion of him hee imputes to the infirmity of the Saints at Rome Therefore hee intercedes to God for them and beseeches him to pardon them Vers. 17. Notwithstanding the Lord stood with mee and strengthened mee that by mee the preaching might bee fully known and that all the Gentiles might hear and I was delivered out of the mouth of the Lion The second is That the Lord was his help in the defence of his cause and supported him by his Grace against all accusations whereof hee gives the Reason That so the Lord did more illustriously confirm and commend the preaching of the Gospel amongst the Gentiles Out of the mouth The third is That God delivered him from the present danger of death or from the cruelty of Nero and his adversaries which accused him as it were out of the mouth of the Lion Vers. 18. And the Lord shall deliver mee from every evil work and will preserve mee unto his heavenly Kingdome to whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen The fourth is That by this experience God had confirmed his Faith in him that hee would preserve him lest daunted with any danger hee should defile himself in any evil work even until hee should translate him into his heavenly glory upon which account hee gives thanks to God with confidence Vers. 19. Salute Prisca and Aquila and the houshold of Onesiphorus 20. Erastus abode at Corinth but Trophimus have I left at Miletum sick 21. Do thy diligence to come before Winter Eubulus greeteth thee and Pudens and Linus and Claudia and all the Brethren Artic. 4. It contains the salutations sent to Prisca or Priscilla and her Husband Aquila and to the houshold of Onesiphorus Trophimus Artic. 5. Wherein to hasten the comming of Timothy hee mentions the absence of Erastus and Trophimus who might minister unto him and supply the place of Timothy Salutes Artic. 6. It contains the salutations sent from some Saints at Rome who were with the Apostle while hee writ these things Vers. 22. The Lord Iesus Christ bee with thy spirit Grace bee with you Amen Artic. 7. Hee concludes his Epistle wishing the presence of Christ with the spirit and soul of Timothy and praies for grace to the whole Church whom it concerned to understand the Doctrine set down in this Epistle that with the greater reverence they might receive the Ministery and acknowledge the authority of Timothy The Epistle of Paul to TITVS Analytically expounded THE CONTENTS WHen Paul had onely laid the foundation of a Church in the Isle of Crete which is also called Candia making haste to some other place as it became the Apostle of the Gentiles hee leaves Titus and enjoyns him as an Evangelist to prosecute the work But when Paul understood that hee was contemned by some and that hee might bee brought into further contempt by those that were obstinate as if hee had been a common Pastor Paul invests him with Authority and puts upon him as it were his own person as well in making Ministers as in the whole administration of the Church and encourages him to go forward in the work of the Lord. Besides the Preface and Conclusion there are three parts of the Epistle according to the number of the Chapters The first is concerning the Election of Ministers Chap 1. The second is concerning the duties of each ranck in the Family Chap. 2. The third is concerning the duties of all Christians Chap. 3. CHAP. I. AFter the Preface to vers 5. Hee instructs Titus about the chusing of Pastors shewing who are to bee admitted to vers 10. and who are to bee rejected to the end Vers. 1. Paul a servant of God and an Apostle of Iesus Christ according to the Faith of Gods Elect and the acknowledging of the Truth which is after godliness The Preface contains three things 1 A description of the Pen-man vers 1 2 3. 2 A description of him to whom hee writes 3 A salutation with an Apostolical benediction vers 3 4. In the description of the Pen-man Paul his authority is asserted from these eight heads 1 That hee is a servant of God and that is maintained against the Jews who reproached him as a deserter of the Religion of his Country 2 That hee is an Apostle of Iesus Christ who by an immediate commission to all Nations held the supreme degree of Ministry in the Church 3 That his Doctrine agrees with the Faith of Abraham and the Fathers and all the Elect which every one of them that are elected would receive none but Reprobates would reject because it contains nothing but the known and acknowledged Truth instructing men to godliness and the pure worship of God Vers. 2. In hope of eternal life which God that cannot lye promised before the world began Hee adjoyns the remaining commendations of his Doctrine and the Arguments of his Authority 4 That it brings a lively hope of eternal life to Beleevers 5 That it is upheld by the testimony of God that cannot lye or it is impossible for him to lye or to speak what is not or not to bee able to effect what hee saith 6 That the original of this Truth is most Ancient inasmuch as God hath promised eternal life not onely in the beginning of the world preaching it to our first Parents in paradise but also covenanting with his Son designed to bee our Mediatour about it before the world was made in the Covenant of Redemption 7 That this Truth was most wisely revealed i. e. by degrees and in convenient seasons as it seemed good to God it was made known and now is openly manifested by the preaching of the Gospel Vers. 3. But hath in due times manifested his word through preaching which is committed unto mee according to the Commandement of God our Saviour 8 That the charge of preaching this Gospel by special Ordination and deputation of our Saviour Christ was committed to
or do they read and not consider it Do they not weigh what is imported by it in sense and meaning It fareth with them as with those to whom Christ said Mat. 22.29 You erre not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God Do they not love it Behold their Plague 2 Thes. 2.10 11 12. Because they received not the love of the Truth that they might be saved for this very cause saith the Text God shall send them strong delusion that they should beleeve a Lie that they might be damned Do they not stedfastly beleeve what they learn in Scripture In Gods judgement with the foolish and unstable they are suffered to wrest the Scriptures to their own destructio● were they never so great wits 2 Pet. 3.16 Do they not study to give obedience unto the ●●own Truth of it Hee dealeth with them as with Israel Psal. 81.11 My people would not hearken unto my voice and Israel would none of mee Hee counteth himself rejected because his Word was rejected But what followeth vers 12 So I gave them up unto their own hearts lust and they walked in their own counsels But to such as will be Christs Disciples indeed Students seeking to grow in knowledge beleef and obedience of his Word seeking to love him and keep his sayings hee promiseth Joh. 14.26 to send unto them The Spirit of Truth the Comforter the Holy Ghost to teach them all things That is to perfect their knowledge more and more by his Spirit to fill their hearts with joy and comfort according to his Truth and to make them holy more and more And why are all these stiles given Even to shew that such as will have Christs Spirit to work any of these must seek him to work all of these joyntly or not to have him for working any of them at all Neither comfort without truth nor comfort without Holiness The same is it which Wisdome cryeth Prov. 8.34 35 36. Blessed is the man that heareth mee watching daily at my Gates waiting at the Posts of my Doors For who so findeth mee findeth life and shall obtain favour of the Lord. But hee that sinneth against mee wrongeth his own Soul all that hate mee love death Therefore how thou doest hate Death and love thine own Soul how thou standest affected towards Gods and the fellowship of the Comforter the holy Spirit the Spirit of Truth and towards the enlargement of the Kingdome of Christ let thy affection towards the Scriptures more abundant dwelling in thy self and for the Scriptures more free course amongst others bear witness Farewel THE EPISTLE OF PAVL to the HEBREWS WHen Peter wrote his second Epistle to the scattered Hebrews there was extant an Epistle of Paul to those same scattered Hebrews also received in the Church for a part of Canonical Scripture and distinguished from Pauls other Epistles 2 Pet. 3.15 16. Therefore amongst other reasons this may bee one to make us think this Epistle must bee it For it is without reason to think that the Churches should bee negligent in keeping such a Iewel commended unto them by the Authority of two chief Apostles or lose Pauls Epistle and keep Peters which maketh mention of it The sum of the Epistle BEcause the Hebrews were hardly drawn from the observation of Levitical Ordinances unto the simplicity of the Gospel and in danger of making Apostacy from the Christian Faith by persecution the Apostle Paul setteth before their eyes the glory of Jesus Christ in his person far above men and Angels by whose Ministery the Law was given not only as God Chap. 1. but also as man Chap. 2. and in his Office above Moses Chap. 3. Threatning them therefore if they should mis-believe Christs Doctrine Ch. 3 4. and above the Levitical High-Priest Ch. 5. Threatning them again if they should make Apostacy from him Chap. 6. yea above all the glory of the Levitical Ordinances as hee in whom all those things had their accomplishment and period of expiring Chap. 7 8 9 10. Threatning them again if they should not persevere in the Faith of Christ unto which perseverance through whatsoever difficulties hee encourageth them by the example of the Faithful before them Chap. 10 11. and by other grounds of Christian comfort Chap. 12. That so in the fruitful obedience of the Gospel they might follow upon Christ seeking for that City that is to come and not for their earthly Hierusalem any more Ch. 13. The sum of Chap. I. IF you shall make comparison O Hebrews the Ministery of the Gospel shall bee found more glorious than the Ministery of the Law For the manner of Gods dispensing his will before Christ came was by part and part and subject to his own addition not after one setled manner but subject to alteration and by the Ministery of men the Prophets Verse 1. But now hee hath declared his last Will gloriously by his own Son God and Man in one person Verse 2 3. who is as far above not only the Prophets but the Angels also as the native glory of his Person and Office is above theirs Verse 4. For hee is of the same substance with the Father Verse 5. and partaker of the same worship with him Verse 6. The Angels but servants to him Verse 7. Hee is eternal God and King over all Verse 8. and in regard of his Manhead and Office filled with the Spirit Verse 9. Yea hee is Creator unchangeable and everlasting Verse 10 11 12. Joyned with the Father in the government of the world Verse 13. The Angels but servants both to him and to his children Verse 14. The Doctrine contained in Chap. I. Vers. 1. God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets ALbeit the Apostle was willing that these Hebrews should understand that this Epistle came unto them from him as appeareth Chap. 10. vers 34. yet doth hee not prefix his name in the body of it as in all his other Epistles that by the prudent dealing of these faithful Hebrews as wee may think others who kept p●ejudice against his person might bee drawn on to take notice of his Doctrine more impartially and know his name after they had tasted of the truth from him in a fitter time Whence wee learn 1. That it is lawful for godly men to dispose of the expression of their names in their writings as they see it expedient 2. That it is not much to bee inquired who is the Writer of any purpose till wee have impartially pondered the matter written 3. That it is not alwayes necessary that wee should know the name of the Writer of every part of Scripture for the authority thereof is not from men but from God the Inspirer thereof 1. Hee saith not simply The Prophets spake but God spake to the Fathers by the Prophets Then 1. God was the chief Doctor of his own Church from the beginning 2. And what the Prophets conveighed from God to the Church
receive the Promises is to receive the thing promised or the Promises in performance But here it is to have the Promises first and immediately made unto him Then the meaning of forms of speech in Scripture is to be found by consideration of all circumstances of the place where they are spoken and not of some circumstances onely 4. It serveth to the commendation of his faith that he obeyed Gods command when it seemed to make the promise null Then 1. To adhere to the promise when by appearance of reason it is likely not to be performed is tried faith indeed 2. When Reason sighteth against Faith it is wisdom to quit that Reason which would make us quit the Promises 3. When Gods commandments and promises unto us seem to cross one another it is wisdom for us to justifie them both All his words are truth Vers. 19. Accounting that God was able to raise him up even from the dead from whence also he received him in a figure Abrahams looking to Gods Fidelity and Omnipotency made him victorious over every difficulty and so to give obedience to this hard commandment Then 1. When we get hard commandments we must lay our reckoning how we may obey them and not how we may shift them 2. Difficulties and impossibilities as would appear must be rolled over upon God 3. Gods Omnipotency maketh that his promise cannot miss but take effect 2. Abraham as he expected so he found He expected Isaac ' s resurrection from the dead and in a figure or similitude be received Isaac back from the dead that is from the jaws of death no less unexpectedly than from the dead Then 1. The Believer shall finde as much as he can expect from Gods word 2. If the performance be not as he doth forecast yet it shall be by a way as comfortable and p●ofitable Vers. 20. By Faith Isaac blessed Iacob and Esau concerning things to come Isaac ' s blessing of his sons is said to be by Faith Then Patriarchal benedictions were given by ordinary Faith albeit from the ground of extraordinary revealed truth For faith ordinary believeth Gods truth revealed howsoever ordinarily or extraordinarily 2. In that this example is propounded for ordinary imitation in believing of Gods ordinary revealed word it teacheth us That he who hath the ordinary word of God hath as sure a ground to rest upon as if he had a particular and extraordinary revelation Vers. 21. By Faith Iacob when he was a dying blessed both the sons of Ioseph and worshipped leaning upon the top of his staff Jacob a dying blesseth his off-spring and worshippeth God in bodily weakness Then 1. Faith can look through the cloud of Death and behold both its own and others felicity 2. In the solid assurance which it hath it can worship or glorifie God for things to come as if they were already past 2. It is not said that he worshipped the top of his Staff but upon the top of his Staff leaning for his weakness cause by approaching Death because he would for this fore-seen blessing of God upon his posterity testifie by signs of worship in his weak body how he esteemed of that favour Then 1. Faith will make the body albeit it be weak concur with the Spirit in the Lords worship 2. When the infirmity of the body maketh it unable to concur with the Spirit it must be helped with a stone as Moses prayed against Amalek or staff as Iacob here or any thing else which may enable it to perform the worship the better being put under breast or arms or knees 3. Iacobs bending of his body in so great weakness thereof must bear witness against the prophane ease which many men now-a-days take unto themselves both in private and publike worship Vers. 22. By Faith Ioseph when he dyed made mention of the departing of the children of Israel and gave commandment concerning his bones Joseph also testified his Faith in his death concerning the delivery of Israel out of Egypt by direction giving for transporting his Bones in sign of his assurance of their going to Canaan because God had promised so Then the Lords promises are sure comforts in death whereby Faith both sustaineth it self and is able to encourage and strengthen others And Faith maketh a man to keep them in memory and to make use of them in due time Vers. 23. By Faith Moses when he was born was hid three moneths of his parents because they saw he was a proper childe and they not afraid of the Kings Commandment How great weakness Moses parents did bewray the history maketh evident yet is their faith commended as victorious over the fear wherein their weakness did most appear Whence we learn 1. That nothing is commendable but because done in faith Their natural love is not mentioned but their Faith 2. That God so loveth faith in his children that he commendeth it in the measure it hath albeit it go not so far as it ought and marketh what faith hath and not what it wanteth of the perfection 2. The Evidence of their Faith he maketh this That they were not afraid of the Kings Commandment Then 1 GOD alloweth not that Kings commandments should be regarded when they command impiety and wickedness for then should they be honoured above God if for their commandment we should do that which he forbiddeth 2. Nothing but faith in God is able to make a man overcome the fear of that which Potentares may do unto him And it is a commendable work of faith to get this victory 3. The beauty of the childe stirred up his Parents to this work of Faith thinking with themselves that it behoved to be for some special end that God had so fashioned the childe Then 1. The Lord hath ways enough to excitate the faith of his own and bring it forth to act 2. Where special endowments are given there is good evidence of special employment to follow Vers. 24. By Faith Moses when hee was come to years refused to be called the Son of Pharaohs Daughter Moses refusing the honour which hee might have had in Pharaohs Court because it might have hindred him from the honour of one of Gods people is commended for a work of Faith Then It is better to be a member of GODS Church amongst GODS People than to be a Prince in a great Kingdome without the Church 2. Because hee would not have chosen to be the Son of Pharaohs Daughter therefore hee refused to be called so Then That which a man dare not avow himself to be or may not lawfully chuse to be hee must refuse to be esteemed to be hee must refuse to be called such 3. His manner of refusing this unhallowed honour is expounded to be by joyning himself with the people of God and so forsaking of Pharaohs Court Then 1. That is the true way of refusing unlawful honour to quit the place whereunto the unlawful honour is annexed and betake themselves to what they may