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A05995 A commentarie vpon the first chapter of the epistle of Saint Paul, written to the Ephesians Wherein, besides the text fruitfully explained: some principall controuersies about predestination are handled, and diuers arguments of Arminius are examined. By Mr. Paul Bayne, sometimes preacher of Gods word at Saint Andrevves in Cambridge. Baynes, Paul, d. 1617. 1618 (1618) STC 1635; ESTC S113832 242,987 440

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dominion toward his Church which is his Quee●e and spouse is more amiably tempered and neerly affected then is his gouernment ouer any other This will appeare by considering how much neerer and communicatiue he is to vs then to Angels creatures otherw se most excellent First looke as the naturall head and members are of the selfe-same speciall kinde for nature the head standeth of skinne flesh bones and so doe the members also thus it is that Christ is one with vs in regard he hath taken the selfe-same nature with vs standing as well of that which is outward and sensitiue as of that which is inward intellectuall In this he commeth neerer vs then Angels he tooke not the nature of Angels but the seede of Abraham Hebr. 2. Secondly Christ doth by his sufferings procure for vs all blessings spirituall and temporall maketh a purchase of them with his bloud Now he in his death respected not Angels in like kind that looke as Kings prouide many things for their Queenes which they doe not for other subiects so doth Christ for vs. Thirdly hee doth vnite vs to himselfe more neerely then Angels they are vnited to him by knowledge and loue such as doe come from the power of that vnderstanding and loue which they haue of their owne from the first creation but we are vnited heere by knowledge of faith and loue heereafter by glorious light loue such as Christ himselfe by his spirit begetteth in vs as the members of the body are vnited with nerues and sinnewes such bands as take their beginning from the head Fourthly hee doth communicate with vs that whole life of grace and glory which wee haue and shall receiue as the naturall members haue no sense or motion which floweth not into them from the head But the Angels haue a blessed life for the substance not comming to them by Christ considered as a mediator euen that blessed life in which first they were created that which commeth to them is onely an augmentation of happinesse their illumination and their ioy being in many regards much increased they who learne by that they obserue in the Church falling out what doe they heare thinke we by inioying the presence of God-man now ascended and glorified and they who ioy in heauen at the conuersion of one sinner how many waies by Christ is their ioy inlarged Fiftly hee doth not direct them as he doth vs hee doth gouerne and direct them as a King doth voluntary ready subiects by an externall signification of his will onely but he doth direct and moue vs outwardly by signifying his will inwardly by sending his spirit which might mooue vs with efficacy to that hee showeth as a naturall head doth the members of it Sixtly and lastly he doth not confirme them as he confirmeth vs for he hath neither gotten by his death for them this grace of perseuerance to the end neyther doth hee shadow them and follow them with ayds outward and inward as hee doth vs left our faith should be preuailed against they haue beene no doubt confirmed from the beginning both by force of their election preuenting them with actuall grace which made them with effect execute what euer thing it was in which it pleased God to proue their obedience if they haue any confirmation from Christ their King it is such an one as doth make them strong to subdue euill Angels or any opposing them in businesses in which their ministery by Christ is imployed such an one may be gathered Dan. 10.13 Vse 1 First then seeing Christ is giuen vs as a head so neerely and communicatiuely ioyned vnto vs let vs abhorre that sacriledgious vsurpation which the Pope committeth while hee challengeth vs to be head of the Church That which the scripture doth attribute as proper to Christ is not to be giuen to any other But they distinguish that the Scripture maketh Christ the principall and inuisible head but this hinders not why there should not be a visible secondary ministeriall head Ans There needeth not a ministeriall head to supply Christs bodily absence For as Kings are in body present at Court onely and yet well enough gouerne their bodies politicke So Christ in regard of his bodily presence in heauen can well enough rule that part of his body in earth without the supply of a visible head Were the Pope a ministeriall head hee might doe that which the principall whose roome he supplieth as Viceroyes do that in the kingdomes ouer which they are set which the Kings might do in their owne persons whose roomes they supply But the Pope cannot doe any inward thing which the head of the Church is to perform 3. Were there a ministeriall head there should be a Lord-like power ouer part of the Church out of Christs person in some other creature then should there be more Lords then one contrary to that in 1 Cor. 12.5 There are diuisions of ministeries but one Lord. Looke as great Lords in earth haue in their houses ministeries of more lesse honor from the steward to the skullerie but no Lord-like or Master-like power in any beside themselues so is in Christ and his Church which is the house of God wherin he is the Lord Apostles others hauing more or lesse honourable seruices but no master-like power ouer the meanest of their fellow-seruants Vse 2 Wee see hence the great grace of Christ who doth so neerely vnite himselfe with vs. Kings in earth the neerer they come to any Subiect the more they show their loue but this is the greatest grace they can show when they make themselues to become one with any of their subiects Thus Christ could not shew vs greater grace then to make vs one with himselfe as a coniugall head ruling ouer vs. We see hence that wee may assure our selues we shall lacke nothing who haue Christ become a head to vs in so neere and communicatiue sort as this is There are some officiall parts in the body which haue that they haue not for themselues onely but for the whole body Thus the Stomacke hath meates the Liuer blood such is the Head Now it were an vnnaturall part for these to keepe that they haue to themselues as for the Liuer to keepe in al the bloud and not impart it by veines to the rest of the body so Christ who can doe nothing which doth not beseeme him he hauing for all of vs the fulnesse of grace and glory according to that Psal 16.2 My good is for the Saints he cannot but be most ready to communicate with vs euery thing that is good onely let vs renew our faith and repentance that so we stop not the passage of this spirit from him our head If the naturall head of the naturall body be neuer so full of spirits if the vessels which conueigh it be once obstructed as in the Palsey the body then is without sense and motion Wee may apply it to our selues c. Obserue secondly that he saith
the meaning and parts of it and so come to the instructions which it affordeth For the dependance of it on that which goeth before it may seem brought in either as an explication of those words in the verse before the mystery of his Will or as an effect intended by some thing which is in the former verse reported The first sense is to be taken vp after this sort God hath opened to vs the mystery of his will out of his gracious pleasure Where I meane nothing by the mystery of his will but that he meant in fulnesse of time to gather to head in Christ with those things already in heauen all things in earth euen a vniuersall Church through the face of the earth this cannot as I thinke be an exposition of those former words For to say nothing that the Glosse is harder then the Text words which are adioyned by way of construction are not commonly so farre remooued from them they conster as you may see in the 7. and 13. verses of this Chapter and all abroad Againe the Apostle by other equiualent termes in the 13. verse doth open what he meaneth by the mystery of Gods will viz. no other thing then the word of truth and Gospell of saluation Thirdly that mystery made knowne did worke in them all wisedome and vnderstanding made them wise in good full measure to saluation but the knowledge of this that God would call and gather to his Christ an Vniuersall Church in earth is such a point in which men made wise to saluation were long ignorant as Peter himselfe Now then if it be no explanation then must it depend on the former as an effect intended and flowing from something before mentioned Now the matters in the verse precedent are but two First the reuealing of the Gospell to Paul with some others Secondly the gracious good will which God did purpose within himselfe concerning this benefit of opening his hidden sauing wisedome to the sonnes of men Some ioyne it with the former God did open to vs Iewes and Gentiles the Gospell that thus hee might in that full time which he had appointed gather to all things now in heauen when he wrote all the things in earth also euen a Church vniuersall But neither would I subscribe to this exposition For first it taketh the persons to whom God is said to haue opened the mystery to be both Iewes Gentiles yea Gentiles principally whereas Paul verse 12. seemeth to appropriate this passage of his Epistle from the 7. verse to the 13 verse vnto the Iewes only Secondly this taketh that fulnesse of times to note the fulnesse of that particular season wherein God had purposed to publish his sauing wisedome to the Gentiles but the Text hath it not the fulnes of any certain time as in Gal. 4.3 but the fulnesse of times indefinitely and vniuersally Thirdly the publishing of the Gospell to all Nations did not gather those iust spirits before in heauen but here they are as properly said to be gathered into Christ their head as the things on earth as when God is said to reconcile all things in the bloud of Christ as well the things in heauen as the things in earth reconciliation doth as properly agree to the heauenly things as earthlie so here by proportion for otherwise he would haue said that he might gather to all things which were now ioyned to their head in heauen all the things in earth also Lastly all in earth through all times and places were not gathered by that first publishing the Gospell to Iew and Gentile but all who then were ordayned to life through the whole world Now these are not al absolutely but respectiuely in comparison of that few and small remnant which out of our Nation God sometime gleaned It remaineth then that these words come in as showing the intended effect which God did ayme at in his gracious purpose of opening the hidden sauing wisedome to the sonnes of men viz. that thus he might in the fulnesse of those seasons which himselfe in wisedome fore-appointed haue gathered to a head in his Christ all things both those who now were by hauing this reuelation gathered in heauen and all the things which are in earth through all places and times to the end of the world This I take to be the truest coherence both because gathering to a head in Christ is the effect to which God doth destinate this gracious purpose of opening the Gospell and also for that this purpose of opening the Gospell outwardly and inwardly or at least inwardly is extended to euery one through all ages of the world who is to be vnited as a member to Christ the head so that no more nor fewer haue beene are or shall be gathered then those whom God did purpose to teach in euery generation Lastly the words fit no sense but this which to shew we must search a little the meaning of them First touching the time Secondly the thing to be done in time In the time two things must be opened first what is meant by dispensation secondly by fulnesse of times Dispensation is a word taken from Stewards and such as haue the keeping of things in common and are to dis●ribute them as they see fit for singular persons and occasions To dispense then is to distribute that I haue in common as is fitting in wisedome to persons and occasions in particular Now the dispensation of times is put by a Meton of the adiunct for fulnes of times wisely dispensed The fulnesse of times indefinitely vnuiuersally noting the consummation of all those seasons succesciuely which God had appointed for the gathering of his children In the thing to be done marke the Action that God might gather to a head in Christ that is the force of the word Secondly marke the Obiect of this action all things that is all persons who in Gods counsell belonged as members making that body whereof Christ is head Thirdly Note the point as it were in which all are to be gathered into one or vnited in Christ in him Hauing propounded the obiect he doth explaine them by a distribution taken from the place all things which now are in heauen with Christ gloriously conioyned to him and all who are in earth that is who are in all places and all times to be gathered to Christ in the earth The summe of them is thus much God I told you did open to vs the Gospell of saluation which thing he did according to that his gracious pleasure whereby it pleased him to open it to all his chosen which he purposed freely within himselfe that thus by opening his will he might in the consummation of all those seasons which his wisedome hath dispensed that he might I say haue gathered as it were to a head all things in Christ both those members who had in their times this Mistery reuealed to them and are now gloriously vnited to him in the heauens and all those who by
glory would deny these glorious gifts which hee was about to intreate When men come to aske at those who haue enough of that they seeke and to aske it in such measure onely as that it is not any thing for those they sue vnto to vouchsafe they easily perswade themselues that they shall speede This maketh Paul still set God before him as hauing that in him for which he prayeth The God of peace sanctifie you throughout 1 Thes 5. Subdue those lusts which fight against your soules So seeking the consummation or perfecting of the beleeuing Hebrewes hee doth set God before him as who had from the lowest humiliation brought the head of them to glory Heb. 13. Thus the Church Act. 4. seeking courage and that wonders might be wrought they set God before them as the God of power who had made heauen earth sea c. Vse Wherefore learne thus to helpe thy faith Wouldest thou haue remission of sinne Consider of God as a God with whom there is plenty of redemption or forgiuenesse Wouldest thou haue ease in any misery and griefe consider of him as a father of all mercy and consolation when thou commest to him this doth strengthen faith and enflame affection We seeke things more securely when we know them to be where we are in looking them and wee follow them more affectionately when now we are gotten after a manner into the sight of them Doct. 2 Obserue secondly that euen true beleeuers haue great want of heauenly wisedome as children and youth when they haue in their measure that wisdome which belongeth to their kinde yet they want in great measure the same wisedome in which they partake So it is with Gods children when now they haue that wisedome from aboue in some degree yet they are many degrees short of that which is to be attained Yea our Sauiour himselfe the head of vs did so receiue wisedome that there was place for growth and increase in it Luke 2. fine What doth the want of wisedome in children which we may not obserue in our selues They see not things together with the end they worke vnto and hence it is they count such things good as to their senses seeme so for the present They thinke those loue them who cocker them and that those doe not loue them who reproue them or hold them in more then they are willing Thus we thinke it happinesse to haue that contenteth vs to be free from that which is grieuous to flesh or spirit We thinke God loues while he smiles on vs and that he doth not loue vs when he doth frowne on vs and make vs drink a wormewood draught day by day Againe children through want of wisedome are vnwilling to suffer that should doe them good backeward to that would doe them good another day for a matter of present pleasure will part with things of no small profit Are not the best of vs vnwilling to come vnder Gods yoake though there is no other way to finde rest to our soules are wee not most backeward to renew our faith repentance to endeauour further the worke of mortification Doe wee not for a little pleasure of sinfull lusts part with our peace yea the health of our spirits too often Thirdly children for want of wisedome forget the beatings past when now the smart is ouer and fall to the same faults which haue made them smart heretofore and is it not so with vs How soone is the griefe of sin escaped vs forgotten how soone doe we stumble at the same stone returning to sin in the same kinde wherein we haue formerly offended Finally as children and youth through want of wisedome speake and doe many things full of folly so we let fall in word and deede alas how many things in which the worke and direction of true wisedome is wanting Vse Let vs then labour to finde this want in our selues and see our folly that we may be made wise The more we grow in yeares the more we see what lacke of ciuill wisedome wee had in youth So it should be here the auncienter we grow in Christianitie the more wee should discerne the folly in vs and want of wisedome which is from aboue Let vs not be dismaid who are conscious of lack this way things are not begun perfected at once wisdom must get vp frō one degree to another in vs. Doct. 3 Obserue thirdly that he prayeth for reuelation as well as wisedome that we haue neede not onely of wisedome whereby to vnderstand but of light manifesting the spirituall things which are to be vnderstood of vs Hee prayeth both for one and other wisedome and reuelation To haue inward facultie of seeing is one thing to haue outward light by meane wherof to see is another Light must come to light before we can see the light in the eye must meete with the outward light of the Sunne or a Candle or some other lightsome body or nothing is perceiued So the light of wisedome which is inherent in the Soule must haue shining to it this light of reuelation which doth make manifest things spirituall or though our sight be neuer so quicke we shall be inuironed with darknesse The spirit is fitly ergo compared with fire which hath not onely heate reso●uing numbnesse and making starke ioynts actiue but it hath light gratefull to the eye of the body So the spirit hath both loue which warmeth our frozen hearts and affections and also this light of reuelation which delighteth the eye of the vnderstanding and manifesteth to the view of it things that are heauenly Vse Wherefore let vs seeke to God for this comfortable effect of his spirit Euen as he can lay his hand on this bodily light by a cloud intercepting the shining of it so can hee with-draw this illumination of his spirit and cause vs to grope as it were in darkenesse though the eye of our mindes were neither shut vp nor otherwise troubled Doe we not sometimes see things comfortable and on a sodaine feele them eclipsed when no sinne hath inwardly altered the state of our soules this heauenly illumination now spreading it selfe through the word of promise we set before vs now presently withdrawne or much obscured It is a wonder how weake men of vnderstanding and godly wisedome should see clearely ioyfully the things of their peace yea the will of God in which they are to walke and men for Conscience equall to them for vnderstanding and godly wisedome farre before should walke onely inabled with much adoe to carry on their course in faith and obedience I cannot finde any reason for it but in this outward reuelation which shineth farre more brightly to the one then the other Now by moone-light a weake eye will reade or write better then the sharpest sight can by twi-light when now day first breaketh Doct. 4 Obserue fourthly who it is that worketh in vs all true wisdome euen God by the spirit of Christ I tolde you it is therefore
This is plaine that this his soueraignety is a consequent following on his ascension into heauen It is plaine likewise that he is so ascended into heauen that the heauens must containe him till he come to iudgement Acts 3. Looke as Kings are crowned in the chiefe Cities of their Kingdomes and keepe their residence in their Pallaces neere vnto them So it was decent that our Sauiour should be crowned in this heauenly Ierusalem and keepe his residence as it were in his heauenly mansion Vse 1 This should draw vp our hearts to heauen whither our Sauiour is entred where hee now sitteth in Maiesty Should wee haue some friend highly aduanced though in parts very remote from vs wee would long to see them and make a iourney to them Vse 2 This doth assure vs that all wee who are Christs shall in due time be brought to heauen where he is the head and members must not still be diuorced beside that hee prayed that where he is there we should be also Iohn 17 Vse 3 We see Vbiquity and all reall presence as reall is opposed to spirituall not to be an imaginary presence wee see it ouerthrowne For if hee fit in heauen at Gods right hand then to sit at Gods right hand is not to be made euery where present for hee could not be said to be made euery where in the heauens without a contradiction no more then to be made infinite within limited bounds of being I take it for granted that the heauens can signifie nothing but a place limited for the extent of it And it is against the Papists a sufficient reason Hee is ascended and sitteth in Heauen Ergo he is not heere according to the Angels reasoning Math. 28.6 He is not heere for hee is risen they did not know this new Philosophy that Christ might be risen from that place and yet be corporally present in it to Doct. Lastly marke the distinction of worlds Obserue There is a world to come in which Christ and those who are Christs shall reigne for euer This world waxeth old the fashion of it passeth it is called the present euill world but there is a world to come in which all things shall be restored which God hath made subiect to his Christ as the heyre of it Heb. 1.8 in which we shall be ioynt-heyres with him Abraham had a promise not onely of seede but that he should be heyre of this world a type wherof the land of Canaan was euen as the first Adam and all that came from him had a world this in which wee are prepared for them So the second Adam and all that are his haue a world also belonging vnto them Vse Let vs then comfort our selues in this though in this present euill world wee suffer many things there is a world which shall last for aye in which we shall reigne with Christ blessed for euer In this world to come shall all teares be wiped from our eyes and all our sinnes so be forgiuen that there shall be no step nor print appearing of them forgiuen not in regard of sentence only interloquutory but in regard of full declaration and execution to which that place in Mathew seemeth to haue respect He that blasphemeth against the spirit shall not be forgiuen neither in this world nor in the world to come Now followeth the speciall Soueraignty And hath giuen him a head ouer all to his Church which is his body the fulnesse of him who filleth all in all VERSE 22 For vnderstanding these words wee must note that the word head is vsed sometime for one who in any kinde is before and aboue other and in this large sense Christ is the head of Angels all men Man is the head of the Woman Christ of Man God of Christ 1 Cor. 11. He is the head of all principalities and powers But here it signifieth that Christ is so ouer his Church that hee is in a more neere and communicatiue sort conioyned with it as the head is with the body and members which are annexed and subiected to it A head ouer all This may be referred to the Church as making a comparison twixt Christs superiority ouer his Church and Angels in this sense God gaue Christ that hee should be a head principally and aboue all other things beside to his Church Thus Ch. 6. Aboue all put on the shield of Faith or it may be referred to him who is giuen our head in this sense God gaue him to be a head to vs who is ouer all things because the speciall soueraignty is noted in his being a head This word being taken in the strictest acceptation and because it affordeth matter of further consideration we will take the latter sense to his Church This word Church sometime noteth one congregation of men called forth of the world as the Church at Corinth Cenchraea sometime it is taken to signifie the multitude of them who are foreknown of God and appointed to saluation for all who are gathethered by Gods effectuall calling in heauen and earth and who are in their time to be made partakers of his holy and effectuall calling Thus Heb. 12.28 we finde it taken thus here for all the body which doth make full and perfect Christ mystically considered is here to be vnderstood Which is his body Not his naturall but mysticall body The fulnesse That is which maketh him full and compleate as he is a head for a head without a body is maimed though otherwise such is his perfection and fulnesse that hee filleth all in all The summe is Though God hath set Christ ouer euery creature yet hee hath giuen him that he should be ouer his Church as a head in a more neere and communicatiue power him I say hath hee giuen to be a head to the whole multitude of belieuers who is in dignity and power aboue euery creature Now as hee is a head to the ●niuersity of true belieuers so the vnited mu titude of them are as a body mysticall to him ma●ing him full and compleat so farre forth as hee is a head him I say in whom dwelleth all fulnesse so that hee filleth all in all In the end of the 22. verse wee are to marke first that Christ is giuen to be a head to his Church secondly the quality of him giuen to be our head or of our head that is ouer all The Church is described from the mutuall respect which it standeth in to Christ as a head which is his ●ody Secondly from the effect of it to be gathered from those last words which is the fulnesse that is which maketh full him who filleth all in all Doct. The first thing to be obserued is that Christ is made as a head hauing a more neere an● communicatiue soueraignty ouer belieuers then ouer any other Looke as the King hath a more intimate and amiable superiority and regiment ouer his Queene then ouer any other subiect so it is heere in Christ our King whose