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A41197 A brief exposition of the Epistles of Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians by James Fergusson. Fergusson, James, 1621-1667. 1659 (1659) Wing F772; ESTC R27358 577,875 820

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history ver 22 23. Thirdly he expoundeth the mystery of the two Covenants prefigured by the history ver 24. 25 26. Fourthly he confirmeth the truth of this mystery from Scripture ver 27. Fifthly he maketh application of the whole purpose first for information of the way to attain the heavenly inheritance ver 28. Secondly for consolation against present persecutions to the end Vers. 1. NOw I say that the ●eir as long as he is a childe differeth nothing from a servan● though he be lord of all 2. But is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father THe Apostle being yet further to clear the Churches freedom from that legal external policy of the ancient Church whereof he spake so much chap. 3. ver 19 c. doth use another similitude taken from a pupil and his tutors and curators And first having made a transition usual to him when he is more fully to explicate any former purpose See chap. 5. 16. 1 Cor. 15. 50. he setteth down the similitude in these verses to this purpose That a childe though he be heir and owner of all his fathers inheritance in hope and as to right yet so long as he is a minor and under age he differeth nothing from a servant in point of subjection and as to free government and enjoyment of his rights and goods ver 1. and this because he himself is ruled and his estate managed by tutors and curators the continuance of which subjection the Apostle sheweth is ordinarily limited unto the time prescribed by the father longer than which the heir is not to remain in that state of subjection to his tutors ver 2. There are indeed other limits of childrens minority prefixed by the Law besides the Will of the father but he mentioneth this because it only doth quadrate to the present purpose for which the similitude is made use of From this usual custom among men approved of here by the Spirit of God being considered in it self and without respect had to that spiritual purpose unto which it is applied afterwards Learn 1. So licentious is youth where there is no restraint and so foolish as being destitute of experience and more ruled by the inundation of impetuous passions than force of reason That it is much conducing both for a man's self and for the publick good of the society among whom he liveth he be first subjected unto others and made to obey as a servant whereby in progresse of time he may attain some wisdom and experience before he have absolute power to dispose of his own estate and obtain dominion over others otherwise it could not be so generally agreed unto by all parents and in all nations that the heir as long as he is a childe should differ nothing from a servant which the Apostle speaketh of as an approven custom and excepted against by none 2. It is the duty of parents as to provide a competent portion for their children whereupon they may live when they themselves are dead and gone so to do what in them lyeth to secure their portion for them lest it be delapidated by their childrens folly or any other way rendred uselesse unto them for unto this end are tutors and curators provided by the father unto the childe But he is under tutors and governors 3. Though parents are not to give unto their children just cause of irritation Col. 3. 21. yet they ought not to please them to their hurt but in some things must crosse their humour to wit especially when their so doing tendeth evidently to their childrens good for though the heir even when he is a childe would affect liberty and absolute dominion over his own estate yet the wise parent must keep him under subjection to tutors and governors 4. It is no small mercy unto children when God doth prolong the life of parents untill they themselves attain to so much age and experience as may enable them to manage their own affairs seing otherwise their person and estate must come under the tuition government and reverence of others who possibly may prove their unfriends for they must even be under tutors and governors 5. Parents would labour to carry themselves with so much equity wisdom and streightnesse in providing a worldly portion for their children to live upon as they do not disoblige those with whom they have commerce that so they may with some measure of confidence commit the tuition of their children and means to the care and oversight of others even those whom they shall be necessitated to appoint for tutors and governors 6. It is the wisdom of parents to place no such trust of their children and means upon any though otherwise never so much trust-worthy but that they be limited in and at a set time be obliged to give an account of their trust Power and trust is a thing so dangerous that if it be at the intrusted partie 's option there are but few who willingly do part with it Therefore as for one reason it is marked here as a part of the father's providence to prescribe a time longer than which his childe is not to be under tutors and governors Until the time appointed by the father saith he Vers. 3. Even so we when we were children were in bondage under the elements of the world HEre he applyeth the similitude shewing the Church when she was in her infant-state under the Old Testament was kept in bondage and subjection under that rigid and strict administration or outward policy which then was and served for an A B C or a rough Rudiment whereby the ancient Church was instructed for the most part by resemblances taken from earthly and wordly things The first Doctrine which ariseth from his use-making of an earthly similitude to clear a spiritual Truth is already marked chap. 3. ver 15. doct 2. Learn 2. The Church of God under the Old Testament was in a state of nonage and as an infant or childe first for quantity as being contained in narrow bounds once of one family Gen. 4. 3 4. and at most but of one nation Psal. 147. 19 20. Secondly in understanding for although some persons were then endued with more excellent gifts of wisdom and knowledge than any now such as Abraham David c. And though many even under the New Testament are but in understanding children and babes Heb. 5. 12. yet considering the more clear revelation of the Gospel which now is 2 Cor. 3. 18. we not only have an opportunity of attaining to much more knowledge now than they had then Matt. 13. 7. but also the generality of Christians are much more knowing of Gospel-mysteries than the body of the Jewish Church was Mat. 11. 11. Yea and those of them who excelled most in knowledge did see but afar off Deut. 18. 18. and through a cloud of many dark Ceremonies Heb. 9. 9. which now are removed for speaking of the Jewish Church before Christ came of which himself
while he saith Fathers provoke not your children to wrath 2. To provoke or stir up others unto sin maketh us guilty before the Lord even of those sins which others commit being provoked thereunto by us Hos. 6. 9. for Paul forbiddeth and condemneth this as a sin in parents towards their children Fathers provoke not your children to wrath 3. So small command have all men naturally over their passions especially when provoked by reall injuries from others that the strongest of natural bonds cannot keep them in order and at under except they be restrained by grace but they must transgress the bounds even children cannot bear injuries from their very parents without being incited thereby to sinfull anger yea such is the corruption of some children that they can bear lesse at the hands of their parents than of any other else for so much is implied while he saith Fathers provoke not your children to wrath 4. A necessary duty is not to be neglected upon pretence that others may take occasion to sin against the Lord from it and particularly parents are not to withhold seasonable and necessary correction from their children even although their children should be enraged and provoked to wrath by it for notwithstanding he forbiddeth fathers to provoke their children to wrath yet he will not have them upon that pretence neglecting to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. 5. As people are most ready to run from the one extream of any sin unto the other from prodigality to sinfull parcimony from rigiditie to too much lenity So the servants of Christ while they are disswading people from the one extremity had need most carefully to guard lest under pretence of eschewing that people do rush upon the other for the Apostle while he forbiddeth too much rigidity in parents he seeth it necessary to guard them against the other extremity of too much indulgence and lenity while he saith bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. 6. It is the duty of parents not only to provide for the bodies and outward estate of their children but also and mainly to care for their souls endeavouring by all meanes possible to bring them up for sons and daughters to the Lord Almighty for as they are to bring them up or nourish them so also to beat down sin in them by nurture or correction and to make them know Jesus Christ the Lord But bring them up saith he in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. 7. As parents are to correct their children betimes so they ought not herein to satisfi● their own rage and passion but to go about it with a composed minde as a piece of service injoyned by God aiming mainly at the amendment of the faulty childe and in order hereto joyning instruction and admonition with correction yea and seeking the blessing of Christ to accompany it for the Apostle will have nurture and admonition joyned together and both of them in the Lord In the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Verse 5. Servants be obedient to them that are your masters according to the flesh with fear and trembling in singleness of your heart as unto Christ HE commeth now in the last place to the duties of masters and servants and first beginneth with servants See the reasons why he insisteth so long on their duty upon Col. 3. 22. Now servants were of two sorts some did serve for hire or as apprentises Mal. 3. 5 Others were bond-slaves to their masters being either taken in war 2 Chron. 28. 10. or bought with money Lev. 25. 44. The Apostle speaketh to both those sorts and first giveth a sum of their duty to wit obedience to their masters according to the flesh by which designation of masters he limiteth their dominion and mastership to the bodies of their servants to things temporall and of the flesh only leaving the soul and conscience to God only who is the alone Lord of conscience Matth. 23. 8. And the obedience here enjoyned to be given by servants unto those as it is largely taken doth consist in a chearfull executing of all their lawfull commands Matth. 8. 9. even though the thing commanded be laborious painfull Luke 17. 7 8 9. and rigid 1 Pet. 2. 18. in a meek and patient bearing of their rebukes Tit. 2. 9. yea and corrections also 1 Pet. 2. 18 20 21. and in with-holding their hands from picking and their tongues from abusing their masters by alledging commissions from them which they have not for their own advantage 2 King 5. 20 c. and in abstaining carefully from all contriving and procuring of their masters prejudice for benefiting themselves or others Luke 16. 1 2 c. Secondly he giveth some properties of this obedience as first it must be with fear and trembling which property consisteth in a sollicitous and earnest care and indefatigable diligence in following their masters affairs to his greatest advantage Gen. 31. 38 39. joyned with reverence flowing from love to their masters person 1 Tim. 6. 1. and with fear of his displeasure Mal. 1. 6 and is contrary to pride and lazinesse See working with fear and trembling taken in this sense Phil. 2. -12. Secondly their obedience must be with singlenesse of heart which is opposed to a double heart hypocrisie and deceit and it implyeth that faithfulnesse which ought to be in servants towards their masters as minding and intending from their very heart the thriving and successe of their affairs in all things and at all times Tit. 2. 10. And thirdly it must be as unto Christ whereby he expresseth the manner motive and rule of their obedience See upon chap. 5. ver 22. Doct. 1. Christian liberty and spirituall freedom from sin Satan and Gods wrath is not inconsistent with civil bondage and subjection Christ and the Gospel teacheth no man to cast off that yoke but how they are to carry themselves as becometh Christians under it for he speaketh to servants as servants enjoyning them civil subjection though they were now converted and partakers of that spirituall liberty purchased by Christ Gal. 3. 28. Servants be obedient to your masters 2. The condition of none is so base or despicable but free grace in God will stoup so low as to take notice of them in it yea and bestow upon them all those precious blessings purchased by Christ that so grace may appear to be grace when it hath compassion on those who are in all respects most unworthy and vile for even some of those servants who for the most part were bond-slaves and as little esteemed of by their masters as their very beasts were converted by the Gospel and are therefore here spoken unto as converts Servants be obedient to your masters 3. Such is the sufficiency of Scripture that there is no rank state nor degree of persons even from the King to the bond-slave to whom it doth not serve as a full and perfect rule to direct them how to
consideration of them and pointeth forth what the plain history doth teach concerning the duties of husband and wife Neverthelesse saith he Let every one of you in particular so love his wife 2. It is not unprofitable for people that Ministers do wind up their large exhortations in a short and pithy sum of what they have spoken at greater length whereby the memory of people may be somewhat helped and their affections also may be more forcibly wrought upon when the strength of a large discourse is contracted in two or three words and presented both to the understanding and affections of people at once for so doth Paul in the conclusion sum up what he had spoken at large from ver 22. of the duties both of husbands and wives in two succinct sentences Let every one of you so love his wife c. 3. Then do people receive and hear with profit these exhortations which are spoken unto all in generall when they make application of them to themselves as if they were delivered unto them in peculiar and by name for what the Apostle spoke indefinitly unto all ver 25. he doth here make particular application of it unto every one Neverthelesse let every one of you in particular so love his wife 4. As maried parties are ready to forget their mutuall duties yea and to sport at such doctrine which doth presse and enjoyn those duties so the Ministers of Christ would not only inculcate them the more frequently but also deliver their exhortation of that kind with greater weight and authority for the Apostle not only repeateth but in an authoritative commanding way bindeth this exhortation on them Let every one love his wife and the wife see that she reverence 5. As we would labour to infix in our memories a short sum of our most necessary duties so also of the most moving and taking argument to enforce the practice of these duties otherwise the naked knowledge of our duty will prove but ineffectuall to lead us captive to walk in it for Paul summeth up both the husbands duty and the strongest argument to enforce the duty taken from that near union between him and his wife Let every one of you so love his wife as himself 6. Then and only then is the duty of subjection and obedience of inferiours toward their superiours sincerely and heartily discharged and accepted of by God when it floweth from inward reverence and hearty esteem in the former toward the place and dignity conferred by God upon the latter for he here commandeth wives to give reverence to their husbands thereby pointing at the right fountain of that subjection which he had formerly pressed upon them ver 22 24. even fear flowing from love And the wife see that she reverence her husband CHAP. VI. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle insisteth further upon those duties which are incumbent to Christians as they are members of families And first he presseth upon children obedience to their parents 1. from the equity of it ver 1. which he cleareth from the fifth command ver 2. Secondly from the advantage which should redound to them by it ver 3. Next he presseth upon parents to hold off the two extremities of rigidity and indulgence towards their children ver 4. Thirdly he presseth upon servants obedience to their masters which is set forth by severall of its necessary qualifications and properties ver 5 6 7. and inforced from the great advantage which they should reap by it ver 8. Fourthly he presseth upon masters their duty which is to be accompanied with the like qualifications fear and trembling only being excepted ver 9. In the second part he presseth one duty which belongeth unto all Christians in generall even to prepare for a Christian warfare And 1. more generally that they would take unto them spirits by making use of the strength which they had without themselves in the Lord Christ ver 10. and of the saving graces of Gods Spirit inherent in themselves ver 11. which he enforceth from the nature of the warfare and terror of the adversary ver 12 13. Next he exhorteth them more particularly to put on and make use of six several pieces of the Christian armour 1. The grace of sincerity 2. The inherent righteousnesse of an holy conversation ver 14. 3. A resolute frame of heart to charge through all difficulties ver 15. 4. The grace of faith commended from its excellency and usefulnesse ver 16. 5. The well-grounded hope of salvation 6. Acquaintance with the Lords written Word ver 17. Thirdly he presseth the exercise of prayer as necessary for the obtaining and right use-making of all those ver 18. exhorting them to pray for utterance and boldnesse to himself in particular ver 19. because of his office and bonds ver 20. In the third part of the Chapter he concludeth the Epistle 1. by shewing he had sent Tychicus whom he highly commendeth to inform them of his own particular affairs ver 21. and to comfort them ver 22. Next by his usuall fare-well-wish for them in particular ver 23. and for all the lovers of Christ in generall ver 24. Vers. 1. CHildren obey your parents in the Lord for this is right THe Apostle doth now fall upon the duties of parents and children And first beginneth with children the word rendered children signifieth these who are begotten even though now come to perfect age See upon Col. 3. ver 20. doct 2. These he enjoyneth to obey their parents where by parents are meaned not only the immediate but also the mediate parents as grand-fathers c. Gen. 50. 23. yea and those also who are in the place of parents Luk. 2. 48 51. Now the obedience here enjoyned is as comprehensive as that honour enjoyned to be given unto parents by children in the fifth command which is cited ver 2. to enforce the obedience here spoken of and it implyeth first inward reverence or acknowledgement of that eminency in which God hath placed parents above their children joyned with fear Lev. 19. 3. and love 1 Tim. 5. 4 to be testified as by other outward signes so by reverent speaking of them and to them Prov. 30. 17. 2. Obedience more strictly taken so as that children receive the instruction of their parents Prov. 1. 8. execute their lawfull commands and directions even though they be burthensome and hazardous Gen. 37. 13. 1 Sam. 17. 20. and accept with patience their reproof and correction Prov. 15. 5. even though their parents be in some respects faulty therein Heb. 12. 9 10. And thirdly gratitude and thankfulnesse so as that they help parents when their necessity requireth 1 Tim. 5. 4. and bear with and cover their infirmities Gen. 9. 22 23. Prov. 23. 22. Now this duty of obedience in children is first explained from the manner motive and rule of it while he saith in the Lord. See this phrase explained upon chap. 5. ver 22. Secondly it is urged by two
arguments the first whereof is in this verse and taken from the equity and righteousnesse which is in it even that children should do all the forementioned duties unto their parents to whom under God they owe their very being The Laws of all Nations even of the most barbarous do enjoyn it an● all creatures who have life and sense are carried in some measure by a kind of instinct unto it Hence Learn 1. The great and main duty which a childe as a childe ought to learn and so to learn as to practise is to obey his parents even to receive their instructions and execute their lawful commands this being a duty which of any other proud and rebellious nature is most averse from and yet such as nature it self doth plead for its equity so that whatever children be otherwise for beauty for strength for quicknesse wisdom activity learning preferment or honour yet this being inlacking they fight against the very law and light of nature and so are a reproach to their parents Prov. 19. 26. and do accelerate the judgement of God upon themselves 1 Sam. 2. 25. for though the obedience here enjoyned doth draw with it all those other duties which children owe to their parents as was shown in the exposition yet it doth in the first place signifie a submissive hearkening unto and obeying of their lawfull commands as the word in the Original doth imply which he doth mainly presse upon children Children obey your parents 2. This duty of obedience to parents belongeth unto all children whatsoever so that neither age sexe place honour or condition do exempt them wholly from it 1 King 2. 19. for he speaketh indefinitly unto all children and of both sexes Children obey your parents 3. Children are bound to obey not only one but both their parents the mother as well as the father yea the holy Ghost doth expresly provide for the mother giving her the precedency Lev. 19. 3. because her sexe being weaker she is the more subject to be despised for he useth a word common to both father and mother while he saith Children obey your parents 4. It is not sufficient that children obey their parents either from a natural instinct or fear of their displeasure or hope of great things to be received from them and enjoyed by them but their obedience must flow from conscience of duty towards God who doth enjo 〈…〉 it and be regulated by and subordinated to that obedience which they owe to Him otherwise their obedience is only heathenish and naturall but not Christian for he commandeth Children obey your parents in the Lord. 5. The nature of man is since the fall become so perverse and backward that there is need of a spur of earnest exhortation inforced with strong and evident reason to stir us up even to those duties which are written in broadest letters upon every mans heart by nature for the Apostle seeth it necessary not only to exhort unto this duty of obedience to parents but also to enforce his exhortation by arguments For this is right saith he 6. The first and chief motive which ought to set us on work to any duty is not so much the advantage which may redound to us by the practice of it as the equity and righteousnesse which is in the thing it self as being commanded by God and well pleasing in His sight for he enforceth obedience to parents from the equity of it before he mention ver 3. the profit which should accresce unto children by it For this is right saith he Vers. 2. Honour thy father and mother which is the first commandment with promise THe Apostle passing-by all other reasons to prove the equity of the former injunction doth pitch upon one to wit the Law of God enjoyning this duty in the fifth Command The scope of which Command is to prescribe all those duties which inferiours owe to their superiours and by consequence which superiours owe to their inferiours where all superiours are expressed by the name of father and mother because the authority of parents is most natural and the yoke of it most easily comported with and therfore all other authority goeth under the name of that to render it lesse invidious to those who are to be subject unto it And the duty enjoyned to inferiors is their giving honour to superiors which implyeth as was shown ver 1. reverence obedience and gratitude Now this command is described from its precedency as being the first and most weighty command in all the second table and from the manner of propounding it not nakedly but with a speciall promise of a particular mercy subjoyned to this command in particular and expressed ver 3. which cannot be said of any other command for the promise annexed to the second is a generall promise of mercy made to such as keep all the commands Hence Learn 1. Whatever God hath commanded in His Word is most righteous equitable and just for he proveth that it is right for children to obey their parents because the Law of God enjoyneth honour thy father and mother 2. Though the Law of Ceremonies given by Moses doth not oblige Christians Christ the substance of those shadows being come Col. 2. 17. nor yet the judiciall Law which was given to the Jewish Commonwealth and to stand and fall with it Numb 36. 6 7. yet the moral Law or the Law of the ten Commandments as being never yet repealed by God doth stand in force and is binding unto Christians for Paul doth urge this duty of obedience unto parents upon children because the morall Law enjoyneth it Honour thy father and mother which is the first commandment with promise 3. So far is God from abolishing different ranks degrees and states among men that He taketh speciall care to have those and publick order in those inviolably preserved while He not only enjoyneth the respective duties of superiors and inferiors but also giveth them the first and chief place among all those other duties which man doth owe to man for saith he honour thy father and mother by whom as we shew are meaned all lawfull superiors and he addeth which is the first commandment to wit in the second table 4. Though God as absolute Lord might enjoyn us obedience to His commands without giving any promise of a reward yet so backward are we to our duty and so mercifull is God that to overcome our backward unwillingnesse He is pleased sweetly to allure us by His gracious promise of a free reward unto our obedience for here is a commandment with promise Vers. 3. That it may be well with thee and thou mayest live long on the earth HEre he sheweth what that promise is and thereby giveth a second argument to inforce the duty of obedience upon children unto parents taken from the profit and advantage which should redound unto them by it for the Lord doth here expresly promise prosperity and long life to all such as make conscience of this
duty For understanding of which promise know that though it was to be understood even in the most plain and obvious sense of the words as it was held forth to the ancient Church to whom God used to promise and bestow things carnall and earthly as an earnest and shadow of things heavenly 1 Cor. 10. 11. Yet even then there was a tacite condition implied to wit in so far as the thing promised should serve for Gods glory 2 Chron. 35. 24. and the good of those to whom the promise was made 1 King 14. 13. But now under the New Testament though this promise even in the letter be doubtlesse fulfilled unto many Yet it is chiefly to be understood in a sprituall sense in so far as the godly obedient childe whether he live long or short doth alwayes live well because he liveth in Gods favour Psal. 63. 3. and cometh to a full and ripe age as having reached the prize and mark for attaining whereof life is given even the salvation of the soul Isa. 65. 20. Hence Learn 1. Though our first and chief motive unto duty ought to be the equity and righteousnesse which is in the thing it self as being commanded by God Yet we may eye the promised reward whether temporall or eternall as a secondary motive and encouragement providing it be not looked at as a thing to be merited by our obedience Luk. 17. 10. for as ver 1. he inforced this duty of obedience from the equity of it in the first place So here from the advantage which should redound unto children by it in the second place That it may be well with thee 2. So merciful is God to man that He hath injoyned only those things as equitably righteous and conducing to His own glory which tend also and no lesse to our own profit and advantage so that we need not to separate our own well-being from His glory but are alwayes to seek the former as a mean of and in subordination to the latter for the Apostle sheweth that this duty of obedience in children as it tendeth to glorifie God in the first place it being a doing of what is right according to His command So it tendeth to the advantage of children in the next That it may be well with thee 3. To live well and long upon the earth is in it self not to be despised or under-valued in so far as though the godly man the longer he liveth he is the longer keeped out of heaven yet he findeth the moe proofs and experiences of Gods goodnesse here on earth 1 Joh. 3. 13. and hath the larger opportunity of a fair seed-time of glorifying God here and consequently shall of free grace reap a more plentifull harvest of comfort at death and of glory hereafter 2 Cor. 9. 6. for he promiseth this as a blessing to the obedient childe that it may be well with thee and thou mayest live long upon the earth which as we shew is accomplished sometimes in the very letter 4. Then do we rightly apply unto our selves under the New Testament those things which were spoken to the Jews under the Old when passing-by what was in such things typical or astricted to the infant-state of the Church which then was we look upon what was substantial moral or of common equity as belonging unto us yet for so much doth the Apostle teach while citing the promise annexed to the fifth command he saith only that thou mayest live long upon the earth and omitteth the last clause of that promise to wit which the Lord thy God giveth thee Exod. 20. 12. whereby that promise was in a peculiar manner astricted to the Jews and to the land of Canaan which He did give them to inherit 5. The best way to thrive even in things worldly and to attain prosperity health wealth and length of dayes so far at least as shall serve for Gods glory and our own good is to live a godly life by taking heed thereto according to Gods Word and especially by giving due reverence and obedience to our natural parents and consequently to all our lawfull superiours because of the Command of God for unto the Command ver 2. Honour thy father and mother this promise is subjoyned that it may be well with thee and thou mayest live long upon the earth Verse 4. And ye fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. HE doth here in a word set forth the duty of parents And because they are apt to abuse their parentall authority and chiefly the fathers therefore he enjoyneth to them and by consequence to the mothers to beware of provoking their children to wrath or of imbittering their spirits which is done either by denying them that which is their due in food r●iment or meanes of education Lam. 4. 3. or by commanding things in themselves unjust 1 Sam. 20. 31. or by unjust and rigorous commands about things in their own nature indifferent 1 Sam. 14. 29. or inveighing with bitter words against them chiefly when there is no cause 1 Sam. 20. 30. and lastly by beating them either unjustly when there is no fault 1 Sam. 20. 33. or immoderatly unseasonably or basely when there is a fault Next he doth guard them against the other extremity of too much indulgence to their children while he exhorts them first to bring them up or as it is in the original to nourish them which comprehendeth not only their giving unto them present maintenance from the womb Gen. 21. 7. but also their providing for them against the future 2 Cor. 12. 14. and training them up in any lawfull imployment whereby they may be able under God to sustain themselves and theirs Gen. 4. 2. And secondly to joyn nurture and admonition with their education by the former whereof is meaned the timous seasonable and compassionate correction of children which parents are bound to dispense Prov. 13. 24. and by the latter is meaned the information of their judgement how they ought to carry themselves towards God in things religious Gen. 18. 19. and how towards man in righteousnesse civility and good manners which is also a great piece of the duty of parents towards children Prov. 31. 1 8 9. And lastly he addeth that their education must be in the admonition of the Lord Christ that is such as becometh Christians and by which young ones are instructed chiefly in the knowledge of Gods Word of Jesus Christ and of the way of salvation held forth by Him Hence Learn 1. Such is the prevalencie and interest of sin in the soul of man now fallen that in some it wholy extinguisheth or much weakeneth the most intense of our natural affections and maketh them run in a channel quite contrary unto what they ought for the Apostle supponeth that even naturall affection in some parents to their own children will be so far weakened as by their unnatural carriage to provoke and imbitter them
faith in God as Creator such as the faith of Turks but it is Faith in Jesus the son of Mary Mat. 1. 25. who is that Christ or Messiah who being promised under the Old Testament Isa. 7. 14. is now come under the New it is this Faith relying on Christ who by His merit hath purchased the thing promised Isa. 53. 5. which giveth a right unto the Promise for to specifie what Believers they are to whom the Promise is given he addeth by the Faith of Jesus Christ. Vers. 23. But before Faith came we were kept under the Law shut up unto the Faith which should afterwards be revealed 24. Wherefore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ that we might be justified by Faith 25. But after that Faith is come we are no longer under a School-master 26. For ye are all the Children of God by Faith in Christ Jesus IN these words the Apostle answereth a fifth Objection and doth more directly handle that point concerning the abrogation of the ceremonial Law yea of the whole Mosaical Dispensation now under the dayes of the Gospel The Adversaries might have objected Seing the Law or that legal Dispensation of the Covenant of Grace was so usefull unto the ancient Church and so subservient to the Promise as is affirmed ver 22. Then why did Paul cry down the use of it especially the practice of the ceremonial Law now The Apostle answereth by distinguishing times and sheweth that before Faith came whereby he meaneth not the grace of saving Faith for that was alwayes in the Church Heb. 11. 4 c. but either Christ called Faith because He is the object of Faith in which sense He is called our hope 1 Tim. 1. 1. or the full manifestation of the Doctrine of Faith which was about the time of Christ's death and ascension he granteth I say that before that time the use of the Law was first necessary to the Jews because they were by the Law as by a military guard keeped to wit chiefly from being mixed with other Nations whether in Religion or Policy Eph. 2. 14. Secondly It was saving to them in so far as it did shut up conclude and enclose them as it were in a prison for it 's the same word and that same purpose more fully expressed which is ver 22. under sin and the curse due to sin that hereby they might be in a manner prepared and as it were necessitated to imbrace the Doctrine of Salvation by Faith in Jesus Christ which was then but darkly Mat. 11. 11. and afterwards more clearly revealed the full revelation whereof they were by this mean kept more intent upon ver 23. Which latter use of the Law he illustrateth and concludeth by shewing the Law as a Pedagogue or Schoolmaster did with much rigor and servitude govern and rule the Church then in her infancy and childhood and thereby did lead the Elect unto Christ that they might be justified by faith The Apostle having thus shewed ver 23 24. that the Law that is the legal dispensation of the Covenant of Grace was for good use to the ancient Church denyeth that therefore the use of it should be continued now when the doctrine of Faith is clearly manifested yea by the contrary he sheweth it was then to be abrogated and the Christian Church freed from the observation of it because it exerced only the office of a Schoolmaster over children and so can have no authority over the Church and especially Believers now ver 25. which he proveth from this That the Christian Church and all of them to wit Jew and Gentile were like a son come to age because of their Faith in Christ Jesus already come and so was to be dealt with no longer as a childe under a Schoolmaster ver 26. From Vers. 23. Learn 1. Though there was Gospel or the Doctrine of Salvation by Free-grace held forth to be laid hold upon by Faith unto the ancient Church ver 8. yet it was ●o obscurely and sparingly propounded then and so clearly and largely manifested now That the Scripture speaketh as if that Doctrine had not been at all in the Church then but only revealed now in the dayes of the Gospel for here he calleth all the time of the Old Testament the time before Faith came or before the Doctrine of Free-grace the object of Faith came and that this Faith was afterwards to be revealed to wit because it was but sparingly revealed then 2. Besides other differences betwixt the administration of the Covenant of Grace under the Old Testament and under the New this was one the old administration was extended only to the Jews Psal. 147. 19 20. and to some of other Nations who forgetting their own People Psal. 45. 10 joyned themselves to them but the new is extended to all Nations Mat. 28. 19. for this difference is here hinted at while the Apostle speaking of those who were under that old dispensation ver 23 24. speaketh of them in the first person We were kept under c. We that is the Nation of the Jews whereof Paul was one but speaking of those who are under the new Dispensation he mentioneth not only the Jews under the pronoun of the first person We ver 25. but also the Gentiles under the pronoun of the second person Ye ver 26. for ye saith he to wit the Galatians of the Gentiles are all the Children of God 3. The administration of the Covenant of Grace under the Old Testament by so many Rites Sacrifices Ceremonies such a system of politick Laws such rigid pressing of moral duties with the annexed promises of eternal life and threatnings of Gods wrath and curse the Gospel-promise all the while being hid as it were behind the curtain among other uses did serve for a hedge or a place of military defence to keep that ancient People of whom Christ was to come distinct and separate from all other Nations as a besieged city is guarded by walls ditches and armed souldiers from the irruption of enemies for this is aimed at while he saith We were keeped under the Law to wit as by a military guard for so the word signifieth It 's true they were also keeped from going astray either in Religion or in life and conversation but that use of the Law was mentioned v. 19. Doct. 4. The hard servitude wherwith the ancient Church was pressed and under which she was as to her outward estate as it did forcibly constrain the Elect among them to quit their own righteousnesse and to betake themselves for righteousnesse and life unto Faith in the promised Messiah as knowing somewhat from Scripture Hag. 2. 6 7. compared with Heb. 12. 26 27. that then the Church should be eased of that hard servitude and bondage for in both these respects the Law did shut them up unto the Faith afterwards to be revealed making them close with the Doctrine of Free-grace for Salvation by Faith in the mean time
the labours of Christ's Ministers are attended with little successe and but very few are converted by their pains and this even somtimes when outward means are such as may be most promising of fruitfulnesse the Lord hereby inculcating this necessary Lesson That the great work of converting souls dependeth not upon most promising means 1 Cor. 3. 6. for the Prophet having an eye mainly as we shewed in the Exposition to the first beginnings of the Christian Church when Christ Himself was a Preacher Rom. 15. 8. calleth her by the name of barren that beareth not that travelleth not 3. The Lord will sometimes for good and necessary reasons expressed chap. 1. ver 13. doct 6. give His Church and People so far over to the rage of persecuters and own them as little under trouble to the view of the world as if He had no interest in them as their Lord and Husband for in this respect the Apostle calleth the Christian Church desolate that is without an husband in appearance For the desolate c. 4. A false declining yea an apostate Church may be to outward appearance much more owned of God as to the multitude of followers external beauty outward prosperity and freedom from the crosse than the true Church So that none of those things are infallible marks of a true Church for the Jewish Synagogue because of those things seemed to have an husband when the Christian Church was desolate Than she that hath an husband 5. The wise Lord hath thought it fit to make His Church and real Believers in the Church lyable as to their outward condition mainly to great variety and many changes it being almost impossible that we who are of such changeable tempers our selves should bear any one condition right for any long time together and not miscarry one way or other under it Psal. 55. -19. for the Church for that time barren and desolate was to have many children The desolate hath or as the words may also reade shall have many children 6. It is the duty of God's People to compose their affections especially those of joy and sorrow suitably to God's various way of dealing with them for the Church before barren and therefore sad is to change her sorrow into joy upon God's changing His way of dealing with her Rejoyce thou barren for the desolate hath many moe children 7. The enlargement of Christ's Kingdom and gaining of many sinners to God together with the weakning of Satan's interest in the world ought to be entertained with much joy for saith he Rejoyce break forth and cry for the desolate hath many moe children than she that hath an husband 8. So many are the discouragements of the Godly and so many causes of grief which are as heavy weights and strong bars to bear down and keep in their joy That this duty of rejoycing is not easily come at even when God in His gracious providence giveth reason for it Hence the command is inculcated in several words Rejoyce cry and break forth which last supposeth that many restraints from this duty are lying-on which must be broken-through before the heart can attain to it Vers. 28. Now we Brethren as Isaac was are the children of promise THe Apostle in the last place applieth this typical history and the scriptural confirmation of the mystery prefigured by it And first by asserting what himself really was and what in charity he yet conceived many of them at least to be he sheweth the only way of attaining the heavenly inheritance as children to be by vertue of the Covenant-promise in resemblance of Isaac who was so begotten ver -23. and tacitly implyeth that it is not attained by vertue of our own natural endeavours or fleshly priviledges whereof the Jewish Synagogue and her followers did boast chap. 6. ver 12 and wherein they were represented by the childe of the bond-woman Ishmael ver 23 Doct. 1. A Minister ought to prosecute general Doctrine so far untill it be brought home to the particular state and case of his hearers by pertinent and close application as that wherein the life and power of preaching doth mainly consist 1 Tim. 5. 20. for Paul resteth not untill he make application of the Doctrine in hand Now we Brethren as Isaac was c. 2. The humours of people are sometimes so ticklish that a Minister hath need to proceed to the work of applying general Truths unto them with that warinesse and circumspection as to point out their duty and what he would have them to be rather by shewing his charitable thoughts of them that they are so already than by any direct up-stirring of them to it for so doth Paul here point at their duty of quiting confidence in the flesh and of betaking themselves to Faith in the Promise by shewing he did in charity judge of them as those who had done so already Now we Brethren are children of the promise 3. That any of Adam's lost seed who are by nature children of wrath do become the children of God and heirs of eternal life is only by vertue of the gracious promises of the Covenant of Grace in so far as first they are begotten into a new and spiritual life not from any principle of natural strength and vigor Rom. 9. 16. but by the force of those Promises enlivened by the Spirit of God 2 Cor. 10. 4. And secondly their right to Heaven ariseth not from any works which they do Tit. 3. 5 but from Faith in the Promise Joh. 3. 16. for in this sense we are called children of the promise Vers. 29. But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit even so it is now HE applyeth the present purpose in the second place for consolation to the true members of the Christian Church against those persecutions which they sustained from the false Apostles and such others as adhered to the Jewish Synagogue and to the doctrine of Justification by Works first by shewing that the like persecution did befall Isaac and was prefigured by those bitter mockings which Isaac who was begotten by the power of Gods Spirit according to the tenour of the Promise did suffer from Ishmael who was begotten by the ordinary strength of nature and boasted in his carnal outward priviledges See Gen. 21. 9. As it was then so it is now saith he Doct. 1. It hath been and yet is the ordinary lot of God's Children to suffer hard things from the men of this world the Lord having seen it most fitting that by the crosse they come to their Crown and through many tribulations enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Act. 14. 22. for Paul speaketh of persecutions as a thing common to the Church in all ages But as then even so it is now saith he 2. The sorest persecutions and troubles which the Godly endure do frequently come from those who are otherwise tyed unto them by most strict and nearest relations of kinred
he doth partly reprove and partly guard against was mutual and of both parties If ye bite and devour one another saith he 4. When schism in a Church is not only maintained on the one hand with fleshly passion strife reproaches and other real injuries but when it is also oppugned upon the other hand not so much with the sword of the Spirit the Word of Truth as with the same fleshly and sinfull means Then especially is schism the fore-runner and procuring cause of desolation and ruine to both parties and to the whole Church and this not only because of that hemous guilt which is in it but also that stumbling-blocks are thereby multiplied which cannot but prevail mightily to make men doubt of all Truth and in end prove nulli-fidians for the Apostle holdeth this forth as the consequence of their biting and devouring one another Take heed saith he lest ye be destroyed one of another 5. As it is a matter of great difficulty to make men of credit and parts being once engaged in their contentious debates to project the consequences of their so doing further than the hoped-for victory against their contrary party Act. 15. 37 c. So it were no small wisdom before folk meddle with strife so as to engage their fleshly passions in it however they may be otherwise provoked seriously to project and consider what wofull sad and dangerous effects may follow thereupon to the Church of God for saith he Take heed lest ye be destroyed one of another Vers. 16. This I say then Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh HE returneth to the first Rule given ver 13. to w●● That they would not use their liberty for an occasion 〈◊〉 the flesh by a transition usuall unto him when he is further to insist upon any thing formerly spoken See chap. 4. ver 1. and furnisheth them with an help for reducing that Rule unto practice to wit Walking in the Spirit or following the motions and directions of the renewed part or new-man of Grace in the heart for which the word Spirit when it is opposed to flesh is usually taken See Joh. 3. 6. the fruit of their walking thus he sheweth should be their mortifying and keeping at under the flesh or their corrupt and unrenewed part in so far as though the lusts or first inordinate motions of inbred corruption for so is lust taken in the tenth Commandment wo●● not be totally suppressed yet they should not be fulfilled or brought unto the compleat act with deliberation and consent which doth more fully speak that which is ver 13. concerning their not using liberty for an occasion to the flesh Doct. 1. There is not any possibility of getting the power of inbred corruption subdued or the lusts of finfull flesh curbed to any saving purpose by a natural man or by any man without a work of saving Grace wrought in his heart by the Spirit of God for he prescribeth unto them walking in the Spirit as the only remedy against fulfilling the lusts of the flesh which supposeth that the Spirit or the work of saving Grace and Regeneration wrought by the Spirit must be first in them 2. The prevailing of corruption over Christians even to the accomplishing of the outward acts thereof after deliberation which sometimes hath come to passe as in David and others doth not prove that they never had a work of Grace or that they have totally fallen from it but only that they walk not in the Spirit the motions and directions of the renewed part are not obeyed but quenched the power whereof wherewith the renewed faculties are endued is not exercised and hereby God is provoked to withdraw His actuating Grace so that our lusts once in part mortified cannot but gather strength and range abroad in the soul without any effectual resistance for Paul saith not if ye have the Spirit but if ye walk in the Spirit ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh 3. The sin of lust and covetousnesse as it speaketh the first motions of corruption whether in our understanding will or sensual appetite towards unlawfull and forbidden objects namely such motions as are sudden and run before our deliberate consent they cannot be wholly abandoned by the childe of God in this life no not though he use the utmost of diligence and watchfulnesse for upon their walking in the Spirit he doth not promise that those lusts shall not be in them only they shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh 4. It is a Minister's duty to insist so far upon any point of necessary Truth untill he make it so far as he is able sufficiently plain according to the capacity of the hearers as also if the Truth in hand contain a practical duty the practice whereof is attended with many difficulties he is to insist upon it until he furnish the hearers with some pertinent helps and motives unto that duty for so doth Paul insist upon that Truth delivered ver 13. This I say then and by insisting doth explain it ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh and furnisheth them with an help how it shall be practised Walk in the Spirit saith he Vers. 17. For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that ye cannot do the things that ye would HE proveth that their following the motions of the renewed part should keep the unrenewed part at under by two arguments first Because the renewed and unrenewed part or Spirit and Flesh do lust against uncessantly oppose and labour to suppresse one another by reason of that great contrariety which is betwixt those two principles as being of a different original Job 3. 6. and supported and assisted with contrary powers ver 19. and 22. whence he sheweth it doth follow that we cannot compleatly effectuate neither the good nor the evil which we would the flesh alwayes opposing that which we would according to the direction of the Spirit the Spirit again opposing what we would according to the direction of the flesh which latter is the conclusion he doth here prove as it is expressed ver 16. Doct. 1. As a Minister ought to point at some helps unto the People for their better discharging of any difficult duty So he ought to make it appear that those are helps indeed and how they contribute for the more easie practising of the duty pressed otherwise they receive no encouragement thereby neither to set about the duty nor to make use of those helps in order to the duty for the Apostle having prescribed an help for keeping the flesh at under doth here demonstrate clearly that the thing prescribed doth really help as appeareth from the scope 2. As the regenerate man hath a renewed principle of Grace in all the faculties and powers of the soul wrought in him by the Spirit of God So he hath in all those some
that which is good 5. It is the duty not only of Ministers but of private Christians also keeping themselves within the bounds of their calling Heb. 5. 4. to endeavour the edification of those with whom they converse while they labour either to beget or carry on the work of grace in them and this not only by their good example but by their edifying discourse and communication for he speaketh to all indifferently while he saith Let no communication come out of your mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying 5. We are not left to run at random in our ordinary discourses as if we might speak what we please providing we speak not evil but are tied only to speak edifying purpose and this at all times and with all persons Col. 4. 6. whether we be speaking of things religious or which appertain to our particular calling or recreations for as it is lawfull and necessary for Christians sometimes to speak of those things so there is such a way to speak of them as the hearers may be bettered by our speech But that which is good to the use of edifying 6. As godly discourse and conference ought to be heard and entertained by those who are present So although the Word preached be the ordinary mean of converting sinners Rom. 10. 14 15. yet the Lord is sometimes pleased to blesse the familiar and secret discourses of private Christians being spoken with grace and seasoned with the salt of divine wisdom by making them a mean of conveying grace unto others even to some whom no publick preaching of the Word could ever move or work upon 1 Pet. 3. 1. for the end of speaking good to the use of edifying here proponed is attainable else it had been no strong motive to the duty That it may minister grace unto the hearers Vers. 30. And grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption HE doth here inforce the former disswasive by a strong reason set down in form of precept the force whereof is first propounded that by their obscene unprofitable and unedifying discourse they would grieve the holy Spirit of God who is called holy because He is holy in Himself Isa. 6. 3. and the cause of all holinesse in us Rom. 15. 16. And we are are said to grieve Him not as if He who is God could be grieved properly for the passions of grief anger sorrow c. as implying some defect or imperfection are not in God Numb 23. 19. But improperly and in so far as we do that which in it self is apt to grieve Him if He were capable of grief Rom. 14. -15. and which provoketh the Spirit of God to do that which grieved persons do even to withdraw from the soul to shew His dislike and to return grief for grief This reason is next inforced from one work of the holy Spirit in the hearts of Believers which is here called sealing by a metaphor taken from that use of seals and signets among men whereby publick writs are confirmed and made authentick or the wares of merchands are marked and set apart for their own use In like manner the Spirit of God by renewing and sanctifying Believers imprinteth the draughts and lineaments of His own image upon them whereby they are not only set apart and sealed as His own peculiar goods but themselves also may be assured that they are His and shall be safely keeped under that seal untill the day of judgement called here the day of redemption See upon chapter 1. ver 13. and therefore by grieving the Spirit they did hazard the removall of this seal at least darken it much and consequently mar their own comfort exceedingly Doct. 1. The holy Ghost the third person of the blessed Trinity is graciously pleased to become in a singular manner familiar with the truely regenerate taking up a place of abode in their spirits and furnishing them with sweet and necessary counsel and advice from time to time 1 Joh. 2. 27. for as we shew His being grieved doth speak His withdrawing from them and a ceasing from being so friendly and familiar with them as a stranger will do from an inne wherein he hath received some affront which implieth that He was once present and familiar with them And grieve not the holy Spirit of God 2. How friendly and familiar soever the holy Spirit of God be with the believing soul yet so holy and pure is His Nature that he can behold no iniquity Hab. 1. 13. but when those that are dearest to Him give any way to known sin He must shew Himself displeasd with it and with them for it for so much is supponed while the Apostle disswading them from sin sheweth this holy Spirit of God will be grieved by it And grieve not the holy Spirit of God 3. However many by their obscene and putrid discourse intend no further than to make themselves or others joviall and glad Hos. 7. 3. yet hereby and by such other sins of the like stamp as being against the motions light and direction of the Spirit this holy Spirit of God is much displeased and so much as persons grived use to be and therefore will withdraw His gracious and conforting presence with all those other tokens of His respect and favour from the person by whom He hath been grieved Isa. 57. -17. leaving him to be guided for a time by his own spirit and the spirit of Satan Psal. 81. 12. and giving him over to a kind of desperate grief and hellish horrour Psal. 32. 3 4. or senslesse stupidity Isa. 63. 17. as a just reward for grieving the holy Spirit of God for Paul sheweth that by their putrid communication they would grieve the Spirit of God and make Him do what grieved persons use to do while he saith And grieve not the holy Spirit of God 4. As those spirituall plagues inflicted upon our spirits for grieving of the Spirit of God and following upon His withdrawing from us are most terrible so the childe of God not only may but ought to skare at and abstain from sin even that he may be preserved from those spirituall plagues and judgements though neither love to duty nor fear of an other correction do constrain him for the Apostle laboureth to deter them from the sin of loose speaking by this consideration as being of greatest force even lest thereby they should grieve the Spirit And grieve not the holy Spirit of God saith he 5. Though the redemption of Gods children be perfected in regard of the price payed by Christ Joh. 19. 30. yet in regard of the application of it unto us it is but begun in this world and perfected in the next for he speaketh of our compleat redemption as yet to come Whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption 6. Those whom God will compleatly redeem from all sin and misery both in soul and body and from whose eyes He will wipe away
without any reserve or limitation and the practice of any other is to be followed but so far as their example is conincident with Gods Word and practice See 1 Cor. 11. 1. where Paul commandeth them to follow him with an expresse limitation to wit as he was a follower of Christ but here his command is absolute and unlimitted Be ye followers of God 5. The Lord doth enter into most intimate friendship with and taketh on most neer relations unto those whose sins He pardoneth So that He doth not only free them from deserved wrath but placeth them among the children and maketh them adopted sons and daughters unto Himself for here he calleth them God's dear children of whom He said chap. 4. 32. that God had forgiven them for Christs sake 6. All those who are dear children to God by adoption should look upon their highest priviledges as strongest engagements to duty and particularly set themselves to imitate Him in the exercise of mercy kindnesse forgivenesse and of such other duties as He hath made lovely and amiable by His own example for Paul maketh their priviledges an engagement to duty and to imitate God in particular Be ye followers of God as dear children 7. It is not sufficient that we set our selves to imitate God except we do it as dear children that is first humbly Matth. 18. 2. 3. and next with a kind of naturall affection and propension for so do children affect to imitate and by imitation to please their parents and not as servants and slaves by compulsion Hence he saith as dear children pointing not only at the reason why but the manner how they should follow Him Vers. 2. And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour HE doth next illustrate yet further that precept given chap. 4. ver 32. and joyntly sheweth wherein they were to imitate God to wit not only in forgiving but also in loving one another and so as they should walk in love whereby is meaned that all their actions towards their neighbour ought not only to be good in themselves but also flow from a principle of love to his good and edification which duty or constant task of walking in love is inforced by a new argument taken from Christ's example who loved us and did evidence His love by giving Himself freely and of His own accord Job 10. 18 even unto death for us or for our sins Gal. 1. 4. which action of Christ is illustrated first from the end for which He did give Himself even to be a propitiatory sacrifice unto God for expiating all the sins of the Elect as was fore-signified and typified by all those expiatory levitical sacrifices under the Old Testament whether those which were generally called by the name of offering under which were comprehended all sacrifices both of living beasts and of things destitute of life as flowre oyle frankincense and such-like or those which were more strictly called by the name of sacrifice and were of living beasts and therefore conjoyned with shedding of bloud as the word in the original implyeth which cometh from a root signifying to kill and slay hence it is that our crucified Lord doth here get the name both of an offering and sacrifice This action of Christ is illustrated next from its fruit and efficacy to wit the rendering of God well-pleased with Christ His offering up Himself and with the persons and performances of true Believers for His sake as sweet smelling odours by reason of their likenesse unto and agreement with our spirits are well-pleasing and satisfying unto such as find them Doct. 1. Whatever duties of mercy and kindnesse we do discharge unto our neighbour we do not sufficiently imitate God therein neither perform service acceptable to Him if they flow not from a principle of love to our neighbours good and edification and be not directed thereunto as the great end of our work next to the glory of God and therefore a man may do many externall duties of love and yet not be accepted of God when his great aim is to be seen of men Matth. 6. 2. or to merit heaven by his good works Rom. 9. 31 32. without any inward compassion or affection to his neighbour or a sincere aim towards his good for the Apostle sheweth we do only then rightly imitate God in the duties of kindnesse and love when all we do floweth from the inward affection of love and is from love to our neighbour directed to his good while he saith walk in love 2. Our walking in love to our neighbour as it is formerly explained and when it floweth from the fountain of love to God is an evidence of adoption and of one who is a dear childe to God for having spoken of their near relation to God as being His dear children he presently enjoyneth them to make so much evident by their walking in love 3. That God the Father doth pardon the sins of the Elect having given His Son unto death to purchase pardon for them doth speak His love unto those whom He doth pardon and that Jesus Christ did willingly give Himself to death for them doth no lesse speak His unspeakable love unto them also So that they are equally loved both by the Father and the Son for he saith as Christ also hath loved us the particle also relateth to the love of the Father in pardoning for Christs sake whereof he presently spoke 4. So necessary is love among Christians together with those many duties which flow from it So many are the snares and difficulties which Satan our own corrupt natures and our mutual infirmities do create in our way to keep us from it that God seeth it necessary to propose the love both of the Father and the Son as two most powerfull adamants to draw our backward hearts up towards it for saith he Walk in love as Christ also hath loved us 5. As Christs love to lost sinners being firmly believed is a strong argument constraining those whom He hath so loved to walk in love towards others that being one of the great things required by Him from those whom He loveth Joh. 15. 12. So this love of Christ to us ought to be a pattern and copy to which we are to be conformed in our love towards others and therefore our love ought to be free for so was His Job 15. 16 It ought to be fruitfull for so was His Gal. 1. 4. it ought to be constant for so was His Job 13. 1. it ought to be discreet not encouraging or humouring the person beloved in sin for so was His Matth. 16. 23. And walk in love as Christ hath loved us saith he 6. Then do we consider the love of Christ aright and so as to be effectually incited to our duty from the consideration of it when we look upon it in those effects which flowed from it and especially
was as not to question far lesse deny but confidently avow what he now by grace is and that because not only the joynt consideration of both maketh them shine forth more clearly in their own colours but also our fixing our eye upon the former without avowing the latter doth breed discouragement unthankfulnesse and in progresse of time heartlesse dispare of an outgate from the wofull state wherein we apprehend our selves yet to be for the Apostle representeth to their view both those joyntly Ye were sometimes darknesse but now ye are light 3. Believers can never attain to read the happinesse of their present state through grace so long as they fix their eye only upon what they are in themselves nor yet untill they consider what they are in Christ and by vertue of that fulnesse of perfections in Him which not only floweth forth to them in the streams according to their measure Joh. 1. 16. but also is imputed to them in the fountain 1 Cor. 5. 21. and therefore may be looked upon by them as their own for although he calleth them darknesse absolutely and in themselves yet they are light not in themselves but in the Lord Christ. 4. Our former darknesse of ignorance and profanity wherein we have for a long time lived is so far from being an argument to make us continue in our former wofull course that on the contrary we ought from the consideration thereof be incited to take up our selves and live more tenderly for the time to come seing the time past of our life may suffice usto have walked in a godlesse course 1 Pet. 4. 3. for Paul maketh this an argument why they should not any longer partake with obstinate sinners in their godlesse course for saith he ye were sometimes darknesse 5. Neither long continuance in sin already even to wearinesse nor yet any conviction of the shame and dammage which do attend it are sufficient to make a man abandon and quit it throughly except there be a gracious change wrought in him chiefly as to his inward state from that which he sometimes was for he mentioneth this gracious change of their inward state as that wherein the strength of the present argument doth ly whereby he would disswade them from being partakers with them for ye were sometimes darknesse but now are ye light in the Lord. 6. As all spirituall priviledges in generall are bestowed upon us that we may improve them both for our comfort and also for enabling and inciting to duty So the more we enjoy of light whether external light in preaching of the Word or the internal light of knowledge in the mind we ought to improve it the more by walking according to that light else our condemnation shall be greater Joh. 3. 18. for from their priviledge of being light in the Lord he inferreth walk as children of light Vers. 9. For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth THe Apostle in way of parenthesis doth give a reason of the former consequence or why their being now light in the Lord did bind them to walk as children of light and consequently not to partake with obstinate sinners in their sin and withall sheweth wherein that walking doth consist The reason is taken from the new creature and habits of grace in the heart called here the Spirit as Rom. 7. 25. Gal. 5. 22. and are the same with the light of grace by the Spirit of God spoken of ver 8. Now he sheweth the fruit of this light or of those gracious habits consisteth in the exercise of all Christian vertues which are here summed up in three 1. Goodnesse whereby we are inclined to communicate what good is in us for the advantage of our neighbour both in his spirituall 1 Pet. 4. 10. and bodily Gal. 6. 10. estate 2. Righteousnesse whereby we deal righteously in all our transactions with others And 3. Truth whereby we carry our selves sincerely being free from error hypocrisie or dissimulation whether towards God or men So the force of the argument cometh to this Such a walking as he did enjoyn was the native fruit and result of their being made light in the Lord by the Spirit of God and therefore they were obliged to it Doct. 1. It is the duty of Christs Ministers not only to presse upon the Lords people the practice of holinesse in generall but also to condescend upon and accordingly to presse the exercise of those particular vertues both to God and men wherein holinesse doth consist otherwise people will readily place most of holinesse in those things wherein it consisteth least Matth. 23. 23. for Paul having exhorted them to walk as children of the light doth here shew wherein that walking doth consist even in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth 2. None can walk as a childe of light or practise those duties wherein such a walk consisteth in a way acceptable to God but he who is a childe of light truely regenerate and acteth from a principle of grace in the heart Whatever floweth from an unrenewed heart how specious soever is but a shadow and imperfect imitation of the childe of light in this christian walk as an ape would imitate a man or a violent motion doth resemble that which is natural and floweth from an inward principle for he sheweth the exercise of goodnesse righteousnesse and truth wherein our walking as a childe of light consisteth is the fruit of the Spirit or of the root of grace in the heart wrought by the Spirit of God For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness c. 3. As it concerneth Christians to walk suitably unto their state and priviledges So they would seriously consider in order to their walking thus that holinesse of life is the native fruit and result of their being in a gracious state or of the work of grace in the heart and therefore that they are not only obliged to lead an holy life in way of duty and gratitude but a necessity also doth ly upon them to it if so they be renewed and as they would not evidence themselves to be yet in their unrenewed state for having exhorted them to walk as children of light or suitably to the state of grace he inforceth the exhortation by shewing that such a walking is the native fruit and necessary result of being in such a state For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse c. 4. A facility and easinesse to communicate what is in us for our neighbours good and advantage doth well consist with the exercise of righteousnesse whereby we give every man his due and do require of him what is our due from him for he conjoyneth the exercise of those two while he saith the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse 5. As the grace of sincerity and freedom from dissimulation and hypocrisie is a necessary ingredient in the exercise of all other vertues So our walking answerably unto
that state of light unto which we are called must be extended unto duties of all sorts not only to duties of goodnesse and righteousnesse towards our neighbour but also to duties towards God so as we imbrace those Truths which He holdeth forth in Scripture without all mixture of Error yea and take Him for our party in every duty as being the only judge of our sincerity for he saith The fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth Vers. 10. Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. BEfore the Apostle use any moe arguments to inforce the former precept he doth first resume and explain the precept it self And first he explaineth the affirmative part thereof by giving one direction necessary to be practised by those who would walk as children of light even that by diligent search and enquiry they prove and try according to God's will revealed in His Word Isa. 8. 20. what is acceptable and well pleasing unto Him in every step of their way Doct. 1. There is no walking as a childe of light or suitably unto that gracious state to which we are called except we conform our selves not unto this world Rom. 12. 2. or to what may bring about our own advantage and so gratifie our lusts Matth. 5. 29. but unto what is acceptable to God and prescribed unto us as the rule of duty in His Word for this proving of what is acceptable unto Him is required not for it self or to rest thereon but to regulate our practice accordingly See ver 11. doct 1. and is called-for as a necessary concomitant of walking like children of light as is clear from the grammatical construction according to which this verse is to be joyned with the close of the eighth so that it runneth thus Walk as children of the light proving what is acceptable 2. We cannot conform our selves unto what is acceptable to the Lord and consequently cannot walk as children of light except we make a serious search and enquiry into the rule of duty and acceptation revealed in the Word yea and do what we do that we may come up to that rule and therefore we walk not acceptably when either we do things rashly without deliberation Prov. 19. 2. or doubtingly after deliberation Rom. 14. 23. yea nor when the thing done is in it self right and acceptable but we do it not from that ground but to gratifie our own lusts Matth. 6. 2. or the lusts of others Gal. 1. 10. for in order to this walking he requireth them to prove what is acceptable to the Lord as the rule by which they were to walk 3. It is not sufficient to make this inquiry in order to some few and weighty actions of our life but in order to all whether of greater or lesser concernment whether advantage or losse may probably follow upon our conforming of our selves unto this rule for the direction is indefinit without any limitation or restriction unto this action or that and therefore it ought to be extended unto all Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. 4. The finding out of what is acceptable unto the Lord especially in some intricate cases is not easily attained there must be an accurate search together with an excercising our selves in the practice of those things which we already know to be acceptable that so we may experimentally know them to be such and get our knowledge bettered in those things whereof we are yet ignorant Joh. 7. 17. for the word rendred proving signifieth an accurate proof not so much by argument as by trial and experience as gold is tried in the fire Iam. 1. 12. Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. Vers. 11. And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darknesse but rather reprove them HE explaineth next the negative part of the former precept as it was expressed ver 7. First by discharging them to be accessory any of those wayes mentioned ver 7. doct 3. to the sins of wicked men called here works of darknesse because they flow usually from the darknesse of ignorance Act. 3. 17. and are the works of unrenewed men who are nothing but darknesse See ver 8. are contrary to the light of Gods revealed will Joh. 3. 20. and are usually committed in the dark the very actors being ashamed to do them openly 1 Thess. 5. 7. and because they bring those who live and die in them without repentance unto utter darknesse Matth. 25. 30. They are also called unfruitfull works because they not only bring no advantage unto those who do commit them Rom. 6. 21. but also much hurt and dammage even the wages of sin which is death Rom. 6. 23. Next by commanding them to reprove convincingly those works of darknesse and the parties guilty of them and this though chiefly by their contrary good works Heb. 11. 7. yet not only by those but also by the word of admonition and reproof Eccles. 7. 5. as occasion should offer and Gods glory with the edification of their neighbour should seem unto spiritual prudence to call for it Besides what is already observed from a parallel place ver 7. doct 1. hence Learn 1. Then do we make an approven search and enquiry into what is acceptable unto the Lord when we do not satisfie our selves with the naked knowledge of what He approveth Rom. 2. 18. nor yet do only labour to defend by force of reason or sufferings what we find to be truth after search against gain-sayers 1 Cor. 13. 2 3. but do also make it the rule of practice by practising or for bearing accordingly for the Apostle having commanded them ver 10. to prove what is acceptable unto the Lord doth here enjoyn them to abstain from that which they could not but by searching find to be displeasing to Him while he saith and have no fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darknesse 2. Though we are not simply and in all cases to abstain from the fellowship of wicked men but may freely converse with such of them as we are bound unto either by the law of necessity Psal. 120. 5 6. or by any civil 1 Pet. 2. 18. religious 1 Cor. 7. 12. or natural bond Eph. 6. 1 2. yet no ty of that kind doth give us warrant to partake with them in their sins and therefore we are to eschew all unnecessary and voluntary fellowship and familiarity with them Psal. 26. 4. lest thereby we be drawn to walk in their wayes Prov. 22. 24 25. and they be hardened in their evil course and kept from being ashamed 2 Thess. 3. 14. for he forbiddeth absolutely all fellowship with them in their sins and consequently whatever may bring us under that hazard if so it can be eschewed without the neglect of any other duty And have no fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darknesse 3. We ought to look upon sin in its blackest colours of shame digrace losse of our time strength and of all other expence consumed upon it
for her advantage Prov. 8. 30. with Gal. 2. -20. not for what is hers but for her self Hos. 14. 4 and not in words only but in deeds also testifying His love by the effects Joh. 15. 13. and in the constancie of His love who loveth whom He loveth unto the end Joh. 13. -1. even notwithstanding of their infirmities Psal. 89. 30 33. such ought the husband's love to be Doct. 1. Though husbands are not to suffer their wives to exercise dominion and authority over them that being contrary to the Ordinance of God and the good both of husband and wife ver 22. 23. yet seing the nature of men and of husbands in particular with relation to their wives are sufficiently bent of their own accord to exercise any power and authority they have and rather to exceed their due than to keep within it therefore neither ought they themselves so much to mind their power neither is it so necessary for them to be minded thereof by others as to be carefull how to use their power and authority well and as it ought for therefore the Apostle though he commanded the wives to submit yet he doth not expresly bid the husbands rule over their wives but husbands love your wives as thinking it more fit to let them understand how to use their power well than to stir them up to the exercise of it 2. The great and main duty which an husband as an husband ought to learn and so learn as to practise it is love to his wife and so to love her as to make love kyth in all his deportment towards her and in all those other duties which he oweth to her this being that one thing in the husband which sweetneth the yoke of subjection laid upon the wife giveth her courage under it and maketh her willingly submit unto it when it receiveth such a sweet return from her husband for Paul doth hold forth this as the husbands great lesson and the sum of all his other duty Husbands love your wives 3. There is no husband whatever he be for birth parts authority or power who is not tyed to love his wife and to evidence his love to her in all those duties mentioned in opening up the Text for he speaketh indefinitly unto all Husbands love your wives 4. Neither is there any wife to whom all those duties flowing from the fountain of love are not due by her husband No meannesse of birth Esther 2. 17. no personall infirmity 1 Sam. 1. 5. adultery being excepted Matth. 19. 9 nor frowardnesse of nature Joh. 19. 17. do prejudge her of them for he speaketh indefinitly also of the wives Husbands love your wives 5. Though it concerneth husbands and wives and others also who are tied together by mutuall relations as masters and servants parents and children to take some sort of inspection one of another lest any of their relations come short of their duty 2 King 5. 13. yet it concerneth every one most to make conscience of his own duty not only to God but also to his relations and that as for other reasons so for this There can be no greater encouragement to stir up his relations to make conscience of their duty to him for he commandeth every one to mind their own duty most the wives to submit themselves the husbands to love their wives and so in the rest 6. As Jesus Christ hath deigned Himself to undergo the relation of an husband to His Church So this and those other relations taken on by Him are not empty titles He doth the duties which all such relations do bind to even to the utmost And particularly He is such an husband that for love to His Church and all other duties flowing from love He is exemplary unto all other husbands seing greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down His life for His friends Joh. 14. 13. for as Paul implyeth here and in the verses following that Christ is the Churches husband so he holdeth forth His love as a pattern to be imitated by all Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church 7. The love which a husband carrieth to his wife ought to be founded not upon beauty riches health or any such thing only which is subject unto decay but also and principally upon that unchangable foundation of the love of Christ unto His Church which is here held forth not only as a pattern but as an argument also and the reason wherefore husbands ought to love their wives even as Christ also loved the Church 8. As those whom Christ doth love with a speciall love are only His that is real Believers who are subject to Him ver 24. So Jesus Christ did give Himself to death not for all and every one Joh. 17. 9. but only for His Church which is His All and consisteth of some of all Nations and of all ranks in the world in which respect only Christ is said to have died for all 1 Tim. 2. 6. for Paul astricteth both His love and His death to the Church As Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it See some further Doctrines gathered from the like words ver 2. Vers. 26. That he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word HE insisteth upon this excellent pattern of love by shewing two ends why Christ from love did give Himself for His Church The first whereof is attained in the present life and expressed in this verse to wit that He might sanctifie those for whom He gave Himself Which sanctifying work as it is here taken doth comprehend that whole complex businesse of translating the Elect from the state of sin and death to the state of grace and life even our regeneration justification and the gracious change of our dispositions or sanctification strictly so called as Joh. 17. 17. which he calleth a cleansing of us expressing the manner how Christ doth sanctifie His Church even by doing away the guilt of sin or obligation to wrath because of sin in justification Rom. 8. 1. and the filth power and activity of sin in the renovation of our natures after His own Image Rom. 6. 14. which cleansing work is here described from the externall means and instruments by which Christ doth cleanse His Church and make application of the vertue and power of His death and sufferings in order to that end And those are 1. the Sacrament of Baptism called the washing of water because of the externall rite and element used in that Sacrament and cleansing is ascribed to this washing not as if there were any vertue bestowed upon the water by God whereby grace is conferred and really wrought 1 Pet. 3. 21. but because though it be God alone who wholly and effectually doth sanctifie and cleanse us 1 Cor. 3. 7. yet this Sacrament as also the other are made use of by Him not only to represent Christ and those gracious saving works of His 1 Corinth