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A64467 The reconciler of the Bible inlarged wherein above three thousand seeming contradictions throughout the Old and New Testament are fully and plainly reconciled ... / by J.T. and T.M. ... Thaddaeus, Joannes, fl. 1630.; T. M. 1662 (1662) Wing T831_VARIANT; ESTC R33916 334,239 278

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Law and by our Law he ought to die They had a Law in jure not in facto A Law but it wanted the life Execution They might judge among themselves whether such a one were worthy death as they wrongfully judged Christ here but yet the Romans had given them a Law that they should not put their Laws in execution which concerned life And so by the Roman Law it was unlawful for them to put any man to death * 1083. Joh. 18.36 with Psa 71.28 Christs Kingdom is not of this worlds fashion nor of the fashion of the world nor of the Subjects of this world but it consists of Gods Children and it is set up in their heart There is the Kingdom of Christs power which he sheweth in the Protecting of the godly from the wicked in the destruction of his enemies and in the advancement of his name from one end of the earth to the other 1084. Joh. 19.9 Jesus answered not Pilate 1 Tim. 6.13 Christ Jesus before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good confession To Pilates question first Christ did not answer because he stood before him to suffer and not to plead or excuse at length he gave testimony to the Truth in words and deeds for his Passion and Death were a sufficient testimony and sealing of his Doctrine * 1085. Joh. 19.29 And they filled a spunge with vinegar and put it upon Hysop with Mar. 15. They put it on a reed And so Mat. 27. There was a vessel of Vinegar which upon such occasions usually stood there either as some say to shorten life or to ease the pain but the souldiers did wickedly mingle gall with some of it and offered it him to drink before he was lifted up upon the Cross which he refused and then after when he was upon the Cross they offered him Vinegar and he took it so Matthew and John agree As for the Hyssope some suppose it put about the Spunge so as the Spunge gave him Vinegar to his mouth and the Hyssope besprinkled his face with the Vinegar wherein it was dipped 1086. Joh. 20.1 Christ rose on the first day of the week Mat. 12.40 The Son of Man shall be three daies and three nights in the heart of the earth untill the third day This is a Synecdochical computation of time for the least part of the day of the preparation is taken for a whole day and the beginning of the day after the Passeover or the Sabbath is taken also for a whol day Christ was three daies in the grave but it was incompleatly three daies so also he was two nights in the grave the night before being added to them 1087. Joh. 20.1 Mary Magdalen came early when it was yet dark unto the Sepulchre Mar. 16.2 Very early they came to the Sepulchre at the rising of the Sun When it was yet dark very early in the morning she went out of her house and the City waiting for the rest of the women with which afterwards she came to the Sepulchre at the Sun-rising 1088. Joh. 20.17 Touch me not Ver. 26. Reach hither thy finger Christ after the Resurrection would not be touched of Mary Magdalen who only sought him after a carnal way and thought of enjoying him no otherwise than she did formerly by his earthly presence amongst them But he commanded Thomas to touch him that his faith being confirmed he might be a more certain witnesse of Christs Resurrection Touch me not so as loving mothers touch their Sons that they have wanted that is touch me not to stay me For I am not yet ascended I am in haste and have not dispatched all I must I have now the business of being your Advocate to do and I must speedily about it But yet Thomas thou art an unbelieving man in this point and hast less faith than this woman touch thou me for confirming of thy Faith not to stay my Journey The ACTS of the APOSTLES LUKE the Evangelist describes either in general all the Acts of the Apostles or in special Peters Preachings Acts Visions Miracles Imprisonments the Conversion of Paul his Travels Disputations Miracles Bonds Imprisonments and the History of the Primitive Church after Christs Ascension from 26 years unto the 60 year from Christs Nativity 1089. ACTS 1.1 Of all things that Jesus began both to do and teach Luke wrote Joh. 21.25 There are also many other things which Jesus did the which if they should be written every one I suppose that even the world it self could not contain the books that should be written Luke in the first Book wrote of all things necessary for our salvation though not of all things but summarily concerning the conception of Jesus Christ his Nativity Life Passion Death Resurrection and Ascension into heaven August In John Tract 49. Christ did many things that are not written as John the Evangelist witnesseth but those things were chosen to be written which might suffice for the salvation of Beleevers * Act. 1.1 with Joh. 21.25 Of all things that is somthing of every thing which Jesus did the most material and chief things or all things which the Spirit of God suggested to be writtten or all things which were sufficient for the preaching of the Gospel and his he●rers The latter place tels us that there are many other things beside the principal matters which were not written though it denies not but the principal are written 1090. Act. 1.7 It is not for you to know the times or the seasons 1 Thes 5.1 Of the times and seasons brethren you have no need I write to you Times and seasons as they are in a general consideration is one thing and as they are taken for particular years or daies or seasons are another The Apostles must not be too curious to know the year or day when Christ will come or restore the Kingdom to Israel but yet the Apostle would not have them ignorant of this that there is a time when Christ will come again though he may conceale the particulars of it 1091. Acts 1.9 Whilst the Disciples beheld Christ was taken up and a cloud received him Joh. 3.13 No man hath ascended up into heaven but he that came down from heaven The body of Christ was taken up visibly on high where Christ was personally before according to his Divine Nature Acts 1.9 with Joh. 3.13 The former place speaks of Christs personal ascent into heaven as Man where he is to be reserved till his se-second coming It speaks not of his ascent as God for there he was as God yet the Person in which the Divine Nature was ascended visibly The latter place speaks of Christs being in heaven as God 1092. Acts 1.15 The number of names together were about an hundred and twenty 1 Cor. 15.6 After that he was seen of above five hundred brethren at once The number of an hundred and twenty must be restrained to the faithful there at Jerusalem the rest were out of this gathering in other places Luke
ordinary and usuall course of nature and so he sheweth his presence in respect of us not that there is any thing that he doth not see and know or doth change his place but this is attributed to God after the manner of men and in respect of our sense as Gen. 18.21 Psalm 14.2 * Gen. 11.7 with 1 Kings 8.27 God in descending forsaketh not the place wherein he was but containeth in himself all space and place Yet the attributes and properties of God are of the very substance of his nature his power his wisdome his justice goodnesse and providence wherefore when by these he manifestly sheweth his glory to us inferiour creatures he is rightly said to descend unto us For although his power was never absent nor his providence in directing that which men did wickedly commit unto his own glory and the profit of his Church yet now he descended by his power when he sheweth unto men the force thereof and by his providence when he declared himself displeased with their wicked enterprize 58. Gen. 11.12 Arphaxad begat Salem Luke 3.36 Which was the son of Sala which was the son of Cainan c. Beda in Luk. 3. The name and the generation of Cainan in Genesis and the words of the dayes according to the truth of the Hebrews is not found but Arphaxad is said to have begotten Sala there being none betwixt him Luke took this genealogy from the edition of the 70 Interpreters 59. Gen. 11.26 Terah lived 70 years and begat Abram Nahor and Haran Chap. 12. ● And Abram was 75 years old when he departed out of Haran Terah did not beget three sons in the same year but he began to generate at 70 years old and he lived in Haran to 205 years old it may be Abram was the younger son but because he is so commended in the Scriptures he is set down first before his brethren as Jacob Mat. 1.3 Judas 1 Pet. 4.1 * Gen. 11.26 27. with 12.4 Abram when he went out of Haran was 75 years Chap. 12.4 5. before which time Verse 32. of this Chapter whose age is summoned up to 205 out of which deduct the age of Abram at the time of his departing out of Haran which presently followed the death of his father and the birth of Abram will fall out to be about the 130 year of Terahs age It s supposed Haran was the eldest and Abram the youngest for Sara was Harans daughter and ten years elder than Abram Others conceive Abram the eldest as born in the 70 year of Terah and that he departed from Haran into Canaan while his Father lived but had no settled possession till after the decease of Terah 60. Gen. 12.5 Abraham took Sara his wife and Lot his brothers son Chap. 13.8 and 14.14 Abraham said to Lot we are brethren c. Brothers are called by blood Gen. 27.13 of alliance Chap. 14.4 of gentility Deut. 15.3 of affection 2 Sam. 1.26 of unity of confession of faith Jer. 31.34 We are brethren saith Abraham to Lot perswading him not to contend with him but seeing that he is joyned with him in the band of religion and consanguinity he wisheth him to avoid occasion of quarrell and not to give scandall to the infidels 61. Gen. 12.3 and 18.18 All the Nations of the earth shall be blessed in him Gal. 3.14 The blessing of Abraham came on the Gentiles through Christ This promise was made to the seed and posterity Gen. 22.18 Heb. 11.3 but not to the person of Abraham so the promises made by God to the Fathers are fulfilled in their children and in individuals * 62. Gen. 12.3 In thy seed all Nations shall be blessed Eph. 3.5 6. In other ages it was not made known c. The promise of the Gospel was not so hid in other ages but that some knew the calling of the Gentiles before but because very few knew it and they that did know it had it revealed to them darkly and for the most part under figures in generall and confusedly it was revealed before but not so distinctly and particularly as now it is * 63. Gen. 12.5 And they departed to go into the Land of Canaan Heb. 11.8 And he went out not knowing whether he came The nomination of a Country in generall is one thing the designation of some particular place of abode in that Country is another Moses speaks in the former sense and the Apostle in the latter Besides at the first God did not tell him of the place whither he should go for the greater triall of his faith but when he was come into Canaan then he told him that was the place * 64. Gen. 12.8 Into a Mountain eastward from Bethel Gen. 28.19 The place in Abrahams time was called not Bethel but Luz But the holy Writers speaking of things and persons that are past do anticipate that is they speak of them according to the custome of that place and time in which they wrote 65. Gen. 12.18 Abraham told a lye Psalm 5.7 Thou shalt destroy all those that speak leasing Mat. 26. Psalm 32. Seeing that the Devill is the Father of lying Abraham denying his wife sinned against God by distrust against Sara and Pharaoh by injustice for he sought to save his life by wrong means as Peter did by denying Christ God will destroy impenitent lyers but not whose lies and offences are pardoned in Christ and covered as Abrahams Isaacs and Peters were who repented * Gen. 12.18 with Psalm 5.7 The latter place speaks of such as tell lies and repent not a lye is a sin and punishable where ever it is found But repentance takes away the sting of the lye and so it doth not destroy nor did it destroy Abraham 66. Gen. 12.7 13.15 15.38 This land which thou seekest will I give to thee and thy seed c. Acts 7.5 Heb. 11.9 And he gave him n● inheritance in it no not so much as to set his foot on Prophesies and Promises are given to some and fulfilled to others nor are they alwayes fulfilled to those to whom they are given but in those for whose cause they were given So the Land was given to Abraham according to right but to his posterity for possession * 67. Gen. 13.15 To thee will I give it Acts 7.5 Heb. 11.9 And he gave him none inheritance in it Chrysostome hath an observation on Hosea 11. that the promises and prophesies were given to some and fulfilled to others being not alwayes fulfilled to those they were given but to those for whom they were given The Land was given to Abraham as to right to his sons as to possession the future being put for the time past or present For first the inhabitants of Canaan were to be dispossessed but that they were not yet their iniquity being not then full * 68. Gen. 13.17 Arise and walk thorough the Land and I will give it thee Act. 7.5 He gave him no inheritance in it no not a foot
made by Abraham Gen. 23.17 18. the field of Ephron in Machpelah the other by Jacob in Gen. 33.19 but the one after the other a long while Thirdly Some of the Patriarchs were buried in Sychem which Jacob bought Gen. 33.19 as Joseph and some as Abraham Isaac and Jacob Gen. 50.13 were buried in Hebron the field that Abraham bought for money of Ephron Fourthly Those words in Acts 7.16 Of the sonnes of Emmor may be rendred besides that i. e. sepulchre of the sons of Emmor of Sychem 99. Gen. 33.19 Jacob bought a parcell of a field where he had spread his Tents Chap. 23.16 Abraham paid the money for the Cave and the borders round about Act. 7.5 And he gave him no inheritance in it no not so much as to set his foot on The Patriarchs would not possess themselves of the Land of promise before the time whose patrimony was not bought with money but as we find it Acts 7. God gave it freely to their posterity * Gen. 35.26 All the sonnes of Jacob were said to be born in Padan Aram yet Benjamin was not born there but the Scripture is not sollicitous to reckon many times the exceptions but gives the denomination to the greater part as Gen. 46.15 all the souls which came from Jacob are reckoned to be 70 when probably there wanted one * Gen. 37.10 with 35.19 And thy mother If Rachel was dead how then doth he say I and thy mother shall worship thee He speaks not of dead Rachel but of his living maid Bela who being Josephs Nurse was in place of his mother 100. Gen. 42.15 By the life of Pharaoh Matth. 34. Swear not at all Deut. 30.19 2 Cor. 1.23 Joseph sweareth not but he confirmeth his words by speaking after the usuall manner that the Egyptians did So Moses calleth the heaven and the earth and Paul calleth God to witnesse upon his soul Christ by the Evangelist forbids all vain and unnecessary oaths and forbids perjury 101. Gen. 46.4 I will go down with thee into Aegypt and I will also surely bring thee up again Chap. 49.33 Jacob died in Aegypt Gen. 50.13 Jacob returned out of Aegypt in his posterity and his body also after his death was brought into the land of Canaan and buried there 102. Gen. 46.21 The ten sons of Benjamin Chap. 44.20 He was a childe a little one Dom. Mart Luth. Jacob gave a wife to his youngest sonne Benjamin that Rachel might have seed by him and whilst God by a singular blessing gave him so many sonnes by that means he pacified Jacobs sorrow for Joseph * 103. Gen. 46.26 with 27. Acts 7.14 In the first computation Jacob and Joseph are not comprized nor Ephraim and Manasses his sonnes which being added make up 70 in the Acts is added the five Nephews of Joseph which Numb 26. and 1 Cro. 7. are reckoned and they are Machir the sonne of Manasses and Galaad the sonne of Machir Sutulaam and Taam the sonnes of Ephraim and Edom the sonne of Sutulaam which were all born in Aegypt * Gen 46.26 All the souls were threescore and ten Exod. 1.5 Deut. 10.22 with Acts 7.14 Threescore and fifteen souls Moses observed a three-fold manner of numbring the people First Those souls only which entered with him into Aegypt of Jacobs family and came from his loynes except the wives of his sons and so there was 66 souls The second numbring by which is exposed the number of the whole Nation comprehending Jacob Joseph and two sons of Joseph which came from the loyns of Jacob which 4 added to 66 make 70. The third numbring of all the heads belonging to the family of Jacob contracted into one viz. 4 Wives of Jacob and the two sons of Judah though being dead in Canaan Or and Onam comprehending Jacob Joseph and his two sons and so they will all make 76 and so Jacob being substracted Acts 7.14 as will appear by the words they make 75 so the number 75 is not to be understood of those that went down but of all which had relation to Jacob who Jacob excepted were so many Others resolve it thus Jacob and Joseph and Josephs two sonnes born in Aegypt coming from Jacobs loynes are reckoned with them which with 66 reckoned verse 6. make 70 and though Joseph came into Aegypt before and two came not down at all being born there Yet they are said to be 70 the whole taking denomination from the greater part but without appearance of fraud because the story sets down who came with Jacob and who came not As for the number 75 the Septuagint use 75 in their Translation Gen. 46.27 and Exod. 1.5 which 5 are Machir the sonne and Gilead his sonne and nephew or grand-child of Manasseh and Sutulam and Taham two sonnes of Ephraim and Edom his grandchild by Sutulam which they seem to take from 1 Cro. 7.14 20. but if they reckon right they should reckon two more verse 29. But others say that to make up the number 75 there is use made of such as were born afterwards in Egypt of one family as Father Son Grand-child and Great-grandchild which Jacob might see before he died and of these the most being such as he brought with him out of Canaan they might all in reference to Jacob be sorted to his company 104. Gen. 46.34 Every shepherd is an abomination to the Aegyptians Chap. 47.6 If thou knowest any men of activity amongst them then make them rulers over my cattle The Aegyptians hated the shepherds of the Hebrews not for their cattle but for their circumcision and religion because they sacrificed those things which the Aegyptians worshipped for Gods 105. Gen. 47.31 And Israel bowed himself upon his beds head Heb. 11.21 Worshipped leaning upon the top of his st●ffe Jacob being lifted up at the head of his bed bowed himself upon the top of his staff and so worshipping God left an example of piety behind him to his children * Gen. 47.31 with Heb. 11.21 Some say the difference ariseth by the Apostles following the 70 and the 70 followed a Copy which had no poin●s for the same Letters varied in one vowell stand to both for Mitteh is a bed Matteh a staff But others easily reconcile it thus Jacob was old and feeble and delighting in prayer and bowing himself in holy adoration to his God would now in the last time succour up his feeble limbes by a staff to wind about his weak body into a more reverend prostration before the Lord than that of lying upon his back in his bed and in this posture he kneeled up with his face towards the beds head leaning on a staff * 106. Gen. 48.22 with Gen. 33.19 Josh ult 33. The one place saith He took it by force the other He bought it Jacob at the first truely bought it but being strucken with fear by reason of the slaughter of the Sichimites by his two sonnes he relinquished the field the Amorites invading it Jacob returning
our sinnes and detest evill justly and as we should so God is daily angry with us for our sinnes But damnable anger and unlawfull is joyned with the sin of those who for every light offence do maintain their anger reckoning more of what is committed against them than against God 461. Psal 9.8 God shall judge the world in righteousnesse 1 Cor. 6.2 Know ye not that the Saints shall judg the world The manner of judging of the world is either by authority so the whole Trinity will judge or of subordinate authourity so Christ as Mediator and man will judge or of assertion so the Apostles will judge the world or of approbation so all the Saints and Angels shall allow of the sentence pronounced by the supreme judge Chrysostome the Saints shall judge the world by exemplary judgement because by example of their faith the infidelity of the world shall be condemned 462. Psal 14.1 The fool said in his heart There is no God Psal 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work Wicked men if not in words yet in their deed and actions they deny God and as much as in them is they wish there were no God and no Hell 463. Psal 18.42 They cryed unto the Lord and he heard them not Jer. 29.12 Ye shall call upon me and I will hearken unto you God doth not hear the prayers of hypocrites but he hears the prayers of penitents 464. Psal 19.4 Their line went out into the ends of the earth Rom. 10.18 Their sound went out into the whole world Paul interprets the Psalme concerning the Doctrine of the Gospell and saith that it is the Canon of the holy Ghost and rule of faith and manners of Christians appointed by God by the sound and voice of the prophets of Christ and his Apostles in which the will of God is revealed and therefore it is called the Canonicall Scripture * Psal 19.4 with Rom. 10.18 To fetch an allusion from a place is one thing to allude to a place only is another He that alludes to a place only is not bound to recite the words further than that allusion requires The Apostle was shewing that the Gospell spread much in the world even as David said the light of the Sunne did * 465. Psal 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul Rom. 6.23 The Law is the ministration of death The former place speaks of the Morall Law and also of the Gospell-Doctrine of Christ as it was held forth in the Scripture before Davids time The latter place of the Morall Law alone which though it be a perfect rule of righteousnesse yet in regard of us so unable to performe it and transgressors of it we can have nothing but death by the Law for cursed is he that doth not continue in all that the Law requires The Law is a killing Letter and a ministry of death not of it self but to us so sinfull and wretched 466. Psal 19.8 The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart 2 Cor. 3.7 The Law is the ministration of death engraven in stones In this Psalme by the Law is understood all the will of God revealed from above The Apostle speaks only of the Morall Law not as it is in it self for so it is the perfect Law of righteousnesse and brings life but in respect of us who are transgressors of the Law and obtained nothing but death by it 467. Psal 19.11 And in keeping of thy Commandements there is great reward Luke 17.10 When you have done all ye were commanded ye shall say We are profitable servant we have done nothing but what we are obliged to do David commendeth the Law of God and that there is great reward in the keeping of it In which the goodnesse of God is commended who may of right require obedience from us yet he freely gives a reward unto us which he oweth not Christ sheweth that we and all that we have are due unto God therefore we can aske nothing for a reward and it is presumption to think that we can deserve any thing at Gods hands * Psal 19.11 with Luke 17.10 There is great reward of mercy not of merit neither of congruity nor condignity for when we have done all we ought we cannot profi● he Lord. It s one thing what God g●●es to us as sonnes another thing what we expect as wages for our work 468. Psal 22.1 My God my God wherefore hast thou forsaken me Joh. 14.10 Chap. 16.32 I am not alone for the Father is with me In the first place is signified the sense of Gods wrath and the effect thereof in Christ who taking upon him our person is made sinne for us though he complained that he was forsaken as man yet he was not forsaken as the Sonne of God nor was the divine nature separated from the humane nature but supported it In the latter place when Christ saith I am not alone he hath respect to the flight of the Apostles and fortifieth himself against it by the presence of his Father 469. Psal 22.3 My God I cryed by day and thou heardest not John 11.42 I knew because thou hearest me alwayes Christ was not heard in his passion because he was to dye In the latter place he speaks of his prayer for believers he gives thanks to his Father that he was alwayes heard 470. Psal 24.1 The earth is the Lords and the fullness thereof Luk. 4.6 I will give to thee saith Satan unto Christ all this power and glory Satan being the spirit and father of lying Joh. 8.4 Matth. 28. Psal 22 8. doth falsly appropriate to himself the power of the world Christ being appointed by his father King of Kings to whom was given all power in Heaven and Earth he rules in Heaven and Earth from sea to sea from the Rivers unto the ends of the earth 471. Psal 24.2 The Lord hath founded the earth upon the seas Exod. 20.4 The waters are under the earth The earth hath its stability from the first Creation the foundation thereof is the power of God which is the center of the whole and it doth as it were move upon the waters above and beneath it hath the waters on the sides so that the Sea is higher than the earth it is therefore the wonderfull work of God that he preserveth mankind from drowning in the midst of the waters 472. Psal 26.2 Prove me O Lord. 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man prove himself God because he proves our thoughts words and deeds therefore we must prove our selves that we may make our selves approved to God * 473. Psal 2.9 Turn not thy face far from me Psal 51.9 Turn thy face from my sins It is one thing to turn away his face from Davids sinne another thing to turn away his face from Davids person David prayed that God would not withdraw his favour from him but that he in favour would hide away his face from his
in him he was despised and we esteemed him not In the first place is spoken of Christ exaltation and the glory of his Kingdome of which Solomon was a type not outwardly in the sight of men but inwardly and spiritually before God and the faithfull people In the latter of Christs humiliation and as carnall men judge of Christ * Psal 45.2 with Isaiah 53.2 The former speaks of Christ as he appeares to the soule broken and bruised and called home The latter of Christ as he appeared to the men of the world Jews and the wicked without any Majesty or Kingship The former as he shall appear in glory the latter as he appears in outward dispensations here below The comelinesse is rather relating to his Majesty than to his person though questionlesse which in it self was fair yet was through his troubles and sorrow beclouded and he seemed a man of sorrow 492. Psal 49.8 The Brother shall not redeem his Brother Heb. 2.12 Christ our Brother offered himself for the price of our Redemption Because men could not satisfie the Divine Law Christ God and Man our Brother and our Saviour by his obedience and suffering fulfilled the whole Law for us his satisfaction is our Redemption for our sinnes 1 Joh. 2.2 Rom. 20. and the sinnes of the whole world and he is the fulfilling of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that believeth * 493. Psal 49.12 He is like the beasts that perish Rom. 8.21 The creature it self also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Sonnes of God Beasts perish because when they die there is an end they have no resurrection The second place speaks of the renewing of the world after desolution thereof And whether by the creature he means the Heaven and the Earth with the rest of inanimate things or he intends the animate Besides he shews that they shall be no more subject to any such alteration and corruption as now when the beasts perish much lesse to serve for the object and instrument of sinne but every thing according as its capable shall be glorified and fully delivered from vanity and perishing * 494. Psal 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble and I will hear thee Isa 65.25 And it shall come to passe that before they call I will answer When God saith he will answer before they call it hinders not but that when at other times they do call he will answer The latter promise in Isaiah doth not say that he will alwaies answer before they call but that sometime he will answer before they call i. e. he will deliver his people before they apprehend danger * 495. Psal 51.11 Cast me not away from thy presence c. Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Doubt If the Lord should take away his Spirit and cast his people out of his presence Then how comes he not to leave us Answ The words of David might be spoken by him in his desertion in which case a man may fear that which he is most sure to avoid His praying that God would not cast him off doth not necessarily imply a fear that God would do it but rather an hope and assurance that God would not do it As elsewhere we find him praying for that which God hath promised unto him and which he doubted not but God would performe 2 Sam. 26.27 The former place shews what David in justice might fear for his sinne The latter what God in mercy would grant for his Christ The former what David in his prayers did seek The latter what God in his promise did answer 496. Psal 95.11 Slay them not O Lord. Vers 13. Consume them in thy wrath First he praies that the enemies of God may be tollerated a while for example to others and led captive in triumph then when others are taught better by their example let them be destroyed That destruction if it may not be understood of their lives yet it may be of their power dignities and wealth that so being brought down they may not be able to hurt the Church or oppose themselves against God * Psal 59.11 with 13. Slay them not at once or suddenly let them rather have Cains punishment but yet consume them surely that so they may know themselves to be men and thou the God of Heaven * 497. Psal 60. title When Joab returned and smote of Aedem in the valley of Salt twelve thousand 1 Chron. 18.12 Abishai the sonne of Zeruiah slew of the Aedemites in the valley of Salt eighteen thousand 2 Sam. 8.13 And David gat him a name when he returned from smiteing of the Syrians in the valley of Salt eighteen thousand The victory is ascribed to David as Generalissimo to Joab and Abishai as two chief Commanders and so all three had their speciall Victories running into one They are called Aedomites in some places Syrians in another because both Syrians and Aedomites joyned together against David Joab and Abishai In one place its said eighteen thousand in another place twelve thousand probably either David or some of the three at first slew six thousand and then Joab returning with the rest he either giving the first onset or else doing some remarkable service is said to slay twelve thousand more and so in all eighteen thousand 498. Psal 60.3 O God thou hast cast us off Rom. 11.1 Hath God cast off his people God forbid David speaks of temporall casting off Paul of eternall 499. Psal 62.11 God spake once Heb. 1.1 God spake by divers manners to the Fathers and Prophets God speaks once not by number but by counsell nor doth he deliberate the second time but he speaks divers wayes with a voice or without a voice to men waking or sleeping by himself or by his Angels In the former place the certainty in the latter the manner of divine Revelation is understood * 500. Psal 68.18 Thou hast led captivity captive and thou hast received gifts for men Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he gave gifts to men Led captivity captive which may be interpreted either passively or actively Passively he took away from Satan Death and Hell all their captives changing their miserable captivity into an holy and happy captivity whereby they are brought into the obedience of the Gospel 2. Actively Christ hath captivated the world flesh and Devill Death and Hell which in severall kinds had before captivated mankind Received gifts and gave gifts i. e. receiving gave as the phrase is Exod. 25.2 and in divers others places taking is used for giving 1 Kings 3.24 17.10 Judg. 14 2. and giving is used for taking as Gen. 42.30 So as Christ received gifts at Gods hands in the Psalms and he did not keep these gifts or use them for himself but Saint Paul would have us to know that he gave us these spirituall gifts Thus the one shews the giver the other interprets to what end they were
given to be bestowed on us 501. Psal 69.1 Save me O Lord. 1 Pet. 3.21 Baptism saveth us God is the principall efficient necessary cause of our safety Baptism is the instrumentall cause and not absolutely necessary because many are saved without Baptism for it is not the want of it but the contempt of that condemns us 502. Psal 69.23 Let their Table be made a snare unto them Matth. 5.44 Rom. 12.14 Blesse and curse not We may curse the enemies of God out of pious zeal not out of evill affection Christ bids us pray for our enemies rather than curse them 503. Psal 69.25 Let their habitation be desolate Act. 1.20 Peter applies that to Judas That which David speaks in generall of the enemies of Christ that Peter applies to the Captain of them Judas his habitation was desolate and his place amongst the Apostles untill another tooke his Bishoprick * 504. Psal 69.28 Let them be blotted out of thy Book of Life Lev. 17.8 Whose names are not written in the Book of Life The booke of the living is one thing the Booke of Life another The book of the living in the Old Testament is the book of such as live here the Booke of Life in the New Testament is the Book of Eternall Life David prayes that they may not be in the Land of the living or their names found in the book of the living that is they may die and go to their grave Or else By the Book of the living and Life is meant the Book of Eternall Life and so it signifies That he desires that God would make it appear that they are not written in the Book of Life though they seem by their profession to be of that number So that this doth not speak that their names were ever in the Book of Life for those whose names are once there cannot be obliterated the Election of God standing firme but in regard wicked men are subject to flatter themselves out of an erroneous heart with the love and favour of God which they never had He desires that God would make a plain discovery of this their damnable delusion letting their consciences taste the terrors of God that so they may not deceive themselves 505. Psal 74.12 God is my King of old working salvation in the midst of the earth Phil. 2.12 Worke out your salvation with feare and trembling God from eternity worked our salvation in respect of his decree in the midst of the earth freeing his Church from the beginning and defending it in us he works it when he draws us to him and gives us power to will and to do that being so justified we may study for holinesse and walk in good works unto the accomplishment of our salvation 506. Psal 72.8 He shall reign from Sea to Sea John 18.36 My Kingdom is not of this world Vers 36. It is not from hence The first place is concerning the power of Christs Kingdome he reigns also powerfully amongst his enemies the latter is of the Kingdome of Grace for with his grace by faith he blesseth godly hearts therefore he saith My Kingdome is not of this world yet he denied not but that it was in this world * 507. Psal 72. ult The Prayers of David the sonne of Jesse are ended Psalm 86.1 A Prayer of David The first place tells us this was his last Prayer that he made for Solomon a little before his death Or the last Psalm which David penned leaving it as a depositum or testimentary Legacy to Solomon Or the last of those Psalms that David set in order before his death for the use of the Church The rest were gathered together by others as some of Solomons Proverbs were Prov. 25.1 * 508. Psal 73.1 Truely God is good to such as be of a cleane heart Prov. 20.9 Who can say his heart is clean To have an heart clean by endeavour is one thing to boast of a clean heart is another David tells us that God is good to such as endeavour to have clean hearts God accepts of the will for the deed and by Christ have cleannesse imputed to them But yet even these cannot but say they find a polluted principle against which they strive * 509. Psal 78.24 And had rained down Manna upon them to eat and had given them the Corn of Heaven Jo. 6.31 Our Fathers did eat Manna in the desert as it is written He gave them bread from Heaven to eat With Jo. 6.32 Moses gave you not that bread from Heaven The Heavens are twofold either visible or invisible the two former Texts speak of Manna coming from the visible Heaven the latter Text saith the Manna came not from the invisible or spirituall Heaven Manna was a corporall food and so came from a corporall Heaven It s said to be Angels food comparatively not positively or simply as if the Angels had eaten thereof But the Hebrews use the food of Angels for the food of the Mighty an epithite given to Angels i. e. a food that seemed rather Angelicall and Celestiall than Earthly as well by reason of its origine purity and perfection as for the efficacy of it to preserve the body in perfect health and equall strength by Gods speciall appointment in those who did not by their distrust or rebellion make it of no efficacy This Manna was not truely and properly Heavenly but by signification and Sacramentally as given by Moses the Minister of the Lord. * 510. Psal 78.59 When God heard this he was wroth Isa 27.4 Anger is not in me The first place tells us that God was as an angry man in the effects he poured out upon his people The second place that an implacable anger towards his people is not in God or that Gods anger and displeasure towards his Church was then over Not that he never would expresse the effects of anger upon any part of his Church for the future but that he at present was appeased with them 511. Psal 79.4 We are made a reproach to our neighbours a scorne and derision to them that are round about us Matth. 5.10 Happy are they that are persecuted for righteousnesse sake Good men are more affected with scorns and reproaches than with blowes for saith Chrysostome a blow on the body is divided betwixt the body and the soul but a reproach wounds the soul only Yet the godly must valiantly endure injuries for the glory of God and safety of their neighbours but if that accrue not to Gods glory and is hurtfull we are to remit it to God by our just complaint and prayer for revenge on him that doth the injury * Psal 79.4 with Matth. 5.10 The former is a complaint to God The second is declaration of Gods judgement of such men as are a reproach for his Gospell-cause Men may be happy in Gods account and yet such are they in the latter place and yet be miserable in their own the apprehension of misery is enough to make them cry out
Lord will do The first That wicked men will not take notice of the Lords glorious works though the works being considered in themselves are glorious The second place shews what a glorious work that of redemption should be that even all that would see and take notice of it not shutting their eyes and being obstinate as the wicked do might see it * 607. Isai 26.14 They are dead they shall not live Vers 19. Thy dead men shall live The condition of wicked men perishing is one thing the Saints rising is another There is a difference betwixt men that are dead to God and men that are Gods dead men or that die for God or are his The former Texts speaks of oppressors which are but dead though they live they are many times cut off in the midst of their dayes they shall not live but those that are dead or slain upon Gods account shall live again live for ever 608. Isai 26.20 The wicked will not behold the Majesty of the Lord. Chap. 40.5 And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed and all flesh shall see it together for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it The Prophet speaks concerning the Kingdome of Christ and the state thereof and he teacheth in the former place that the wicked shall be so blinded that they cannot perceive the mighty worke of God wherein he hath shewed his greatnesse his glory his power and his mercy which blindnesse of theirs doth not take away the glory of God and of Christs Kingdome which all men may see in the saving work of mans Redemption 609. Isai 28.16 Behold I lay in Sion a stone a sure foundation faith the Lord. 1 Cor. 3 10. I have laid the foundation saith Paul God laid the foundation of our salvation in respect of his decree the sending of his Sonne and the perfection of mans salvation Paul laid the foundation in respect of manifestation and of his office and of the Christian Religion at Corinth * 610. Isai 30.26 The light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun and the light of the Sun seven-fold Matth. 24.29 The Sun shall be darkned and the Moon shall not give her light Spirituall shining is one thing naturall is another The light and knowledge of God should so farre exceed that which it had been that as much as the Moon light was inferiour to that of the Sun so much the knowledge of that time should be inferiour to that which was to be in after ages Nor yet doth this hinder but that at the generall desolution of the world the naturall lights of the Sun and Moon should be obscured * 611. Isai 30.20 Thy Teachers shall not be removed into a Corner any more Phil. 5.1 Paul a prisoner c. The former place speaks comparatively thy Teachers shall not as formerly be removed into corners but there shall be more plenty Nor doth this hinder but God may upon speciall occasions remove this and that Teacher and suffer them to be imprisoned as Paul though he never leaveth his Church in generall without Teachers Some distinguish betwixt teaching in Corners and Teachers to be driven to Corners by persecution * 612. Isai 31.7 Idols of Silver and of Gold which your own hands have made 1 Cor. 8.4 We know that an Idol is nothing Idols are something materiall or in relation to the substance that they are framed of they are nothing in relation to their effects and energies an Idol is of no force or value * 613. Isai 33.52 The Lord is our Law-giver Gal. 3.19 The Law was Ordained by Angels The former place speaks of God as the Author the latter place denies not God to be the Author but speaks of Angels as instruments or meanes by which the Lord gave the Law * 614. Isai 35.8 He was taken from prison and from judgement and who shall declare his generation Act. 8.33 In his humiliation his judgment was taken away It is one thing to quote the word another thing the sense Luke quoted the sense and substance of what the Prophet had said and not the words He was taken away from the judgement of his adversaries and delivered from prison What else was that but the exalting of his own judgement above them that past upon him The word that is rendred is as well to lift up a thing as to take away 615. Isa 38.1 2 Kings 20.1 2 Chron. 32.24 Set thy house in order for thou shalt dye and not live Vers 5. I will adde unto thy dayes fifteen years saith the Lord. Augustine saith that Ezechias was in order to dye according to some causes of future events In Gen. tit lib. 6. cap. 17. yet God added fifteen years to his life doing onely that which he foreknew he would do before the beginning of the world Gods justice brought the command for Ezechias death but his mercy prolonged his life and so Ezechias Piety and Repentance is proved 616. Isai 41.7 Chap. 46.6 They lavish gold out of the bag and weigh silver in the ballance and hire a Goldsmith and he wageth it a God 1 Cor. 8.4 An Idoll is nothing Silver and Gold and such materials as the Idols are made of were created by God but relatively unto God they are said to be nothing because they have nothing of God in them for God will not be worshipped by Idols 617. Isai 42.8 Chap. 48.11 I will not give my glory to another Matth. 11.29 Chap. 28.19 All power is given to me in Heaven and in Earth God will not give his praise and glory to an Image Christ to whom all power and glory is given is not only man but the true and eternall God also with the Father and the holy Ghost having co-equall glory with them but by reason of his office of Mediator all things are given him of the Father 618. Isai 42.8 I will not give my glory to another Rom. 8.14 The glory of God shall be revealed in us The first place is concerning those things wherein God will be glorified by us in this life that is by worship adoration invocation The letter concerning the participation and place of glory in the life to come which he will communicate to us 619. Isai 42.10 Sing unto the Lord a new Song that is the Gospell Gen. 3.15 It was Sung in Paradise concerning the blessed seed of woman That Evangelicall Song is called new not for time but because it comprehends new and wonderfull things a new light is kindled by it it makes a new Creature and shews us the new way to heaven 620. Isai 45.6 7. I am the Lord and there is none else I forme the light and create darknesse I make peace and create evill I the Lord do all these things Gen. 1.31 And all that God made was good God makes evill not of sinne but of punishment and calamity by which he justly afflicts sinners Also the Prophet here opposeth the evill of the misery of war to the good
have received freely give Ver. 10. The workman is worthy of his meat Gal. 6.6 Let him that is taught in the Word minister to him that teacheth in all good things The Apostles were sent to cure all manner of sick folk and Christ foreseeing the Jews to be greedy of money bad them give every one for his health what he pleased lest they should make a gain of Miracles done in his Name That command contradicts not the saying of Christ and his Apostles of publick maintenance due to the Ministers of the Church which must be paid to them for their pains in their Ministry but the gift of Miracles was not to be sold * Mat. 10.8 with Gal. 6.6 The first place was meant of working Miracles especially The second place of preaching the Word Christ knew that the Disciples by working Miracles might be profered too much gain and compass great wealth to themselves therefore that they and others might know gathering wealth was not the design he commands them that as ●hey had freely received so they should freely give they had received immediately power from God without any humane adjuments or advantages or ministrations therefore they should as freely dispence the power of Miracles Secondly If the former place be understood of preaching the Word it is not to be understood further than forbidding filthy Lucre setting the Word to sale preaching upon the design to grow rich to benefit themselves in estate or name above measure 1 Tim. 3.3 Thirdly This was a temporary command aimed at for the Journey which they were then at not to be a standing Law in the Church for so Ministers should have nothing at all not wages for their work 821. Mat. 10.9 Provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in your purses Joh. 13.29 Judas had the bag The possessing of gold silver or brass is not condemned but the abuse of it Christ in his first temporal mission to the Jews because they were in a few daies to take a view of all Judea forbad his Disciples to take money or bags that they might perform their Embassage with greater expedition doubting not that they should want any thing In the mean while he gives charge to Judas for a common bag * Mat. 10.9 Provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in your purses with Luk. 22.36 But now he that hath a purse let him take it c. The former place forbad thought and care for provisions in that Journey The latter place only shews that for the future they would have occasions enough for money and meat The former is not so precisely taken in the Letter as to make the Apostles Practice and Christs Precept to be at odds or Christ condemn himself for he had his bag which Judas bare Besides he had his upper garment Joh. 13.4 And Coat without seam Joh. 19.23 Luk. 22.36 Peter had his Sandals Act. 12. Paul had a Cloak 2 Tim. 4. Secondly This was a temporary Precept given them only in commission only for the present and that they were to go thus signifies no more than that they were in haste to go and dispatch Christ himself intimates as much as the Command was temporary Luk. 22.35 When I sent you without a purse c. But now he that hath a purse * Mat. 10.10 Neither two coats neither shoes nor yet staves Mar. 6.8 9. Take nothing for your journey save a staff only but be shod with Sandals and not put on two coats Christ forbids to carry two changeable garments the one to wear to day the other to morrow but he did not forbid two necessary garments for keeping out cold and the carrying of two changeable garments I conceive was only for that present time and service they being to make great expedition were not to burthen themselves with many garments Staff they might have not staves a staff to support not staves to offend Sandals they might have which were open above and ready upon all occasions not shooes of more cost and credit in those daies 822. Mat. 10.10 Not a staff Mar. 6.8 Save a staff only A staff or wand was twofold in use either to defend or carry or to journey and to support a man in the former place he speaks of a staff of defence which would be burthensome to carry in the latter place of a staff to support one Gen. 32.10 Exo. 4.7 which we call a walking staff which is a help to a man in his journey 823. Mat. 10.10 Nor shooes Mar. 6.9 But be shod with Sandals He forbids them to take shooes with them that is two pair as he forbad them to take two coats but he lets them be shod with Sandals which were then in use * 824. Mat. 10.12 Salute it Luk. 10.4 Salute no man by the way Salutations are lawful Paul commands them Rom. 16.16 But Christ forbad them only for that journey which they were to dispatch in haste salutations being most commonly hinderances and spenders of time and though in that journey they might not salute any by the way yet when they were at their journeys end in houses where they were to abide they might then salute any man worthy of a salutation So that the salutations forbidden was only at that time and in relation to hinderance of business 825. Mat. 10.16 Behold I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves Joh. 14.27 My peace I leave with you my peace I give unto you The godly are in danger in the world as sheep amongst wolves but they have peace in Christ who said unto them In me you shall have peace in the world you shall have trouble 826. Mat. 10.16 Be wise as serpents Rom. 6.8 To be carnally minded is death Spiritual and Christian wisdom is commended by Christ to his Disciples and it ought to be in all Christians especially Pastors who are often amongst Wolves and are bound to take heed that they be not too slow and fearful in discharging their office and fly from Christ 1 Pet. 4.7 for fear of dangers Carnal and worldly wisdom contrary to the will of God is death of that Paul speaks * 827. Mat. 10.16 with 1 Cor. 3.18 If any among you be wise let him become a fool There is a natural or acquisite prudence which is to be exercised in all callings as men have relation to men or to External troubles and affairs of this life and there is this prudence as it hath relation to God and the mysteries of Religion We and Apostles had need to exercise our wisdom and prudence in the affairs with men especially in dangers where so many traps are laid for their lives to be wise as serpents in foreseeing dangers and yet fly innocently on as Doves till we be stricken down and yet this hinders not but that the most worldly-wise men may be blind in the things that co●cern our eternal salvation The former place would have those that are wise in the things of God viz. the children of God
the hypothesis of the Sadduces that God was the God of the dead for they supposed the dead should never rise again Paul from another hypothesis affirms the same which depends on Christs resurrection on this wise God is the God of the dead because the dead bodies shall rise again 876. Mat. 23.9 Call no man your Father upon the earth 1 Cor. 4.15 If you had ten thousand instructors in Christ yet have you not many Fathers for in Christ Jesus have I begotten you Christ will have us place our filial confidence in God only not in men though they love us with fatherly affection and teach us the true Religion and so are called Fathers not by nature but by participation that they are so So Paul calls himself the Father of the Corinthians and of Timothy by reason of the Gospel not primarily but secondarily because he was an Instrument which God used to call and regenerate them by the Gospel that he preached to them 877. Mat. 23.10 Be not called Masters 1 Cor. 4.15 You have many Masters ●oh 1. Christ is our only spiritual Rabbi Master and Doctor others that have these titles are but servants to this great Master because they must teach no other but the Doctrine of Christ For of his fulness we have all received he is the way the truth and the life and it is enough to us that he said it 878. Mat. 23.17 Ye fools and blind Cha. 5.22 Whosoever shall say Thou fool shall be in danger of hell fire Christ by his Office and his Charity was angry with the Pharisees and to make them repent he called them fools and blind but he forbids that out of a carnal reproachful desire and greediness of revenge or pride or mad anger any man should detract from his neighbour 879. Mat. 23.37 O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them Cha. 27. Jerusalem is called the holy City Jerusalem the City of Martyrs is there called the City of many Saints It is called the holy City for the most holy God by whom it was made choice of or for the Messias who taught them the sanctity of faith and life and offered himself for us for a price of redemption or for the Saints that were in it * 880. Mat. 24.25 Prepared from the beginning Joh. 14.2 I go to prepare a place for you Preparation by Predestination is one thing Preparation by Possession is another Heaven was prepared by Council and Predestination for Gods Children But by possession actually by Christ who took our humane nature and carried it into heaven to take possession in the name of the Elect. 881. M●t. 25.3 And he shall separate the sheep from the goats Joh. 10.16 There shall be one sheep-fold and one shepheard There is a difference betwixt a sheep-fold and a fold for Goats There is a difference betwixt true sheep and sheep only in appearance sheep in appearance may have the same visible Church as the true sheep but in the future state of the Church the true sheep shal be separated from the hypocrites There is but one sheepfold of both Jew and Gentile nor of both but one shepheard 882. Mat. 25.32 He shall separate the Sheep from the Goats Joh. 10.16 And there shall be one sheepfold The first place is concerning the future state of the Church after the day of Judgment that shall be otherwise then it is now for then shall there be a separation made Hypocrites now pass for Sheep then they shall be manifested to be Goats Eph. 2.14 Cap. 5.23 1 Cor. 3.11 The latter place is of the faithful who shall be gathered into one sheepfold that is the Church both Jews and Gentiles under one shepheard 883. Mat. 25.34 Inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world Eph. 1.4 He chose us in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy Christ by the beginning and foundation of the world understands eternity the Apostle looks to the first Creation for before the foundations of this world were laid God chose us in Christ to salvation 884. Mat. 25.34 There is a Kingdom prepared for us before the foundation of the world Joh. 14.3 I go saith Christ to prepare a place for you There is a place by Gods decree provided for us from eternity according to predestination but not particular designation which is done after Christs ascension but the Devil Death and Hell and Malediction did not suffer us to come thither untill Christ had destroyed those impediments and by his death vanquished the Devil Death and Hell blotted out our sins by rising again had restored life to us by his Ascension had opened heaven to us and going thither before us confirmed it that we should follow him thither * 885. Mat. 25.46 These shall go into eternal punishment Jer. 3.12 For I am merciful saith the Lord and will not keep mine anger for ever The former place speaks of Gods expression of his wrath in the world which is to come This latter place speaks of the expression of his wrath in this life The former is pronounced against particular persons that were desperately reprobate the latter of such as though they were desperately wicked yet would or might return having still time to the Lord. 886. Mat. 26.2 Ye know that after two daies is the Feast of the Passeover Ver. 6. Jesus was in Bethany six daies before the Passeover The Evangelist began to speak of what was done two daies before the Passeover but repeating the matter higher he relates some things were done in Bethany six daies before the Passeover because the History of Judas the Traytor required that Therefore here is an Hysterosis * 887. Mat. 26.2 17. Mar. 14.12 Joh. 13.1 The Hebrews begin their day at Evening Lev. 23.32 The day from the ingress of Christ into Jerusalem to the Resurrection may be reckoned three waies After the Jews After the Gentiles After the Evangelists The first of the Sabbaths Sunday The day of entering into Jerusalem The second of the Sabbaths Monday Of cursing the Tree The third of the Sabbaths Tuesday Of the Supper The fourth of the Sabbaths Wednesday Of selling The fifth of the Sabbaths Thursday Of the day before the preparat 6. The preparation of the great Sabbaths Friday Of Preparation Supper c. 7. The Sabbath Saturday Of rest in the Sepulchre The eighth of the Sabbaths Sunday Of rising So that after two daies ●ems the third day after his solemn entrance into Jerusalem But while I study brevity I dare not enter into the sea of that variety which is here offered 888. Mat. 26.7 A woman poured Oyntment on our Saviours head Joh. 12.3 Mary took a pound of Oyntment of Spikenard very costly and anoynted the feet of Jesus Some hold that these are different Histories yet it might be that when a greater quantity of oyntment was poured forth that his feet were anointed also at the same time * Mat.
sate at the right hand of God Chap. 14.22 This is my body Christ ascending and sitting at the right hand of God doth not take away the presence of his body in the holy Supper but confessing it Phil. 2.9 that he is exalted above all things into glory 935. Mar. 16.19 Christ sits at the right hand of God Eph. 1.20 Col. 3.1 Heb. 1.3 c. 8.1 1 Pet. 3.22 Act. 7.56 Steven saw Jesus standing at the right hand of God To sit is the part of the Judge to stand the part of him that fights and helps us saith Gregory Homil. de Ascens Domini Steven therefore being at the conflict with death saw him standing whom he had for to help him but Mark describes Christ sitting after his Resurrection for after the glory of his Ascension he shall come as Judge in the end of the World The Gospel of St. LUKE IT comprehends the Conception of John Baptist and Jesus Christ with their Nativity Life Vocation Sermons in special the Miracles of Christ his Passion Death Resurrection Apparition and Ascension into Heaven 936. LUK. 1.13 Zacharias prayer is heard ver 18. He believed not Although he had a conflict through the weakness of his faith of the special gift of so wonderful a Son yet he had a general faith concerning a Messias the Deliverer of the people from their disgrace and therefore his doubting did not exclude his prayers from being heard 937. Luk. 1.32 The Lord God shall give unto him the Throne of his Father David Joh. 18.36 My Kingdom is not of this world To sit in the Throne of David here is not to govern a temporal Kingdom as David did here on earth but a spiritual wherein Christ reigns by faith in the hearts of his followers and he rules over sin death and the devil 938. Luk. 1.33 And he shall reign over the House of Jacob for ever 1 Cor. 15.24 He shall deliver up the Kingdom to God the Father ver 28. He shall be subject unto him Christs Kingdom is eternal and without end not as Davids earthly Kingdom was for a few daies but it must be continued for ever in the Person of Christ and the faithful after a spiritual manner he shall deliver the Kingdom to the Father not that he shall no longer rule with the Father but because ●fter this world is ended he will fully joyn us to his Father and will govern his Church otherwise than it is now governed * Luk. 1.33 with 1 Cor. 15.24 28. There is a twofold Kingdom of Christ 1. Essential as God 2. Oeconomical as Mediator God and Man betwixt God and Man The first Kingdom is not here spoken of in either place And as for the second which he received from his Father he shall surrender it up again to his Father after he hath subdued sin and death and put all his enemies under his feet Christ governs his Kingdom his Church and people here by means and instruments as the Word Sacraments Ministers c. By Angels Men Ecclestastical or Politick opposing means for the suppressing his childrens adversaries Now he shall deliver this Mediatory rule when he hath fully reconciled all men to God and perfected his work to God the Father who will rule his Children in a new and hidden way without men or means nor mediatly but immediately by himself Christ shall still reign He shall reign over Israel for ever because he shall rule till Eternity come and after him there shall be no King for when Eternity comes he shall rule though in a new way 939. Luk. 1.36 Elizabeth Maries Cousin ver 5. She was of the daughters of Aaron Luk. 2.5 Mary was of the Tribe of Judah of the house of David In the Scripture they are called Cousins though they are not at all of the same family so vulgarly Anna is affirmed to be the mother of Mary and the sister of Elizabeth 940. Luk. 1.44 The babe leaped in my womb for joy that is Iohn Baptist in the womb of his Mother when Mary came to her Joh. 1.31 I knew him not saith Iohn Christ was known to John before by internal and spiritual knowledge but John knew him externally and corporally in his baptism 941. Luk. 1.67 Zacharias prophesied being full of the Holy Ghost Joh. 7.39 The Holy Ghost was not yet because Christ was not yet glorified The first place is meant of the gift and Spirit of Prophesie the latter place is concerning the visible and wonderful effusion of gifts of the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles after Christs glorification 942. Luk. 2.11 There is born to you a Saviour in the City of David which is Christ the Lord. 1 Pet. 3.21 Baptism doth save us Subalternates do not disagree Christ makes his people safe from their sins principally as the efficient meritorious cause Baptism serves but instrumentally and not alwaies for it is not the want of Baptism but the contempt which conde●ns us 943. Luk. 2.33 His Father and mother marvelled at those things Mat. 1.8 Jesus according to his humanity had no Father Heb. 7.3 According to his Divinity had no Mother The Father of Jesus Christ Joseph was only so for his care but not really and naturally so for he was appointed by God to be a keeper of the Virgin Mary espoused to him and her Son and Christ being a little child gave him honour and reverence due to a Father The Virgin Mary was his natural Mother according to the flesh for he received his humane nature of her substance 944. Luk. 2.34 Simeon blessed him Heb. 7.7 The lesser is blessed of the better Simeon prayed well for Mary congratulating her concerning her happy and blessed Off-spring and by a Prophetick Spirit foreshewing the hard success she and her Son should have but he did not prefer himself before them 945. Luk. 3.7 The Baptist cals the Pharisees a generation of Vipers Mat. 5.22 He that saith to his brother Thou Fool shall be in danger of hell fire John Baptist calls them not so reproachfully out of an ill affection but from his Office because such were full of poyson and malice working the Viperous works of the devil the old Serpent So the Ministers of the Church must publickly complain of the sins of the people 946. Luk. 5.10 Fear not from henceforth thou shalt catch men Joh. 1.42 Andrew brought Simon his brother to Christ Simon is brought by Andrew to follow Christ and to profess the Gospel by a general call but Christ calls him by a special call to the Sacred Function about the matter of Fishing 947. Luk. 6.1 And it came to pass on the second Sabbath after the first that he went through the Corn fields Mat. 12.1 At that time Jesus went on the Sabbath day through the corn The Jews cal●ed the eight day of the great solemnity the second Sabbath after the fir●● for some of their Feasts lasted for eight daies and the first day with the eighth day were the most solemn and the intermediate
affectation of glory for the manifestation of truth and the good of others will require it If Christ should not have discovered what he was they had not known what he had been therefore his saying he was the light of the world was no affecting or seeking glory of himself but a manifestation of truth for the good of others * 1028. Joh. 8.50 I seek not my own glory Joh. 17.1 Father glorifie thy Son Glory is either earthly and external or spiritual and eternal Christ sought not as those who affect external glory on earth to do what he could to be seen of men and reputed potent for he strove to hide his Miracles many times from the Jews but he notwithstanding might pray and did that God would be pleased to deliver him from this prison of the world and give him eternal glory and spiritual enjoyments in heaven 1029. Joh. 8.51 If a man keep my saying he shall never see death Heb. 9.27 It is appointed unto all men once to dye Christ speaks of spiritual and eternal death the Apostle speaks of corporal and temporal death 1030. Joh. 8.58 Before Abraham was I am Heb. 2.17 He took upon him the seed of Abraham There are three kinds of speeches concerning Christ some things are spoken of him according to his Divine Nature so he was before Abraham some things are spoken according to his Humane Nature when he is called Abrahams seed or Davids and some things are spoken of both Natures that he is the Mediator between God and Man 1 Tim. 2.5 1031. Joh. 9 3. Neither this man sinned nor his Parents Rom. 3.10 There is none righteous no not one none that understandeth The cause of his blindness was no notable and enormous wickedness of himself or his Parents though all men be sinners and for their sins infirmities and defects of nature are obnoxious to temporal and eternal punishments * Joh. 9.3 with Rom. 3.10 This man and his Father both sinned and were sinners yet neither the Fathers particular sin or the Sons was the cause why the Lord made this man blind but the reason why this man was blind was God would have glory * 1032. Joh. 9.29 We know not whence thou art Joh. 7.27 We know whence thou art We know not from whom thou hast thy authority or was sent whether from God or not But we know thy Country and Kindred and Parents 1033. Joh. 9.31 God heareth not sinners 1 Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins God is faithful and just to forgive us and to cleanse us from all our sins God hears not impenitent sinners obdurate in their wickedness but to such as repent confess and amend their lives he pardons their sins 1034. Joh. 9.39 For judgment I am come into this world Chap. 3.17 Chap. 12.40.47 I came not to judge the world but to save the world In the former place by Judgment is meant a benefit given to men by the coming of Christ by which he brought those things to good order that were out of order In the latter Christ speaks of his principal end of his coming into the world * Joh. 9.39 with 12.40 47. The former place intimates that he came to discern betwixt the cause of such as believe and confess and of the proud who think that they see being hereby the more blinded And as he discerned rightly the cause of the blind and seeing so he administred knowledge and light as the Physitian judgeth betwixt him that is really crazy thinking himself to be sound and him that is really sound and thinks himself crazy The latter place speaks of his authoritative Judicature of men according to their works at the last day For thus at his first coming he came not to judge the world though the other way he did come to judge 1035. Joh. 9.41 If you were blind you should have no sin Rom. 11.25 Blindness is hapned unto Israel In the first place Christ speaks of the Jews according to the opinion they had of themselves for they did not acknowledge any blindness of their minds or their sins In the latter what was the truth of them indeed blindness hapned to them not that they should all perish but that many multitudes of the Gentiles might be converted and saved so well as the Jews * Joh. 9.41 with Rom. 11.25 Blindness is either praev● dispositionis or purae Negationis if they were blind purae Negationis then they had not had sin i. e. sin so aggravated so as now that they have the means and waies of knowledge and will not know Blindness is partial or Total The Apostle tells us they were blind in part if they had been totally ignorant and blind and wanted the means of knowledge they had not had sin Blindness is either affected and joyned with a contempt of knowledge Job 21.14 or blindness which ariseth from negligence when men use not their just endeavours to know that which they should and ought to practice ignorance is per accidens as when it follows upon the doing of some voluntary previous action as drunkards sin of ignorance or ignorance is invincible and that is to be understood both juris facti That is defined to be invincible which when the person who is ignorant useth all sufficient means for knowledge and yet doth not attain knowledge If the Jews had been blind or ignorant this way they had had the less sin but their blindness was affected and negligent and per accidens blindness The Apostle speaks of this blindness not of that which is invincible * 1036. Joh. 10.8 All that came before me are thieves and robbers Joh. 1.6 There was a man sent from God whose name was John The former place meaneth of false Prophets which came not in by Christ or his authority but by Satan and their own ambition who did not preach Christ as Moses and John did in all their administrations all these false Prophets are thieves The latter place speaks not of a false Prophet but of a true Prophet who declared Christ * 1037. Joh. 10.15 Christ laid down his life for his sheep Heb. 10. Christ poured forth his bloud for the ungodly By bloud in the second place as in other Scriptures no more is meant than life so that to pour forth his bloud and to lay down his life are all one For his sheep i. e. for the Elect. For the ungodly by ungodly is meant the Elect before their Conversion or Justification as Rom. 4.5 5.6 So that Christ poured forth his bloud for the Elect even when they were not yet converted or justified but in their natural and sinful estate and condition to the greater glory of his grace * 1038. Joh. 10.22 The Feast of the Dedication and it was Winter Solomons Feast was about the Autumnal Aequinoctial 1 Kin. 8. Zerobabels was in the Spring a little before Easter This was neither for it was instituted by Maccabeus 1 Mac. 4.59 The design was to praise God for the deliverance of the people
and to put them in mind of the consecration of the Temple which had been prophaned by Antiochus and was of the Hebrews called chamucho and by the Greeks Euraenia which signifieth renewing because the Temple had been new dedicated That Feast was kept in the Month Caslew which the November Moon corresponds with 1039. Joh. 10.28 My sheep shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand Chap. 13.18 Judas was chosen to be of Christs sheep and yet perished Election in the first place is meant to eternal life In the latter to an Office Judas was Christs sheep only by outward vocation and profession 1040. Joh. 10.29 My Father is greater Ver. 30. I and my Father are one Christ is equal to God the Father according to his Divine Nature less than the Father according to his Humane Nature and his Office of Mediatorship between God and Man * 1041. Joh. 10.30 I and my Father are one Joh. 14.28 My father is greater than I. They are one as to the Divinity of Christ Christ and God are one God so as to the Humanity of Christ and his Office of being an Advocate and Mediator a Servant and Messenger so the Father is greater than I. 1042. Joh. 10.32 Many good works have I shewed you from my Father chap. 14.10 The Father that dwelleth in me he doth the works In the former place Christ speaks not exclusively because the works of the Trinity outwardly are common to the three Persons There is no work of the Son which the Father doth not work in him In the latter ascribing operation to the Father he asserts that it is done by the authority and counsel of his Father so speaking of the manner and order of working he takes not away the unity of Essence Majesty and Power * 1043. Joh. 10.36 Whom the Father hath sanctified c. with Joh. 1.1 And the Word was God The Socinians would gather that Christ is the only begotten Son of God either by reason of the conception by the Holy Ghost or for the sanctification and sending into the world as the formal cause of his Deity and Filiation 'T is true by reason of his conception by the Holy Spirit the Son of God who in the beginning with God the Father was God and after made man but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without any mutation of the Deity or confusion of the same by his taking flesh Neither is his Mission the foundation of the Deity of the Son or of his Filiation but is founded in that and shews it a posteriori He could not be sanctified and sent into the world who was not coeternal with the Father which sent him * 1044. Joh. 10.36 Whom the Father hath sanctified and sent into the world Joh. 17.19 I sanctifie my self God the Father sanctified the Humane Nature of Christ even from his first conception and from all contagion of sin made him full of the gifts of the Holy Ghost and consecrated him to the Divine Office of being Saviour of the world Yet Christ as God sanctified himself for the Father worketh and he wrought the same work in the Humane Nature 1045. Joh. 11.4 Lazarus sickness was not unto death Vers 14. Lazarus is dead The sickness of Lazarus by reason of the event was not unto death because Christ raised him again and saith that his death was but a sleep for we are not so early awaked from sleep as Christ called Lazarus out of his grave and he shall raise us all at the last day * Joh. 11.4 with 14. Lazarus sickness was not really in the event unto death though in appearance he was dead at the present In respect of Christ it was not unto death in respect of his friends he was dead Not unto death as death is a perpetual seperation of the soul from the body Christ purposing to reunite them shortly Lazarus was dead as to the present seperation of soul body * 1046. Joh. 11.15 I was not there mat 18.20 Where two or three be gathered together in my name I am in the midst of them Christ was not there by his Humane Presence which can be only in one place at once though his Divine Nature is in all places Christ may be present in a place and with a person in his humane shape and body as he was many times with the Jews and yet not present by his gracious influences and help Christ was present neither bodily nor by his help there In the latter place which is not meant of ordinary matters but of the Assembly and Meetings of Gods People about his Worship Christ is present there not by his bodily presence but by his gracious influence● and spiritual presence 1047. Joh. 11.25 He that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live Ver. 26. He that believeth in me shall never dye Death is temporal and eternal temporal in this world is corporal and spiritual Christ speaks of both in the former place Spiritual death is either of them who being dead have not Christs quickning Spirit and of this he speaks not here but of them that being quickned by Christs Spirit are dead to sin and the flesh in the latter is meant chiefly eternal death 1048. Joh. 11.26 Whosoever believeth in me shall never die Heb. 9.27 It is appointed for all men once to dye The faithful do not dye a spiritual and eternal death but natural death is common to all men 1049. Joh. 11.34 Where have you laid him Chap. 21.17 Thou knowest all things Christ enquired of Lazarus his grave not as if he were ignorant thereof but that he might stir up a desire in his sisters and those that were present to consider and to see the Miracle of the Resurrection So God said to Adam Gen. 3.9 Adam where art thou * Joh. 11.34 with Joh. 21.17 He that knew Lazarus to be dead knew where they had laid him he either speaks this as Man and so he acted when he wept or else he speaks it not as ignorant of it but as one who would draw them to go with him by asking that question he gave them an opportunity to follow him to see what he did and how he raised Lazarus * 1050. Joh. 11.42 And I knew that thou hearest me alwaies Psal 22.2 O my God I cry in the day time but thou hearest not There are several waies of hearing The King heareth his Subjects by way of Regality The Master his Scholar by way of docibility The Father heareth his child by way of natural affection God heareth Christ as a Father his Son alwaies that he asked any thing of God The second place speaks of David in the Letter and Christ in the Mystery he was heard alwaies of God though God did not alwaies seemingly attend to him but sometime forbear to give a present remedy according to his Petition as in his Passion Not that really and indeed he did ever shut his ears against his Prayers It is one thing to
hear and grant though not just in the same mode and time another thing to hear and presently give a supply in the same manner and method 1051. Joh. 11.50 Caiphas a wicked man prophesied by the instinct of the Spirit Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the sons of God The gifts of Gods Spirit are of Sanctification and Salvation and those are proper to the elect children of God or gifts of administration which are common to good and bad men amongst which is the gift of Prophesie * Joh. 11.50 That one man should dye c. Rom. 8.14 The gifts of God are one thing the graces of God are another Caiphas though a wicked man might have this gift given or by a thorough consideration of the Scriptures might know that one man was to dye and yet this hinders not but that only the Sons of God should have the graces of the Spirit * 1052. Joh. 12.25 He that hateth his life in this world shall keep it unto eternal life 1 Joh. He that loveth wickedness hateth his own soul Hatred is not here taken properly for so man never yet hated his own flesh but hating is taken for less loving i. e. He that less loveth his life than trouble for the Gospel while he lives here shall keep his soul to eternal life though he may suffer the loss of his external life Hatred in the second place is taken for the effects of hatred He that loveth wickedness effecteth that to his soul which a man that hateth him would do that is he punisheth his own soul 1053. Joh. 12.27 Father save me from this hour Phil. 2.8 He became obedient unto death Christ feeling the sins of the world lying upon him feared death as he was man and desired rather to live than dye if that might have been granted without detriment to Gods glory and our salvation but because it was not possible that that Cup should pass from him he submitted himself to his Fathers will and said Therefore came I unto this hour 1054. Joh. 12.30 Now shall the Prime of this world be cast out Eph. 6.12 We have yet war with the Prince of this world That casting out was out of the hearts of the faithful whom though the devil do tempt and oppose many waies yet he cannot vanquish them but is cast out Also Christ respects the casting out of the devil whilst both Jews and Gentiles amongst whom the devil reigned were called to the grace of Christ by his coming * Joh. 12.30 with Eph. 6.12 Satan is cast out while the darkness of Ceremonies neglecting the Substance and the Idolatry that was amongst Jews and Gentiles was cast out and Christ by the preaching of the Gospel was exalted 2. Satan is cast out of the hearts of Gods people when he hath not his Regal and full sway in the heart but by the power of Gods grace he is mastered though satan as a tyrant even in them may strive and make onsets against the grace of God so that he being cast out as to his reigning yet not as to his tempting and striving warring against the hearts of Gods children which the latter place speaks of * 1055. Joh. 12.50 And I know that his Commandment is life 2 Cor. 3.7 The Law is the ministration of death The Commandment of God is that which either may be accounted Legal or Evangelical The former place intends Evangelical Commands i. e. such commands as were given by Christ or concerning Christ The latter is meant of Legal Commands without reference to Christ or else without the ministration of the Spirit * 1056. Joh. 13.1 Loving his own in the world he loved them to the end Hos 1.9 For you are not my people and I will not be your God Hos 9.17 My God will cast them away c. Gods People are his own first in a general or National way so are they which make an external profession of the Lord and are in outward covenant with him as the Jews these may have the external signs and impresses of Gods love and these turning away from the Lord the Lord will turn from them Secondly Gods own Elect or chosen forth of others which he once setting his love upon he loves to the end The former place is meant of his Elect. 1057. Joh. 13.27 After the sop satan entred into him Ver. 2. And supper being ended the devil having now put into the heart of Judas Iscariot The first place is of total possession when after so many admonitions from Christ and so many humane favours received Judas yet continued in his purpose of betraying Christ he is delivered to satan to be ruled so that he could think on nothing that was sound and good * 1058. Joh 13.27 Do quickly God commands no sin These are not the words of exhortation or command but spoken Ironically as if he should say Well take thy course and do what thou wilt make haste man * 1059. Joh. 13.29 Judas had the bag Mat. 10.9 Provide neither gold nor silver nor brass in your purse The latter place speaks of Christs Command upon a peculiar and particular occasion not upon the account of all times and that temporary command expired with that expedition But Christ having a purse-bearer constantly as Judas was shews that it is lawful to have and use money for our necessaries 1060. Joh. 13.34 A new Commandment I give unto you that you love one the other Mat. 22.27 This was the greatest Commandment in the Old Testament to love God and our Neighbour It is called a new Commandment not by reason of the substance but because Christ renewed it and the singular affection of love which Christ requires in his followers As he loved them and gave himself for them so he would that they should love one the other with singular affection * Joh. 13.34 with Mat. 22.37 It was an old command as to the substance of the command but a new command as to the circumstances Christ commanding it in a new manner it is not now Love your Neighbour as your self but As I have loved you The Gospel or Testament whereof this is a part is new the Spirit works it in out new hearts 1061. Ioh. 14.3 I go to prepare a place Mat. 25.34 Inherit the Kingdom prepared from the beginning of the world The place was predestinated from the beginning of the world but now by Christ it was particularly designed and fitted by the Ascension of Christ actually for the Godly 1062. Ioh. 14.4 Whither I go ye know and the way ye know Ver. 5. We know not They did know inchoatively and imperfectly but because they know not that they did know the cause was their rudeness and forgetfulness of Christs words * Joh. 14.4 wi h 5. The Disciples knew that Christ was to go to heaven but they were not so thoroughly instructed what heaven was or that he would go then thither Possibly they might imagine him to speak of
passively for experience which rejoyceth by patience in the latter place it is taken actively for trial and the effect of it that is tribulation for affliction trieth faith as fire doth gold 1196. Rom. 5.6 7. Christ died for us 1 Joh. 3.16 Because he that is Christ laid down his life for us and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren Col. 1.24 Christ dying for us a sacrifice and revenger paid our ransom for us John comparing the death of Christ for us and our death for the brethren doth it secundum quid for we dye not to redeem our brethren but to edifie them 1197. Rom. 5.8 God commendeth his love towards us in that when we were yet sinners Christ died for us Rom. 8.32 The Father spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all The Father and the Son did alwaies love us and have done all things for us Christ delivered himself for our sins into the power of the devil and because we were not to be redeemed by power but by righteousness Christ the Righteous died for us and so by righteousness he overcame the devil therefore because the devil had slain Christ it was necessary that he should release those that were captives Aug. de Trin. l. 13. c. 2. and the devil by the price paid was not made rich but ensnared 1198. Rom. 5.10 When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son Joh. 15.13 No man hath greater love than this that a man lay down his life for his friends By nature we are Gods enemies by reason of sin but by grace we are reconciled to God by Christ who died for us and we are so made the dearest friends unto God 1199. Rom. 5.12 18. As by one man sin entred into the world and death by sin so death passed over all men Ver. 19 As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by one mans obedience many shall be made righteous The guilt of Adam is here compared with the grace of Christ because both have that descends on their followers Adam derives his guilt on all men by nature Christ derives his righteousness by grace on all that believe on him * Rom. 5.12 18. with 19. This term of Universality All must be restrained according to the nature of the subject as Adam transfused his Sin unto all which were his off-spring so Christ also justifieth all his that is all his which believe in him Besides the preheminence of the benefit consists not in the equality of the number that Christ should save as many as are lost in Adam for then there should be only an equality not a superiority Herein the Prerogative of grace is seen 1. In the excellency of the effect Life being more excellent than Death Righteousness than Sin 2. In the powerfulness of the Work it shews a greater power to save than to destroy 3. In the preheminence of the amplitude of grace we are justified not only from one but all kind of sins 1200. Rom. 5.20 The Law entred that sin might abound Chap. 7.12 The Law is holy and the Commandment holy just and good The Law increaseth sin not of it self and its own nature but by accident because it discovers sin and the poyson of it that we may know it for by the corruption of nature we are stirred up to strive against the Commandment yet the Law remains still in it self just and good 1201. Rom. 6.3 So many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death Acts 8.13 Simon Magus and other hypocrites were baptized yet they put not on Christ To be baptized into Christ is to put on Christ the Robes of his Righteousness and Holiness which Believers who are baptized do Hieron in Rom. 6. Simon Magus and hypocrites that are not faithful receive not the Spirit but water only in Baptism for there is a common Baptism to all that are baptized but not the vertue of Baptism that is grace Aug. in Psal 77. 1202. Rom. 6.12 Let not sin reign in your mortall body Chap. 3.12 There is none that doth good no not one The first place is to exhort us to mortifie sin in us in the Regenerate sin reigns not they are wholly dead to sin in Christ and partly in themselves they that are not Regenerate know indeed what they ought to do and know that of themselves they are unable to perform it 1203. Rom. 6.14 Ye are not under the Law but under grace Gal. 3.22 The Scripture hath concluded all under sin The first place is concerning the Regenerate who are not under the malediction dominion and rigid exaction of the Law The latter place is concerning all that are subject to sin for whom the Law is a Schoolmaster to Christ by the knowledge of our sins 1204. Rom. 6.18 You are become the servants of righteousness Ver. 20. You were free from righteousness In the former place is spoken of those who were converted and freed from the yoke of sin in the latter of those that are not yet converted who are free from righteousness and are not under the government of righteousness for carnal wisdom cannot be subject to the Law of God 1205. Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death Wisdom 2.24 By the envy of the devil death entred into the world The wages of sin is death because the Justice of God would have it so to punish mankind that was fallen by death the Author whereof was not God but it came into the world by the envy of the devil 1206. Rom. 7.6 Now we are delivered from the Law Mat. 5.17 I came not to destroy the Law We are delivered from the curse of the Law the rigour and provocation of it to sin also from the Law or death in which we were held but that takes not away the right use of the Law in respect of us 1207. Rom. 7.7 I had not known lust unless the Law had said Thou shalt not covet 1 Tim. 3.1 If a man desireth the Office of a Bishop he desireth a good work Concupiscence taken morally is either absolutely indifferent as to eat and drink or relatively to the Law and so good or bad as it is done contrary or according to the Law being ordinate or disordinate The latter place the Law condemns 1208. Rom. 7.8 Sin in me wrought in me all manner of concupiscence Jam. 1.15 When lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin Paul means actual concupiscence of corrupt nature James original concupiscence 1209. Rom. 7.9 I was alive without the Law once saith Paul Phil. 3.6 Touching the righteousness which is in the Law blameless Before his conversion Paul lived a Pharisee without any true knowledge of the divine Law ascribing to himself external righteousness which was hypocrisie 1210. Rom. 7.12 The Law is holy just and good 2 Cor. 3.7 It is the ministration of death The Law in it self in respect of the Author is good holy and just
because it declareth the good and holy will of God in respect of us it is called the ministration of Death because it reproves sin and threatens us with death 1211. Rom. 7.14 I am carnal sold under sin Chap. 6.22 We are made free from the Law of sin wherein we were held The Apostle according to the unregenerated part was carnal that is indulgent to his carnal lusts but being Regenerate he did lament for those carnal affections and resisted them 1212. Rom. 7.18 In me dwelleth no good thing Chap. 8.9 The Spirit of God dwelleth in us The first place is of the old man in me that is my flesh and that part which is not regenerate The second is concerning man that is regenerate for Christ liveth in us the Holy Ghost liveth in us and indeed the whole Trinity Joh. 14.23 1213. Rom. 7.18 To will is present with me Phil. 2.13 God worketh in you to will To be willing is that good which is wrought in us by the Holy Ghost but after the fall of man to be willing and be able to will what is good was lost in us 1214. Rom. 7.22 I delight in the Law of God after the inward man Ver. 23. I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind Paul delighted according to his spirit and inward man the regenerate part in the Law of God but rebelled against it in his outward man the flesh and the part unregenerate for the whole man is as it is commonly said partly flesh and partly spirit 1215. Rom. 7.23 I see another Law in my members warring against the Law of my mind Chap. 8.2 The Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and of death The faithful are either captivated by the Law of sin that they cannot do that good they would but what sin will have done that dwelleth in them or they are freed from sin here inchoatively because it doth not condemn them nor yet reign in them Psal 32.1 Rom. 8.1 c. 6.12 but in the next world it shall be accomplished and they shall be perfectly made free from it 1216. Rom. 8.2 The Law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death Joh. 5.28 The hour is coming in the which all that are in the graves shall hear his voice and come forth Resurrection from death to life is common to the good and bad but in a divers manner and for a divers end the good shall come forth gloriously to life the wicked ignominiously unto death 1217. Rom. 8.24 We are saved by hope Eph. 2.8 By grace are you saved through faith Mar. 16.16 Subalternates disagree not the grace of God is the efficient cause faith and hope the instrumental causes of our salvation * 1218. Rom. 8.26 The spirit it self maketh intercession for the Saints according to the will of God 1 Tim. 2.5 One Mediator between God and Man the Man Christ Jesus The Spirit provoketh us to prayers and tells us as it were within what we should say and how we should groan The Son doth properly make intercession for us who is our Advocate Yet by a figure the Holy Ghost is said to make intercession for us also because he rowseth and stirreth us up to prayer and prompteth as it were our Lesson unto us and how we ought to pray in all our necessities 1219. Rom. 8.30 God whom he did predestimate them he also called Mat. 20.16 c. 22.14 Many are called but few chosen The first place is concerning those who being called are obedient to the Holy Ghost and make their vocation firm unto the end of their lives The latter is of those who resist the vocation of God in respect of the former there are as many predestinated as are called but of the latter more called than are predestinated 1220. Rom. 8.31 If God be for us who can be against us 1 Pet. 5.8 Your adversary the devil When God is for us though the devil be against us he prevails not 1221. Rom. 8.38 Nothing nor creature can separate us from the love of God Chap. 9.3 I could wish that my self were accursed from Christ for my brethren The wish of Paul was conditional if it were lawful and might be done the Apostle thereby sheweth the vehemency of his affection toward his kindred and submits himself to the Divine will Chrysostom on this place saith that Paul by a premeditated prayer desired to be separated from Christ by a temporal and eternal abjection for the salvation of his brethren and so would by his own destruction redeem them to eternal salvation neither did he therefore love his brethren more than Christ for he did not desire to be separated from the love of Christ but from the fruit of his love and friendship he desireth to perish not as an enemy of Christ but a preserver of his brethren as Christ was made a curse for us not as Gods enemy but as our Redeemer * Rom. 8.38 with 9.3 In the latter place Paul had respect unto the glory of God alone or unto the salvation of his brethren alone Sed charitatem hominum in studio gloriae Dei conjungimus but we joyn the love of Men with the glory of God c. He wisheth the salvation of his brethren with respect unto the glory of God as Moses in the like Case in making request for his people therein desired the promotion of Gods glory This doth not shew that Paul could be separated from Gods love but that his zeal for Gods people was so great that if it were possible he would be separate Qui subponit nihil ponit Or secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only imports Excommunication whereby one is held as accursed and execrable and deprived of all communion with the Church not as if the Apostle wished to be hardned in heart against the Lord Christ and severed from his love for that can never simply be wished of any pious man but that he out of the overflowing of his love wished that he himself might bear the punishment which they might expect from the righteous judgment of God for their hardness so they might be freed from this hardness and accursedness * 1222. Rom. 9.13 Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated There are three things to be considered in the accepting of persons 1. When some external condition is respected beside the merit of the cause 2. And this is done contrary to the Law of Equity 3. And not without injury done unto another But none of these are seen in Gods electing Jacob and rejecting Esau 1. He respecteth not any condition or quality in them which are elected but he maketh of this or that man of his own good pleasure 2. He is not tied to any Law and so transgresseth no Law 3. He doth no wrong unto any in exempting some from destruction which in the rigour of his justice is due unto all