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A53696 Exercitations on the Epistle to the Hebrews also concerning the Messiah wherein the promises concerning him to be a spiritual redeemer of mankind are explained and vindicated, his coming and accomplishment of his work according to the promises is proved and confirmed, the person, or who he is, is declared, the whole oeconomy of the mosaical law, rites, worship, and sacrifice is explained : and in all the doctrine of the person, office, and work of the Messiah is opened, the nature and demerit of the first sin is unfolded, the opinions and traditions of the antient and modern Jews are examined, their objections against the Lord Christ and the Gospel are answered, the time of the coming of the Messiah is stated, and the great fundamental truths of the Gospel vindicated : with an exposition and discourses on the two first chapters of the said epistle to the Hebrews / by J. Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1668 (1668) Wing O753; ESTC R18100 1,091,989 640

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some of them pretend to adhere unto to this day the folly of which blasphemy both reflects upon themselves and is demonstratively removable from him whom to their eternal ruine they seek to reproach For 1. Do they not know that their own Moses was generally esteemed by the wisest of the Heathen to have been skilled and exercised in Magick So Pliny and Apuleius testifie and that he wrought wonders by vertue thereof as Celsus contends at large And can they fix on a readier course to confirm such a suspicion in the minds of Atheistical Scoffers then by their own taking up the same accusation against the Author of more and greater miracles then those wrought by Moses What colour of answer can they return unto his reproaches whilest themselves with more open impudence manage the same accusation against the Lord Jesus Besides as is confessed Aegypt was the spring of Magical incantations the worlds Academy for that diabolical cunning where almost alone it was had in honour and reputation There in the Kings Court had Moses his education and conversation forty years How much more just then though sufficiently unjust might a suspicion seem concerning him of his being skilled in that falsly called Wisdom then concerning our Lord Jesus who was persecuted thither and returned thence in his infancy which they childishly object unto him So that in this whole vain pretence they do nothing but attempt to cast down their own foundations 2. Neither indeed do they account the skill in and use of Magical incantations a crime but an Excellency Josephus would have us believe that the Art of Magick and the invention of incantations was part of the Wisdom of Solomon And their Talmudical Doctors do expresly approve of that diabolical Art Nothing then but extream malice and desperation would put them upon inventing this Cloke for their infidelity which not only casts down the foundation of their own Profession but involves also a contradiction unto those Principles which at other times they avouch So that Rabbi Achor was mistaken when he gave out that as a Prophecy which was indeed an history namely that a generation of ungodly men among the Jews would not believe the things that the Messiah should do but should affirm that he doth them by Art Magical § 73 For the blasphemy its self there needs no other answer be given unto it but what was returned by our Lord Jesus of old If these things had been done by Magical incantations and consequently the assistance of the Devil it must needs be upon a division of those wicked spirits among themselves and that upon the main design of their Kingdom Dominion and Interest in this world The open and proclaimed work of our Lord Jesus in this world was by all wayes and means to overthrow the Kingdom of Satan and his works This he privately taught this he publickly declared to be the main end of his coming into this world The Works and Miracles which he wrought were very many innumerable of them exercised on Devils themselves to their shame terror and dispossession of the habitations they had invaded In and during this work he declares them to all the world to be evil wicked malicious unclean and lying spirits reserved for everlasting destruction in Hell under the wrath of the great God For this cause they on the other side ceased not to oppose him and to stir up all the world against him untill they thought they had prevailed in his death If men therefore shall imagine or fancy that the works of Christ against the interest of Satan upon his Person unto his shame wrought to confirm a Doctrine teaching all the world to avoid him abhor him fight and contend against him commending every thing that he hates with promises of life eternal unto them who forsake him and maintain his quarrel against him threatning every thing that he loves and labours to promote in the world with eternal vengeance were wrought by his help and assistance they had more need to be sent unto the place where the maladies of those distracted of their Wits are attended then to have an answer given unto their folly § 74 They have yet another pretence to preserve themselves from the efficacy of this self-conviction But this is so perfectly Judaical that is so full of monstrous ridiculous figments that nothing but an aim to discover their present desperate folly and with what unmanly inventions they endeavour to cover themselves from the light of their own conviction can give countenance unto the repetition of it Besides the Fable its self is vulgarly known and I shall therefore only give a brief compendium of it seeing it may not be wholly avoided The story they tell us is this There was a stone in the Sanctum Sanctorum under the Ark wherein was written Shem Hamphorash so the Cabalists call the Name Jehovah He that could learn this Name might by the vertue of it do what miracles he pleased Wherefore the Wise men fearing what might ensue thereon made two Brazen Dogs and set them on two Pillars before the door of the Sanctuary And it was so that when any one went in and learned that Name as he came out those Dogs barked so horribly that they frighted him and made him forget the Name that he had learned But Jesus of Nazareth going in wrote the Name in Parchment and put it within the skin of his leg and closed the skin upon it so that though he lost the remembrance of it at his coming out by the barking of the brazen Dogs yet he recovered the knowledge of it again out of the Parchment in his leg and by vertue thereof he wrought miracles walked on the Sea cured the lame raised the dead and opened the eyes of the blind That alone which from hence we aim to evince is the conviction that the most stubborn of the Jews had of the miracles of our blessed Saviour Had they not been openly performed and undeniably attested no Creatures that ever had the shape of men or any thing more of modesty then the Brazen Dogs they talk of would have betaken themselves to such monstrous foolish figments for a countenance and pretence unto the rejection of him and them He that should contend that the Sun did not shine all the last year and should give this reason of his Assertion because a certain man of his acquaintance climbed up to Heaven by a Ladder and put him in a Box and kept him close in his Chamber all that while would speak to the full with as much probability and appearance of truth as the grand Rabbins do in this Tale. Every word in their story is a Monster The stone the writing of the name of God in it the vertue of the pronuntiation of that name the Brazen Dogs the entrance of a private man into the Sanctum Sanctorum the barking of the Dogs are Dreams becoming men under a poenal infatuation and blindness not much distant from
Will and Understanding of the Humane Nature is the principle of those Theandrical acts whereby Christ ruleth over all in the Kingdom given him of his Father Rev. 1. v. 17 18. As he was God he was Davids Lord but not his Son As he was Man he was Davids Son and so absolutely could not be his Lord. In his Person as he was God and Man he was his Lord and his Son which is the intention of our Saviours Question Matth. 22. v. 45. 3. For the Nature and Manner of this speaking when and how God said it four things seem to be intended in it 1. The Eternal Decree of God concerning the Exaltation of the Son incarnate So David calls this Word the Decree the Statute or Eternal Appointment of God Psal. 2. v. 7. This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Internal and Eternal Word or speaking of the Mind Will and Counsel of God referred unto by Peter 1 Epist. 1. v. 20. God said this in the Eternal Purpose of his Will to and concerning his Son 2. The Covenant and Compact that was between the Father and Son about and concerning the Work of Mediation is expressed also in this saying That there was such a Covenant and the nature of it I have else-where declared See Prov. 8. v. 30 31. Isa. 53. v. 10 11 12. Zech. 6. v. 12 13. Joh. 17. v. 4 5 6 In this Covenant God said unto him Sit thou at my right hand which he also pleaded in and upon the discharge of his work Isa. 50. v. 8 9. Joh. 17. v. 4 5. 3. There is also in it the Declaration of this Decree and Covenant in the Prophesies and Promises given out concerning their accomplishment and execution from the foundation of the world Luke 1. v. 40. 1 Pet. 1.11 12. Gen. 3.15 He said it by the mouth of his holy prophets which have been since the world began And in this sense David only recounts the prophesies and promises that went before Luke 24. v. 25 26 27. And all these are comprised in this speaking here mentioned Thus the Lord said unto him And all these were past when recorded by David But he yet looks forward by a Spirit of prophesie into the actual accomplishment of them all when upon the Resurrection of Christ and the fulfilling of his work of Humiliation God actually invested him with the promised Glory which is the fourth thing intended in the expression Acts 2. v. 33.36 chap. 5.33 1 Pet. 1. v. 20 21. All these four things center in a new Revelation now made to David by the Spirit of Prophesie This he here declares as the stable Purpose Covenant and Promise of God the Father revealed unto him The Lord said And this also gives us an account of the manner of this Expression as to its imperative Enunciation Sit thou It hath in it the force of a promise that he should do so as it respected the Decree Covenant and Declaration thereof from the foundation of the world God engaging his Faithfulness and Power for the effecting of it in its appointed season speaks concerning it as a thing instantly to be done And as those words respect the glorious accomplishment of the thing it self so they denote the acquiescence of God in the work of Christ and his Authority in his glorious Exaltation 4. The thing spoken about is Christ's sitting at the right hand of God wherein that consists hath been declared on verse 3. In brief it is the Exaltation of Christ into the glorious Administration of the Kingdom granted unto him with Honour Security and Power or as in one word our Apostle calls it his Reigning 1 Cor. 15.25 Concerning which we have treated already at large And herein we shall acquisce and not trouble our selves with the needless curiosity and speculation of some about these words Such is that of Maldonat on Matth. 16. before remarked on verse 3. saith he Cum filius dicitur sedere ad dextram Patris denotatur comparatio virtutis filii Patris potentia filii major dicitur ratione functionis Officii administrationis Ecclesiae Paterque videtur fecisse filium quodammodo se superiorem donasse illi nomen etiam supra ipsum Dei nomen quod omnes Christiani tacitè significant cùm audito nomine Jesu detegunt caput audito autem nomine Dei non item Than which nothing could be more presumptuously nor foolishly spoken For there is not in the words the least intimation of any comparison between the Power of the Father and the Son but only the Father's Exaltation of the Son unto Power and Glory expressed But as was said these things have been already considered 5. There is in the words the End aimed at in this sitting down at the right hand of God and that is the making of his Enemies the foot-stool of his feet This is that which is promised unto him in the state and condition whereunto he is exalted For the opening of these words we must enquire 1. Who are these Enemies of Christ. 2. How they are to be made his foot-stool 3. By whom For the first we have shewed that it is the glorious Exaltation of Christ in his Kingdom that is here spoken of and therefore the Enemies intended must be the Enemies of his Kingdom or Enemies unto him in his Kingdom that is as he sits on his Throne carrying on the work designed and ends of it Now the Kingdom of Christ may be considered two ways First in respect of the Internal Spiritual Power and Efficacy of it in the hearts of his subjects Secondly with respect unto the outward glorious Administration of it in the world And in both these respects it hath enemies in abundance all and every one whereof must be made his foot-stool We shall consider them apart The Kingdom Rule or Reigning of Christ in the first sense is the Authority and Power which he puts forth for the conversion sanctification and salvation of his Elect. As he is their King he quickens them by his Spirit sanctifies them by his grace preserves them by his faithfulness raiseth them from the dead at the last day by his power and gloriously rewardeth them unto Eternity in his righteousness In this work the Lord Christ hath many enemies as the Law Sin Sathan the World Death the Grave and Hell all these are enemies to the Work and Kingdom of Christ and consequently to his Person as having undertaken that work 1. The Law is an enemy unto Christ in his Kingdom not absolutely but by accident and by reason of the consequents that attend it where his subjects are obnoxious unto it It slays them Rom. 7. v. 9 10 11. which is the work of an enemy is against them and contrary unto them Col. 2. v. 14. and contributes strength to their other adversaries 1 Cor. 15. v. 56. which discovers the nature of an enemy 2. Sin is universally and in its whole nature an enemy unto Christ Rom. 8. v. 7. Sinners
and enemies are the same Rom. 5. v. 8 10. Col. 1. v. 21. It is that which makes special direct and immediate opposition to the quickning sanctifying and saving of his his people Rom. 7. v. 21 23. Jam. 1. v. 14 15. 1 Pet. 2. v. 11. 3. Sathan is the sworn enemy of Christ the adversary that openly constantly avowedly opposeth him in his Throne Matth. 16.18 Ephes. 6. v. 12. 1 Pet. 5.8 And he exerts his enmity by temptations 1 Cor. 7. v. 5. 1 Thess. 3. v. 5. accusations Rev. 12. v. 10. persecutions Rev. 2. v. 10. All which are the works of an enemy 4. The World is also a professed enemy of the Kingdom of Christ Joh. 15. v. 18. in the Things of it the Men of it the Rule of it it sets it self against the work of the Lord Christ on his Throne The things of it as under the curse and subject to vanity are suited to alienate the hearts of men from Christ and so act an enmity against him Jam. 4. v. 4. 1 Joh. 2. v. 15 16 17. 1 Tim. 6. v. 9 10 11. Matth. 13. v. 22 The men of the world act the same part Matth. 10. v. 22. chap. 24. v. 9. By examples by temptations by reproaches by persecutions by allurements they make it their business to oppose the Kingdom of Christ. And to that end is the Rule of it for the most part directed or over-ruled 1 Cor. 15. v. 24 25. 5. Death is also an enemy so it is expresly called 1 Cor. 15.26 it designs execution of the first Curse against all believers and therein contributes aid and Assistance unto all other Adversaries giving up its self to the service of Satan and therefore said to be in his power Chap. 2.14 of this Epistle and borrows a sting of sin 1 Cor. 15.56 to make its self the more terrible and sharp 6. The Grave is an Adversary also It fights against the faith of the Subjects of Christ by reducing their Mortality into Corruption and holding fast the dead untill they are powerfully rescued from the jaws of it 7. Lastly Hell is that Enemy in a subordination whereunto all these others do act They all aim to bring men into Hell which is an Eternal Enemy where it prevails This attends the workings and successes of those other Adversaries to consume and destroy if it were possible the whole Inheritance of Christ Rev. 6.8 All these are Enemies to Christ in his Work and Kingdom with every thing that contributes aid or Assistance unto them every thing that they make use of in the pursuit of their Enmity against him Now all these Enemies as far as they oppose the spiritual internal carrying on of the work of Christ must be made the footstool of his feet The Expression is Metaphorical and is to be interpreted and applyed variously according to the Nature and Condition of the Enemies with whom he hath to do The Allusion in general is taken from what was done by Joshua his Type towards the Enemies of his people Josh. 10. v. 24. To shew the ruine of their power and his absolute prevalency against them he caused the people to set their feet upon their necks See 2 Sam. 22.39 Psal. 8.6 To have his Enemies then brought under his feet is to have an absolute compleat conquest over them And their being made his footstool their perpetual and unchangeable Duration in that condition under the weight of what ever burden he shall be pleased to lay upon them This being that which is to be done we may consider how it is accomplished now this whole work of conquest and prevalency over all his enemies is done 1. Meritoriously 2. Exemplarily 3. Efficiently 1. Meritoriously By his Death and blood-shedding he hath procured the sentence of Condemnation in the Cause depending between him and them to be pronounced against them so that they shall have no more Right to exert their Enmity against him or his He hath given them all their deaths wounds and leaves them to dye at his pleasure So hath he prevailed against the Law Gal. 3.13 Col. 2.14 Rom. 7.6 He hath removed that strength which it gave to sin 1 Cor. 15.55 56. So that it hath no right to disquiet or condemn any of his Subjects for the future And 2. Against sin Rom. 8.2 3. So that it should not reign in nor condemn his any more And 3. Satan also Heb. 2.14 15. as to all pretence of Liberty or Right unto any part of his cursed work And 4. So likewise the World Joh. 16.33 Gal. 1.4 And against 5. Death Heb. 2.14 15. 1 Cor. 15.55 56. with 6. The Grave and 7. Hell or the wrath to come 1 Thess. 1.10 They are all meritoriously conquered in his death and Resurrection And all this hath he done for his Church 2. Exemplarily All these Adversaries peculiarly exercised their Enmity against and tryed their strength and power upon his own person The Law brought its curse upon him Gal. 3.13 Sin its Guilt 2 Cor. 5.21 Rom. 8.2 3. Satan put forth all his power against him Col. 2.15 as also did the World in all sorts of things and persons in all kinds of Opposition and Persecutions Death also he tasted of Heb. 2.9 and lay in the Grave descending into the lower parts of the earth Ephes. 4.9 And he was not unassaulted by the pains of Hell when he bare our Iniquities Isa. 53.5 6 10. Now all of them did he absolutely conquer in his own person For he satisfied the Law removed the Curse and took it away Rom. 8.3 made an end of sin Dan. 9.24 destroyed the Devil Heb. 2.14 and triumphed over him Col. 2.15 subdued the world John 16. ●3 conquered death Acts 2.24 and the Grave v. 27. and Hell also And in his own person hath he set an Example of what shall be done in and for the whole Church 3. It is done Efficiently in by and for his whole Church and this in three instances 1. Initially in their Vnion with himself When and as he unites any of them unto himself he begins the conquest of all Enemies in them and for them giving them a Right to the compleat total and final Victory over them all 2. Gradualy he carries them on in their several seasons towards perfections treading down their Enemies by degrees under them And 3. Perfectly at the last day when having freed them from the Law and sin trodden down Satan prevailed against the World recovered them from death rescued them from the Grave and delivered them from Hell he shall be himself perfectly victorious in them and they made compleatly sharers in his Victory wherein the making of all his Enemies his Footstool consisteth Secondly The Kingdom of Christ respects his Administration of it visibly in this world in the Profession and Obedience of his Subjects unto him and this also with the Opposition made unto it is respected in this Expression God the Father in the Exaltation of Jesus Christ hath given unto him
dangers that attended him in the course of his obedience are inexpressible And surely this renders salvation by him very great But yet there is that remains which gives it another Exaltation For 3. This Son of God after the course of his obedience to the whole will of God must die shed his bloud and make his soul an offering for sin And herein the glory of this salvation breaks forth like the Sun in its strength Obedient he must be unto death the death of the cross Phil. 2.8 If he will be a Captain of salvation to bring many sons to glory he must himself be made perfect by sufferings Heb. 2.10 There were Law and Curse and Wrath standing in the way of our salvation all of them to be removed all of them to be undergone and that by the Son of God For we were not redeemed with silver and gold or corruptible things but with the precious bloud of Christ 1 Pet. 1.18 And therein God redeemed his Church with his own bloud Acts 20.28 And herein assuredly was the love of God manifest that he laid down his life for us 1 Joh. 3.16 This belongs unto the means whereby our salvation is procured Nor yet is this all for if Christ had only died for us our faith in him had been in vain and we had been still in our sins Wherefore 4. To carry on the same work he rose from the dead and now lives for ever to make intercession for us and so save unto the uttermost them that come unto God by him By these means was the salvation preached in the Gospel obtained which surely manifest it to be great salvation Would God have sent his Son his only Son and that in such a manner were it not for the accomplishment of a work as well great and glorious init self as indispensibly necessary with reference untoits end Would the Son himself have so emptied himself of his glory condescended to so low a condition wrestled withsuch difficulties and undergone at length such a cursed and shameful death had not the work been great wherein he was employed O the blindness hardness and stupidityof the sons of men they profess they believe these things to be true at least they dare not deny them so to be but forthe effect of them for the salvation wrought by them they value it the least of all things that they have any acquaintance withall If this salvation thus procured do seize on them in their sleep and fall upon them whether they will or no they will not much resist it provided that it cross them in none of their lusts purposes or pleasures But to see the Excellency of it to put a valuation upon it according to the price whereby it is purchased that they are utterly regardless of Hear ye despisers wonder and perish Shall the Son of God shed his blood in vain Shall he obey and suffer and bleed and pray and die for a thing of nought Is it nothing unto you that heshould undergo all these things Was there want of Wisdom in God or love unto his Son so toemploy him so to use him in a business which you esteem of sovery small concernment as that you will scarce turn aside tomake enquiry after it Assure your selves these things are not so as you will one day find unto your eternal ruine Thirdly This salvation will appear to be great if we shall consider what by it we are delivered from and what we are interested in or made partakers of by vertue thereof These also may denominate salvation to be great and they may therefore be considered apart First What are we delivered from by this salvation In a word Every thing that is evil in this world or that which is to come And all evil may be referred unto two heads 1. That which corrupteth and depraveth the principles of our nature in their being and operation And 2. That which is destructive of our nature as to its well-being and happiness The first of these is sin the latter is punishment and both of them take up the whole nature of evil The particulars comprised in them may not here be distinctly and severally insisted on The former containeth our Apostasie from God with all the consequences of it in darkness folly filth shame bondage restlesness service of lust the world and Sathan and therein constant rebellion against God and diligence in working out our own everlasting ruine all attended with a senseless stupidity in not discerning these things to be evil hurtful noisome corruptive of our natures and beings and for the most part with bruitish sensuality in the approbation and liking of them But he who understands no evil in being fallen off from God the first Cause chiefest Good and last End of all in being under the power of a constant Enmity against him in the disorder of his whole soul and all the faculties of it in the constant service of sin the fruit of bondage and captivity in the most vile condition will be awakened unto another apprehension of these things when a time of deliverance from them shall be no more The latter of these consists in the wrath or curse of God and comprizeth what ever is or may be poenal and afflictive unto our Nature unto Eternity Now from both these with all their effects and consequences are Believers delivered by this salvation namely from sin and wrath The Lord Christ was called Jesus because he saves his people from their sins Matth. 1.21 And he isalso the Saviour who delivers them from the wrath to come 1 Thess. 1.10 And this is great salvation If a man be but the means of delivering another from poverty imprisonment or a dangerous disease especially if such a one could be no otherwise delivered but by him how great is the kindness of it esteemed tobe and that deservedly Providential deliverances from imminent dangers of death temporal are looked on as great salvations and that by good men and so they ought to be 2 Cor. 1.10 But what are all these unto this salvation What is the sickness of the body unto the disease yea the death of the soul What is imprisonment of the out-ward man under the wrath of poor worms like our selves and that for a fewdays unto the chains of everlasting darkness What is alittle outward want and poverty to the want of the favour love and presence of God unto Eternity What is death temporal past in a moment an end of troubles anentrance into Rest unto death eternal an eternaldying under the curse wrath and righteous vengeance of the holyGod These things have no proportion one to another So unexpressibly great is this salvation that there is nothing left us to illustrate it withall And this excellency of Gospel salvation will at length be known to them by whom at present it is despised when they shall fall and perish under the want of it and that to Eternity Lastly This salvation is Great upon the
and Speech for that occasion is blasphemously to make God the sole-Author of that Temptation which he so much abhorred Lastly Considering the Punishment denounced against mankind of Death Temporall and Eternall that which is threatned unto the Serpent bears no proportion unto it if it concern only the Serpent its self And what Rule of Justice will admit that the Accessory should be punished with greater Sufferings than the Principal Neither doth this Punishment as to the Principal part of it the bruising of the Head befall all Serpents yea but few of them in comparison doubtless not one of a Million whereas all mankind none excepted were liable unto the Penalty denounced against them Were no more men intended herein than are bitten on the heel by Serpents the matter were otherwise but death is passed upon all in as much as all have sinned Satan then it was who was the Principal in this Seduction the Author of all Apostasie from God who using the Serpent its instrument involved that also so far in the Curse as to render it of all Creatures the most abhorred of mankind § 27 Against this Seducer it is denounced that his Head should be bruised The Head of Satan is his Craft and Power From these issued all that Evil whereinto mankind was fallen In the bruising therefore of his Head the defeat of his Counsel the destruction of his Work and the Deliverance of Mankind is contained as our Apostle most excellently declares Heb. 2. Death must be removed and Righteousness brought in and acceptance with God procured or the Head of Satan is not bruised This therefore is openly and plainly a promise of the Deliverance enquired after Moreover There is a Declaration made how this Victory shall be obtained and this Deliverance wrought and that is by the Seed of the Woman This seed is twice repeated in the words once expresly and her seed and Secondly it is included in the Pronoun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it And as by seed in the first place the Posterity of the Woman some to be born of her race partakers of humane nature may be intended as the subjects of the Enmity mentioned so in the latter some single person some one of her Posterity or seed that should obtain the Victory is expresly denoted For as all her seed in common do never go about this work the greatest part of them continuing in a willing Subjection unto Satan so if all of them should combine to attempt it they would never be able to accomplish it as we have before proved at large Some one therefore to come of Her with whom God would be present in an especiall and extraordinary manner is here expresly promised And this is the Messiah God having in infinite Wisdom and Grace provided this way of Relief and given § 28 this intimation of it That Revelation became the Foundation and Center of all the Religion that ensued in the world For as those who received it by Faith and adhered unto it continued in the Worship of the true God expressing their Faith in the Sacrifices that he had appointed typically to represent and exemplifie before their eyes the work its self which by the promised seed was to be accomplished so also all that false Worship which the generality of mankind apostatized into was laid in a general perswasion that there was a way for the Recovery of the favour of God but what that was they knew not and therefore wandered in wofull uncertainties Some suppose that our great Mother Eve in those words Genes 4. ver 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expressed an Apprehension that she had bore him who was Man-God the Man the Lord the Promised Seed And they do not only contend for this meaning of the words but also reproach them who are otherwise minded as may be seen in the Writings of Hunnius and Helvicus against Calvin Junius Paraeus and Piscator That she together with Adam believed the Promise had the consolation and served God in the Faith of it I no way doubt But that she had an Apprehension that the Promised Seed should be so soon exhibited and knew that he should be the Lord or Jehovah and yet knew not that he was to be born of a Virgin and not after the ordinary way of mankind I see no cogent Reason to evince Nor do the words mentioned necessarily prove any such apprehension in her The whole weight of that supposition lyes on the Construction of the words from the interposition of the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●enoting as they say after Verbs active alwayes an Accusative Case But instances may be given to the contrary whence our Translation reads the words I have gotten a man from the Lord without the least intimation of any other sense in the Original And Drusius is bold to affirm that it is want of solid skill in the Sacred Tongue that was the cause of that conception Besides if she had such thoughts she was manifoldly mistaken and to what end that mistake of hers should be here expressed I know not And yet notwithstanding all this I will not deny but that the expression is unusuall and extraordinary if the sense of our Translation be intended and not that by some contended for I have gotten or obtained the Man the Lord. And this it is possible caused Jonathan Ben Vzziel to give us that gloss on the words in his Targum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Adam knew his Wife Eve who desired the Angel and she conceived and bare Cain and said I have obtained the man or a man the Angel of the Lord. That is him who was promised afterwards under the name of the Angel of the Lord or the Angel of the Covenant which the Jews may do well to consider But we have farther Expositions of this first Promise and farther Confirmations of § 29 this Grace in the Scripture its self For in Process of time it was renewed unto Abraham and the Accomplishment of it confined unto his Family For his gratuitous Call from Superstition and Idolatry with the Separation of him and his Posterity from all the Families of the Earth was subservient only unto the fulfilling of the Promise before treated of The first mention of it we have Gen. 12. v. 1 2 3. Now the Lord had said unto Abraham Get thee out of thy Countrey and from thy Kindred and from thy Fathers House unto a Land that I will shew thee And I will make of thee a great Nation and I will bless thee and make thy Name great and thou shalt be a blessing And I will bless them that bless thee and curse him that curseth thee and in thee shall all the Families of the Earth be blessed And this is again expressed Chap. 18. v. 18. All the Nations of the Earth shall be blessed in him And Chap. 22.18 And in thy seed shall all the Nations of the Earth be blessed And when he doubted of the accomplishment of this
see c. Considering therefore what is elsewhere written of all the Regions about bringing in their sick weak and impotent and of the cures of Persons by the touching of his garment it is evident that his Personal Miracles amounted unto thousands which might well give occasion to the Hyperbole used by John in recounting of them Hence some among the Jews were convinced that he was the Messiah not only by the greatness but also by the number of his works John 7.31 Many of the People believed on him and said when Christ cometh will he do more Miracles then these which this man doeth And what are the seventy six Miracles of Moses unto those as to number which in the first place the Jews glory in And if we may add those which were wrought by his power by them that preached the Gospel on his Commission as they are all of the same efficacy unto the end proposed or confirmation of his being the Messiah they amount not unto thousands only but probably unto millions For of this sort were all the miraculous gifts of the Holy Ghost that were granted unto the Church all the world over So that as to the number of Miracles he was sufficiently by them attested unto to be the Messiah the great Law-giver of the people of the New Covenant Again The Jews much insist on this that all other Prophets wrought Miracles by § 64 the Intervention of Prayer Moses alone without it at his own pleasure The Rod they say was committed unto him as a Kingly Scepter to denote that Authority whereunto the whole nature of things gave place It is true indeed it is not recorded that Moses prayed in words before every Miracle that was wrought by him or in reference unto his Ministry but yet this is plain in story that he wrought no mighty work but either upon his prayer or some express command and direction from God in particular which everts the Judaical pretence of an abiding power remaining with him enabling him to work Miracles when and how he would But this which they falsly ascribe unto Moses was eminently true in the Lord Jesus Those thousands of miraculous works which he wrought were the arbitrary effects of a word of command without any especial direction for every new work arguing the constant presence of an infinite power with him exerted according to his will Come forth of him come out of the grave I will be thou clean be ye opened and the like expressions he used as signs and pledges thereof Thus was it not with Moses as the story manifests yea he himself greatly doubted of the greatest effect of the Divine power put forth by him when he smote the Rock to bring forth water The nature of the Miracles also wrought by the one and the other may be compared § 65 and we shall see from thence on which side the pre-eminence will be found For those wrought by Moses or by God himself whilest he employed him in the service of giving the Law and the delivery of the people they were for the most part portentous Prodigies suited to fill men with wonder astonishment and fear Such were all the signs of the presence of God on Mount Sinai The effects also of most of them were evil and destructive proceeding from wrath and indignation against sin and sinners such were all the mighty works wrought in Aegypt such those of the swallowing up of Dathan and Abiram in the Wilderness Those that tended unto the good and relief of mankind as the bringing of water from the rock were typical and occasional And those kinds of works were suited unto that Ministry of Death and Condemnation which was committed unto him But on the other side the mighty works of the Lord Jesus were evidently effects of Goodness as well as of Power and consisted in things useful and helpful unto mankind Healing the sick opening the eyes of the blind and ears of the deaf giving strength to the lame casting out of Devils feeding hungry multitudes raising the dead are things amiable and useful And though terrible Prodigies may more affect and astonish carnal minds such as the Jews were filled with yet these works of Grace and Goodness do more allure those who attend unto the dictates of right Reason Evidences they were of a gracious Ministry tending unto salvation and peace in every kind such as that of the Messiah was promised and foretold to be As Miracles then were the tokens of their several Ministries and bespake the nature of them those of the Lord Christ were exceedingly more excellent then those of Moses § 66 Furthermore as Moses had not a power of working miracles constantly resident with him which he might exert according unto his own will so he was very far from being able to communicate any such power unto others God indeed took of the Spirit that was on him and gave it unto the Elders that were to be joyned with him in the Government of the people Numb 11.25 but yet neither was there a power of working miracles going along with that Spirit but only ability for Rule and Government nor yet was that communication of it any act of Moses at all But now our Lord Jesus as he had the Divine Power mentioned alwayes with him so he could give Authority and Power unto whom he pleased to effect all such miraculous works as were any way necessary for the confirmation of their Doctrine Of this nature was the Commission which he gave the Twelve when he sent them forth Matth. 10.8 Heal the sick cleanse the Lepers raise the dead cast out Devils As also that unto the LXX Luke 10.17 19. yea he promised them which also came to pass that by his power and presence with them they should do greater things then those which they had seen him to do John 14.12 Mark 16.17 And this difference is so eminent that nothing can be objected against it This more evidently confirmed him to be the Master then all the mighty works which he wrought in his own Person on the earth § 67 Again all the miracles of Moses ended with his life The Jews indeed some of them tell us a company of foolish stories about his death which as their manner is they would fix on those words Deut. 34.5 and Moses dyed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the mouth or word of the Lord as namely how he contended with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Angel of Death and drove him away with his rod so that he could not dye until God laid his mouth unto his and so took out his soul from him But these figments are shamefull and such as become none but themselves However these things extended only unto his death therewith ended his Ministry and Miracles But now the greatest Miracle of our Lord Jesus was wrought by him after the violent and cruel death which he underwent for our sakes For he took his life again and raised himself from the dead John
by the Jews of all sorts to belong to the Messiah his Kingdom and Offices and his design was to deal with them chiefly upon their own concessions and principles As we have some few other helps remaining to acquaint us with what was the received sense of the Judaical Church concerning sundry passages in the Old Testament relating unto the promised Christ so the Paraphrases of Scripture that were either at that time in use amongst them as was the Greek Translation amongst the Hellenists or about that time composed as the Targums at least some parts of them will give us much light into it What of that antient sense appeareth yet in the corrupted Copies of those Translations which remain being considered will much evince the reason and suitableness of the Apostles Quotations And this is needful to be observed to refute that impiety of some as Cajetan who not being able to understand the force of some Testimonies cited by the Apostle as to his purpose in hand have questioned the Authority of the whole Epistle as also the mistake of Hierom who in his Epistle to Pammachius rashly affirmed that Paul did quote Scriptures that were not indeed to his purpose but out of design to stop the mouths of his Adversaries as he himself had dealt with Jovinian which was very far from him whose only design was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to promote the Truth in Love IV. He takes it for granted in the whole Epistle that the Judaical Church-State did yet continue and that the Worship of it was not yet disallowed of God suitably to what was before declared concerning his own and the other Apostles practice Had that Church-State been utterly abolished all observation of Mosaical rites which were the Worship of that Church as such had been utterly unlawfull as now it is Neither did the determination recorded Acts 15. abolish them as some suppose but only free the Gentiles from their observance Their free use was yet permitted unto the Jews Acts 21.20 22 25 26. Chap. 27.9 and practised by Paul in particular in his Nazaretical Vow Acts 21.26 Which was attended with a Sacrifice Numb 6.13 Nor was Mosaical Worship utterly to cease so as to have no acceptance with God until the final ruine of that church foretold by our Saviour himself Mat. 24. by Peter 2 Ep. 3. by James also Chap. 5.6 7 8 9. and by our Apostle in this Epistle Chap. 10.37 Chap. 12.25 26 27. was accomplished Hence it is that our Apostle calls the times of the Gospel the world to come Chap. 2.5 Chap. 6.5 the name whereby the Jews denoted the State of the Church under the Messiah proper unto it only whilest the legal administrations of Worship did continue Thus as de facto he had shewed respect unto the Person of the High Priest as one yet in lawful Office Acts 23.5 So doctrinally he takes it for granted that that Office was still continued Chap. 8.4 5. with the whole worship of Moses institution Chap. 13.11 12. And this dispensation of Gods patience being the last tryal of that Church was continued in a proportion of time answerable to their abode in the Wilderness upon its first Erection which our Apostle minds them of Chap. 3. c. 4. The Law of Moses then was not actually abrogated by Christ who observed the rules of it in the dayes of his flesh nor by the Apostles who seldom used their liberty from it leaving the use of it to the Jews still but having done its work whereunto it was designed and its obligation Expiring ending and being removed or taken away in the death and resurrection of Christ and promulgation of the Gospel that ensued thereupon which doctrinally declared its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or uselesness God in his Providence put an end unto it as to its observation in the utter and irrecoverable overthrow of the Temple the place designed for the solemn exercise of its Worship so did it decay wax old and vanish away Chap. 8.13 And this also God ordered in his infinite wisdom that their Temple City and Nation and so consequently their whole Church-State should be utterly wasted by the Pagan Romans before the power of the Empire came into the hands of men professing the name of Christ who could neither well have suffered their Temple to stand as by them abused nor yet have destroyed it without hardning them in their impenitency and unbelief V. That which is proposed unto confirmation in the whole Epistle and from whence all the Inferences and Exhortations insisted on do arise and are drawn is the Excellency of the Gospel and the Worship of God therein revealed and appointed upon the account of its manifold relation to the Person and Offices of Christ the Mediator the Son of God Now because those to whom it is directed did as hath been declared some of them adhere to Mosaical Ceremonies and Worship in conjunction with the Gospel others with a preferency of them above it and some to a relinquishment of it especially when they once found its profession obnoxious to Persecution the Apostle institutes and at large prosecutes a comparison between Moses's Law and the Gospel as to their usefulness and excellency in reference unto mens acceptation with God of the one and the other as also of the Spirituality Order and Beauty of the Worship severally required in them And herein though he derogates in no respect from the Law that which was justly due unto it yet on the accounts before mentioned he preferreth the Gospel before it and not only so but also manifests that as Mosaical Institutions were never of any other use but to prefigure the real Mediatory work of Christ with the benefits thereof so he being exhibited and his work accomplished their observation was become needless and themselves if embraced to a neglect or relinquishment of the Gospel pernicious This comparison wherein also the proof of the positive worth and Excellency of the Gospel is included omitting for weighty reasons intimated by James Acts 21.21 by himself Acts 9.25 Chap. 22.19 20 21. all Prefatory salutations he enters upon in the first verses of the Epistle and being thereby occasioned to make mention of the Messiah from whose Person and Office the difference he was to insist upon did wholly arise he spendeth the residue of the Chapter in proving the divine excellency of his Person and the Eminency of his Office as the only King Priest and Prophet of his Church on all which the dignity of the Gospel in the Profession whereof he exhorts them to persevere doth depend He then that would come to a right understanding of this Epistle must alwayes bear in mind 1. To whom it was written which were the Jews of the several sorts before mentioned 2. To what End it was written even to prevail with them to embrace the Gospel and to persist in the Profession of it without any mixture of Mosaical Observations 3. On what Principles the Apostle deals with
v. 33. Herein are we to rest and to put a stop unto all our enquiries So it pleased him Matth. 11. v. 25. And he giveth no account of his matters Job 33. v. 12 13. This we are to acquiesce in as the great Reason of all God's dispensations and ways even his own infinite Wisdom and sovereign Pleasure He alone knows what becomes his own Goodness and Greatness and of creatures not one but as he is pleased to reveal it For can we find out the Almighty unto perfection can we by searching find out God Job 11. v. 7. How shall poor limited finite creatures come to know what beseems the Infinite Holy One to do any otherwise but as himself declareth that he hath done it And then we know the work is holy and wise and such as becometh Infinite Perfection because he hath done it Herein then we principally rest as to the meetness and condecency of the ministery of Angels God hath appointed it Whereunto we may adde those other Reasons which the Scripture suggests unto us as 1. God doth it for the preserving and manifestation of the Glorious Order of his Kingdom God is pleased to rule his Creation as a Supreme Lord and King Hence there is so often mention made in the Scripture that he is the King the only Potentate the Lord of Lords and King of Kings as also of his Throne his Kingdom Dominion Reign and Government And God doth this that he might thereby give an Understanding of his Sovereignty unto his creatures and make way thereby for the manifestation of his Glory Now unto a Kingdom there are three things essential Rule Obedience and Order In this Kingdom the Sovereign Ru●e is in the hand of God alone the Kingdom or Monarchy is his Obedience is the work and duty of the whole Creation every thing according to its nature capacity and condition The Glory of both these lies in Order Hereof there are two parts first that which respects the Being of the Creatures in their dependance on God secondly that which respects their Operation in Obedience unto him God hath in infinite Wisdom endowed the works of his hands with such various natures whereon their uses do depend as that they are placed thereby in several ranks series and Orders in an useful subserviency unto one another so far as they are advantaged thereby in their common and absolute subjection to himself This is the Order of their Being the Order of their Operation is such as they are fitted for by their natures and whereby they set out the Glory of this Kingdom of God Thus he takes the Angels being fitted thereunto in that place which they hold in the Order of Nature and Being unto the next and immediate attendance upon the Throne of his Kingdom There they wait upon him to receive and execute his commands in all the affairs of his Kingdom So are they every where described in the Scripture Psal. 68. and 103. Dan. 7. Revel 5. Isa. 6. and else-where And by this Ministery of Angels doth God insinuate unto us the Glory and Order of his Kingdom His glorious and fiery Throne being attended with millions of these mighty Angels ready to accomplish his will And whereas God hath erected imperium in imperio a Kingdom in a Kingdom like the wheels within the wheels in Ezekiel's Vision namely the Oeconomical Dispensatory Kingdom of Christ in his Oecumenical Kingdom over the whole Creation and hath annexed thereunto the principal manifestation of his Glory Rule and Dominion those blessed Ministers do principally attend the Affairs thereof And thus though God can govern and dispose of all things solo nutu by the Almighty immediate Emanations of his own Power yet for the manifestation of the glory of his Kingdom especially of that Rule which is committed unto the Lord Christ he useth the ministery of his creatures in that Order which his infinite Wisdom had disposed them unto at the first Creation 2. God is pleased to do this to exercise the Obedience of the Angels themselves and that upon a three-fold account First to keep preserve and rule them fitly to their state and condition Being Creatures they have a natural and necessary dependance on God their Creator and being Intellectual creatures they have a moral dependance on him according to a Law and Rule with reference unto the utmost End whereunto they were created This requires their constant Obedience unto the Will of God without which they leave and forsake the Law of their Creation and Condition and also deviate from the End for which they were made Wherefore to exercise them unto and in this their Obedience God makes use of their ministery and service in his Government of the Church And this they shall continue to do unto the end of the world when the course of their Obedience being accomplished they shall be everlastingly satiated with the contemplation of God's infinite Excellencies and enjoyment of him as their Reward Secondly That in them he might give an Example of ready Obedience unto the Church These Angels of God being in their nature excellent and great in power always ready watchful and free from all Diversions or Avocations eminent in Light and Holiness as always beholding the face of God and filled with his Grace are proposed unto us in their Obedience and readiness to do the Will of God as an Example and pattern which we are to imitate unto our utmost though we are never able perfectly to express And thence are we directed by our Saviour to pray that we may do the will of God on earth as it is done by them in heaven Thirdly That they themselves may be made partakers of this singular Honour and Glory to serve the most High God in his most glorious work the preservation and salvation of his Church for that this is their Honour was before declared 3. God emploieth them in an especial manner in this ministery for the good of them that are Heirs of salvation to manifest unto them the Greatness and Glory of the work of the gathering preserving and redemption of his Church with the value that he puts upon all the fruits of the Death and Concernments of the Mediation of his Son Jesus Christ. For as of themselves they desire to look particularly into these things which in general appear so glorious unto them 1 Pet. 1. v. 12. that their delight in the Wisdom and Love of God may be more and more encreased so by God's dealings with his Church in whose behalf they are employed they learn therein the manifold Wisdom of God and riches of his grace Ephes. 3. v. 10. And thus in all their employment about the Saints wherein they are sent out to minister for their good they learn much of the Wisdom and Love of God and are thereby excited to honour applaud glorifie him and praise him Somewhat of this they shall see in the least and meanest work toward any Believer that is committed unto them
or Creation and Providence the Sun Moon and Stars showres from Heaven with fruitful seasons are in their judgement Preachers of the salvation of sinners I know not what also they say that the Reason of man by the Contemplation of these things may find out of I know not what Placability in God that may incite sinners to go unto him and enable them to find Acceptance with him But we see what success all the world and all the Wise men of it had in the use and improvement of these means of the salvation of sinners The Apostle tells us not only that by their Wisdom they knew not God 1 Cor. 1.21 but also that the more they searched the greater loss they were at untill they waxed vain in their imaginations and their foolish hearts were darkned Rom. 1.21 And indeed whatever they had amongst them which had any semblance of an obscure Apprehension of some way of salvation by Atonement and Intercession as in their Sacrifices and Mediations of inferiour Deities which the Apostle alludes unto 1 Cor. 8.5 6 as they had it by Tradition from those who were somewhat instructed in the Will of God by Revelation so they turned it into horrible Idolatries and the utmost contempt of God And this was the issue of their disquisitions who were no less wise in the principles of inbred Reason and the knowledge of the works of nature than those who now contend for their Ability to have done better Besides the salvation of sinners is a Mysterie as the Scripture every where declareth a blessed a glorious Mysterie Rom. 16.25 The Wisdom of God in a Mysterie 1 Cor. 2.7 Ephes. 1.9 Col. 1.25 26. That is not only a thing secret and marvellous but such as hath no dependance on any Causes that come naturally within our Cognizance Now what ever men can find out by the Principles of Reason and the contemplation of the works of God in Creation and Providence it is by natural scientifical conclusions and what is so discovered can be no heavenly spiritual glorious Mysterie such as this salvation is What ever men may so find out if they may find out any thing looking this way it is but natural science it is not a Mysterie and so is of no use in this matter what ever it be Moreover it is not only said to be a Mysterie but an hidden Mysterie and that hid in God himself as Ephes. 3.9 10. Col. 1.25 26. 1 Cor. 2.7 8. That is in the Wisdom Purpose and Will of God Now it is very strange that men should be able by the the natural means fore-mentioned to discover an heavenly supernatural Wisdom and that hidden on purpose from their finding by any such enquiry and that in God himself so coming unto the knowledge of it as it were whether he would or no. But we may pass over these Imaginations and accept of the Gospel as the only way and means of declaring the salvation of God And therefore every Word and Promise in the whole Book of God that intimateth or revealeth any thing belonging unto this Salvation is it self a part of the Gospel and so to be esteemed And as this is the work of the Gospel so is it in an especial manner its proper and peculiar work with respect unto the Law The Law speaks nothing of the salvation of sinners and is therefore called the Ministry of death and condemnation as the Gospel is of life and salvation 2 Cor. 3.9 10. And thus the Gospel is salvation declaratively Secondly It is Salvation Efficiently in that it is the great Instrument which God is pleased to use in and for the Collation and bestowing salvation upon his Elect. Hence the Apostle calls it the Power of God unto salvation Rom. 1.16 Because God in and by it exerts his mighty Power in the saving of them that believe as it is again called 1 Cor. 1.18 Whence there is a saving Power ascribed unto the Word it self And therefore Paul commits believers unto the Word of grace as that which is able to build them up and give them an inheritance among all them that are sanctified Acts 20.32 And James calls it the ingrafted Word which is able to save our souls Chap. 1.21 The mighty Power of Christ being put forth in it and accompanying of it for that purpose But this will the better appear if we consider the several principal parts of this Salvation and the Efficiency of the Word as the Instrument of God in the communication of it unto us As First In the Regeneration and Sanctification of the Elect the first external Act of this Salvation This is wrought by the Word 1 Pet. 1.23 We are born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the Word of God Wherein not only the thing it self of our Regeneration by the Word but the manner of it also is declared It is by the Collation of a new spiritual life upon us whereof the Word is the seed As every life proceeds from some seed that hath in its self virtually the whole life to be educed from it by natural wayes and means so the Word in the hearts of men is turned into a vital principle that cherished by suitable means puts forth vital acts and operations By this means are we born of God and quickned who by nature are children of wrath dead in trespasses and sins So Paul tells the Corinthians that he had begotten them in Jesus Christ by the Gospel 1 Cor. 4.15 I confess it doth not do this work by any Power resident in its self and alwayes necessarily accompanying its Administration For then all would be so regenerated unto whom it is preached and there would be no neglecters of it But it is the Instrument of God for this end and mighty and powerful through God it is for the accomplishment of it And this gives us our first real Interest in the Salvation which it doth declare Of the same Use and Efficacy is it in the progress of this work in our Sanctification by which we are carried on towards the full Enjoyment of this salvation So our Saviour prayes for his Disciples Joh. 17.19 Sanctifie them by thy Word as the means and instrument of their Sanctification And he tells his Apostles that they were clean through the word that he had spoken unto them Chap. 15.3 For it is the food and nourishment whereby the spiritual Principle of Life which we revive in our Regeneration is cherished and encreased 1 Pet. 2.2 and so able to build us up untill it give us an inheritance among them that are sanctified Secondly It is so in the Communication of the Spirit unto them that do believe to furnish them with the Gifts and Graces of the Kingdom of Heaven and to interest them in all those Priviledges of this salvation which God is pleased in this life to impart unto us and to entrust us withal So the Apostle dealing with the Galatians about their backsliding from the
whole course of our Obedience from first to last and we shall not need to faint nor shall we ever fail Secondly To look for Direction and Guidance from him This in an especial manner belongs unto him as the Captain of our salvation There are two things which we find by Experience that Professors are apt to be at a great loss in whilest they are in this World The Worship of God and their own Troubles For the first We see and find that woful Variance that is among all sorts of men and for the latter we are apt our selves to be much bewildred in them as unto our Duty and our Way Now all this Uncertainty ariseth from the want of a due attendance unto Jesus Christ as our Guide In reference unto both these he hath peculiarly promised his Presence with us With the Dispensers of the Word he hath promised to be unto the ends of the world or consummation of all things Matth. 28.29 And we find him walking in the midst of his Golden Candlesticks Rev. 1. In that allegorical description of the Gospel Church-State and Worship which we have in Ezekiel there is a peculiar place assigned unto the Prince Now one end of his Presence is to see that all things are done according unto his Mind and Will And unto whom should we go but unto himself alone His Word here will prove the best Directory and his Spirit the best Guide If we neglect these to attend unto the Wisdom of Men we shall wander in uncertainties all our dayes It is so also in respect of our Troubles we are ready in them to consult with flesh and blood to look after the Examples of others to take the advice that comes next to hand When the Lord Christ hath promised his Presence with us in them all and that as the Captain of our salvation And if we neglect Him his Example his Direction his Teaching it is no wonder if we pine away under our distresses II. We may observe That the Lord Jesus Christ being Priest Sacrifice and Altar himself the Offering whereby he was consecrated unto the perfection and complement of his Office was of necessity to be part of that work which as our Priest and Mediator he was to undergo and perform When other Typical Priests were to be consecrated there was an Offering of Beasts appointed for that purpose and an Altar to offer on and a Person to consecrate them But all this was to be done in and by Jesus Christ himself Even the Father is said to consecrate him but upon the account of his designing him and appointing him unto this Office but his immediate actual consecration was his own work which he performed when he offered himself through the Eternal Spirit By his death and suffering which he underwent in the discharge of his Office and as a Priest therein offered himself unto God he was dedicated and consecrated unto the Perfection of his Office This would require our further Explication in this place but that it will again occur unto us more directly III. The Lord Christ being consecrated and perfected through sufferings hath consecrated the way of suffering for all that follow him to pass through unto Glory All complaints of sufferings all Despondencies under them all Fears of them are rendered unjust and unequal by the sufferings of Christ. It is surely righteous that they should be contented with his Lot here who desire to be received into his Glory hereafter Now there are sundry things that follow upon this Consecration of the way of suffering by Jesus Christ. As First That they are made necessary and unavoidable Men may hope and desire other things and turn themselves several wayes in their contrivances to avoid them but one way or other sufferings will be the Portion of them that intend to follow this Captain of Salvation The Apostle tells Believers that they are predestinated to be conformed to the Image of the Son of God Rom. 8.29 And lets them know in the close of that Chapter that no small part of this Conformity consists in their Afflictions and Sufferings The Head having passed through them there is a measure of Afflictions belonging unto the Body which every member is to bear his share of Col. 2.24 And the Lord Jesus himself hath given this Law unto us That every one who will be his Disciple must take up his Cross and follow him Discipleship and the Cross are inseparably knit together by the unchangeable Law and Constitution of Christ himself And the Gospel is full of Warnings and Instructions unto this purpose that none may complain that they were surprized or that any thing did befall them in the course of their profession which they looked not for Men may deceive themselves with vain hopes and expectations but the Gospel deceiveth none it tells them plainly before-hand That through many tribulations they must enter into the Kingdom of God and that they who will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution If they like not of these terms they may let the way of Christ alone if they will not do so why do they yet complain Christ will be taken with his Cross or not at all And the folly of our hearts can never be enough bewailed in thinking strange of trials and afflictions when the very first thing that the Lord Christ requireth of them that will be made partakers of him is that they deny themselves and take up their cross But we would be children and not be chastised we would be gold and not be tried we would overcome and yet not be put to fight and contend we would be Christians and not suffer But all these things are contrary to the Eternal Law of our Profession And so necessary is this way made that though God deal with his people in great variety exercising some with such trials and troubles that other sometimes in comparison of them seem utterly to go free yet every one one way or other shall have his share and measure And those exceptions that are made in the Providence of God as to some individual persons at some seasons derogate nothing from the general necessity of the way towards all that do believe Secondly It hath made all sufferings for the Gospel honourable The sufferings of Christ himself were indeed shameful and that not only in the esteem of men but also in the nature of them and by Gods constitution They were part of the curse As it is written Cursed is he that hangs upon a tree And as such our Lord Jesus Christ looked on them when he wrestled with and conquered the shame as well as the sharpness But he hath rendred all the sufferings of his that remain very honourable in themselves what ever they are in the reputation of a blind perishing world That which is truly shameful in suffering is an effect of the curse for sin This Christ by his suffering hath utterly separated from the sufferings of his Disciples Hence
the Apostles rejoyced th●t they had the honour to suffer shame for his Name Acts 5.41 that is the things which the world looked on as shameful but themselves knew to be honourable They are so in the sight of God of the Lord Jesus Christ of all the holy Angels which are competent judges in this case God hath a great cause in the world and that such a one as wherein his Name his Goodness his Love his Glory is concerned this in his infinite Wisdom is to be witnessed confirmed testified unto by sufferings Now can there be any greater Honour done unto any of the sons of men than that God should single them out from among the rest of mankind and appoint them unto this work Men are honoured according to their riches and treasures And when Moses came to make a right judgment concerning this thing he esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches than all the treasures of Egypt Heb. 1● 29 We believe that God gave great honour unto the Apostles and Martyrs of old in all their sufferings Let us labour for the same spirit of faith in reference unto our selves and it will relieve us under all our trials This then also hath Christ added unto the way of sufferings by his consecration of it for us All the glory and honour of the world is not to be compared with theirs unto whom it is given in the behalf of Christ not only to believe on him but also to suffer for him 1 Pet. 4.14 15 16. Thirdly He hath thereby made them us●ful and profitable Troubles and afflictions in themselves and their own nature have no good in them nor do they tend unto any good end they grow out of the first sentence against sin and are in their own nature poenal tending unto death and nothing else Nor are they in those who have no interest in Christ any thing but effects of the wrath of God But the Lord Christ by his consecrating of them to be the way of our following him hath quite altered their nature and tendency he hath made them good useful and profitable I shall not here shew the usefulness of Afflictions and sufferings the whole Scripture abundantly testifieth unto it and the experience of Believers in all ages and seasons confirms it I only shew whence it is that they become so and that is because the Lord Christ hath consecrated dedicated and sanctified them unto that end He hath thereby cut them off from their old stock of wrath and the curse and planted them on that of Love and Good-will He hath taken them off from the Covenant of works and translated them into that of Grace He hath turned their course from death towards life and immortality mixing his Grace Love and Wisdom with these bitter waters he hath made them sweet and wholesome And if we would have benefit by them we must always have regard unto this consecration of them Fourthly He hath made them safe They are in their own nature a Wilderness wherein men may endlesly wander and quickly lose themselves But he hath made them a way a safe way That way-faring men though fools may not erre therein Never did a Believer perish by afflictions or persecutions never was good Gold or Silver consumed or lost in this Furnace Hypocrites indeed and false Professors fearful and unbelievers are discovered by them and discarded from their hopes But they that are Disciples indeed are never safer than in this way and that because it is consecrated for them Sometimes it may be through their unbelief and want of heeding the Captain of their salvation they are wounded and cast down by them for a season but they are still in the way they are never turned quite out of the way And this through the grace of Christ doth turn also unto their advantage Nay it is not only absolutely a safe way but comparatively more safe than the way of Prosperity And this the Scripture with the experience of all Saints bear plentiful witness unto And many other blessed ends are wrought by the consecration of this way for the Disciples of Christ not now to be insisted on There remains yet to be considered in the words of the Apostle the Reason why the Captain of our salvation was to be consecrated by sufferings and this he declares in the beginning of the Verse It became God so to deal with him which he amplifies by that description of him For whom are all things and by whom are all things Having such a design as he had to bring many sons unto glory and being he for whom are all things and by whom are all things it became him so to deal with the Captain of their salvation What is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here intended and what is the importance of the word was declared before This Becomingness what ever it be it ariseth from hence That God is he for whom are all things and by whom are all things It became him not only who is so but as he is so and because he is so There is no reason for the addition of that consideration of God in this matter but that the cause is in them contained and expressed why it became him to do that which is here ascribed unto him We are then to enquire what it is that is principally regarded in God in this Attribution and thence we shall learn how it became him to bring the Lord Christ unto suffering Now the description of God in these words is plainly of him as the first Cause and last End of all things neither is it absolutely his Power in making all of nothing and his Sovereign Eternal Being requiring that all things tend unto his glory that are intended in the words But he is the Governour Ruler and Judge of all things made by him and for him with respect unto that Order and Law of their Creation which they were to observe This Rule and Government of all things taking care that as they are of God so they should be for him is that which the Apostle respects This then is that which he asserts namely that it became God as the Governour Ruler and Judge of all to consecrate Christ by sufferings which must be farther explained Man being made an intellectual Creature had a Rule of Moral Obedience given unto him This was he to observe to the glory of his Creator and Law-giver and as the condition of his coming unto him and enjoyment of him This is here supposed by the Apostle and he discourseth how man having broken the Law of his Creation and therein come short of the glory of God might by his grace be again made partaker of it With respect unto this state of things God can be no otherwise considered but as the Supreme Governour and Judge of them Now that Property of God which he exerteth principally as the Ruler and Governour of all is his Justice Justitia regiminis the Righteousness of Government Hereof there are
example to suffer for the truth But his Doctrine carried its own evidence with it that it was from God and was besides uncontrollably confirmed by the Miracles that he wrought So that his sufferings on that account might have been dispensed withall And surely this great and stupendous matter of the dying of the Son of God is not to be resolved into a Reason and Cause that might so easily be dispensed with God would never have given up his Son to die but only for such causes and ends as could no otherwise have been satisfied or accomplished The like also may be said of the other cause assigned by them namely to set us an example It is true in his death he did so and of great and singular use unto us it is that so he did But yet neither was this from any precedent Law or Constitution nor from the nature of the thing it self nor from any property of God indispensibly necessary God could by his grace have carried us through sufferings although he had not set before us the example of his Son so he doth through other things no less difficult wherein the Lord Christ could not in his own Person go before us as in our conversion unto God and mortification of indwelling sin neither of which the Lord Christ was capable of We shall leave them then as those who acknowledging the death of Christ do not yet acknowledge or own any sufficient cause or reason why he should die Christians generally allow that the sufferings of Christ were poenal and his death satisfactory for the sins of men but as to the cause and reason of his so suffering they differ Some following Austine refer the death of Christ solely unto the Wisdom and Sovereignty of God God would have it so and therein are we to acquiesce Other ways of saving the Elect were possible but this God chose because so it seemed good unto him Hence arose that saying That one drop of the blood of Christ was sufficient to redeem the whole world only it pleased God that he should suffer unto the utmost And herein are we to rest that He hath suffered for us and that God hath revealed But this seems not to me any way to answer that which is here affirmed by the Apostle namely that it became God as the Supreme Governour of all the world so to cause Christ to suffer nor do I see what demonstration of the glory of Justice can arise from the punishing of an innocent Person who might have been spared and yet all the ends of his being so punished to have been otherwise brought about And to say that one drop of Christs bloud was sufficient to redeem the world is derogatory unto the Goodness Wisdom and Righteousness of God in causing not only the whole to be shed but also his Soul to be made an offering for sin which was altogether needless if that were true But how far this whole Opinion is from truth which leaves no necessary cause of the death of Christ will afterwards appear Others say that on supposition that God had appointed the Curse of the Law and death to be the penalty of sin his faithfulness and Veracity were engaged so far that no sinner should go free or be made partaker of glory but by the intervention of satisfaction And therefore on the supposition that God would make some men his sons and bring them to glory it was necessary with respect unto the engagement of the truth of God that he should suffer die and make satisfaction for them But all this they refer originally unto a free constitution which might have been otherwise God might have ordered things so without any derogation unto the glory of his Justice or Holiness in the Government of all things as that sinners might have been saved without the death of Christ. For if he had not engaged his Word and declared that death should be the penalty of sin he might have freely remitted it without the intervention of any satisfaction And thus all this whole work of death being the punishment of sin and of the sufferings of Christ for sinners is resolved into a free purpose and Decree of Gods Will and not into the exigence of any essential property of his Nature so that it might have been otherwise in all the parts of it and yet the glory of God preserved every way entire Whether this be so or no we shall immediately enquire Others grant many free Acts of the Mind and Will of God in this matter as 1. The Creation of man in such a condition as that he should have a moral dependance on God in reference unto his utmost end was an effect of the Sovereign Pleasure Will and Wisdom of God But on supposition of this Decree and Constitution they say the Nature Authority and Holiness of God required indispensibly that man should yield unto him that obedience which he was directed unto and guide● in by the Law of his Creation so that God could not suffer him to do otherwise and remain in his first state and come unto the end first designed unto him without the loss of his Authority and wrong of his Justice Again they say that God did freely by an Act of his Sovereign Will and Pleasure decree to permit man to sin and fall which might have been otherwise But on supposition that so he should do and would do and thereby infringe the Order of his dependance on God in reference unto his utmost end that the Justice of God as the Supreme Governour of all things did indispensibly require that he should receive a meet recompence of reward or be punished answerably unto hi● crimes so that God could not have dealt otherwise with him without an high derogation from his own Righteousness Again they say that God by a meer free Act of his Love and Grace designed the Lord Jesus Christ to be the way and means for the saving of sinners which might have been otherwise He might without the least impeachment of the glory of any of his Essential Properties have suffered all mankind to have perished under that penalty which they had justly incurred but of his own meer Love free Grace and good pleasure he gave and sent him to redeem them But on the supposition thereof they say the Justice of God required that he should lay on him the punishment due unto the sons whom he redeemed it became him on the account of his Natural Essential Justice to bring him unto sufferings And in this Opinion is contained the truth laid down in our Proposition which we shall now farther confirm namely that it became the Nature of God or the Essential Properties of his Nature required indispensibly that sin should be punished with death in the sinner or in his surety And therefore if he would bring any sons to glory the Captain of their salvation must undergo death and sufferings to make satisfaction for them For First Consider that description
is good gracious and merciful Isa. 50.10 And withall it intimates what God requires of them towards whom he is so good and gracious This Name of God is unknown to men by nature so is the way and means whereby he will communicate his Goodness and Grace unto them And this is the Name of God here intended which the Lord Jesus manifested unto the men given him out of the world Joh. 17.5 which is the same with his declaring the Father whom no man hath seen at any time Joh. 1.18 This is that Name of God which the Lord Jesus Christ had experience of in his sufferings and the manifestation whereof unto his Brethren he had procured thereby Hereof he says in the Psalm 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will declare it recount it in order number the particulars that belong unto it and so distinctly and evidently make it known 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will make it known as a messenger sent from thee and by thee And there are two ways whereby the Lord Christ declared this Name of God 1. In his own Person and that both before and after his sufferings for although it be mentioned here as a work that ensued his death yet is it not exclusive of his teachings before his suffering because they also were built upon the supposition thereof Thus in the dayes of his flesh he instructed his Disciples and preached the Gospel in the Synagogues of the Jews and in the Temple declaring the name of God unto them So also after his Resurrection he conferred with his Apostles about the Kingdom of God Acts 1. 2. By his Spirit and that both in the Effusion of it upon his Disciples enabling them personally to preach the Gospel unto the men of their own generation and in the Inspiration of some of them enabling them to commit the Truth unto writing for the Instruction of the Elect unto the end of the world And herein doth the Apostle according unto his wonted manner not only confirm what he had before delivered but make way for what he had farther to instruct the Hebrews in namely the Prophetical Office of Christ as he is the great Revealer of the Will of God and Teacher of the Church which he professedly insists upon in the beginning of the next Chapter In the second part of this first Testimony is declared farther 1 What Christ will moreover do He will sing praises unto God and 2. Where he will do it in the midst of the Congregation The Expression of both these is accommodated unto the Declaration of Gods Name and praising of him in the Temple The singing of Hymns of praise unto God in the great Congregation was then a principal part of his Worship And in the first Expression two things are observable 1. What Christ undertakes to do and that is to praise God Now this is only Exegetical of what went before He would praise God by declaring his name There is no way whereby the Praise of God may be celebrated like that of declaring his Grace Goodness and love unto men whereby they may be won to believe and trust in him whence Glory redounds unto him 2. The chearfulness and alacrity of the Spirit of Christ in this work he would do it as with Joy and Singing with such a frame of heart as was required in them who were to sing the praises of God in the great Assemblies in the Temple 2. Where would he do this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the midst of the Congregation the great Congregation as he calls it v. 25. that is the great Assembly of the people in the Temple And this was a Type of the whole Church of the Elect under the New Testament The Lord Christ in his own Person by his Spirit in his Apostles and his Word by all his Messengers unto the end of the world setting forth the Love Grace Goodness and Mercy of God in him the Mediator sets forth the praise of God in the midst of the Congregation I shall only add that whereas singing of hymns unto God was an especial part of the Instituted Worship under the Old Testament to whose use these Expressions are accommodated it is evident that the Lord Christ hath eminently set forth this praise of God in his Institution of Worship under the New Testament wherein God will ever be glorified and praised This was that which the Lord Christ engaged to do upon the Issue of his sufferings and we m●y propose it unto our Example and Instruction namely V. That which was principally in the heart of Christ upon his sufferings was to declare and manifest the Love Grace and Good will of God unto men that they might come to an Acquaintance with him and Acceptance before him There are two things in the Psalm and the words that manifest how much this was upon the heart of Christ. The most part of the Psalm containeth the great confl●ct that he had with his sufferings and the Displeasure of God against sin declared therein He is no sooner delivered from thence but instantly he engageth in this work As he lands upon the shore from that Tempest wherein he was tossed in his Passion he cryes out I will declare thy name unto my brethren in the midst of the Congregation will I sing praise unto thee And thus we find that upon his Resurrection he did not immediately ascend into glory but first declared the name of God unto his Apostles and Disciples and then took order that by them it should be declared and published to all the world This was upon his Spirit and he entered not into his glorious Rest untill he had performed it The words themselves also do evidence it in that Expression of celebrating Gods name with hymns with singing It was a joy of heart unto him to be engaged in this work Singing is the frame 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 James 5.13 of them that are in a glad free rejoycing condition So was the Lord Christ in this work He rejoyced of old with the very thoughts of this work Prov. 8.30 31. Isa. 61.1 2 3. And it was one of the glorious Promises that were made unto him upon his undertaking the work of our Salvation that he should declare or preach the Gospel and the name of God therein unto the Conversion of Jews and Gentiles Isa. 49.1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10. He rejoyced therefore greatly to do it and that First Because herein consisted the Manifestation and Exaltation of the glory of God which he principally in his whole work aimed at He came to do the will and thereby to set forth the glory of the Father By and in him God designed to make his glory known the glory of his Love and Grace in sending him the glory of his Justice and faithfulness in his sufferings the glory of his Mercy in the Reconciliation and Pardon of sinners the glory of his Wisdom in the whole Mysterie of his Mediation and the glory together
confederacies of the men of the world for their carnal security And thus by this Triple Testimony hath the Apostle both confirmed his foregoing Assertion and farther manifested the Relation that is between the children to be brought unto Glory and the Captain of their salvation whereby it became righteous that he should suffer for them and meet that they should enjoy the benefit of his sufferings which he more fully expresseth in the following Verses Verse XIV XV. THe Vnion of Christ and the Children in their Relation unto one common root and participation of the same nature being asserted the Apostle proceeds to declare the Ends Use and Necessity of that Vnion in respect of the Work which God had designed him unto and the Ends which he had to accomplish thereby Of these Two he layeth down in these two Verses namely the Destruction of the Devil and the Delivery thereby of them that were in Bondage by Reason of Death neither of which could have been wrought nor effected but by the Death of the Captain of salvation which he could not have undergone nor would what he could otherwise have done been profitable unto them had he not been of the same nature with the children as will appear in the opening of the words themselves Verse 14 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V.L. Quia ergo Bez. quoniam ergo because therefore Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for seeing or for because Eras. Posteaquam igitur Ours forasmuch then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes used for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 postquam ex quo tempore from whence so as to express no Causality as to that which follows but only the Precedency of that which it relates unto But it is not in that sense used with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which here is subjoyned but quoniam quandoquidem the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore plainly expressing a Causality they are well rendered by ours Forasmuch then or therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V.L. pueri communicaverunt carni sanguini The children communicated in flesh and blood Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sons were partakers or do partake Eras. Commercium habent cum carne sanguine have communion or commerce with flesh and blood Bez. Pueri participes sunt carnis sanguinis the children are partakers of flesh and blood as Ours The Vulgar expresseth the time past which the Original requireth Aethiopick He made his children partakers of his flesh and blood with respect as it should seem to the Sacrament of the Eucharist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V.L. Et ipse similiter consimiliter A.M. participavit eisdem Bez. Ipse quoque consimiliter particeps factus est eorundem as ours He also himself took part of the same And the Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he himself also in the same likeness or manner was partaker or partook in the same or self same things Arab. He also like unto them partook in the properties of the same That is truly partook of Flesh and Blood in all their Natural or Essential Properties Aethiop And he also was made as a brother unto them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut per mortem suam that by his own death properly as to the sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V.L. destrueret all other Latin Translations aboleret that he might destroy so ours but to destroy respects the Person abolere in the first place the Power 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eum qui tenebat mortis imperium Syr. Eras. Vul. him that held or had the rule of death Bez. eum penes quem est mortis robur him that had the power of death Aethiop the Prince of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is Satan 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some Copies read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V. liberaret eos Bez. liberos redderet eos and free them and make them free Syr. and loose them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Per omne vivere suum Whilest they lived All their lives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Obnoxii erant servituti Bez. Mancipati erant servituti properly damnates erant servitutis obnoxious subject unto b●ndage Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood This Expression is not elsewhere used in the Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to have any thing what ever in Common with another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is he who hath nothing in fellowship or common with others And this word is used in reference unto all sorts of things Good and Bad as Nature Life Actions Qualities Works Here it intimateth the common and equal share of the Children in the things spoken of They are equally common to all These are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Flesh and Blood That is Humane Nature liable to Death Misery Destruction Some would have not the nature of man but the frail and weak Condition of mankind to be intended in this Expression So Eniedinus and after him Grotius who refers us to Chap. 5.7 1 Tim. 3.16 2 Cor. 4.11 for the confirmation of this sense But in none of those places is there mention of Flesh and Blood as here but only of flesh which word is variously used both in the Old Testament and New Yet in all the places referred unto it is taken not for the Quality of Humane Life as it is infirm and weak but for humane nature it self wnich is so as concerning that of 1 Tim. 3.16 it hath at large been declared And the design of the place rejects this Gloss which was invented only to defeat the Testimony given in these words unto the Incarnation of the Son of God For the Apostle adds a Reason in these Verses why the Lord Christ was so to be of one with the children as to take upon himself their nature which is because that was subject unto death which for them he was to undergo And Flesh and Blood are here only mentioned though they compleat not Humane Nature without a Rational Soul because in and by them it is that our Nature is subject unto death We may only farther observe that the Apostle having especial regard unto the Saints under the Old Testament expresseth their Participation of flesh and blood in the Preterperfect Tense or time past which by Proportion is to be extended to all that believe in Christ unless we shall say that he hath respect unto the common interest of all mankind in the same nature in the root of it whence God is said of one blood to have made them all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we see is rendered by Interpreters similiter consimiliter codem modo ad eandem similitudinem That is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 likewise or after the same manner And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 17. every way like Here it is restrained by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same that is flesh and blood Humane Nature as to the Humane Nature he was every way as the children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Partem habuit particeps erat he took part And in the use of this Word the Dative Case of the Person is still understood and sometimes expressed So Plato 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he might share or partake in the same acts with them And it is here also understood That he might partake with them of flesh and blood And the Apostle purposely changeth the word from that which he had before used concerning the children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they had Humane Nature in common they were men and that was all having no Existence but in and by that nature Concerning him he had before proved that he had a Divine Nature on the account whereof he was more excellent than the Angels And here he sayes of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Existing in his Divine Nature he moreover took part of that nature with them which makes a difference between their Persons though as to Humane Nature they were every way alike and this removes the exception of Schlictingius or Crellius that he is no more said to be incarnate than the children That by death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This word is peculiar to Paul He useth it almost in all his Epistles and that frequently Elsewhere it occurs but once in the New Testament Luke 13.17 and that in a sense whereunto by him it is not applyed That which he usually intends in this word is to make a thing or person to cease as to its present condition and not to be what it was So Rom. 3.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall their unbelief make the faith of God of none effect cause it to cease render the promise useless And v. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do we make the Law void by faith take away its use and End Chap. 4.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the promise is made ineffectual Chap. 7.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If her husband is dead she is freed from the Law The Law of the Husband hath no more power over her So v. 6. 1 Cor. 13.8 10 11. Chap. 15.24 26. 2 Cor. 3.10 13. Gal. 3.17 Chap. 5.4 11. Ephes. 2.15 The Intention of the Apostle in this word is the making of any thing to cease or to be void as to its former Power and Efficacy not to remove annihilate or destroy the Essence or Being of it And the Expression here used is to the same purpose with that in Psalm 8.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to quiet or make to cease the enemy and self-avenger 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is properly vis robur potentia Force Strength Power like that of Arms or Armies in battle And sometimes it is used for Rule Empire and Authority 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to be in Place of Power and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to be able to dispose of what it relates unto And in both senses we shall see that the Devil is said to have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the power of death Now there is not any notion under which the Devil is more known unto or spoken of among the Jews than this of his having the power of death his common appellation among them is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Angel of death And they call him Samael also So the Targum of Jonathan 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 3.6 And the woman saw Samael the Angel of death And Maimon More Nebu. lib. 2. cap. 30. tells us from the Midrash that Samael rode upon the Serpent when he deceived Eve that is used him as his instrument in that work And most of them acknowledge Sathan to be principally intended in the temptation of Eve though Aben Ezra deny it in his Comment on the words and dispute against it And he addes that by Samael the Angel of death they understand Sathan which he proves from the words of their wise men who say in some places that Sathan would have hindred Abraham from sacrificing of Isaac and in others that Samael would have done it which proves that it is one and the same who by both names is intended And hence they usually call him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wicked Samael the Prince of all the devils and say of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Samael brought death upon all the world So that by this Samael or Angel of death it is evident that they intend him who is termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Prince and Ruler of the rest So also they speak expresly in Baba Bathra distinc Hashatephir 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rabbi Simeon said the same is Sathan and the Angel of death and the evil figment that is the cause and author of it And they call him the Angel of death on many accounts the consideration whereof may give us some light into the reason of the Expression here used by the Apostle The first is that before mentioned namely that by his means death entred and came upon all the world His temptation was the first occasion of death and for that reason is he termed by our Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 8.44 a murtherer from the beginning And herein he had the power of death prevailing to render all mankind obnoxious to the sentence and stroke of it Secondly Because he is employed in great and signal Judgments to inflict death on men He is the head of those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 evil Angels who slew the Aegyptians Psal. 78 49. So in Psal. 91.5 those words Thou shalt not fear 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the arrow that flieth by day are rendred by the Targum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the arrow of the Angel of death which he shooteth by day And in the next verse those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the destruction that wasteth at noon day they render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the troop of devils that walk at noon-day the Psalmist treating of great and sudden destructions which they affirm to be all wrought by Sathan and thence the Hellenists also render the latter place by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the devil at noon-day wherein they are followed by the Vulgar Latine Arabick and Aethiopick Translations And this the Apostle seems to allude unto 1 Cor. 10.10 where he says that those who murmured in the wilderness were destroyed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the destroyer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the destroying Angel or the Angel of death as in this Epistle he terms him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chap. 11.28 And it may be this is he who is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Job 18.13 the first-born of death or he that hath right unto the administration of it They term him also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
unto him to be agitated and terrified as it were at his pleasure To this end were Persons excommunicate given up unto Satan to vex 1 Tim. 1.20 He threatens them as an Executioner with the work that he hath to do upon them 4. God hath ordained him to be the Executioner of the sentence of Death upon stubborn sinners unto all Eternity partly for the Aggravation of their Punishment when they shall alwayes see and without relief bewail their folly in hearkening unto his Allurements and partly to punish himself in his wofull Employment And for these several Reasons is Satan said to have the power of death And hence it is evident That VIII All the Power of Satan in the world over any of the sons of men is founded in Sin and the Guilt of Death attending it Death entered by sin the Guilt of sin brought it in Herewith comes in Satans interest without which he could have no more to do in the Earth than he hath in Heaven And according as sin abounds or is subdued so his Power is enlarged or streightned As he is a Spirit he is mighty strong wise as sinful he is malitious subtle ambitious revengeful proud Yet none of all these give him his Power He that made him can cause his sword to pierce unto him and preserve man though weak and mortal from all his force as a mighty Spirit and his Attempts as a wicked one And yet these are the things in him that men are generally afraid of when yet by them he cannot reach one hair of their heads But here lyes the foundation of his power even in sin which so few regard Then IX All sinners out of Christ are under the power of Satan They belong unto that Kingdom of Death whereof he is the Prince and Ruler The whole world lyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the power of this wicked one If the Guilt of death be not removed from any the Power of the Devil extends unto them A power indeed it is that is regulated Were it Soveraign or absolute he would continually devour But it is limited unto times seasons and degrees by the Will of God the Judge of all But yet great it is and answerable unto his Titles the Prince the God of the world And however men may flatter themselves as the Jews did of old that they are free if they are not freed by an interest in the death of Christ they are in bondage unto this beastly Tyrant and as he works effectually in them here he will ragingly inflict vengeance on them hereafter 3. He is destroyed To destroy him The sense and importance of the word here used was before declared It is not applyed unto the Nature Essence or Being of the Devil but unto his Power in and over death As it is elsewhere declared John 12.32 Now is the Judgement of this world now is the Prince of this world cast out that which is here called the destroying of the Devil is there called the casting out of the Prince of this world It is the casting him out of his Power from his Princedom and Rule and Col. 2.15 Having spoiled principalities and powers he made an open shew of them triumphing over them in his cross as Conquerors used to do when they had not slain the Persons of their Enemies but deprived them of their Rule and lead them Captives The Destruction then here intended of him that had the power of death is the Dissolution Evacuation and Removing of that Power which he had in and over death with all the effects and consequences of it 4. The means whereby Satan was thus destroyed is also expressed It was by death by his own death This of all others seemed the most unlikely way and means but indeed was not only the best but the only way whereby it might be accomplished And the manner how it was done thereby must be declared and vindicated The fourfold power of Satan in reference unto death before mentioned was all founded in sin The Obligation of the sinner unto death was that which gave him all his Power The taking away then of that Obligation must needs be the Dissolution of his Power The foundation being removed all that is built upon it must needs fall to the ground Now this in reference unto the Children for whom he dyed was done in the death of Christ Virtually in his death it self Actually in the Application of it unto them When the sinner ceaseth to be obnoxious unto death the Power of Satan ceaseth also And this every one doth that hath an interest in the death of Christ for there is no condemnation unto them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 And this because he dyed he dyed for their sins took that death upon himself which was due unto them which being conquered thereby and their Obligation thereunto ceasing the Power of Satan is therewith dissolved The first Branch of his Power consisted in the bringing of sin into the world This is dissolved by Christs taking away the sin of the world John 1.29 which he did as the Lamb of God by the Sacrifice of himself in his death typified by the Paschal Lamb and all other Sacrifices of old Again His power consisted in his Rule in the world as cast under sin and death From this he was cast out John 12.32 in the death of Christ when contending with him for the continuance of his Soveraignty he was conquered the ground whereon he stood even the guilt of sin being taken away from under him and his Title defeated And actually Believers are translated from under his Rule from the Power of Darkness into the Kingdom of Light and of the Son of God Nor can he longer make use of death as poenal as threatned in the curse of the Law to terrifie and affright the consciences of men for being justified by faith in the death of Christ they have peace with God Rom. 5.1 Christ making Peace between God and us by the blood of his Cross Ephes. 2.14 15. 2 Cor. 5.19 20 21. the Weapons of this part of his Power are wrested out of his hand seeing Death hath no power to terrifie the conscience but as it expresseth the curse of God And lastly his final Execution of the sentence of death upon sinners is utterly taken out of his hand by the death of Christ inasmuch as they for whom he dyed shall never undergo death poenally And thus was Satan as to his power over death fully destroyed by the death of Christ. And all this depended on Gods Institution appointing the satisfactory sufferings of Christ and accepting them instead of the sufferings of the children themselves The Socinians give us another Exposition of these words as knowing that insisted on to be no less destructive of their Error than the death of Christ is of the power of the Devil The Reason hereof saith Schlictingius is quia per mortem Christus adeptus est supremam potestatem in omnia qua
which necessarily infers his prae-existence in another nature their perswasion about the Person of Christ is utterly overthrown Their exceptions in their controversial writings unto this place have been else-where considered Those of Eniedinus on this Text are answered by Paraeus those of Castalio by Beza and the objections of some others by Gomarus We shall in the first place consider what is proposed for the confirmation of their sense by Schlictingius or Crellius and then the exception of a very learned Expositor unto the sense before laid down and confirmed And Schlictingius first argues from the Context Praeter ipsa verba saith he quae hunc sensum nullo modo patiuntur ut postea dicemus contextus ratiocinatio authoris id repudiat qui pro ratione argumento id sumere non potuit debuitve quod sibi hoc ipso argumento ratione probandum sumsisset De eo enim erat quaestio cur Christus qui nunc ad tantam majestatem gloriam est evectus non angelicam sed humanam morti variis calamitatibus obnoxiam habuerit naturam bujus vero rei quo pacto ratio redderetur per id quod non angelicam sed humanam naturam assumpserit cum istius ipsius rei quae in hac quaestione continetur nempe quod Christus homo fuit natus nunc causa ratioque quaeratur At vero si haec verba de juvandis non Angelis sed hominibus deque ope iis ferenda intelligamus pulcherrime omnia cohaerent nempe Christum hominem mortalem fuisse non angelum aliquem quod non angelis sed hominibus juvandis servandisque fuerit destinatus But the foundation of this Exposition of the Context is a mistake which his own preceding discourse might have relieved him from For there is no such question proposed as here is imagined nor doth he in his following Exposition suppose it The Apostle doth not once propose this unto confirmation that it behoved the Lord Christ to be a man and not an Angel But having proved at large before that in Nature and Authority he was above the Angels he grants verse 8. that he was for a little while made lower than they and gives at large the reason of the necessity of that dispensation taken from the work which God had designed him unto which being to bring many sons unto glory he shews and proves by sundry reasons that it could not be accomplished without his death and suffering for which end it was indispensibly necessary that he should be made partaker of flesh and blood And this he confirms farther by referring the Hebrews unto the Scripture and in especial unto the great Promise of the Messiah made unto Abraham that the Messiah was to be his seed the love and grace whereof he amplifies by an intimation that he was not to partake of the Angelical nature That supposition therefore which is the foundation of this Exposition namely that the Apostle had before designed to prove that the Messiah ought to partake of humane nature and not of Angelical which is nothing to his purpose is a surmise suited only to the present occasion Wherefore Felbinger in his Demonstrationes Evangelica takes another course and affirms that these words contain the end of what was before asserted verse 14 15. namely about Christs participation of flesh and blood which was not to help Angels but the seed of Abraham and to take them into grace and favour But these things are both of them expresly declared in those verses especially verse 15. where it is directly affirmed that his design in his Incarnation and Death was to destroy the devil and to free and save the children And to what end should these things be here again repeated and that in words and terms far more obscure and ambiguous than those wherein it was before taught and declared For by Angels they understand evil Angels and there could be no cause why the Apostle should say in this Verse that he did not assist or relieve them when he had declared in the words immediately fore-going that he was born and died that he might destroy them Neither is it comely to say that the end why Christ destroyed the devil was that he might not help him or the end why he saved the children was that he might assist them Besides the introduction of this assertion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not allow that here any end is intimated of what was before expressed there being no insinuation of any final cause in them The Context therefore not answering their occasion they betake themselves to the words Verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith he significat proprie manu aliquem apprehendere sive ut illum aliquo ducas sive ut sustentes hinc ad opitulationem significandum commodè transfertur quos enim adjutos volumus ne cadant vel sub onere aliquo succumbant aut si ceciderint erectos cupimus iis manum injicere solemus quo sensu Ecclesiastic 4. v. 12. De sapientia dictum est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hoc est opitulatur quaerentibus se eadem est significatio verbi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod qui aliquem sublevatum velint illi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adverso manum porrigere solent It is acknowledged that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth frequently signifie as here is alledged namely to help and assist as it were by putting forth the hand for to give relief But if that were intended by the Apostle in this place what reason can be assigned why he should wave the use of a word proper unto his purpose and frequently so applied by himself in other places and make use of another which signifying no such thing nor any where used by him in that sense must needs obscure his meaning and render it ambiguous Whereas therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to help and relieve and is constantly used by our Apostle in that sense it being not used or applied by him in this place to express his intention but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies no such thing nor is ever used by him to that purpose the sense contended for of help and relief is plainly excluded The place of Ecclesiasticus and that alone is referred unto by all that embrace this Exposition But what if the word be abused in that place by that Writer must that give a rule unto its interpretation in all other Writers where it is properly used But yet neither is the word used there for to help and relieve but to take and receive Wisdom suscipit receiveth or taketh unto it self suo more those that seek it which is the sense of the word we plead for and so is it rendred by Translators So the Lord Christ suo modo took to himself the seed of Abraham by uniting it unto his person as he was the Son of God In the very entrance also of his discourse this Author acknowledgeth that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉