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A44565 One hundred select sermons upon several texts fifty upon the Old Testament, and fifty on the new / by ... Tho. Horton ...; Sermons. Selections Horton, Thomas, d. 1673. 1679 (1679) Wing H2877; ESTC R22001 1,660,634 806

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if it were hardly any sight at all Surely it is not a seeing of God in his Essence but onely of what he is towards us for our particulars And the Scripture does speak of it as imperfect Thus 2 Cor. 13.12 Now we see through a glass darkly but then face to face Now I know in part but then shall I know even as also I am known Where are three words of disparagement which are put upon this kind of sight in comparison with that which is more perfect First it is but in a Glass 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we know that such sights as those are they are but imperfect because they are but reflexive As the sight of the Sun-beams in Heaven which cannot be look'd upon directly so is knowledge of God by Faith it is tantum in speculo The second is darkly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as we conceive of things in a Riddle or Mystery which implies a great deal of cloudiness and mistiness and obscurity in it The third is but in part 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which still denotes a shortness in it And this for that disco very which we have of God in a way of ordinary Revelation by the sight of Faith The second is Extraordinary in Prophetical manifestation Thus some of the Servants of God in former times had a special elevation of mind peculiarly vouchsafed unto them whereby they were enabled to have notable apprehensions of God and a glorious sight of him as in the instances above-mentioned Isaiah seeing him upon the Throne Jacob face to face Moses beholding his glory c. But yet neither did these reach so high as the Essence of God Moses that saw the most of him he is said to see but his back-parts that is some imperfect image and representation of his glory his face he could not nor might not see Ex. 33.20 Thou canst not see my face for no man shall see my face and live This imports That Moses did not see the Substance of God but onely that God did after a familiar manner reveal himself to him and in some resemblance shew him his Glory so far forth namely as Moses was capable of it which did wonderfully affect him And thus we have the second thing here considerable for the explaining of this passage and that is the Act No man hath seen God at any time that is perfectly in his Divine Substance and Essence and that as to sight in the full latitude and extent of it whether Corporeal with the eyes of the Body or Mental with the eyes of the Mind And for this latter in all its varieties also whether of Nature or Grace of Reason or Revelation not by way of Causality not by way of Negation not by way of Eminency as to the obscurity of Reason nor yet either by the sight of Faith as more ordinary or by the light of Prophesie as more extraordinary as to Divine Revelation The third and last is the Medium or Means by which That must be also here taken in for the explication of this passage to us No man hath seen God but in Christ whereby he hath made himself in a manner visible and conspicuous to us so that He who cannot be seen otherwise yet in Him is seen after a most illustrious manner Hence he is said to be the Image of the invisible God Col. 1.15 because all the Excellencies and Perfections of God they are entirely in Christ Thus even the Father Himself which we shewed before was never seen yet comes to be so according to that of our Saviour to Philip Joh. 14.9 He that hath seen me hath seen the Father namely because the glory of the Father does shine forth in the face of Jesus Christ. As it is again in Joh. 1.14 We beheld his glory the glory as of the onely begotten of the Father c. No ma hath seen God to purpose any other ways than as revealed in his Son And thus we have the full explication as I conceive of this present Proposition That no man hath seen God at any time No man hath seen the Father No man hath seen the Father Essentially No man hath seen the Father but in Christ There 's the Object the Act the Medium Now to give you some account of the Point there is a two-fold ground which may be assign'd hereof unto us why God cannot be seen by us whiles we live here in this world in the sense which I have now given of it the one is taken from God and the other is taken from our selves First on Gods part there 's an obstruction from the Incomprehensibleness of his Nature which cannot be fully reached unto by any Creature whether in Heaven or Earth Even the blessed and glorious Angels themselves who are in a state of Comprehension though they comprehend so much of God as the Creature is comprehensive of yet they can never comprehend so much of him as is indeed comprehended in him Our God to speak strictly of him is beyond and above all Comprehension Therefore this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here which we translate no man may be as well rendred no Creature and it agrees with other places in Scripture as Matth. 11.27 No man knoweth the Son but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father but the Son It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is no person whatsoever So Rev. 5.3 No man in heaven and earth was able to open the book it is also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is no creature The Nature and Essence of God in the Fulness it is beyond any created Comprehension And so there is an obstruction to our perfect seeing of Him on His part But secondly There where he is also comprehensible and shall be also comprehended hereafter yet there is at present an Obstruction of it on ours and that again two manner of ways First of all from the frailty of our Nature as we are flesh and blood And secondly from the corruption of our Nature as we are sinful flesh and blood First there 's the frailty of our Nature as we are flesh and blood Who shall dwell with the devouring fire c. There is such an Infinity betwixt the glorious God and poor mortal man as there is no coming near unto him Here some even of the Servants of God when God has appeared unto them have conceived presently they should die as Gideon in Judg. 6.22 and Manoah Judg. 13.22 We shall die because we have seen God face to face Secondly As from the frailty of our Nature as it is flesh and bloud so from the corruptions of our Nature as it is sinful flesh and bloud Thus in the place before cited Isa 6.5 Isaiah bewails himself as one undone because being an unclean person and of polluted lips he had seen the King the Lord of Hosts And Job when his eye had once seen God he then says he abhorred himself and repented in dust and ashes in Job 42.5 6. Thus is
not to wholesome words even the words of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Doctrine which is according to godliness he is proud knowing nothing c. Where wholesome words and the words of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Doctrine which is according to godliness are made to be synonymous to each other and to signifie still one and the same According to the second sense of the phrase so here is the like Censure of all unsoundness and averseness whatsoever from Evangelical Truth more especially The Doctrine of Christ that is that Doctrine which treats of Christ in his nature and person and offices and such as these either of these have one and the same Character fastned upon them and sentence pronounced against them and that is that they have not God Our business at this time will lye chiefly inthe latter of these as I conceive more especially aim'd at and intended by the Apostle and that is the Censure of such persons as do trespass upon the Doctrine of Christ as it is taken specifically for the Doctrine of salvation by Christ And that first of all in the simple denial and rejection of it Whosoever transgresseth i. e. transgresseth this Doctrine and transgresses it so notoriously with a special Emphasis considerable in it as denying or opposing himself to it suchan one hath not God It is not every transgression at large which is here intended as excluding those from having God which are guilty of it for then we were all of us in a very sad and miserable condition there being none of us but have enough ofthis in us and more than we should Our transgressions are multiplied upon us as David speaks But we must take it in reference still to the matter in hand the Doctrine of Christ whosoever transgresses this that contradicts it as the Arabique reads it or that sets against it as the Ethiopick carries it such an one comes under this censure Whosoever either on the one hand think Christ to be needless and superfluous that he might well enough be spared or on the other hand thinks Christ to be imperfect and insufficient that there is not enough in him either of these transgresses the Doctrine of Christ In one word Whosoever they be that do lessen and diminish from Christ as the Mediatour and Saviour of the Church and as the Scripture propounds him to us to be received and entertained by us such as these they have not God He that is not a Christian he is an Atheist and he that isnot a Christian in the true notion and sense of Christianity he is no Christian at all and as the Gospel does exhibit it tous let his name and profession and appearance be what it will be Thus 1 Joh. 2.23 Whosoever denieth the Son the same hath not the Father not only because that the Father and the Son are one simple pure and indivisible essence but also because the Father doth not manifest himself to salvation but only by his Son as we shall see more anon Therefore further in Ephes 2.12 The Ephesians at what time they were without Christ at the same time they are said to be without God which two expressions are both joyn'd together there in that place Wherefore remember that ye being in time passed Gentiles c. That at that time ye were without Christ being aliens from the Common wealth of Israel and strungers from the Covenants of promise having no hope and without God in the world without Christ and without God they infer one the other And so now here in the Text He that transgresses the Doctrine of Christ he hath not God This may be said ofhim divers manner of ways First In point of Knowledg they have not the right notion and apprehension and understanding of God The Apostle Paul speaks of some in the Church of Corinth that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have not the knowledg of God 1 Cor. 15.34 And he speaks this to their shame the same may be said of those which receive not the Doctrine of Christ they have not the knowledg of God neither they are ignorant of God and if they be such as live in places and under means of knowledg it is so with them upon the same terms of sham and disgrace unto them In 1 Thes 4.5 It is made a description of the Heathen which were persons living without Christ The Gentiles that know not God And in 1 Cor. 1.21 it is said That the world by wisdom knew not God It is true indeed some kind of knowledg of God they had even by the light of nature and therefore we read in Rom. 1.19 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of that which may be known of God as manifest in them for God hath shewn it unto them they knew that there was a God but who this God was they did not know nor in the way of his most considerable and comfortable manifestations of himself There is no true knowledg of God indeed and such as will give satisfaction but as he is revealed in Christ who is the brightness of his glory and the express image of his person as we find him call'd Heb. 1.3 Therefore 2 Cor. 4.6 it is said That God who commandeth the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledg of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ In the face of Jesus Christ there we have the knowledg of the glory of God as who otherwise is a light whom none can approach unto therefore he is said to be the Image of the invisible God Col. 1.15 Why of the invisibel God not only as invisible to the eyes of the body which is true of every spirit but likewise to the eyes of the mind it self also out of Christ God without Christ is imperceptible and altogether undiscernable of us we cannot possibly each to any competent knowledg of him There 's no Knowledg of God without Christ nor there 's no Knowledg of God out of Christ no knowledg of God without Christ because it is he that declares him no knowledg of God out of Christ because it is he that resembles him and represents him and exhibits him to us First I say no knowledg of God without Christ because it is he that manifests him Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father he hath declared him It i Christ only that gives the kowledg of God Therefore in Matth. 11.27 we find this expression That no man knoweth the son but the father neither knoweth any man the father save the son and he to whomsoever the son will reveal him Secondly No knowledg of God neither out of Christ because it is he that represents him As we cannot look upon the Sun directly but in its reflexion so neither can we see God in His Majesty and as considered absolutely in himself but as his Glory shines out
as he had it in the Promises so he had it likewise in the Performance and the accomplishment of that promise to him as we may see in 2 Tim. 4 16 17. All men forsook me but the Lord stood by me and strongthned me There was the Lord in the top of the Ladder In the Multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts delight my Soul in Psal 94. vers 29. And so much of the First reference of this Passage as it respects the Ladder it self in the full Latitude and extent of it whether of Christ or of the Church or Jacob. The Second Reference is to the Motion of the Angels that passed upon it The Lord stood above them also as ordering and guiding and disposing and governing of them The Angels as Great as they are yet they are still but Creatures and at the Command of God himself who is the Lord and Creator of them And so the Scripture testefies of them in Psal 103.20 Bless the Lord ye his Angels that excell in strength that do his Commandements hearkening to the Voice of the Lord. It was a great Comfort and Advantage to Jacob that he had the Angels to waite upon him in this his present Condition to ascend and descend upon his Ladder Oh but this was the main of all that God himself stood above it for the ordering and regulating of them The greatest means of Comfort without God are altogether uncomfortable and helps which have no help in them it is he who alone give virtue and Efficacy to any Creature and that makes it advantagious in him and without which it can do us no good nor benefit us at all be it in its own Nature never so excellent This was that which was the Glory of this Vision and that put an Eminency upon it which as I may say is a Ladder it self and consisting of its several steps and gradations in it and neither of them could be wel spared Here 's the Ladder and the Angels and the Lord. If Jacob had not seen the Ladder as a pledge unto him of the happiness of his Conveyance he would have been at some loss within himself If he had seen the Ladder and had not seen the Angels ascending and descending upon it he would have been to seek still And if further had seen the Angels upon it and had not seen the Lord stand above it he would have been very miserable for all this This is that which is the excellency of Angels that they are the Angels of God and this is the good that comes by them That the Lord stands above them This is true and holds good not onely of Angels Properly but of Angels Metaphorically not onely of Angels by Nature but also of Angels by Service and imployment which are the Pastors and Ministers of the Church who have sometimes this appellation of Angels fastned upon them and are so denominated we may apply it even to them also by way of Analogy The Pulpit it is as I may so call it Jacobs Ladder that reaches from Earth to Heaven It has its footing on Earth for we have this Treasure in Earthen Vessels But the top of it is in Heaven for we bring with us the glad tidings of Salvation The Angels of God they ascend and descend upon it in the exercise of their minesteriall Imployment But it is the Lord that must stand above it and give virtue and Efficacy to it or else all is in vain and to no purpose It is he that must give us Assistance and it is he that must give us Success and a blessing upon all our undertakings or else it will go but very ill with us nor with you neither If thy presence go not with us carry us not up hence as Moses said in the like case Exod. 33.25 Who is Paul and who is Apollo but Ministers by whom ye beleived even as the Lord gave to every man I have Planted and Apollos has watered but it is God that gave the Increase as the Apostles speaks 1 Cor. 3.5 And so I have done with this first General part of the Text which is the Vision it self in the three several Branches of it The erection of the Ladder The Motion of the Angels and the Superintendency of God himself The Second is the Provocation of Attention or the Proposal of this Spectacle to view in the word BEHOLD which is now breifly to be dispatch'd by us This though it be first in the Text yet it is last in our handling of it as it is also in the Nature of the thing For first of all the sight is prepared before the Spectators are call'd into the vewing of it And so here this word Behold as it lies in the Text is very Emphaticall and more then ordinary in other Scriptures where also sometimes we meet with it as we may observe in the Multis lications of it for we have it here under a Threefold Repetition the more to awaken our attention to it Behold Behold Behold Behold the Ladder and behold the Angels and behold the Lord. All are to be Beheld by us And the Viewing and beholding of them all will serve as the Application of all that heitherto has been delivered about them There are divers sorts of Looking and beholding which are here required of us in order to this Spectacle before us First So behold it with an Eye of Wonderment and Admiration as a very Great and Glorious Mistery especially so far forth as it concerns Christ himself Here 's that which calls for special heed and attention from us we heard before how the very Angels themselves looked upon it with Astonishment and how much more then should then Sons of Men who are themselves so deeply Interested and concern'd in it There 's nothing which belongs to Christ but it is worth the beholding and has commonly the Provocation of it affix'd unto it Behold a Prophet Behold a Virgin Behold the Lamb of God still behold when there 's Speech of Christ and so here Forasmuch as he is pleased thus to offer and Exhibit himself to our view we should not take off our Eyes from him but fasten them upon him Look upon him in both his Natures and look upon him in all his Offices as they are laid before us It is that which is here required and expected from us This Vision it was not onely for Jacob but also for us and it does very much belong unto us This Ladder is still standing even to this present day and is not removed or taken down but we may look upon it Not in a Dream but waking nor in the Shaddow onely but in the Substance We all now may with open face Behold as in a Glass the Glory of the Lord c. as it is 2 Cor. 3.18 Secondly With an eye of Faith we are to behold it so also as improving it to our own great Comfort and Consolation in the greatest Troubles and perplexities that may befall us
punishments of the sword that ye may know there is a judgement Wrath not onely of men but also as it seems there to be implyed of God himself as proceeding from his righteous judgement when the Lord is angry he sends the sword into such a Country for the punishment of it They chose new Gods then was there war in the gates Iudg. 5.8 Namely as a punishment of their Idolatry All these evils proceed from hence mens sinning against God As for example in the Israelites dividing from the rest of their brethren this thing is said to be of the Lord. The same may be also said in like manner of all others besides they do relate and refer to him Now therefore if He will give quietness surely none can be able to make trouble in this regard All the Armies and Forces which are abroad through the whole world they doe as I may say serve in this sense under his command and therefore if he will but disband them there must needs be peace and quietness presently out of hand without more adoe That 's the first Branch of this first proposition when God will give a Kingdom quietness none shall be able any way to disturb it Secondly Let us take notice of the other And when he hides his face who then can behold him This hiding of the face in this place is differently expounded by Interpreters I shall present to you that which is most probable and fasten upon what I conceive most agreeable to the scope of this Scripture First there are some which here by Gods face do understand the wayes of his providence and so they make the sense this when God will walk in a secret way for the disposing of things in a Kingdom there is no discerning of him this is that which we may sometimes observe in our own experience That the Lord is pleased now and then to go before us in the works of his providence after a more clear and conspicuous manner so that we may easily see and perceive and apprehend what he is doing in the world He writes it in great Characters and Capital letters as we may so express it that whosoever runs may read it as the Prophet speaks Again at other times he carries things after a more hidden manner His wayes are in the deepes and His Counsels are unsearchable and His judgements past finding out and now in such a case as this is none can behold him thus we have it in Psal 74.9 We see not our signs there is no more any Prophet neither is there among us any that knoweth how long It pleases the Lord sometimes so to order things and dispose of them that the wisest and holiest man in a kingdom cannot tell what to say to them Those which have most acquaintance with God which have greatest interest in him and which are most familiarly used unto him they are sometimes ready to be puzzled and stagger'd at some dispensations and they lay their hands upon their mouthes in a way of astonishment and admiration That 's one meaning of these words But Secondly another meaning of them is this by taking Gods face here for the visible expressions of his love and favour to any Kingdom or Nation When he hides his face from any people that is when he withdraws the pledges of his goodness from them who then can indeed behold him That is who can indure before him who is able to stand in his presence with any comfort or contentment at all And according to this interpretation we have this truth from it That when the Lord is indeed angry and displeased with any kingdom or nation that Kingdom or Nation is in a very sad and lamentable condition When he hides his face who then can behold him Psal 76.6 Thou even thou art to be feared and who may stand in thy sight when once thou art angry And Nahum 1.6 Who can stand before his indignation and who can abide in the fierceness of his anger His fury is poured out like fire and the riches are thrown down by him And Psal 90.11 Who knoweth the power of thine anger even according to thy fear so is thy wrath And many such places there are to signifie the sadness of Gods displeasure This may be further explain'd and laid open to us in these following particulars as demonstrations of it First when God is angry with a people he takes them short in those outward comforts which they have formerly been partakers off as we find in that expression used in 2 King 10.32 In those dayes the Lord began to cut Israel short He takes away that former peace and plenty and abundance which they have sometimes injoy'd this in a sense is an hiding of his face forasmuch as every comfort is in its place a beam of Gods countenance It is God that puts comfort into the creatures and that makes them comfortable to us Now the Lord when he is displeased with a Nation he oftimes does deprive them of these as he threatens his own people of Israel in Hos 2.9 Therefore will I return and take away my corn in the time thereof and my wine in the season thereof and I will recover my wooll and my flax c. I will recover it Mark the expression as who should say he had let them have it hitherto in a manner before he was aware and they had stollen it as it were from him against his will but he would fetch all back again from them Secondly As he takes away these comforts so also which is the consequent of it he sends Judgments and plagues in stead of them which are quite opposite and contrary to them These he hath divers sorts of as ye may see in Deut. 28. which he threatens to the children of Israel upon supposition of their disobedience Cursing and vexation and rebuke in all that they set their hand unto ver 20. c. And so his three evil arrows which he mentions in other places likewise Sword Famine and Pestilence c. They are such as are effects and testimonies of Gods wrath and displeasure against a Nation and especially and above all the sword that judgment which is now upon us it is a principal expression of his wrath when the enemies roar in the midst of the Congregations and set up their Ensigns for signs as it is in Psal 74.4 Thirdly He also sometimes layes upon them spiritual judgements which are the greatest judgements of all He takes away his Gospel and his Ministers and his Ordinances He remove's the Candlestick out of its place as we have lately shewn out of another Scripture This is the true hiding of his face indeed there being nothing wherein he does more appear and shew himself then in such dispensations as these are The Gospel it is the glass which represents to us the face of Jesus Christ and wherein we see the glory of the Lord when therefore God takes away this at any time from any
there an obstruction on our part for our seeing and beholding of God after such a manner Now the use of this Point may be drawn forth into a varions improvement First as a confutation of that fond conceit of the Anthropomorphites certain Hereticks of old who would make God like unto man ascribing to him humane shape and bodily lineaments If he were so he might then be seen by the eyes of man which it is here said he cannot be That which they ground their errour upon which is such parts mention'd in Scripture as Eyes and Ears and Hands will not hold they being taken in a Metaphorical sense and not properly Seondly It is a confutation also of Papists in their Idolatrous Worship of God under the Image of a Man God himself presses this as an Argument against such kind of practises as we may see in Deut. 4.5 Take ye therefore good heed unto your selves for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake unto you And so which is pertinent hereunto it is likewise against all apprehensions in the mind of God in the likeness of any visible Object and teaches us how we should in our thoughts conceive of him namely as he is revealed in his Word as of an Eternal Essence most Holy most Wise c. who made all things and governs them by his Infinite and Almighty Power Thirdly seeing no man can see God perfectly whiles he is here below it should make us therefore so much the more to cherish that imperfect sight of Him which at present is vouchsafed unto us in our communion with him by his Spirit and in the exercise of the grace of Faith We should see him as much as we can till we can see him better Whiles we cannot look upon him directly let us at least look upon him in his reflections look upon him as he shines forth in the Gospel and in the face of Jesus Christ wherein we have a glorious view of him according to that state and condition in which we are It is the priviledge of us under the New Testament above them which were under the Old that we now all with open face may behold as in a glass the glory of the Lord and may be changed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord as it is in 2 Cor. 3.18 We should look upon God in his Ordinances in his Creatures and in his Children wherein he has represented himself to us and whereby in a sort we may have communion with himself if we love not them whom we have seen how shall we love him whom we have not seen 1 Joh. 4.20 Lastly Seeing here in this present life God becomes thus invisible to us that we cannot see see him and yet notwithstanding our happiness does consist in the vision of him it should make us to breathe and long after that blessed place and state and condition wherein we shall see him face to face as the Apostle Paul gives us an instance and example in himself in Phil. 2.23 and in 2 Cor. 12.2 c. And further we should so order and frame our lives at present whiles we are here below in the flesh that we may be made meet at last for the beholding of such a sight as this is We should by all means labour and endeavour to be pure in heart because that such shall see God Matth. 5.8 And we should follow after peace and holiness without which no man shall see the Lord Heb. 12.14 And as we desire when he appears to be like him and to see him as he is so having this hope in us we should be careful to purifie our selves even as he is pure as the Apostle John exhorts us 2 Joh. 3.2 3. And so now I have done with the first General Part of the Text which is the Defect premised in those words viz. No man hath seen God at any time The second is the supply of this Defect propounded in these The onely begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father he hath declared him where what is wanting on our parts we have very happily made up to us in Christ In this passage it self there are two branches further considerable First the Person mentioned Secondly the Action which is attributed or ascribed to this Person The Person mentioned that is Christ in these words The onely-begotten Son who is in the bosome of the Father The Action attributed to this Person is the discovery of the Father unto us in those words He hath declared him First to speak of the former viz. the Person mentioned who is Christ and this Person is here exhibited to us under a double description First from his Relation and secondly from his Residency From his Relation that is that he is the Onely-begotten Son of the Father From his Residency that is that he is in the bosom of the Father First here is considerable his Relation whereby Christ is here described unto us and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the onely-begotten Son Thus we find him called in other places by this Apostle There is two things at once in it First that he is begotten And secondly that he is the onely-begotten He is the begotten first of all Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee it is the speech of God to Christ Psal 2.7 and it is again recited by the Apostle in Heb. 2.5 The manner of this begetting is to us incomprehensible and so ineffable but we may take it according to these following conceptions of it as pertinent to it First that God the Father begat the Son of his very Substance very God of very God And hence hath the Son the Name of God fastned upon him The Word was God Joh. 1.1 and God blessed for evermore Rom. 9.5 Yea he has the name of Jehovah which is attributed to none but to him that is the true God Gen. 19.24 c. Secondly God the Father communicateth his whole Essence to the Son He begat another Self of Himself even that which Himself is In which respect the Son of God saith I and the Father are one The Father is in me and I in him Joh. 10.30.38 Thirdly God the Father's begetting of the Son it is truly and properly Eternal I was set up from everlasting says he Prov. 8.22 c. I was brought forth before the hills c. as I shewed the last day This Generation of the Son of God it is coeternal with God himself which is further considerable unto us Lastly This Divine Generation it denoteth an Equality of Nature and Essence in those Two Persons the Father and Son Hence in Phil. 2.6 it is said that being in the form of God he thought it no robbery to be equal with God No robbery because it was his due and of right belonging to him as of the same Essence That which lies upon us is to adore this great Mystery and to stand in
him practically and in the effects so as this knowledg had any influence upon their hearts for the ordering of their lives and conversations Thus they were ignorant of him did not know him so as to fear him to love him to honour him to obey him c. And this is indeed such an ignorance as oftentimes does very much prevail not only out of the Church but in it not only amongst Pagans and Heathens but also as we may take notice of it by the way sometimes even in profest Christians amongst whom 't is so much the more abominable There are a great many people in the world which have a great deal of knowledg and common illumination in whom that knowledg notwithstanding does not produce any gracious effect to the bettering of them like glow-worms which have light without heat and their heads are bigger than all the rest of them besides This is that which is most common and dangerous in great Wits as we shall see more afterwards and therefore requires so much the greater heed and care for the avoiding of it Take heed of resting in the partaking of any knowledg which does not put forth it self in some answerable activity and operation For as every Divine Truth in regard of the nature of it is ordained to some practise so indeed it is not known to purpose except it be put into practise These Gentiles because that when they knew God yet they glorified him not as God but in the midst of all their knowledg were many of them very base and wicked livers Adulterers and Fornicators and Drunkards and Idolaters and the like yea and the best of them which were free from those sins were unthankful and proud therefore they are said not to know God when in a sort and sense they did know him Quod curiositate invenerant superbiâ perdiderunt as Austin speaks what they found out by their wit they lost by their pride They knew God speculatively but they did not know him powerfully Fourthly and lastly They knew God Essentially as considered in his own nature but they knew him not Dispensatively representatively as exhibited in Christ Thus they knew not God neither indeed in the case they were could they know him They knew not God that is Immanuel God with us God manifest in the flesh God taking our nature upon him and becoming a Mediator for us Him they did not know This is clear out of divers places of Scripture and cannot be questioned Thus Joh. 1.10 speaking concerning Christ He was in the world and the world was made by him and the world knew him not And so 1 Cor. 2.8 Whom none of the Princes of this world knew for had they known him they would not have crucified the Lord of glory The world knew not Christ neither in his Persons nor yet in his Offices so they knew him not And being they knew not Him who was the Image of the Invisible God the brightness of his Glory and the express image of his Person as the Apostle calls him In this respect and upon this account it is said of them that they knew not God to know God and not to know him in Christ is as good as not to know him at all for what 's to know him so but to know him rather to our own confusion and amazement and greater horrour of soul it is to know him as an enemy and to know him as an angry Judg and to know him as a person at variance and difference with us as a consuming fire and one whom there 's no coming near this is a very uncomfortable knowledg of him but now to know him in the union of our nature and in his Majesty vailed with our flesh this is sweet and pleasing indeed this is the knowledg which is manifest in the Gospel but this the world at present knew not they knew not God in Christ And that 's the fourth and last term which lies here in the Text to be explained what is meant by their not knowing of God And thus much for the Explication of the Words I come now in the next place to the Proposition it self thus explained as it lyes in the Text That in the wisdom of God the world by wisdom knew not God Which affords us this observation as the Moral of all That the greatest Wits of the world having no more but the common light of nature and the advantage of humane Accomplishments are oftentimes exceedingly to seek in the spiritual and saving knowledg of God This is the Point which here lyes before us to be considered by us And I shall endeavour to make it good by a threefold consideration and that founded upon the words of the Text. First The insufficiency of the Medium Secondly The weakness of the Faculty And thirdly The perversness of the Subjects First The insufficiency of the Medium and that is the Glory of God shining forth in the Creatures which is here called the Wisdom of God This of it self is insufficient to the producing of such a kind of knowledg as this is Indeed it has in a sort some sufficiency in it as is here intimated and implied unto us forasmuch as the world is censured for not improving it and from hence they are said to be without excuse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1.20 but yet it is not sufficient wholly and fully to such an end as we speak of this is most certain and unquestionable that every creature has some kind of footstep and impression of the Deity upon it Quaelibet Herba Deum as we use to speak There 's not the least spire of Grace but it signifies and presents a God to our thoughts much more the whole Body of the Creation This does exhibit and present God a great deal more fully But yet God as he is laid open in the Gospel and as he is made known in the Preaching of the Word this the Creature does not shew nor is able to do it this is a point which cannot be known but by the Scripture and written Word of God which those who were Pagans and Heathens were unacquainted withal To know God as a Saviour and as the Author of Eternal Happiness unto us this the Book of the Creatures does not discover or make known and therefore they knew not God first of all from the insufficiency of the Creation which is here denominated as I have shewn the wisdom of the Medium of God Secondly From the weakness of the Faculty the world by wisdom knew not God that is by its own wisdom and that wisdom which is within the compass of it self so it knew him not The wisdom of the world is insufficient alone of it self to bring any people to the saving knowledg of God this is clear out of sundry places of Scripture as for instance in Mat. 16.17 when Peter had acknowledged that Christ was the Son of the living God what says he unto him hereupon Blessed art