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A87510 A mixture of scholasticall divinity, with practicall, in severall tractates: vvherein some of the most difficult knots in divinity are untied, many darke places of Scripture cleared, sundry heresies, and errours, refuted, / by Henry Ieanes, minister of God's Word at Chedzoy in Sommerset-shire.; Mixture of scholasticall divinity, with practicall. Part 1 Jeanes, Henry, 1611-1662. 1656 (1656) Wing J507; Thomason E872_3; Thomason E873_1; ESTC R202616 347,399 402

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joy is full and universall either in regard of objects degrees or duration 1. Then a Christian hath all joy in regard of objects When he possesseth in some measure all the objects that is all the grounds or motives of a true Spirituall joy when he hath for substance all that a believer ought to rejoyce for when believers reach such a happinesse their joy is full John 15.11 16.24 1 Iohn 1.4 The joy of Christ is fulfilled in themselves Iohn 17.13 2. A Christian may have all joy in regard of degrees though not absolutely yet so far forth as the measure of joy is attainable in this present life which is but the seed time of joy Ps 97.11 And indeed I believe the heart of man during his abode on earth is hardly capable of a more overflowing quantity of joy then that which supported the Martyrs and made them laugh and sing in their fiery trialls their most bloudy persecutions Lastly a believer may have all joy in regard of duration He may as the Apostle exhorts him Phil. 4.4 rejoyce alwaies in the storme of the most violent opposition as well as in the calme of peace and protection The troubles and miseries of this life may sometimes dimme his joy but they can never totally or finally extinguish it Your joy saith our Saviour no man taketh from you John 16.22 He might have said no Devil too Secondly Paul beseecheth God in the behalfe of the Romans that as their joy so their peace too may be full and universall The God of hope fill you with all peace that is with all sorts and kinds of peace the peace of concord towards their brethren the peace of conscience in themselves and that both speculative and practicall 1. Speculative which was a freedome from scrupulous doubtings concerning things indifferent of which he spake before 2. Practicall and that both of justification and sanctification 1. The peace of justification which ariseth from the assurance of pardon and sense of Gods favour 2. The peace of sanctification which proceedeth from the mortification of all lusts and corruptions Such is the fulnesse of this peace of believers as that as the Apostle saith it passeth all understanding Phil. 4.7 that is it is incomprehensible by any created understanding save that of the humane nature of Christ In the next place we have this full and universall joy and peace amplified from the causes and that both efficient and finall 1. From the efficient causes thereof and that againe both subordinate and supreame 1. From the subordinate cause thereof faith The God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing that is by believing And indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is by the Apostle often used for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after the propriety of the Hebrew The influence of faith upon joy you have in the Apostle Peter 1 Pet. 1.8 In whom though now we see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory And as for its efficiency of peace the Apostle Paul plainely expresseth it Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ faith is the ground of all true inward joy and peace in our owne bosomes and the boundary of all true sincere and sound joy and peace with others A Second amplification is from the supreame and first efficient cause through the power of the Holy Ghost Nothing can fill a soule with all joy and peace but the full and infinite power of the Spirit of God Paul may plant and Apollo may water but Omnipotency only can reach such an increase The last amplification which we have of this fulnesse of joy for which the Apostle is a suiter in the behalfe of the Romans is the finall cause thereof that ye may abound in hope Pareus observeth that there is an Emphasis in the verbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He doth not wish unto them barely hope but to abound in hope and to abound in hope denoteth 1. a plenteous progresse in the degrees 2. a fulnesse of the objects 3. a constant sufficiency in reference to the use of hope 1. A plenteous progresse in the degrees of hope an arrivall unto a full assurance of hope Heb. 6.11 By which an entrance is minister'd unto us abundantly into the everlasting kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 1.11 2. A fulnesse of the objects of hope Some by this abounding in hope saith Willet upon the place understand the hoping for of all things needfull both for the body and soule 3. It denoteth a constant sufficiency as touching the use of hope Looke as he may be said to abound in money or treasures who hath enough to serve his turne upon all occasions to supply all his wants So a soule may be said to abound in hope when it hath such a measure thereof as is constantly sufficient for a victorious encounter with the thickest variety of the greatest perils incident unto mankind Our hope is then truely abundant when it is an helmet strong enough to beare the blowes of our most powerfull and malitious enemies When it is an anchor sure and stedfast enough whereby the soule may ride it out safely in the most dangerous tempest Vnto Pauls petition for the beginnings of glory in the Romans I shall subjoyne his thanksgiving for the like in himselfe 2 Cor. 1.3,4,5 Blessed be God even the father of our Lord Jesus Christ the father of mercies and the God of all comfort who comforteth us in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble by the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation also aboundeth by Christ In a second place this conformitie unto Christs glory begun here in this life and permixed with our infirmity and misery shall hereafter in heaven be compleated and perfected for then we shall have a full and everlasting fruition of all honour and blisse derivable from God and proportionable unto our capacities God will then make knowne the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared unto glory Rom. 9.23 Then he will reveale the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the saints Ephes 1.18 David makes a large profession of the inward gladnesse of his heart and the outward expression thereof by his tongue My heart is glad and my glory rejoyceth Psalm 16.9 Nay he expresseth that the feare of death did not put a dampe upon his rejoycing My flesh saith he shall also rest in hope The hope of a resurrection unto a glorious and immortall life made him looke upon his grave as a bed Esay 57.2 upon death as a sleepe or rest 1 Thes 4.14 Now the ground of this his joy and hope was the resurrection of Christ's body and glorification of his soule vers 10 11. But now this could never have begotten such a joy
disposition unto that other darknesse which is in Hell Those that doe not behold the glory of Christ here darkly in the glasse of his ordinances 1 Cor. 13.12 they are utterly unqualified for the distinct clear and immediate intuition of his glory in heaven where he is seen face to face The inheritance of the saints consisteth in light and therefore persons ignorant of God and Christ are altogeather unmeete to share in it and therefore we may say of them whiles they are on earth that they are in darknesse and the shadow of death in the borders and suburbs of hell This dispositive cause of the glory of the elect we have vers 25. to goe no farther illustrated by a twofold comparison one of dissimilitude another of similitude 1. By a comparison of dissimilitude The world hath not knowne thee and therefore I pray not for it but these that thou hast given me have knowne that thou hast sent me and therefore I intercede for their glory 2. By a comparison of similitude I have knowne thee and these have knowne that thou hast sent me I have knowne thee in all perfection Col. 2.3 Math. 11.27 John 1.18 And these know my mission by thee and therefore in some measure they know thee also unto them only of all the sons of men have I revealed thee and disclosed thy counsell and therefore I am an earnest intercessour in their behalfe that they may be with me where I am and behold my glory I have communicated a saving knowledge of me and thee unto them and therefore do thou impart glory and happinesse unto them They are conformable unto me while I am here on earth and therefore let them consort me in heaven hereafter But to speake more particularly of the branches of this our conformitie after death unto the fulnesse of Christ's glory It is 1. of our soules presently after dissolution from their bodies 2. of our bodies too upon their reunion with our soules in the resurrection 1. Of our soules presently upon their dissolution from our bodies Then the spirits of just men are made perfect Hebr. 12.23 perfectly freed from sinne and misery And if we speake of their happinesse in regard of essentials possessed of as great a perfection thereof as is communicable unto them In their understandings there will be perfect light They shall see God face to face 1 Cor. 13 12. they shall see Christ as he is 1 John 3.2 In their wills there shall be love and joy flaming unto the highest What the Apostle speakes of the Church in generall Ephes 5.27 is applicable unto every believing soule presently upon separation from the body Christ forthwith presents it unto himselfe glorious not having spot or wrinckle or any such thing c. Secondly In the resurrection Christs members shall enjoy a perfect state of glory in their bodies as well as their soules This second branch of their conformitie unto Christs fulnesse of glory I shall set forth and confirme by the explication of foure places of scripture The first is Phil. 3.21 who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according unto the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himselfe In sanctification there is a change wrought in both the bodies and soules of the saints 1 Thes 5.23 But this is but an imperfect change In their glorification after death there will be a full and perfect change as of their soules presently upon their separation so of their bodies in the resurrection And this change of their bodies we have here set forth from the manner tearmes and cause of it 1. From the manner or kind of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not an essentiall but accidentall transformation Looke as in change of old and broken vessels the matter is the same onely the colour is fresher and brighter the fashion newer and better So in the resurrection our bodies shall be the same for substance They shall retaine the same flesh and bloud the same figure and members that now onely they shall be over-cloathed with spirituall and heavenly qualities and prerogatives of corruptible they shall be made incorruptible of passible impassible of earthy heavenly and this we have here expressed by the tearmes of this change from which and to which It is a transformation of our bodies from vilenesse a configuration or conformation of them in glory unto the body of Christ 1. Here is terminus a quo the tearme from which vilenesse our vile bodies In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the body of our vilenesse that is by an Hebraisme our vile bodies our most vile bodies This vilenesse is either generall or speciall 1. generall common to all mankind to wit mortality and passibility obnoxiousnesse unto inward infirmities and diseases outward common calamities and finally unto death and corruption 2. Speciall accrewing unto the saints by persecution Gal. 6.17 Their bodies while living may be blemished with scars wounds dismembring and after death may many wayes be disfigured Well! all defects and blemishes shall be removed and our bodies shall be fashioned like unto Christs glorious body Here we have the second tearme of this change the tearme unto which glory and this is set downe not absolutely but in a way of comparison a comparison of similitude This glory shall be like that of Christs body in his resurrection He shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body and his glorious body or body of glory was cloathed with four glorious dotes or endowments impassibility subtilty agility and clarity For farther explication of which I shall referre you unto what I shall presently deliver on 1 Cor. 15.42,43,44 Onely one thing I shall desire you to remarke for the present and that is this Whereas divers Papists understand the subtilty of Christs body in order unto the penetration of any other bodies they are herein contradicted by some of their owne Schoolemen Durand Capreolus and Estius The two latter understand by it the perfect and full subjection of the glorified body unto the glorified soule b Perfecta subjectio corporis ad animam quoadoperationes cognitivas appetitivas videtur pertinere ad subtilitatem haec subiectio potest intelligi vel quantum ad operationes sensitivas praecisè ut nihil sit in corpore per quod puritas talium operationum impediatur sicut nunc fit in nobis frequenter propter grossitiem impuritatem spirituum deservientiaum operationibus sensitivis Omnis enim impuritas talis segregabitur a corporibus gloriosis vel potest intelligi talis subjectio propter obedientiam perfectam quam tunc habebunt vires sensitivae ad rationem quae obedientia modò non est in nobis cum caro concupiscit adversus spiritum ob hoc corpus nunc dicitur animale ab animalitate quia motus animales magis sunt in nobis secundum impetum sensualitatis quam
velut ab ipso attracta sese quam celerrimè movebunt nam ab objecto trabi rapi quippiam notum est utovem à ramo viridi sibi ostenso puerum à pomo filium à matre conspectâ ac vicissem matrem à filio quae tamen omnia moventur etiam ab interna quadam insita virtute Estius in locum 1 Thes 4.17 Whence they collect that glorified bodies shall be made so strong nimble agile as that they shall be able to meet the Lord in the aire afterwards to soare up with him unto the very heavens Out of the Apocrypha they cite wisedom 3.7 In the time of their visitation they shall shine and runne to and fro like sparkes among the stubble A fourth endowment of glorified bodies which Paul reckoneth up is spirituality It is sowen a naturall body it is raised a spirituall body 1 Cor. 15.44 This is that which the Schoolemen call subtilty The mis-interpretation of which by some I have before noted and then also I acquainted you with Capreolus and Durand their exposition of it which I confesse is orthodox but yet not the meaning of the Apostle in this place For a naturall body unto which a spirituall body is here opposed is in the Greeke not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an animal or soulie body that is actuated and animated by the soule after a naturall way and manner by the intervention of bodily helps such as eating drinking sleeping and the like In all congruence of opposition then spirituality is here opposed unto animality and a glorified body is said to be spirituall in regard of an immediate supportance by the spirit without any corporall meanes in an everlasting incorruptible blessed and glorious life In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the Angels of God in heaven Math. 22.30 without any use of the generative and nutritive faculties The Fourth and last place which I shall alleadge touching this particular is Rom. 8.23 Where the full and perfect glorification of the bodies of those that here receive the first fruites of the spirit is tearmed Synecdochically in regard of the tearme from which it is redemption to wit from all the punishments of sinne and in conformity hereunto the day of generall judgment and resurrection is stiled the day of redemption Ephes 4.30 There is a redemption by way of price and a redemption by way of power The redemption of both our soules and bodies in a way of price was finished by Christ in the worke of his humiliation and he rested from it upon the day of his owne resurrection The redemption of our soules by power is perfected in the houre of death But the redemption of our bodies by power will not be consummated untill the day of our resurrection and then they shall be fully delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God And thus have I confirmed our future conformity in soules and bodies unto the all fulnesse of glory that dwelleth in the humanity of Christ Now the certainty hereof should comfort us against the sinfull corruptions of our soules the naturall cumber and wearinesse the most ignominious deformities the most painfull infirmities of our bodies all other wants and miseries of our lives and lastly the feare of death a King of terrours unto all that are out of Christ 1. Against the sinfull corruptions of our soules There is no evill of so malignant a nature as sinne and therefore nothing so great and grievous a burden unto a pious and sanctified spirit Nothing so strong an argument for griefe and mourning But now the assured hope of our conformation unto Christs glory will put due limits and bounds unto this our sorrow so that it will keepe it from degenerating into despaire and keep us from being swallowed up of over much sorrow 2 Cor. 2.7 for it assureth us that all our corruptions shall one day be totally and finally subdued and we shall be endewed with a spotlesse holinesse that cannot be defiled and so shall be presented unblameable and unreproveable in the sight of God Col. 1.22 Secondly Here is comfort against the naturall cumber and wearinesse the ignominious deformities the painfull infirmities of our bodies c. For our resurrection will be a glorious redemption from them all Here many times our dull and unactive bodies are unable or unready to obey the commands to performe the desires of our soules and so are burdensome clogs and not serviceable helps unto them That which is sowed in weakenesse shall be raised in power Glorified bodies shall be endewed with such a power as shall render them most obedient able and agile instruments of their soules The Speed of their motion shall be like that of the devouring fire in a heape of drie stubble and the height of it shall surpasse the towring flight of the eagle For they shall be able to meet the Lord in the aire 1 Thes 4.17 when he comes to judgment and afterwards mount up unto the third and highest heavens Suppose we have blemishes either naturall or contracted that render us deformed in the sight of men Why the glory and beautie of the resurrection will exclude all defects The most unhansome ill-favoured and mis-shapen body of a saint shall be fashioned like unto Christ's glorious body Our bodies here are little better then receptacles of frailty and paine subject unto all manner of inward distempers or outward annoyances But the impassibility and clarity of our bodies in their glorified condition be will an abundant compensation for all this He that can with an eye of faith behold the future configuration of his vile body unto Christs body of glory will with patience support his spirit under the tedious languishment of a lingering consumption under the raging violence of a pestilentiall feaver under the otherwise unsupportable torments of the goute cholick stone c. And in the third place he will patiently undergoe all other wants and miseries of this life As for wants he knoweth that we have Gods promise to supply them Phil. 4.19 God shall supply all your need according unto his riches in glory by Christ Jesus As for all the most grievous aflictions of this life he expects a far more exceeding weight of glory that will overpoyse them 2 Cor. 4.17 The Apostle there expresseth our future blisse in foure gradations 1. It is glory 2. it is massie or weightie glory whereas our aflictions are but light 3. it is eternall and in comparison of that our aflictions are but for a moment 4. it is a farre more exceeding weight then our aflictions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly exceeding or above measure exceeding that is it is unmeasurable I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 This life unto the best is Bochim a vale of
wounds and diseases of our soules be many and deepe the oyle of gladnesse wherewith Christ was anoynted above his fellowes is able to heale them Siquidem ante faciem unctionis Christi nullus omnino stare poterit morbus animae quamlibet inveteratus saith Bernard in the but now cited place The Yoake saith the Prophet shall be destroyed because of the anoynting Esay 10.27 Where some by yoake understand the yoake of sinne and by the anoynting the spirituall anoynting of Christ with the Holy Ghost If unrighteousnesse hath a kingdome and dominion in all men by nature Christ is a King of righteousnesse that will in all his members overthrow the reigne and dominion of unrighteousnesse here in this life and destroy the very being and existence of it in death that will batter and weaken all its strong holds now and utterly raze and demolish them then If our soules be overspread with spirituall darknesse and ignorance with the noysome fogs and mists of iniquity why Christ is a sunne of righteousnesse upon the first arising of which in our hearts our ignorance and lusts will be dispersed and scattered but when it shall come to its full strength then all shadowes shall fly away Canticl 4.1 All darkesome clouds nay the thinnest vapour as well as the thickest mist shall be dispelled and wasted Even all the remainders of the old man the least reliques of the flesh shall have a totall abolishment and be utterly rooted out of the soule All conflicts and combatings of the Law of the members with the law of the mind shall then receive an everlasting period 2. Here is consolation against their emptinesse of grace against the wants weaknesse and imperfection of their holinesse How many and great soever their wants be how defective soever their graces how imperfect soever their holinesse yet by union with Christ and consequently communion in and conformitie unto his fulnesse they shall be made compleate and perfect Ye are compleate in him Col. 2.10 As by reason of a compleatnesse and perfection in him imputed to you for justisication so also by a compleatnesse from him really imparted unto you for sanctification Christ hath riches and treasures for their poverty a wardrobe for their nakednesse a fulnesse for their emptinesse an unmeasurablenesse of the spirit to supply any deficiency to remove any decayes of grace and to make up whatsoever is wanting for the full fashioning of Christ in their hearts Indeed an absolute fulnesse is not to be expected as long as we carry about us these robes of fraile flesh Here something will still be lacking to our faith and other graces As the sunne communicateth it's light unto the moone leasurely by degrees till she come to her full light till it be full moone So Christ the sunne of righteousnesse gradually conformeth his members unto that fulnesse of grace which dwelleth in him So that here below they are but in a state of infancy and so subject to defects But yet he poureth out his spirit and grace upon them in such order and measure as that they proceede from strength to strenth Psalm 84.7 like the sunne to the perfect day Prov. 8.18 Untill at last they arrive unto an absolute fulnesse of grace in respect both of parts and degrees incompatible as with mixture so with measure admitting neither of decay nor growth Then they shall be at the well-head and therefore brimme-full of grace each according to his capacity They shall have so much grace as they can hold When I awake saith David I shall be satisfied with thy likenesse Psal 17. vers 15. I shall be full of thy Image it is by some translated filled with all the fulnesse of God Ephes 3.19 Unto us then God will be all in all 1 Cor. 15.28 Unto the reason as Bernard descants upon those words he will be plenitudo lucis unto the will multitudo pacis unto the memory continuatio aeternitatis Here we are but sprinkled with the spirit with a few drops of it In heaven it shall be poured most plentifully upon us Here we are but covered with a parcell of grace and holinesse there we shall be cloathed all over with it There shall be no more any spots blemishes or wrinckles in our holinesse Ephes 5.27 No longer any eb's of our graces any fainting of our hope any dulnesse in our devotion any drooping of our love any languishing of our zeale All shall be blowne into a purer flame and advanced to a degree of Angelicall sublimitie Those first fruites of the spirit which are but sowne in our seede time here shall then arise grow up into a full harvest of grace an entire pure unmixed absolute fulnesse For then we shall all come c. unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature or age of the fulnesse of Christ Ephes 4.13 Of which words I shall reckon up three of the most probable expositions that I have met with And they proceed according unto the threefold acception of Christ in scripture It is taken 1. For Christ himselfe 2. For the Image of Christ Gal. 4.19 Vntill Christ be formed in you that is untill the Image of Christ be stamp't upon you consisting in the knowledge of him conformitie unto him both in qualitie practise as Mr Perkins sheweth at large upon the place 3. It is taken mystically for Christ considered as a head joyned with his body the Church 1 Cor. 12.12 1. If you take Christ here for Christ himselfe Why then answerably the fulnesse of Christ is to be understood of such a fulnesse as was formally in Christ himselfe either in the graces of his soule or in the stature and growth of his body Unto the measure of both which we may be said to come in regard of our graces at the resurrection analogically and proportionally Because there shall then be in our graces a fulnesse or perfection of degree or quantity Even as there was in the graces of Christ from the very first moment of his conception as there was in the growth of his body at his resurrection 2. If Christ be here put for the Image of Christ then the fulnesse of Christ is to be understood exemplariter of a full conformitie unto the fulnesse of grace and glory in Christ At the resurrection our resemblance of Christ shall be full and perfect the Image of Christ shall be fully framed or fashioned in us So that then we shall receive the full shape of Christians Christ shall then As Musculus upon the place expresseth it grandescere in nobis Our now weake and as it were infant graces shall then come unto a perfect man unto a ripe age unto the measure of the stature of fulnesse or unto the measure of a full stature and be in nothing defective not so much as in point of degree Thirdly If Christ be taken Mystically why then the fulnesse of Christ here is extrinsick the same with that Ephes 1.23 The Church which is
is the brightnesse of his fathers glory Hebr. 1.3 the Prince of life Acts. 3.15 the Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 But in a second place in the exaltation of Christ besides this externall declaration of the glory of his Godhead there was farther a reall collation of an all-fulnesse of glory upon his manhood It is generally resolved by the Schoolmen and for ought I know not gainesaid by Protestants that Christ in regard of his soule was from the very first instant of his conception comprehensor blessed full of glory and injoyed the happinesse of heaven for the substance of it This Aquinas proveth part 3. quaest 34. art 4. Because even then he received grace not by measure But now if his grace should fall short of that of comprehensors the saints and Angels in heaven If he should not have enjoyed the light of glory If his graces had not beene alwaies acted in the vision fruition and comprehension of God there had been a measure in his grace The spirit had beene given unto him by measure Unto Aquinas I shall adde Becanus who upon the same argument thus reasoneth Sum. The. par 3 tract 1. c. 9. quaest 2. Christ according unto his humanity had the cleare vision of God from the very instant of his conception The reason is because it is manifested that he had this vision before his death But the reason and ground of his having of it before his death was the hypostaticall union Therefore seeing this reason or ground of the beatificall vision agreed unto him from the very instant of his conception therefore we must say that he had the vision of God from the first moment of his conception The major is plaine from that in Joh. 3.13 No man hath ascended up to heaven but he that came downe from heaven even the sonne of man which is in heaven Where the verbe ascendit is of the preterperfect tense whereby Christ signified that he had now already ascended into heaven which could not be true of a corporall ascent but of a spirituall by the beatificall vision The same thing may be gathered from that in John 12.26 If any man serve me let him follow me and where I am there shall also my servant be And from Chap. 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me From these and the like places it is evident that Christ when he spake these things was in the estate of blessednesse unto which he also wished and desired that the Apostles might come Whence I conclude that he was alwaies in that state from the very instant of his conception because there is no reason why he should be in it then and not before Of this heaven-happniesse in the soule of Christ from the beatificall vision there would alwaies without Gods miraculous restraint and prevention have beene two as it were connaturall sequels 1. a fulnesse of unspeakable and unconceivable joy solace delight pleasure and comfort in his soule 2. a redundancy of glory from his soule unto his body But by the speciall dispensation of God the resultancy of the former was suspended and withheld in the time of his passion and the latter the a Secundum naturalem habitudinem quae est inter animam corpus ex gloria animae redundat gloria ad corpus Sed haec naturalis habitudo in Christo subjacebit voluntati Divinitatis ipsius Ex quâ factum est quod beatitudo remaneret in anima non derivar●tur ad corpus sed care pateretur quae conveniunt naturae passibili secundum illud quod Damasc dicit quod beneplacito Divinae voluntatis permittebatur carni pati operari propria Aquinas part 3. quaest 14. ar 1. Anima Christi a principio suae conceptionis fuit gloriosa per fruitionem Divinitatis per fectam Est autem dispensativè ut ab anima gloria non redundaret incorpus ad hoc quod mysterium nostrae redemptionis suâ passione impleret Et ideo peracto hoc mysterio passionis mortis Christi statim anima in corpus in resurrectione resumptum suam gloriam derivavit Et ita factum est corpus illud gloriosum Aquinas par 3. quaest 54. ar 3. derivation of glory from his soule unto his body was totally deferred untill his Exaltation And then indeed the interruption of joy in his soule the interception of glory from his soule to his body was altogeather removed 1. His soule was filled with all that joy solace pleasure delight and consolation which can possibly flow from the sight of an object so infinitely pleasing as is the essence majesty and glory of God In the presence of God he had fulnesse of joye at his right hand pleasures for evermore Psal 16.11 God made him full of joy with his countenance Act. 2.28 2. His body was replenished with as much glory as was proportionable unto the most vast capacitie of the creature It was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a body of glory that is a most glorious body in it selfe and the spring of glory unto others Of this glory of Christs body Peter James and John had a glimpse in the transfiguration Math. 17.2 He was transfigured before them and his face did shine as the sunne and his rayment was white as the light Glory was coevall unto his soule from it's first creation but the flowing of it unto his body was stope to qualifie him for the worke of our redemption for that was to be wrought by suffering and if his body had been glorified it would have beene impassible and could not have suffered But now here at the present by speciall dispensation God giveth way unto the redounding of glory from his soule unto his body and this transitory glory was such as that it changed the naturall darknesse of his flesh and made his face to shine as the sun nay it brake through the obscurity of his rayment and made it white as the light His rayment became shining exceeding white as snow so as no fuller on earth can white them Mark 9.3 Of the fulnesse of glory that was conferred upon Christ in his exaltation there were diverse prophecies and types in the old Testament most cleare and pregnant affirmations in the new Testament 1. Divers prophecies and types in the old Testament 1. Prophecies and the most remarkable prophecy hereof is in Psalm 16. v. 9 10 11. which is applied unto Christ by the Apostle Peter Acts. 2. vers 25. usque ad 32. Thou wilt not leave my soule in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy holy one to see corruption Thou wilt shew me the path of life In thy presence is fulnesse of joy at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore In these words the Psalmist prophesieth of the resurrection of Christs body and the glorification of his soule 1. Of the resurrection of his body and that he
secundum dictamen rationis Sed tunc dicetur corpus spirituale quia omnes tales motus erunt plenè subjecti spiritui In quart lib. Sentent dist 44. quaest 5. The former more distinctly thinks that this subjection stands either in the purity and refinednesse of the sensive operations or else in a perfect and totall obedience of the sensitive faculties unto the conduct and guidance of reason without any reluctancy of the flesh against the Spirit Lastly here is the cause of this change Christ himselfe Who shall change our vile bodies He is the cause thereof as man by his merit and intercession But our Apostle speakes of his Causation thereof as God by his omnipotency really effecting it Whereby he is able even to subdue all things to him●elfe He can subdue all things to himselfe put all things under his feete and therefore he can subdue death and the grave he can conquer and destroy all their sad and painefull forerunners ghastie and dreadfull attendants and consequently he can swallow them all up in a most full and compleate victory A Second place is Psalm 17.15 I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likenesse I shall be full of thy Image it is by some translated A gracious and sanctified soule is satisfied with the likenesse of God as soone as it is separated from the body but the satisfaction spoken of in the text is deferred untill the day of the generall resurrection When those that dwell in the dust awake and sing Esay 26.19 When I awake I shall be satisfied with thy likenesse The likenesse c Secundum hoc homo est particeps beatitudinis quod ad Imaginem Dei existit Imago autem Dei primò principalitèr in mente consistit sed per quandam derivationem etiam in corpore hominis quaedam representatio imaginis invenitur secundum quod oportet corpus anima esse proportionatum Unde beatitudo vel gloria primò principaliter est in mente sed per quandam redundantiam derivatur etiam ad corpus Aquin. in lib. Senten dist 49. quaest 4. art 5. in solutione secundi and Image of God is primarily and principally in the soule But yet it is in the body too secondarily by way of reflex and derivation And it is of this likenesse of God that David is to be understood When I shall awake thy likenesse thy Image shall by way of redundancy be derived unto my very body and it shall be satisfied filled therewith in it's measure so far as it is capable A third place is 1 Cor. 15. as we have borne the image of the earthie we shall also beare the image of the heavenly vers 49. As we have been conformed unto the image of the first man the fountaine of all mankind who is here tearmed earthy dusty or slimy in partaking from him by naturall propagation a body like his after his fall earthie dustie ●…imie fraile mortall and corruptible subject to age many blemishes and deformities to diseases within and violence without a naturall body 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is an animale or soulie body that is quickned by the soule onely which cannot quicken or susteine the body without the assistance of naturall animall qualities which must be continually repaired by sleepe food and sometimes costly medicaments So shall we beare the image of the heavenly that is our bodies shall be made conformable unto the body of Christ in his resurrection who is here tearmed the heavenly to wit man as in regard of his miraculous conception by the holy Ghost and his divine and infinite person so also in regard of those celestiall and glorious qualities wherewith his body in its rising was adorned and these we have specified above vers 42 43 44. incorruption glory power and spirituality 1. Incorruption It is sowen in corruption it is raised in incorruption an immortality farre beyond that of Adams body in paradise to wit an exemption from even the possibilitie of dying for they shall be quite freed from the mutuall action and passion of corruptible and corrupting elements But neither is this all for such an immortality and incorruption shall be found even in the bodies of the damned This incorruption therefore of the glorified bodies of the saints is an utter impassibility which excludes not onely death but also whatsoever is penall any corruptive that is harmefull malignant afflictive passion any passion that is either contra or praeter naturam Flesh and bloud saith the Apostle cannot inherit the kingdome of God 1 Cor. 15.50 Where in the following words the Apostle explaining thinks * In tert St. Thomaetom 2. disp 48. Sect. 1. pag. 521. Suarez what is meant by flesh and bloud subjoyneth neither doth corruption inherit incorruption to shew that not the substance but the mortality of flesh and bloud is excluded from the kingdome of God As by the word corruption the Apostle there understandeth all bodily miseries so by incorruption saith * In 4. Sent. dist 44. §. 15. pag. 265. Estius he would signify a state of the body exempt from all misery whatsoever To prove that glorified bodies shall be thus impassible the Schoolmen alleadge these following scriptures Revel 7.16,17 They shall hunger no more neither thirst any more neither shall the sun light on them nor any heate For the lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feede them and shall lead them unto living fountaines of waters and God shall wipe away all teares from their eyes Revel 21.4 God shall wipe away all teares from their eies and there shall be no more death neither sorrow nor crying neither shall there be any more pain For the former things are past away A hot dispute here is among the Schoolmen whether the impassibilitie of glorified bodies be intrinsecall or extrinsecall Here we must premise with Durand that glorious bodies are not impassible per privationem principii passivi for they shall consist of matter and there shall be in them a temper of elementary qualities that have contraries Impassible then they are onely per aliquod praestans impedimentum actualis passionis ne fiat All the doubt then is whether the hinderance or prevention of this actuall passion be from without or from within 1. Scotus Durand and others resolve that it is onely from without ex manutenentia Dei by Gods providence assisting and preserving of them either by positive resistance of the corruptive influence of second causes or else as Scotus resolveth by not cooperating with any such causes He illustrates it by the similitude of Shadrach Meshech and Abednego in the fiery furnace Dan. 3. That the fire did not consume their bodies it was not from any intrinsick impassibility in them arising either from the want of passive power or from something seated in their bodies contrary unto fire and so making head and resistance against it But the cause of it was onely from without Because Gods will was not to concurre
of God When our soules are sinlesse then they shall be compleatly happy and therefore the inchoatiō of their blisse consisteth in repentance for mortification of sinne The vessell of our bodies shall one day be replenished with glory therefore every one should know how to possesse it in sanctification and honour not in the lust of concupiscence 1 Thes 4.4 Christ will fashion our bodies like unto his glorious body and therefore unfitting to debase them unto the drudgery of sinne O how can they hereafter be meete receptacles of and qualified subjects for glory if we wholly make them the instruments of our lusts and their members weapons of unrighteousnesse vessels unto honour should purge themselves from vessels unto dishonour and not prostitute themselves unto such sordid uses as those are applied unto 2 Timoth. 2. vers 20 21. If we are vessels of mercy which God hath prepared unto glory and on whom he will make knowne the riches of his glory Rom. 9.23 we shall be very ungratefull if we doe not glorify him in our bodies and spirits 1 Cor. 6.20 if we employ any faculty of this or member of that unto his dishonour The blessednesse of glorious saints in heaven is to see God face to face 1 Cor. 13.12 to see Christ as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 And therefore for this every gracious saint prepareth by seeking his face here in his ordinances Psalm 27.8 Because God will one day make knowne unto us the wayes of life Psalm 16.11 in a way of possession therefore it is fit that now we apply our selves unto Gods shewing us the way of life in the way of instruction and revelation Our constant prayer should be that of Davids Psalm 25.4,5 Shew me thy waies o Lord teach me thy paths lead me in thy truth and teach me Christ prayeth in the behalfe of all the elect those whom his father hath given him that they may be where he is and that they may there behold that is enjoy his glory which God hath given him John 17.24 Now unto this prayer our soules do not say a hearty Amen unlesse they pant after the assemblies of the saints and communion with Christ in them as the hart panteth after the water brookes Ps 42.1,2 Where two or three are gathered together in the name of Christ there hath he promised to be in the midst of them Math. 18.20 And they that loath such society would soon be tired and cloyed with the happinesse of heaven There are persons loathing Christ and loathed by him those that principally affect such and delight most in their felloship and company do not cordially care to come where Christ now is in his exalted condition and if their hearts were left unto their liberty of choice they would refuse the pleasures of paradise for those of an alebench or taverne if they were perpetuall And if it were possible for thē to have a view of the glory which God hath given Christ they would quickly be weary of so happy a sight and turne away their eies from beholding it Thus have I at last gone over the severall branches of that all-fulnesse which dwelleth in Christ I shall briefly insist upon some uses that may be made of them considered jointly and so I shall put a conclusion unto my meditations upon this subject These Uses shall be either of information exhortation or consolation 1. Of Information and they shall be two 1. From this all-fulnesse that dwelleth in Christ we may inferre his incomprehensiblenesse He is a mine unto the bottome of which we can never digge He is an ocean that can never be fathomed His riches are said to be unsearchable Ephes 3.8 which Epithet denoteth the undiscoverablenesse of them by the light of nature the incomprehensiblenesse of them by the light of faith 1. The absolute undiscoverablenesse of them by the light of nature Flesh and bloud can never reveale them so that without divine revelatiō we had been as utterly ignorāt of thē as the world was of the mines of America before the discovery of Columbus The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trāslated unsearchable signifieth not to be traced out by the footsteps for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to find out by the footsteps The riches of Christ are not to be traced out by any footsteps of them for in the whole book of the creature there are no vestigia no prints left of them 2. The riches of Christ are said to be unsearchable in regard of their incomprehensiblenesse by the light of faith We may comprehend them manu not visu 1 Cor. 2.9 That faith which is most quick sighted doth not reach a full adequate and comprehensive knowledge of them Of the riches of glory it hath only a glimpse and that a farr off The riches of grace redemption righteousnesse c. it seeth only darkly and dimmely as through a glasse and then the riches of his divine person and nature are absolutely infinite and therefore cannot be comprehended by the finite understanding of man For between the object comprehended and the power or faculty comprehending there must be a proportion But between that which is finite and that which is infinite there is no proportion As the Apostle saith here of the riches of Christ in generall that they are unsearchable so in Col. 2.3 he affirmeth particularly concerning the treasures of wisdome and knowledge in Christ that they are hidden and they are said to be hidden because they are totally and altogether concealed from the unregenerate Math. 16.16 1 Cor. 2.14 1 Cor. 1.23 And because they are but sparingly and in measure here in this life manifested unto the regenerate 1 Cor. 13.12 2. From this all-fulnesse that dwelleth in Christ we may inferre the excellency and preciousnesse of the calling of the ministry for it is by God designed unto the proposall and application of this all-fulnesse unto the sons of men and what calling or office can have a richer a more noble and diviner object We have saith the Apostle this treasure in earthen vessels 2 Cor. 4.7 Though the most faithfull holy and diligent ministers of the Gospell be but earthen vessels yet they hold a divine and heavenly treasure In Christ are hid all the treasures of grace of wisdome and knowledge And ministers are Christs Almoners and cofferers to distribute these treasures unto poor hungry and naked soules And what imployment can be more honourable in it selfe and more beneficiall unto a man by the fall of Adam sunke into an extremity of want and poverty The Apostle Paul acknowledgeth that to preach the unsearchable riches of Christ was a great grace given unto him Eph. 3.8 where I shall take notice of three things 1. The riches of Christ were either such as he was possest of in himselfe or such as he communicatth unto us 1. Such as he is possest of in himselfe The riches of his person and natures his rich and glorious offices the riches of his satisfaction
Priestly empty the golden oyle out of themselves Zech. 4.12 These are the wings that is the beames and rayes of the Sun of righteousnesse Mal. 4.2 the vehicula of its influence In Psalm 36.8 we have a promise of sweet and abundant satisfaction unto Believers but it is affixed unto the ordinances of God They shall be abundantly satisfyed with the fatnesse of thy house What Paul Rom. 15.29 assureth himselfe touching his coming among the Romanes is appliable in some degree unto the ministery of even ordinary pastours and teachers It is in the fulnesse of the blessing of the Gospell of Christ that is as Lyra glosseth it in the abundance of spirituall grace so that their congregations if they receive the Gospell with all readinesse of mind shall to use the words of Calvin upon the place spiritualibus Evangelii divitiis affluere abound in all spirituall riches of the Gospell God ordinarily doth so largely blesse the labours of pious and painfull ministers as that for a seale of their ministry he makes them instrumentall in imparting unto Gods people in their flocks not onely some Rom. 1.11 but all spirituall gifts and graces that are sanctifying and saving Lastly here is a word of Consolation for every soule that is united unto Christ We may say of Christ what the wise man did of his feare Prov. 19.23 He that hath him shall abide satisfyed he shall not be visited with evill What the Poëts fancied of their cornu copia may more truly be averred of Christ that as they feigned afforded them who possessed it whatsover they desired And Christ yeilds unto them who have interest in him a supply of all that they can lawfully and will throughly and effectually wish and aske for It is but asking and we have Christs promise to receive that our joy may be full Joh. 16.24 He is plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon him Psalm 86.5 There dwelleth an all fulnesse in the head and therefore there cannot be an emptinesse in any of the members for he received this all-fulnesse for them and therefore he will either derive unto them or imploy for them every parcell of it In him there is as fulnesse so bountifulnesse he is as full so bountifull most ready to impart unto others that fulnesse which for their sakes he is possessed of We may say of him what Solomon doth of the clouds Eccl. 11.3 If they be full of raine they empty themselves upon the earth Christ is full of every desirable good and he will empty himselfe upon every one that is related unto him In some sort he communicates unto them most particulars of his fulnesse He imployeth the fulnesse of his office and authority and he layeth out the fulnesse of his sufficiency to promote their salvation He communicates unto them even the very fulnesse of his Godhead in a way of anology and resemblance Saint Peter speaks of an Analogicall participation of the divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 The fulnesse of his grace and favour with God he makes use of to ingratiate us with God and he makes us the objects of his owne fulnesse of Love and favour As for the fulnesse of his habituall grace we have the very same grace for kind imparted unto us though farre different in measure We receive of his fulnesse grace for grace John 1.16 The fulnesse of his satisfaction and merit is communicated unto us by imputation that is acceptation it is accepted for us unto our justification From his fulnesse of glory he will derive some beames unto us He will fashion our bodies unto an imitation of his glorious body And unto this there will be presupposed in our soules a resemblance of the glory and happinesse of his soule for the body is happy and glorious by redundancy from the soule This premised what is there that should perplex a soule that is in a state of Union with Christ Is it wants and emptinesse why it hath the all-fulnesse of Christ to gage for a supply Is it its owne impotency and disability why unto that it may oppose Christs all-sufficiency Though we be not able of our selves to contribute any thing towards our salvation yet he that hath undertaken the worke is able to save unto the uttermost and he is also authorized hereunto He hath all power given unto him in heaven earth a fulnesse of office and Authority Is Originall corruption a trouble unto them that rendred them children of wrath in their cradles and in the wombe Against the discomfort of that they should set Christs fulnesse of grace and favour with God for this will purchase the grace of Adoption for all that are his He is the son of Gods love and therefore in him he will be well pleased with them Doe they complaine as the Psalmist we are exceedingly filled with contempt Our soule is exceedingly filled with the scorning of those that are at ease and with the contempt of the proud Psalm 123.3,4 Why upon this they would look with an eye of contempt if they did but consider how their blessed Saviour is full of grace love and favour towards them Are they disquieted with the sight and sense of the defects and imperfections that are in their graces why they are covered with the fulnesse of Christs habituall grace and holinesse Is the vast guilt of their actuall enormities a terrour unto them why● all their sins are swallowed up by the fulnesse and infinitenesse of Christs fatisfaction Doe they grieve for the blemishes of their good workes which are so farre from meriting heaven as that they supererogate for hell and damnation Why though there be a necessity of doing good workes necessitas praecepti and medii yet there is no need of meriting by them for our Head by his infinite merits hath purchased more glory then our natures are capable of And of this fulnesse of glory he is possessed now in heaven in our behalfe as our Attorney and in his appointed time the times of restitution of all things he will derive of this his fulnesse of glory unto us according unto our capacity which he confirmeth and assureth unto us by his promise in the Gospell by the earnest of his Spirit in our hearts FINIS Bookes Printed for and to be sold by Thomas Robinson in Oxford CHronicon Historiam Catholicam Complectens ab exordio Mundi ad nativitatem D. N. Jesu Christi exinde ad annum à Christo nato LXXI Authore Ed. Simson S.T.D. in folio An Answer to M. Hoards Book entituled Gods Love to Mankind by William Twisse D.D. Together with a Vindication of D. Twisse from the Exceptions of M. John Goodwin in his Redemption Redeemed by Henry Jeanes in folio A Treatise of Fruit-Tree shewing the manner of Grafting Setting Pruning and Ordering of them in all respects according to new and easy Rules of Experience gathered in the space of twenty years by Ra. Austen in 4o. XXII Lectiones Tredecim Orationes sex Conciones
quaest 107. Art 2. Whereas it is said Col. 2.9 that in him dwelleth all fulness of the God head bodily Lombard thinkes that bodily is as much as completivè So that he understands by the words Christs fulfilling the signes and ceremonies of the law For as they are said to be shadowes of things to come not in a proper but metaphoricall sense and in reference to them God was said to dwell in the material Temple made with Hands only umbratilitèr after a typical darke umbratile and latent way Even so the fulness of the God-head is said to dwell in him bodily only metaphorically in opposition to legal shadowes because God by him accomplisht whatsoever they prefigured or shadowed Hence then we may inferre the plucking away of Moses his vail the abrogation of all Levitical sacraments sacrifices observances all typical ceremonies whatsoever When we have Christ the Antitype there is no need of the ceremonies the Types they are as the bones Christ as the marrow and therefore the perverse Jewes are fitly by Jerome compared unto dogs in that as dogs they doe as it were only gnaw the bones dote on the bare types and in the mean while neglect Christ Jesus the marrow Mannah hidden in them The law was given by Moses full of types and shadowes voyd and emptie of grace but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ John 1.17 As grace to pardon the breaches to remove the curses to enable for obedience unto the precepts of the morral law so truth to abolish the types and resemblances of the ceremonial law Whereupon he is termed the end of the law Rom. 10.4 to note that all the ceremonies of the law had in him their perfection and accomplishment and consequently period and abolishment They were but figures and presence of the truth nullifies all figures they were but shadowes and presence of the body and substance evacuates all shadowes they were but obscure glimmerings weak and faint representations darke and misty prefigurations of the day spring from on high that is a light to them which sate in darkness a light to enlighten the Gentiles and the Glory of the people Israel When this light therefore is risen upon the world they must needs vanish it 's brightness and lustre cannot but dimme tapers and candles in comparison of the sunne of righteousness and approach of the sunn makes all lesser lights useless Bernard in his first Homily super missus est tels us that the promises made of Christ unto Abraham Isaacke and Jacob were as the seed the types foreshadowing him as the blossoms Christ himselfe as the fruites Answerable unto which is that of Aquinas prim secun quaest 107. Art 3 that the new Testament where of Christ is the summe is contained in the old tanquam frumentum in spicâ tanquam arbor in semine Now prodeunte fructu flos decidit quia veritate apparente in carne figura pertransit when the fruit appeares the blossome fals off when the truth appeareth in the flesh the figure thereof passeth away All Levitical rites were but promissiva signa as Austin termeth them predictions of Christ to come and therefore farther observation of them would be a flat and real denial of Christs comming in the flesh But now this cessation of the ceremonies was not at once in an instant but sensim paulatim saith Austin leasurely by degrees by little and little As the mystery of our redemption signified by them had it's inchoatum in the cratch at the birth of Christ it 's consummatum on the cross at the death and passion of Christ Even so the ceremonies of the law themselves began to cease upon Christ's comming but were together with the sins of the world to be utterly cancelled upon the cross Ephes 2.15,16 Col. 2.14 Aquinas prim secun quaest 103. Art 3. upon the first breaking out of the light of the sun of righteousness upon the world all shadowes began to wast lessen Upon the initial promulgation of the Gospel in Christ's own personal preaching nay upon the very proclamation of Christs approach by his forerunner John Baptist the ceremonial law was in the waine and therefore it is said that the Prophets and the law proph●…sied until John Math. 11.13 because however the ceremonial law was not abrogated by John or as soon as John preached yet aegrotare tunc caepit as Maldonate hath it non multò post Christi mortem moritura it thereupon began presently to languish weaken and sicken and upon the cross it actually gave up the Ghost To which purpose some have observed that the last character of the Hebrew Alphabet was a plaine figure of Christ's cross to shew that his sacrifice thereon ended all legal sacrifices and ordinances whatsoever But now however ceremonialia presently upon Christs death became mortua dead void of all efficacy and power to bind yet were they not mortifera deadly until there was a plenary promulgation of the Gospel And therefore the Apostles gave them an honourable funeral by observation of them even after their power of obligation was quite expired in Christ's death From this abrogation of Jewish ceremonies some of the ablest patrons of humane ceremonies of mystical signification doe allow us to dispute against the pedagogy and schoole of them whereby the mysteries of faith and doctrines of the gospel are wrapped up in new shadowes which God had freed from the old which were of his own institution and meant to have published plainely by the preaching of the Gospel and Sacraments a cleerer kind of teaching and not againe to be adumbrated by new shadowes for this were to turne us back to our spelling book So Doctor John Burges in his rejoynder to Ames pag. 265. 267 268. But the old Non-conformists were not content with this but argued hence farther for the abolishing of all significant ceremonies of humane institution whatsoever not only those which Doctor Morton termeth Sacramental which signify some grace conferred by God but also those which he calleth moral which signify man's spiritual duty and obedience towards God such as the surplice cross c. Neither is this inference so irrational as the Prelatical partie have heretofore represented it To make which appeare I shall desire you to take notice of that which the judicious Mr. Bayne observeth on Col. 2.17 The Papists saith he may hence be in part answered they object that their ceremonies are not here condemned but such as signified Christ to come Though in other regards they are taken away then of signification yet they must know signification respecting Christ is two-fold 1. Of that which concerneth his own individual person as his manifestation in the flesh suffering c. 2. Of that which representeth any thing to be done in the body of Christ mystical to be done spiritually of Believers And that Christ is to be taken here in this latitude a If that of the Fathers may goe for currant that distinction of ●l●ven footed
to hear those things which ye hear and have not heard them Indeed the Church before Christ as our Saviour said of Abraham John 8.56 saw the day of Christ his comming in the flesh afar off through a vail or cloud of ceremonies and by the faith of prophesy Heb. 11.13 But we see it by the faith of History Unto them Christ was as a Kernel hidden in the ground as contained within God's promises Unto us he is as a branch grown forth Isai 4.2 Diodati Hence it is that the ceremonies of the old Testament were Prophetical prenunciative of things to come the Sacraments of the new Testament Historical commemorative of what is past As therefore the truth of History is held to be more real then the trurh of prophesy because it is a declaration of a real performance of that which was promised So the Christian administration of the Covenant of grace may be said to containe in it a fulness of truth that is a more real verity then the Levetical or Mosaical According to the which difference as is observed by the reverend Morton in his book of the institution of the Lord's Supper pag. 213. St. John the Baptist was called by Christ a Prophet in that he foretold Christ as now to come but he was called more then a Prophet as demonstrating and pointing him out to be now come Math. 11.9 Joh. 1.15,29 The ceremonial law saith the Apostle had a shadow of good things to come and not the very Image of the things Hebr. 10.1 In which words Calvin Pareus Cornelius Alapide and others conceive that there is an allusion unto the custome of Painters whose first rude or imperfect draught is termed a shadow or adumbration upon which they lay afterwards the lively colours so draw the Image unto the life with all its lineaments The rites of the old Law were but a rough draught but obscure and confused shadowes in respect of the ordinances of the Gospel which are a lively and express Image a distinct and perfect picture of Christ and his benefits Thus you see Beloved that God hath respited us to live in a time of greater light and fuller revelation then the Patriarks lived under O let us not receive so great a grace of God in vain but walke suitably thereunto let us improve this priviledge unto the best advantage of our soules by making use of it as an engagement unto a greater eminency in knowledge and piety then was in those dayes O! it were a shameful and ungrateful part that the Saints of the old Testament should see farther better and more distinctly through the cloud of ceremonies a light that shone in a dark place 2 Pet. 1.20 then we through the cleere mirror of the Gospel in which we may with open face behold the glory of Christ shining 2 Cor. 3.18 that their soules should thrive grow fat and full with the shadowes of the Law and ours be lanke and leane with the more solid and substantial ordinances of the Gospel 2. Christ may be considered under the relation of an head unto his Church and so the Church belongeth unto him as his fulness The Church which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all Ephes 1.23 This assertion at the first blush seemeth very strange For if in Christ dwell all fulness all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 If he be all in all if he fill all in all how then can either the Church triumphant all whose members owe all their perfection unto his influence or the Church militant which alas is but a company of poore creatures and sinners empty of all good save what floweth from him be possibly imagined to be his fulness any wayes to fill and perfect him why the very proposal of the doubt in some sort cleares it That which in the text seemingly contradicts the Churches being Christs fulness he filleth all in all insinuates after what manner it must be understood for from Christ's being of himselfe so full as that he filleth all in all the inference is not only easy but necessary that the Church is not his inward fulness serving to supply his defects and inwardly to fill and perfect him but only his outward fulness serving to magnify his mercy and outwardly to fill and honour him and from her he hath indeed an external filling glory and perfection Even as a King receiveth glory from his subjects in the multitude of the people is the Kings honour Prov. 14.28 or as a husband is honoured by a vertuous wife She is a crowne to him Prov. 12.4 A Father credited by his off-spring Childrens Children are the crowne of old men Prov. 17.6 Or as a Gentleman is graced by his numerous retinue Aquinas upon the place saith that the Church is Christ's fulness even as the body may be said to be the fulness of the soule And the body may be so termed because it is for the service of the soule because the soule workes in and by it and without it cannot put forth many of it's operations So the Church is for the service praise and glory of Christ Isai 43.21 Christ exerciseth and manifesteth the power and efficacy of his spirit in her She is as it were a vessel into which he poureth his gifts and graces Without a body how can the operations of the soule be visible And if it were not for the Church how could the power and efficacy of Christ's grace be discernable As a general or Commander may be said to be filled when his army is encreased his conquests enlarged so Christ when Believers are added unto the Church Acts. 2.47 The illustration is not mine but Hierom's The expression will not seem harsh if we consider the titles of the Church in the old Testament She is the glory of God Isai 4.5 Even as the woman is the glory of the man 1 Cor. 11.7 a crowne of glory in the hand of the Lord and a royal Diademe in the hand of God Isa 62.3 the throne of his glory Jer. 14.21 that is unto him a name of joy a prayse a glory and an honour before all the nations of the earth Jer. 13.11 and 33.9 For the further clearing of this text we will consider Christ personally essentially mystically 1 Personally as he is Sonne the second Person in the Trinity having in the Godhead a subsistence distinct both from that of the father and Holy Ghost and so he is full of himselfe 2. Essentially according to his natures both Divine and humane as he is God as he is man and so also he is full by himselfe full and perfect God full and perfect man So then the Church is not his fulness 3 Mystically as he is head of his Church and so he is not perfect without her being his body mystical So then the Church is his fulness Can the head saith the Apostle say to the feet I have no need of thee 1 Cor. 12.21 Christ hath deigned
is farre above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come vers 21 should descend so low as to reckon himselfe made full and compleat by weak and unworthy men rather wormes and no men that he who is so full as that he filleth all in all should yet be pleased so farre to humble himselfe as to call his members his fulness who alas are naturally empty of all spiritual good and full of sinne and misery A second duty unto which we may hence be exhorted respects the Church Is the Church Chrift's fulness then compassionate her sufferings doe and suffer your utmost for her delivery To see the fall of great men the funeral or ruine of great cities workes in those that either see or hear of it a kind of relenting or commiseration Why the Church of God his body his fulness is all in flames and shall not this command our most serious passions our sincerest and heartiest prayers and our utmost endeavours for her deliverance A Third exhortation regards themselves and it is to walk worthy of their high relation not to discredit it but to adorne it rather in an holy conversation The misdemeanours of favourites reflects upon their Princes And doe not the evil lives and actions of the Churches members redound unto the dishonour of Christ the head of the Church especially seeing he hath taken them into so streight and intimate a fellowship with him as that he hath made them of his body and fulness As they that honour him shall be honoured so they that cast any disgrace upon him or his body shall be sure to meet with shame and dishonour at the last Let them therefore be exhorted not to receive so great a favour as exaltation to be a part of Christ's fulness in vaine but to walke fittingly to the excellency of so high a condition as becometh the members of him who filleth all in all Lastly those that after an impartial examination of their relation unto the Church find themselves not only to be in her but of her as true proper and living members may upon this their assurance ground diverse consolations and that especialy in these five following particulars Use 1. Of consolation 1 If you are members of the Church and so consequently parts of Christ's fulness why then you may rest confident of all true blessings all spiritual honour and advancement He will be unto you a sunne and a shield he will give you grace and glory no good thing will he withhold from you Psal 84.11 You are his own and therefore he is neerly interested in your good your bliss and prosperity and consequently will be as careful of promoting it as you your selves will or can be For who will not use his utmost care and fidelitie in his own concernments All the members of the Church are one with Christ in a very near relation so that he and they make but one Christ they are as parts and portions of himselfe they are his fulness and therefore in all their advancements he is honoured and after a sort farther filled Whereupon divers Interpreters translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Eph. 1.23 passively and render the words thus qui omnia in omnibus adimpletur which is filled all in all that is is filled in all his Saints according to all graces and vertues requisite unto their eternal salvation By conferring then any grace or vertue or any other blessing upon them he conferreth it as it were upon himselfe he honoureth and filleth himselfe and on the contrary if he should deny blessings unto them he should deny them unto himselfe which is a thing not to be imagined Because the Church is Christs fulness because the members of the Church are said to be parts and portions of this fulness therefore as the Apostle phraseth it Hebr. 3.14 they partake of Christ they partake of all his communicable perfections 1. Of the satisfaction and merit of his death and sufferings Phil. 3.10 1 Pet. 4.13 2 of the graces of his spirit Joh. 1.16 3 of his glorious dignities priviledges and relations We are by him a royal Priesthood spiritual Kings and Priests sonnes and coheirs with him Nay 4 We shall reap from him not only relative but real glory when he shall appear we shall be like him 1 Joh. 3.2 and that not only in our soules but in our bodies Phil. 3.21 It is said of him that at the day of judgment he shall be glorified in his Saints 2 Thes 1.10 There is saith D. Sclater upon the place a personal glory of the Mediatour Joh. 17.5 And there is his social glory as I may terme it resulting unto his person from the glory which he communicates unto his Children And of this the Apostle here speakes Conjunct with the glory of Saints is the glory of Christ so neerely at that in their glorification himselfe is glorified Every Saint then may warrantably be assured that Christ will take all possible care for his glorification 2 You may hence find great cause of consolation in and against the forest afflictions For being parts of Christ's fulness whatsoever evil befals you he will deeply resent it he will be most tenderly affected with it nay exceedingly afflicted in it In all their afflictions saith the Prophet he was afflicted Isai 63.9 that is he compassionates their afflictions and as it were sympathizeth with them He is touched with the feeling of our infirmities Hebr. 4.14 Zech. 2.8 Judg. 10.16 Psal 106 44. Hereupon is it that Christ looked upon Saul's persecution of his members as reaching himselfe and therefore cried unto him from heaven Saul Saul why persecutest thou me I am Jesus whom thou persecutest Act. 9.4,5 Thus when the foot is trodden on the tongue in the head complaineth why treadest thou on me linguam non tetegit compassione clamat non attritione saith one Clemens Monilianus speaking of this passage of Saul The partie complained of toucheth not the tongue at all and therefore this cry and complaint of the tongue is not so much out of d Hinc autem Theologi quidam putant ostendi sanctorum passiones fidelibus prodesse ad remissionem poenarum quae vocatur Indulgentia Ex hoc tamen Apostoli loco nobis non videtur admodum solide statui posse Non enim sermoiste quo dicit Apostolus se pati pro Ecclesiâ necessario sic accipiendus est quod pro redimendis peccatorum poenis quas fideles debent patiatur Estius in Col. 1.24 paine or passion as sympathy and compassion Now the ground of Christ's thus sympathizing with his members is their mystical union with him As Christ the head and his body make one Person mystical one full Christ so the passions of the head and of the body and members make one compleat masse or body of passions with such difference for all that between the one sort and
persons from their places that is named in this world or that which is to come that is renowned here on earth or in heaven in the state of heavenly blisse which is said to be future or to come not because it doth not now exist but for that it is to come unto us that live here in this present world Lastly we have a distribution of this soveraigne authority or dominion of Christ It is 1. generall over the whole Creation And hath put all things under his feet v. 22. 2. speciall over the Church And gave him to be the head over all things to the Church 1. Generall over the whole creation and hath all things put under his feet Zanchy by all things here understands the enemies of Christ which shall be subjected unto him by way of conquest he shall in a victorious manner as it were tread upon them and trample them under his feet As the Captaines of the men of warre with Joshua did tread upon the five kings that were taken Josh 10.24 For this * Qui de ecclesia non sunt subjecti sunt Christo ficu● quae sub pedibus habemus nempe ut vilia digna quae conculcentur et conterantur Zanchius restriction of the phrase to wicked men and the enemies of Christ he giveth this reason the sheepe the members of Christ are in his hand not under his feete no man shall pluck them out of his hand Joh. 10.28 For answer the Scripture indeed mentioneth a twofold putting under the feete of Christ penall or obedientiall 1. There is a penall and disgracefull way of putting under the feet of Christ by way of punishment or contempt but when the Scripture speakes of that there is allwaies expresse mention made of enemies Psal 110.1 1 Cor. 15.25 But putting under the feet of Christ when it is used simply by it selfe without any such addition of enemies signifieth that which is obedientiall and denoteth the generall subordination of all creatures whatsoever unto Christ If any differ herein from me I shall desire him impartially to consider that place in Heb. 2.5,6,7,8 Where the Apostle hath a large discourse of this very subject And out of this place I shall draw three arguments to prove that the putting all things in subjection under the feet of Christ is so comprehensive as that it takes in not only enemies but all the creatures 1. v. 5. He hath put in subjection unto him the world to come that is heaven the inhabitants of which are the glorious Saints and Angels 2. v. 8. In that he put all in subjection under him he left nothing that is not put under him The Apostle we see is peremptory and expresse that no creature whatsoever is excepted or exempted from this subjection and therefore it would be saucinesse in any man to restraine it only unto enemies 3. The 8th Psalme out of which this phrase is applied unto Christ makes mention of all sheepe and oxen yea and the beasts of the field the foules of the aire and the fish of the sea and whatsoever passeth through the path's of the sea 's Psal 8.7,8 that were put under his feet Now these creatures are not capable of any enmity or hostility against Christ and therefore the phrase doth not here signify the speciall subjection of enemies by way of victory and triumph 2. We have here the second branch of Christs dominion that speciall soveraignty and supreme authority which he hath over his Church Gave him to be an head over all unto his Church that clause over all as is noted by Mr Bayne may be understood either in regard of Christ or the Church 1. In regard of Christ and so it denoteth the perfection of his glory and authority Gave him who is over all things to be the head unto the Church and so here is not only signified the excellency of Christ but farther the greatnesse of the gift or benefit herein bestowed by God upon the Church in that he hath given her a most eminent glorious and powerfull head But of this the Apostle speakes so fully in the foregoing words as that to insert it here againe so suddenly would be little lesse then a tautology I conceive therefore that the words are meant in regard of the Church so that in them is couched a comparison of the greater with the lesse of Christs head-ship unto the Church with his domination which he hath above all other creatures Christ may be said to be an head unto the whole universe He is the head of all principality and power Col. 1.10 But he is an head unto the Church in a more singular and eminent manner then he is unto any other of the creatures then he is unto the Angels He was unto the Angels only a mediator of confirmation or preservation unto us also a mediator of redemption and therefore now being at the right hand of God he presents unto him in our behalfe the satisfaction of his death for the remission of our sinnes the merit of his death for the supply of all our wants and in such a manner he doth not intercede for the elect Angels who are free from both sinne and indigency Besides there is not such a suitablenesse of nature between him and the Angels as there is between him and the Church of the redeemed For he tooke not on him the nature of Angels but he tooke on him the seed of Abraham Heb. 2.16 Zanchy expounds the words as of the singularity of Christs love unto the Church so also of the extent and universality of his influence upon her So that over all things with him sounds as much as in all things in all mercies and benefits needfull unto the Church his body in all duties belonging unto him as the head of his Church He communicates unto her all good things grace and glory Psal 84.11 he is present with her in all her streits and supplieth her in all her wants He dischargeth for her and unto her all the offices of an head he illightneth quickneth governeth and protecteth her But this interpretation may be thought to be strained therefore I shall acquiesce in the former touching the specialty of Christs headship Bayne or soveraignty over the Church It is more intimate communicative and beneficiall then that over any other Creatures though never so great and glorious A second place is Phil. 2.9,10,11 Where we have of Christs exaltation 1. an emphaticall affirmation 2. a large and lively description 1. An emphaticall affirmation God also hath highly exalted him It is not barely said that God exalted him but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 super exaltavit highly exalted him Exalted him above all highnesse Exalted him unto the greatest height of honour and power that the humane nature is advanceable so highly he exalted him that all Creatures whatsoever from the highest heavens unto the center of the earth are far below him as it were under his feete 2. We have a large
the words of the Apostle who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect If we respect inherent qualitie there is enough to charge him with but by forgivenesse of sinnes the same becommeth as if it had never been In a word therefore we are not formally just in qualitie if God judge us thereby being stained and defiled in all the righteousnesse that we have but we are formally just in law by the imputation of the righteousness of Christ for that thereby a satisfaction is interposed our sins are remitted and pardoned so that there is no let but that God mercifully for his sake accepteth us unto ever lasting life As for the answere of Ames it standeth thus Non aliâ ratione formalitèr nos justos nominari esse dicimus imputatâ Christi justitiâ quam quâ is cujus debitum ab altero solvitur nominatur est ab illo debito liber vel immunis quâ is cui procuratus est alterius favor aut graetia nominatur est illi alteri gratus Haec autem fieri posse probatur satis ab experientiâ communi Bellarm. enervat tom 4. pag. 134. when we say that we are righteous and formally denominated such by the righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto us our meaning is no otherwise then as when also we say that a man is freed or discharged from a debt which is paid for him by another or as when a man is said to be gracious with another when this grace or favour is procured by a third person And again in p. 135. exempla quae profert Bellar. denominationū ab extrinseca forma res cognita paries visus athiops albus vestibus nullam habent proportionem ad hanc Fidelis est iustifis catus coram Deo justitiâ imputata In istâ significatur moralis habitudinis ratio status qui pendet ex causâ extrinseca sed nihil tale in illis apparet Exempla apta sunt in scripturis Infidelis est condemnatus peccator est redemptus c. In a second place some extend the place so as that they make it to take in the whole perfection of a Christian which is communicated or derived from Christ either by imputation or by reall infusion and so it may be paraphrased by Ephes 1.3 God hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings in Christ with righteousnesse grace and glory The intendment of the Apostle is to assert that the cause or Originall of all the compleatnesse of a believer is Christ Jesus alone And therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in him is as much as by him and such is the signification of it elsewhere as Col. 1.16 Ye are compleat in him that is ye are compleat for him and from him for his sake as a meritorious cause purchasing your compleatnesse and from his reall influence as a physicall cause working and effecting your compleatnesse This sence of the words is more comprehensive then the former and therefore to be embraced if it be not otherwise liable unto any just exceptions and whether it be so I shall in the next place briefely examine 1. How can Believers here in this life be said to be compleat as touching their sanctification seeing the counter-lustings of the flesh are an undeniable proofe of the imperfection thereof For answer Their sanctification is compleat and full in regard of parts though not degrees Every believer receiveth from Christ's fulnesse grace for grace Joh. 1.17 Every one hath grace sufficient 2 Cor. 12.9 sufficient for the mortification of every lust and corruption sufficient to enable for the acceptable performance of every duty necessary to salvation Quintus Curtius comparing Alexander and Parmenio together passeth this censure upon them Multa sine rege prosperè rex sine illo nihil magnaerei gesserat He prosperously atchieved many things without Alexander Alexander did nothing of moment without him If we compare a Christian with Christ we may say that without Christ he can doe nothing at all Joh. 15.5 whereas he can doe all things through Christ which strengthneth him Phil. 4.13 2. The like objection may be framed against the compleatnesse of Believers in this life as touching their glorification for though they have the first fruits and beginnings of glory yet they are so overballanced by the unspeakable miseries of this life as that Paul doubted not to say that they were of all men most miserable if their happinesse were confined unto this life if in this life onely they had hope in Christ 1 Cor. 15.19 For answer 'T is true Believers are not compleat actually as touching their glorification but yet they may be said in respect of it to be compleat virtually and seminally and for such an assertion we have the warrant of Scripture He that believeth on the Sonne saith John the Baptist hath everlasting life Joh. 3.36 not onely shall have it but hath it He hath it already in the seed and root of it The grace of the Spirit in his heart is a well of water that will spring up unto everlasting life Joh. 4.14 In this sence he that hath the Sonne hath the life of glory as well as a life of righteousnesse and holinesse 1 Joh. 5.12 and so ground to rejoyce in hope of the glory of God Rom. 5.2 Looke as a man that is an undoubted heire unto great riches might be said to be rich in reversion if he could be assured to live unto the enjoyment of it So Believers may be said to be compleat in regard of their glorification because there is a certainty of their full fruition of it for they are heires apparent of perfect glory The God and father of our Lord Jesus Christ hath according to his abundant mercy begotten us againe unto a lively hope by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you 1 Pet. 1.3,4 And this inheritance is made sure unto them by an eternall and immutable decree 2 Thes 2.13 by an irreversible and unrepealable promise of an omnipotent God Hebr. 9.15 that can breake through all difficulties and overcome all impediments of it As also by the purchase of an unvaluable price by the testimony of an infallible spirit sealing them unto the day of redemption Ephes 4.30 that is deliverance from all bondage into the full liberty of the sonnes of God Rom. 8.21 Believers then are happy when others nay themselves judge themselves in the very extremity of misery when they walke in darknesse and see no light Isaiah 50.10 There is you see certitudo objecti The future compleatnesse of their glory is a thing certaine in it selfe and there may be certitudo subjecti Such believers as walke humbly with their God Micah 6.8 and purifie themselves as he is pure 1 Joh 3.3 may and ought to reach that full assurance of hope of which the Apostle speakes Heb. 6.11 upon this account it is that the Apostle
saith that we are saved by hope Rom. 8. vers 24. that is we are saved here in this life not in regard of a present and plenary possession or fruition but onely in respect of an assured expectation thereof And thus I have ended with the exposition of the words in themselves I am in the next place briefely to examine the inference of them from the foregoing There dwelleth in Christ as man all-fulnesse of the Godhead bodily therefore ye who believe in Christ are compleat in him for he is able to make you compleat Because hereupon it followeth 1. that in all that he did and suffer'd there was an infinite merit able to purchase this compleatnesse 2. That there was in him an insinite power able to conferre this compleatnesse Some understand those words of our saviour Joh. 6.63 concerning the humanity of Christ considered alone without his Deitie It is the spirit that quickneth that is it is the Godhead united unto the humane nature that giveth spirituall life The flesh profiteth nothing that is the humane nature of Christ if it were disunited from the divine it would be of little availe unto the quickenance of our soules It s concurrence is not onely profitable but necessary yet it is onely instrumentall and therefore in the vertue of it's principall agent the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelling bodily in it If Christ had beene meere man though clothed with all the power that a creature is capable of He could not have saved so much as one single soule from eternall death But he is God as well as man and therefore able to justifie sanctifie and glorifie even millions of worlds With thee saith the Psalmist unto God is the fountaine of life Psalm 36.9 A fountatine that can never be exhausted The fulnesse of the Godhead in Christ is not as a river but as a sea whence flow all those streames that make glad the city of God Psalm 46.4 It was from his Deity that there was in him an ample sufficiency to finish the transgression to make an end of sinnes and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting righteousnesse Dan. 9.24 Because his righteousnesse is the righteousnesse of God Phil. 3.9 therefore it is appliable to and available for all the believers that ever were are or shall be in the world Because it was the great God that was our Saviour and gave himselfe for us Therefore he hath redeemed us from all iniquity and purified us unto himselfe a peculiar people Tit. 2.13,14 Because he is the Sonne of God therefore his bloud cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 therefore by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10.14 Because the Father hath by eternall generation given unto the Sonne to have life in himselfe Joh. 5.26 therefore he quickeneth whom he will vers 21. He can quicken those soules that are dead in sinns and trespasses and he will at the last day quicken those bodies that have for thousands of yeares beene rotten in their graves Because he is the Lord from heaven 1 Cor. 15.47 The Lord of Glory 1 Cor. 2.8 therefore he can clothe our mortall and corruptible bodies with incorruption and immortality He can change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according unto the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himselfe Phil. 3.21 Can you desire more comfort then that which this point yeeldeth It promiseth as much perfection as our natures can hold But it is indeed onely unto those who are qualified as those Colossians were unto whom our Apostle directs this Epistle Saints and faithfull Brethren Chapt. 1.2 who have received Christ Jesus the Lord rooted and built up in him and established in the faith abounding therein with thanksgiving Chapt. 2. vers 6 7. This restriction is implied thinke some in that the Apostle doth not say ye are compleate from him or by him but ye are compleat in him That clause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in him containeth say they a description of those that are thus compleate They are such as are in Christ as have an actuall inexistence in him Such as are incorporated and implanted into him by the spirit and faith And they are all new creatures 2. Cor. 5.17 they have all the spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 Men may take a full draught of a * Musculus Da venant naturall fountaine and yet not goe into it but stand without it But now as for this spirituall fountaine Christ Jesus none can so much as sippe of the water of life in him without passing into him by the act of a faith that purifyeth the heart Acts 15.9 and worketh by love Galat. 5.6 and out of the belly of him that believeth shall flow rivers of living water John 7.38 Branches separate from the vine wither and grow saplesse Members cut off from the head are dead and become carrion Professours disunited from Christ can have no vitall communion with him no participation of any true and reall compleatnesse from him They are but livelesse pictures of Christians have onely a forme of Godlinesse onely the carcasse of that perfection which Christ imparteth unto his members and therefore however they may be for their naturall and acquired endowments most accomplished persons yet as touching spirituals they are next to divels of all creatures most imperfect and incompleate wretched and miserable poore blind and naked Revel 3.17 able to doe nothing John 15.5 In a second place Paul inferreth from the personall union the dignity of the humane nature of Christ in comparison of the good Angels Because in him dwelleth all fulnesse of the Godhead therefore he is the head of all principality and power Here examine we 1. what is meant by principality and power 2. How Christ as man is the head of all principality and power 1. Then enquire we what is meant by principality and power In vers 15. of this chapter and in Ephes 6.12 they signify evill Angels But here they are taken onely for the good Angels Angels which are tearmed in scripture the elect Angels 1 Timoth. 5.21 the Angels of heaven Math. 24.36 the Angells of light 2 Cor. 11.14 the sonnes of God Job 1.6 Job 38.7 who are tearmed 1. Principalities from that excellency which they have by nature and grace above other creatures they are the chiefe of the creation as it were Princes in comparison of other creatures 2. They are stiled powers for that Authority which God hath delegated unto them over other creatures For the restriction of the tearmes here unto the good Angels I shall alleadge 3 arguments 1. This headship is a sequele of the personall union and therefore no meere creature shareth in it But if it denoted barely a superiority over the wicked Angels it were a priviledge communicable unto the good Angels 2. To be head is properly a superiority that is some way or other beneficiall unto those
God will make plentifull provision for all their wants It is the inference of the Apostle himselfe Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his owne sonne but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things He that soared not his owne sonne his deare son his most tenderly beloved sonne but delivered him up for us all unto the slaughter how shall he not with him freely give us all things that is all things needfull for our eternall happinesse and salvation all things that pertaine to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.13 The promises of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Timoth. 4.8 4. They may hence be certaine of a continuall confirmation of their graces and preservation from Apostacy Gods t If Kings bear goodwill to some family if his love begin in some chief one who is with him at court as his speciall favourite it is so much the firmer to all the rest of them Thus here how firme and sure is his love to us who●n he hath loved unto life in Christ our head and eldest brother who is his naturall sonne from whom it is impossible that his love should ever start and when it is sure to the head can the body be forsaken Mr Bayne on Eph. ● ver 4. pa. 39. love of them is like his love of him immutable Thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me saith Christ Joh. 17.23 If the head be alwaies the beloved the members can never be hated The fruits therefore of this love the gifts and callings of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 If the naturall sonne of God be daily his delight and that as well unto as from eternity Therefore with everlasting kindnesse he will have mercy on his adoptive sonnes The mountaines shall depart and the hils be removed But my kindnesse shall not depart from them neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on them Isai 54.8,10 But now if he should not uphold and establish them by his spirit Psalm 51.12 if he should not continually support and underprop their graces but suffer them totally and finally to decay and wither this would be a palpable withdrawing of his loving kindnesse and a shutting up his tender mercies in anger Besides the sonnes love of them resembleth the fathers love of him Joh. 15.9 As the father hath loved me so have have I loved you Now there is no change in the fathers love of him therefore neither in his love of them And therefore we may conclude that as it is their duty so it shall be their priviledge and happinesse to continue in his love The Apostle Paul professeth in the behalfe of all believers that nothing can divorce them from the love of God in Christ that is for Christ I am perswaded saith he that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord Rom. 8.38,39 In those last words which is in Christ Jesus our Lord The Apostle layeth downe the ground of the perpetuity of God's love of his children 'T is not in themselves but in Christ Jesus that is it is for his sake for that unalterable affection which he beareth unto him Lastly from the eminency of God's favour unto Christ his members may with confidence expect the perfect and full glorification of their soules and bodies hereafter in heaven For our Saviour himselfe in that prayer of his Joh. 17. having petitioned for the glory of all that were to believe on him he inforceth this his petition by representing unto the Father the love that he hath borne unto him as man from all eternity Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with mee where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given mee for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world ver 24. Is is as if he had said That love which thou bearest unto me expresse unto those that are mine As thou loved'st mee invest them with that glory which thou hast decreed unto my humanity Believers then may as confidently expect their owne glory as they are assured of the Fathers affection unto Christ and this assurance should digest all their sorrowes and miseries here in this life From Consolations I proceed unto Exhortations and they shall be directed either unto the enemies or members of Christ 1. Then for enemies and aliens they may hence be exhorted 1. Unto humiliation for their past enmity against Christ 2. Unto a serious and earnest endeavour after reconciliation and union with him 1. Unto humiliation for their past enmity against him and his his members ministers and other ordinances Who dare almost oppose the Minions of earthly Princes for History presents us with plentifull instances of such whom their very frownes have ruined O then the hatred of heavens favourite must needs be infinitely more fatall and unfortunate Because he is able to crush his most potent adversaries tremble then to consider that all thy life long thou hast hated the beloved loathed and abhorred God's darling been averse from the Son of his love rejected his elect servant in whom his soule delighteth been a most disaffected and malignant Antagonist unto him in whom the Father is well-pleased 2. Because Christ is so highly graced with God all his enemies may be exhorted to doe what lieth in them for the future for reconciliation and union with him by application of themselves unto the diligent use of such meanes and ordinances as God hath sanctified and set apart for that purpose For those that are not united with him cannot expect so much as a good look from God because God is reconciled onely in him 2 Cor. 5.19 he accepts none but in the beloved Ephes 1.6 He is well pleased with none but such as are in him Those that are out of him lye under the displeasure and wrath of God which is a consuming fire In terrene courts how ambitious are men to be related unto the grand favourite as knowing that he is the channell of all considerable preferments Should it not then be the utmost ambition of men to have relation unto Christ for through him onely God dispenseth all saving favours unto the sonnes of men We may say of him in reference unto God as Tacitus did of Sejanus the powerfull favourite of Tiberius ut quisque Sejano intimus ita ad Caesaris amicitiam validus Contrà quibus infensus esset metu ac sordibus conflictebantur He that was an intimate of Sejanus needed not with any great labour search for honours He that had him his enemy languished under dispraise and misery None had any honour without his favour Neither without him could any keep any place of either profit or credit with security Besides
great expression of Christs love his death upon the crosse 1 Cor. 2.2 I determined not to know any thing among you save Jesus Christ and him crucified Indeed Christs love is the epitome and center the fulfilling of both Law and Gospell Rom. 13.8 it was out of love that he performed the duties and sufferd the penalties of the law for us It is out of love that he hath revealed and will accomplish the promises of the Gospell unto us A second motive unto the study of the love of Christ is the incomprehensiblenesse of it It passeth knowledge and therefore though we arrive unto never so great a degree in our knowledge of the love of Christ yet still there will be a terra incognita place for new and farther discoveries Christs love is a structure of vast indeed infinite extent It is as it is said of God Iob. 11.8,9 As high as heaven deeper then hell larger then the earth and broader then the sea and therefore impossible we should exactly measure it in all these dimensions However let us labour to measure it as exactly as we can that we may comprehend so much of the length breadth depth and height thereof as is discoverable by the saints here in this life The love of Christ then is a most spacious object for contemplation in the meditation of which we may exercise our selves day and night and into which to use the expression of Calvin nos quasi demergamus we may as it were plunge our selves over head and eares as into an ocean that hath no bottome A third motive in this place is from the proper and adequate subject of this knowledge That ye may be able to comprehend with all Saints c. The knowledge of Christs love is the priviledge of the saints common unto all believers and withall it is so proper and peculiar unto them as that it belongs unto none but saints If thou hast an effectuall and applicative knowledge though but in a remisse degree of the transcendent love of Christ thou art then a saint and if thou art a gratious faint here on earth thou maist be confident that thou shalt be a glorious saint in heaven But now if on the other side thou livest dyest in ignorance or meerely in a notionall or uneffectuall knowledg of the love of Christ thou can'st have no evidence of thy saintship And if thou art not a saint here thy portion will be with damned Fiends and Divels in hell hereafter A fourth motive is the influence of the knowledge of Christ's love and that is 1. preservative from fainting in tribulations here 2. preparative for the allfulnesse of God in heaven hereafter 1. Preservative from fainting in tribulation here And this may be gathered from comparison of these verses with the foregoing For vers 13. The Apostle dehorts them from fainting at the newes of his troubles I desire that you faint not at my tribulation for you and in the following verses he backes this dehortation with a most humble and fervent petition the preface unto which we have verses 14 15. for this cause I bow my knee unto the father of our Lord Jesus Christ c. The matters or things petitioned for are three 1. Corroboration and confirmation by the spirit of God vers 16. that he would grant you according unto the riches of his glory to be strengthned with might by his spirit in the inner man 2. A further union with Christ vers 17. and 3. which belongs unto our purpose a practicall and experimentall apprehension of the love of Christ that ye may be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge c. 18 19. By this coherence you see that a feeling and efficacious knowledge of Christs love and the dimensions thereof will embolden and hearten the saints in their owne and others troubles and as a soveraigne cordiall keep them from all despondency and sinking of spirit A second branch of its influence is preparative for the all fullnesse of God vers 19. I bow my knees unto the father of our Lord Jesus Christ vers 14. that ye may be able to comprehend c. and to know the love of Christ c. that ye might be filled with all the fullnesse of God vers 18 19 that is with a full knowledge of God in the beatificall vision the full image of God a full participation of the divine nature a full union with fruition of God full and immediate influences from God according unto that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.28 God shall be all in all that is in all the elect he shall be vice omnium instead of all ordinances unto their soules instead of all meanes and helpes unto their bodies And I saw no temple therein for the Lord God almighty and the Lamb are the Temple of it And the city had no need of the Sun neither of the Moone to shine in it for the glory of God did lighten it and the Lamb is the light thereof Revel 21.22,23 The meaning of the place is that God shall immediatly by himselfe supply the efficiency of all second causes whatsoever Before I leave these words I shall out of them direct unto a cause of the knowledge of the love of Christ to wit to be rooted and grounded in love vers 17. that is either in our assurance of Gods love in Christ unto us or else in the habit of our love unto God and Christ I bow my knees unto the father c. that ye being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend know the love of Christ c. They which are rooted and grounded in love are able to reach the dimensions of Christs love to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge c. A full and firme assurance of Gods love in Christ unto us and our firme and constant love of God and Christ will put us upon a most industrious search after all the secrets of Christs love unto our soules Whereas on the other side those that either despaire or doubt of that love of God and Christ as also those that have but faint affections and inconstant desires towards them all such make but a very slow progresse in the study and knowledge of Christs love The last exhortation is unto an imitation of this fulnesse of love Walke in love saith the Apostle as Christ also hath loved us and hath given himselfe for us an offering and a sacrifice unto God c Ephes 5.2 In which words we have 1. An exhortation unto the duty of love walke in love 2. A direction unto a patterne whereunto we must conforme our selves in performance of this duty 1. As for the exhortation it is observed by the solid and judicious Zanchy that it is not barely to love but to walke in love that is to passe the whole course of our life to spend all
his body the fulnesse of him that filleth all in all And then the meaning of the words is untill the mysticall body of Christ grow to ripenesse and perfection untill all that belong to the election of grace all that be ordained to eternall life be gathered and added unto the Church and untill every member arrive unto a full growth unto a full measure of grace and glory And this I conceive to be the most probable sence of the words for as Cornel. A lapide well observeth the Apostle saith untill we come to a perfect man and not untill we come unto perfect men because he speakes not of Christians considered severally but rather of the whole Church which he compareth unto one perfect man of which man the Church is as it were the body Christ himselfe the soule and head Now when the body commeth unto it's fulnesse of growth the head also commeth thereunto as also the strength vigour quicknance and efficacy of the soule its union with and information of the body which though the soule it selfe be indivisible is divisible and consequently coextended with the body Even so in like manner when all the members that shall be added unto the Church shall come unto their full growth and perfection in grace why then Christ considered under a mysticall capacity as head of his Church may be said to come unto his full growth age or stature too And his union with his Church and members will then absolutely be full and compleate I come in the last place unto the uses of exhortation From the all-fulnesse of Christ's grace we may be exhorted unto two duties 1. Humiliation for the imperfection of our graces 2. Diligence and constancy in the growth of our graces 1. Unto Humiliation for the imperfection that is in our owne graces and to give the better edge unto this exhortation I shall propound two motives 1. The perfection of the holinesse of the second Adam should mind us of that perfect holinesse which we lost in the first Adam And reflexion on such an unvaluable losse cannot but strike the heart of any one with a deepe measure of godly sorrow that is not ignorant of the worth and necessity of grace 2. All aberrations from the rule are blemishes and therefore seeing our graces fall so infinitely short of that perfection which is in the patterne of grace Christ Jesus all our graces are defective and sinfull and so present matter for spirituall mourning Can we behold the Sun of righteousnesse and not blush at the menstruous rag's of our own righteousnesses Can we looke upon the bottomlesse fountaine of holinesse in Christ and not be ashamed of our shallow brooke that would soone waxe dry if it were not continually supplied from the aforesaid fountaine Alas what are our drops unto his ocean our sparks or beames unto his sunne His gifts and graces were in comparison of ours unmeasurable God gave not the spirit by measure unto him But what a narrow measure is there in the brightest gifts and endowments of the most glorious saints that ever lived upon the face of the earth And this measure ariseth from mixture with contrary lusts and corruptions The Holy Ghost replenished the heart of Christ from the very conception The word was no sooner made flesh but it forthwith was full of grace and truth But Satan hath filled our hearts from the very wombe with a body of sin and death armies of lusts and corruptions like the Midianites which lay on the ground like grashoppers for multitude Judg. 7.12 As soone as we were conceived we were forthwith full of all the seeds of sinne ignorance and errour In Christ were unsearchable riches of grace But we are like the foole in the Gospell Luk. 12.21 that was not rich towards God Like the Church of Laodicea Revel 3.18 that was wretched miserable poore blind naked In him were hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge In us there are to allude unto the expression of the Prophet upon another occasion Esay 45.3 treasures of darknesse the treasury of an evill heart Math. 12.34,35 The sonne of man was cloathed with a garment of holines●e downe to the foote Revel 1.13 Whereas the robe of our graces is farre more narrow and scanty then the filthy garments of our corruptions Christ was a lambe without blemish and without spot Whereas alas there is a spot in the dearest Children of God Deut. 32.5 the spot of Originall and Actuall sinne their purest graces and most spirituall duties are bespotted and distained by the adhesion of sinfull lusts and corruptions The eyes of Christ are pure white and precious like orient Jewels or sparkling Diamonds His eyes are as the eies of doves by the rivers of water washed with milke and fitly set or as it is in the margent sitting in fulnesse that is fitly placed and set as a precious stone in the foile of a ring Cant. 5.10 But now our eyes are not onely darke and dimme but impure and uncleane 2 Pet. 2.14 full of Adultery Grace was poured into his lips Psal 4.2.5 his lips are full of grace t is in the old translation But now our tongues are full of deadly poyson Jam. 3.8 Our mouthes are full of cursing and bitternesse Rom. 3.14 God anoynted Jesus Christ with the holy Ghost and he went about doing good c. Acts 10.38 But that the greatest part of men have received no such anoynting is witnessed by their unactivenesse for the glory of God and good of the Church They are as unprofitable burdens unto the earth as the Sodomites whose iniquity was fulnesse of bread and the abundance of Idlenesse Ezek. 16.49 2. We may hence be exhorted unto diligence and constancy in the growth of our graces For let our progresse in them be never so great yet still we shall come farre behind out patterne and never be able here to reach his all-fulnesse Those that learne to write will labour to come as nigh their copy as they can And in all handy-crafts learners endeavour a full conformitie unto their rules and patternes And therefore we may conclude that we can never be too conformable to the holinesse of Christ which God hath propounded unto us for a samplar to imitate He was full of grace and therefore we can never be gracious enough In him were hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge And therefore we can never be knowing enough We desire a full conformitie unto the glory and happinesse of Christ And therefore it is very irrationall to thinke upon a stay or stoppe in the way thereunto to wit a conformity unto his grace and holinesse What is spoken of the degrees of grace and light in the Church Cant. 6.10 may be applied unto every Christian In his first conversion he looketh forth as the morning When he arriveth unto further maturity he is faire as the moone that hath a mixture of spots with her fullest light But in the state of glory he will
It takes * Pareus away the cause and the effect It stops up not onely the fountaine Originall corruption but all the rivulets of actuall transgression The fulnesse of satisfaction in the humiliation of Christ was like the fulnesse of water in the sea And the sea by reason of it's huge vastnesse can drowne mountaines as well as molehils Even so the fulnesse of Christ's satisfaction can swallow up the greatest as well as the least sinnes A second head of disparity is in regard of the potency and prevalency of their effects The offence of Adam brought in a kingdome and tyranny of death If by one mans offence death raigned by one ver 17. But now the obedience and righteousnesse of Christ hath purchased and erected a farre more powerfull eminent and glorious kingdome the Kingdome of life Much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousnesse shall raigne in life by one Jesus Christ ibid. It is very remarkable that whereas the Apostle saith in the former part of the verse by one mans offence death reigned by one he doth not to answere this say in the latter part of the verse life shall raigne by one man Christ Jesus but they which receive abundance of grace c shall reigne in life by one Jesus Christ For this Estius giveth two reasons 1. Because it sounds more sweetly and comfortably to say that justified persons shall reigne by Christ then to say that life shall reigne in those that are justified by Christ And secondly it is to put a difference between the Kingdome of death and the Kingdome of life The Kingdome of death destroyeth all its vassalls but the Kingdome of life contrariwise exalts all its subjects and maketh them to be Kings partakers of the heavenly Kingdome with Christ And thus have you seen out of the Apostle that there is such a wide imparity between the obedience of Christ and the disobedience of Adam as that the satisfaction and merit of Christs obedience is by far more beneficiall unto the Church and people of God then the guilt of Adams sin was prejudiciall In the next place the Apostle prosecutes a comparison of similitude between the efficacy of the sin of the one unto condemnation and of the righteousnesse of the other unto justification and life And this he doth first in proper and then in metaphoricall tearmes In proper tearmes vers 18 19. As by the offence of one judgment came upon all men unto condemnation Even so by the righteousnesse of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous In which words we have the influence of Adams offence and Christs righteousnesse resembled in regard of both intensivenesse and extensivenesse 1. Intensivenesse they are like though not equall in the intension or degree of their efficacy As Adams offence was effectuall to make his posterity sinners to involve and inwrap them in guilt and condemnation so Christs righteousnesse and obedience was available to invest all his members with justification to make them righteous before God unto everlasting life 2. They are resembled proportionally in regard of the extensivenesse of their objects As by the offence of one to wit Adam judgment came upon all men that were his naturall seed by propagation Even so by the righteousnesse of one Christ Iesus the free gift came upon all men that were his spirituall seed by regeneration unto justification of life Secondly This similitude is propounded in metaphoricall tearmes ver 21. That as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reigne through righteousnesse unto eternall life by Iesus Christ our Lord. Whereas the kingdome of Originall sinne is made the sequel of Adams transgression So the kingdome of grace is made the consequent of Christs obedience Originall corruption may be tearmed a King in regard 1. of vastnesse of dominion It reigneth before regeneration in all men and in all of men in their mortall bodies as well as their soules 2. In regard of greatnesse of power It hath all the powers of the soule and parts of the body untill they be renewed by the holy Ghost under such a command as the Centurion had his servants or souldiers Math. 8.9 And unto this kingdome of sinne the kingdome of grace by Christ is answerable As sinne reigneth unto death so grace reigneth through righteousnesse by Jesus Christ Now unto the grace and favour of God a kingdome an-answerably is ascribed in two respects 1. in regard of it's powerfull efficacy it is as able to protect and exalt all those to whom it is extended as Originall sinne is to ruine and destroy those that are under it's plenary subjection 2. in regard of its plentifull fruits grace reigneth by Jesus Christ By him there is a large kingdome a great abundance of grace answerable to the kingdome and abundance of sinne in us to the reigning of sinne unto death The subjects of this kingdome receive abundance of grace and of the fruit of righteousnesse ver 17. There is one thing more in the text that much conduceth unto the glory of this kingdome of grace and that is the continuation of it unto eternity Other kingdomes may expire But grace shall reigne through righteousnesse unto eternall life And thus the Apostle declareth what a great purchase Christ by his all-sufficient merits hath made in the behalfe of his members He hath purchased for them grace and favour with the God of heaven nay a powerfull rich and an absolutely eternall kingdome of grace O how happy and glorious shall all those soules be that are found in Christ standing by faith under the coverture of His merits and righteousnesse Grace shall reigne over them through righteousnesse unto eternall life Secondly Christ may be considered according unto his state of exaltation and so there dwelled in him an all fulnesse of glory There was a manifestation of the All-fullnesse of glory that was essentiall unto his Godhead A reall collation of an all-fulnesse of glory upon his manhood First then in the exaltation of Christ there was a manifestation of the all-fulnesse the infinitenesse of glory that was essentiall unto the Godhead This divine glory of his was for a time as it were laid aside clouded and eclipsed by the forme of a servant the infirmities of his humane nature the miseries of his life and by the shame and paine of his death But in his exaltation the father glorified him according unto his desire and prayer John 17.5 with his owne selfe with the glory which he had with him before the world was that is the father manifested and displayed in him that glory which he had from all eternity in a way of equality with himselfe By the resurrection he was declared to be the sonne of God with power Rom. 1.4 and therefore possessed of an infinite glory for the sonne of God
1.18 God gave him in all things the preheminence Phil. 2.9 He highly exalted him and gave him a name above every name Ephes 1.21 and placed him far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not onely in this world but also in that which is to come All these and the like Scriptures evidently hold forth as a fulnesse of office and authority so also a fulnesse of glory and majesty in Christ as man Christs manhood was exalted unto an higher degree of glory majesty and dignity then the most glorious Saint or Angell ever was or shall be Principalities powers mights and dominions fall far short of his glory This doctrine concerning the all-fulnesse of glory in the manhood of Christ in its state of exaltation may be applied for Refutation Consolation Exhortation 1. For refutation of the doctrine of the Papists touching the corporall presence of Christs body in the Lords supper For this doctrine of theirs by just consequence makes Christs body of glory or most glorious body his impassible body to be most inglorious because it affirmeth it under the formes of bread and wine to be obnoxious unto as execrable indignities and obscenities as can be imagined as for example to be burnt by fire to be blown away by the wind to be vomited and disgorged by either a sickly or drunken communicant to be put in a dunghill to be devoured by wormes mice dogs or hogs to passe through the guts or entrals into the draught See farther of this Bishop Morton of the institution of the Sacrament of the blessed body and bloud of Christ c. lib. 4. cap. 10. Secondly Christs fulnesse of glory in his exaltation may serve for the consolation of all his members because they may be confident of conformity thereunto for God hath predestinated them to be conformed unto the image of his Son Rom. 8.29 Vnto the image of his glory as well as unto the image of his grace and crosse For if we be dead with him we shall also live with him if we suffer we shall also reigne with him 2 Tim. 2 11,12 If Christ himselfe the King be crowned with glory and honour he will bestow a matrimoniall crowne of glory and honour upon his Queen the Church and every faithfull soule It is said of David that the Lord had established him King over Israel and that he had exalted his Kingdome for his people Israels sake 2 Sam. 5.12 and therefore doubtlesse his care was to promote the glory and happinesse of the whole people of Israell as well as of his owne person and family David was a type of Christ and therefore we may say of Christ that God established him in and exalted him unto his Kingdome of glory for his people his Churches sake and upon this we may conclude that he will be carefull to make them glorious and happy as well as himselfe This conformity of Christs members unto his fulnesse of glory is either inchoate here in this life or else consummate hereafter in heaven 1. Then the saints here even in this life may enjoy a begun and imperfect conformity unto Christs glory and this may be evinced from 1. the relations of it 2. Gods promises of it and 3. the saints prayers for it 1. From the relations of it It had the relation of an end 1. Vnto the ministery of Christ himselfe here upon earth These things have I spoken unto you that my joy might remaine in you and that your joy might be full John 15.11 John 17.13 2. Unto the penning of the sacred Scriptures These things write we unto you that your joy may be full 1 Iohn 1.4 Thirdly unto the prayers of the Saints Aske and ye shall receive that your joy may be full John 16.24 2. There are many gracious promises in Scripture of this inchoation of the Churches and Saints glory here on earth 2 Peter 1.10,11 If ye do these things ye shall never fall For so an entrance shall be minister'd unto you abundantly into the everlasting Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Even here in this life we may have an entrance into Christ's Kingdome of glory that shall be everlasting And this entrance may be abundantly minister'd unto us Hag. 2.7 I will fill this house with glory saith the Lord of Hostes The words perhaps may primarily be understood of Gods honouring the materiall Temple with the bodily presence of Christ hut we may put an enlargement upon them and extend them unto the Spirituall house of God his Church which he filleth here in this life with the beginnings and first-fruites of glory Ps 36.7,8 Those of the childrē of men that put their trust under the shadow of thy winges shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatnesse of thy house and thou shalt make them drinke of the river of thy pleasure In Esay 66.10,11 God promiseth all the true members of the Church all that rejoyce with Jerusalem and are glad with her all that love her to satisfy them with the breasts of her consolation that they may milke out and be delighted with the abundance of her glory For thus saith the Lord Behold I will extend peace unto her like a river c. vers 12. If the Church be in a distressed and persecuted condition as a meadow that is mowne downe why Christ shall come like raine upon the mowen grasse as showers that water the earth Ps 72.6 When she lieth under reproaches and suffering even then a Spirit of glory shall rest upon her 1 Pet. 4.13 In his dayes that is under his goverment shall the righteous flourish and abundance of peace so long as the Moone endureth Psalm 72.7 The peace of God which passeth all understanding shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus Phil. 4.7 Lastly we have the Saints prayers for these beginnings of glory recorded in Scripture and that both of petition and thanksgiving 1. Petition Now the God of hope saith Paul in the behalfe of the Romans fill you with all joy and peace in believing that ye may abound in hope through the power of the holy Ghost Rom. 15.13 This petition doubtlesse had a favourable and gracious reception The least that can be said of it is that it is a sufficient argument of not onely the possibility but also probability of the thing petitioned for In it there are two things especially remarkable pertinent unto the argument in hand 1. The matter with which he praied that they might be filled all joy and peace 2. An amplification of this matter from its causes to wit instrument end and principall efficient 1. Then we have the matter with which he prayed that they might be filled all joy and peace which Synechdochically may be very well put for all other inchoations of glorification because they some way or other imply them 1. Then he prayeth that God would fill them with all joy Now a Christian hath all joy that is his
with the consumptive operation of the fire as touching their bodies Against this Suarez in tert part Thomae tom 2. disp 48. sect 3. p. 530. objects that this is not so agreeable unto that of Paul 1 Cor. 15.53 This corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortall must put on immortality For to put on incorruption and immortality in rigour of speech signifies more then extrinsecall protection of God hindering extrinsecall Agents Besides saith he Christs body was impassible otherwise after his resurrection then it was while it lay in the sepulcher But in the grave it was incorruptible by the outward providence of God which would not suffer it to see Corruption to be resolved into dust and ashes or into the foure elements or into any such thing Hereupon Suarez himselfe concludes that the bodies of the blessed shall be made impassible by some supernaturall quality infused into them and inherent in them rendering them uncapable of all corruptive alteration For it is of such perfection that it is able to resist and hinder the Agency of all the efficient causes of corruptive passion pag. 531. Thus you see with what confidence these subtile disputers determine of a point that I am perswaded can never be determined but by the event As for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that our glorified bodies shall be impassible this the scripture clearely asserts but as for the quomodo the manner how and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the cause by which it is it speakes hereof very sparingly and therefore I shall not adventure to determine peremptorily concerning it but leave the decision of it unto the great day of revelation when all the secrets riddles and mysteries of Divinity shall be fully and distinctly unfolded A second prerogative of glorified bodies that our Apostle specifies is glory which is the same with that which the Schoolmen tearme clarity It is sowen in dishonour it is raised in glory 1 Cor. 15.43 Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sunne in the kingdome of their father Math. 13.43 Of this the miraculous and extraordinary majesty of the countenance of Stephen might be a glance and presage Acts 6.15 All that sate in the councell looking stedfastly on him saw his face as it had beene the face of an Angell that is bright and glorious And unto it we may adde the lustre of Moses his face which shone so gloriously that the Children of Israel were afraid to come neare him and he forced to put a veile upon it till he had done speaking with them Exod. 34.29,30,33,35 If such was the glory of the countenance of Stephen Moses whilest they were mortall and fraile men here on earth then how will the Countenance of glorified saints glitter when they shall communicate in the glory of Christs owne body for unto this the glory of Moses and Stephen's faces doth not bare so much proportion as the light of the smallest starre hath unto the splendour of the sunne It is well observed by d Claritas quae postrema dos est glorificati corporis ex eo proveniet quod gloria animae fic redundabit in corpus ut quod animae spiritualitèr competit in corpore corporaliter appareat Nam tale quiddam licet imperfecte conting it nobis etiam in hâc vita Hominis enim laeti ac benè conscii vultus serenus quodammodo lucidus est atque omniuo secundum affectus animi facies corporis mutari solet Erit igitur in corporibus sanctorum splendor quidam oculis conspicuus qui index erit gloriae spiritualis exislentis in anima in 4. Sentent dist 48. sect 15. pag. 266. Estius that the joy of the soule hath even here in this life an unperfect impression upon the body making the countenance serene and cheerefull and hereupon he inferreth the redundancy of glory and happinesse from the soule unto the body The spirituall glory of their soules shall be conspicuous by the bodily brightnesse of their countenances What the Schoolmen speake concerning the flowing of the Clarity of a glorious body from the soule is to be understood warily and if I be not mistaken Suarez giveth a very good interpretation of it The truer exposition saith e Verior expositio est hujusmodi claritatem dici redundare à beatitudine animae non physicè sed proportione quadam quia animae existenti in statu ita perfecto debita est similis seu proportionalis corporis perfectio Suarez in tert part Thomae tom 2. disp 48. sect 2 pag. 528. he is that this clarity of the body is said to redound unto it from the soule not physically but by a kind of proportion Because unto the soule existing in so perfect a state there is due the like or a proportionable perfection of the body A third priviledge of glorified bodies mentioned by the Apostle is power It is sowen in weaknesse it is raised in power vers 43. that is endewed with a strength that is above the reach of inward infirmities or outward dangers This strength is that glorious endowment of the body which the Schoolmen tearme agilitie whereby the body is most perfectly subjected unto the soule in regard of Motion ut mobile principio motivo By it it is inabled to move wheresoever the soule will have it to the right hand or to the left upwards or downwards and that without wearinesse and though not in an instant yet with uncredible celerity For it they quote out of the old testament Esay 40. vers 31. They that waite upon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall mount up with wings as Eagles they shall runne and not be wearie and they shall walke and not faint Out of the new Testament they alleadge f Quomodo rapientur illi quorum corporibus in erit virtus agilitatis quâ seipsapossint ad nutum animae in omnem partem facillimè movere cum raptus motum significet violentum Respondeo motum quo sancti ferentur in sub●ime obviam Christo raptum ob vocari non violentiam quae ibi nulla futura est sed vel propter celeritatem qucmodo dicit Poeta Quo nunc se proripit ille quâ ratione etiam de Christo intelligi potest illud Apocalyps duodecimo Et raptu● est filius ejus ad Deum ad throuum ejus id est celer●imè sublatus nam quae celeritèr fiunt raptim fieri dicuntur vel quia motus ille quamvis non contra raturam futurus sit utpotè procedeus ab internâ virtute seu dote agilitatis Erit tamen supra naturam quemadmodum ipsados futura est supernaturalis vel deniquè raptus idoircò vocatur quia non ita fiet ab internâ virtute quinetiam magnum momentum adferat externum illud objectum quodam modo trahens rapiens ad se Beatos ipse nimirum Christus ad quem in sublimi conspicuum gloriosum tanquam ad caput suum omnia membra
interruption Then answered Peter and said unto Jesus Lord it is good for us to be here if thou wilt let us make here three Tabernacles one for thee and one for Moses and one for Elias And yet Peter was only a spectator of this glory and had himselfe no share in it O then what infinite satisfaction may we expect in the beholding of Christs glory in heaven for it will be accompanied with an everlasting enjoyment thereof the lustre of it will be diffused unto us so that some shall enjoy the glory of the Sun some of the Moone some of the Starres 1 Cor. 15.41 We may conclude then of heaven as Peter of the mount of Christs transfiguration Lord it is good for us to be here In earth we are surrounded with spectacles of discontent but in heaven the glory of Christ will be an all-pleasing object for in the sight of it will stand part of our blisse and therefore it should command our hearts and draw unto it our thoughts and affections Christ glorified is our treasure and where your treasure is there will your heart be also Math. 6.21 Wheresoever the body is thither will the Eagles be gathered together Luk. 17.37 Math. 24.28 Hosea chap. 1.11 Prophesying of the true members of the Church under the Gospell giveth them this character They shall appoint themselves one head and ascendent è terrâ they shall come up out of the land that is they shall ascend from earth to heaven in their desires In Cant. 8.3 the motion of the Church even here in her state militant is ascension Who is this that commeth up out of the wildernesse Though she be in a wildernesse condition yet the texminus ad quem of all her motions is the land of promise the heavenly Jerusalem she is still comming up out of the wildernesse The constant prayer of the Church is for the comming of her Lord and Husband Christ Jesus and the spirit dictates this prayer unto her The spirit and the bride say come Revel 22.17 She knoweth that the day of his comming will be her wedding day And hath she not reason to long for the consummation of her marriage with so all-glorious an husband She is assured that the day of his comming will be her coronation day wherein he will grant her to sit with him in his throne Revel 3.21 and place upon her head a crowne of righteousnesse 2 Timoth. 4.8 of life Jam. 1.12 and glory that fadeth not away 1 Pet. 5.4 What more tempting and alluring then the beauty of such a crowne the glory of such a throne And therefore she hath great cause to love the appearing of the Lord Jesus 2 Timoth. 4.8 and to desire that it may be hastened 2. From Christ's all-fulnesse of glory and the certainty that we have of our participation thereof we may be exhorted to use our strictest endeavours in our declining of sinne pursuite of holinesse and tracing the waies of new obedience Hath not Christ decreed to make us glorious like himselfe The glory which thou gavest me I have given them Joh. 17.22 and is it not then a very undecent thing for us to have here inglorious soules base and unworthy affections and conversations He hath prepared for us riches of glory And unto such riches will not poore and low soules be unsuitable We are begotten by the refurrection of Jesus Christ unto a lively hope an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us 1 Pet. 3.4 and unto such an undefiled and heavenly inheritance will not defiled consciences and earthy minds be altogeather disproportioned and so unqualified and unmeete for the partaking of it If you compare vers 20 21. of 3 Phil. you may find an argument to stirre us up unto heavenly mindednesse We looke from heaven for the saviour the Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body c. Therefore let our conversation be in heaven Here on earth as it was said of Lazarus Luk. 16.25 we receive our evill things Even a Jacob complaines of the few dayes of his Pilgrimage as evill Gen. 47.9 and unto a Solomon all things under the sunne were vanity and vexation of spirit Eccles 1.2 and therefore while our bodies are fastened unto the earth this theater of misery our soules should soare up to heaven in devotion Because those that have chosen Christ for their Head and King shall ascend from earth to heaven in their bodies at the resurrection ascendent è terra Hos 1.11 They shall come up out of the land therefore it is fit that now in this life they should come up out of the land ascend and mount unto heaven by divine and spirituall meditations and heavenly affections When Christ took Peter James and John to be witnesses of his glorious transfiguration he bringeth them up into a high mountaine apart Math. 17.1 and why might not this betoken that to qualifie us for the contemplation of Christ's glory here and the fruition of it hereafter there is requisite an elevation and separation of our hearts from the distractions of all things here below Saint John having propounded our future conformitie unto Christ's glory 1 Job 3.2 when he shall appeare we shall be like him c. he presently addeth vers 3. that the hope of this conformitie is accompanied with unfeigned endeavours after purity and every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himselfe even as he is pure And indeed it would be very irrationall for a man to hope to be like Christ in his glory and happinesse and at the same time to resolve to be unlike him in his grace and holinesse In Rom. 8.23 they that waite for the Adoption that is the consummation and manifestation of their adoption to wit the redemption of their bodies are described by the Apostle to be holy and penitent persons such as have the first fruits of the spirit Gal. 5.22,23 and such as groane within themselves that is under the sight and sense of their lusts and corruptions This connexion of spirituall sorrow and humiliation with the first fruits of the spirit is very congruent because there is a great deale of equity in this that we should mourne and groane for that which grieveth the Spirit by whose graces we are sealed that is marked out for redemption Ephes 4.30 In heaven the spirits of just men shall shall be made perfect Ephes 12.23 and if we desire after death to be rankt amongst them we should labour by the promises to cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7.1 to be perfect as our father which is in heaven is perfect Math. 5.48 When we awake satisfaction with the image or likenesse of God will be our reward Psal 17. vers last and therefore here it is our duty to put on the new man which is renewed after the image
and hope if he had not been assured to be made conformable thereunto The life and glory of all believers is bound up in Christ's life and glory as Judah said the life of Jacob was bound up in Benjamins life Gen. 44.30 Our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 therefore if God did not leave his soule his person in sheol in the grave in the state of death neither will he leave there the persons of any that belong unto him Because God did not suffer his holy one to see Corruption therefore he will rescue and redeeme all his saints from corruption and not suffer them to be finally overwhelmed therewith He will deale with them as he did with Christ shew unto them the path of life make knowne unto them the waies of life c. Psalm 16.11 Cause them to have in his presence fulnesse of joy and at his right hand pleasures for evermore or make them full of joy with his countenance Acts 2.28 The glory which thou gavest me saith Christ I have given them Iohn 17.22 which words to omit other interpretations that are impertinent unto our purpose and lesse probable may be understood either of the reall glory of his exaltation by God or else of the glory of his relation unto God 1. Of The reall glory of his exaltation by God and then the meaning of the words is that heavenly felicitie unto which thou hast predestinated my humanity I have designed unto all those that believe in me I have promised it unto them and will purchase it for them and give them in way of earnest the first fruits and tast of it Gods gift of glory unto Christ is irreversible and therefore Christ's grant of it unto believers is irrevocable Or Secondly the words may be understood of the glory of Christ's relation unto God the dignity of his sonne-ship We beheld his glory the glory as of the onely begotten of the father Iohn 1.14 This glory was given unto Christ by eternall generation so that he is the naturall Sonne of God believers unto whom Christ giveth this priviledge by grace are sonnes by grace and adoption and yet even this adoptive filiation is such an unspeakable honour as that in comparison of it to be descended from the greatest Potentate that ever was in the world is but to be basely borne If we take this sence it will also fit our present purpose For what is the full glorification of the saints but the manifestation and consummation of their adoption 1 Ioh. 3.2 The fulnesse of glory is that inheritance unto which the faithfull are adopted and into the possession of which they shall enter at the end of the world And in this sence is it that their full glorification is stiled by the Apostle Paul their Adoption Rom. 8.23 In Iohn 17. vers 24,25 Christ intercedeth for the communication of his glory unto all the elect Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world O righteous father the world hath not knowne thee but I have knowne thee and these have knowne that thou hast sent me Here we have a description of the glory of believers and an amplification of it from the subjects and causes thereof 1. A description of it He makes it to stand in two things a coexistence with Christ in heaven a vision or intuition of his glory 1. A coexistence with him in heaven I will that they whom thou hast given me be with me where I am As God he was in heaven even while he was upon the earth Ioh. 3.13 But he speakes of himselfe all along as man and Mediatour and he speakes of his being in heaven as a thing present because it was very shortly and certainely to come to passe Thus vers 4. he makes protestation that he had finished the worke which God gave him to doe and yet it was not finished untill he cried out upon the crosse it is finished John 19.30 Austin puts a difference between being where Christ is and being with Christ The damned in hell are where Christ is as God But those only are with him that have a fellowship with him in his glory As he said unto the good thiefe to day shalt thou be with me in paradise Luke 23.43 But Maldonate rightly noteth that no great stresse is to be laid upon this because that which he tearmeth here a being with Christ he stileth Chap. 12.26 a being where Christ is Where I am there shall also my servant be However yet the same Authour observeth that to be with Christ hath a greater force and emphasis then to be where he is because it more expressely signifieth a participation of his glory a communion in his inheritance and kingdome a reigning togeither with him 2 Timoth. 2.12 A Second particular wherein the glory of believers is made to stand by Christ is their vision and intuition of his glory That they may behold my glory which thou hast given me Here they have but a glimpse of Christs glory It shineth as it were through a small chinke into a dungeon of darkenesse It is a light that shineth in a darke place 2 Pet. 1.19 But in heaven they shall have a full aspect of the splendour of his glory For they shall see him as he is Esay 1.32 face to face 1 Cor. 13.12 The sight of this glory shall be of a transforming nature for if the imperfect beholding of his glory in the glasse of his gospell change into the same image into a growing glory from glory to glory why then the full view of his glory in heaven will transforme into a fulnesse of glory The vision and intuition of his glory then doth amount unto a fruition of it They shall be not bare spectators but also partakers of it Thus to see the kingdome of God and life John 3.36 is to enjoy the kingdome of God and life Secondly We have an amplification of this glory and that from it's subjects and causes 1. From its subjects primary and secondary 1. Primary Christ May behold my glory Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and to enter into his glory Lu. 24.26 Glory is said to be his in 4 regards 1 in respect of his fathers donation The glory which thou hast given me to wit by the decree of Predestination 2. By his owne purchase He humbled himselfe and became obedient unto death even the death of the crosse Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name Phil. 2.8,10 3. In regard of plenary participation 4. in respect of originall and primary possession Christ was possessed of a fulnesse of glory for to distribute it unto his members Christ the head is the primary his members are the secondary subjects of this glory unto whom it is diffused from him I will that