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A42584 Gell's remaines, or, Several select scriptures of the New Testament opened and explained wherein Jesus Christ, as yesterday, to day, and the same for ever, is illustrated, in sundry pious and learned notes and observations thereupon, in two volumes / by the learned and judicious Dr. Robert Gell ; collected and set in order by R. Bacon. Gell, Robert, 1595-1665.; Bacon, Robert, b. 1611 or 12. 1676 (1676) Wing G472; ESTC R17300 2,657,678 1,606

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a man apprehend himself confined to one City yea to one Countrey 2. What present all horrible noisome accidents as nastines most offensive from man to man most infamous most chargeable to the purse as for company the worst of men and such only as are fit for such a place by all which we may make some conjecture of the infernal prison or the hell of the damned poena damni sensus want of all accommodations the rich man had not one drop of water To see Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven and themselves shut out To let us know that this prison is not only literally to be understood outward prisons are not punishments saith the Lawyer but in order to them nor doth either Civil or Municipal Law allow any punishment to be inflicted on the debtor beside imprisonment But the spiritual prison which is hell it self hath all torments The Lord delivered him to the Tormenter till he should pay his debts Matth. 18.38 But some by this prison understand Purgatory and prove it by the authority of the Ancient Fathers Surely not St. Austin nor St. Hierom nor St. Cyprian though alledged for that purpose by some The former Fathers expresly understand this place of hell it self But why must it be understood of Purgatory Because it is said Thou shalt not depart hence untill thou hast paid the utmost farthing The utmost farthing therefore must be paid and then thou shalt depart thence but the nature of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we turn till or untill doth not imply this for howsoever Supponit antecedens tamen non semper infert consequens The Ancients give some instances of this as Psal 110. until I make thine enemies thy foot-stool until doth not imply that he should not sit on God's right hand afterward And where it is said of Michol that she had no child until the day of her death surely she had none afterward But whereas Purgatory is supposed to be found out for the purging of less or venial sins whereas he who will not be reconciled to his adversary whether a person or the Law he dieth without charity and therefore according to their Doctrine of Purgatory such a one cannot be said to be in Purgatory but in Hell it self because want of Charity is not according to them a venial but a mortal sin Doubt This seems to be unreasonable to compel men to pay debts which they have no ability to pay yea to be tormented till they pay The Turks seem more reasonable than thus who they say put none in prison for debt when they have nothing to pay This therefore should seem to be as unreasonable as a violent detention I Answer it is indeed unreasonable and it is but reasonable that it should be unreasonable Thou didst voluntarily depart from the reasonable service of thy God and therefore it is just to leave thee to the unreasonable service of the Devil Thou wert before in Eutopia in a Kingdom of Reason and Justice now the Just Judge hath delivered thee to the Officer who hath cast thee into his Atopia his Kingdom of unreasonableness 2 Thes 3.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou lived'st unreasonably among men now thou art in the Devil's power hee 'l match thee Doubt How then do we read that the Lord delivers even out of the pit wherein there is no water Zach. 9.11 The Messenians had an horrible prison which by an Euphemia they called Thesaurus where Philomena was God hath such a prison-ward where he hath those whom he reserves as his vessels of Wrath he hath also those whom he reserves for vessels of Glory Consider who he is to whom our Lord saith Thou shalt not depart hence It is he who by no means maugre all corrections and chastisements admonitions and instructions and those timely given while he is in the way with the Adversary yet he will by no means come to agreement These have hardned themselves against all they are desperate debtors But there are prisoners of hope Zach. 9.11 12. Obser 1. Note here what great need there is of a strong and mighty Redeemer It is a saying in our Law Nullum tempus occurrit Regi No time lapst hinders the King of his right and it is as true nullus locus nullus status no place no state hinders the Great King the Lord of Hosts from his right and he hath a right even to the lost man 2 Pet. 2. denying the Lord that bought them thy Brother for whom Christ died he died for him that is perished 1 Cor. 6. It is reckoned among the ends of his coming Luke 4.18 What a multitude of Captives there are some in the prison of the Law some in Christ's own prison some in the prison of Satan who want a Mighty Redeemer and the Mighty Redeemer is not wanting unto them who are not wanting to themselves The woman of Sychar a City of Samaria 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are wont to say that after a long drought a good shower of rain delivers a multitude of prisoners they understand the corn imprisoned in the earth And when we are conformed unto the death of the Lord Jesus that grain of Wheat fallen into the ground and dead John 12. he bringeth forth much fruit in us No power prevails against him when the Angel comes to fetch Peter out of prison when we are utterly at a loss we cry who shall deliver me Obser 2. See here thy doom who ever thou art who walkest loosly licentiously and lewdly in the broad way The Great Judge hath his prison he straitens thee 'T is true persons of Quality saith the Lawyer they are in liberâ custodiâ they are in free prison But the Judge is without respect of persons The rich man was in hell torments Obser 3. See and wonder how the Noble Off-spring of God Created according to the Image of God in Wisdom Righteousness Holiness and Truth should so far degenerate that for want of Wisdom Righteousness Holiness and Truth though counselled by Divine Wisdom to agree with the Law of God though corrected and instructed by that Law yet should prove so infatuate that for want of Wisdom he should be cast like some unhandsome or loathsome thing out of the way and thrust into an hole and there pine away an● perish Obser 4. The prison of the damned is an unalterable and unchangeable condidition they are confirmati in malo Abraham tells the rich man in hell that there is a gulf pight Obs 5. There is a necessity of being conformed to the Lord Jesus Christ as well in suffering ●s in reigning yea first in suffering c. Rom. 8.29 Our Lord saith so to Jerusalem Esay 51.17 with v. 22. Awake awake O Jerusalem which hast drunk at the hand of the Lord the cup of his wrath thou hast drunken the dregs of the cup of trembling and wrung them out yet thus saith thy Lord God even God that pleadeth the cause of his
evil one sinner destroyeth much good Observ 5. The great necessity of a strong Saviour and Redeemer Vide Notes in Rom. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The commadment came Observ 6. Sin is come into the world The Philosopher himself could say from his observation and experience of disorder and confusion in the world that certainly things formerly had been otherwise than now they are And Tully Hominem dicit non ut à matre sed tanquam à noverca natura editum in vitam c. That man was brought forth unto life by nature not so much a mother as indeed a stepdame How Corpore nudo fragili infirmo born naked with a frail and weak body with a mind anxious in regard of troubles and molestations cowardly in regard of fears remiss and idle in regard of labours prone and propense to sloath and lust Rem vidit causam nescivit saith one of the Ancients He saw the matter but not the cause Repreh 1. This reproves their great inadvertency to say no worse of many whereof some Learned men who are engaged in that opinion that there is no original sin but what we call so is contracted by every one in his own person by the example and imitation of others For certainly That there is an inbred propension and inclination unto sin they themselves deny not when they say it is in most men but they will not yield it in all Nor do we say That Original sin is in like measure in all though we say with the Apostle That it is entred into the world and passed over all men which yet is evident in some haply more in some less as I shall shew anon In which respect Alexander Hales said of Bonaventure by reason of his mildness and sweetness of disposition Quod Adamus in Domino Bonaventura non peccavit that Adam had not sinned in Bonaventure what is added that that sin which we call Original proceeds from example and imitation may be disproved by manifold experience of Infants and Children who never had any such example before them for their imitation ye do they declare the fruits of this poisonous plant growing in them as self-will frowardness and disobedience And when they grow a little elder we may discover self grow up in them self-love self-honour self-praise c. and when they grow yet elder lying and excusing and covering sin like Adam Job 31.33 And manifold the like iniquity which Sathan hath bound up in the heart of a child Prov. 22.15 But truly since it appears to all men that the nature of most men say they of all men say we is infected with sin and the whole lump levened It 's better not to dispute whence it became so poluted but rather to enquire into some means how we may be cleansed It 's to little purpose when we see a fire to enquire how it came unless we put to our helping hand to quench it in our selves and others Iniquity burns like a fire saith the Prophet Isai 9.18 and unless it be timely quenched it will burn to the neither most Hell Deut. 32.22 It is said probably that there is no malady without a remedy fire may be quenched the diseased cured what is crooked may be made straight fiery concupiscence concupiscence inflamed may be slaked yea quenched The whole head sick and the whole heart faint yet is not man so desperately sick but he may be recovered The crooked generation may be made straight God made it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 straight or up-right in the beginning and it may be made straight again by him Thus 't is true By one man sin entred into the world The Apodosis or redition unto this first point is as true vers 15. The gift by grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many And vers 19. As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous Here then Adam is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the type or figure of him that was to come i. e. of Christ I reserve the special explication of those words till I come to the press handling of them Mean time we here find a similitude grounded on a dissimilitude As by one man sin entred into the world so by one man grace and righteousness entred into the world What the one destroys the other repairs and restores Luk. 10.30 A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho c. It might be res gesta a true story 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jericho by all the Ancients is understood the world They spoiled him of his raiment his robe of original righteousness and wounded him leaving him half dead Supernaturalia sunt ablata naturalia sunt vulnerata The things supernatural are taken away the natural wounded Exhort Unto those who convey the nature of Adam unto Posterity that they endeavour to mortifie and kill the old Adam quench the fomes It is observed that they who have so done have left behind them a more blessed issue for though the old Adam be still propagated yet the more he is mortified the less he is transmitted unto posterity as we may see in the Example of Sampson Samuel Joseph Timothy Thy mother Eunice and thy grand-mother Lois It is the law of Adam 2. Death entred in by sin What death is this I shall not trouble you with all the significations of it but only name such as are most pertinent unto the matter in hand and Death is either 1. Natural and of the body Or 2. Spiritual and inward as the death of the life of God in the Soul Or 3. The whole curse of God that followeth upon this 1. As for the first 't is well yea best known by the name of death but whether that be the death here meant it may be doubted For 1. Whereas Gen. 1.28 Man before his fall was to procreate Children they who are immortal have no such faculty of procreation as our Lord speaks Luk. 20.35 36. 2. Beside man had a natural body before the Fall and therefore a mortal So the Apostle calls man's body a natural body 1 Cor. 15.44 which before he calls vile and corruptible opposeth it to a spiritual and immortal body Thus when our Apostle here saith That death came into the world by sin he saith not that mortality then came into the world or a power to dye but death and a necessity of dying for no doubt man if he had not sinned though by nature he were mortal yet by the grace and goodness of God he might have been preserved from death or if he had been dead he might by the grace of the same God have been recalled to life and made immortal But this grace he lost for himself and his posterity Sin therefore was not a cause of natural mortality but rather of necessary death and so 't is true of death also that by sin death entred into the world 2. Death entred
3. Apodosis Some there are who are righteous and not after the similitude of the second Adam's righteousness This is gravius dictum durus sermo an hard saying at the first hearing which yet is obvious for there is a righteousness which is of the Law Rom. 10.5 and which is of faith vers 6. So the Apostle calls that his own righteousness which is by the Law Phil. 3.9 But that which is through the faith of Christ he calls the righteousness which is of God by faith 4. Death hath reigned over those who have not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we turn to Reign answers most what to the Hebr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to have publick Authority and Dominion whether the Power be used well or ill So we read of a reign of sin and a reign of righteousness Rom. 5.21 a reign of life vers 17. and a reign of death It is here said of death that it reigneth I must here remind you what we understand by death Not only 1. The death Natural which surely had been natural to Man whether he had sinned or no and it had been of Grace if he had continued in the body and not have died Nor only 2. The Spiritual death which is a separation of the Soul from God who is our Life But also 3. The Infernal or hellish death though with distinction according to the distinction of those over whom death reigns which distinction is implyed in the Text for so we cannot truly say that the hellish death reigns over all those who have or have not sinned according to the similitude of Adams transgression though it cannot be denied but that naturally even this death also followeth sin as the wages of it every sin being in its own nature mortal and should prove so did not the Mediator intervene and bring the spirit of Life into the fallen man But here we speak of death as it naturally succeeds unto sin and followeth it according to the prediction and denuntiation Gen. 2. In the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death What right or title hath Death to the Kingdom The answer to this question will serve for a reason of this point Among the several wayes of coming to power and Sovereignty Statesmen reckon Usurpation Succession and Election and by these means death obtains the Kingdom vers 12. By one man sin entred into the world and death by sin for first sin usurped a power over us so ye find vers 21. Sin reigned unto death and that is the kingdom of sin Amos 9.8 Rom. 6. Let not sin reign But doth Sin die without issue No Death is the natural Child and issue of sin Jam. 1.14 15. ye find the Genealogy Every man is tempted when he is drawn away by his own lusts and enticed Then when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is perfected bringeth forth death If we shall search higher and enquire whose lusts these are and who draws us away then we shall find that lust is the Seed of the Devil Joh. 8. The lusts of your Father he is the Grandfather of Sin and Death so that indeed as Children are in the power of their Masters where Sin or Death is said to reign the Devil himself reigneth who hath the power of Death Hebr. 2.14 Ephes 2.1 2 3. So that sin is the Child of the Devil and the first born of sin is Death according to Jam. 1.15 Job 18.12 13. Bildad foretelling the destruction of the ungodly saith Destruction shall be ready at his side and shall devour the strength of his skin even the first born of death So we turn it but the LXX the Vulg. Lat. and the Chaldee Paraphrast they turn it by Apposition the first-born death or death the first-born of sin as the Genuine Child of sin and by right of primogeniture by birth-right successor and heir of sin in the kingdom of sin and Bildad vers 14. explains himself and puts instead of death the first-born and heir of sin the King of terrors But doth Sin and Death enter tanquam in vacuam possessionem as into an empty possession or doth Sin and Death find no resistance Truly very little or none at all and therefore Joh. 8. the lusts of your Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the Devils lusts and ye have a will to do them and Rom. 6.19 Ye have yielded your members servants so that here is great right pretended unto the Kingdom right of succession and right of election I cannot here but take notice of that great presumption and rash judgement of some who have dared to condemn to death and hell many souls whom Antiquity hath commended unto us as the most Holy among the Heathen There is a Book extant bearing Title de Animabus Paganorum concerning the Souls of the Heathen The Author of that Work numbers up the most Vertuous of the Heathen recites many of their good works and wise sentences and their exemplary good lives and at length shuts them all up in the pit About the same time that this Work first saw light came forth another bearing Title de Inferno concerning Hell in the handling of which the Author is large and descends to speak of every particular place there not omitting any nook or corner mentioning all the kinds and degrees of torments with so great confidence you would think he had been there Such proud censorious spirits there are yet in the world yea worse who dare pronounce peremptory sentence of Damnation upon those who are not down-right of their own opinion How much more safe were it to follow that moderate spirit of the Apostle 1 Cor. 5.12 13. What have I to do to judge them that are without judge ye rather them that are within your selves and others within or under your power but these that are without God judgeth Yet such is the presumption of proud Adam in us That although our God hath exempted many things from our knowledge Deut. 29.29 as indeed such as we know not nor can know and which are not reveiled yet lest we should seem to be ignorant of any thing we will dare to determine of them as the state of the Heathen the state of Infants When mean time the things which are reveiled as the whole duty of man reveiled in the word these we neglect when yet they are things which the Lord would have us take principal notice of and therefore that Text Deut. 29.29 Things reveiled belong to you and to your Children c. Those words in Hebrew are full of extraordinary points and accents that we should take the greater heed unto them Observ 1. Death is the King of the first Adams Posterity Observ 2. The thraldom and slavery of ungodly men they are subjects and vassals under sin and death See Notes in Rom. 6.19 Life shall reign over them who shall be righteous after the similitude of the second Adams
how is the man dead unto sin upon the coming of the Commandments it seems he is not for we find him afterward heartily complaining that he was sold under sin vers 14. that sin became exceeding sinful in him vers 23. that sin dwelt in him and that he was brought into captivity unto the law of sin vers 23. For answer to this doubt it will be worth your labour to distinguish between the person who is the man here dead unto sin and the sin it self mortified killed and dead in the man and to the man for the man may be dead to the sin yet may not the sin be dead to the man This is not my distinction for ye shall find the Scripture will warrant us so to distinguish Rom. 6.3 So many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death What then was sin dead in so many of them as were baptized into Jesus Christ Surely no for vers 11. Reckon ye yourselves dead unto sin And vers 12. Let not sin reign in your mortal body c. neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin c. Dead therefore they were unto sin but sin was not dead unto them or in them They were dead unto sin c. 1. In regard of affection they hated it abhorred it shun'd it and detested it 2. In regard of profession they professed so much in their Baptism they were baptized into the death of sin represented unto us by the death of Christ with hope to arise unto newness of life and the life eternal in the general Resurrection And thus we understand the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.29 What shall they do who are baptized for the dead if the dead rise not which some would understand as if it had been a custom to be baptized for those in Purgatory for the up-holding of that and other Popish Tenents they are wont to feign customs which never were out of places of Scripture hard to be understood Whereas the Scripture sounds thus What do they who are baptized for dead men professing themselves dead unto sin in hope of the Resurrection unto the new and the everlasting life if the dead rise not For as many as are baptized into Jesus Christ are baptized into his death and if we be planted into the likeness of his death we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection Thus they who are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 They were crucified in affections and profession yet were not their affections and lusts crucified unto them for vers 26. Let us not be desirous of vain glory provoking one another envying one another while there were desires of vain glory envy and emulation stirring in them though they might be crucified unto those desires in that they yielded not unto them yet were not these desires and lusts crucified unto them Ye read this distinction more plainly Col. 2.20 and 3.3 Ye are dead dead in your affection and desire unto sin ye have no lust unto it Dead by your profession being baptized into Christ's death Col. 2. But was sin was lust dead unto them See I pray vers 5. Mortifie your members which are upon the earth that which is dead cannot be mortified if these had been dead what need had they to be mortified Therefore since the Apostle exhorts them to mortifie their lusts surely their lusts were not dead though they were dead unto their lusts When sin is crucified killed mortified and dead unto the man as well as the man is crucified and dead unto sin Then the Apostle varieth his phrase as Gal. 6.14 he speaks of himself The world saith he is crucified unto me and I unto the world The Reason of this appears from the Nature of Gods Law The Law is enmity against the Sin and as enemies bear a mortal and deadly hatred one against another so are the Law and Sin disposed for it becomes a killing letter unto him 2 Cor. 3.6 and what the Law cannot effect against the Sin too strong it works upon the man and as it followeth in the next words to the Text that which was ordained to the life of the man proves his death And in this sence we understand Deut. 32.36 The Lord shall judge his people and repent him when he seeth that their power is gone Then saith he I kill and make alive vers 39. For rectum is index sui obliqui it s like a straight line The Law discovers the sin as one contrary manifests another contraria contrariis elucescunt black appears the more black if discovered by white and the contrary darkness the more and greater if discovered by the light è contra Sin therefore and righteousness being discovered in their colours the beauty and comeliness of the one the deformity and ugliness of the other will easily appear and beget a true estimate in the man which confesseth a love unto the Law of righteousness and an hatred of the sin and discrimen honestorum turpium power to discover things that differ Phil. and consequently an aversness and aversation from the one and an inclination and love unto the other Observ 1. Hence we may discover a mistake of great consequence proceeding only from an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a double signification of the word death and dead For 1. Whereas of old prayers were wont to be made for those who were dead unto their sins that they might have strength against them Hence proceeded that yet lasting controversie touching prayers for the dead which the Papists urge exceedingly in behalf of those who are in Purgatory most what we are outwardly minded and that what we read or hear we are apt to understand only of outward things Most true it is that these poor afflicted souls to whom the Law comes and in whom sin revives they are in Purgatory as appears throughout this Chapter where they struggle against sin but are not able to resist unto blood striving against sin as the Apostle speaks to the Hebrews as yet in this state Heb. 12.4 And therefore the man in the Text crys out Wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death presently it followeth I thank my God through Jesus Christ Which in the Vulgar Latin is Gratia Dei per Jesum Christum and the most Ancient English Manuscript turns it the grace of God through Jesus Christ For this Grace and Peace the Apostle prays almost in every one of his Epistles The soul hath sin exceeding sinful like an evil spirit raised in it which it hath no power to lay no strength at all against it only it is dead unto the motions of it Hereupon the Apostle prayeth for grace and strength against so potent an enemy thus 1 Cor. 1.3 and 2 Cor. 1.2 Gal. 1.3 More specially Col. 1.2 Having prayed for grace in general vers 9.10 11. he prays for the special grace in knowledge wisdom
prove as much 4. Besides the last Resurrection as most men understand is of the dead Bodies not of the mortal bodies which are here spoken off 5. The last Resurrection is in a moment in the twinkling of an eye saith St. Paul But this first is gradual and in time the last is the work of God only who raiseth the dead But in the first the works of Faith is required on our parts as I shall shew anon what then is here meant by the mortal Body The Body here is not that which our Apostle calls the Body of sin for that is not to be quickned but to be destroyed Rom. 6. nor is it the mortuum Corpus but mortale not dead but mortal liable to death The Bodies here meant are our natural Bodies even those which we bear about us liable to natural or violent death The Spirit is not said to quicken this Body with a vegetative or sensitive or rational life which it is supposed to have already But with such a life as is to be advanced unto and as it were spiritualized by the Spirit of God For although our natural Bodies live the inferior life vegetative and sensitive yet by a gracious redundance and overflowing of the Heavenly life in the inward man our Bodies are all to be purged and purified from all sinful pollution and sanctified and beautified with all those graces whereof they are capable which although they have their root and original in the Soul and Spirit yet have they their exercise in our mortal Bodies as sobriety temperance charity continency moderation c. for by the actions of our mortal Bodies is manifest what life we live Yea by what other means can we discover the life but by the exercise of it in our mortal Bodies for hereby is made known whether our Members be the Lords or an Harlots 1 Cor. 6.13 The Apostle having said The Body is not for fornication but for the Lord and the Lord for the Body He adds God hath raised up the Lord and will also raise up us by his own power know ye not that your Bodies are the Members of Christ So Eccles 19.20.32 A man may be known by his look and one that hath understanding by his countenance when thou meetest him A mans attire and excessive laughter and gate shews what he is The Apostle speaks home to this 2 Cor. 10.11 Alwayes bearing about in our Bodies the dying of the Lord Jesus Christ that the life of Jesus may appear in our mortal Body for we who live are alwayes delivered unto death for Jesus sake that the life of Jesus may be made manifest in our mortal body or flesh Reason of this may be 1. In regard of God the Father 2. Of Christ 3. And those who are Christs For God the Father he is not once named in this Text though he be mainly concerned in it and the reason is both in this and many other Scriptures lest by frequent use it might become less venerable and so be prophaned for the same reason God is not named in the whole Book of Esther although his Providence Preservation and Government of his Church in that History be wonderfully declared His great Name signifies Being and that was not often mentioned among the Jews The Lord would rather his Being and works should be known than his Name too frequently taken into our lips and may we not learn the like by the same omission not to call our selves too often by Titles and Names of Gods People but rather to let our lives and actions speak what we are But to return from this digression in this reason 2. What is held forth unto us In the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ is signified and required as in the exemplary cause and pattern to be pourtrayed and copied out in the Church and every Member of it If Jesus Christ be raised up from the dead then must the Church be raised up with him from the death of sin and therefore the Apostle reasons from the one to the other negatively and affirmatively If there be no Resurrection from the dead then is Christ not raised 1 Cor. 15.13 and Vers 15. If God raised not up Christ then the dead are not raised God hath raised up the Lord Jesus and will also raise us up by his own power 1 Cor. 6.14 They are one Body and one Spirit acts in both 3. In regard of his Office he is the Saviour of his Body and as the Body is for the Lord so is the Lord for the Body 1 Cor. 6. 2. Again in regard of the Spirit which raised up Christ from the dead it s an Eternal Spirit a mighty powerful Spirit for whereas a Spirit is that whereby every thing is powerful and active that Spirit which hath less matter hath more power how much more the Spirit of God who is a Spirit Besides the more lustful sluggish and idle the object is whereon the Spirit works the more power is required The mortal Body therefore requires a mighty Spirit to quicken and enliven it 3. They who are Christs must be like unto him as his Spouse holy in Body and Spirit 1 Cor. 7.34 Bear his Cross crucify the flesh with the affections and lusts be conformed unto his Image Rom. 8.29 Obs 1. This is a fruitful way of meditating and speaking of our Lords Resurrection Col. 3.1 Obs 2. As there is a renovation or renewing in the spirit of our mind whereby we are raised up by the Spirit of God to think and will to love and desire those things which are above so is there also a renewing or renovation in the mortal Bodies of those who are raised up with Christ and renewed in the spirit of their mind for as the Body partakes of the punishment for iniquity as the Prophet complains there is no soundness in my flesh by reason of my sin Psal 38.7 so both cry out for help unto God Psal 16.9 My heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth my flesh also shall rest in hope Obs 3. Note hence we are by corruption of Nature become dead in trespasses and sins Ephes 2. Examples whereof we have of the wanton Widow and the prodigal Son as well as our own experience Wherefore to be raised with Christ is to be changed from the Spiritual death in sin to the righteous and holy life wherein we have great reason to admire the unspeakable love and mercy of our God Col. 3. This takes away all excuses men are wont to use when in defence of themselves yet lying in their fall and living in their sins they say they have mortal bodies bodies of clay and how can these be quickened to the life of righteousness Did the Apostle think we suppose we had immortal Bodies when he exhorts Rom. 6.19 I speak saith he after the manner of Men because of the infirmity of your flesh as ye have yielded your Members Servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity eve● so now
suffered for them fulfilled the Law and done all and left nothing for them to do but only to believe all 's done already to their hand But as in the dayes of Christ's flesh so now and ever the Revelation of God the Fathers Law and the Revelation of St. John's Doctrine of Repentance must precede and go before the plain and explicite Revelation of Christ For so Moses his Law leads us unto Christ the end of the Law whence our Saviour made entrance unto the Revelation of himself by the exposition of the Law Luk. 24.27 yet the Law leads not to Christ without the Doctrine of John We must first be Johannites or St. John's Disciples ere we can be Christians As St. Peter in the Text was Bar-johanna a Son or Disciple of St. John before he was Christs Disciple which appears undeniably out of Scripture and that both by predictions of the Old Testament as Esay 40.5 Mal. 3 and 4. beside other places and their accomplishments in the New Testament for so all the Evangelists bring in John before our Saviour in order both of time and doctrine So that St. Mark begins his Gospel thus The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as it is written in the Prophets behold I send my messenger before thy face Mar. 1.7 The beginning of the Gospel therefore is St. John the Baptist his doctrine is to precede Mat. 14.13 Thus John the Baptist sends his Disciples unto Christ Mar. 6.32 And John being put to death our Saviour sends forth his Twelve Apostles to preach repentance the doctrine of St. John in all places where he himself should come Luk. 9.10 Mar. 6.12 Luk. 10. The Apostles also in communicating the doctrine of Christ premise or prerequire the preaching of St. John Act. 3.37 38. So St. Peter begins his Sermon to Cornelius and St. Paul his to the Antiochians Act. 10 and 13. And it as neerly concerns us and all men as them For the same Grace of the Lord which brings salvation unto all men hath appeared teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ And this is the Righteousness that goes before him even Christ saith holy David and then as the words following are he directs his people in the way which he doth by Precept Audible as the Word Example Visible as the Sacrament 1. The Precepts are the whole word of God not as many think the Gospel and nothing but the Gospel and therefore inure themselves only to the New Testament whereas our Saviour who knows best how to reveal himself saith The Scriptures that was the Old Testament only then they bear witness of him and he began as Moses Luk. 24.27 and all the Prophets and expounded in all the Sciptures the things which concerned himself And so ought we to do and to come unto Gods word abrasa tabula without prepossession of false Glosses our own or others and resolve with David I will hear quid loquitur in me Dominus what the Lord saith in me and standing in aequilibrio like the ballance trembling at Gods word and yielding that way he swayes us Not that we should be guided by our own fantastical Enthusiasms and fanatical imaginations without or contrary or beside the Analogie of Gods written word No no but to hear Moses and the Prophets the Preachers of Gods word for these God the Father commands to set their faces against Gog Ezech. 38. i. e. reveal the coverings of Ceremonies Types and Figures wherein Christ is hidden and remove the veil of false knowledge and opinions of Gods truth according to St. Hierom's interpretation of that place so saith St. Paul It pleased God to reveal his Son in me that I might teach him to the Gentiles But in reading and hearing the word of God Esau will strive to be born before Jacob Pharez before Zarah the natural before the Spiritual the earthly spirits and spirits of flesh and blood before the spirit of our Father which is in Heaven and Satan can transform himself into an Angel of light Here then is wisdom To try the spirits whether they be of God or no Our Saviour saith of the Prophets by their works ye shall know them whether true or false and we may say so of the spirits by their words their inward words ye shall discern them whether good or bad If good their message is of repentance amendment of life humility peace mercy gentleness meekness patience and all goodness withdrawing from all evil provoking and encreasing all good If evil contrary St. John gives us one mark hereby know ye the spirit of God every spirit that confesseth Jesus Christ come in the flesh is of God which is not to be understood of the History which all men indifferently good and bad born or not born of God may confess alike But the true real and thorough confession of the word made flesh which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dwells in us of Christ formed in us in us the hope of Glory for what shall it profit me Christum esse natum in carne nisi nascatur etiam in carne mea saith one of the pious Ancients Nor ought we having received the Fathers Revelation of his Son to consult with men Samuel was but a Child when God having spoken to him he ran to Eli. When it pleased God to reveal his Son in me saith St. Paul I conferr'd not with flesh and blood but he presently fell to practise what he knew and so must we continue in the things that we have learned that more may be given unto us Do we reveal the things we know that we may know the secret things we yet know not This this is the only Clavis Scripturae which opens Christ the door unto us 2. So do the Sacraments also both 1. that whereby we become the Sons of God being born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God And 2. That which presents unto us his body and blood for because the Children were partakers of flesh and blood he also took part of the same that through death he might overcome him who had the power of death i. e. the Devil And thus he guides us also by example unto himself So he suffered for us leaving us an example that we might also suffer with him that we might mortifie and kill the sinful flesh and blood that we may kill that Creature of our own and save Gods Creature alive That we may crucifie the ill thief and save the good Not as some do who pine their bodies and spare their lusts If thus we bear about in our body the dying of the Lord Jesus the life also of Jesus shall be revealed in our mortal flesh As at the death of Christ the veil was rent from the top to the bottom and the
28.12 Where saith he is wisdom found and where is the place of understanding man knoweth not the place thereof nor is it to be found in the Land of the Living i. e. in the Land of proud men who sin in their life as the Chaldee Paraphrast turns it vers 22. destruction and death i. e. death and sin say we have heard the fame thereof with our ears at length he concludes vers 28. Behold the fear of the Lord is wisdom and to depart from evil is understanding Dan. 9.13 Rom. 12.2 This wisdom is daily more and more reveiled by our daily mortification by our daily dying unto sin for when we mortifie our members that are upon the earth fornication uncleanness inordinate affection evil concupiscence and covetousness which is idolatry When we put off the mortal garment of anger wrath malice blasphemy filthy communication lying and the like then we put on the New Man which is renewed in Knowledge Col. 3. For as at the death of Christ the veil of the Temple was rent from the top to the bottom and the SANCTVM SANCTORVM appeared so at our conformity unto the death of Christ Aperta est nobis intelligentia Scripturae magna parva Sacramenta sunt manifestata Hug. in Mat. 27. That 's the first veil velamen peccatorum the veil of sin to be removed from our hearts the second is velamen carnalis cogitationis de carne Christi the veil of carnal conceits and imaginations of Christ according to the flesh to be removed from our minds under which are hidden in his Deity the treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge This hath been found to be a cause by accident of that which excludes per se out of the School of Christ for thus whiles the Jews gazed only upon Christs humanity they lost the knowledge of his Deity Examples are obvious Joh. 6.8 Such carnal conceits of Christ produce no other than carnal affections thus too m●ny reason in effect at this solemn feast of our Lords incarnation now drawing on Christ was at this time born 't is Christmass therefore let us sit down to eat and to drink and rise up to play or rather let us sit down to eat and to drink and sit up all night at play whereas were our Meditations fixt upon his Deity God would make known unto us what is the riches of the glory of this mystery which is Christ in us Col. 1.27 yea we would earnestly desire that Christ might be conceived formed and born in us Gal. 4.19 For know ye not that Christ Jesus is in us except we be reprobates 2 Cor. 13. Hence it is that our Saviour takes us off from carnal thoughts of himself The flesh saith he profits nothing Joh. 6. And it is expedient for you that I go away for if I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you We must first be weaned from carnal thoughts and then the Spirit will teach us spiritual understanding Quem docebit scientiam quem intelligere faciet auditum ablectatos à lacte avulsos ab uberibus Isa 28. If I go away saith our Saviour I will send the Comforter or Teacher unto you who shall lead you into all Truth for Nisi carnis presentia subtrahatur spiritualem gratiae plenitudinem mens occupata non admittit saith St. Bernard These veils removed we must then humbly and obediently search the Scriptures which are able to make us wise unto Salvation we must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 search them as he that digs in a Mine searches the hidden treasures we must pray for wisdom to the Author of it Jam. 1. So we shall be no longer without but be able to understand a Proverb and the interpretation the words of the wise and their dark sayings Prov. 1.6 For if thou cryest after knowledge and liftest up thy voice for understanding if thou seek her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord for the Lord giveth wisdom out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding And then what remains but that in an holy life and godly conversation we glorifie the great reveiler of Divine mysteries for herein is my Father glorified saith the Son that ye bring forth much fruit so shall ye become my Disciples Joh. 15. And if these things be in you and abound ye shall neither be idle nor unfruitful in the acknowledging of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ for so an entrance shall be administred unto you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 1.5 8 and 11. Thus Daniel prayed for the Revelation of a Mystery obtained it and then praised God Dan. 2. And because it is his gift to know that he is the giver of wisdom saith the wise man and that it is he that giveth us means to attain unto the knowledge of Divine Mysteries Let us praise and bless and glorifie his Holy Name in all these Gratias agamus Domino pro fundatoribus benefactoribus nostris benedictus in illis sit deus noster qui creavit Coelum terram Now unto the King Eternal Immortal Invisible the only wise God be honour and glory for ever and ever Amen More NOTES and OBSERVATIONS on MARK 4.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vnto you it is given to know the mystery of the kingdom of God but unto them that are without all things are done in parables THe same reasons which moved me first to make choice of this Argument the common desire of Knowledge especially the knowledge of Mysteries fit for a learned Auditory such as this is The listening after News the greatest trade that 's driven at this day especially touching matters of State when every man is or would be a Statesman the secrets and mysteries of a Kingdom such as this Text holds forth And very seasonable it is now when the Lord is shaking all the Kingdoms of the Earth to speak of such a Kingdom as cannot be shaken Hebr. 12.28 These reasons I say which moved me not long since to make choice of this Theme for this place the same perswade me to continue it Ye may perceive I have not so much changed that Text in Mat. 13.11 as only taken the parallel thereunto and this I have done only for Explications sake for we have in this the very same Divine Truths which are in that only which is the benefit and excellency of parallel Scriptures they are by the parallel more clearly opened and explained I shall but remind you of them and so proceed where I then left 1. God hath his kingdom the kingdom of God 2. There is a mystery or there are mysteries of the kingdom of God 3. The Disciples know these mysteries 4. It is given to them to know them 5. To those who are without all things are in parables 6. Vnto the Disciples it is given but to those that are without all things are in parables I dispatched the
and is the wisest and the most loving and tendering our good it comes all to one if we refuse his love we cannot exempt our selves from his power if 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not prevail with us yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall Observ 1. How doth the Son teach the fear of the Father Matth. 11.27 All things are delivered to me of my Father no man knoweth the Son but the Father Observ 2. The Gospel it self doth not exempt us from fear Woe to me if I preach not the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.16 lest having preached to others I my self become a castaway 1 Cor. 9. last Knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men 2 Cor. 5. we having received a kingdom that cannot be shaken let us have grace that we may serve him with fear and godly reverence Heb. 12.28 The Mercies of God do not hinder this Psal 130.4 There is mercy with thee that thou mayest be feared nor our union by faith Psal 86.11 Knit our hearts unto thee that we may fear thy Name The tenour of the Everlasting Gospel which the Angel preached is FEAR Revel 14.6 O how far short come most of us of that eminency yet we are fearless 3. It is safe for the People for the Minister it is lawful yea expedient to urge the same duty upon us Deut. 6.7 whet them upon thy Children our memories are weak to retain what is not driven home by importunity especially a difficult Precept Act. 20.31 I ceased not for the space of three years to warn every one with tears the rather having been weakened by sin which commonly wasteth the Soul and disables it Those Precepts which were delivered to Israel Exod. 25. touching preparation of materials to build the Tabernacle after which they sinned in making and worshiping the Golden Calf the Holy Ghost repeats them almost verbatim Chap. 35. The like is observable after sin committed in the Moabites Num. 28. we are unlike to bottles and other vessels once filled they need be filled no more but we must take heed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lest we let them slip The Precepts by often whetting become more sharp Heb. 4.12 and bright the rust is to be wrought off some Precepts are mystical as muzzling the Ox The rust must be wrought off 1 Cor. 9. The Disciples rubb'd the ears of Corn there is an husk that must be thrash'd off that we may feed upon the Corn. Repreh 1. This discovers the highest presumption and Luciferian pride of ungodly men Magistrates Ministers People all who being themselves but mortal men dare contest with the great God for the obedience of men under their power and put them in fear of death unless they obey them maugre the countermands of the highest God and the fear of him I call this Luciferian pride for ungodly men imitate Lucifer in this Isa 14.13 Thou hast said in thine heart I will ascend into heaven I will exalt my Throne above the stars of God I will sit also upon the mount of the Congregation in the sides of the North I will ascend above the heights of the Clouds I will be like the most High this was Lucifers pride he would ascend into heaven and exalt his Throne above the stars of God i. e. he would be like to the most High ruling the Angels and stars of Heaven he would sit upon the mount of the Congregation i. e. in mount Sion in Jerusalem where the Congregation met together even there he would sit and rule he would rule the Church of God upon earth this was Lucifers ambition and this hath been and is the pride and ambition of all ungodly Rulers and Governours they will be like the Highest The Prince of Tyrus set his heart as the heart of God Ezek. 28. All the kingdoms of the earth are mine and the glory of them they alwayes maintain competition with God Almighty Who is the Lord saith Pharaoh when they have cast away his fear what madness do they fall into as Pharaoh Ego feci memetipsum Ezek. 29.3 I have made my self Xerxes because the Sea near Hellespont had broken a bridge he had made over it caused it to be beaten with three hundred stripes yea fetter'd it as I told you before Caligula would be a God and have familiar converse with the Moon Dioclesian would be worshipped as a God as the brother of the Sun and Moon had his feet kissed The like insolency hath possessed the POPE The like insolency possessed Heliogabalus and Julian the Apostate we might add examples of many other like frenzies in Emperours Kings Princes and Potentates But let us look neerer home doth not every wicked man affect the Deity and would he not be accounted a God Psal 73.9 The Psalmist gives us the character of ungodly men Martin Luther in his Saxon Translation and the Low Dutch also render the words thus What they say that must be spoken from heaven what they speak that must prevail upon earth they will be absolute Gods they will have their will done in heaven and earth Is not this the ambition in every Leader of every Sect Nay is it not thy pride Must not the Preacher speak just as thou wilt have him or else thou wilt one way or other be revenged of him Nay 't is not enough to be subject to a Law but every mans private will must be a Law not only to himself but to another and the Preacher must speak according to that By imagination they are wrapt up to the third heaven come down thou proud spirit of the daughter of Babel This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is such an abomination that would make the hair stand an end for fear and terrour Men differ among themselves yet they expect in their erroneous judgements that Gods truth must stoop to them in their errours that God must go out of his way to come into their way that their Minister must be of their divided mind See the great boldness and folly and fool-hardiness of those who fear man yet fear not God! Psal 9. ult Put them in fear O Lord that the heathen may know that they be but sorry men Men are apt to be high-minded above their measure above their strength Alexander was perswaded by his flatterers that he was a God and that the High Priest of Jerusalem had called him Jupiter's Son when he called him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Canutus commanded the Sea that it should not flow which soon shewed it self not to be under his command by making him wetshod whereupon he confuted his flatterers Vana est omnium regum potestas solus Deus est omnipotens This fear the Law works in them Exod. 20.20 and so the word may here signifie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 set over them a Law-giver as a Teacher The Law of our God was given us for this end with such horrour and terrour And the terrible and mighty works
unto all men and why so for we our selves also were sometimes foolish Are none of us so still did the Apostle think we bear this testimony of himself that we should word it only or talk of it or that we should examine our selves whether we be such yea or no whether we are thus foolish yea or no Disobedience is the greatest folly in the world and therefore the Wise Man often in the Proverbs understands by the fool the disobedient man O ye foolish Galatians who hath bewitched ye that ye should not obey the truth 'T is a witchery to be disobedient unto our God Who of us would endure a disobedient Son or Servant and shall we call our selves Sons and Servants unto our God and yet continue in our disobedience who would endure these Vices in his Neighbour in his Wife in his Child in his Servant who doth not hate them in all these and yet will a man endure them in himself I beseech ye consider it well shall we live in these sins yet conceive our selves Gods Children what Children then think ye surely not worse than these though ye rake hell for them but if thou doest truly hate this lawless life then surely thou wilt first and chiefly hate it in thy self Charity thus truly begins at home and hardly otherwise I beseech ye Beloved let us suffer the correction and the instruction of the Law that we may be dead in our affections unto this wicked lawless life and believe in Jesus Christ and become conformable unto his death die with him that we may live with him and lay hold upon the Eternal Life And that loving correction shall make us great Psal 18.35 Repreh This reproves those who deal falsly with the peoples souls humour and please them in their sins flatter them in a sinful life wherein they live without the Law like those in Ezech. 13.18 19 22. Thus Ahab spared Benhadad 1 King 20.35 42. It is no good argument that a Magistrate is good towards God that he is merry chearful and lively This man lived i. e. he was frolick and jovial and merry without the Law NOTES more at large on ROMANS VII 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Commandment came sin revived IN these words is contained the estate of the Man after the Law came And that in regard 1. of Sin that revived 2. of the man he died Four things must be explained 1. What Commandment is here meant 2. How the Commandment may be said to come 3. How sin to revive 4. How upon the coming of the Commandment sin revives 1. What Law what Commandment was this the Law of Nature or the written Moral Law Here is now a Controversie there are who restrain this to the written Commandment But if the Law came to some who lived without the Law before there was any written Law then surely it cannot be understood only of the written Law But the Law came to some who lived without the Law before there was any written Law for so Adam lived without a Law when he sinned and to him the Law came and made his sin known so that he was ashamed of it and hid himself Cain lived without the Law and to him the Commandment came and made the burden of his sin known unto him to be greater than he was able to bear Gen. 4.13 Pharaoh lived without the Law and to him the Commandment came and discovered his sin and the righteousness of God so that he confessed That the Lord is just and I and my people are wicked Exod. 9. If therefore unto these and innumerable others who lived without the Law the Commandment came and made their sin known unto them before there was any written Law doubtless these words cannot be understood only of the written Law That when the Commandment came sin revived For the Law of the God of Life which is written in the hearts of men not with ink but with the Spirit of the Living God that comes to every man and tells him what he hath done what he hath left undone it is that which is said here to come it is that which saith inwardly to the man Thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt do no murder steal covet 't is that which inwardly accuseth the man and saith to him When thou sawest a thief thou consentedst to him and hast been partaker with the adulterers Thou hast let thy mouth speak wickedness and with thy tongue thou hast set forth deceit Thou satest and spakest against thy brother and hast slandered thine own mothers son These things hast thou done and I held my tongue and thou while thou wert alive without the Law thoughtest wickedly that I am such an one as thy self but I will reprove thee and set before thee the things which thou hast done And of men in this estate the Apostle speaks Rom. 2.14 15. But touching this Controversie whether it be the written or unwritten Law it matters not much to us so the Law 2. How may the Commandment be said to come When spiritual things as the Commandment here are said to come we are to understand that they are present and appear to be Thus God and Christ and Faith and the Law are said to come when they appear so the Lord is said to have come to Moses when he appeared unto him Exod. 19. And Christ is said to have come in the flesh 1 Joh. 4.2 when he appeared in the flesh or was made manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3. ult Thus 1 Cor. 11.26 as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup shew ye forth the Lords death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 until he come why He is with us alwayes to the end of the world Until he come therefore is until his life appear in us for our receiving of the Sacrament is our profession of conformity unto the Lords death until he come and live in us so 2 Cor. 4.10 Alwayes bearing in our mortal bodies the dying of the Lord Jesus that the life of Jesus may be made manifest or represented so Castel in our body for we which so live are alwayes delivered up unto death for Jesus our true lifes sake that the life of Jesus might be made manifest or represented in our mortal flesh O that every one of us so received this holy Sacrament which is indeed the true end of it Thus also Faith is said to come when it appears to be in us Gal. 3.25 and the reason is spiritual things are said to come when they appear as before So that the Law comes to the man when it is present with him appears to him makes it self known unto him and him known unto himself this explication I conceive may be sufficient 3. But how may Sin be said to revive The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth to live not to revive howbeit the ancient reading was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth revived as we turn it and Origen read the Text
is false doctrine because it 's strange unto us The Ismaelites thought strange of Gods Commandments Do we obey do we live it do we observe the great things of the Law do we live justly do we love mercy do we walk humbly with our God If we do these things then we shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or no and not till then otherwise for men to hear and then to go away and tell other things this or that is strange doctrine and not practise it So long as men are estranged from the life of God they must needs think strange of the will of God Sin estrangeth man from his God We may learn from hence a good Rule not to be too hasty in judging any tenent to be strange Doctrine or Heresie and condemning men as Hereticks until we our selves have made tryal of the Doctrine whether it be of God Most men speak evil of things and persons whom they know not The Jews for this reason rejected Christ Joh. 5. because they had not heard the voice of the Father his Law nor seen his shape and therefore how could they receive the Son and his Doctrine when they rejected the Father and his Doctrine of his Law that ought to precede While we are averse from our God his Law is an enemy unto us and therefore it was ordained after the Fall Gen. 3. Eph. 2. Coloss 2. Dehort Let not the Commandment seem strange unto us It is connatural it is conformable unto the Law of Nature that is born with us Rom. 2. Means Cease from thine own wisdom Those who would have the Law written in their hearts they must not kick against it Moses wrote Deuteronomy he tells us after Sehon King of the Amorites was overcome when rebellion and kicking against the Law when all scoffing and jeering at those who urge and lay the Law to us hath ceased That 's Ogg the King of Basan This Sehon dwelt at Heshbon i. e. in the mans own thoughts and these are they which make us think strange of the Law 't is the word in the Text and the Psalmist useth the very same argument Psal 94.11 The thoughts of men are vain Blessed is the man whom thou chastenest O Lord and teachest him out of thy Law Thou hast restrained prayer from the Almighty Job 15.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acquaint now thy self with God and be at peace so good things shall come unto thee Receive I pray thee the Law from his mouth and lay up his words in thy heart Job 22.21 22. This is the way to be acquainted with thy God Isai 1.16 18. and 30.19.64.24 Jer. 33.3 Call upon me and I will answer thee and shew thee great and mighty things such as thou knowest not NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON ROMANS VIII 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead will also quicken even your mortal bodies by or because of his spirit that dwelleth in you THe Wise Man moves an Objection concerning Festival Dayes When all the light of every day is from the Sun he answers it himself by the knowledge of the Lord they were distinguished and he altered seasons and appointed feasts some of them hath he made high dayes and hallowed them and some of them hath he made ordinary dayes as the like reason is of men and persons all men are from the ground saith he and Adam was Created of earth he answers the Objection In much knowledge the Lord hath divided them and made their wayes divers Ecclus. 33 7 8 9. As for Festival dayes howsoever the Apostles thought meet to wave and neglect many which the Jews observed according to the Law of Moses yet some they retained as being more mysterious such as are the Passover Pentecost and the Feast of Tabernacles whereof the first prefigured the Death and Resurrection of the Lord Jesus the second the giving of the Holy Ghost and the third the Feast of the Lords Nativity For the Prophet Zachary tells us that the Feast of Tabernacles shall be kept and thus Tertullian and divers of the Ancient Fathers understood the Apostle Coloss 2.16 Let no man judge you in meat and drink or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in part of a feast as the word signifies in part of a feast for one part of it was Judaical and Ceremonial and to be abolish'd another part of it Spiritual and C●●istian and to be retained Nor doth this any way thwart what the Apostle writes Rom. 14.5 One man esteems a day above a day but another man esteems every day 5.9 it 's evident that the Apostle speaks of the weak and strong Christian but come we to the words propounded The Apostle having in the seventh Chapter described the condition of a man as yet under the Law which some foully mistake and pittifully abuse as if it were a description of a perfect Regenerate Man when yet nor Christ nor his Spirit are once mentioned throughout all the dispute from the fifth verse to the 25th In the eighth Chapter he deciphers the state of those who are under the Grace of Christ wherein there is no condemnation as who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit In these the Spirit of Grace works Life and Peace in the inward Man That they may know whether they have Christ and his Spirit in them or not that body in which sin lived reigned and ruled is dead because of sin now dead in it but the Spirit lives in it because of Righteousness received by the Grace of God and living in it Now the Spirit of God which raised up Christ from the dead not only raiseth up the inward Man but the outward also not the Soul only dead in trespasses and sins but the mortal Body also if that Spirit dwell in us which is the purport of the Text and hath accordingly two parts which are the two Divine Axioms which I shall consider in the Text. 1. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. The Spirit of the Father raised up Christ from the dead 2. If the Spirit of Him the Father that raised up Christ from the dead dwell in you He who raised up Christ from the dead will quicken even your mortal Bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you 1. The Spirit of the Father raised up Christ from the dead We find the Resurrection of Christ attributed unto the Father and His Spirit often elsewhere in Scripture Acts 2.24 Whom God raised up having loosed the pains of death And again vers 32. This Jesus hath God raised up whereof we are all witnesses So Rom. 1.4 Declared to be the Son of God with power accordi●g to the Spirit of Holyness by the Resurrection from the dead And Chapt. 6.4 5. Therefore we are buried with him by Baptisme into death that like as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory
yield your Members Servants to righteousness unto holyness So shall it come to pass that if the Spirit dwells in us that he who raised up the Lord Jesus from the dead will also quicken or make alive even our mortal Bodies by his Spirit that dwells in us 4. Observe hence There is a due regard to be had a due care to be taken of our mortal Bodies they are a part of our selves they are mortal and liable unto death and they are to be quickned and enlivened by the Holy Spirit Wherefore we must feed them with food convenient for them use Physick for preservation of them in health cloath them decently repair our health decayed by too much austerity St. Paul adviseth Timothy Drink no more water but use a little Wine for thy stomachs sake and thy frequent infirmities 1 Tim. 5.23 They are to be the foot-stool of the Lord as the Earth to the Heavenly Man The Temples of the Holy Ghost the Body is for the Lord as the Lord for the Body Obs 5. But what warrant is this for our excessive eating and drinking our unreasonable pampering and glutting or surfeiting of our Bodies as if we layed up store and provision for a Siege If there had been such surfeiting and drunkenness in the Apostles time as is now in our Age surely he would have counselled us to drink water and but a little wine for our stomachs sake and our frequent infirmities whereof we often complain and are the causes of them our selves Again our Bodies are to be cloathed decently and what warrant is all this for our crisping and curling our pampering or perfuming our spotting or painting our superfluous adorning according to every new fantastick mode they labour not nor do they spin nay they are bound and pinion'd from all labour even so much as dressing themselves yet are they cloathed like to the Lillyes and Tulips Solomon in all his glory was not to be compared to one of these It is true care is to be taken of our Bodies but what warrant for all this superfluity and vanity Alas our heathenish cares What we shall eat what we shall drink or wherewithal we shall be cloathed these steal away our heart and ravel out our time a●e not these those things after which the Gentiles seek Is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Soul more then meat and the Body then rayment Matth. 6.25 What Spirit think we dwells in these Bodies they fare deliciously they are sensual and voluptuous therefore they have not the Spirit Jude vers 19. They are filled with Wine wherein there is excess Therefore they cannot be filled with the Spirit of God Ephes 5.18 But let us be exhorted to lay aside all this wanton superfluity it is a reasonable and equal Exhortation of the Apostle Rom. 6.19 This justly reprov●s too many at this day who presume upon their Faith and that their heart is right towards God an● that they are well rooted and grounded and built up in Christ in the inward Man and upon presumption of this take to themselves a freedom in outward things living in jollity and looseness in regard of the outward life Who conceive that the Lord is so well pleased with their inward and Spiritual life of the inward Man that he regards not the outward acts of the Body and this persuasion hath prevailed so far with some that they have let loose the reigns to all lasciviousness and not heeded the curbs and checks of the Spirit It was a foolish speech and a false of the Epigrammatist Lasciva est nobis pagina vita proba est Our Writings saith he are loose and lascivious but our life is chast Does not the mouth speak out of the abundance of the heart Yea doth not the tongue utter the hand act the feet walk yea the whole Body move according to the dictat of the heart If therefore the words and actions and motions of our Bodies are sinful and evil sure the inward thoughts wills desires and other affections are sinful and evil also Doth not our Lord say That by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words thou shalt he condemned Matth. 12.36 If the inward life wherewith the Spirit quickens our Souls and Spirit were sufficient why does our Apostle here tell us The Spirit of God shall quicken and enliven our mortal Bodies How can we glorify God by our good works The inward they cannot see but by the outward they may judg what Christians we are Must not our light so shine before Men that they may see our good works and glorify our Father which as in Heaven Mat. 5. Let us be exhorted therefore more strictly to consider our wayes before the Lord and so prepare our walking with our God in truth and holyness and love and charity to each other that he may be delighted to dwell in us to make us his Temples to raise us up from the mortality from the death of sin to the life of righteousness that we walking in the Spirit like loving and obedient Children to our God there may accrue no condemnation to us who walk or live not according to the flesh viz. in our sensual sinful life which God of his grace and great mercy cause to happen to every Soul of us For consolation to the poor disconsolate soul let us consider the Apostle to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 15.30 31. wherein we have the testimony taken from his own Person and that confirmed by Oath wherein he professeth in behalf of himself and all Believers with him that he died daily which may be understood for our comfort of those daily perils and dangers of a bodily death whereunto he daily exposed himself by preaching the Gospel or rather of the daily Mortification of sin in hope of the Resurrection and life for the Christian life however it may be thought easie in our profession it is most difficult in practice Yet the Apostle had great rejoycing and glorying therein in Christ Jesus our Saviour which glorying and rejoycing proceeds from the Pattern Christs sufferings and our conformity thereunto Heb. 12.2 Who for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross c. So that all the afflictions both outward and inward which befal us in our way and course of Mortification are counterpoysed by joy rejoycing and glorying for that daily dying to sin that daily ceasing from sin from his own wisdom and knowledge that he might be wise with the wisdom of God that daily mortifying his earthly Members fornication uncleanness inordinate affection evil concupiscence and covetousness which is Idolatry who knew this but the Lord and his own Spirit From all which we may gather that true Believers the People of God have great joy and comfort in their proficiency in the good life though accompanied with many sorrows and conflicts St. Paul died daily and rejoyced daily and invites us to rejoyce alwayes Phil. 4.4 There is no dolour no sorrow in this death nor ought
and drink to do his Fathers will and shall it be ours to do our own will His will was resolved and emptied into his Fathers will his humanity was wholly without it self 't was instrumentum Dei divinitati conjunctum saith Lyra an instrument at hand for the Deity to work by Such an obedient mind hath been alwayes in the Servants of God mine heart is ready mine heart is ready saith holy David and our Apostle Lord what wilt thou have me to do nay rather what wilt thou do with me their will was so resolved into Gods will that they seemed to do nothing themselves but were without themselves like serviceable instruments to be acted by their Masters hand and ready for God to work by 't is St. Luke's ordinary phrase Paul and Barnabas rehearsed what God had done with them Act. 14.27 and 15.4 Such an obedient mind was in Christ and in all that are Christs and that not only in speaking and doing but also in suffering according to the Will of God which is the third step of our Lords Humiliation He was obedient unto death Rare and singular obedience for whereas obedience is alwayes the greater by how much the good is the greater which we undervalue for obedience sake what goods are greater than either those of name and honour but what contradiction of sinners did he suffer against himself they thought they said well when they said he was a Samaritan and had a Devil or those of fortune but he became poor and had not where to lay his head or those of body as beauty stature strength c. But he was weak and had neither form nor comliness or those of Soul and of all the rest the Will but not my Will but thy Will be done or those of the whole man as Liberty but he was captivated and led away like a sheep to the slaughter or that of all the rest which is the fountain of all the rest the Life but he became obedient even to the death he undervalued and parted with every desireable good only for obedience sake But the Son of Man must be killed saith he himself and he was delivered up to death by his Father it seems therefore his death was necessary yea constrained and violent for he was betrayed bought and sold by Judas and the Jews who procured his death and he himself was unwilling to die if therefore there were necessity from God if coaction from men if in him unwillingness to die surely there was no obedience unto death The Answer to this doubt may serve also for a fundamental reason of this third step or degree of our Lords humiliation for 't is most true the Father delivered up the Son unto death both by cloathing him with a mortal garment which he might put off and die and by inspiring a Will into him to die and by allowing his betrayers and murtherers power and opportunity to deliver him up unto death and by so disposing and ordering his death contrary to their malicious designs that by a conformable death he might repair the life of the world according to the speech of Joseph his type Ye thought evil against me but God intended it to good c. to save much people alive Yet did he not constrain his Son to die either immediately predetermining his Will by an antecedent peremptory decree or over-ruling it and taking away the liberty of it by constraint or mediately by giving any coactive power over him into his enemies hand which 't is manifest they had not and though they had the power they had from God yet not for any such end so that God cannot be said to be the cause of his death though he gave them power to kill him no more than he that lends his friend a knife may be said to be the cause of a murder committed with it so that here was no absolute necessity or compulsion either from God or Man only a necessity of consequence there was which as the learned know may consist with things contingent and free agents But he was unwilling to die how then obedient unto death he seemed indeed unwilling to die and that was lest he should seem not to be a man for what maw simply or absolutely was ever willing to die when he would shew in his flesh the weakness of our flesh saith Tertullian he said Father let this Cup pass from me but in order and submission to his Fathers Will he curb'd his own Will and complyed with his Father in eodem volito and was willing to die Read the story of his Passion and see if he be not so O my Father if it be possible let this Cup pass from me nevertheless not as I will but as thou wilt Father save me from this hour but for this cause came I unto this hour Yea he was so thirsty after the Cup of his passion that he called Peter Satan for suggesting a contrary motion the Cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it The Father gave it him and he took it the Father delivered him up unto death and he delivered himself up unto death Ephes 5.25 both willingly as Zeno Veronensis speaks of Abraham and Isaac which figured out our Lords passion Ille gladium exerit iste cervicem eodem voto c. the one draws out his sword the wicked which is thy sword or a sword of thine saith David and the other puts forth his neck And surely great reason there was for this Joynt-will of the Father and Son touching the death of Christ whether we respect the Righteousness of God or the salvation of Men For whereas the Righteousness of God is either facti of deed whereby he doth all things befitting himself It became him to make the Captain of our salvation perfect through sufferings or dicti of Promise for those things which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his Prophets that Christ should suffer he hath so fulfilled And he suffered for our Salvation the general end which we confess in the Creed which salvation in respect of the term à quo is from sin from the wrath of God for sin from the curse of the Law for sin from eternal death the wages of sin from Satan who hath the power of death in sin Tit. 2.14 Rom. 5. Gal. 3.13 Hos 13.14 For Chrlst by his death put to death these enemies of our Salvation as Sampson his type by his death the Philistines In regard of the term ad quem as we confess in the Collect on Easter day by his death he opened unto us the gate of Everlasting Life that he might bring us unto God 1 Pet. 3.18 that he might bring us unto Glory that by means of death we might receive the promise of the Eternal Inheritance Hebr. 2. and generally 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Gregory Nyssen nay summa voluntatis c. the whole summ of Gods will is the salvation of men saith Tertullian So willing
was the Father that Man should be saved that he spared not his only begotten Son and so willing was the Son that he spared not himself but became obedient to his Father even unto death and ought not we to be at least as willing as obedient and that for our own salvation It 's but our duty for hereunto are we called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2.21 a principal duty which the Sacrament requires of us and which every one of us hath promised and vowed solemnly and stand engaged faithfully to perform For as from the death of Christ the Sacraments have their power and efficacy saith the School so their principal end is our conformity to the death of Christ for know ye not that so many of us as are baptized into Jesus Christ are baptized into his death Rom. 6.3 And to speak a word in season because the Church now generally addresses it self to the Holy Communion Know ye not that so often as ye eat that bread and drink that Cup of the Lord ye shew forth the Lords death till he come till his life appear in our mortal body As they relate of Artemesia that she drunk up her husbands ashes in wine and erected unto his memory a stately Monument So the Church the Spouse of Christ erects a monument in her self of Christs death by her conformity thereunto For the Cup of blessing which we bless is it not the communion of the blood of Christ and the bread which we break is it not the communion of the body of Christ 1 Cor. 10.16 But good God how few are there of that crowd of men who call themselves Christians that dare follow Christ down this third step of his Humiliation For do not most men believe that it 's enough that Christ died though they die not that this work is done already to their hand or if they think it their duty do they not put it off till hereafter Let us eat and drink for to morrow wee 'l die Or do they not think to commute this duty and turn it into vain jangling and conceive that it 's enough for them to dispute it out whether Christ died for all men or no But as for conformity to his death few words of that or if words yet but words Nay men are so averse from this duty that I make no question but many would rather part with all their estates than their sins as Rabanus Maurus spake by experience of some who had left large Revenues and Patrimonies that they might embrace a Monastick life and die to the world yet had not left their anger and covetousness but would quarrel for the value of a farthing Nay many would not doubt rather to dye a violent death skin for skin and yield their bodies to be burned in defence of some tenent which they have chosen to hold in Religion than die the spiritual death unto sin For since men of divers and contrary Religions have laid down their lives upon terms of contradiction it may hence be concluded that one of them at the least died in defence of his own will not that he might loose his own will and suffer according to the Will of God so that under their favour who think otherwise it 's no good argument this or that man dyed in defence of such or such a tenent therefore it 's a true tenent But if so few dare follow our Lord down this step to be obedient unto death Quid dicam in crucem tolli What shall I say of that lowest step of his Humiliation He became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross that painful that lingering that infamous that accursed death of the Cross So painful that crux is all one with a torment and cruciare to torment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there being then in use no torment thought so exquisite But si grave breve no 't was a long a lingering death so that it might be thought a favour even to dye And ad damnum accedit infamia to so great so long a torment add the infamy of it 'T is the most shameful death in the judgement of all men Gentiles Jews and Christians whether we respect the quality of the Malefactors adjudged so to dye 't was the death only of servants and slaves and of those the basest and most notorious Homine libero indignum quamvis nocente saith Lactantius whence St. Paul was slain with the sword because a free-man the other Apostles crucified or put to other deaths because reputed servants Or whether we respect the place where 't was executed without the gate so base so infamous the Gentiles thought it Extra Portam dispersis manibus patibulum habebis saith the Comedian and the Jews account it the greatest reproach of Christans that they worship 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a crucified God Nay St. Paul acknowledges it a most shameful death by opposing Glory and the Cross had they known him they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory 1 Cor. 2.8 And shame and the cross are all one with him Heb. 13.13 and you 'l think no less if ye remember those who they are without the gate for without are dogs and Sorcerers and whore-mongers and murderers and idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a lye Apoc. 22. And among these they reckoned the God of Truth the Lord of Life Nay add but to the shame of men the curse of God that it was an execrable death for cursed is every one that is hanged upon a tree and 't will appear to be the worst of all deaths of all punishmens the worst Summo supplicio i. e. cruce afficiuntur saith the Lawyer O who hath done this wickedness this great wickedness and with so high a hand sinned against God! who but Judas and the Jews they contrived and plotted his death and Pilat he adjudged him so to dye though he himself confessed there was no cause of death in him Alas poor Pilat alas poor Jew you bear all the blame but we we Beloved we are the men who have crucified the Lord of Glory we we also have been his betrayers and murderers For 't is not the Plot of the Jews only but the conspiracy also of all ungodly men Morte turpissimâ condemnemus eum Nor were the Jews the only men that crucified him but all the Nations of the Earth Apoc. 1.7 and we among the rest he was crucified in the great City of the Devil as St. Austin understood it which is spiritually call'd Sodom and Egypt Apoc. 11.8 For what do the Priests else but mock when they preach Christ one way and live another what do they else but imprison him when they know the Truth and hold it in unrighteousness Nay what do they else but crucifie him For they who sin wilfully after they have received the knowledge of the truth they crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh and
to be like unto these his brethren Who are brethren how are the children of God Christs brethren 1. See Notes on Gen. 26.1 they who are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. And do the will of the Father Matth. 12. ult Act. 2.37 2. The Spiritual Seed of Abraham are born of the same Father even of God so Hebr. 2.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one Confut. Those who hence infer an equality contrary to vers 11. hujus capitis 2. It became him to be like unto his brethren in all things wherein we have 1. Christ's similitude and likeness to his brethren 2. the extent of it 3. the reason of both 1. Similitude and likeness is not here to be understood in regard of quality but in regard of essence and nature that 's the main drift of the Apostle here to shew that because he took not on him the Angels or layeth not hold on the Angels but the Seed of Abraham therefore he must be like unto the Seed of Abraham which he took on him or layeth hold upon 2. The extent of this similitude and likeness is in all things i. e. in all things which were expedient for our Redemption and no way impeached or hindered his perfection He was therefore born like unto his brethren and like unto them brought up Esay 7.15 He was subject unto his Parents Luk. 2. He was like unto his brethren in all things which are incident unto their nature He was weary Joh. 4. he was hungry he eat he was thirsty he drank he wept Joh. 11. he dyed he is not said any where to have been sick for that is not universally incident unto the whole nature of man Many there have been who have dyed without precedent sickness Besides since all diseases proceed either from an imperfect forming of the body or from some fault in the seed or from intemperancy or ignorance whereby we know not how to distinguish what is wholesome for food The Body of our Lord Jesus was perfectly formed by the holy Ghost he himself was not intemperate and knew and avoided whatever was hurtful to the body He was without sin as Chap. 4. Our Apostle expresly limits the similitude For 1. That was not expedient for our redemption 2. Besides it would have hindered his perfection 1. It was not expedient for our redemption but opposite thereunto for therefore he was made manifest that he might take away our sins and in him was no sin 1 Joh. 3.5 Had there been sin in him he might have been disabled from taking away our sins yea he had had need of one to have taken away that sin 2. Sin would have hindered and diminished his perfection for whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law 1 Joh. 3.4 which directly opposeth his perfection who was to fulfil the law and so take away the sins of the world For like reason we read not that he was liable to errour ignorance or folly for these were no way expedient unto our Redemption but hinderances unto his perfection because they are defects and deprivations We read our Lord wept Joh. 11. but we read no where that our Lord laughed and the reason may be because he was given unto us as an example of mortification and so his weeping was expedient to our Redemption and no way hindered our Lords perfection But that he laughed not it was not that it was unlawful so to do for to what purpose did the Creator implant the power of laughing in our nature if it were utterly unlawful ever to exercise it But though the Lord Jesus be not reported any where to have laughed yet we find that Abraham and Sarah laughed and Isaac had his name from it And Elias derided Baals Priests yea among the times appointed for several actions The Wise man tells us there is a time to laugh Eccles 3. And good reason for nature at mea● and after it requires a chearfulness and ungirding of the mind because all spiritual exercises even joy it self calls the mind inward and in a sort oppresseth the body for the refreshing and recreating of which we receive meat and drink But this is understood always to be done in measure and moderation which is as it were the reign and bridle of the mind Otherwise Solomon saith rightly of laughter thou art mad and the Apostle reckons up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jeasting among the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things that are unseemly and not convenient Eph. 5. Reason That 's implyed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it became him The word here used is of like extent with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it notes a decency comliness and fitness See Notes on verse above 2. It implys an hypothetical debt So that if the Lord would redeem man he ought to be like unto the man whom he would redeem for that nature that was to be redeemed and delivered that was to be taken on and laid hold upon and the Lord was to be made like unto that nature in all things since therefore he determined for the reasons named before to redeem and deliver man he ought or it became him in all things to be made like unto man whence Phil. 2.7 Other reasons there are 1. God hath said In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Either Christ or the Children must suffer 2. He must be an example of suffering from the following words Object If he were like unto his brethren in all things then he was like unto them in their sins Respon That 's it wherein he was not like unto his brethren which is by name excepted Heb. 4.15 But it seems he was even herein like unto his brethren Rom. 8.3 God sent his Son in the similitude of sinful flesh Therefore he is like unto his brethren even in their sin This followeth not The Scripture it 's evident by the context is thus to be understood that God sent his Son to supply the defect and impotency of the Law and our flesh that he might take upon him mans flesh that which is like unto the sinful flesh of other men as that which was mortal and suffered the miseries and death its self due to sinful flesh Our Lord therefore is compared to the Brazen Serpent Numb 21.8 9. Joh. 3.14 as like unto it which seemed to have the venome and poyson of a Serpent in it but indeed had none And thus our Lord was like unto the sinful flesh but indeed had no sin 2. The old Hereticks abused this Scripture to confirm their opinion who said that our Lord had no true flesh but only a fantastick body But one of the pious Ancients hath long since answered them that it is not said that our Lord was made in the similitude of mans flesh but in the similitude of sinful flesh 3. But it 's further said that Christ was made in the likeness of man Phil. 2.7 Therefore he was only like to man not truly man