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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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engagements to enlarge His own Kingdom Psal. 2. 9. that before means and instruments be deficient for the propagation of the Gospel He will turn the hearts of desperate enemies and make most bitter persecutors to be eminent lively and painful Preachers so was it here He who persecuted us in times past now preacheth the Faith which once he destroyed 6. How patient ought the Church of Christ to be under saddest persecutions and how far from base despondency of spirit as if her case were wholly desperate and remedilesse seing Jesus Christ at an instant can carry captive her chiefest adversaries and make them to be her stoutest friends as appeareth from this He who persecuted us now preacheth 7. As godlesse persecutors propose unto themselves no lesse than the total overthrow and rooting-out of Truth though neither Men nor Devils shall be ever able to effectuate it Mat. 16. 18. so men may look if they repent not Luke 13. 3. to be justly charged with the guilt of all that evil which once they intended as if they had actually accomplished it although it was without their reach so to do for that Faith or Doctrine of Faith as Tit. 1. 13. which Paul at this time did preach is said once to have been destroyed by him because he aimed at no lesse and his sin before God was no lesse than if he had done it although the Lord in mercy did pardon it 1 Tim. 1. 13. Now preacheth the Faith which once he destroyed 8. We ought so to look upon notable changes which do fall out whether in particular persons or publick societies whether to the better or the worse as that we may see somewhat of God manifested in them either His Justice or Mercy Wisdom or Power some one Attribute of His or other and so as we may give a suitable return whether of fear or joy thankfulnesse or admiration or of any other sanctified frame of spirit and holy performance for which such a manifestation calleth for those Christians in Judea did so look upon this notable change in Paul as to see God's mercy and power manifested in it and accordingly with joy did give God thanks so much is imported in this They glorified God in me saith he 9. Whensoever God is pleased to make a man instrumental whether for our own particular good or the more publick benefit of Christ's Church as we would not be ingrateful unto the instruments themselves Judg. 9. 16 c. so neither are we to rest upon them ascribing the praise of what they do to them but as we would not provoke the Lord to smite them or at least to make them uselesse to us 1 Cor. 4. 6. we are to look unto God more than them ascribing the praise of what they do unto Him as that which is His proper right and due so do they ascribe to God the praise of any good which Paul did by his preaching They glorified God in me or concerning me 10. The more that God hath made it convincingly and from clear evidences manifest to the conscience of His People that a Work is owned and approven by Him and hath drawn an acknowledgement from them to that purpose unto His own praise it aggregeth the sin of those the more who would afterwards question or deny that Work to be His for the Apostle's scope in part is to aggrege the sin of his adversaries who denied him to be an Apostle immediately sent from Jesus Christ and that the Doctrine preached by him was the Truth of God from this that the Churches in Judea were convinced of the contrary and had acknowledged so much long since to the praise of God by giving glory unto Him on Paul's behalf so that those Galatians and the false Apostles were guilty of obscuring the glory of God shining forth in his Conversion and Office which was already acknowledged by others And they glorified God in me CHAP. II. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle addeth some further Evidences that both his Office and Doctrine were divine As first They were such as might abide the censure of the chief Apostles ver 1 2. Secondly In the main thing controverted which was about Circumcision the other Apostles did joyn with him in that they were not for but against the circumcizing of Titus ver 3. and for a weighty reason ver 4 5. Thirdly In that meeting which was at Jerusalem the other Apostles did find nothing for which to challenge either him or his Doctrine ver 6. but upon the contrary perceiving that Paul was called of God to be an Apostle ver 7. both from that divine assistance wherewith he was accompanied ver 8. and from those Apostolick gifts wherewith he was endued they acknowledged both him and Barnabas for Apostles ver 9. and all of them did part good friends the collecting of some supply to the poor Jews among the Gentiles being recommended by the rest to Paul ver 10. Fourthly He did rebuke Peter when in his practice he declined from the Doctrine taught by Paul concerning the abrogation of the Ceremonial Law and for any thing which appeareth to the contrary Peter in this debate did yeeld to Paul as having truth for him to ver 15. In the second part because this dispute about the Ceremonial Law did fly very high the false Apostles urging the observation of it as meritorious of justification therefore the Apostle turneth the force of the dispute against Justification by Works and proveth by several Arguments that we are justified by Faith only As first The believing Jews who had as much reason to boast in their works as any ver 15. did renounce all confidence in them for Justification ver 16. Next he preoccupieth an Objection and sheweth that this Doctrine of Justification by Faith without Works giveth no encouragement to sin ver 17. Because 1. it did presse the mortifying and destroying of sin ver 18. And 2. though it did free them from the Law in several respects yet not as it is the rule of an holy life ver 19. Yea 3. it doth tye the justified person more strictly to subdue sin and lead an holy life ver 20. Lastly he addeth a second Argument to prove that we are justified by Faith only because if we were justified by Works Free-grace and Christ's death should be uselesse ver 21. Vers. 1. THen fourteen years after I went up again to Jerusalem with Barnabas and took Titus with me also 2. And I went up by revelation and communicated unto them that Gospel which I preach among the Gentiles but privately to them which were of reputation lest by any means I should run or had run in vain THe Apostle first mentioneth another journey of his to Jerusalem together with the time when and the companions with whom he went and that extraordinary Instinct and Command from God which moved him to undertake that journey ver 1 2 And secondly sheweth that when he came to Jerusalem he did privately
from the strength of Nature or the Works of the Unregenerate and not the Works of the Regenerate also which are performed by the Grace of Christ he should have quite mistaken the question and not at all refuted his adversaries It doth therefore of necessity follow that the Apostle reasoneth against Justification by Works done in obedience to the Law in general and that he affirmeth we are justified only by Faith in opposition unto all Works of ours whatsoever which he proveth by two Arguments in this Chapter First because he himself and other Jews who though they enjoyed by birth and education as being born Members of the visible Church many priviledges beyond the Gentiles who were profane sinners and born aliens from God and therefore might have expected to be justified by their good works if so any could be justified that way Yet they knowing perfectly that all their Works done in obedience to the Law could never justifie or make them righteous before God and that only Faith in Christ would make them so righteous even they who had as much reason to boast of their Works as any other had renounced all confidence in their Works and betaken themselves only to Faith in Jesus Christ for Justification and hereby he leaveth unto them to gather what madnesse it were for those Galatians or any other of the Gentiles to rely upon the Works of the Law so as to be justified by them which he further confirmeth as it seemeth from Psal. 143. -2. affirming that no flesh whether Jew or Gentile shall be justified to wit by the Works of the Law which is here supplyed by the Apostle without adding to the sense The like addition of words for explication without wronging the sense is frequently used in the New Testament where Scriptures are cited out of the Old as Mat. 4. 10. compared with Deut. 6. 13. Heb. 10. 5. compared with Psal. 140. 7. Doct. 1. Though every man by nature is a childe of wrath and enemy to God Eph. 2. 3. as Nature speaketh that which is born with us and conveyed unto us from our parents by carnal generation Psal. 51. 5. Yet all those who are born within the visible Church have a right by nature unto Church-priviledges and to enjoy the external means of Grace and Salvation as Nature speaketh that which is born with us not of natural generation but of free-grace which God is pleased to honour His People with and to deny unto others for the Apostle here calleth himself and others come of Abraham who had been from that time upwards the only visible Church Psal. 147. 19 20. Jews by nature wherby he doth not simply design them to be men of such a Nation for that could make nothing to the Apostle's scope in the present argument besides that the Jew is here opposed to sinners of the Gentiles so it must relate some way to their spiritual state neither doth it import that much as if they had inherent holinesse and were altogether sinlesse by nature for this is contradicted by Scripture Rom. 3. 9. So the meaning must be that from their birth and because of God's love to them in making choice of them to be a Church to Himself above all Nations Deut. 7. 6. they were externally at least in covenant with God Deut. 29. 11. whereby they had a right to all Church-priviledges as of being under God's special care and government Isa. 4. 5 6. of enjoying the ordinary means of Salvation as they were capable of them Gen. 17. 12. And as it was with the Jews then so is it with those that are born within the visible Church now they are Christians by birth to wit in the sense presently mentioned for the visible Church under the New Testament and among the Gentiles hath succeeded to those priviledges which were enjoyed by the Church under the Old Rom. 11. 17. So that even young Infants are expresly called holy 1 Cor. 7. 14. to wit with an external and federal holinesse and on this account they have right to Baptism the seal of the Covenant which no Infidel can claim Act. 2. 38 39. We who are Jews by nature and not sinners of the Gentiles 2. The Doctrine of free Justification by Faith in Jesus Christ and not by Works was early opposed by Satan and heretical spirits and no Doctrine so much opposed as it was and that because no Truth is more necessary to be keeped pure than this is it being such a Truth as if it be keeped pure several other Truths are keeped pure also and if it fall many other Truths do also fall with it Therefore is it that Satan did so much labour and yet laboureth to bear it down for the defacing of this Truth was mainly aimed at by the false Apostles among those Galatians as appeareth from the Apostle his setting of himself so much to defend it That we might be justified by the Faith of Christ and not by the Works of the Law saith he 3. Concerning the nature of Justification we learn several things First That Justification is not the Lord 's making one who was before unjust to be just by working of habitual and inherent righteousnesse in him as the Papists do take it confounding Justification and Sanctification contrary to Scripture 1 Cor. 6. 11. But it is a judicial action whereby the Lord absolveth the sinner from death and wrath and adjudgeth him to life eternal for the word expressing this grace here is a judicial word taken from Courts of Justice which being attributed to the Judge is opposed to condemn Rom. 8. 33 34. and so signifieth to absolve and give sentence neither doth the Scripture ever make use of this word in any other sense where the justification of a sinner before God is spoken of Knowing that a man is not justified c. and that we might be justified Secondly The ground whereupon and the cause for which sinners are thus justified or absolved from wrath and adjudged to life eternal is not any Works which they do in obedience to the Law of God whether Ceremonial or Moral for Works are excluded while he saith A man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the Faith of Jesus Christ it is not except by the Faith c. as if Works were only excluded when Faith is not joyned with them as the Papists do read it but the word is well turned here by the adversative particle But as it is frequently in Scripture See chap. 1. 7. Mat. 12. 4. So that Works are simply excluded and Faith established as only having hand in this businesss which is more plainly asserted afterwards That we might be justified by the Faith of Christ and not by the Works of the Law by which are meaned both the Works of the Moral and Ceremonial Law as we cleared in the Exposition Thirdly The Works which are excluded from having hand in Justification are not only those which are done before conversion but also
which follow after and flow from the working of God's Spirit in us even those Works are imperfect Isa. 64. 6. and so cannot make us compleatly righteous and we do owe them to God in the mean time Luke 17. 10. and so they cannot satisfie divine Justice for the failings of the bypast time They are the work of God's Spirit in us Philip. 2. 13. and so we can merit nothing at God's hand by them for He excludeth the Works of the Law in general now the good Works of the Regenerate are such as are commanded by the Law and done in obedience to the Law besides that those false Apostles did admit a mixture of Faith and Works in Justification so that if the Apostle had not excluded even Works which flow from Faith they might have quickly agreed upon the point Man is not justified by the Works of the Law Fourthly That through vertue whereof we are thus justified and absolved by God is the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ performed by Himself while He was here on Earth both in doing what we should have done Mat. 3. 15. and suffering what we ought to have suffered Gal. 3. 13. which righteousnesse is not inherent in us but imputed to us Rom. 5. 17 18 19. as the sum of Money paid by the Cautioner standeth good in Law for the principal Debtor So we are said to be justified by the Faith of Christ or Faith in Jesus Christ as laying hold upon His righteousnesse which is imputed to us as said is and by which only we are made righteous Fifthly Though Faith be not alone in the person justified but is ever accompanied with all other saving graces for it worketh by Love chap. 5. 7. Yet Faith is that only grace which hath influence in our Justification for all other Works even those that flow from Grace are excluded and only Faith admitted to have hand in this businesse A man is not justified by the Works of the Law but by the Faith of Jesus Christ and that we might be justified by the Faith of Christ and not by the Works of the Law Sixthly Faith hath influence upon our justification not as it is a Work or because of any worth which is in it self more than in other graces or as if the act of believing whether it alone or joyntly with other graces were imputed unto us for righteousnesse but only as it layeth hold on Jesus Christ and giveth us a right to His Righteousnesse through the merit whereof alone we are justified for it is by the Faith of Jesus Christ or Faith receiving Joh. 1. 12. and resting on Jesus Christ Isa. 26. 3 4. that we are justified besides that all Works of the Law or commanded by the Law are here excluded and by consequence Faith it self as it is a work is excluded also Seventhly This way of Justification by Free-grace accepting of us for the Righteousnesse of Jesus Christ and not because of our own worth is common to all who ever were are or shall be justified whether good or bad the most eminent and best of men must quit the conceipt of their own righteousnesse and rely upon Him who justifieth the ungodly by Faith for even those who were Jews by nature Paul and the other Apostles betook themselves to this way Even we saith he have believed in Jesus Christ and the Scripture cited by Paul speaketh universally of all For by the Works of the Law shall no flesh be justified Eightly Before man be justified through vertue of this imputed Righteousnesse he must first be convinced of his own utter inability to satisfie divine Justice and so to be justified by any thing which himself can do So natural is it to seek for a righteousnesse of our own and in our selves that we will never seek in earnest to the Righteousnesse of Christ until we be made to despair of our selves Rom. 10. 3. for the Apostle sheweth that this conviction went before their Justification Knowing that a man is not justified by the Works of the Law Next he must be convinced also of a worth in Christ's Merit to satisfie divine Justice and that this Merit of Christ's is offered to all who shall lay hold on it by Faith so as that it shall stand good in Law for them in order to their Absolution as if they had given an equivalent satisfaction to God's Justice themselves for none will venture his immortal soul upon that the worth whereof he doth not know Hence the Apostle sheweth that the knowledge of this also did preceed their Justification Knowing that a man is not justified but by the Faith of Jesus Christ. And lastly being thus convinced he must by Faith receive and rest upon Jesus Christ and that most perfect Righteousnesse of His by making his soul adhere and cleave to the Word of Promise wherein Christ is offered Act. 2. 39 41. whereupon followeth the real Justification and Absolution of the man who so doth for Paul marketh this as a third thing going before their Justification Even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified Doct. 4. The former practices of ancient Believers eminent for parts priviledges and graces who have quit their own righteousnesse and ventured their soul wholly upon this imputed Righteousnesse of Christ laying hold upon it by Faith ought to be looked on as a strong argument inforcing us to do the like for the Apostle's scope is to prevail with those Galatians by this argument We who are Jews by nature saith he have believed in Jesus Christ that we might bejustified 5. Though the approved practices of eminent godly persons may have their own weight in order to our encouragement to deny our selves and lay hold on Christ Yet it is the Word of the Lord which can only quiet a man's conscience in this matter and make his mind fully aquiesce to it for the Apostle unto their example subjoyneth a Scripture-confirmation of the Truth in hand By the Works of the Law shall no flesh be justified Vers. 17. But if while we seek to be justified by Christ we our selves also are found sinners is therefore Christ the minister of sin God forbid HE preoccupieth an Objection which might have been framed against the present Doctrine thus If the Doctrine of Justification by Christ doth suppose that even the Jews themselves who are sanctified from the womb are equally sinners with the Gentiles and that being unable to attain to Justification by the Works of the Law they must only rely on Christ by Faith as Paul had but presently affirmed ver 16. Then it would seem to follow that Christ were the minister of sin or that the Doctrine of the Gospel did make men sinners both by taking away that Righteousnesse of the Law which the Jews thought they had and were warranted as they conceived by the Scriptures of the Old Testament so to think as also by furnishing both Jew and Gentile with an occasion to cast-by all care of Holinesse and
good Works seing that thereby they were not to be justified but by Faith in Christ only See the like Objection propounded Rom. 3. 31. Which Objection the Apostle answereth first by repelling the Inference as absurd and blasphemous in this verse and next by confuting it in the following Doct. 1. The Ministers of Jesus Christ in holding forth Truth would carefully foresee and prudently take off what atheistical loose or erring spirits do usually object against it to make it odious so doth Paul here But if while we seek c. 2. It is too usual for people to conceit too much of their external Church-priviledges as if by having them they had saving Grace and stood not in so much need of Christ's imputed Righteousnesse as others for this is that which the adversaries did stumble at that the Jews by nature who enjoyed so many rich priviledges should be found sinners and as unable to be saved by their own works as others For if while we seek to be justified by Christ we our selves are found also sinners 3. Whatever be a mans priviledges otherwise he must if so he would be justified by Christ take his confidence off them and reckon himself equal to the most vile and worthlesse sinners in the point of unability to merit any thing from God by his own Works for this is supposed as that whereon their Objection is grounded and Paul doth passe it as granted and speaketh only against their Inference from it But if while wee seek to be justified by Christ we our selves are found also sinners 4. It is no new prejudice though a most unjust one whereby the Doctrine of Justification by Faith alone and not by Works hath been unjustly loaded that of its own nature it doth tend to foster people in sin The Papists do object so now and the false Apostles did so of old Is therefore Christ the minister of sin say they or the Doctrine preached by Christ the occasion of sin 5. To take occasion from Free-grace or the Doctrine of it to live in sin is so much as in us lyeth to make Christ the minister of sin and therefore a thing which all christian hearts should sk●●ner at and abominate for in the place of saying the Doctrine of the Gospel doth occasion sin it is said Is Christ the minister of sin And Paul doth abominate the very thought of it rejecting it as most blasphemous and absurd God forbid saith he it is a deniall joyned with a detestation of the thing denied So chap. 3. 21. and 1 Cor. 6. 15. Rom. 9. 14. Vers. 18. For if I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressor THe Apostle refuteth the former Inference next by some reasons taken from that indissoluble tye which is betwixt Justification and Sanctification which he holdeth forth in his own person that he may hereby propose himself an example unto others The first is that Paul in preaching the Doctrine of Justification had joyntly with it prest the ruine and destruction of sin as necessarily flowing from that Doctrine and therefore if he should again build up sin by giving way to the practice of it he should contradict himself in what he had preached not walking according to the Doctrine of the Gospel but contrary to it and so himself should be the transgressor and the Gospel free from giving him any occasion so to be Doct. 1. The Doctrine of Justification by Free-grace cannot be rightly preached except the Doctrine of Mortification and destroying of sin be joyntly preached with it for the same Faith which layeth hold on Christ for Righteousnesse doth rest upon Him also for grace and strength to subdue corruption and sin Act. 15. 9. and if He be not imployed for the latter He will not bestow the former thus sin and corruption were those things which Paul destroyed in so far as he did hold forth the most solid and ready way how to get them destroyed while he taught the Doctrine of Justification If I build again the things which I destroyed 2. From this it followeth that the untender lives of those who professe this Doctrine do not reflect upon the Doctrine as if in it self it did give occasion or encouragement unto them so to live but upon themselves who do not make the right use of that Doctrine but abuse it and walk quite contrary to what is prescribed by it for so doth Paul infer For if I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressor or the fault is not in the Doctrine but in my self Vers. 19. For I through the Law am dead to the Law that I might live unto God HEre is a second Reason by preoccupation of an Objection for they might say The Doctrine of Justification as taught by Paul did free Believers from the Law Rom. 7. 4. and therefore did give them encouragement to sin The Apostle answereth by granting they were freed from the Law but denyeth that inference deduced from it upon two reasons and his Answer doth furnish us with three Doctrines which will further clear the meaning of the words First Paul and all Believers are dead indeed to the Law that is so as they put no confidence in their obedience to it for their Justification Philip. 3. 9. so as they are freed from the condemning power of it Chap. 3. 13. and as by its rigorous exaction of perfect obedience under hazard of the curse which we were not able to perform it did make us desperate and carelesse and so did occasionally provoke and stir-up corruption in the heart Rom. 7. 5 6. I am dead to the Law Secondly It is the Law it self which maketh them thus dead to the Law the curse of the Law putting them so hard to it that they are made to despair of getting Heaven and Salvation by their obedience to it Rom. 3. 20 21. and are forced to fly unto Christ by being in whom they are freed from condemnation Rom. 8. 1. and get their corruption so far mortified as that it taketh not occasion to sin the more from the Law 's discharging of sin as it was wont Rom. 6. 14. For I through the Law am dead to the Law And thirdly Though Believers are delivered from the Law in the former respects Yet not as it is the rule of an holy life for the very end of their freedom is That being so delivered they might by vertue of the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them live righteously and holily to the glory of God for saith he I am dead to the Law that I might live unto God By all which it doth evidently appear That the Doctrine of Justification in it self doth give no encouragement to sin which answereth the Objection and refuteth the blasphemous Inference which is made ver 17. Vers. 20. I am crucified with Christ. Nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the Faith
10. 31. duties of our lawful imployments Heb. 11. 33. and to our carriage under crosses Heb. 11. 24 25. for by the life which Paul lived in the flesh is meaned this natural life Heb. 5. 7. 1 Pet. 4. 2. and his living this spiritual life of Faith was extended even to the things of that life The life which I now live in the flesh is by the Faith of the Son of God Doct. 7. As Jesus Christ did give Himself a Ransom for the Elect See chap. 1. 4. so no worth in us no good which He expecteth from us or need which He stood in of us but only love in Him to us did move Him so to do He loved me and gave Himself for me 8. Though the full perswasion and assurance of Christ's special love unto and His dying for me in particular is not the very essence and being of saving Faith Eph. 1. 13. for saving Faith may be without it Isa. 50. 10. Yet it is a thing which may be had without extraordinary revelation the Spirit of God enabling the Believer to discern in himself those graces 1 Cor. 2. 12. which are set down as marks of His special love and favour in Scripture 1 Joh. 3. 14 18 19 21 24. and bearing witnesse with His Spirit that he is a childe of God Rom. 8. 16. and this assurance should be aimed at in the right method by all 2 Pet. 1. 10. for Paul speaking in the name of other Believers sheweth he had attained it Who loved me and gave Himself for me saith he 9. This full perswasion and assurance in its own nature is so far from making those who have it loose the reigns to wickednesse and security that upon the contrary it serveth as a strong incitement to make them mortifie sin and live that spiritual life of Faith which is here spoken of for it served for this use unto Paul I live by the Faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself forme Vers. 21. I do not frustrate the grace of God for if rightebusnesse come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain HAving removed the objection the Apostle proceedeth to establish Justification by Faith and not by the Works of the Law by a second argument to this purpose If we be justified by the Law or works done in obedience to the Law Then those two absurdities would follow 1. God's free grace and favour should be rejected despised frustrated and made uselesse for the word signifieth all these and the reason of the consequence lyeth in this That if Justification be by Works Then it cannot be by Grace Rom. 11. 6. 2. Christ's death had been in vain without any necessary cause or reason if the Justification of finners could have been attained by Works or by any other mean Doct. 1. They who have attained unto the perswasion and full assurance of God's favour and love in Christ ought above all others to maintain the glory of His Grace and Mercy in saving of sinners freely not admitting of any thing whether in practice or opinion whether in themselves or so far as is possible in others which may incroach upon it obscure it or weaken the thoughts of the excellency of it in the minds of men for Paul who was perswaded of Christ's love ver 20. doth look upon this as his duty flowing from that assurance I do not frustrate the Grace of God saith he 2. The joyning of Works with Faith in the matter of Justification is a total excluding of God's Free-grace and favour from having any hand in this Work for Grace admitteth of no partner so that if Grace do not all it doth nothing if any thing be added to it that addition maketh Grace to be no Grace Rom. 4. 4. for the Apostle reasoning against those who would have made Works to share with God's Free-grace and favour in Justification sheweth his joyning with them in that opinion would be a total rejecting and making uselesse of God's Grace I do not frustrate the Grace of God 3. That the Apostle doth exclude in this dispute from having any influence in Justification the Works not only of the Ceremonial but also of the Moral Law appeareth from this That he opposeth the Merit of Christ's death to all Merit of our own whether by obedience to the one Law or to the other neither can any reason be given for which our meriting by obedience to the Ceremonial Law maketh Christ to have died in vain which is not applicabl to the Moral Law For if righteousness come by the Law then Christ died in vain 4. That he excludeth also not only the Works of the Moral Law which are performed by the natural and unregenerate man but also those which the Godly do perform by vertue of Faith drawing influence from Christ appeareth from this that the Apostle useth this argument taken from the uselesnesse of Christ's death not against the unconverted Jews who had not received the Gospel and so would easily have granted that Christ was dead in vain but against those who had received the Gospel and so would never have pleaded that any Works done by a natural man but those only which flow from the Grace of Christ could justifie a sinner and yet Paul reasoneth against those If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain 5. That he doth exclude also all Works of ours whatsoever from being the meritorious cause of our Justification not only in whole and their alone without the Merit of Christ but also in part and joyntly with His Merit appeareth from the former ground that he is reasoning against professed Christians who doubtlesse did give Christ's Merit and Death some share at least in Justification else the absurdity which is deduced from their Doctrine by Paul should have had no weight with them as being no absurdity in their mind Then Christ is dead in vain 6. If there had been any other way possible in Heaven or Earth by which the Salvation of lost sinners could have been brought about but by the Death of Christ then Christ would not have died our disease was desperate as to any other cure for while he saith If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain he affirmeth two things 1. That to suppose Christ hath died in vain or without cause is a great absurdity no wayes to be admitted of 2. If the Justification and Salvation of sinners could have been attained by Works or any other mean then His Death had been in vain and so that it were an absurd thing to suppose he would have died in that case CHAP. III. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle having sharply rebuked these Galatians for their defection ver 1. useth five other Arguments to prove that we are justified by Faith and not by Works First They had received the saving Graces of God's Spirit by hearing the Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not by Works ver 2.
Which Argument is further urged ver 3 4. and enlarged unto their receiving these other miraculous Gifts of the Spirit by the means of that Doctrine and as confirmations of it ver 5. Secondly Abraham was justified by Faith ver 6. From which he inferreth that Believers are Abraham's children ver 7. and that all of them whether Jew or Gentile must be justified by Faith also ver 8 9. Thirdly Those who seek to be justified by the Law are under the curse of the Law and therefore not justified ver 10. Fourthly Scripture testifieth that men shall be justified by Faith ver 11. Whence he inferreth and proveth his Inference that therefore they cannot be justified by the Law ver 12. Fifthly Christ's redeeming of us from the curse of the Law and all the fruits following upon His Death are received by Faith ver 13 14. In the second part of the Chapter he answereth some Objections and joyntly sheweth the date prescribed by God for keeping the Ceremonial Law was now past Object 1. It seemeth the way of Justification by Faith in the Promise made to Abraham was changed by the Law given upon Mount Sinai He answereth by a similitude taken from humane Covenants ver 15. that the Covenant of Grace made and ratified by God with Abraham in Christ could not be altered nor abrogated by the Law which was given so long after ver 16 17 18. Object 2. The Law seemeth to be given in vain and to no purpose if it do not justifie He answereth by shewing another end for which the Law was given to wit for the discovery and restraint of sin and that God's design was not that people should be thereby justified ver 19 20. Object 3. The Law seemeth then to be contrary to the Covenant-promise if the one discover sin and the other forgive and cover it He answereth first retorting the Objection against the Propounders to wit that by their way the Law would be contrary to and destructive of the Promise ver 21. Secondly shewing the Law in discovering sin and condemning for it was subservient to the Promise while it did necessitate guilty sinners to believe and apply the Promise ver 22. Object 4. It seemeth the Ceremonial Law and the whole ancient dispensation ought to be observed under the Gospel for the same use and end at least He answereth shewing the Law was for good use to the ancient Church ver 23. which he illustrateth by comparing the Law to a Schoolmaster ver 24. but denieth that therfore it should be observed now because the Church was come to perfect age and so could not be any longer keeped under a Schoolmaster ver 25 26. Object 5. It seemeth Circumcision at least ought to be observed seing it was not added upon Mount Sinai but instituted long before He answereth shewing that Baptism doth serve for all those spiritual uses now which Circumcision did serve for then and consequently that Circumcision was not to be any longer practised ver 27 28 29. Vers. 1. O Foolish Galatians who hath hewitched you that you should not ohey the Truth before whose eyes Jesus Christ hath been evidently set forth crucified among you THe Apostle being to insist further upon the former dispute lest their assertions had been thereby rendred dead and dull quickeneth them a little by inserting a sharp reproof wherein he chargeth them with folly in that they had suffered themselves to be seduced by a sort of spiritual sorcery or witchcraft unto disobedience to the Doctrine of the Gospel which disobedience he aggregeth from the perspicuity and plainnesse in which that Doctrine was preached unto them even such as if Christ together with His bloudy passion had been drawn and painted upon a board before them Doct. 1. The Minister of Jesus Christ when he is called to insist upon the clearing-up of Truths unto the understanding whether positively by shewing what is revealed in Scripture concerning them or controversally by refuting contrary Errors would mix his discourse with an occasional word of Exhortation Reproof or somewhat of that kind which may tend more immediately and directly to excite and quicken the affections of hearers lest they otherwise wax dull and languish for Paul casteth-in a sharp reproof in the midst of his dispute O foolish Galatians c. 2. Where the precious Truths of the Gospel are preached and disobeyed People neither labouring to be perswaded of the Truth in their understandings Act. 17. 32. nor to prize it in their heart and affections Matth. 11. 17. nor to practise it in their life and conversation Matth. 7. 26. this is a sin the evil whereof cannot be sufficiently aggreged or spoken against as being a sin against the remedy of sin Heb. 2. 3. for this is the fault for which the Apostle doth so sharply reprove those Galatians even that they did not obey the Truth the word signifieth the not believing of and disobedience to the Truth when it is believed 3. Hereticks who by fair words deceive the simple Rom. 16. -18. are a kind of spiritual Sorcerers and Heresie and Error is spiritual Witchcraft For first as Sorcerers by deluding the senses make people apprehend that they see what they see not So Hereticks and erring spirits by casting a mist of seeming reason before the understanding do delude it and make the deluded person beleive that to be Truth which is not chap. 1. 6 7. And secondly as Sorcerers in what they do of that kind are in a singular manner assisted beyond the reach of their own ability and skill by the Devil who really doth the thing upon the Sorcerers practising of some Satanical ceremonies which are prescribed unto them by the Devil as a watchword whereat he is ready to answer So heretical spirits are often more than ordinarily assisted in drawing of multitudes after them and this by Satan's concurring with them 2 Thess. 2. 9. Thus the Apostle speaking of that influence which false Teachers had upon them in drawing them from the Truth he saith Who hath bewitched you It 's a word borrowed from the practice of Witches and Sorcerers who being assisted by the Devil use to cast mist before the eyes to dazle and so delude them 4. For a people to have the Gospel among them and not to make use of it but to reject it and make defection from it argueth them to be fools indeed whatever be their wisedom otherwise in things relating to this present life for the Doctrine of the Gospel containeth saying Wisdom which maketh wise unto Salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. which Wisdom they reject Thus Paul calleth them foolish Galatians because they obeyed not the Truth 5. Though neither Ministers nor any other ought to charge men with folly with a mind to reproach them or in way of private revenge Mat. 5. 22. Yet the Minister of Jesus Christ or any other who hath a Call to it may upbraid a man with folly if first the party reproved be guilty of folly as
the hearing of Faith HE again returneth to the Argument for Justification by Faith set down ver 2. and enlargeth it thus That the Lord had not only accompanied that Doctrine among them with the fruits of the Spirit of Regeneration and saving Graces wrought by it but also with other extraordinary gifts of the Spirit such as the working of miracles speaking with strange tongues curing of diseases which were so many confirmations that the Doctrine was of God Doct. 1. Though the saving Graces of God's Spirit are conveyed to the hearts of hearers by the preaching of the Gospel Yet God is the author and worker of them and the Gospel only a mean by which He worketh for having spoken of their receiving the Spirit when he first propounded this Argument ver 2. he doth here in the resuming of it explain how they received it to wit by God's bestowing of it He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit 2. When the Doctrine of the Gospel as it is now dispensed under the New Testament did first break up the Lord to confirm the Truth thereof did accompany the preaching of it with the working of miracles which properly are works above natures strength and so could be wrought by none but God and this that hereby the truth of the Doctrine might be confirmed which being once sufficiently done there is no further use for miracles now for the Apostle sheweth that miracles were wrought among the Galatians by the hearing of Faith and that this was one Argument of the divinity of that Doctrine while he saith He that worketh miracles among you doth He it by the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith 3. So strong and provalent is the spirit of Error where it is letten loose and so weak are the best in themselves to resist it that for love to Error they will quit Truth though formerly never so much confirmed and sealed unto them by the saving fruits of God's Spirit in their hearts accompanying it for though these Galatians had the Doctrine of Justification plainly preached ver 1. and sealed to them by the saving Graces of God's Spirit and by many miracles wrought among them yet they make defection from it He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit and worketh miracles among you c. Vers. 6. Even as Abraham believed God and it was accounted to him for righteousness 7. Know ye therefore that they which are of Faith the same are the children of Abraham HAving put a close to that Argument which he brought from their own experience proving that we are justified by Faith and not by Works he addeth another from a Scripture-example of Abraham to confirm the same Truth who though he did abound in many vertues and good works yet he was not justified by these but by Faith only which he proveth by the testimony of Moses Gen. 15. 6. where it is affirmed that Abraham believed in the Lord to wit not only by giving assent unto the Promise spoken of immediately before about the multiplication of his seed and giving unto them the Land of Canaan Gen. 15. 5 7. but by assenting unto and imbracing of the prime Promise of the Covenant made by God with him that in the Messias who was to come of him he himself and the Nations were to be blessed Gen. 12. 3. of which Promise this of the multiplication of his seed was but a dependent and the means to effectuate it which Faith of Abraham's or the thing believed and laid hold upon by Abraham's Faith to wit the obedience of the Mediator the blessed Seed was imputed unto him for righteousnesse or accepted of God as his obedience for his Justification ver 6. from which he inferreth or rather the matter being so evident he exciteth themselves to infer the conclusion which he intendeth to prove That only they who are of the Faith or seek after Justification by Faith are children of Abraham by following of his steps and succeeding to him in the inheritance of that blessing of free-gifted Righteousnesse and Justification thereby which he enjoyed for an equivalent phrase to this here is that which is ver 9. They are blessed with faithfull Abraham ver 7. Doct. 1. Though saving Faith hath for its general object the whole Word of God consisting of Histories Threatnings Commands and Promises both of temporal and eternal blessings for Faith giveth firm assent unto the whole Word because of that divine Authority which revealeth it Act. 24. -14. yet the principal object of justifying Faith is the Word of Promise holding forth Christ and His Righteousnesse as the meritorious cause of the Believers Salvation for this Promise which Abraham did believe and the Faith wherof was imputed to him for righteousnes had Jesus Christ in its bosom it being a Promise of giving unto Abraham a numerous seed Gen. 15. 4 5. and so a Promise of Jesus Christ to come of him in whom all the Nations Act. 3. 25. and Abraham himself ver 9. were to be blessed Even as Abraham believed God 2. That it may go well with a soul and be accepted in God's sight who can endure no unclean thing Hab. 1. 13 it is necessary that it be cloathed with some righteousnesse of one sort or other for Faith was accounted unto Abraham for righteousnesse 3. It being wholly impossible for fallen man to attain unto that personal perfect righteousnesse which the Law requireth Rom. 3. 10 c. the Wisdom of God hath found out another way of making him righteous to wit that whereby Faith is imputed reckoned or accounted unto him for righteousnesse for Abraham's Faith was accounted unto him to wit by God for righteousnesse 4. Faith is not in a proper sense imputed to the Believer for righteousnesse as if the work of Faith it self were imputed to us and accepted of God whether freely or because of the merit of Christ for our total and perfect righteousnesse but it 's imputed in a figurative sense with respect had to that which Faith apprehendeth and layeth hold upon to wit the obedience and sufferings of Jesus Christ these being laid hold on by Faith become our righteousnesse Rom. 5. 19. and 10. 4. for the Apostle all alongst this Chapter opposeth Faith and Works now his Arguments would be of no force if Faith did justifie as a work and for any worth in it self It was accounted to him for righteousness 5. In the matter of Justification Faith is opposed not only to those Works which go before Conversion but to those also which follow after it and are the real fruits of God's Spirit in the Believer all Works whether of the one sort or other are excluded for even to Abraham many years after his Conversion when he had abounded in good Works and many gracious Vertues Gen. 12 13 14 chapters his Faith was accounted for righteousnesse 6. As there is a second and reiterated Justification of one and the same person in this sense that upon our renewed
apprehending of the Promise by Faith the sentence of our absolution and adjudication to life eternal is also renewed so this second Justification is not upon the account or for the merit of our good Works no more than the former It is alwayes Faith that justifieth for Abraham who was justified long before upon a renewed act of his believing hath his Faith of new and not his Works imputed to him for righteousness 7. The Godly under the Old Testament and the Godly under the New are justified one and the same way as we are justified freely Rom. 3. 24. so were they Isa. 43. 25. as we are justified fully and absolved both from the guilt and punishment of sin 1 Joh. 1. -7. Rom. 8. 1. so were they Isa. 53. 5. otherwise the Apostle could not argue from Abraham's Justification to ours as he doth here Know ye therefore saith he that they which are of the Faith c. 8. They who are of the Faith or who seek after Justification by Faith are Abraham's children and his seed they who are Members of the visible Church and profess the Doctrine of Faith are his children outwardly because they walk in the steps of their father Abraham by professing of and assenting to that Doctrine of Faith which he believed Rom. 4. 12. whereby they have title to the Covenant of Grace Act. 2. 39. Rom. 11. 16 17. which title of theirs to the Covenant implyeth a right to enjoy all divine Ordinances Act. 2. 38 39. whereof they are capable and from which they do not debar themselves by ignorance 1 Cor. 11. 28. or scandal Mat. 18. 17. It implyeth also all external Church-priviledges leading unto Salvation Rom. 9. 4. Yea and a right to Salvation it self upon God's tearms required in the Gospel Joh. 3. 16. In which respect Salvation is said to be of the Jews Joh. 4. -22. They again who do not only professe the Doctrine of Faith but also imbrace it in their hearts by the grace of saving Faith are Abraham's children inwardly because they have not only a title to the Covenant of Grace but also come up to the conditions required in it and so do walk in the steps of saving Faith and Repentance wherein Abraham walked who is held forth as a pattern and father for imitation unto others whereby they enjoy not only outward priviledges but also saving benefits and blessings and have not only a conditional but an absolute and actual right unto Heaven and Glory the covenanted Inheritance of Abraham's children Heb. 11. 12 13 14 15 16 This distinction of Abraham's children outwardly and inwardly is founded upon Rom. 2. 28 29. and is necessary as for the right understanding of other places of Scripture so of this They which be of the Faith are the Children of Abraham Vers. 8. And the Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen through Faith preached before the Gospel unto Abraham saying In thee shall all Nations be blessed 9. So then they which be of Faith are blessed with faithful Abraham BEcause the former consequence from Abraham's Justification to ours might be questioned to hold in the Gentiles who were not of Abraham's posterity therefore the Apostle doth clear it from the words of the Promise made to Abraham Gen. 12. 3. that in him or in his seed Jesus Christ who was to come of him Gen. 22. 18. all the Nations or Gentiles were to be blessed which Promise he sheweth was no other than the Gospel or glad tydings that all the blessings to be purchased by Christ Abraham's seed among which Justification by Faith was one were to be bestowed by God upon the Gentiles and that the Scripture or Spirit which speaks in Scripture fore-knowing to wit in the Decree that God was to do so did contrive the Promise in these words of purpose that it might bear so much ver 8. from which he inferreth that all Believers indefinitely the Nations not excluded but included do partake of all those saving blessings which Abraham did partake of by Faith among which free Justification was the chief for of that is the question ver 9. Doct. 1. That Scripture is not an invention of man but the Word of the all-knowing God appeareth from this that several things are foretold therein which had their accomplishment a long time afterwards according as they were foretold the knowledge of which things at so great a distance of time could not be in any but God Isa. 41. 22 23. for the calling of the Gentiles and their Justification by Faith was foretold about the space of two thousand years before it fell out And the Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen through faith 2. The foreknowledge of future events at the greatest distance doth most properly and peculiarly belong unto God which doth alwayes suppose His Will and Decree that such things shall come to passe in which Decree of His He doth foreknow them Act. 2. 23. Whatever foresight of this kind is in any of the creatures they have it by borrowed light from Him and as we say by lighting their Candles at His Torch for the foreknowing that the Gentiles would be justified by Faith is attributed to Scripture or the Spirit of God speaking in Scripture And the Scripture foreseeing c. 3. The calling of the Gentiles and their attaining to Salvation by free-grace and all the spiritual priviledges of Abraham's seed was a thing hardly credible at the first breaking-forth of the Gospel the case of all Nations except the Jews seemed to be so desperate and damnable Eph. 2. 11 12. Hence the Apostle seeth it necessary upon all occasions almost to clear that the calling of the Gentiles had ground from Scripture as here The Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen by Faith 4. Hence we learn several things tending to the right understanding of that Promise made to Abraham Gen. 12. 3. In thee or in thy seed Gen. 22. 18. to wit Christ all Nations shall be blessed As first That the Covenant of Grace made with Abraham whereof this Promise is one Article was extended not only to Abraham's carnal seed but to all Believers in every place even among the Gentiles for in thee all Nations shall be blessed Secondly All men by nature and considered without respect had to and as not having interest in this gracious Covenant made with Abraham in Christ are destitute of all blessings under the drop of God's wrath and curse Eph. 2. 3. and so are really cursed for this is imported while he saith in thee and not otherwise all Nations shall be blessed Thirdly That we who by nature are cursed creatures should be freed from the curse and do partake of the contrary blessing it cometh to passe by vertue of that gracious Covenant made with Abraham and more particularly it is through Jesus Christ Abraham's seed in whom we being ingraffed by faith are delivered from the curse ver 13. for In thee or in thy seed Gen.
22. 18. all Nations shall be blessed Fourthly The Blessings promised to Abraham's seed in the Covenant made by God with him were not only temporal carnal and appertaining to this life but heavenly and spiritual The former indeed were often inculcated upon the Ancient Church Deut. 28. 2 3 c. not as if these had been all or the main Blessings of the Covenant but as they were shadows only of things more heavenly Heb. 11. 14 15 16. for the Apostle explaineth one part at least of the Blessings promised to be Justification by Faith The Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen by Faith saith In thee shall Nations be blessed Fifthly The man who is justified by Faith is a blessed man and there is no blessednesse under the Sun comparable unto this for a man to have his sin pardoned Psal. 32. 1. and the Righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto him and so to be placed in a state of favour with God for the Apostle expoundeth the Blessing promised by being justified The Scripture foreseeing that God would justifie the Heathen by Faith Sixthly This Promise made to Abraham containeth in it the summe of the Gospel to wit the glad tydings of all spiritual blessings and particularly of a free-gifted Righteousnesse purchased by Christ to be bestowed upon all who by Faith should be ingraffed in Christ and that the Gentiles should have accesse in the dayes of the Gospel to these Blessings among the rest for the Promise holdeth out all this and Paul calleth the revealing of this Promise the preaching of the Gospel The Scripture preached before the Gospel unto Abraham Seventhly The Gospel therefore is no new Doctrine but the same in substance with that which was taught to Abraham and to the Church under the Old Testament for saith he The Scripture preached before the Gospel unto Abraham Eightly Though the Gospel or glad tydings of Salvation was not unknown to the Ancient Church yet it was but a very small glimmering light which they had of it in comparison with what we do now enjoy all that Scripture recordeth Adam and the Patriarchs to have had of it was in that obscure Promise Gen. 3. 15. and all that Abraham had of it was in this Promise here mentioned which though it was much clearer than the former because the day-light of the Gospel under the New Testament was then drawing nearer yet it was far short in clearnesse and plainnesse of these Gospel-promises which we do now enjoy as Joh 3. 16. Scripture preached before the Gospel unto Abraham saying In thee shall all Nations be blessed Ninthly The blessing of Justification by Faith and of other spiritual favours promised to the Nations in Abraham was such as Abraham was not the author of it but a sharer in it with the rest of those to whom it was promised so he inferreth from the Blessing promised to Abraham That we are blessed with faithfull Abraham Doct. 5. Eminent Priviledges bestowed by God upon particular persons do not exempt them from walking to Heaven in the common path-way with others if so they look for it at all for Abraham though highly priviledged to be the father of Believers ver 7. in whom all Nations were to be blessed Gen. 12. 3. yet behoved to enjoy the Blessing not because of his own merit but freely and by Faith as well as others as is imported in the Epithet of Faithful given to Abraham We are blessed with faithful Abraham not with circumcised vertuous Abraham 6. God in bestowing of Blessings promised upon condition of Faith doth not so much look upon the greatnesse of Faith as the truth and sincerity of it for though every one who are of Faith believe not so strongly as Abraham did yet they are blessed with faithfull Abraham Vers. 10. For as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them HEre is a third Argument to prove that we are justified by Faith and not by Works because they who seek to be justified by the works of the Law are under the curse of God and so not justified which he proveth because according to Scripture Deut. 27. 26. the Law pronounceth the curse upon every man who fulfilleth not the whole Law in every tittle or jot of it now he taketh it for granted that none fulfill the whole Law and so doth leave unto them to gather that the Law doth fasten the curse upon all who seek Justification by it Doct. 1. That Paul doth mean the Works not only of the Ceremonial Law but also of the Moral all alongs this dispute while he excludeth Works from being the cause of Justification appeareth from the Scripture here cited which is verified mainly in the Moral Law as it appeareth from these sins in particular against which the Levites were to denounce the curse all of them being transgressions of the Moral Law Deut. 27. 15 16 c. to the end For it is written Cursed is every one 2. Fallen man is so far from attaining to a state of favour with God and happinesse here or hereafter by any Works which he can do that when he hath done the utmost even of what his natural strength or renewed faculties of grace can reach if he seek to be justified by it he remaineth under God's curse and wrath notwithstanding of all for the Apostle affirmeth universally of all that are of the works of the Law that is who seek to be justified by works done in obedience to the Law for therein was the great controversie that they are under the curse 3. The cursed estate of man by nature through sin and misery together with that impossibility he lyeth under to be recovered from that wofull estate and to regain a state of favour with God by any work of righteousnesse which he doth is a thing known not by the discoursing of natural reason which being blind in the things of God cannot judge aright neither of its own misery nor of the way of recovery from it 1 Cor. 2. 14. The knowledge of those is borrowed from Scripture-light whose sentence alone is to be stood to in this matter hence Paul appealeth to Scripture for probation of what he hath herein affirmed For it is written saith he Cursed is every one 4. Every sin even the least as being a wrong done against God Iam. 2. 11. who is infinit in all His Attributes Job 11. 7 8 9. and a transgression of His holy and righteous Law 1 Joh. 3. 4. Rom. 7. 12. deserveth no lesse than that the curse of God should light upon the sinner under which curse is comprehended all the miseries of this life Lam. 3. 39. death it self Rom. 6. 23 and the pains of Hell for ever Mat. 25. 41 46 for so the Scripture cited affirmeth Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that is
who transgresseth in one thing 5. There is no person whether rich or poor noble or ignoble learned or unlearned whose sin deserveth not the forementioned curse The consideration indeed of the person of some sinners doth aggrege their sin beyond the sin of others Rom. 2. 17. to 25 but no consideration of the person of any can so far extenuate his sin as to make it not deserving of God's wrath and curse for saith he Cursed is every one without exception who continueth not 6. Not only sins of commission or doing of that which the Law forbiddeth but also sins of omission or the leaving undone of what the Law commandeth do deserve the curse for saith he Cursed is every one not only who doth what the Law forbiddeth but who continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them 7. It is not the bare knowledge of our duty nor yet a fair profession of love and respect to our duty so known which cometh up to that exact righteousnesse that the Law requireth under hazard of the curse there must be practice also according to that knowledge for Cursed is every one who continueth not to do them 8. This real obedience and practice that the Law of God requireth under hazard of the curse is universal extending it self to the conscience-making of all duties commanded together with the way wherein they are commanded Mat. 15. 8. and to the abstaining from all sins forbidden together with their occasions Job 31. 1. for Cursed is every one who continueth not in All things he saith not in some things only 9. This obedience required is also constant from the first minute of a man's life to the hour of his death so that though he should but once sin he is under the curse for Cursed is every one who coutinueth not to do them 10. It is altogether impossible for any one of fallen mankind either of himself Joh. 15. -5. or by any grace received in this life 1 Joh. 1. 8. to keep the Law perfectly or to attain to that exact measure of righteousnesse that the Law requireth which appeareth not only from what the Law requireth as it hath been formerly cleared but also from this Paul takes it here for a confessed and granted conclusion for if any could keep the Law then every man who seeketh to be justified by the works of the Law should not be cursed providing they did what they could as Paul here affirmeth seing the Law doth curse none but those who do not keep the Law For as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse for it is written c. 11. Though every man doth break the Law and so deserveth that curse which is pronounced against sin by the Law Yet all are not left to perish under this curse some are delivered from it to wit those that are of Faith or who by Faith lay hold on Jesus Christ for righteousnesse who was made a curse for them ver 13. such having fled from the sentence and curse of the Law and laid hold on the Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel shall be judged not by the Law but the Gospel which admitteth of the Righteousnesse of a Cautioner imputed Philip. 3. 9. instead of an exact personall righteousnesse required by the Law for saith the Apostle As many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse and so not they who are of Faith 12. Those who do not betake themselves to the Covenant of Grace must stand and fall according to the sentence of the Law or Covenant of Works and therefore seing the Law doth curse them as not having come up to the exact righteousnesse required in it cursed are they and cursed shall they be for saith he They who are of the Law or seek Justification by the Law are cursed because the Law seeketh more than they can perform Vers. 11. But that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for The Just shall live by Faith 12. And the Law is not of Faith but the man that doth them shall live in them IN these Verses is the fourth Argument to prove the negative part of the main Conclusion to wit That no man is justified in God's sight who judgeth not according to outward appearence but according to Truth 1 Sam. 16. -7. by his personal obedience to the Law and that because righteousnesse and life cometh from Faith as he proveth from Habbak 2. -4. and therefore not from the Law ver 11. The force of which consequence as the Apostle declareth doth ly in this that the Law is not of Faith that is the way of Justification which the Law prescribeth to wit the Law as strictly taken for the meer precepts legal promises and threatmings of the Law See chap. 2. ver 15. doth not consist with the way of Justification by Faith because the Law promiseth life to him only who observeth what the Law prescribeth and so hath a perfect inherent righteousnesse as he proveth from Lev. 18. 5. but Faith conveyeth life to him who is destitute of that righteousnesse if he believe on Him that justifieth the ungodly by Faith as he hath cleared frequently before See Rom. 4. 5. and so doth not expresse it now ver 12. Doct. 1. There is a twofould Justification of a sinner one which is in the sight of God and is here expressed whereby he is reputed and standeth righteous and just in the estimation of God the Judge whose judgment is unerring and alwayes according to Truth Jer. 11. 20. Another which is before men and is here implyed whereby the sinner is reputed and standeth righteous in the estimation of men whose judgment as flowing from charity 1 Cor. 13. 7. and grounded upon outward appearance 2 Sam. 16. -7. may frequently erre and be deceived But that no man is justified in the sight of God 2. Though God do not justifie any or esteem of him as righteous for any works done in obedience to the Law Yet that a man may be justified in man's sight because of his works is not here denied by the Apostle for Justification before men is nothing else but a charitable judgment past upon the person that God hath justified him by Faith which judgment is grounded upon the evidences of the person's faith manifested in the fruits of good works Iam. 2. -18. But that no man is justified by the Law in Gods sight c. 3. The spirit of Error being once given way to doth so far blind the understanding Isa. 44. 20. that it cannot see and so far engage the will and affections to the maintaining of it 2 Tim. 4. 3. that the person erring will not see what Scripture saith against that Error though it be never so evident to an indifferent eye for though the maintainers of Justification by Works would not or could not see it yet the Scriptures even of the Old Testament
did give clear testimony against that Error and for the contrary Truth It is evident saith Paul for the Just shall live 4. The Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not by Works is no new-fangled opinion the Scriptures even of the Old Testament give testimony to it as the only way of Justification before God which then was for Paul proveth that none are justified by the Law from an Old Testament-Scripture cited out of Hab. 2. -4. The Just shall live by Faith 5. The Scripture cited teacheth first That the way of justifying a sinner or of making him righteous under the Old Testament and under the New is the same and therefore we may safely draw arguments from the one to the other for so doth the Apostle here It is evident for The Just shall live by faith Secondly Faith in God and His Promises especially these wherein Jesus Christ and His Righteousnesse are offered is that which maketh a sinner just and righteous in God's sight for the words may be rendred thus The Just by Faith shall live so that they shew what that is which makes a man just and righteous Thirdly The man who is thus just by Faith is recovered from that state of death wherein every man by nature lyeth Eph. 2. 1. and doth live which life of his doth also flow from faith for both righteousnesse and life are here ascribed to faith The Just shall live by Faith Fourthly This life by Faith which the Believer doth enjoy is such as furnisheth him with comfortable through-bearing in the midst of hardest dispensations without apostasie and fainting in so far as he doth not walk by present sense but taketh up God as reconciled to him in Christ 2 Cor. 4. 18. and looketh upon his present crosse as an evidence of God's fatherly love Heb. 12. 6. and knoweth it will have a blessed event to him in God's way and time Rom. 8. 28. and that his life is hid with God in Christ Col. 3. 3. far above the reach of any trouble for this is the Prophet's scope from whom this place is cited even to shew that the Just shall so live by Faith as to ride out the storm arising from the present trouble which was to overwhelm others See Hab. 2. 4. The Just shall live by Faith Fifthly This life of the Believer which he enjoyeth by Faith though it be begun here in the knowledge of God and Jesus Christ Joh. 17. 3. and in freedom from the deserved sentence of death Rom. 8. 1. whereupon followeth a right to eternal life Joh. 3. 3. and in the lively practice of all commanded duties to which the Believer is enabled by drawing life and vertue out of Christ through Faith Philip. 4. 13. Yet this life is not circumscribed with the present time it 's to be perfected afterward in Glory so that the life flowing from Faith is a lasting never-ending ever-continuing and eternal life for the Promise is extended unto all imaginable future duration without any restriction The Just shall live by Faith From Vers. 12. Learn 1. Though the Law and Faith or the Gospel which is the Doctrine of Faith be not contrary each to other both of them being the Truths of God but are mutually subservient one to another in many things the Law making sin known Rom. 3. -20. the Gospel holding forth the remedy of sin Joh. 1. 29. the Law pointing forth our need of Christ Rom. 10. 4. and the Gospel giving us an offer of Christ for life and righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1. 30. The Law again holding forth those duties wherein the man made righteous by Faith ought to walk and to testifie his thankfulnesse Eph. 5. 1 2. and the Gospel or Faith in Jesus Christ offered in the Gospel furnishing him with spirituall strength to walk in these duties which the Law prescribeth 2 Cor. 3. -6. Yet the Law and Faith are mutually inconsistent in the point of Justification so that if Justification be sought by the works of the Law it cannot be had by Faith and if it be had by Faith it cannot be attained by the works of the Law there can be no mixture of Law and Gospel Faith and Works in this matter for in this sense the Apostle affirmeth The Law is not of Faith 2. The Law doth offer life to none upon easier terms than perfect obedience and the constant and universal practice of whatsoever the Law prescribeth for the voice of the Law is The man that doth them to wit those things that the Law enjoyneth shall live in them or attain eternal life by his so doing 3. The way of Justification by Faith doth wholly exclude our doing and works and those of every sort from having influence as causes or conditions either in part or in whole upon our Justification before God for the Apostle proveth the inconsistency of the Law and Faith in the point of Justification from this that the Law suspendeth our right to life upon the condition of doing and works and therefore the way of Justification by Faith must wholly exclude Works else the Apostle should not cogently have proved the thing intended to wit That the Law is inconsistent with Faith from this That he who doth them shall live in them Vers. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree 14. That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through Faith HE addeth a fifth Argument to prove the affirmative part of the main Conclusion to wit That we are justified by Faith and withall sheweth how Faith doth justifie not for any merit or worth in it self but as it receiveth Jesus Christ whereby all the blessings purchased by Him are applied to Believers for the Apostle obviating an objection which he foresaw might arise from ver 10. to wit If the Law do curse all men how then are any freed from the curse sheweth that Jesus Christ hath delivered us from God's wrath or the sentence of the Law 's curse by taking upon Himself the curse due to us while He was obedient to death even the death of the crosse Philip. 2. 8. Which kind of death was pronounced to be accursed as he proveth from Deut. 21. -23. This is contained ver 13. And hence he shewes a double fruit did flow the first to the Gentiles the blessing of Church-priviledges divine Ordinances and of Reconciliation Adoption Grace here and Glory hereafter promised to the Nations in Abraham Gen. 22. 18. being now purchased by Christ and residing in Him as the Head and Fountain did come through Him to the unrighteous Gentiles who before the time of Christ's death were strangers to Christ and to Abraham's blessing purchased by Christ Eph. 2. 12. The second fruit of Christ's death did accresse to the Jews among whom he reckoneth himself joyntly with the Gentiles who
and no more spared than if we our selves who sinned had been in His place for the Text saith He was not only accursed but made a curse in the abstract to shew how greatly he was accursed in death neither was this execration only in respect of man who indeed did judge Him execrable Isa. 53. 3 4. but also in respect of God as appeareth by the testimony alleaged out of Deut. 21. 23. for though the Apostle intending the sense only and not the words omitteth the mentioning of God Yet in the place cited we have it thus He that is hanged is accursed of God 10. The malefactor among the Jews who was adjudged to end his life by hanging on a tree was pronounced by God to be a curse or accursed not as if every one who died that death even notwithstanding of their repentance had been rejected of God and condemned Luke 23. 39 43. but partly because that was a most odious and infamous death in it self as being aflicted only for atrocious and heinous crimes and partly because it was fore-ordained of God that Christ our Surety should end His life by that kind of death in order to our redemption and delivery from the Law 's deserved curse for which cause mainly God was pleased to pronounce that kind of death accursed above any other as appeareth from the Apostle's alleaging this Scripture to clear that Christ was made a curse for us It is written saith he Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree From Vers. 14. Learn 1. So wonderfull is God in working especially in that great work of our Redemption that He bringeth about one contrary by another He giveth life by death and the blessing by the curse and frequently in His way of working our choicest mercies do come through greatest miseries for Christ was made a curse that the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles 2. The blessing promised to Abraham and to the Nations in Abraham or rather in Christ Abraham's seed Gen. 22. 18. was not of temporall things only as of Corn and Wine of a fat and rich soile these were only the shell but the kernell of that Promise were blessings of another sort even spiritual such as Grace here and Glory hereafter which appeareth from this that before this blessing could be conveyed to Abrahams believing seed a price of infinite value behoved to be paid for it a price too precious to purchase any temporal blessing by for even Christ was made a curse that the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles 3. The spiritual blessing of Grace here and Glory hereafter promised to and in Abraham as it was purchased by Christ at a dear rate so it resideth and is exstant in Him who is as it were the storehouse wherin the blessing is laid up Col. 2. 3. and the dispenser of it unto Abraham's seed Act. 5. 31. in whom Believers are truly blessed Gen. 22. 18. and from whose fulnesse we do all receive and Grace for Grace Joh. 1. 16. for saith the Text That the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles through Jesus Christ or as it is in the Original in Jesus Christ So that this blessing is still in Him as the fountain and dispenser of it 4. Though Jesus Christ was the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world Rev. 13. -8. in so far as remission of sins and life eternal were bestowed upon Believers under the Old Testament through the merit of His death even before He actually died Rom. 3. 25. it being sufficient in order to these effects that it was transacted between the Father and the Son that He should die Isa. 53. 10. and that it was certainly known by God that He would die Act. 15. 18. Yet there were some effects of His death and those of great advantage to the Church both of Jews and Gentiles which were keeped in store and in Gods wise dispensation not to be actually bestowed untill the time of His death As first in relation to the Gentiles the real making-over of Abraham's blessing unto them whereby they were made one actual seed unto Abraham with the believing Jews was to follow upon Christ's death God having so provided and not to go before it for Christ was first made a curse by being hanged on a tree before the blessing of Abraham did come upon the Gentiles Secondly in relation to both Jew and Gentile the Covenant-promise made to Abraham and his seed Gen. 17. 7. which before Christ's death was vailed over with many carnal Ceremonies and lay hid under the many reiterated Promises of temporal blessings and an earthly Canaan Gen. 15. 7 c. was after Christs death to be made more clear the vail of Ceremonies and earthly blessings to be removed and the promised blessings of Righteousness and life everlasting to be held forth in their spiritual beauty and lustre for upon Christ's being made a curse he saith We to wit not only the Gentiles but the Jews also of whom Paul was one do receive the promise of the Spirit that is after the manner of speaking used by the Hebrews the spiritual promise in opposition to those external rites and shadows under which it did formerly lurk Doct. 5. Though by the grace of saving Faith a Christian believeth to be true whatever he knoweth to be revealed in the Word Act. 24. -14. and is in some measure especially when Faith is lively affected and doth practise according to what each Truth calleth for yeelding obedience to the Commands Rom. 16. 26. trembling at threatnings Isa. 66. -2. and imbracing the Promises of God for this life Psal. 23. 1. and that which is to come Heb. 11. 13. Yet the principal acts of Faith as it is saving and justifying are the accepting and receiving of the Promise and of Christ's satisfaction to the Father's justice held forth in the Promise for Paul speaking of Faiths part in Justification setteth forth the exercise of it thus That we might receive the promise by Faith 6. Faith doth justifie and make us blessed not for any worth in it self as if the work and merit of Faith were reckoned to us for righteousnesse but because it is the instrument and as it were the hand of the soul whereby we receive the Promise and Christ in the Promise whose satisfaction alone is our only righteousnesse before God Rom 5. -19. for that Paul is to be understood thus all alongs this dispute appeareth from these two Verses wherein he ascribeth our delivery from the curse and partaking of Abraham's blessing to Christ's merit or to His being made a curse for us giving unto Faith only the receeiving and imbracing of that satisfaction as it is offered in the Promise That we might receive the Promise through Faith saith he Vers. 15. Brethren I speak after the manner of men though it be but a mans Covenant yet if it be confirmed no man disanulleth or addeth thereto 16. Now to Abraham and his seed were
exhortation to quit all relation unto the bond-woman as they would escape the threatned judgment CHAP. V. IN the first part of this Chapter he exhorteth them to persist in their Christian Liberty from the bondage of the Mosaical Yoke and chiefly that they would not seek after Justification by these Ceremonial Observances In order to which the observation of the Ceremonial Law was mainly urged by the false Apostles Act. 15. 2. Which exhortation he presseth 1. directly because first Christ had purchased that liberty ver 1. Secondly Circumcision did deprive the person circumcised of all benefit by Christ ver 2. Thirdly it engaged him to keep the whole Law and so made his Salvation impossible ver 3. Fourthly seeking after Justification by these Observances was a renouncing of Christ ver 4. Fifthly Paul and other converted Jews sought not to be justified by these but by Faith ver 5. Sixthly the Command enjoyning Circumcision had now ceased ver 6. Next he presseth the exhortation indirectly first by reproving them for their defection ver 7. and by obviating two objections ver 8 9. Secondly by professing his hope of their recovery ver 10. Thirdly by refuting a calumny spread of himself as if he had preached Circumcision ver 11. Fourthly by wishing the prime seducers were cut off ver 12. In the second part of the Chapter he exhorteth them to use their liberty aright for which he giveth two rules 1. They would not give licence to their fleshly corruptions 2. They would serve one another by love ver 13. The latter of which he inforceth Because first love is the compend of all duty ver 14. Secondly dangerous effects would follow upon the want of it ver 15. and prescribeth an help for reducing the first rule in practice to wit walking in the Spirit ver 16 17 18. And having cleared what it is to fulfill the lusts of the flesh v. 19. 20 21. and what to walk in the Spirit from the respective effects of both Flesh and Spirit ver 22 23. he useth one argument against fulfilling the lusts of the flesh because they were engaged to crucifie them ver 24. and another for walking in the Spirit because they all pretended at least to regeneration and the first principles of a spiritual life ver 25. and concludeth with a dehortation from ambition provoking and envying one another ver 26. Vers. 1. STand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free and be not intangled again with the yoke of bondage THe Apostle first exhorteth them stedfastly constantly and against all contrary opposition to maintain both in judgment and practice the former doctrine of the Churches freedom especially from the Levitical Ceremonies Secondly he dehorteth them from coming under that intolerable bondage which did attend the making conscience of those ceremonial observances Act. 15. 10. and had some resemblance with that bondage of Idolatry under which they formerly were with relation to which he saith be not again intangled See chap. 4. ver 9. Thirdly he inforceth the exhortation more directly by six arguments The first whereof which is in this verse is Because Christ had purchased this freedom to the Church by His Bloud Doct. 1. Then only is it seasonable to labour upon the affections of an erring people by exhortation and reproof when sufficient pains have been first taken to inform their judgements and by strength of reason to convince them of their error otherwayes exhortations perswasions and reproofs will prove but poor and weak arguments for Paul useth this method here while having formerly gone about by Scripture and Reason to convince them of their Error he doth now exhort them Stand fast therefore c. 2. Every man by nature is a bondslave as being under the bondage of sin Rom. 6. 17 Satan Eph. 1. -2. the curse of the Law Gal. 3. 10. The Jews moreover were under bondage to the Ceremonial Law the observing whereof was a bondage because of the great trouble pain in the flesh and expence which did attend the observation of it and therefore it especially is meaned by the yoke of bondage in this place See Act. 15. 10. for while he saith Christ hath made us free he supposeth a foregoing-bondage 3. Jesus Christ by his obedience and death chap. 4. 4 5. hath purchased freedom and liberty unto His Church a liberty not to do evil Rom. 6. 1. nor from the yoke of new obedience Mat. 11. 29. nor from the crosse Mark 8. -34. nor yet from that due obedience and reverence which inferiours ow to superiours Col. 3. 22. Rom. 13. 1. but from the dominion of sin Rom. 6. 14. the tyranny of Satan 2 Tim. 2. 25 26. the curse Gal. 3. 13. and irritating power of the Law Rom. 7. 5 6. from observing the Ceremonial Law of Moses Col. 2. 14. and much more from subjecting our Consciences to the Rites Doctrines Ceremonies and Laws of men in the matter of Worship Col. 2. 20. for saith he Christ hath made us free 4. The consideration of the worth and price which Christ hath put upon our freedom and liberty in all the fore-mentioned particulars even such as He hath given Himself for the purchase of it ought to indear it unto us so much as that contrary to all opposition and to the utmost of our power and abilities and upon all hazard whatsoever we may with courage and constancy in our places and stations stand to the defence of it for so much doth the Apostle enjoyn saying Stand fast therefore to the liberty and that because Christ hath made us free 5. Though civil liberty and freedom from bodily bondage be so much desired that even before we be called to it we are ready to break all bonds and aspire to be at it Jude ver 8. Yet so ignorant are we of that worth which is in spiritual liberty and freedom from spirituall bondage that hardly can we be excited to seek after it or made to stand to it when it is attained but are in daily hazard to return to the flesh-pots of Egypt preferring our former bondage to our present liberty Hence the Apostle findeth it necessary to inculcate this duty so much of standing to the liberty and of not being intangled again with the yoke of bondage 6. Multiplicity of external Rites and significant Ceremonies in the matter of Worship is not only a burden and yoke to the conscience hard to be born but also an intangling and insnaring yoke especially when folk do place all their religion in these so that when once the conscience hath stooped to take on this yoke hardly can it again be shaken off the truth whereof doth hold in Rites and Ceremonies which are even appointed of God but much more in those which are appointed only by men for the Apostle calleth the Ceremonial Law a yoke and such as would intangle them Be not intangled again with the yoke of bondage he alludeth to oxen whose necks are tyed to
beloved Christians let me exhort you all and especially you to whom the Lord hath carved out such a lot in things worldly that ye have abundance of time and leasure from your other imployments Give more of your time to the searching of Scripture and labour to understand the mind of God concerning your Salvation revealed therein Hereby shall you be preserved from being led aside by Satans emissaries who do erre not knowing the Scriptures Matth. 22. 29. Hereby ye shall be made wise unto Salvation and rendered victorious over your strongest lusts and throughly fitted for the most difficult duties while the Lord by His Spirit shall make the Scriptures profitable unto you for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousnesse and thereby make you perfect throughly furnished unto all good works 2 Tim 3. 16 17. Only in order to the gaining of those rich advantages by reading Scripture ye would read not superficially but conscientiously attentivly and devoutly and do not slight to take what helps ye can get from the Labours of others for attaining to the increase of solid knowledge and sanctifying grace What humane frailties you discerne in this piece of mine which doubtlesse are not a few pitie them and so much the more pray for me that I may discern and amend them and if any will be so faithfull and free as to advertise me either immediately or by causing others to acquaint me with them I shall God willing be humbly thankfull and endeavour to make the best use I can of their freedom knowing that such reproofs will not break my head but be as a precious ointment The great and gracious God blesse all your endeavours for advancing your selves and your relations in knowledge and grace So prayeth Kilwinning Nov. 12. 1658. Your servant in the Lord JAMES FERGUSSON ERRATA Page Line Read 6 11 subscribe 10 24 5. 13 28 had deserted 1● 28 their 20 7 believing ●1 6 their 24 15 dele to 36 9 wickednesse 37 15 32. 39 16 22. 40 23 went not up 52 5 our 53 23 acquired 54 28 2. 61 24 composing ibid 35 9. 19. 84 13 dele who 102 10 affections 131 10 inflicted 136 24 worth 163 20 doth succeed 166 3 ver 7. 171 7 17. 180 12 us sons 239 23 11. 283 11 may have 298 23 15. 315 7 sin and A brief Exposition of the Epistle of Paul to the Galatians The ARGUMENT PAul having planted several Churches in Galatia Act. 16. 6. and 18. 23. a region of Asia the lesse and being now as it seemeth a prisoner at Rome chap. 6. 17. some false Apostles had seduced these Churches from the sincere doctrine of the Gospel preached by Paul chap. 1. 6. perswading them that the observation of the Levitical Ceremonies now abolished was necessary chap. 6. 13. and that justification and salvation were partly from faith in Christ and partly also from their own works chap. 3. 2. and 4. 21. and that Paul was no lawful Apostle no wayes to be compared with the other Apostles who had seen Christ in the flesh as may be gathered from chap. 2. 6 9. and therefore his doctrine was but false Upon which occasion the Apostle writeth unto them this Epistle wherein his scope is to convince those Galatians of their Errors to reduce them to the right way to confirm them in the Truth and to presse upon them the duties of an holy life chap. 3 and 4 c. which he laboureth to effectuate after prefacing to ver 6. chap. 1. First by asserting the truth of the Gospel preached by him and the Authority of his own Apostleship to ver 15. of chap. 2. Secondly by vindicating the true doctrine of justification by faith and of the temporary use and abrogation of the Levitical Law and of the whole legal dispensation of the Covenant of Grace to the end of chap. 4. Thirdly by instructing them in the right use of Christian Liberty having exhorted them to stand to it and pointing out and pressing upon them the exercise of several Christian Vertues to ver 11. of chap. 6. From whence he concludeth the Epistle to the end of chap. 6. CHAP. I. IN the first part of this Chapter is the preface to the whole Epistle containing the party who did write it ver 1 2 the party to whom it was written ver 2. the salutation ver 3. a description of Jesus Christ from the work of Redemption ver 4. and a thanksgiving to God for this work ver 5. In the second part he reproveth the Galatians for their defection from the Gospel ver 6. to Errors which did overturn it ver 7. In the third part that he may justifie this reproof he asserteth the divine authority of the Gospel preached by him First by cursing those who should hold out another Gospel differing from it ver 8 9. Secondly from the scope of his doctrine and his aim in preaching it ver 10. Thirdly because both the first saving knowledge which he had of the Gospel and his office to preach it were immediatly from God and not from men whether Apostles or any other ver 11 12. whereof he giveth several evidences As first that ever untill the instant of his conversion he was a learned but persecuting Pharisee ver 13 14. Secondly that being miraculously converted and called he went presently with no small pains and hazard to discharge his Apostolick Office without instruction or authority received from any Apostle ver 15 16 17. Thirdly that after three years he went to Peter but not to be informed by him or to receive ordination from him or from any other Apostle ver 18 19. The truth of all which history he confirmeth by an oath ver 20. Fourthly that he preached as an Apostle in Syria and Cilicia with the approbation of the Christian Jews whom formerly he had persecuted ver 21 22 23 24. Vers. 1. PAUL an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised Him from the dead 2. And all the Brethren which are with me unto the Churches of Galatia IN these two Verses is the Inscription of the Epistle holding forth 1. Who did write it to wit Paul described from his Office and his Call to that Office which were both wholly divine as being immediately from God ver 1. And the Brethren with him such were eminent Professors but especially publick Preachers who then were with Paul and did give their testimony to those Truths contained in this Epistle though they were not the immediate Pen-men of the holy Ghost in it as Paul was 2. To whom the Epistle was written ver 2. From ver 1. Learn 1. Free-grace doth often light upon the most unworthy not only by giving grace and salvation to themselves but also making them sometimes instrumental for the Kingdom of Christ and for bringing about the salvation of others for Paul once a wicked persecutor 1 Tim. 1. 13 is now made an eminent Apostle Paul an
take liberty of practice to himself in those things which he doth condemn in others and the contrary of which he doth either by his Doctrine or example at other times constrain them to as appeareth from the question here propounded If thou livest not as do the Jews why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews as if he had said Thou can neither answer to God nor man for it 7. It is no small sin for Superiours to bind where the Lord hath left free by urging upon their Inferiours the observing of a thing in its own nature indifferent as necessary except it be in these cases wherein the Lord by those circumstances which do accompany it doth point it out as necessary such are the cases of scandal Act. 15. 28 29. and contempt 1 Cor. 14. 40. for hereby mainly is Peter's sin aggreged that he did compel the Gentiles to the necessary observation of the Ceremonial Law though the use of it was at that time indifferent Why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews 8. In the primitive times of the Christian Church the People of God did wonderfully subject themselves to the Ministry of the Word in the hand of His Servants and much more than People now do for if the actions of the Apostles compelled men to do this or that as Peter's action did compel the Gentiles what then did their Doctrine and heavenly Exhortations Why compellest thou the Gentiles c. Vers. 15. We who are Jews by nature and not sinners of the Gentiles 16. Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the Faith of Jesus Christ even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified by the Faith of Christ and not by the works of the Law for by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified SOme Interpreters do conceive that Paul's speech to Peter doth yet continue in these two Verses Yea and some think that it is extended to the end of the Chapter but others conceive that Paul having closed the narration of what passed betwixt him and Peter ver 14. doth here return to speak to the Galatians and though those last do seem to have most of reason for them yet which of these opinions do stand it is all one to the main purpose for it is clear that the Apostle doth here state and fall upon one of the main questions which were betwixt him and his adversaries to wit That we are justified or accepted of and declared righteous in God's sight by Faith in Christ and not by the works of the Law And for the better understanding of the threed method of the Apostles dispute together with the state of the present question and the sense and force of those arguments which he maketh use of to confirm the Truth in controversie We shall premit three things in general First the Apostle's adversaries erred in two things mainly 1. they urged the rigid observation of the Ceremonial Law as necessary by vertue of a divine Precept standing yet in force as may be gathered from the Apostle's reasoning chap. 3. 19 25. and chap. 4. 3 4 5. 2. As Seducers wax worse and worse 2 Tim. 3. 13. so they went higher and urged the observation of these Ceremonies as that whereby joyntly at least with Christ sinners are justified before God as appeareth from chap. 2. 16 21. and 3. 11. Now the Apostle addresseth himself to the refutation of both those Errors and because the latter Error to wit That sinners are justified by their obedience to the Law is most dangerous therefore he doth refute it first and apart to ver 19. chap. 3. And next he refuteth that first Error joyntly with the other proving there was no necessity at all of observing the Ceremonial Law or any part of that Mosaical Pedagogie now under the New Testament and that it ought not now to be observed the date prefixed by God for the observation of it being already expired to ver 13. chap. 5. Secondly while the Apostle all-along this dispute denyeth we are justified or that righteousnesse and the inheritance do come by the Law he understandeth by the Law not the whole Doctrine delivered by Moses upon Mount Sinai for the Law being so taken was a Covenant of Grace as appeareth from the Preface and Promises of the Decalogue and from the Ceremonial Law which shadowed forth Christ and remission of sins through Him Heb. 10. 4 8 9. so that Believers under the Old Testament may be said to have been justified and to have had righteousnesse by the Law in this sense for it implyeth no further than that they were justified according to the tenour of the Covenant of Grace as it was wrapped-up in that ancient legal dispensation The Apostle therefore takes the Law more strictly and in the sense of his adversaries for the mere precepts and threatnings of the Law as it requires perfect obedience and curseth those who have it not abstracting from Christ and Grace which were held forth though but obscurely in it for in that sense his adversaries maintained justification by the Law and therefore the Apostle while he refuteth justification by the Law must be understood to speak of the Law in the same sense also which sometimes he clearly expresseth while he explaineth his meaning by denying we are justified by the works of the Law vers 16. and chap. 3. 5 10. Thirdly that the Apostle may strike at the root of this their most dangerous Error of Justification by Works he excludeth all Works in general not only those of the Ceremonial Law but the Works also of the Moral Law Yea and all Works of ours whatsoever from having influence upon Justification for as shall be observed in the Dispute it self the Arguments used by the Apostle to prove that we are not justified by Works are applicable to the Moral Law equally if not more than to the Ceremonial Law Yea and do exclude the Works of the Regenerate as well as of the Unregenerate Besides it is sure that none professing the Name of Christ as the Apostle's adversaries did would have urged the naked external performance of those Ceremonies as having influence upon Justification except as it was conjoyned with internal love to God and our neighbour commanded by the Moral Law and signified expressed and some one way or other advanced by those outward performances Neither is it conceivable how they maintaining a necessity of Faith in Christ could imagine that any Works whatsoever whether done in obedience to the Ceremonial Law or to the Moral being such Works only as are done by the power of Nature and strength of Free-will without the Grace of Christ should have justified a sinner and made him righteous before God So that if Paul in this Dispute had excluded from Justification only the external Works of the Ceremonial Law and not the Works of the Moral Law also or only all Works whatsoever flowing
of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself for me HEre is a third Reason to the same purpose with the former shewing more fully that justified persons are most strictly tyed to mortify sin and lead an holy life if so they walk according to the prescript of the Doctrine of Justification which was taught by Paul for he and by consequence all real Believers were crucified with Christ to wit the old man of their indwelling corruption Rom. 6. 6. it did receive the stroke of death by His death He having by death redeemed them from the slavery of it Tit. 2. 14. which crucifixion with Christ doth not destroy the natural life of Believers for so Paul sheweth he did live only the old man of corruption doth not live in them so as to act them in what they do but Jesus Christ doth live in them He being united to them as the root to the branches or head to the members and furnishing them with spiritual life and motion whereby the very natural life which they live and those things which concern that life are ordered and gone about by vertue of strength drawn from Christ by Faith in Him and the consideration of Christ's love to them and His dying for them because he loved them is a great inducement unto justified persons so to live Now this being true in Paul and in some measure in all Believers and seing the principles of the Doctrine of Justification did bind all to this It is evident that to affirm this Doctrine did tend to foster sin is but a foulforged calumny Doct. 1. As Jesus Christ did die a most shameful painful and cursed death upon the crosse Gal. 3. 13. so in His dying He did stand not as a private but as a publick person in the room and place of all the Elect for He was their surety Heb. 7. 22. and died for them Job 11. 50. so that when they lay hold upon Him by Faith and thereby are made one with Him Eph. 3. 17 the crosse and passion of Christ as to all those benefits which were purchased by it whether in order to the removal of the guilt of sin Mat. 26. 28. or to the subduing of its strength and quickning of them in the way of holinesse 2 Cor. 5. 15. or to the purchasing of life eternal for them Joh. 3. 16. is as verily made theirs as if they had been crucified in their own persons for Paul saith of himself as an instance of all Believers I am crucified with Christ. 2. The former confideration of the Believer's right to Christ's purchase in order to the subduing of sin layeth a strong engagement on him and giveth a great encouragement unto him to oppose resist and set about the mortification of sin in himself for Paul maketh this an argument to prove that the Doctrine of Justification in its own nature is no friend to sin because according to the principles thereof the justified person is crucified with Christ. 3. God's infinit wisdom hath found out the way whereby the threatning of death Gen. 2. 17. is fulfilled in the Elect so that they die and yet their lives are spared they die and yet they live for they are reckoned in Law to have died when Christ their Surety died for them so that He was taken and they go free Joh. 18. 8. thus is that riddle solved which is here propounded by Paul I am crucified with Christ yet I live 4. Though notwithstanding of fulfilling the threatning of death upon the Elect they do live yet upon their believing in Jesus Christ the old man of corruption and power of sin is so far weakened in them that it doth not bear the chief sway in their heart to command execute and order all their actions as formerly it did Gen. 6. 5. for thus is that other riddle solved which is here propounded Nevertheless I live yet not I to wit the old I the body of death and corruption did not live in him but was mortified and the dominion thereof removed Rom. 6. 14. Dost 5. The Doctrine of Justification by Free-grace revealed in the Gospel layeth on strong obligations upon the justified person to set about the whole duties of Sanctification not only those which relate to the mortifying of sin but also to his quickning in the way of grace both those must go together and the justified man is obliged to both and furnished with help and encouragement from the Doctrine of Justification to set about both for Paul sheweth they were both conjoyned in himself the first while he saith Not I live the second while he saith Christ liveth in me whereby is meant his following the motions of Christ's Spirit as the guide of his life Rom. 8. 1. and this he speaketh of himself as a thing that he was obliged unto and furnished for by the Doctrine of Justification which he taught otherwise he should not have refuted the calumny of his adversaries 6. That Christians may live the spiritual life of grace they must 1. be united to Christ and have Christ dwelling in them by Faith Eph. 3. 17. for speaking of the spiritual life which he lived he supposeth Christ to be in him But Christ liveth in me 2. Besides this union with Christ there must be a communication of influence from the Spirit of Christ to excite them unto Cant. 5. 2. enable them for John 15. 5. make them persevere Philip. 1. 6. and effectually to order and direct them in Philip. 4. 13. the practice of every thing that is spiritually good for this is to have Christ living in them to wit as the head in the members or root in the branches which do furnish the members and branches with all things necessary for life and growth and Christ's quickning of Believers in the way of grace is frequently see forth by similitudes drawn from those Col. 2. 19. Joh. 15. 5. 3. The Believer if so he would live this spiritual life must not only have the habit of Faith in his heart but also must keep it in daily exercise so as first thereby to try what he is to do if so it be warranted by the Word of Truth and how it is to be circumstantiated Rom. 14. 23. Secondly thereby to draw furniture from the Spirit of Christ for exciting enabling and directing him in the way of duty 2 Cor. 3. 5. And thirdly to apply pardoning mercy for covering the defects of duty when he hath gone about it and for removing the guilt of all his other sins Mat. 6. 11. for this is to live by the Faith of the Son of God or in the Son of God which Paul speaketh of as a necessary ingredient in this spiritual life 4. This spiritual life and life of Faith must be extended not only to spiritual duties and of God's immediate Worship but also to all the actions of our natural and temporal life in so far as they fall under a Command even to our eating and drinking 1 Cor.
those Galatians were Secondly if the reproof flow from love and compassion in the person who doth reprove and an honest desire after the sinner's good as it was here for he casteth not up their folly in passion but in compassion desiring nothing but their good and amendment Thirdly if the reproof carry along all lawfull and allowed moderation with it as here he calleth them not wicked but more gently foolish or imprudent and withall layeth the great weight of their sins upon their Seducers who had bewitched them And fourthly That the reprover not only himself do know that there is reason so to charge them but also hold forth these reasons to them that they may be convinced also for so doth Paul he demonstrateth their folly from that they obeyed not the Gospel which was so plainly preached among them O foolish Galatians c. Doct. 6. Ministers ought not to rest upon a coldrife way of preaching Truth Mat. 7 -29. but are to endeavour the delivery of it with that perspicuity and plainnesse Col. 4. 4. that power and livelinesse 1 Cor. 2. 4. as it may penetrate the conscience of the hearers and be so clear and evident to them as if it were pictured and painted out before their eyes and in order to this they would not only labour to understand throughly what they preach 1 Tim. 1. 7. but also to believe it themselves 2 Cor. 4. 13. and to have their own affections in some measure warmed with love to it 1 Tim. 1. 15 And above all would labour with God that the effectuall operation of His Spirit may come along with what they preach 1 Cor. 2. -4. that so the Truth delivered may be the more lively and convincingly represented to the hearers for Paul did so preach Jesus Christ was evidently set forth crucified among them before their eyes He did so represent Christ and Him crucified to their ears by the preaching of the Word as if they had seen Him with their eyes 7. Though Jesus Christ and His sufferings are to be painted out vively represented and pictured by the plain and powerful preaching of the Gospel Yet it doth not follow that they are to be artificially painted with colours upon stone or timber for religious use for God commandeth the former but condemneth the latter Exod. 20. 4. And the graven image is but a teacher of lies Hab. 2. 18. Doct. 8. The more clearly and powerfully that the Gospel hath been preached among a People their defection from it and not giving obedience to it is the more aggreged for Paul aggregeth their not obeying the Truth from this that before their eyes Jesus Christ had been evidently set forth crucified among them Vers. 2. This only would I learn of you Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith THe Apostle having stirred them up to attention by a reproof doth now return to his former dispute proving that we are justified by Faith and not by Works See chap. 2. 16. And this he proveth first because the Spirit of Regeneration and other saving Graces of the Spirit of God called here the Spirit as being fruits of the Spirit chap. 5. 22. were wrought in those of them who were regenerate not by the works of the Law that is by the Doctrine of Justification by Works but by the hearing of Faith that is by hearing the Doctrine of Justification by Faith for here as usually elswhere See chap. 1. 23. Faith is taken for the Doctrine that is believed And for the truth of this assertion he appealeth to their own conscience and experience leaving them to gather that therefore they were justified and reconciled by the Doctrine of Faith seing God bestoweth His Spirit upon none but such as are reconciled unto Him Rom. 5. 1 2 c. Doct. 1. There is not ordinarily any Church so corrupt but God hath some who are truely gracious among them for Paul's Argument supposeth that the Spirit and saving graces of the Spirit were in some of those Galatians because of whom he speaketh generally unto all Received ye the Spirit saith he 2. Even those who are truely gracious may stagger strangely in reeling times and be in a great measure overtaken with the most dangerous Errors of the times though they cannot totally 1 Pet. 1. 23. nor finally Isa. 54. 7 8. fall away for Paul speaketh even to them who had received the Spirit as to those who were taken with the common Errors Received ye the Spirit 3. As Regeneration and saving Grace is the work of God's Spirit in the Elect So the ordinary mean whereby He conveyeth Grace to the heart is by hearing the Word preached for they had received the Spirit by the hearing of Faith 4. Though the hearing of the Law preached doth work conviction of sin terror of conscience and legal contrition Act. 2. 37. whereby the heart is in some sort prepared for receiving of the Gospel Yet the Law as distinct from the Gospel and as it presseth perfect obedience in order to our Justification before God in which sense it was mistaken by the false Apostles and is so spoken of in this dispute See upon chap. 2. 15. can never be a mean of begetting Grace in the heart for so it driveth the soul to despair and worketh wrath Rom. 4. 15. Thus the Apostle affirmeth they received not the Spirit by the works of the Law 5. It is the Gospel preached and heard which the Lord maketh use of as a mean for conveying Grace to the heart being first convinced of sin and misery by the preaching of the Law Act. 2. 37 38. for the Gospel offereth Christ freely from whom being laid hold upon by Faith we do all receive Grace for Grace Job 1. 16. Thus the Apostle affirmeth they had received the Spirit by the hearing of Faith 6. Though a gracious heart may be overtaken with Error as said is See Doct. 2. Yet there remaineth somewhat of conscience in vigour with them in so far as that being appealed unto about the truth of things weighty and which belong to the reality of God's work in their heart and the way of His working in them they dare not readily lie and contradict their own known experience for Paul at least supposeth so much while he doth appeal to their own conscience and experience how saving Grace was wrought in them This only would I learn of you Received ye c. 7. Our Justification before God and the renovation of our natures by the Spirit of God are so much conjoyned that the Doctrine which through God's blessing is the mean of working the former is also the only Doctrine appointed of God for holding forth the right way of attaining the latter for Paul argueth that the Doctrine of Justification without Works is divine because that Doctrine was the mean of conveying sanctifying Grace unto their hearts as appeareth from the scope of the Argument here used Received ye the Spirit by
the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith Vers. 3. Are ye so foolish having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect by the flesh HEre is an Inference from the former Verse That seing their beginning in the way of Christianity was spirituall the Doctrine of Justification by Faith having communicated the Spirit of Regeneration and other Graces to them as ver 2. it should be an act of extream folly and madnesse in them to quit that Doctrine and to imbrace the Doctrine of Justification by Works as if they could be perfected by it seing it is but a fleshly dead Doctrine and therefore is here called flesh because flesh and corrupt nature do plead and stand for it Rom. 10. 3. and because it doth produce no spiritual effect but rather the contrary in the soul who doth imbrace it Rom. 7. 5. Doct. 1. The Text speaketh nothing against the Doctrine of Perseverance as if those who were once renewed and truly spiritual might lose the Spirit of God altogether and turn fleshly For besides first that the Apostle doth not positively assert that they were changed already but only by way of question holdeth out the hazard which should follow upon their change Secondly he speaketh not of a change of qualities or dispositions from good to bad but in their judgment from the Doctrine of Faith here called the Spirit to the Doctrine of Justification by Works here called flesh Thirdly though he did imply a change of qualities and disposition from Spirit to flesh and from holinesse to sin as a consequence of this change of judgment and opinion Yet there is nothing here importing that any total or final change of that kind either had fallen or could fall upon those who were truly gracious 2. The Doctrine maintained by the Papists now That Faith in Jesus Christ doth begin our Justification in so far as it disposeth us unto good works and that by those our Justification is compleated is no new error but that which hath been held of old by these Hereticks who had seduced the Galatians and whom Paul here refuteth for he supposeth that in answer to the present argument they might readily affirm that though the Doctrine of Faith here called the Spirit as 2 Cor. 3. 6. did begin the work yet the Doctrine of Works here called flesh did perfect it Having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect by the flesh 3. The fore-mentioned Doctrine hath so many absurdities following upon it That the imbracing of it doth argue no lesse than folly and madnesse for Justification by Faith and Works cannot consist Rom. 11. 6. much lesse can the former take its perfection from the latter the more noble from that which is more base hence Paul condemneth it of folly Are ye so foolish saith he having begun c. 4. Our after-carriage and walking in the things of God and religious matters ought to be conform to our good beginnings which we once had in those and the contrary hereof is incomparable folly and madness for he saith Are ye so foolish having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect by the flesh Vers. 4. Have ye suffered so many things in vain if it be yet in vain HE cleareth what he said of the folly and madnesse which is in following the way presently spoken of by shewing if they should hold on to seek Justification by Works or partly by Faith and partly by Works they would lose all the fruit of their former constancy and sufferings sustained by them for that Truth which he did now preach this he speaketh not positively but as it were doubtingly and suspending its certainty upon the hopes he had of their amendment Doct. 1. It is the lot of those who professe Truth to suffer many things in the defence of it See chap. 1. ver 13. doct 6. The Galatians found the truth of this Have ye suffered so many things 2. They may suffer many things for Truth who afterwards will make foul defection from it for as the example of others particular interest wrapt up in the publick and the general applause which sufferers for Truth do receive from the lovers of Truth will make even Hypocrites suffer much so continued sufferings will make even the godly faint for a time yea the best being left to themselves in an hour of tentation will turn their back upon Truth so that no engagements by a profession no experience or remembrance of that joy and sweetnesse which they have found in the way of Truth nor yet their former sufferings for Truth will make them adhere unto it for these Galatians had suffered many things for the Doctrine of Justification by Faith yea and had found much sweetnesse and satisfaction in it chap. 4. 15. and yet now they have made defection from it Have ye suffered so many things in vain 3. Afflictions and sufferings for the Truth are very useful and profitable to the sufferers though not to satisfie God's justice for sin neither in its guilt nor punishment neither eternal nor temporal for these are fully done away in Christ Isa. 53. 5. Yet for other ends as for the trial of their Faith 1 Pet. 1. 7. for conforming them to Christ their head Philip. 3. 10. who was a man of sorrows Isa. 53. 3. for making them die to the world chap. 6. 14. and to fit them for Heaven afflictions and crosses being the beaten way which leadeth to it Act. 14. 22. for while he saith Have ye suffered so many things in vain he importeth their sufferings would have been usefull for them if they themselves had not hindered it 4. Whatever have been the sufferings of a people or person for Truth they are all in vain lost and to no purpose as to any thing which can be expected from God to the party who hath suffered if so he make defection from and turn his back upon Truth afterwards for Paul insinuateth this as an undoubted Truth while he saith Have ye suffered so many things in vain 5. Though these who have suffered much for Truth should afterward make defection from it we are neverthelesse to keep charity towards them as hoping God will give them repentance and reclaim them Yea all our sharpnesse towards them whether in aggreging their sin or in holding out the terrible consequences which are deserved by and probably will follow upon their sin ought to be wisely tempered by expressing those charitable thoughts which we have of them for so doth the Apostle here while speaking of these Galatians who had formerly suffered much for Truth and threatning them for their present defection with the losse of all those advantages which they might have expected from their sufferings the suspendeth the certainty of the threatning upon their hoped-for repentance If it be yet in 〈◊〉 saith he Vers. 5. He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit 〈◊〉 worketh miracles among you doth He it by the works of the Law or by
being by Christ's death joyned in one did enjoy the Promise of the Spirit or the spiritual Promise as being now denuded of these earthly and external Ceremonies wherewith it was vailed formerly and set forth in its native and spiritual beauty and lustre both which fruits of Christ's death he sheweth are conveyed unto and enjoyed by both Jews and Gentiles only by Faith So that the Apostle in these two Verses doth not only prove the main Conclusion That Faith laying hold on Christ is that which delivereth from the Law 's curse and which conveyeth Abraham's blessing together with the Covenant-promise unto us and so doth justifie us but also indirectly and as it were at the by hinteth at two other Truths tending also to clear the main controversie between him and his adversaries which therefore he is to assert more directly afterwards to wit first That now after Christ's death the Gentiles being called by the Gospel were to be joyned in one body with the Jews and both of them to make up one seed to Abraham and equally to partake of Abraham's blessing whereof free Justification through Faith spoken of ver 9. was a main part And secondly that the Covenant-promise that God would be a God to Abraham and to his seed Gen. 17. 7. was now after Christ's death to be held forth more clearly and spiritually the types and shadows of earthly Ceremonies and of that legal Dispensation under which it was formerly hid being laid aside From Vers. 13. Learn 1. The threatnings of the Law denouncing a curse against those who yeeld not personal obedience to it did not exclude or forbid a Surety to come in the sinners room and to undergo the curse due unto Him for though it be clear from ver 10. that the Law doth curse all yet this impeded not but Christ might come to redeem us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us 2. Every man by nature the Elect not excepted Eph. 2. -3. are under the sentence of the Law 's curse whereby in God's justice they are under the power of darknesse Col. 1. 13. slavery and bondage to sin and Satan Eph. 2. -2. so to remain until they be cast in utter darknesse Jude 13. except delivery and redemption do interveen for while it is said Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law it is supposed that by nature we are under it 3. There is no delivery of enslaved man from this wofull bondage but by giving satisfaction and by paying of a price for the wrong done to Divine Justice either by himself or by some surety in his stead God's fidelity Gen. 2. 17. His righteous nature Psal. 11. 6 7. and the inward desert of sin Rom. 1. 32. do call for it for Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law the word signifieth to deliver by giving a price 4. It is not in the power of fallen man to acquire a ransom for himself by any thing he can either do or suffer whereby Justice may be satisfied and he delivered from this state of slavery and bondage The redemption of the soul is precious and ceaseth for ever to wit among men Psal. 49. 8. for if man could redeem himself Christ had not been put to it to redeem us from the curse of the Law 5. Jesus Christ the second Person of the blessed Trinity hath undertaken this great work of redeeming captive-man from his slavery and bondage and accordingly hath accomplished it The work was indeed undertaken at the appointment of all the Persons Luke 1. 68. to whom also the price was paid Eph. 5. 2. only the execution of this work was by that wise design of sending the second Person in the flesh to become man that so he might not only have right as our near kinsman Ruth 3. 12 13. but also be fitted to redeem as having a price to lay down for our ransom Heb. 10. 5. Christ hath redeemed us 1. Our Redeemer Jesus Christ is true God who being man's Creator and having entred a Covenant of friendship with man at the beginning by vertue whereof He had interest in man not only as His creature but as one in state of friendship with Himself from which blessed state man did fall Eccles. 7. 29. and so brought himself and all his posterity 1 Cor. 15. 21 to this state of bondage wherein he now is for so much is imported while Christ is said to redeem Redemption being properly of those things which once were our own but for the time are lost Christ hath redeemed us saith he 7. This work of man's Redemption undertaken and accomplished by Christ was a Redemption properly so called our freedom and delivery being obtained not by power or strong hand meerly nor yet coming from the sole condescension and pity of the injured party without seeking reparation for former injuries but by the payment of a sufficient price and by giving a just satisfaction to a provoked God as appeareth not only from the word rendred redeem which as said is signifieth to buy with a price but also from this that the price is condescended upon to wit Christ's undergoing the curse of the Law due to us and this He did for us that is not only for our good but also in our room and stead for by His undergoing this curse we are freed from it so that although to buy or redeem be sometimes taken improperly and doth signifie to obtain a thing without any price Isa. 52. 3. yet what is presently said and other circumstances do evince that in this work of Redemption performed by Christ the word must be taken properly for a delivery obtained by a payment of a just price Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us 8. The price paid by Christ in order to our redemption was no lesse than His undergoing that curse of the Law which was due to us whence it followeth that Christ's sufferings by way of satisfaction were not only in His body but also in His soul He did not only wrestle with the fear of death Heb. 5. -7. but was also deprived of that joy and comfort or the sense and feeling of God's favour and help which He formerly enjoyed and had His own sad conflicts and agonies arising in His Soul hereupon Mat. 27. 46. which though in us they would necessarily produce sin yet in Christ they did not Heb. 4. -15. because of His most pure nature Heb. 7. 26. for He was made the curse of the Law for us Now the curse of the Law did reach to the terrors of the soul as well as to the pains of the body 9. Though Jesus Christ as considered in His own Person was altogether holy and innocent Isa. 53. -9. and alwayes even when He was made a curse most beloved of the Father Mat. 3. 17. yet being considered as our Surety Heb. 7. 22. and sustaining our person He was the object of sin-pursuing justice
the Promises made He saith not And to seeds as of many but as of one And to thy seed which is Christ. 17. And this I say that the Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law which was four hundred and thirty years after cannot disanul that it should make the Promise of none effect 18. For if the inheritance be of the Law it is no more of Promise but God gave it to Abraham by Promise THe Apostle having confirmed the truth of his Doctrine by several Arguments doth in the second part of the Chapter answer some Objections and joyntly herewith refuteth the other Error maintained by his adversaries about the necessity of observing the Ceremonial Law shewing that however the Law or the legal way of dispensing the Covenant of Grace prescribed unto Moses upon mount Sinai was for good use so long as by God's appointment it was to stand in force yet Christ being now come in the flesh the date prefixed for its continuance was now expired and so the Christian Church of Jews and Gentiles wholly freed from the observation of it The first Objection as may be gathered by his Answer was to this purpose That granting what the Apostle had said concerning Justification by Faith in the Promise and not by Works did hold true before the Law was given by Moses yet afterwards that way of Justification seemeth to have been altered and Justification by Works established according to the tenour of the Law given by God on mount Sinai seing that latter Acts and constitutions do not only stand in force but also abrogate the former in so far at least as they are inconsistent with the latter The Apostle answereth by a comparison which he sheweth is taken from humane affairs and first setteth down the similitude to this purpose That a Covenant or Paction made among men for preserving mutual peace and friendship being once confirmed by Oath and other usual solemnities cannot without imputation of levity or injustice be disannulled and quite broken neither can any condition destructive to the former be added to it ver 15. And secondly That he may apply this similitude with greater evidence and force he first sheweth the nature of that Covenant made by God with Abraham did consist in Promises wherein the blessing promised is given freely and not for the merit and worth of our obedience and works as the word rendred Promise doth signifie and next he sheweth that all Abraham's seed not only those who lived before the giving of the Law but those also who lived after and not only the Jews but also the Gentiles were comprehended in the Covenant and to partake of the promised Blessing according to the tenour of it which he proveth from the formal words of the Covenant-tender which express all those who were to partake of the covenanted Blessing by the name of Abraham and of his Seed in the singular number to shew that it is under one and the same consideration that they all are his seed and do partake of his promised Blessing otherwise if it had been Gods purpose to convey the heavenly Inheritance unto some upon their Faith in the Promise and unto others for the merit of their Works Then the Promise should have been made unto his Seeds in the plural number as pointing at the different grounds of this their spiritual relation unto Abraham and not unto his Seed in the singular which seed of Abraham is here called Christ to wit Christ mystical which comprehendeth Christ the Head and all Believers whether before the Law or after whether Jew or Gentile as the Members of that Body whereof Christ is the Head all of which are designed by the name of Christ as 1 Cor. 12. -12. Col. 1. 24. and so here to shew that not Moses not the Law not Works but Christ the Promise and faith in Christ and the Promise is the bond and ty of this Union pleaded-for in Abrahams seed ver 16. Thirdly He applyeth the similitude taken from the unchangeablnesse of humane Covenants and inferreth that much lesse can that Covenant which was made with Abraham and his seed be abrogated or any condition destructive be added to it by the Law which was given four hundred and thirty years after which consequence is inforced by four Considerations 1. It was a Covenant made with Abraham not by a man like himself but by God 2. It was not only made but long before ratified and confirmed both by the Oath of God Heb. 6. 14. and other more than ordinary solemnities Gen. 15. 9 10 c. And 3. a Covenant not only made and confirmed but a Covenant confirmed in Christ or as the Original will bear looking toward Christ as Him alone upon whom the fulfilling of that Covenant did depend Gen. 22. 18. So that if this Covenant had been abrogated whether by the Law or any other thing there had been no necessity of sending Christ. And 4. because this Covenant upon Gods part was a free absolute Promise the performance whereof did not depend upon the works of the other party and so their unworthinesse could be no pretence for the abrogation of it this inference from the comparison is ver 17. And fourthly Because some in following forth the present Objection might have urged that though the giving of the Law did not fully abrogate the way of Justification by Faith in the Promise Yet this much behoved to be granted that the Law and Works were to be conjoyned at least with the Promise and Faith in the point of Justification Therefore the Apostle answereth ver 18. that even this much cannot be granted and that because Works and Faith Law and Promise are inconsistent as to the point of conveying a right to the covenanted Inheritance so that if the works of the Law have any influence upon our Justification and right to Heaven the free-gifted Promise made of God to Abraham and Faith in that Promise can have none and thus the confirmed Covenant should yet be abrogated the absurdity whereof he hath already shewen to wit ver 17. From Vers. 15. Learn 1. Though the Servants of Jesus Christ will be necessitated sometimes to use some more than ordinary sharpness of speech in their reproofs toward the People of God committed to their charge yet they are carefully to guard lest their affections be imbittered against them and would alwayes keep love and affection toward them yea and testifie their love to them even when they do most sharply reprove them for the Apostle though he upbraided these Galatians with folly ver 1. Yet here he testifieth that neverthelesse he loved them while he calleth them Brethren Brethren I speak after the manner of men 2. It is not only lawful but also exceedingly conducing for the edification of hearers that Ministers make use of similitudes and examples taken from things natural 1 Cor. 15. 38 c. artificial Iam. 3. 7. or from common custom among men for clearing or
confirming of spiritual Truths to the understanding and for inforcing the practice of some spiritual duty upon the will and affections 1 Cor. 9. 24. for similitudes from things earthly as being more notour unto us do conduce much not only to illustrate things spiritual but also to bring them frequently to our remembrance afterwards especially when those earthly things from which the similitude is taken do occur in our daily imployments Hence the Apostle professeth he would speak after the manner of men that is he would make use of a similitude taken from the custom of men in their civil affairs for clearing of the Truth in hand 3. As it is lawfull for men whether particular persons or Nations to enter a Covenant or paction for keeping of mutual peace and friendship and to confirm their Covenant so made by subscription oath 1 Sam. 20. 16 17. and other lawfull and accustomed olemnities Gen. 31. 51 c. that hereby it may be the more esteemed-of as sacred and inviolable So it is a mark of extream inconstancy and carryeth with it the guilt of high perfidie for those who have once entred such a Covenant to disanul alter or adde to it at their pleasure or to stand to it no longer than it maketh for their own advantage for saith he Though it be but a mans Covenant yet if it be confirmed no man disanulleth or addeth thereto No man to wit even the men themselves who made the Paction else the similitude would not quadrate to the Truth for illustration whereof it is made use of to wit that even God Himself that made the Covenant with Abraham and his seed could have no such purpose in giving the Law as to alter and abrogate that Covenant as is clear from ver 17. From Vers. 16. Learn 1. The Covenant of Grace made with Abraham and his spiritual seed is a Covenant of promise wherein the thing promised is freely bestowed and not from the merit or worth of our obedience and works and herein the promises of this Covenant do differ from the promises of the Law or Covenant of Works for by the Promises which signifie a free promise is meaned the Covenant of Grace to Abraham and his seed were the Promises made the word signifieth a free promise 2. This Covenant of Grace is also a Covenant of Promises as containing many Promises for although it sometime have the name of a promise in the singular number as ver 17. from that comprehensive and chief Promise I will be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee Gen. 17. -7. yet it containeth a numerous number of other promises which are as so many rivulets and streams flowing from that fountain-promise presently mentioned even the Promises of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Tim. 4. 8. for saith he To Abraham and his seed were the Promises made 3. This Covenant of Grace or Promise was entred by God with Abraham as accepting the tender of it not only for himself but for his seed whereby all his natural issue excepting those only who were expresly excepted by God to wit all the posterity of Ishmael and Esau who continued and waxed worse in the apostasie of their forefathers from Abrahams God Rom. 9. 7 13. were comprehended within the Covenant by vertue whereof though none did attain Salvation but those only who did come up to the conditions of the Covenant whereupon Salvation was tendred to wit Faith Habak 2. 4. and Repentance Isa. 55. 7. yet all of them did enjoy the priviledge of Ordinances Gen. 17. 10. and had Salvation offered unto them Joh. 4. 22. not absolutely but upon Gods terms revealed in His Word to wit if only they would believe and repent hence saith the Apostle To Abraham and his seed were the Promises made 4. As the Christian Church of the Gentiles is Abraham's spiritual seed as well as the Church of the Jews and was looked upon as his seed in that Covenant-promise made to Abraham and his seed Gen. 17. -5. compared with Rom 4. 16 17 So it is under one and the same consideration that both Jew and Gentile and all who reckon spiritual kindred to Abraham are his seed to wit as they follow the steps of his Faith and at least do professe that Doctrine of free Justification by Faith wherein Abraham walked Rom. 4. 12 See the distinction of the seeds or children ver 7. doct 8. for seing the Promises spoken of in the Text were made to his seed it seemeth they cannot be that Promise which aimed principally at Christ In thy seed shall all Nations be blessed Gen. 22. 18. but the Promises made to his seed the Church and chiefly that Promise I will be a God unto thee and to thy seed Gen. 17. -7. besides the mentioning of seed in the singular number were not an argument of any weight to prove that Christ personall was only meaned in the Promise seing seed is a word collective and may comprehend a number under it even in the singular number as the words Flock Army and such like so it seemeth most probable that by the seed here is meaned Christ mystical or Christ with His Body the Church made up both of Jew and Gentile who reckon spiritual kindred unto Abraham upon one and the same account and therefore are designed in the Promise by seed and not seeds He saith not And to seeds as of m●ny but as of one and to thy seed 5. So strict and near is that union which is betwixt Christ and the Church that not only is He the Churches Head Eph. 1. 22. but also as the Church is His Body and fulnesse Eph. 1. 23. So Christ is mystically and virtually the fulnesse of the Church in so far as it is He dwelling and working in them by the efficacy of His Spirit who separateth them from the world maketh them one mystical Body among themselves and one with Himself and worketh all their works in them even those which belong to Him not only as the Head but which also belong to them as Members of the Body 1 Cor. 12. 11 12. for hence is it that the whole believing seed of Abraham is here called Christ He being the bond of their union Joh. 17. 21. the fountain of their life and motion Joh. 4. 14. and the active immediate principle from which all their spiritual actions do flow Joh. 15. 5. And to thy seed which is Christ saith he From Vers. 17. Learn 1. That though God might have dealt with man by way of soveraignity as an absolute Monarch enjoyning to man his duty without giving him any ground to hope for a reward of his service yet He hath been graciously pleased to wave such right and to deal with him by way of covenant or paction and agreement upon just and equal terms prescribed by God Himself in which God promiseth true happinesse to man and man engageth himself by promise for performance of what God
requireth for as these are the terms in general upon which God did ever enter any Covenant with man so the Apostle supposeth that Gods dealing with man is by way of a Covenant while he saith And this I say that the Covenant that was confirmed before of God 2. So merciful is God that after the Covenant of Works made with man before the fall was broken by Adam Gen. 3. 6. and made uselesse unto all his posterity as to the obtaining of Heaven and happinesse by it ver 10. he was graciously pleased to enter a Covenant of Grace with fallen man to deliver him from the estate of sin and misery and to bring him into an estate of salvation by a Redeemer Rom. 3. 21 22. This is that Covenant here spoken of The Covenant that was before confirmed of God in Christ. 3. Though the Covenant or Paction entred by God with the Church before Christ came in the flesh did differ in the way of administration and in some considerable circumstances from that Covenant which God hath entered with His people in the dayes of the Gospel upon which account they are distinguished by the names of Old and New Heb. 8. 13. First and Second Covenant Heb. 8. 7. yet both these Covenants are one and the same in substance and do fully agree in all the essential parts for the Apostle's intent is to prove that we are justified under the New Testament by that Covenant which was confirmed before of God in Christ unto Abraham four hundred and thirty years before the Law 4. So prone is fallen man to misbelieve the truth and reality of Gods offer in the Covenant of Grace Joh. 4. 48. and especially to question the making out of that offer to himself in particular Psa. 88. 4 5 c. and so willing is God to have all doubts of that kind fully satisfied Heb. 6. 17 that though His gracious word of promise be of it self worthy of all acceptation and trust 1 Tim. 1. 15. yet He hath been graciously pleased to adde all those confirmations unto His Covenant-grant which are used among men who being most suspected would most gladly be trusted He hath committed it to writing Joh. 20. 31. confirmed it by witnesses Heb. 2. 3. with miracles Heb. 2. 4. by oath Heb. 6. 13 17. and by seals Mat. 26. 28. 28. 19. compared with Rom. 4. 11. for saith he The Covenant that was before confirmed of God 5. The Covenant of Grace had a special relation to Jesus Christ as well under the Old Administration as under the New He being that Seed of the Woman who was to bruise the head of the Serpent Gen. 3. -15. and in whom all the Nations of the earth were to be blessed Gen. 22. 18. and the substance of all those ceremonial shadows the practice whereof was then enjoyned Col. 2. 17. and being the thing signified in all their Sacraments 1 Cor. 5. 7. 1 Cor. 10. 4. and God's design in giving the Law being to drive men to Christ for righteousnesse Rom. 10. 4. for saith he The Covenant was confirmed before of God in Christ or tending towards Christ as the Original will bear 6. The knowledge of Scripture-chronologie whereby we know not only those things which are mentioned in Scripture-story but also the time when every thing did fall out so far as may be gathered by the Scripture it self chiefly is necessary and profitable for the better understanding of God's mind in diverse parts of His Word for here the Apostle observeth the time when the Law was given and layeth the great stresse of his argument upon it whereby he proveth that the Law could not disanul the Covenant of free-grace made with Abraham even because the Law was four hundred and thirty years after the Covenant was confirmed of God in Christ The beginning of which space of years is to be reckoned from the first solemn sanction and confirmation of the Covenant by God to Abraham Gen. 15. 8 c and the close of it was at the giving of the Law upon mount Sinai which was the first year of Israels coming out of Egypt Exod. 19. 1. Doct. 7. God's intent in giving the Law and urging exact obedience to it under hazard of the curse neither was nor is that hereby people should be taken-off from seeking righteousnesse and life eternal only by faith in the Promise or that they should set about the practice of duties commanded by the Law as that which was to make them righteous before God the Law was given for other ends as the Apostle doth after declare but not for this for he sheweth here that Gods design in giving the Law could not disanul the Covenant made with Abraham or make the Promise of none effect From Vers. 18. Learn 1. So subtil is the spirit of Error that it will seem to cede somewhat to Truth as hereby intending to prejudge the Truth more than if it had ceded nothing for the oppugners of Justification by Faith did sometimes give Faith some place in Justification and pleaded only for a joynt influence of Works and Faith of the Law and the Promise which conceit of theirs the Apostle doth here refute For if the Inheritance be of the Law it is no more of Promise 2. The state of Grace and Favour with God here and of Glory hereafter is the inheritance portion and heirship of the Lord's People there being no temporal worldly inheritance which can sufficiently furnish the heart with satisfaction Psal. 4. 6 7. of which spiritual and heavenly Inheritance the Land of Canaan was a type for the Apostle speaking of Justification and all the spiritual blessings which flow from it calleth them the Inheritance by way of excellency If the Inheritance be of the Law 3. There are only two wayes of attaining a right to this Inheritance one by the Law or by Works done in obedience to the Law chap. 2. 16 which was the tenour of the Covenant of Works the other is by the Promise or by Faith in Jesus Christ offered in the Promise chap. 2. 16 according to the tenour of the Covenant of Grace The Apostle speaketh of these two wayes here If the Inheritance be of the Law it is no more of Promise 4. There can be no mixture of these two so that a right to Heaven should be obtained partly by the merit of Works and partly by Faith in the promise the one of those removeth the other for saith he If the Inheritance be of the Law it is no more of Promise 5. The only way of attaining right to this Inheritance now since the fall is by God's Free-gift without the merit of Works for God did give it to Abraham the father of all justified persons the word signifieth He gave it freely without respect had to Abraham's works 6. The tender and offer of this gracious gift is made in the promises of the Gospel which being laid hold upon by Faith do entitle the Believer to the tendered
meeknesse or severity unto their temper and that because being now at a distance he could not understand their temper so exactly and therefore was somewhat perplexed and in doubt how to deal with them All which do expresse to the life how tender constant sincere and well-ordered his affection and love was towards them ver 20. From Vers. 19. Learn 1. There ought to be such a conformity betwixt the heart and the tongue that the tender and warm expressions of kindness uttered by our tongue may be undoubted evidences of that real kindnesse and respect which is seated in the heart otherwise fair words are but foul flatteries abominable both to God and man Prov. 27. 14. for Paul doth speak to these Galatians most affectionatly as a mother to her dear children wherein he would have them to read his very heart My little children saith he 2. The Ministerial Calling is an imployment of no small labour and pains partly because of much labour and diligence which is required to fit a man for that imployment and for every part of it 1 Tim. 4. 13 15. Act. 20. 20. and partly because of many outward troubles and persecutions which do usually attend the faithfull discharging of it Mat. 10. 17. but mainly because the object of that imployment is the charge of people with relation to their spiritual and eternal concernments Heb. 13. 17 in which as people are most apt to miscarry so their miscarrying therein is most dishonourable unto God and dangerous to themselves and therefore the Minister whose charge doth ly about those and maketh conscience of his charge cannot but be much exercised even to wearynesse and the wasting of his natural spirits with a tide of contrary affections as hopes and fears joy and sorrow desire and indignation c. 2 Cor. 11. 28. Hence Paul setteth forth the measure of his ministerial pains by the travel of a woman with childe Of whom I travel in birth saith he 3. Though it be God only who by His own almighty Power doth beget us to that new and spiritual life of Grace Iam. 1. 18. 1 Cor. 3. -6. yet He maketh use of called Ministers as the ordinary means and instruments by whose ministery His Spirit doth effectually work and bring about the conversion of sinners Rom. 10. 17. and therefore the honour and title of being spiritual fathers and mothers is conferred upon them hence it is that Paul not only calleth them his little children but also saith he did travel in birth with them whereby he compareth himself to a woman in travel and the work of the Ministry to the travel it self by the means whereof children are born to God 4. Though those who are once regenerated cannot totally fall away from grace so as to stand in need of a second regeneration for the seed of God abideth in them 1 Joh. 3. 9. yet they may so far fall away as that the new man of Grace in them will be much marred and all lively evidences of their regeneration ly under ground and in the dark and so as that to outward appearance there will be nothing of the life of God in them for though Paul saith not he be got them again yet be did travel in birth with them again that so Christ might be formed in them which supposeth that the Image of Christ in them was much darkened the beauty thereof marred and their spiritual life and motion hid and hardly discernable as the life and motion of an unborn childe in the womb 5. The great end of a Minister's pains and that which not being attained he is not to cease or to rest satisfied is not so much his own exoneration as to have a near conformity to Christ and the draughts of His Image consisting both in knowledge Col. 3. 10. and holinesse Eph. 4. 24. wrought in the hearts and lives of his hearers for this was aimed at by Paul Until Christ be formed in you saith he From Vers. 20. Learn 1. The presence of a Pastor with his Flock is so necessary in order to the entertaining of mutual affection and the suppression of prejudices when they are yet in the bud and before they come to any great height and in order to a Minister's better uptaking of the peoples case and condition and to his application of suitable and seasonable remedies that though a Minister may sometimes be necessarily withdrawn from his Flock yet he ought alwayes have a desire to be present with them without neglecting any occasion when it offereth of returning to them for thus was it with Paul I desire to be present with you 2. A Minister ought to take notice so far as is possible of the several conditions and dispositions of his People that hereby he may know how to carry himself and to speak to them in that way which he conceiveth will be most gaining upon every one admonishing some reproving others comforting and instructing some and sharply threatning others for this we conceive is meaned by Paul's changing of his voice in order to which he desired to be present with them that so knowing their case he might the better fit his speech to their condition 3. As the People of God are not all of one but of different tempers some being more tractable and some more obstinate some more soft and easie to be wrought upon by the Word and some more obdured some more subject to heartlesse discouragements and others to high and lofty unsobernesse of spirit So that way of dealing in a Minister which will be profitable for the one temper will not be so for another for Paul being ignorant of their present temper stood in doubt of them as fearing if he did not fall upon a right way of dealing with them he might do them more hurt than good 4. Though a Minister may sometimes have reason to doubt what way to take with a people in order to their gaining and be not a little perplexed lest there be not successe answerable to his pains yet he is not to give over but must go on doing what is likeliest and depending upon God for successe so doth Paul here for though be stood in doubt of them or was perplexed for them yet he sendeth this Epistle to them Vers. 21. Tell me ye that desire to be under the Law do ye not bear the Law IN the third part of the Chapter the Apostle confirmeth and illustrateth the truth of the whole preceding disputation concerning our Justification by Faith and not by Works and the abolishing of the ancient legal Dispensation of the Covenant of Grace and this by the history of Abraham's family whereby he sheweth the Lord did prefigure not only the doing away of that ancient Dispensation under the dayes of the Gospel but that also so many as did adhere unto it being considered as it was set in opposition to the Covenant of Grace by those who sought to be justified by the works of the Law were kept under
the yoke with cords or somewhat else that they may not shake it off Vers. 2. Behold I Paul say unto you that if ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing HE addeth a second argument to inforce the exhortation wherein having opposed his own Apostolick Authority for confirming the truth of what he is to say against all who would contradict it he affirmeth that the observing of any one Ceremony and especially of Circumcision to wit as of a thing which ought of necessity to be done and as a part of a mans righteousnesse necessary to salvation in which sense it was pressed by the false Apostles Act. 15. 2. did cut off the observer from all benefit by Jesus Christ. The reasons of which sentence are first the holding up of Circumcision and by consequence the whole bulk of that Mosaical Dispensation did say in effect that Christ was not yet come seing all those were to be done away at His coming Heb. 9. 10. Secondly Christ must either be our whole righteousnesse and compleat Saviour or not at all Act. 4. 12. Isa. 42. 8. So that by joyning Circumcision with Christ as a necessary part of their righteousnesse and a cause of salvation Christ did cease from being a Saviour to them at all Doct. 1. A Minister of Jesus Christ ought not to satisfie himself in this that what he speaketh is pertinent and apposit to the present purpose but would also endeavour that those to whom he speaketh may with attention and faith receive it off his hand In order to which it is not inconvenient that all-alongs his discourse he labour to quicken their attention by speaking somewhat for that very end especially when he is to utter any Truth of singular concernment or from receiving whereof he apprehendeth the hearers may be somewhat averse for such a truth is here delivered by Paul and therefore he prefixes a note of attention to it Behold saith he 2. A Minister ought to be so confident of the truth of his doctrine and of his own authority from Christ to deliver it that although his doctrine be contradicted and his authority undervalued he may yet with boldnesse assert both the one and the other for though Paul's Apostolick Authority was questioned See upon chap. 1. ver 12. and the Truth which he here holdeth forth much contradicted Act. 15. 2. Yet he opposeth his own Authority for the confirmation of this Truth against all who would oppose it Behold I Paul say unto you if ye be circumcised 3. That Paul in this dispute excludeth from Justification not only works flowing from the strength of man's free-will without grace but also those which flow from a gracious root wrought in the heart by Christ appeareth from this that those against whom he disputeth professed faith in Christ and so could not maintain that the works of a natural man destitute of Christ did justifie otherwayes this had been no cogent argum 〈…〉 t to refute their opinion that if they were circumcised Christ should profit them nothing 4. Many do professe Christ who shall receive no saving advantage by Him especially they who rely upon any thing besides Him or joyntly with Him as the meritorious cause of their salvation for saith he If ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing Vers. 3. For I testifie again to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to do the whole Law HEre is a third Argument to which also Paul premitteth his Apostolical Authority seriously affirming and by a publick profession confirming for so the word rendred testifie doth signifie that whosoever now Christ the substance being come did observe Circumcision to wit in the way wherein it was urged by the false Apostles Act. 15. 2. he was thereby engaged to keep the whole Law and this the whole Ceremonial and Judicial Law Circumcision being the initiatory Sacrament engaging the Receiver to the whole Mosaical Pedagogie Exod. 12. 48. and the whole Moral Law and that under the hazard of condemnation The reason whereof is That no lesse than universal and perfect obedience to the Law in all its precepts is required unto this that a man be justified by Works Gal. 3. 10. Doct. 1. Of how much the nearer concernment unto the salvation of hearers any Truth is the Minister of Christ ought so much the more to insist upon it and with so much the greater seriousnesse and fervency to inculcate and presse it as a matter of life and death that people may know he believeth and therefore speaketh and consequently may be the more moved with what he speaketh for Paul speaking of a Truth the not-receiving whereof would have condemned those Galatians he doth with much vehemency insist upon the pressing of it I testifie again saith he to every man that is circumcised 2. Because it is a matter of no small difficulty to get those reclaimed who are engaged in an evil course Jer 13. 23. therefore frequent testimonies would be given by Christ's Ministers against them in it that hereby the guilty party may have the lesse of ease and peace in their way and thereby through God's blessing upon His own mean be made to quit it 2 Tim. 2. 25. And at least the Lord's Servants may be the more exonered Ezek. 3. 19. and others of the Lord's People preserved from being infected with that sin which they do so much and so frequently testifie against 1 Tim. 5. 20. for in order to those ends Paul having once and oftener both in this Epistle and by his preaching doubtlesse while he was with those Galatians testified against this dangerous error of theirs doth here give further testimony against it while he saith For I testifie again to every man 3. It is wholly impossible for any meer man to keep the Law of God perfectly in this life and to obtain salvation by so doing Paul taketh this for granted otherwise this argument that circumcision did engage them to keep the whole Law under hazard of condemnation had not been cogent He is a debtor to do the whole Law 4. Though Believers in Jesus Christ be not delivered from their obligation to the least duty which is required by any precept of the Moral Law Mat. 5. 19. yet they are not under that exact rigor and condemning power of the Law whereby eternal wrath is denounced against the sinner for the meanest breach of the Law Deut. 27. 26. for while he speaketh of their being debtors to do the whole Law as a sad terrifying consequence of their being circumcised it must be understood not simply of their obligation to obedience but of an obligation under the penalty of the Law 's curse and hereby it is imported that sincere Believers are not under this obligation else the argument were of no force Vers. 4. Christ is become of no effect unto you whosoever of you are justified by the Law ye are fallen from Grace FOlloweth a fourth Argument to wit Whosoever did observe the Levitical
Ceremonies as they were pressed by the false Apostles or sought to be justified by their observing of them they by so doing had renounced Christ and all benefit to be had by Him for the word rendred Christ is become of no effect to you signifieth ye are made void of and separated from Christ and had fallen from the way and doctrine of Free-grace for Grace here seemeth to be taken for the doctrine of Grace as Tit. 2. 11. The reason of the consequence is that Grace and Works are not consistent in the justification of a sinner if the one have any hand in it the other hath none Rom. 11. 6. Doct. 1. Those sad consequences mentioned here and in the preceding verses do not strike against the observing of Circumcision simply and at all times and cases for even at this very time the observance thereof was tolerated to the weak Jews Rom. 14. 6. and to some of the stronger sort also as of a thing at that time indifferent to them for eschewing the offence of the weak Act. 16. 3. but as it was pressed by the false Apostles even as the cause of a mans Justification before God for to be circumcised and to be justified by the Law are equivalent phrases in the Apostle's meaning as is clear from ver 2 3. compared with this Whosoever of you are justified or seek to be justified by the Law 2. To make apostasie from Christ and the Gospel once received is of more dreadfull consequence than the not receiving of Him or not reaping any profit by Him at all for having spoken ver 2. of their receiving no advantage by Christ as one bad consequence of their being circumcised which was common to them with those who never professed the Name of Christ he doth here mention their apostasie from Christ and Grace as another bad consequence which he reserveth to the last place as being more formidible than any of the former Ye are become separate from Christ ye are fallen from Grace 3. The Apostle's consequence whereby he inferreth that they who seek Justification by Works are fallen from Grace doth no wayes prove that the truly Regenerate can really or totally fall from God's grace and favour for by Grace is meaned the doctrine of Grace Besides their falling from Grace is only conditional and suspended upon their seeking Justification by Works in which damnable error the truly Regenerate cannot finally at least persist Mat 24. -24. although for a time they may be overtaken with it Whosoever of you are justified by the Law ye are fallen from Grace Vers. 5. For we through the Spirit wait for the hope of righteousnesse by Faith HE addeth a fifth Reason to wit That Paul himself and other Jews who before their conversion to the Christian Faith were circumcised being now converted and taught by the holy Ghost did renounce all confidence in their own works or carnal priviledges whether Circumcision or any other and did look for Heaven called here Hope because it is the object of our hope as Tit. 2. 13. only by vertue of that righteousnesse of Jesus Christ which is laid hold upon by Faith Doct. 1. The riches of a Believer are not so much in possession as in expectation and hope We wait for the hope or for Heaven hoped for 2. None have right to Heaven here or shall enjoy it after this who are wholly unrighteous and destitute of all righteousnesse for it is called the hope of righteousnesse as being attained unto by the Righteous only and by vertue of their righteousnesse 3. No personal righteousnesse of our own doth entitle us to this blessed hope and heavenly inheritance Tit. 3. 5. but only the righteousnesse of Christ imputed to us Rom. 5. 19. and apprehended by Faith which therefore is called here Righteousnesse through Faith 4. It is only the inward efficacious teaching of God's Spirit which can sufficiently instruct us in the knowledge of this imputed righteousnesse by Faith and make us with security and confidence venture our eternal well-being and hope of Heaven upon it for saith he We through the Spirit or being taught by the Spirit of God do wait for the hope of righteousness 5. The experience and example of other exercised gracious Christians ought to be of great weight to incline our judgment and affections towards an assenting unto and imbracing of those Truths from which they have drawn spiritual consolation for Paul doth reason that they ought to receive the doctrine of Justification by Faith because he himself and other believing Jews did venture their salvation in that bottom For we wait for the hope of righteousnesse through Faith 6. The example of none though of never so much reputation in the Church is to be followed as an absolute rule but in so far only as their practice is approven by the Spirit of God speaking in Scripture Isa. 8. 20. for Paul to make his example a sufficient rule for them to follow sheweth he did nothing but as he was taught by the Spirit of God For we through the Spirit wait saith he Vers. 6. For in Jesus Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor Uncircumcision but Faith which worketh by love HEre is his sixth Reason which militates not only against the observing of Circumcision and those other Levitical Ceremonies as a part of a mans righteousnesse before God but also against the necessity of observing them at all Because in Jesus Christ or in the state of the Church under the Gospel after Christ was manifested in the flesh neither the observing of these things nor the neglect of them did commend a man to God as acceptable service to Him the service which He now requireth being only a true lively Faith evidencing it self to be such by the fruits of a new life comprehended under the love of God and our neighbour Rom. 13. 8. Doct. 1. Though Circumcision and the rest of those Levitical Ceremonies were once enjoyned and accordingly to be practised as a necessary part of Worship Gen. 17. 10 11. so that the performance of them in the way required was service acceptable to God Gen. 8 20 21. and the neglect and contempt of them was in a high measure detestable Exod. 12. 19. Yet Christ being come in the flesh who was the substance of all those shadows Col. 2. 17. the command whereby they were enjoyned did cease they remaining for a season chiefly to the Jews and some of them also to the Gentiles Act. 15. 29. in their own nature indifferent so that the using or not using of them except in the case of eschewing scandal Rom. 14 21. and of bearing testimony to the doctrine of christian liberty Gal. 2. 3 4. did neither commend a man nor make him guilty before God for saith he In Jesus Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor Uncircumcision 2. To impose the ty of a Command upon any thing as a necessary part of divine Worship wherein the Word hath left us free or
And therefore is He called the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4. 13 yet upon the actual exercising of the grace of Faith the Spirit of God doth more fully manifest Himself to be dwelling in Believers by His carrying-on the work of sanctification in them for their greater comfort and further strengthning of their faith for saith he After ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit 3. Whoever have rightly closed with the Gospel and Christ in the Gospel by believing will have the grace of sanctification and holinesse of life following upon their so doing as also sometimes some measure of joy peace and sensible comfort for as I cleared by the seal is meaned those graces And after ye believed ye were sealed saith he 4. Even real Believers have need of confirmation and sealing as being oftimes exercised and tossed with several doubts and scruples both concerning the truth of the Gospel and promise in general Mark 9. 24. and the reality of their own closing with and interest in the Promise Psal. 88. 14. for therefore is it that after those Ephesians had believed they were sealed hereby to evidence the truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their believing the Gospel After ye believed ye were sealed 5. The Lord hath provided and accordingly doth bestow sufficient means upon Believers whereby all their fore-mentioned doubts may be solved and they abundantly satisfied for besides the writing of the Promise upon their hearts and the outward seals of the Covenant of Grace or Sacraments which are visibly dispensed by Christ's Ministers there is an inward seal to wit the saving Graces of God's Spirit together with growth and increase in those imprinted by the Spirit of God upon the hearts of Believers in order to their confirmation although they sometimes cannot perfectly discern nor exactly take up the draughts and lineaments of it After ye believed ye were sealed 6. The saving graces of God's Spirit wrought in a Believer and exercised by him in all sorts of holy duties and especially growth in grace is a most convincing evidence not only that the Word of the Gospel by which holinesse is wrought is the undoubted Truth of God for this is the witnesse by water spoken of 1 Joh. 5. 8. there being no other thing but the Truth of God able to produce such strange and supernatural effects as those but also it serveth to evidence the reality of the man's interest in the promise and of his right to the heavenly inheritance in whom those saving graces and the fruits of holinesse are seing holinesse of life is the inseparable effect of saving faith and interest in the promise Act. 15. 9. for by the Seal is meaned mainly the graces of sanctification and as was shewn they get that name because as Seals do confirm publick Writs and make them appear to be authentick so the saving and sanctifying graces of the Spirit do confirm to those in whom they are the Truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their faith in Christ In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 7. Our doubts and scruples whether concerning the truth of the Promise in general or our own particular interest in the Promise ought not in reason make us suspend our believing in Christ and the Promise untill we first be sealed and sanctified and so receive sufficient confirmation but on the contrary we are first to set our Seal to God's Truth by believing and venturing our salvation upon it and then we may expect next to have God setting His Seal upon our heart in order to our confirmation for that is the order here set down In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 8. The sanctifying of our natures and adorning of our hearts with saving graces together with any confirmation in the truth of the Promise or of particular interest in the Promise which Believers receive from these is the work of God's Spirit only for it is ascribed to Him here and with relation thereto He is called the holy Spirit not only because He is essentially holy and very holinesse it self but also the author of sanctification and of all saving graces in Believers Gal. 5. 22. and the Spirit of promise not only because He was promised to be abundantly poured-out upon Believers under the New Testament Act. 2. 16. but also His office is to seal and confirm by His gracious operations the Promises of the Gospel to Believers Rom. 8. 16. Ye were sealed saith he with the holy Spirit From that use for which the holy Spirit with his saving graces was bestowed upon them Learn 1. As the Spirit of God is a person subsisting and not a created gift or grace so this holy Spirit doth not only bestow His gifts and graces upon Believers but also cometh Himself unto them and dwelleth in them In so far as though He be not personally united with them as the divine nature is with the humane in Christ yet He is not only with them in his essence and being as He is present every-where Jer. 23. 24. nor yet in respect of His working by a general providence only as He is present even with wicked men for in Him they live move and have their being Act. 17. 28. but He resideth in them as in his own Temple by his special and saving operations whereby He not only bestoweth upon them the habits of all saving graces at their first conversion Ezek. 36. 25 26. but doth also by his immediate strong and special influence daily preserve those graces in life Joh. 10. 28 29. actuate them Philip. 2. 13. and ordinarily maketh them to grow Hos. 14. 5. for whereas the word Spirit in the former verse is in the neuter gender● he repeats it here by a masculine relative which would be better rendred who than which to shew that the Spirit is a person subsisting Which Spirit he saith is given us for an earnest of our inheritance 2. Heaven and glory is the only portion and inheritance of Believers all their enjoyments earthly though never so great being but mean fading in themselves and lyable to spoyling and vastation from others so that this inheritance which is incorruptible fadeth not away and is reserved in the heavens 1 Pet. 1. 4. is only worthy to be looked upon as their inheritance for the Apostle calleth it our inheritance by way of excellency Which is the earnest of our inheritance 3. As the right unto this inheritance is made-over unto Believers upon their resigning themselves to God by faith in way of covenant and paction Isa. 55. 3. So the Lord hath thought it convenient not to give them the possession of it presently upon their right but to delay it for a season that in the mean time they may exercise their hope in longing after it Philip. 1. 23. And God may get glory from the heirs of heaven here upon earth and among earthly men by being the means of salvation unto some Mat. 5. 16. and of conviction and just
do enjoy communion with God and especially in the confident bold and reverent exercising of their faith both as to the change of their state in justification Rom. 5. 2. and as to their sanctification and all the duties thereof Philip. 4. 13. which accesse to God is chiefly attained in the duties of prayer and praise as having God for their direct and immediate object This is that accesse which in some measure floweth from peace and reconciliation with God and is an evidence of it for the Apostle proveth that the Gospel was effectually preached in order to their peace and reconciliation because they had accesse to God We both have accesse to the Father 2. There can be no accesse or familiar approaching unto God by sinners who are not in Jesus Christ and come not to God through Him seing God is a consuming fire unto such Heb. 12. 29. Their sins having divided betwixt Him and them Isa. 59. 2. and so closed up all accesse unto God untill Jesus Christ do apply unto them the merit of His death whereby He blotteth out their sin Rom. 3. 25. and bringeth them unto a state of favour with God and so maketh a patent door for accesse unto Him Rom. 5. 1 2. and keepeth it alwayes patent by His continued intercession Heb. 7. -25. which their renewed provocations would otherwise dayly and hourly close and obstruct 1 Joh. 2. 1. for saith he through Him that is Christ we both have an accesse to the father 3. Christ is the only Mediator betwixt God and man by whom alone we have accesse and liberty to approach unto God in the exercise of our graces whether in the duty of prayer or any other way and not by the mediation of Saints or Angels for saith he through him we have an access or manuduction to the father 4. This accesse and approaching unto God is not locall by passing from one place to another especially seing there is no place wherein accesse to God may not be had Joh. 4. 21. 23. but it is spirituall consisting in the motion of the heart towards God in the exercise of saving and spirituall graces for so much is implied while this accesse is ascribed unto the Spirit as the efficient thereof We have an accesse by the spirit 5. It is not sufficient in order to our accesse unto God that obstructions be removed and a door made patent by Christs merit and intercession through which we may enter but such is partly our impotency Joh. 15. -5. and partly our aversnesse from making use of the offered opportunity Luk. 14. 17 18 c. that except the Spirit of God do cause us enter by creating spirituall graces in us Ezek. 36. 26. by actuating and exciting those graces Cant. 4. 16. and especially by helping our infirmities in prayer and stirring up a vehement flame of holy and ardent affections which may serve as wings to elevate our spirits to God Rom. 8. 26. Except I say the Spirit of the Lord did thus we could not otherwise have any accesse unto God for he saith through him we have an accesse by one spirit 6. As it is one and the self same Spirit of God who breatheth upon the graces of Gods people Cant. 4. 16. and thereby giveth them accesse unto God So it concerneth us much as we would find accesse and liberty of approaching unto God to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace there being nothing that marreth accesse to God and fellowship with Him more than imbittered spirits and division of heart among the people of God 2 Corinth 13. 11. for therefore doth the Apostle mention the one Spirit of God to shew that the Spirit doth unite those among themselves upon whom this rich blessing of accesse is bestowed We both have an accesse by one Spirit 7. As there are three distinct persons in the Godhead the Father Son and Spirit So the enjoying of the Father is the highest happinesse which can be attained and in which the soul doth rest content when it is attained the Son again is the way by which we come to the Father and the Spirit our guide which causeth us enter this way and go alongs in it all which is clearly hinted at here through Him that is Christ we have an accesse by one Spirit to the Father Vers. 19. Now therefore ye are no more strangers and forreigners but fellow-citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God HEre beginneth the fourth branch of the second part of this Chapter where by way of a conclusion drawn from what is said in the six former Verses the Apostle setteth forth that excellent and blessed state wherein the Ephesians now were which though in some respects and in some things at least by proportion it may be applied to the state of the visible Church to wit in so far as the members thereof had all those priviledges here spoken of in their offer upon the terms held forth in the Gospel and were under the drop of those means which the Lord doth ordinarily blesse and make effectuall for working a saving interest in and right unto all those yea and had a present actuall right to the external part of those priviledges even the visible Church being in some respects Gods City Houshold and Temple at least the suburbs utter-court and porch thereof and having her own answerable priviledges which are in some measure proportionall to those of the invisible Church yet seing as was shewed formerly upon the exposition of ver 13. those excellent things here spoken of are not fully and to their outmost perfection verified in any but in the invisible Church and the truly regenerate the members thereof Therefore I shal open up the mind of the Spirit of God as aiming mainly at those and give the meaning of those excellent things here mentioned as they appertain chiefly to such in the mean time leaving it unto the judicious Reader to gather from what is said how and in what respects they are applicable unto the visible Church And so that we may enter the exposition of the words The Apostle setteth forth their present happy condition first negatively by shewing what they were not neither strangers nor forreigners whereby with allusion to those who are not free-men of an Incorporation or City but either strangers that is such who have neither the freedom of the City nor a place of habitation in it but have their residence far from it or forreigners that is such who though they have their residence in the City yet are not free-men but sojourners for a season he sheweth that the second branch of their former misery spoken of ver 12. which includeth all the rest even their being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel deprived of all union and communion either with the invisible or visible Church was now removed Secondly he setteth forth their present blessed condition positively under three similitudes whereof two are in this verse In the first