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A53696 Exercitations on the Epistle to the Hebrews also concerning the Messiah wherein the promises concerning him to be a spiritual redeemer of mankind are explained and vindicated, his coming and accomplishment of his work according to the promises is proved and confirmed, the person, or who he is, is declared, the whole oeconomy of the mosaical law, rites, worship, and sacrifice is explained : and in all the doctrine of the person, office, and work of the Messiah is opened, the nature and demerit of the first sin is unfolded, the opinions and traditions of the antient and modern Jews are examined, their objections against the Lord Christ and the Gospel are answered, the time of the coming of the Messiah is stated, and the great fundamental truths of the Gospel vindicated : with an exposition and discourses on the two first chapters of the said epistle to the Hebrews / by J. Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1668 (1668) Wing O753; ESTC R18100 1,091,989 640

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Prophet unto David to be Equivocal For David enquired of Nathan about building an House or material Temple unto God Nathan returns him answer from God that he shall not do so but that his son should perform that work This Answer David understands of his immediate son and of a material House and thereupon makes material provision for it and preparation in great abundance upon the encouragement he received in this Answer of God Now if neither of these were at all intended in it neither his son nor the material Temple it is evident that he was led into a great mistake by the Ambiguity and Equivocation of the word which we find by the Event that he was not God approving and accepting of his Obedience in what he did It remains then that Solomon firstly and immediately is intended in these words 2. Some on the other hand affirm the whole Prophesie so to belong unto and so to be fulfilled in Solomon and in him alone that there is no direct respect therein unto our Lord Jesus Christ. And the reason for their assertion they take from those words which immediately follow those insisted on by the Apostle namely If he commit iniquity I will chastise him with the rod of men which cannot be applied unto him who did no sin neither was there guile found in his mouth They say therefore that the Apostle applies these words unto Christ only by way of an Allegory thus he deals with the Law of not muzling the Ox which treadeth out the corn applying it to the provision of carnal things to be made for the Dispensers of the Gospel As he also in another place representeth the two Testaments in the story of Sarah and Hagar That which principally is to be insisted on for the removal of this difficulty and which will utterly take it out of our way will fall in with our Confirmation of the third Interpretation to be proposed For the present I shall only answer that as the words cited by the Apostle do principally concern the Person of Christ himself yet being spoken and given out in form of a Covenant they have respect also unto him as he is the Head of the Covenant which God makes with all the Elect in him And thus whole mystical Christ Head and Members are referred unto in the Prophecy and therefore David in his repetition and pleading of this Oracle Psal. 89.30 changeth those words if he commit iniquity into if his children forsake my law Notwithstanding then a supposition of transgression in him concerning whom these words are spoken the Lord Christ may be intended in them such failings and transgressions as disannul not the Covenant often falling out on their part for whom he undertaketh therein But I offer this only in majorem cautelam to secure the testimony insisted on unto our Apostles intention the difficulty it self will be clearly afterwards assoiled 3. We say therefore with others that both Solomon and the Lord Christ are intended in this whole Oracle Solomon literally and nextly as the Type the Lord Christ principally and mystically as he who was typed figured and represented by him And our sense herein shall be farther explained and confirmed in the ensuing Consider●tions 1. That there never was any one Type of Christ and his Offices that entirely represented him and all that he was to do For as it was impossible that any one thing or person should do so because of the perfection of his Person and the Excellency of his Office which no one thing that might be appointed to prefigure him as a Type because of its limitedness and imperfection could fully represent so had any such been found out that multiplication of Types which God in his infinite Wisdom was pleased to make use of for the revelation of him intended in them had been altogether useless and needless Wherefore according as God saw good and as he had made them meet and fit so He designed one thing or person to figure out one thing in him another for another end and purpose 2. That no Type of Christ was in all things that he was or did a Type of him but only in that particular wherein he was designed of God so to be and wherein he hath revealed him so to have been David was a Type of Christ but not in all things that he was and did In his Conquests of the Enemies of the Church in his Throne and Kingdom he was so but in his private actions whether as a Man or as a King or Captain he was not so The like must be said of Isaac Melchisedeck Solomon and all other personal Types under the Old Testament and much more of other things 3. That not all things spoken of him that was a Type even therein wherein he was a Type are spoken of him as a Type or have any respect unto the thing signified but some of them may belong unto him in his personal capacity only And the reason is because he who was a Type by God's institution might morally fail in the performance of his duty even then and in those things when and wherein he was a Type Hence somewhat may be spoken of him as to his moral performance of his Duty that may no way concern the Anti-type or Christ prefigured by him And this wholly removes the difficulty mentioned in the second Interpretation of the words excluding the Lord Christ from being directly in the Oracle upon that expression if he sin against me for those words relating to the moral duty of Solomon in that wherein he was a Type of Christ namely the Rule and Administration of his Kingdom may not at all belong to Christ who was prefigured by God's institution of things and not in any moral deportment in the observance of them 4. That what is spoken of any Type as it was a Type and in respect of its institution to be such doth not really and properly belong unto him or that which was the Type but unto him who was represented thereby For the Type it self it was enough that there was some resemblance in it of that which was principally intended the things belonging unto the Anti-type being affirmed of it Analogically on the account of the relation between them by God's institution Hence that which follows on such Enuntiations doth not at all respect or belong to the Type but only to the Anti-type Thus at the Sacrifice of Expiation the scape Goat is said to bear and carry away all the sins of the people into a land not inhabited not really and in the substance of the matter but only in an instituted Representation for the Law was given by Moses but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. Much less may the things that ensue upon the Lord Christ's real bearing and taking away of our sins be ascribed to the devoted beast So is it in this case The words applied by the Apostle to prove the Son to have a more excellent Name than the Angels
hell it self but only the immediate wrath of God But thus is it with Sathan from this ministery of Angels He sees the Church and every Member of it all whom he seeks to devour encamped about protected and defended by this Heavenly Host so that he cannot in any measure have his will at them nay that he cannot touch the soul of any one of them nor cause an hair of the head of any one of them to perish This fills him with self-devouring rage envy and wrath And thus doth God by this way accomplish his judgment upon him And these are some of the Reasons which the Scripture intimates unto us why the Lord is pleased thus to make use of the ministery of Angels which may suffice for an Answer to the first Question before proposed II. The second is Vnto what Ends and Purposes doth God make use of the ministery of Angels for the good of them that do believe The thing it self we suppose in both these Questions It is so directly asserted in the words of the Apostle and so many instances are given of it else-where in the Scripture that it needs not any especial confirmation It will also be farther declared in our annumeration of the ends and purposes of it ensuing As 1. In general God doth it to communitate by them the Effects of his Care and Love unto the Church by Jesus Christ. This God represented unto Jacob in the Vision that he gave him of the Ladder which stood upon the earth and whose top reached unto heaven Gen. 28.12 13. For although the Jews say somewhat to the purpose when they affirm this Ladder to have denoted the dependance of all things here below on them above under the Rule of the Providence of God yet they say not all that was signified thereby Our Saviour tells us Joh. 1.52 That from thence his disciples should see heaven opened and Angels ascending and descending upon the Son of man Plainly alluding unto this Vision of Jacob. For those words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the son of man cannot denote meerly the Object of Angelical ministration that they should be exercised in their work about his Person but also that by him by means of his mediation the Angels ascend and descend in the work of ministring unto the Saints It is true the great instance of their ministery was given in and about the Person of Christ as Head of the Church They declared his Conception and Nativity Matth. 1.20 Luke 1.35 Luke 2 11 12. They ministred unto him after his temptation Matth. 4.11 They strengthned him in his Agony Luke 22.43 They were Witnesses of his Resurrection and Ascension Luke 24.4 Acts 1.10 11. But by him and on his account they perform the Offices of their mission towards others also even all the Heirs of salvation but this still upon the account of Christ. They ascend and descend on his mediation sent by his Authority aiming at his glory doing his work carrying on his interest as in the following particulars will appear For 1. They are sent in an extraordinary manner to make Revelations of the Will of God about things tending unto the obedience and spiritual advantage of them that do believe Hereof we have many instances in the Old Testament especially in God's dealing with the Patriarchs before the giving of the Law For although the Second Person of the Trinity the Son of God himself did often appear unto them as to Abraham Gen. 18.1 2. with chap. 19.24 and unto Jacob chap. 32.24 whom he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 48.16 yet God also made frequent use of created Angels in the revelation and discovery of his Mind and Will unto them as is evident from many passages in their story That he used their ministration in the giving of the Law we have before abundantly shewed the Holy Ghost declaring and affirming of it Psal. 68.17 18. Acts 7.63 The like also he continued to do in the Visions of them granted unto the Prophets that ensued unto the end of that Dispensation especially unto Ezekiel and Zechariah So also the same was done under the New Testament as to omit others we have an especial instance Rev. 1.1 How far God is pleased to continue this ministration of Angels unto this day is hard to determine For as many have pretended unto Revelations by Angels which have been meer delusions of Sathan or imaginations of their own brains So to say that God doth not or may not send his Angels unto any of his Saints to communicate his mind unto them as to some particulars of their own duty according unto his word or to fore-shew unto them somewhat of his own approaching work seems in my judgment to be unwarrantably to limit the Holy One of Israel Howbeit such things in particular are to be duly weighed with sobriety and reverence 2. God by them suggests good motions into the minds of his Saints As the devil sets himself on work to tempt them unto evil by suggestions suited unto the principle of sin within them so God employs his holy Angels to provoke them to that which is good by suggesting that unto them which is suitable unto the principle of spiritual life and grace that is in them And as it is difficult to discover the suggestions of Sathan in most cases from the workings of our own minds and our unbelief in them partly because of their connaturalness one to the other and partly because his impressions are not sensible nor produce any effects but as they mix themselves with our own darkness and lusts so it is no less difficult distinctly to take notice of these Angelical motions upon the like account on the other hand For being suitable unto the inclinations of that principle of Grace which is in the hearts of believers and producing no effect but by them they are hardly discerned So that we may have the benefit of many Angelical suggestions of good things which we our selves take no notice of And if it be enquired how these good motions from Angels are or may be distinguished from the motions of the holy Ghost and his actings in Believers I answer that they are differenced sundry ways as 1. These Angelical are ab extra from without Angels have no inbeing in us no residence in our souls but work upon us as an external principle whereas the Holy Spirit abideth with us and dwelleth in us and works ab intra from within the very principles of our souls and minds Whence it follows 2. That these Angelical motions consist in occasional impressions on the mind phancy and imagination by advantages taken from outward objects and present disposition of the mind rendring it meet to receive such impressions and so disposing it to affect the Heart the Will and the Affections whereas the Holy Ghost closeth in his Operations with all the facultie of the soul really and immediately exciting every one of them to gracious actings according to their nature and
disordered by sin but are now all recollected and brought into order under one Head Him hath he given to be Head over all things unto the Church verse 22. The whole Sovereignty over all the whole Creation that is committed unto him is only for this end that he may be the more perfect and glorious Head to the Church He is that Head on which the whole body hath its orderly and regular dependance Ephes. 4.15 16. The head of the body the Church Col. 1.18 The head of every man that is of every believer 1 Cor. 11.3 Ephes. 5.23 And this is every where proposed both as our great Honour and our great Advantage To be united unto him subjected unto him as our Head gives us both honour and safety What greater honour can we have than to be free-men of that Corporation whereof he is the Head than to be subjects of his Kingdom What greater safety than to be united unto him ins●parably who is in Glory invested with all Power and Authority over the whole Creation of God every thing that may do us good or evil 2. That he is our only Head The Church is so put in subjection unto the Lord Christ as not to be subject unto any other It is true the Members of the Church as men on the earth have other Relations in respect whereof they are or may be subject one to another Children unto Parents Servants unto Masters People unto Rulers but as they are Members of the Church they are subject unto Christ and none other If any other were or might be an Head unto them they must be Angels or men As for Angels we have it here plainly testified that the Church is not made subject in any thing unto them And amongst men the Apostles of all others might seem to lay the justest claim to this Priviledge and Honor. But they openly disclaim any pretence thereunto So doth Paul 2 Cor. 1.24 We have no Dominion Rule Lordship Headship over your faith any thing that concerns your obedience to God and your Worship but are helpers of your joy And again saith he We preach not our selves but Jesus Christ the L●rd the only Lord and our selves your servants for Jesus sake 2 Cor. 4.5 And Peter as it should seem foreseeing that some who should come after would pretend unto such Preheminence warns the Elders that they should not think themselves Lords over Gods heritage 1 Pet. 5.3 And this they did in pursuit of the instructions and charge which their Lord and Master gave them Matth. 23.25 26 27. where he warns them that they should neither think of Dignity nor Dominion over the Church but apply themselves with all Humility unto the service of it for which he else-where addes his reason namely that all his Disciples have one Lord and Master and no more Joh. 13.13 Matth. 23.9 10. And it is a woful confusion that the Papists run themselves into in this matter For first they put the whole Church into subjection unto a man whom they call the Pope the common Father and Master of Christians the Head of the Church and then subject both him and it unto Angels in the Adoration and Invocation of them the greatest subjection possible when the Scripture assigneth one only Head of the Church expresly even the Lord Jesus and fully declares that it is not put in subjection unto Angels at all But to pass them by the Lord Christ is not only thus the only Head in general unto the whole Church but also unto every individual Believer in the Church The Head of every man is Christ 1 Cor. 11.3 He is so to every believer respectively and severally and that in both those senses wherein he is an Head that is according to the natural and metaphorical use of the word For 1. He is the only Head of Vital Influence to the whole Church and every member thereof As from the natural Head all influences of life for subsistence motion acting guidance and direction are communicated unto the whole body and to every member thereof so from the Lord Christ alone as he is the spiritually vital Head of the Church in whom are the springs of life and all quickning grace there are communicated unto the whole Church and every believer therein both the first quickning vital principle of life it self and all succeeding supplies and influences of grace for the enlivening strengthning acting guiding and directing of them This himself declares by comparing the Relations of all believers unto him unto that of branches unto the Vine Joh. 15.2 4. which have no life but by vertue of their union unto the Vine nor sap for fruitfulness but what is derived therefrom which he teacheth expresly verse 5. Without me saith he ye can do nothing And this the Apostle lively sets out unto us in the similitude of the natural body Col. 2.19 And this placing of all fulness in the Lord Christ as the Head of the Church that thence the whole and every member of it might derive needful supplies to themselves is fully taught us in the Gospel Hence the Church is called the fulness of Christ Ephes. 1.2 3. or that whereunto Christ communicates of his All-fulness of Grace until it comes unto the measure or degree of growth and perfection which he hath graciously assigned unto it And none I suppose will contend but that the Lord Christ is the alone and only Head of the Church in this sense It hath not a spiritual dependance on any other for grace There is indeed I know not what monster lies in the Opinion of them who take upon themselves to confer grace unto others by vertue of such things as they do unto them or for them but this we do not now consider If any man think he may have grace from any but Christ alone be they Angels or men let him turn himself unto them but withall know assuredly that he forsakes the Fountain of living waters for broken cisterns which will yield him no relief 2. He is the only Head of Rule and Government unto the whole Church and every member thereof This Rule or Government of the Church concerneth all that Obedience which it yields unto God in his Worship And unto an Head herein it is required that he give perfect Rules and Laws for all things necessarily belonging thereunto and to take care that they be observed And here a great contest ariseth in the world The Papists in behalf of their Pope and others under him contend to be sharers with the Lord Christ in this his Headship and fain they would perswade us that he himself hath appointed that so it should be The Scripture tells us that he was faithful in the whole house of God as was Moses and that as a Lord over his own house to erect rule and establish it and himself when he gives commission unto his Apostles bids them to teach men to do and observe all that he had commanded them And accordingly they
tell us that they delivered unto us what they received from the Lord and command us not to be wise above what is written But I know not how it is come to pass that these men think that the Lord Christ is not a compleat Head in this matter that he hath not instituted all Rules and Laws that are needful and convenient for the right discharge of the Worship of God and Obedience of the Church therein at least that somewhat may be added unto what he hath appointed that may be much to the advantage of the Church And this they take to be their work by vertue of I know not what unsealed warrant unwritten commission But to adde any thing in the Worship of God unto the Laws of the Church is to exercise Authority over it dominion over its faith and to pretend that this world to come this blessed Gospel Church-state is put in subjection unto them although it be not so to Angels A vain and proud pretence as at the last day it will appear But you will say Christ gives his Laws only unto his whole Church and not to individual believers who receive them from the Church and so he is not an immediate Head unto every one in particular I answer That the Lord Christ commits his Laws unto the Churches ministery to teach them unto believers but his own Authority immediately affects the soul and conscience of every believer He that subjects himself aright unto them doth it not upon the authority of the Church by whom they are taught and declared but upon the authority of Christ by whom they are given and enacted 3. It appears from hence that as he is our only Head so he is our immediate Head We have our immediate dependance upon him and our immediate access unto him He hath indeed appointed means for the communicating of his grace unto us and for the exercising of his Rule and Authority over us Such are all his Ordinances with the Offices and Officers that he hath appointed in his Church the first whereof he requires us to be constant in the use of the latter he requires our obedience and submission unto But these belong only unto the way of our dependance and hinder not but that our dependance is immediate on himself he being the immediate Object of our Faith and Love The soul of a believer rests not in any of these things but only makes use of them to confirm his faith in subjection unto Christ. For all these things are ours it is appointed for our use and we are Christs as he is Gods 1 Cor. 3.21 22 23. And so have we our immediate access unto him and not as some foolishly imagine by Saints and Angels and by him to God even to the Throne of Grace 4. This priviledge is greatly augmented in that the Church being made subject unto Christ alone and cast into a dependance upon him he will assuredly take care of all its concernments seeing unto him only doth it betake it self The Church made it of old part of her plea that she was as one fatherless Hos. 14.3 that is every way helpless that had none to relieve or succour her And the Lord Christ giveth this as a reason why he stirreth up himself unto the assistance of his people because there was no man that appeared for their help no Intercessor to interpose for them Isa. 59.16 Now God having placed the Church in this condition as to be oft-times altogether Orphans in this world to have none to give them the least countenance or assistance and the Church it self chusing this condition to renounce all hopes and expectations from any else beside betaking it self unto the Power Grace and Faithfulness of the Lord Christ alone it cannot as it were but be a great Obligation upon him to take care of it and to provide for it at all times They are members of his Body and he alone is their Head they are Subjects of his Kingdom and he alone is their King they are Children and Servants in his Family and he alone is their Father Lord and Master and can he forget them can he disregard them Had they been committed to the care of men it may be some of them would have fought and contended for them though their faithfulness is always to be suspected and their strength is a thing of nought Had they been put into subjection unto Angels they would have watched for their good though their Wisdom and Ability be both finite and limited so that they could never have secured their safety and shall not the Lord Jesus Christ now they are made his special care as his Power and Faithfulness is infinitely above those of any mee● creature excel them also in care and watchfulness for our good And all these things do sufficiently set out the Greatness of that priviledge of the Church which we insist upon And there are two things that make this Lib●rty and Exaltation of the Church necessary and reasonable 1. That God having exalted our nature in the Person of his Son into a condition of Honour and Glory so as to be worshipped and adored by all the Angels of Heaven it was not meet nor convenient that it should in our persons when united unto Christ as our Head be made subject unto them God would not allow that whereas there is the strictest union between the Head and the Members there should be such an interposition between them as that the Angels should depend on their Head and the Members should depend on Angels which indeed would utterly destroy the Union and immediate entercourse that is and ought to be between them 2. God is pleased by Jesus Christ to take us into an holy communion with himself without any other medium or means of communication but only that of our nature personally and inseparably united unto his own Nature in his Son And this also our subjection unto Angels is inconsistent withall This order of dependance the Apostle declares 1 Cor. 3.22 23. All things are yours and you are Christs and Christ is Gods As there is no interposition between God and Christ no more is there between Christ and us and in and by him alone do we relate unto God himself And this should teach us 1. The equity and necessity of our universal obedience unto God in Christ. He hath freed us from subjection unto men and Angels that we might serve him and live unto him He hath taken us to be his peculiar ones his lot and portion from whom he expects all his Reverence of Glory out of this world And he hath left us no pretence no excuse for the neglect of any duties of obedience that he requireth of us We cannot plead that we had other work to do other Lords and Masters to serve he hath set us free from them all that we might be his If a King take a servant into his family and thereby free and discharge him from being liable unto any
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so it is said of all mankind that God made them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one blood Acts 17.26 of one common principle which gives an Alliance Cognation and Brotherhood unto the whole Race of Mankind As the making of all mankind by one God gives them all a relation unto him as saith the Apostle We are all his off-spring so their being made of one blood gives them a Brotherhood among themselves See Acts 14.15 And this interpretation differs not in the substance of it from that last preceding in as much as the whole mass of humane nature had its existence in the person of Adam only it refers not the Oneness mentioned formally unto his person but unto the nature it self whereof he was made partaker And this sense the Apostle farther explains verse 14. as he also observes it Rom. 9.5 Secondly By One some understand the same spiritual nature the principles of spiritual life which is in Christ the Head and the children his members And this they say is that which is their peculiar Oneness or being of one seeing all wicked men even Reprobates are of the same common mass of humane nature as well as the children But yet this is not satisfactory It is true indeed that after the children are really sanctified they are of one and the same spiritual nature with their Head 1 Cor. 12.12 and hereby are they differenced from all others But the Apostle here treats of their being so of One that he might be meet to suffer for them which is antecedent unto their being sanctified as the Cause is unto the Effect Neither is it of any weight that the Reprobates are partakers of the same common nature with the children seeing the Lord Christ partook of it only on the childrens account as verse 14. And of their nature he could not be partaker without being partaker of that which was common to them all seeing that of one blood God made all Nations under heaven But the bond of nature it self is in the Covenant reckoned only unto them that shall be sanctified It is then one common nature that is here intended He and they are of the same nature of one mass of one blood And hereby he became to be meet to suffer for them and they to be in a capacity of enjoying the benefit of his sufferings which how it answers the whole design of the Apostle in this place doth evidently appear First He intends to shew that the Lord Christ was meet to suffer for the children and this arose from hence that he was of the same nature with them as he afterwards at large declares And he was meet to sanctifie them by his sufferings as in this verse he intimates For as in an Offering made unto the Lord of the first Fruits of Meat or of Meal a parcel of the same nature with the whole was taken and offered whereby the whole was sanctified Levit. 2. So the Lord Jesus Christ being taken as the first fruits of the nature of the children and offered unto God the whole lump or the whole nature of man in the children that is all the Elect is separated unto God and effectually sanctified in their season And this gives the ground unto all the testimonies which the Apostle produceth unto his purpose out of the Old Testament For being thus of one nature with them he is not ashamed to call them brethren as he proves from Psal. 22. For although it be true that as brethren is a term of spiritual cognation and love he calls them not so until they are made partakers of his Spirit and of the same spiritual nature that is in him yet the first foundation of this Appellation lies in his participation of the same nature with them without which however he might love them he could not properly call them Brethren Also his participation of their nature was that which brought him into such a condition as wherein it was needful for him to put his trust in God and to look for deliverance from hi● in a time of danger which the Apostle proves in the second place by a testimony out of Psal. 18. which could not in any sense have been said of Christ had he not been partaker of that nature which is exposed unto all kind of wants and troubles with outward streights and oppositions which the nature of Angels is not And as his being thus of One with us made him our Brother and placed him in that condition with us wherein it was necessary for him to put his trust in God for deliverance so being the principal Head and first Fruits of our nature and therein the Author and finisher of our salvation he is a Father unto us and we are his children which the Apostle proveth by his last testimony from Isa. 8. Behold I and the children which the Lord hath given unto me And further upon the close of these testimonies the Apostle assumes again his Proposition and asserts it unto the same purpose verse 14. shewing in what sense he and the children were of one namely in their mutual participation of flesh and blood And thus this interpretation of the word will sufficiently bear the whole weight of the Apostles Argument and Inferences But if any one list to extend the word farther and to comprize in it the manifold Relation that is between Christ and his Members I shall not contend about it There may be in it 1. Their being of one God designing him and them to be one mystical body one Church he the Head they the Members 2. Their taking into one Covenant made originally with him and exemplified in them 3. Their being of one common principle of humane nature 4. Disigned unto a manifold spiritual union in respect of that new nature which the children receive from him with every other thing that concurs to serve the union and relation between them but that which we have insisted on is principally intended and to be so considered by us And we might teach from hence that III. The agreement of Christ and the Elect in one common nature is the foundation of his fitness to be an Undertaker on their behalf and of the equity of their being made partakers of the benefits of his Mediation But that this will occur unto us again more fully verse 14. And by all this doth the Apostle discover unto the Hebrews the unreasonableness of their offence at the affl●cted condition and sufferings of the Messiah He had minded them of the work that he had to do which was to save his Elect by a spiritual and eternal salvation He had also intimated what was their condition by nature wherein they were unclean unsanctifi'd separate from God And withall had made known what the Justice of God as the Supreme Governour and Judge of all required that sinners might be saved He now minds them of the Union that was between him and them whereby he became fit to suffer for
the Wars of Titus they decreed that no man should teach his Son the Greek Language For it must be distinguished from the Decree of the Hasmonaeans long before prohibiting the Study of the Graecian Philosophy So that this pretence is destitute of all colour being made up of many vain and evidently false suppositions § 3 Again the Epistle is said to be translated by Clemens but where or when we are not informed Was this done in Italy before it was sent unto the Hebrews to what end then was it written in Hebrew when it was not to be used but in Greek was it sent in Hebrew before the supposed Translation in what Language was it communicated unto others by them who first received it Clemens was never in the East to translate it And if all the first Copies of it were dispersed in Hebrew how came they to be so utterly lost as that no Report or Tradition of them or any one of them did ever remain Besides if it were translated by Clemens in the West and that Transla●●●n alone preserved how came it to pass that it was so well known and generally received in the East before the Western Churches admitted of it This Tradition therefore is also every way groundless and improbable § 4 Besides there want not Evidences in the Epistle its self proving it to be Originally written in the Language wherein it is yet extant I shall only point at the Heads of them for this matter deserves no long Discourse 1. The Style of it throughout manifests it to be no Translation at least it is impossible it should be one exact and proper as its own copiousness propriety of Phrase and Expression with freedom from savouring of the Hebraisms of an Original in that Language do manifest 2. It abounds with Greek Elegancies and Paranomosia's that have no countenance given unto t●●m by any thing in the Hebrew Tongue such as that for instance Chap. 5. v. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the like Expressions whereunto in the story of Susanna v. 55 56. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and v. 59. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is well proved that it was w●●tten Originally in the Greek Language 3. The rendring of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 constantly by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which more afterwards is of the same importance 4. The Words concerning Melchisedech King of Salem Chap. 7.11 prove the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Had the Epistle been written in Hebrew what need this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is being interpreted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a strange kind of Interpretation and so also is it that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 When John reports the Words of Mary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and adds of his own 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to say Master Chap. 20. v. 16. Doth any man doubt but that he wrote in Greek and therefore so rendred her Syriack Expression and is not the same evident concerning our Apostle from the interpretation that he gives of those Hebrew Words And it is in vain to reply that these words were added by the Translator seeing the very Argument of the Author is founded in the Interpretation of those words which he gives us It appears then that as the Assertion that this Epistle was written in Hebrew is altogether groundless and that it arose from many false suppositions which render it more incredible than if it made use of no pretence at all so there want not Evidences from the Epistle its self of its being Originally written in the Language wherein it is still extant and those such as few other Books of the New Testament can afford concerning themselves should the same Question be made about them § 5 Moreover in the Confirmation of our perswasion it is by some added that the Testimonies made use of in this Epistle out of the Old Testament are taken out of the Translation of the LXX and that sometimes the stress of the Argument taken from them relies on somewhat peculiar in that Version which was not possible to have been done had it been written Originally in Hebrew But because this Assertion contains other difficulties in it and is built on a supposition which deserves a farther examination we shall refer it unto its own place and season which ensues Exercitatio V. Testimonies cited by the Apostle out of the Old Testament Compared with the Original and Translations Whence the Agreement of some of them with that of the LXX § 1 THere is not any thing in this Epistle that is attended with more difficulty than the Citation of the Testimonies out of the Old Testament that are made use of in it Hence some from their unsuitableness as they have supposed unto the Authors purpose have made bold to call in question if not to reject the Authority of the whole But what concerns the matter of them and the Wisdom of the Apostle in their Application it must be treated on in the respective places where they occurr when we shall manifest how vain and causeless are the Exceptions which have been laid against them and how singularly they are suited to the proof of those Doctrines and Assertions in the confirmation whereof they are produced But the Words also wherein they are expressed varying frequently from the Original yeild some difficulty in their Consideration And this concernment of the Apostles Citations to prevent a further trouble in the Exposition its self of the several places may be previously considered Not that we shall here explain and vindicate them from the Exceptions mentioned which must on necessity be done afterwards as occasion offers its self but only discover in general what respect the Apostles Expressions have unto the Original and the old Translations thereof and remove some false Inferences that have been made on the consideration of them To this end I shall briefly pass through them all and compare them with the places whence they are taken CHAP. I. § 2 CHap. 1. v. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee from Psalm 2. v. 7. The words exactly answer the Original with the only supply of the Verb Substantive whereof in the Hebrew there is almost a perpetual Elipsis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the same are the Words in the Translation of the LXX In the same Verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I will be unto him a Father and he shall be unto me a Son from 1 Chron. chap. 22. v. 10. The LXX otherwise as to the order of the Words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which also is the order of the Sentences in the Original the Apostle using his own liberty and varying from them both so that this Quotation is not directly from that Translation Ver. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And let all the Angels of God Worship him From Psal. 97. v. 7. without change only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods is rendered
whos 's Mercifull Good Pleasure towards them Moses prayed for Deut. 33.16 that is the Father of Lights from whom descendeth every good and perfect Gift James 1. v. 17. These things evidently express God and none other and yet he is said to be an Angel sent of God in his Name and unto his Work So that he can be no other but a certain Person of the Deity who accepted of this Delegation and was therein revealed unto the Church as he who was to take upon him the seed of Abraham and to be their eternal Redeemer § 18 Josh. 5. v. 13 14 15. And it came to pass whilest Joshua was by Jericho that he lift up his eyes and looked and behold there stood a man over against him with his sword drawn in his hand and Joshuah went unto him and said unto him art thou for us or for our adversaries and he said Nay but as Prince of the Host of the Lord am I now come And Joshuah fell on his face to the earth and did worship and said unto him what saith my Lord unto his servant And the Prince of the Lords Host said unto Joshuah loose thy shooe from of thy foot for the place whereon thou standest is holy The appearance here is of a Man v. 13. A man of War as God is called Exod. 15. v. 3. armed with his sword drawn in his hand as a token of the business he came about At first sight Joshuah apprehends him to be a Man only which occasioned his enquiry art thou for us or for our adversaries which discovers his courage and undaunted magnanimity for doubtless the appearance was august and glorious But he answers unto his whole question 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am not that is a man either of your party or of the enemies but quite another Person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Prince of the Host of the Lord. And this was another illustrious manifestation of the Son of God unto the Church of old accompanyed with many instructive circumstances As 1. From the shape wherein he appeared namely of a man as a pledge of his future incarnation 2. The Title that he assumes to himself the Captain of the Lords Host he unto whom the guidance and conduct of them unto rest not only temporal but eternal was committed whence the Apostle in Allusion unto this Place and Title calls him the Captain of our Salvation Heb. 2. v. 10. and 3. The Person unto whom he spake when he gave himself this Title was the Captain of the People at that time teaching both him and them that there was another supream Captain of their eternal deliverance 4. From the time and place of his appearance which was upon the first entrance of the people into Canaan and the first opposition which therein they met withall so engaging his Presence with his Church in all things which oppose them in their way unto eternal Rest. 5. From the Adoration and Worship which Joshuah gave unto him which he accepted of contrary to the duty and practice of created Angels Rev. 19. v. 10. Chap. 22. v. 8 9. 6. From the Prescription of the Ceremonies expressing Religious Reverence put off thy shoo 's with the reason annexed for the place whereon thou standest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is holiness made so by the Presence of God the like Precept whereunto was given to Moses by the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob. Exod. 3. v. 5. By all these things was the Church instructed in the Person Nature and Office of the Son of God even in the Mysterie of his eternal distinct subsistence in the Deity his future Incarnation and condescention unto the Office of being the Head and Saviour of his Church These Manifestations of the Son of God unto the Church of old as the Angel or § 19 Messenger of the Father subsisting in his own Divine Person are all of them Revelations of the Promis●d Seed the great and only Saviour and Deliverer of the Church in his eternal Pre-existence unto his Incarnation and pledges of his future taking flesh for the accomplishment of the whole work committed unto him And many other instances of the like nature may be added out of the former and later Prophets which because in most important Circumstances they are coincident with these need not here particularly be insisted on Some of late would apply all these Appearances unto a created delegate Angel § 20 which conceit as it is irreconcileable unto the sacred Text as we have manifested so is it contrary unto the sense of the antient Writers of the Christian Church A large Collection of Testimonies from them is not suited unto our present Design and Purpose I shall therefore only mention two of the most antient of them one of the Latin the other of the Greek Church The first is Tertullian who tells us Christus semper egit in Dei Patris nomin● ipse ab initio conversatus est congressus cum Patriarchis Prophetis adv M●r● lib. 2. Christ alwayes dealt with men in the name of God the Father and so himself from the beginning conversed with the Patriarchs and Prophets And again Christus ad colloquia humana semper descendit ah Adam usque ad Patriarchas Prophetas in visione in somno in speculo in aenigmate ordinem suum praestru●ns semper a● initio Deus in terris cum hominibus conversatus est non alius quam sermo qui caro erat futurus Adv. Praxeam It was Christ who descended into communion with men from Adam unto the Patriarchs and Prophets in Visions Dreams and Appearances or Representations of himself instructing them in his future condition from the beginning And God who conversed with men on earth was no other but the Word who was to be made flesh The other is Justin Martyr whose word needs not be produced seeing it is known how he contends for this very thing in his Dialogue with Trypho That which is more direct unto our purpose is to enquire into the Apprehensions § 21 of the Jewish Masters concerning the Divine Appearances insisted on granted unto the Patriarchs and Church of old with what may thence be collected for their conviction concerning the Person of the Messiah The most part of their Expositors do I confess pass over the difficulties of the places mentioned I mean those which are such unto their present Infidelity without taking the least notice of them Some would have the Angel mentioned to be Michael whom they assign a Prerogative unto above the other Angels who preside over other Countreys But who that Michael is and wherein that Prerogative doth consist they know not Some say that Michael is the High Priest of Heaven who offers up the prayers of the Righteous so R. M●nahem The Priest above that offereth or presenteth the souls of the Righteous saith another more agreeably unto the Truth then they are aware of One signal instance only of the evidence of the Truth
extend not unto In brief they do not precisely assert that at the End of the Seven Weeks Messiah the Prince should be for although they are distinguished from the other for some certain Purpose not expressed as to the Determination of the time of the coming of the M●ssiah they are to be joyned with the sixty two Weeks as is expresly affirmed in the following words Now not to prevent my self in what is more largely afterwards to be insisted on in the Exposition of the several passages of this Prophecy after a full consideration of what sundry learned men have offered for the solving of this Difficulty I shall here briefly propose my apprehensions concerning it which I hope the Candid and Judicious Reader will find to answer the Conduct of the Context and Design of the place First I fix it here as unquestionable that the whole space of Seventy Weeks doth § 7 precisely contain the time between the going forth of the Decree and the Vnction of the Most Holy with his Passion that ensued some few years of the last Week remaining not reckoned on to keep the Computation entire by weeks of years This is so expresly affirmed v. 24. that the Interpretation of all that ensues is to be regulated thereby And this as we shall afterwards prove so here we take it for granted as the Hypothesis on which the present difficulty is to be solved There is then a Distribution of these LXX Weeks into VII LXII and One upon the account of some remarkable events happening at the distinct expiration of those several parcels of the whole season v. 25. We have two portions of this time expressed namely VII Weeks and LXII Weeks and two Events attending them Messiah the Prince and the building of the Street and Wall From the going forth of the Decree to restore and to build Jerusalem unto Messiah the Prince shall be seven Weeks and threescore and two Weeks the Street shall be built again and the Wall in troublous times The two Events here mentioned did ensue the two distinct parcels of time limited but not in the Order which the words at first view seem to represent as is evident from the Context For as the Messiah did not come at the Expiration of the VII Weeks so the LXII Weeks were not expired before the building of the City nor is that mentioned as the Event designed by the whole space of LXIX Weeks but as that which should fall out in some interval of it for the Prophecy issues not in the Restauration but Desolation of the City The Angel therefore expresseth the distinct divisions of time and the principal distinct events of them but not the Order of their accomplishment For the natural Order of these things is that in VII Weeks the building of the City Wall and Street should be finished and in LXII Weeks after the Messiah should be cut off And this is evident from the Text for as the building of the City can no way be said to be after the LXII Weeks but in and after the seven which was the season wherein the Decree was executed so the cutting off the Messiah is expresly said in the next verse to be after those LXII Weeks which succeeded unto the VII Weeks wherein the Restauration of the City was finished And to suppose the Messiah in v. 25. not to be the same with the Messiah v. 26. and the Most Holy v. 24. is to confound the whole order of the Words and to leave no certain sense in them For the single remaining Weeks the use of it shall be afterwards declared This distinction therefore of the several portions of the whole time limited doth rather confirm our Application of this Prophecy then any way impeach the Truth or Evidence of it It is added Fourthly That the cutting off the Messiah here spoken of is expresly joyned § 8 with the destruction of the City in one Week to be accomplished the last seven years whereas Christ sufferred above thirty years before the destruction of the Materiall Jerusalem v. 26 27. Answer There appears no such thing in the Text. The destruction of the City and People is only mentioned as a consequent of the cutting off and rejection of the Messiah without any limitation of time wherein it should be performed and de facto it succeeded immediately in the causes of it and direct tendency thereunto § 9 In the last place he sayes Those Phrases v. 24. to finish the Transgression to make an end of sin to purge iniquity and to bring in everlasting Righteousness are manifest Characters of the time of the end as shall be shewed Answ. But why are not the other Ends expressed in the Prophecy namely to seal up Vision and Prophecy and to annoint the Most Holy here mentioned also Why is that Phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated to purge iniquity whereas it rather signifies to make Attonement or Reconciliation for iniquity Is it not because it would be very difficult to make any tolerable application of these things unto the season which is called the time of the End In brief these things are so proper so peculiar unto the Lord Christ and the work of his Mediation that in their first direct and proper sense they cannot be ascribed unto any other things or Persons without some impiety And there is no reason why we should here wrest them from their native and genuine signification all which will be fully manifest in our ensuing Exposition of the words themselves § 10 I shall not here insist on those Reasons and Arguments whereby we prove the true and only Messiah to be intended in this Prophecy For as they are needless unto Christians who are universally satisfied with the truth hereof so we shall from the Context and other Evidences immediately confirm them against the Modern Jews and their Masters In the mean time wholly to remove this unexpected Objection out of our way I shall shew the invalidity of those pretences which the same Learned Author makes use of to countenance his Application of this whole Angelical Message unto the Christian Churches of these latter dayes which are these that follow § 11 First saith he Because the effects Characterizing the end of those years the consuming of transgression and the bringing in of everlasting righteousness are effects to be accomplished in the Christian Church at the fall of Antichrist Isa. 1.25 26 27 28. and 27.19 Apocal. 21.27 Answ. These are but some of the effects mentioned and one of them not rightly expressed there are others in the Prophecy as the Annointing of the most Holy and cutting off the Messiah that can with no colour of probability be applyed unto that season 2. However something analogous unto what is here spoken of as an effect and product of it may be wrought at another time in the conformity of the Church unto its Head yet properly and directly as here intended they are the immediate effects of the annointing death and
that shall ensue thereupon Set aside their opinion concerning the perpetuity of the Ceremonial Law and their return in the observation of it unto their carnal Ordinances built on a supposition that God is pleased with the blood of Bulls and Goats for its own sake and not for a signification of that which was infinitely more excellent and glorious an apprehension which the whole world hath as it were by joint consent long ago renounced and cast away the vain and foolish imaginations about their sensual pleasures Behemoth the Wine of Paradice and literal accomplishment of professed Allegories which the wisest among themselves begin to be ashamed of and there is nothing in their own expectations but we acknowledge that they shall be made partakers of it Return they shall to their own Land enjoy it for a quiet and everlasting possession their Adversaries being destroyed filled they shall be also with the Light and Knowledge of the Will and Worship of God so as to be a guide and blessing unto the residue of the Gentiles who seek after the Lord and it may be be entrusted with great Empire and Rule in the world The most of these things are foretold concerning them not only in their own Prophetical Writings but also by the Divine Writers of sundry Books of the New Testament But all this we say must come to pass when the veil shall be taken from before their eyes and they shall look on him whom they have pierced and joyfully receive him whom they have sinfully rejected for so many Generations Untill this be done they may wrestle●s they can with their own perplexities and comfort themselves as well as they are able in their miseries get money in their dispersions by all unlawfull Arts and ways imaginable and expose themselves to the delusions of Impostors false Prophets and pretenders to be their Deliverers which to their unspeakable misery and reproach they have now done ten times deliverance peace tranquility acceptance with God and man they shall not obtain Here lyes the Crisis of their condition When they shall receive acknowledge and believe in that Messiah who came so long time since unto them whom their Fathers wickedly slew and hanged on a Tree and whom themselves have since no less wickedly rejected and when by his Spirit and Grace they shall be turned from ungodliness and have their eyes opened to see the Mysterie of the Grace Wisdom and Love of God in the blood of his Son then shall they obtain mercy from the God of their fore-fathers and returning again into their own Land Jerusalem shall be inhabited again even in Jerusalem Exercitatio XIX Ordinances and Institutions of the Judaical Church respected and unfolded in the Epistle to the Hebrews Principal Heads of them mentioned therein The call of Abraham Heb. 11.8 9 c. The foundation of the Church in his Posterity The name of Abram signification of it Changed into Abraham its signification The time of his Birth and Death Whence called Ur of the Chaldees where And Haran Extent of Mesopotamia Moses and Stephen reconciled Abraham before his call infected with Idolatry Time of his call Institution of Circumcision End and use of it Time of the Israelites sojourning in Egypt Gen. 11.13 Exod. 12.40 41. Act. 7.6 Gal. 3 17. reconciled The beginning and ending of the 430 years The Fatal period of Changes in that Church Institution of the Passover The time of its celebration The month Time of the day 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between the Evenings when The occasion and nature of this Ordinance The matter of it The manner of its observance Sundry things suited to its first celebration not afterward observed The number required at the eating of the Lamb. By whom it was killed Where How dressed Jews traditions rejected The Feast of unleavened Bread Its Rites Excision to the neglect of what Ordinances annexed Jews acknowledge the figurative nature of this Ordinance Of Frontlets and Philacteries Exod. 23.9 Signes and memorials The sections of the Law written in the Frontlets The Jews manner of making their Phylacteries deceits therein Their trust in them so proved by our Saviour Of their Fringes their appointment making and use Dedication of the first-born males to God Price of the Redemption of Children Close of God's first dispensation towards that Church The solemn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Preparations for it Remote Occasional temporary institutions between the Red-sea and Sinai Of the waters of Marah The giving of Manna Derivation and signification of the name Water brought out of the Rock That Rock Christ. Immediate preparations for the receiving of the Law The time that the people came to Sinai The Day The time of the day that the appearance of God's Glory began The same time that Christ rose from the dead The place Sinai the name of the mountain Horeb of the Wilderness Of the Monastery there Moses first Ascent The ground of it The people prepared by the remembrance of Mercies and Promises Of their washing their cloaths Not a Baptism of standing use Bounds set unto the Mount In what sense it might be touched Heb. 12.21 How the Offendor was to be punished 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 opened The station and order of the people in receiving of the Law The ministry of Angels in the preparations for God's glorious presence How the People met God and God them When Moses used those words I exceedingly fear and quake THere are in the Epistle unto the Hebrews either direct discourses concerning § 1 or occasional mention is made of all or at least the most important things in the whole Mosaical Oeconomy and state of the Church and Worship of God therein under the Old Testament Yea there is nothing material from the call of Abraham unto the utmost issue of God's dispensations towards his posterity that is omitted by him And if we have not a previous acquaintance with these things which he supposed in them to whom he wrote much darkness and many mistakes must needs attend us in the consideration of what he treateth on and the ends which he proposeth unto himself Now because it will no way be expedient every time the mention of them doth occur or allusion is made unto them to insist upon them as first instituted I thought meet in the close of these Prolegomena to present the Reader with a brief Scheme and delineation of the whole Mosaical Oeconomy as also of those other previous concernments of the Church in the posterity of Abraham which by the Apostle in this Epistle we are called and directed unto And they are these that follow 1. The call and obedience of Abraham chap. 11. v. 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17. 2. The institution and observation of the Passover chap. 11. v. 28. 3. The giving of the Law chap. 1. v. 1. chap. 2. v. 1. chap. 12. v. 18 19 20 21 25 26. 4. The sanction of the Law in Promises and Penalties chap. 2. v. 2 21.
who were the Persons who were spoken unto in these last dayes TO VS That is the members of the Judaical Church who lived in the dayes of the Personal Ministry of Christ and afterwards under the preaching of the Gospel unto that day Chap. 2.3 The Jews of those dayes were very apt to think that if they had lived in the times of the former Prophets and had heard them delivering their message from God they would have received it with a cheerful obedience their only unhappiness they thought was that they were born out of due time as to prophetical Revelations This is intimated of them Mat. 23.30 The Apostle meeting with this perswasion in them minds them that in the Revelation of the Gospel God had spoken to themselves the things they so much desired not questioning but that thereon they should believe and obey If this word then they attend not unto they must needs be self-condemned Again that care and love which God manifested towards them in speaking immediately unto them required the same obedience especially considering the manner of it so far excelling that which before he had used towards the Fathers of which afterwards And these are two instances of the Comparison instituted relating unto Times and Persons The next difference respects the manner of these several Revelations of the will of God and that in two particulars For 1. The former was made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by divers parts one after the other The branch of the Antithesis that should answer hereunto is not expressed but implyed to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at once 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by many parts and so consequently at sundry times The gradual discovery of the mind and will of God by the addition of one thing after another at several seasons as the Church could bear the light of them and as it was subserving unto his main design of reserving all preheminence to the Messiah is that which is intended in this Expression How all this is argumentative to the Apostles purpose will instantly appear Take the expression absolutely to denote the whole progress of divine Revelation from the beginning of the world and it comprizeth four principal parts or degrees with those that were subservient unto them The First of these was made to Adam in the Promise of the seed which was the principle of faith and Obedience to the Fathers before the Flood and unto this were subservient all the consequent particular Revelations made to Seth Enosh Enoch Lamech and others before the Flood The Second to Noah after the Flood in the Renewall of the Covenant and establishing of the Church in his family Gen. 8.21 Chap. 9.9 10. whereunto were subservient the Revelations made to Melchisedech Gen. 14.18 and others before the calling of Abraham The Third to Abraham in the restriction of the Promise to his seed and fuller illustration of the nature of it Gen. 12.1 2 3 4. Chap. 15.11 12. 17.1 2. Confirmed in the Revelations made to Isaac Gen. 26.24 Jacob Gen. 49. Joseph Heb. 11.22 and others of their Posterity The fourth to Moses in the giving of the Law and erection of the Judaical Church in the Wilderness unto which there were three principal heads of subservient Revelations 1. To David which was peculiarly designed to perfect the Revelation of the will of God concerning the Old Testament-Worship in those things that their Wilderness condition was not capable of 1 Chron. 23.25 26 27 28. Chap. 28.11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19. To him we may joyn Solomon with the rest of the Prophets of their dayes 2. To the Prophets after the division of the Kingdom unto the Captivity and dureing the Captivity to whom pleading with the people about their defection by Sin and false Worship was peculiar 3. To Ezra with the Prophets that assisted in the Reformation of the Church after its return from Babylon who in an especial manner excited the people to an expectation of the coming of the Messiah These were the principal parts and degrees of the Revelation of the will of God from the foundation of the world until the coming of Christ in his fore-runner John the Baptist. And all this I have fully handled and unfolded in my Discourse of the rise nature and progress of Scripture Divinity or Theology But as I shewed before if we attend unto the special intention of the Apostle we must take in the date of these Revelations and begin with that to Moses adding to it those other subservient ones mentioned peculiar to the Judaical Church which taught and confirmed the Worship that was established amongst them This then is that which in this word the Apostle minds the Hebrews of namely that the will of God concerning his Worship and our obedience was not formerly revealed all at once to his Church by Moses or any other but by several parts and degrees by new additions of Light as in his infinite Wisdom and Care he saw meet The close and last hand was not to be put unto this work before the coming of the Messiah He they all acknowledged was to reveal the whole Counsel of God John 4.25 after that his way had been prepared by the coming of Elias Mal. 4 until when they were to attend to the Law of Moses with those Expositions of it which they had received v. 4 5. That was the time appointed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to seal compleat and finish Vision and Prophet as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to seal up sin or as we render it to make an end of sin or the Controversie about it which had held long agitation by Sacrifices that could never put an end to that quarrel Heb. 10.1 2 14. Now in this very first word of his Epistle doth the Apostle clearly convince the Hebrews of their mistake in their obstinate adherence unto Mosaical Institutions It is as if he had bidden them consider the way whereby God revealed his will to the Church hitherto Hath it not been by parts and degrees Hath he at any time shut up the Progress of Revelation Hath he not alwayes kept the Church in expectation of new Revelations of his mind and will did he ever declare that he would add no more unto what he had commanded or make no alteration in what he had instituted What he had revealed was to be observed Deut. 27.29 and when he had revealed it but untill he declare that he will add no more it is folly to account what is already done absolutely compleat and immutable Therefore Moses when he had finished all his work in the Lords house tells the Church that God would raise up another Prophet like him that is who should reveal new Laws and Institutions as he had done whom they were to hear and obey on the penalty of utter extermination Deut. 18.18 And this discovers the obstinacy of the Modern Jews who from the dayes of Maimonides who
6 7 8. Psal. 89.19 20 21 22 23 24 c. Psal. 72.6 7 8 9 c. Psal. 110.1 2 3. As also in all the following Prophets See Isa. 11.1 2. Chap. 9.6 7. Chap. 53.12 Chap. 63.1 2 3. Jerem. 23.5 6. Dan. 7.13 14 c. As this was foretold in the Old Testament so the accomplishment of it is expresly asserted in the New Upon his Birth he is proclaimed to be Christ the Lord Luke 2.11 And the first enquiry after him is where is he that is born King Matth. 2.2 6. And this Testimony doth he give concerning himself namely that all judgement was his and therefore all honour was due unto him Joh. 5.22 23. And that all things were and a Saviour Acts 5.31 He is highly exalted having a name given him above every name Phil. 2.9 10 11. being set at the Right Hand of God in heavenly places far above c. Ephes. 1.20 21 22. where he reigns for ever 1 Cor. 15.25 being the King of Kings and Lord of Lords Revel 5.12 13 14. for he is Lord of quick and dead Rom. 14.7 8 9. And this in general is fully asserted in the Scripture unto the Consolation of the Church and Terror of his Adversaries This I say is the spring of the Churches Glory Comfort and Assurance It is our Head Husband and Elder Brother who is gloriously vested with all this Power Our nearest Relation our best Friend is thus exalted not to a place of Honour and trust under others a thing that contents the aiery fancy of poor Earth-worms not yet to a Kingdom on the Earth a matter that swells some and even breaks them with pride no nor yet to an Empire over this perishing world but to an abiding an everlasting Rule and Dominion over the whole Creation of God And it is but a little while before he will cast off and dispell all those Clouds and shades which at present interpose themselves and eclipse his Glory and Majesty from them that love him He who in the dayes of his flesh was reviled reproached persecuted crucified for our sakes that same Jesus is thus exalted and made a Prince and a Saviour having a Name given him above every name c. for though he was dead yet he is alive and lives for ever and hath the Keys of Hell and Death These things are every where proposed for the Consolation of the Church The Consideration of it also is suited to strike Terror into the hearts of ungodly men that oppose him in the world Whom is it that they do despise Against whom do they magnifie themselves and lift up their horns on high whose Ordinances Laws Institutions do they contemn whose Gospel do they refuse Obedience unto whose people and servants do they revile and persecute Is it not He are they not his who hath all power in Heaven and Earth committed unto him in whose hand are the Lives the Souls all the concernments of his Enemies Caesar thought he had spoken with Terror when threatning him with death who stood in his way he told him Young man he speaks it to whom it is as easie to do it He speaks to his Adversaries who stand in the way of his interest to deal no more so proudly who can in a moment speak them into Ruine and that Eternal See Rev. 6.14 15 16 17. Thus is the Son made Heir of all in general we shall further consider his Dominion in a distribution of the chief parts of it and manifest his power severally in and over them all He is Lord or Heir 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is of all Persons and of all Things Persons or Rational Subsistences here intended are either Angels or Men for it is evident that He is exempted who hath subjected all things unto him 1 Cor. 15.27 Angels are of two sorts 1. Such as abide doing the will of God retaining that name by way of eminency 2. Such as by Sin have lost their first habitation State and Condition usually called evil Angels or Devils The Lord Jesus hath Dominion over all and both sorts of them Men may be cast under one common distribution which is comprehensive of all distinctions whereby they are differenced For they all are either Elect or Reprobates And the Lord Jesus hath Rule and Dominion over them all Things that are subject unto the Lord Jesus may be referred unto four heads for they are either 1. Spiritual or 2. Ecclesiastical or 3. Political or 4. Natural Again Spiritual are either 1. Temporal as 1. Grace 2. Gifts or 2. Eternal as Glory Ecclesiastical or Church things are either 1. Judaical or Old Testament Things or 2. Christian or Things of the New Testament Political and Civil Things may be considered as they are mannaged 1. By his Friends 2. His Enemies Of Natural Things we shall speak in a production of some particular instances to prove the general Assertion 〈…〉 have here no o● 〈…〉 Something mus● 〈…〉 Christ 〈…〉 them 〈◊〉 rule over them their subjection unto him with the original right and equity of the grant of this Power and Authority unto him 〈◊〉 the things which now fall under our consideration His Preh●minence above them is asserted by the Apostle in the fourth verse of this chapter He is made better more excellent than the Angels See the words opened af●●●wards This was to the Jews who acknowledged that the Messias should be above Moses Abraham and the ministring Angels so Neve● Shalom lib. 9. cap. 5. We have testimony unto it E●hes 1.20 21. He set him at his own right hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among heavenly things far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named What ever Title of Honour o● Office they enjoy not ●●ly in this world but also in that which is to come who enjoy their Power and Dignity in that state of Glory which is promised unto them also who here believe on him Phil. 2.9 God also hath exalted him and given him a name Power Authority and Preheminence above every name that at the name of Jesus unto him vested with that Authority and Dignity every knee should bow all creatures should yield Obedience and be in subjection of things in heaven the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 proper habitation and place residence of the blessed Angels Jude 6. For 2. As he is exalted above them so by the Authority of God the Father they are made subject unto him 1 Pet. 3.22 he is gone into heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Angels being brought into order by subjection unto him Ephes. 1.22 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He hath put all things Angels of which he treats in subjection to him under his feet as Psal. 8.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 15.27 And this by the special Authority of God the Father in a way of Grant of Priviledge and Honour unto him And to evidence the Universality of this Subjection 3. They adore and worship him the highest
Relation unto God in and through him they received by his means God gathering up all things to a consistency and permanency in him Ephes. 1.10 And hence also it became equal that the Rule and power over them should be committed unto him by whom although they were not like us recovered from ruine yet they were preserved from all danger of it So that in their subjection unto him consists their principal Honour and all their safety And as this act of God in appointing Christ Lord of Angels hath these equitable foundations so it hath also sundry glorious Ends. 1. It was as an addition unto that Glory that was set before him in his undertaking to redeem sinners A Kingdom was of old promised unto him and to render it exceedingly glorious the Rule and Scepter of it is extended not only to his Redeemed ones but to the holy Angels also and the sovereignty over them is granted him as a part of his Reward Phil. 2.8 9 10 11. Ephes. 1.20 21. 2. God hereby gathers up his whole family at first distinguished by the Law of their Creation into two especial kinds and then differenced and set at variance by Sin into one Body under one Head reducing them that originally were twain into one entire family Ephes. 1.10 In the fulness of time he gathered together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are in earth in him as was before declared Before this the Angels had no immediate created Head for themselves are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods Psal. 97.7 1 Cor. 8.5 Who ever is the Head must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the God of Gods or Lord of Lords which Christ alone is and in him or under him as One Head is the whole Family of God united 3. The Church of Mankind militant on the earth whose conduct unto Eternal Glory is committed unto Christ stands in need of the ministery of Angels And therefore hath God granted Rule and Power over them unto him that nothing might be wanting to enable him to save unto the uttermost them that come unto God by him So God hath given him to be head over all things to the Church Ephes. 1.22 that he should with an absolute sovereignty use and dispose of all things to the benefit and advantage of the Church This is the first branch of the Lordship and Dominion of Christ according to the distribution of the severals of it before laid down He is Lord of Angels and they are all of them his servants the fellow-servants of them that have the testimony of Jesus And as some men do wilfully cast themselves by their Religious adoration of Angels under the curse of Canaan to be servants unto servants Gen. 8.25 so it is the great honour and priviledge of true believers that in their worship of Christ they are admitted into the society of an innumerable company of Angels Heb. 12.22 Rev. 15.11 13. for they are not ashamed to esteem them their fellow-servants whom their Lord and King is not ashamed to call his Brethren And herein consists our communion with them that we have one common Head and Lord and any intercourse with them but only on this account or any worship performed towards them breaks the bond of that communion and causeth us not to hold the Head Col. 2.19 The priviledge the safety and advantage of the Church from this subjection of Angels to its Head and Saviour are by many spoken unto II. There is another sort of Angels who by sin left their primitive station and fell off from God of whom their Sin Fall Malice Wrath Business Craft in evil and Final judgment the Scripture treateth at large These belong not indeed to the possession of Christ as he is the Heir but they belong unto his Dominion as he is a Lord. Though he be not a King and Head unto them yet he is a Judge and Ruler over them All things being given into his hand they also are subjected unto his power Now as under the former head I shall consider 1. The Right or Equity and 2. The End of this Authority of Christ over this second sort of the first Race of Intellectual Creatures the Angels that have sinned 1. As before this Right is founded in his Divine Nature by vertue whereof he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fit for this Dominion He made these Angels also and therefore as God hath an absolute Dominion over them The Creatures cannot cast off the Dominion of the Creator by rebellion though they may lose their moral Relation unto God as obedient creatures yet their natural as creatures cannot be dissolved God will be God still be his creatures never so wicked and if they obey not his Will they shall bear his Justice And this Dominion of Christ over faln Angels as God makes the grant of Rule over them to him as Mediator just and equal 2. The immediate and peculiar Foundation of his Right unto Rule over faln Angels rendring the special grant of it equal and righteous is Lawful Conquest This gives a special Right Gen. 48.22 Now that Christ should conquer faln Angels was promised from the foundation of the world Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman the Messias was to break the Serpents head despoil him of his power and bring him into subjection which he performed accordingly Col. 2.15 He spoiled principalities and powers divested faln Angels of all that Title they had got to the world by the sin of man triumphing over them as Captives to be disposed of at his pleasure He stilled or made to cease as to his power this Enemy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and self-avenger Psal. 8.2 leading captivity captive Psal. 6.18 breaking in pieces the Head over the large earth Psal. 110.6 binding the strong man armed and spoiling his goods And the Scripture of the New Testament is full of instances as to his executing his Power and Authority over Evil Angels They take up a good part of the Historical Books of it Man having sinned by the instigation of Satan he was by the just Judgement of God delivered up unto his power Heb. 2.14 The Lord Christ undertaking to recover lost man from under his power by destroying his works 1 Joh. 3.8 and to bring them again into favour with God Satan with all his might sets himself to oppose him in his Work and failing in his enterprise being utterly conquered he became absolutely subjected unto him trodden under his feet and the prey he had taken delivered from him This is the next Foundation of the Authority of Christ over the Evil Angels He had a great Contest and War with them and that about the Glory of God his own Kingdom and the Eternal Salvation of the Elect prevailing absolutely against them he made a Conquest over them and they are put in subjection unto him for ever They are subjected unto him as to their present actings and future condition He now rules them and will
are too large and comprehensive to be here spoken unto in this brief delineation of his Kingdom which we undertook in this digression 2. His Lordship and Dominion extends to the other sort of men also namely Reprobates and men finally impenitent They are not exempted from that all flesh which he hath power over Joh. 17.2 nor from those quick and dead over whom he is Lord Rom. 14.9 nor from that World which he shall judge Acts 17.31 And there are two especial grounds that are peculiar to them of this Grant and Power and Authority over them 1. His interposition upon the entrance of Sin against the immediate Execution of the Curse due unto it as befell the Angels This fixed the World under a Dispensation of 1. Forbearance and Patience Rom. 2.4 5. Acts 17.30 Rom. 9.22 Psal. 75.3 2. Goodness and Mercy Acts 14.16 17. That God who spared not the Angels when they sinned but immediately cast them into chains of darkness should place sinners of the Race of Adam under a dispensation of Forbearance and Goodness that he should spare them with much Long-suffering dureing their Pilgrimage on the earth and fill their hearts with food and gladness with all those fruits of kindness which the womb of his Providence is still bringing forth for their benefit and advantage is thus far on the account of the Lord Christ that though these things as relating unto Reprobates are no part of his especial purchase as Mediator of the Everlasting Covenant of Grace yet they are a necessary consequent of his Interposition against the immediate Execution of the whole Curse up●●●he first entrance of sin and of his undertaking for his Elect. 2. He makes a Conquest over them It was promised that he should do so Gen. 3.15 and though the work it self prove long and irksome though the wayes of accomplishing it be unto us obscure and oftentimes invisible yet he hath undertaken it and will not give it over untill they are every one brought to be his Footstool Psalm 110.1 1 Cor. 15.25 And the Dominion granted him on these Grounds is 1. Soveraign and Absolute His enemies are his Footstool Psal. 110.2 Mat. 22.44 Mark 12.36 Luke 20.24 Acts 2.34 1 Cor. 15.25 Heb. 1.13 They are in his hand as the Aegyptians were in Joseph's when he had purchased both their persons and their Estates to be at arbitrary disposal And he deals with them as Joseph did with those so far as any of the Ends of his Rule and Lordship are concerned in them And 2. Judiciary Joh. 5.22 23. As he hath power over their Persons so he hath regard unto their sins Rom. 14.9 Acts 17.32 Matth. 25.31 And this power he variously exerciseth over them even in this World before he gloriously exerts it in their Eternal Ruine For 1. He enlightens them by those heavenly sparks of Truth and Reason which he leaves unextinguished in their own minds John 1.9 2. Strives with them by his Spirit Gen. 6.3 secretly exciting their consciences to rebuke bridle yoke afflict and cruciate them Rom. 2.14 15. And 3. On some of them he acts by the Power and Authority of his Word whereby he quickens their Consciences galls their Minds and Affections restrains their Lusts bounds their Conversations aggravates their sins hard●ns their Hearts and judges their souls Psal. 45. Isa. 6. 4. He exerciseth Rule and Dominion over them in Providential Dispensations Rev. 6.15 16. Isa. 63.1 2 3 4. Rev. 19.13 By all which he makes way for the Glory of his final Judgement of them Acts. 1.17 32. Matth. 25.31 Revel 19.20 Chap. 20.10 11 12 13 14 15. And all this will he do unto the Ends 1. Of his own Glory 2. His Churches good exercise and safety And this is the second instance of the first Head of the Dominion of Christ in this World he is Lord over Persons Angels and Men. II. The Second part of the Heirship and Dominion of Christ consisteth in his Lordship over all Things besides which added to the former comprize the whole Creation of God In the distribution of these premised the first that occur are Spiritual things which also are of two sorts 1. Temporal or such as in this life we are made partakers of and 2. Eternal the things that are reserved for them that believe in the State of Glory The former may be reduced unto two heads for they are all of them either Grace or Gifts and Christ is Lord of them all 1. All that which comes under the name of Grace in Scripture which flowing from the free and special Love of God tends directly to the Spiritual and Eternal Good of them on whom it is bestowed may be referred unto four heads For as the fountain of all these or the gracious free purposes of the Will of God from whence they all do flow being Antecedent to the Mission of Christ the Mediator and Immanent in God it can be no otherwise granted unto him but in respect of its Effects which we shall shew that it is Now these are 1. Pardon of sin and the free Acceptation of the Persons of sinners in a way of mercy This is Grace Ephes. 2.8 Tit. 3.5 7. And a saving Effect and fruit of the Covenant Jer. 31.31 32 33 34. Heb. 8.12 2. The Regenerating of the Person of a dead sinner with the purifying and sanctifying of his Nature in a way of Spiritual power This also is Grace and promised in the Covenant and there are three parts of it 1. The Infusion of a quickning Principle into the soul of a dead sinner Rom. 8.2 Tit. 3.5 Joh. 3.6 Ephes. 2.16 2. The Habitual furnishment of a spiritually quickned soul with abiding radical principles of Light Love and Power fitting it for Spiritual Obedience Gal. 5.17 3. Actual Assistance in a Communication of supplies of strength for every Duty and Work Phil. 1.13 John 15.3 3. Preservation in a Condition of Acceptation with God and holy Obedience unto him unto the End is also of Especial Grace It is the Grace of Perseverance and eminently included in the Covenant as we have elsewhere shewed at large 4. Adoption as a Priviledge with all the Priviledges that flow from it is also Grace Ephes. 1.5 6. All these with all those admirable and inexpressible mercies that they branch themselves into giving deliverance unto sinners from evil temporal and eternal raising them to Communion with God here and to the Enjoyment of him for ever hereafter are called Grace and do belong to the Lordship of Christ as he is Heir Lord and Possessor of them all All the stores of this Grace and Mercy that are in Heaven for sinners are given into his hand and resigned up to his Soveraign disposal as we shall intimate in general and particular 1. In General Col. 1.19 It pleased the Father that in him all fulness should dwell There is a fourfold fulness in Christ 1. Of the Deity in his Divine Nature Rom. 9.5 2. Of Vnion in his Person Col.
Apostol●cal Exhortation Covet the best gifts 1 Cor. 12.31 As first the gift of Wisdom and knowledge in the Word and Will of God 1 Cor. 12.8 1 Cor. 2.7 1 Tim. 3.15 1 Cor. 1.5 Secondly the gift of Ability to manage and improve this wisdom and knowledge to the edification of others Heb. 3.13 chap. 10.25 Rom. 15.14 1 Thes. 5.11 Thirdly of Prayer And many more might be added of the like usefulness and importance IV. 3. To close our considerations of this part of the Lordship of Christ there remains only that we shew him to be the Lord of all Spiritual Eternal things which in one word we call Glory He is himself the Lord of glory 2 Cor. 2.4 and the Judge of all Joh. 5.25 In the discharge of which Office he gives out Glory as a Reward unto his followers Matth. 25.32 Rom. 14.10 Glory is the reward that is with him which he will give out at the last day as a Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Joh. 17.2 And to this end that he might be Lord of it he hath 1 purchased it Heb. 9.12 Eph. 1.14 Heb. 2.10 2 Taken actual possession of it in his own Person Luke 24.25 Joh. 17.5 22 24. And that 3 as the fore-runner on whom he will bestow it Heb. 9.20 And this is a short view of the Lordship of Christ as to things Spiritual V. Ecclesiastical things or things that concern Church Institutions Rule and Power belong also unto his Rule and Dominion He is the only Head Lord Ruler and Law-giver of his Church There was a Church state ever since God created man on the earth and there is the same reason of it in all its alterations as unto its Relation to the Lord Christ. What ever changes it under-went still Christ was the Lord of it and of all its concernments But by way of instance and eminency we may consider the Mosaical Church state under the old Testament and the Evangelical Church state under the New Christ is Lord of and in respect unto them both 1. He was the Lord of the Old Testament Church state and he exercised his Power and Lordship towards it four ways 1. In and by its Institution and Erection he made framed set up and appointed that Church state and all the Worship of God therein observed He it was who appeared unto Moses in the Wilderness Exod. 3.5 Act. 7.32 33. and who gave them the Law on M●unt Sinai Exod. 20 Psal. 68.17 Ephes. 4.8 and continued with them in the Wilderness Numb 21.6 1 Cor. 10.9 So that from him his Power and Authority was the Institution and Erection of that Church 2. By prescribing a complete Rule and form of Worship and obedience unto it being erected as its Law-giver to which nothing might be add●d Deut. 7.4 12 32. 3. By way of Reformation when it was collapsed and decayed Zech. 2.8 9 10 11 12 13. Ma● 3 1 2 3. 4. By way of Amotion or taking down what he himself had set up because it was so framed and ordered as to continue only for a season Heb. 9.10 Deut. 18.16 17 18. Hag. 2 6 7. Isa. 65.17 18. 2 Pet. 3.13 Which part of his Power and Lordship we shall a●terwards abundantly prove against the Jews 2. Of the New Testament Evangelical Church state also he is the only Lord and Ruler yea this is his proper Kingdom on which all other parts of his Dominion do depend for he is given to be head over a●l things unto the Church Ephes. 1.22 For 1. He is the foundation of this Church state 1 Cor. 3.11 the whole design and plat-form of it being laid in him and built upon him And 2. He erects this Church-State upon himself Matth. 16.18 I will build my Church the Spirit and Word whereby it is done being from him alone and ordered in and by his Wisdom Power and Care And 3. He gives Laws and Rules of Worship and Obedience unto it when so built by himself and upon himself Matth. 28.18 Acts 1.2 Heb. 3.2 3 4 5 6. And 4. Is the everlasting constant abiding Head Ruler King and Governour of it Eph. 1.22 Col. 2.19 Heb. 3.6 Rev. 2.3 All which things are ordinarily spoken unto and the ends of this Power of Christ fully declared VI. He is Lord also of Political things All the Governments of the world that are set up and exercised therein for the good of mankind and the preservation of Society according to Rules of Equity and Righteousness over all these and those who in and by them exercise Rule and Authority amongst men is he Lord and King He alone is the absolute Potentate the Highest on the earth are in a subordination unto him That 1. He was designed unto Psal. 89.27 And accordingly he is 2. Made Lord of Lords and King of Kings Rev. 17.14 Chap. 19.16 1 Tim. 6.15 And 3. He exerciseth dominion answerable unto his Title Rev. 6.16 Chap. 17.14 Chap. 18.16 17 18 19 20. Psal. 2.8 9. Isa. 60. Mich. 5.7 8 9. And 4. Hath hence right to send his Gospel into all Nations in the world attended with the worship by him prescribed Matth. 28.18 Psal. 2.9 10 11 12. which none of the Rulers or Governours of the world have any right to refuse or oppose nor can so do but upon their utmost peril And 5. All Kingdoms shall at length be brought into a professed subjection to him and his Gospel and have all their Rule disposed of unto the interest of his Church and Saints Dan. 7.27 Isa. 60.12 Rev. 19.16 17 18 19. VII The last branch of this Dominion of Christ consists in the Residue of the Creation of God Heaven and Earth Sea and Land Wind Trees and fruits of the earth and the Creatures of sense as they are all put under his feet Psal. 8.7 8. Ephes. 1.22 1 Cor. 15.27 So the exercise of his power severally over them is known from the story of the Gospel And thus we have glanced at this Lordship of Christ in some of the general parts of it And how small a portion of his glorious power are we able to comprehend or declare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By whom also he made the worlds The Apostle in these words gives further strength to his present Argument from another Consideration of the Person of the Messiah wherein he also discovers the foundation of the Preheminence ascribed unto him in the words last insisted on By him the worlds were made so that they were his own Joh. 1.11 and it was meet that in the new condition which he underwent that he should be the Lord of them all Moreover if all things be made by him all disobedience unto him is certainly most unreasonable and will be attended with inevitable ruine of the Truth whereof the Apostle aims to convince the Hebrews Now whereas the Assertion which presents its self at first view in these words is such as if we rightly apprehend the meaning of the Holy Ghost in it must needs determine the Controversie
by him as incarnate that the Suitableness and Correspondency of all things in them might be evident The Word was with God saith he in the beginning and all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made v. 1 2 3. But what was this unto the Gospel that he undertook to declare Yes very much for it appears from hence that when this Word was made flesh and came and dwelt among us v. 14. that he came into the world that was made by him though it knew him not v. 10. he came but to his own what ever were the entertainment that he receeived v. 11. For this End then God made all things by him that when he came to change and renew all things he might have good right and title so to do seeing he undertook to deal with or about no more but what he had originally made The Holy and Blessed Trinity could have so ordered the work of Creation as that it should not immediately eminently and signally have been the work of the Son of the Eternal Word But there was a farther design upon the world to be accomplished by him and therefore the work was signally to be his that is as to immediate Operation though as to Authority and Order it peculiarly belonged to the Father and to the Spirit as to Disposition and Ornament Gen. 1.2 Job 26.13 This I say was done for the End mentioned by the Apostle Ephes. 1.10 All things at first were made by him that when they were lost ruined scattered they might again in the appointed season be gathered together into one head in him of which place more at large else-where And this mysterie of the Wisdom of God the Apostle at large unfoldeth Col. 1.15 16 17 18 19. Speaking of the Son by whom we have Redemption he informs us that in himself and his own nature he is the Image of the invisible God that is of God the Father who until then had alone been clearly revealed unto them and that in respect of other things he is the first-born of every creature or as he terms himself Rev. 3.14 the Beginning of the creation of God that is he who is before all creatures and gave Beginning to the Creation of God For so expresly the Apostle explains himself in the next verses By him all things were created that are in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible whether they be thrones or dominions or principalities or powers all things were created by him and he is before all things and by him all things consist But this is not the full design of the Apostle He declares not only that All things were made by him but also that All things were made for him v. 16. so made for him that he might be the Head of the Body the Church that is that he might be the fountain head spring and original of the new Creation as he had been of the Old So the Apostle declares in the next words Who is the beginning the first-born from the dead As he was the Beginning and the First-b●rn of every creature in the old Creation so he is the Beginning and First-born from the dead that is the Original and Cause of the whole new Creation And hereunto he subjoyns the End and design of God in this whole mysterious work which was that the Son might have the preheminence in all things as he had in and over the works of the old Creation seeing they were all made by him and all consist in him so also he hath over the New on the same account being the Beginning and First-born of them The Apostle in these words gives us the whole of what we intend namely that the making of the worlds and of all things in them in the first Creation by the Son was peculiarly subservient to the Glory of the Grace of God in the Reparation and Renovation of all things by him as incarnate It is not for us to enquire much into or after the reason of this Oeconomy and Dispensation we cannot by searching find out God we cannot find out the Almighty unto perfection Job 11.7 It may suffice us that he disposeth of all things according to the counsel of his own will Ephes. 1.12 This Antecedently unto the consideration of the Effects of it we cannot we may not search into Deut. 29.29 What are the Effects and Consequences of his infinitely holy wise Counsel wherein his Glory shines forth unto his Creatures those we may consider and contemplate on and rejoyce in the light that they will afford us into the treasures of these counsels themselves Now herein we see first that it was the Eternal Design of God that the whole Creation should be put in subjection unto the Word incarnate whereof the Apostle also treats in the second Chapter of this Epistle God hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father Phil. 2.9 10 11. God hath put all things in subjection unto him not only the things peculiarly redeemed by him but all things what ever as we shall shew in the next words of our Epistle See 1 Cor. 15 24. Heb. 2.8 Rom. 14.11 Hence John saw every creature which is in heaven and earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea even all that are in them ascribing blessing and honour and glory and power unto the Lamb for ever and ever Rev. 5.13 that is owning and avowing their Duty Obedience and Subjection unto him This being designed of God in the Eternal Counsel of his Will before the world was 1 Pet. 1.2 Tit. 1.2 He prepared and made way for it in the Creation of all things by him so that his Title and right to be the Ruler and Lord of all Angels and Men the whole Creation in and of Heaven and Earth might be laid in this great and blessed foundation that he made them all Again God designed from Eternity that his great and everlasting Glory should arise from the new Creation and the work thereof Herein hath he ordered all things to the praise of the glory of his grace Ephes. 1.6 And this praise will he inhabit for ever It is true the works of the old Creation did set forth the glory of God Psal. 19.1 they manifested his eternal power and Godhead Rom. 1.20 But God had not resolved ultimately to commit the manifestation of his glory unto those works though very glorious and therefore did he suffer sin to enter into the world which stained the beauty of it and brought it wholly under the curse But he never suffered spot nor stain to come upon the work of the new Creation Ephes. 5.6 nothing that might defeat eclipse or impair the glory that
his own likeness and Image are hereby made partakers of such inestimable Benefits as indispensably call for rejoycing in a way of Thankfulness and Gratitude This the whole Gospel declares and therefore it needs not our particular improvement in this place And if this be the duty of the whole Creation it is easie to discern in what a special manner it is incumbent on them that believe whose Benefit Advantage and Glory was principally intended in this whole work of God Should they be found wanting in this Duty God might as of old call Heaven and Earth to witness against them Yea Thankfulness to God for the bringing forth of the first-born into the world is the summ and substance of all that Obedience which God requires at the hands of believers IV. The Command of God is the ground and Reason of all Religious Worship The Angels are to worship the Lord Christ the Mediator and the ground of their so doing is Gods command he saith Worship him all ye Angels Now the command of God is twofold 1. Formal and vocal when God gives out a Law or Precept unto any creature superadded to the Law of its Creation Such was the Command given unto our first Parents in the Garden concerning the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil and such were all the Laws Precepts and Institutions which he afterwards gave unto his Church with those which to this day continue as the Rule and Reason of their Obedience 2. Real and interpretative consisting in an impression of the Mind and Will of God upon the nature of his creatures with respect unto that Obedience which their state condition and dependance on him requireth The very nature of an intellectual Creature made for the Glory of God and placed in a moral dependance upon him and subjection unto him hath in it the force of a Command as to the Worship and Service that God requireth at their hands But this Law in man being blotted weakned impaired through sin God hath in mercy unto us collected drawn forth and disposed all the Directions and Commands of it in vocal formal Precepts recorded in his Word whereunto he hath superadded sundry new Commands in the Institutions of his Worship Wi●h Angels it is otherwise The ingrafted Law of their Creation requiring of them the Worship of God and Obedience to his whole Will is kept and preserved entire so that they have no need to have it repeated and expressed in vocal formal Commands And by vertue of this Law were they obliged to constant and everlasting Worship of the Eternal Son of God as being created and upheld in an universal dependance upon him But now when God brings forth his Son into the world and placeth him in a new condition of being incarnate and becoming so the Head of his Church there is a new Modification of the Worship that is due to him brought in and a new respect unto things not considered in the first creation With reference hereunto God gives a new Command unto the Angels for that peculiar kind of Worship and Honour which is due unto him in that state and condition which he had taken upon himself This the Law of their Creation in general directed them unto but in particular required not of them It enjoyned the Worship of the Son of God in every condition but that condition was not expressed This God supplies by a new Command That is such an Intimation of his Mind and Will unto them as answers unto a vocal Command given unto men who by that means only may come to know the Will of God Thus in one way or other Command is the Ground and Cause of all Worship For 1. All Worship is Obedience Obedience respects Authority and Authority exerts it self in Commands And if this Authority be not the Authority of God the Worship performed in Obedience unto it is not the Worship of God but of him or them whose Commands and Authority are the Reason and cause of it It is the Authority of God alone that can make any Worship to be religious or the performance of it to be an Act of Obedience unto him 2. God would never allow that the Will and Wisdom of any of his Creatures should be the rise Rule or measure of his Worship or any part of it or any thing that belongs unto it This Honour he hath reserved unto himself neither will he part with it unto any other He alone knows what becomes his own Greatness and Holiness and what tends to the Advancement of his Glory Hence the Scripture abounds with severe Interdictions and Comminations against them who shall presume to do or appoint any thing in his Worship besides or beyond his own Institution 3. All Prescriptions of Worship are vain where men have not strength to perform it in a due manner nor Assurance of Acceptance when it is performed Now both these are and must be from God alone nor doth he give strength and ability for any thing in his Worship but what himself commands nor doth he promise to accept any thing but what is of his own Appointment so that it is the greatest folly imaginable to undertake any thing in his Worship and Service but what his Appointment gives warrant for And this should teach us in all that we have to do in the Worship of God carefully to look after his word of Command and Institution Without this all that we do is lost as being no Obedience unto God Yea it is an open setting up of our own Wills and Wisdom against him and that in things of his own especial concernment which is intolerable boldness and presumption Let us deal thus with our Rulers amongst men and obey them not according to their Laws but our own fancies and see whether they will accept our persons And is the Great and Holy God less to be regarded besides what we have our own Inventions or the Commands of other men as the ground and reason of our doing it we have nothing but our own or their warranty for its Acceptance with God and how far this will secure us is easie to judge We might hence also farther observe V. That the Mediator of the New Covenant is in his own Person God blessed for ever to whom Divine or Religious Worship is due from the Angels themselves As also that VI. The Father upon the account of the Work of Christ in the World and his Kingdom that ensued it gives a new Commandment unto the Angels to Worship him his Glory being greatly concerned therein And that VII Great is the Churches security and Honour when the Head of it is worshipped by all the Angels in Heaven as also that VIII It can be no duty of the Saints of the New Testament to worship Angels who are their fellow servants in the worship of Jesus Christ. Verse VII HAving in one Testimony from the Scripture expressing the subjection of Angels unto the Lord Christ signally proved his main Design
Promises 1. That his Kingdom shall not be like the Kingdoms of the earth obnoxious to change and mutation by intestine divisions or outward force or secret decayes by which means all the Kingdoms of the earth have been ruined and brought to nought In Opposition hereunto the Kingdom of Christ is asserted to be perpetual as that which no Opposition shall ever prevail against no means ever impair which yet hinders not but that a day may be prefixed unto its end 2. The Continuance of it unto the total full Accomplishment of all that is to be performed in it or by it in the Eternal Salvation of all his subjects and final Destruction of all his Enemies is in these and the like places foretold but yet when that work is done that Kingdom and Rule of his may have an end And in this sense the Term of Limitation here expressed seems to be expounded by the Apostle 1 Cor. 15.24 At the end he shall deliver up the Kingdom unto God the Father For although those words may admit of another Interpretation namely that he shall give up an account unto the Father of the accomplishment of the whole work committed unto him as King of his Church which he may do and not cease from holding the same Kingdom still yet as they are further interpreted by the Sons coming into a new subjection unto the Father that God may be all in all as v. 28. They seem to imply directly the ceasing of his Kingdom Though this matter be not indeed without its Difficulty yet the different Opinions about it seem capable of a fair Reconciliation which we shall attempt in the ensuing Proposals 1. The Lord Christ as the Son of God shall unto all Eternity continue in the Essential and Natural Dominion over all Creatures and they in their dependance upon him and subjection unto him He can no more divest himself of that Dominion and Kingdom than he can cease to be God Suppose the being of any creatures and that subjection unto him which is the Rise of this Kingdom is natural and indispensible 2. As to the Oeconomical Kingdom of Christ over the Church and all things in order unto the protection and salvation thereof the immediate Ends of it will cease All his Saints being saved all his Sons brought unto Glory all his Enemies subdued the End of that Rule which consisted in the Guidance and Preservation of the one in the Restraint and Ruine of the other must necessarily cease 3. The Lord Christ shall not so leave his Kingdom at the last day as that the Father should take upon himself the Administration of it Upon the giving up of his Kingdom what ever it be the Apostle doth not say the Father shall Rule or raign as though he should exercise the same Kingdom but that God shall be all in all that is God the Father Son and Holy Ghost without the use or intervention of such wayes or means as were in use before during the full continuance of the dispensatory Kingdom of Christ shall fill and satisfie all his Saints support and dispose of the remnant Creation 4. This ceasing of the Kingdom of Christ is no way derogatory unto his Glory or the perpetuity of his Kingdom no more than his ceasing to intercede for his people is to that perpetuty of his Priesthood which he hath by Oath confirmed unto him His Prophetical Office also seems to cease when he shall teach his people no more by his Word and Spirit 5. In three respects the Kingdom of Christ may be said to abide unto Eternity First In that all his Saints and Angels shall eternally adore and worship him on the account of the Glory which he hath received as the King and Head of the Church and be filled with joy in beholding of him Joh. 17.22 24. Secondly In that all the Saints shall abide in their state of Vnion unto God through him as their Head God communicating of his fulness to them through him which will be his eternal Glory when all his Enemies shall be his Footstool Thirdly In that as the Righteous Judge of all he shall to all Eternity continue the punishment of his Adversaries And this is the last Testimony insisted on by the Apostle to prove the preheminence of Christ above Angels and consequently above all that were used or employed of old in the Disposition and Administration of the Law which was the thing he had undertaken to make good And therefore in the close of this Chapter having denyed that any of these things are spoken concerning Angels he shuts up all with a Description of their Nature and Office such as was then known and received among the Jewes before the consideration whereof we must draw out from what hath been insisted on some Observations for our own Instruction which are these that follow I. The Authority of God the Father in the Exaltation of Jesus Christ as the Head and Mediator of the Church is greatly to be regarded by Believers He sayes unto him sit thou at my right hand Much of the consolation and security of the Church depends on this consideration II. The Exaltation of Christ is the great pledge of the Acceptation of the work of Mediation performed in the behalf of the Church Now saith God sit thou at my right hand the Work is done wherein my soul is well pleased III. Christ hath many Enemies unto his Kingdom saith God I will deal with all of them IV. The Kingdom and Rule of Christ is perpetual and abiding notwithstanding all the Opposition that is made against it His Enemies rage indeed as though they would pull him out of his Throne but altogether in vain He hath the Faithfulness and Power the Word and Right hand of God for the security of his Kingdom V. The end whereunto the Lord Jesus Christ will assuredly bring all his Enemies let them bluster whilest they please shall be unto them miserable and shameful to the Saints joyful to himself victorious and triumphant It is the Administration of the Kingdom of Christ in the world that this Truth principally respects Great is the enmity of this world against it great the Opposition that is and hath alwayes been made unto it But this will be the assured issue of it Ruine to the Enemies Joy to the Saints Glory to Christ. This is that which is typed unto us in the Prophesie of Gog. That Prophesie is a Recapitulation of all the Enmity that is acted in the world against the interest of Christ. What his Counsel is the Prophet declares Ezek. 38.11 I will go up to the Land of unwalled Villages I will go up to them that are at rest that dwell safely all of them dwelling without walls and having neither bars nor gates They look upon the Church of Christ as a feeble people that hath no visible Power or Defence and therefore easie to be destroyed this encourageth them to their work who or what can deliver them out of
by every lazie passenger on the surface of the earth they must dig seek and search who intend to be made partakers of them and they do so accordingly And so must we do for these treasures of heavenly wisdom The mystery of the grace of the Gospel is great and deep such as the Angels desire to bow down and look into 1 Pet. 1.12 which the Prophets of old notwithstanding the advantage of their own especial Revelations enquired diligently after verse 11. Whereas now if any pretend though falsly to a Revelation they have immediately done with the Word as that which by the deceit of their imaginations they think beneath them when indeed it is only distant from them and is really above them As if a man should stand on tip-toe on a mole-hill and despise the Sun appearing newly above the Horizon as one beneath him Diligent sedulous searching into the Word belongs unto this heeding of it Psal. 1.1 Or a labouring by all appointed means to become acquainted with it wise in the mystery of it and skilled in its doctrine Without this no man will hold fast his profession Nor doth any man neglect the Gospel but he that knows it not 2 Cor. 4.3 4. This is the great principle of Apostasie in the world men have owned the Gospel but never knew what it was and therefore leave the profession of it foolishly as they took it up lightly Studying of the Word is the security of our faith 3. Mixing the Word with faith is required in this attention See chap. 4.2 As good not hear as not believe Believing is the end of hearing Rom. 10.11 And therefore Lydia's faith is called her attention Acts 16.14 This is the life of heeding the Word without which all other exercise about it is but a dead carcase To hear and not believe is in spiritual life what to see meat and not to eat is in the natural it will please the fancy but will never nourish the soul. Faith alone realizeth the things spoken unto the heart and gives them subsistence in it Heb. 11.1 without which as to us they flow up and down in loose and uncertain notions This then is the principal part of our duty in heeding the things spoken for it gives entrance to them into the soul without which they are poured upon it as water upon a stick that is fully dry 4. Labouring to express the Word received in a conformity of heart and life unto it is another part of this Attention This is the next proper end of our hearing And to do a thing appointed unto an End without aiming at that End is no better than the not doing it at all in some cases much worse The Apostle says of the Romans that they were cast into the mould of the doctrine of the Gospel chap. 6.13 It left upon their hearts an impression of its own likeness or produced in them the express image of that Holiness Purity and Wisdom which it revealeth This is to behold with open face the glory of the Lord in a glass and to be changed into the same image 2 Cor. 4.18 that is the image of the Lord Christ manifested unto us and reflected upon us by and in the glass of the Gospel When the heart of the hearer is quickned enlivened spirited with Gospel truths and by them is moulded and fashioned into their likeness and expresseth that likeness in its fruits or a Conversation becoming the Gospel then is the Word attended unto in a right manner This will secure the Word a station in our hearts and give it a permanent abode in us This is the Indwelling of the Word whereof there are many degrees and we ought to aim that it should be plentiful 5. Watchfulness against all opposition that is made either against the Truth or Power of the Word in us belongs also unto this duty And as these Oppositions are many so ought this Watchfulness to be great and diligent And these things have we added for the further Explication of the Duty that is pressed on us by the Apostle the necessity whereof for the preservation of the truth in our hearts and minds will further appear in the ensuing Observation II. There are sundry times and seasons wherein and several ways and means whereby men are in danger to lose the word that they have heard if they attend not diligently unto its preservation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at any time or by any way or means This our Saviour teacheth us at large in the Parable of the Seed which was retained but in one sort of ground of those four whereinto it was cast Matth. 13. And this the experience of all Times and Ages confirmeth Yea few there are at any time who keep the Word heard as they ought We may briefly name the Seasons wherein and the Ways whereby the hearts and minds of men are made as leaking vessels to pour out and lose the Word that they have heard 1. Some lose it in a time of Peace and Prosperity That is a season which slays the foolish Jesurun waxes sat and kicks According to mens pastures they are filled and forget the Lord. They feed their lusts high until they loath the Word Quails often make a lean soul. A prosperous outward estate hath ruined many a Conviction from the Word yea and weakened faith and obedience in many of the Saints themselves The warmth of Prosperity breeds swarms of Apostates as the heat of the Sun doth Insects in the Spring 2. Some lose it in a time of persecution When persecution ariseth saith our Saviour they fall away Many go on apace in profession until they come to see the Cross this fight puts them to a stand and then turns them quite out of the way They thought not of it and do not like it We know what havock this hath made amongst Professors in all Ages and commonly where it destroys the Bodies of ten it destroys the Souls of an hundred This is the season wherein Stars fall from the Firmament in reference whereunto innumerable are the Precepts for Watchfulness Wisdom Patience Enduring that are given us in the Gospel 3. Some lose it in a time of trial by temptation it pleaseth God in his Wisdom and Grace to suffer sometimes an hour of temptation to come forth upon the world upon the Church in the world for their trial Rev. 3.10 And he doth it that his own thereby may be made conformable unto their Head Jesus Christ who had his especial hour of temptation Now in such a season temptation worketh variously according as men are exposed unto it or as God seeth meet that they should be tried by it Every thing that such days abound withall shall have in it the force of a temptation And the usual effect of this work is that it brings Professors into a slumber Matth 25.5 In this state many utterly lose the Word They have been cast into a negligent slumber by the secret power and efficacy
not put in subjection unto Angels in its Erection or Institution That work was not committed unto them as the Apostle declares in the entrance of this Epistle They did not reveal the Will of God concerning it nor were intrusted with Authority to erect it Some of them indeed were employed in messages about its preparatory work but they were not employed either to reveal the mysteries of it wherewith they were unacquainted nor authoritatively in the Name of God to erect it For the Wisdom of God in the nature and mystery of this work they knew not but by the effects in the work it self Ephes. 3.9 10. which they looked and enquired into to learn and admire 1 Pet. 1.12 and therefore could not be intrusted with authority for its Revelation and the building of the Church thereon But things were otherwise of old The Law which was the foundation of the Judaical Church-state was given by the Disposition of Angels Acts 7.53 Gal. 3.19 And our Apostle here calls it the Word spoken by Angels They were therefore intrusted by God to give the Law and the Ordinances of it unto the people in his Name and Authority which being the foundation of the Mosaical Church-state it was so far put in subjection unto them Secondly It is not put in subjection unto Angels as to the Rule and disposal of it being erected Their Office in this world is a Ministery chap. 1.13 not a Rule or Dominion Rule in or over the Church they have none but are brought into a co-ordination of service with them that have the testimony of Jesus Rev. 19.10 chap. 22.9 being equally with us subjected unto him in whom they and we are gathered into one head Ephes. 1.10 And from their ministerial presence in the Congregations of Believers doth our Apostle press women unto modesty and sobriety in their habit and deportment 1 Cor. 11.10 And the Church of old had an apprehension of this truth of the presence of an Angel or Angels in their Assemblies but so as to preside in them Hence is that caution relating to the Worship of God Eccles. 5.5 6. Better it is that thou shouldst not vow than thou shouldest vow and not pay suffer not thy mouth to cause thy flesh to sin neither say thou before the Angel that it was an errour why should God be angry at thy voice and destroy the work of thine hands By vowing and not paying a man brought upon his flesh that is himself and his posterity a guilt not to be taken away with excuses of haste or precipitation made unto the Angel presiding in their Worship to take an account of its due performance It is true the absolute sovereign power over the Church of old was in the Son of God alone but an especial immediate power over it was committed unto Angels And hence was the Name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God Judge Mighty One communicated unto them namely from their Authority over the Church that Name expressing the Authority of God when unto him ascribed And because of this their acting in the Name and representing the Authority of God the Saints of old had an apprehension that upon their seeing of an Angel they should die from that saying of God that none should see his face and live Exod. 33.20 So Manoah expresly Judg. 13.22 He knew that it was an Angel which appeared unto him and yet says to his wife We shall surely die because we have seen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Angel vested with the Authority of God And hence it is not unlikely but that there might be a respect or Worship due unto the Angels under the Old Testament which themselves declare not to be meet for them under the New Rev. 19. not that they are degraded from any Excellency or Priviledge which before they enjoyed but that the Worshippers under the New Testament through their Relation unto Christ and the Exaltation of their nature in his Person are delivered from that under-age estate wherein they differed not from servants Gal. 4.1 and are advanced into an equality of liberty with the Angels themselves Heb. 12.24 25. Ephes. 1.10 chap. 3.14 15. As amongst men there may be a respect due from an inferiour to a superiour which may cease when he is advanced into the same condition with the other though the superiour be not at all abased And to this day the Jews contend that Angels are to be adored with some kind of Adoration though they expresly deny that they are to be invocated or prayed unto Furthermore about their Power and Authority in the disposal of the outward concernments of the Church of old much more might be declared from the Visions of Zechary and Daniel with their works in the two great typical deliverances of it from Aegypt and Babylon But we must not here insist on particulars Thirdly as to the power of judging and rewarding at the last day it is openly manifest that God hath not put this world to come in subjection unto Angels but unto Jesus alone This then is the main Proposition that the Apostle proceeds upon in his present Argument The most glorious effect of the Wisdom Power and Grace of God and that wherein all our spiritual concernments here are enwrapped consists in that blessed Church state with the eternal consequences of it which having been promised from the foundation of the world was now to be erected in the days of the Messiah That you may saith he no more cleave unto your old institutions because given out unto you by Angels nor hearken after such works of wonder and terrour as attended their Disposition of the Law in the Wilderness consider that this world so long expected and desired this blessed estate is not on any account made subject unto Angels or committed unto their disposal the Honour thereof being entirely reserved for another Having thus fixed the true and proper sense of this verse we may stop here a little to consult the Observations that it offers for our own instruction Many things in particular might be hence educed but I shall insist on one only which is comprehensive of the design of the Apostle and it is That This is the great priviledge of the Church of the Gospel that in the things of the Worship of God it is made subject unto and immediately depends upon the Lord Jesus Christ and not any other Angels or Men. That this is the priviledge thereof and that it is a great and blessed priviledge will both appear in our consideration of what it is and wherein it doth consist And among many other things these ensuing are contained therein 1. That the Lord Christ is our Head So it was promised of old that their King should pass before them and the Lord on the head of them Mic. 2.13 He shall be their King Head and Ruler God hath now gathered all things all the things of his Church into an Head in Christ Ephes. 1.10 They were all scattered and
go against their Convictions But the mind that was in Christ will lead us unto it out of Love unto him with freedom and enlargedness of heart which is required of us III. The blessed issue of the abasement of Jesus Christ in his exaltation unto honour and glory is an assured pledge of the final glory and blessedness of all that believe in him what ever difficulties and dangers they may be exercised withal in the way His Humiliation and Exaltation as we have seen proceeded out of Gods condescension and love to mankind His Electing Love the eternal gracious purpose of his Will to recover lost sinners and to bring them unto the enjoyment of himself was the ground of this dispensation And therefore what he hath done in Christ is a certain pledge of what he will do in and for them also He is not crowned with Honour and Glory meerly for himself but that he may be a Captain of Salvation and bring others unto a Participation of his Glory IV. Jesus Christ as the Mediator of the New Covenant hath absolute and supream authority given unto him over all the works of God in Heaven and Earth This we have so fully manifested and insisted on upon the foregoing Chapter that we shall not here farther pursue it but only mind by the way that blessed is the state and condition great is the spiritual and eternal security of the Church seeing all things are under the very feet of its Head and Saviour V. The Lord Jesus Christ is the only Lord of the Gospel state of the Church called under the Old Testament the world to come and therefore he only hath Power to dispose of all things in it relating unto that Worship of God which it is to perform and celebrate It is not put into subjection unto any other Angels or men This priviledge was reserved for Christ this honour is bestowed on the Church He is the only Head King and Law-giver of it and nothing is it to be taught to observe or do but what he hath commanded But this will fall more directly under our consideration in the beginning of the next Chapter VI. The Lord Jesus Christ in his death did undergo the poenal sentence of the Law in the room and stead of them for whom he dyed Death was that which by the sentence of the Law was due unto sin and sinners For them did Christ dye and therein tasted of the bitterness of that death which they were to have undergone or else the fruit of it could not have redounded untô them for what was it towards their discharge if that which they had deserved was not suffered but somewhat else wherein the least part of their concernment did lye But this being done certain deliverance and salvation will be the lot and portion of them of all them for whom he dyed and that upon the rules of Justice and righteousness on the part of Christ though on theirs of meer Mercy and Grace Verse X. THE Apostle in the Verses fore-going made mention of that which of all other things the Jews generally were most offended at and which was of the greatest importance to be believed namely the sufferings of the Messiah wherein a great part of the discharge of his Sacerdotal Office whereunto he here makes a Transition did consist This his own Disciples were slow in the belief of Matth. 16.22 chap. 17.22 23. Luke 24.25 26. and the Jews generally stumbled at They thought it strange that the Messiah the Son of God the Saviour of his people and Captain of their salvation concerning whom so great and glorious things were promised and foretold should be brought into a low despised condition and therein to suffer and die Hence they cried unto him on the Cross If thou be the Christ come down and save thy self intimating that by his suffering he was assuredly proved not to be so for why any one should suffer that could deliver himself they saw no reason Besides they had inveterate prejudices about the Salvation promised by the Messiah and the way whereby it was to be wrought arising from their love and over-valuation of temporal or carnal things with their contempt of things spiritual and eternal They expected a deliverance outward glorious and Kingly in this world and that to be wrought with Arms Power and a mighty hand And what should they expect from a Messiah that suffered and died Wherefore the Apostle having asserted the sufferings of Christ saw it necessary to proceed unto a full confirmation of it with a declaration of the Reasons Causes and Ends of it partly to evert that false perswasion which prevailed amongst them about the nature of the salvation to be wrought by Christ partly to shew that nothing would thence ensue derogatory unto what he had before delivered about his preheminence above Angels but principally to instruct them in the Sacerdotal Office of the Messiah the Redemption which he wrought and the means whereby he accomplished it which was the great business that he had designed to treat with them about For the Salvation it self he declares that it was not to be of the same kind with that which they had of old when they were brought out of Egypt and setled in the Land of Canaan under the conduct of Joshua but spiritual and heavenly in a deliverance from sin Sathan death and hell with a manuduction into life and blessedness eternal The way whereby this was to be wrought he informs them that it was to be by the sufferings and death of the Messiah and that no other way it could be accomplished on which account they were indispensibly necessary And the first reason hereof he expresseth in this tenth verse Verse 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 One or two Copies read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against the sense and design of the place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is needlesly repeated unless put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then it disturbs the whole meaning of the verse and is inconsistent with the passive Verb following in this Reading 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the singular number relates only unto death expressed in the verse foregoing by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but here All the sufferings of Christ as well those antecedent unto death as death it self are intended 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Passive is followed by some Copies of the Vulgar Translation reading consummari both inconsistent with the sense of the place as we shall see Translations differ but little about these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 most Decebat enim cum For it became him Beza Decebat enim ut iste For it was meet that he to make the following words flow regularly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propter quem omnia Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cui omnia for whom are all things Beza Propter quem sunt haec omnia expressing the Article as restrictive to the things spoken of For whom are all these things One Syriack Copy
of all his Eternal Excellencies in bringing his Sons unto the everlasting Enjoyment of him Now nothing of all this could have been made known unless the Lord Christ had taken upon him to preach the Gospel and declare the name of God Without this what ever else he had done or suffered had been lost as unto the interest of the glory of God This then being that which he principally aymed at this design must needs be greatly in his mind He took care that so great Glory built on so great a foundation as his Incarnation and Mediation should not be lost His other work was necessary but this was a Joy of heart and soul unto him Secondly The Salvation of the Sons to be brought unto glory with all their Interest in the Benefit of his sufferings depended on this work of his How much he sought that his whole work declares For their sakes it was that he came down from Heaven and was made flesh and dwelt amongst them for their sakes did he undergo all the miseries that the world could cast upon him for their sakes did he undergo the Curse of the Law and wrestle with the Displeasure and Wrath of God against sin And all this seemed as it were little unto him for the love he bar● them as Jacobs hard service did to him for his love unto Rachel Now after he had done all this for them unless he had declared the Name of God unto them in the Gospel they could have had no Benefit by it For if they believe not they cannot be saved And how should they believe without the word and how or whence could they hear the word unless it had been preached unto them They could not of themselves have known any thing of that name of God which is their life and salvation Some men talk of I know not what Declaration of Gods Name Nature and Glory by the works of Nature and Providence but if the Lord Christ had not indeed revealed declared and preached these things these Disputers themselves would not have been in any other Condition than all mankind is who are left unto those Teachers which is most dark and miserable The Lord Christ knew that without his performance of this work not one of the Sons the conduct of whom to glory he had undertaken could ever have been brought unto the knowledge of the name of God or unto faith in him or obedience unto him which made him earnestly and heartily engage into it Thirdly Hereon depended his own Glory also His Elect were to be gathered unto him in among and over them was his glorious Kingdom to be erected Without their Conversion unto God this could not be done In the state of nature they also are children of Wrath and belong to the Kingdom of Satan And this Declaration of the name of God is the great Way and means of their Calling Conversion and Translating from the power of Satan into his Kingdom The Gospel is the Rod of his strength whereby his people are made willing in the day of his power In brief the gathering of his Church the setting up of his Kingdom the establishment of his Throne the setting of the Crown upon his head depend wholly on his declaring the name of God in the preaching of the Gospel Seeing therefore that the glory of God which he aimed at the salvation of the Sons which he sought for and the Honour of his Kingdom which was promised unto him do all depend on this Work it is no wonder if his Heart were full of it and that he rejoyced to be engaged in it And this Frame of heart ought to be in them who under him are called unto this work The work it self we see is noble and excellent such as the Lord Christ carried in his Eye through all his sufferings as that whereby they were to be rendered useful unto the glory of God and the souls of men And by his Rejoycing to be engaged in it he hath set a Pattern unto them whom he calls to the same Employment Where men undertake it for filthy lucre for self Ends and carnal Respects this is not to follow the Example of Christ nor to serve him but their own bellies Zeal for the glory of God Compassion for the souls of men Love to the Honour and Exaltation of Christ ought to be the principles of men in this undertaking Moreover the Lord Christ by declaring that he will set forth the praise of God in the Church manifests what is the Duty of the Church it self namely to praise God for the work of his Love and Grace in our Redemption by Christ Jesus This he promiseth to go before them in and what he leads them unto is by them to be persisted in This is indeed the very End of gathering the Church and of all the Duties that are performed therein and thereby The Church is called unto the glory of the Grace of God Ephes. 1.6 that it may be set forth in them and by them This is the End of the Institution of all Ordinances of Worship in the Church Ephes. 3.8 9 10. And in them do they set forth the Praises of God unto men and Angels This is the Tendency of Prayer the Work of Faith the fruit of Obedience It is a fond imagination which some have fallen upon that God is not praised in the Church for the work of Redemption unless it be done by Words and Hymns particularly expressing it All Praying all Preaching all Administration of Ordinances all our Faith all our Obedience if ordered aright are nothing but giving glory to God for his Love and Grace in Christ Jesus in a due and acceptable manner And this is that which ought to be in our design in all our Worship of God especially in what we perform in the Church To set forth his praise to declare his name to give glory unto him by believing and the profession of our faith is the End of all we do And this is the first Testimony produced by our Apostle His next is taken from Psalm 18.2 I will put my trust in him The whole Psalm literally respects David with his Streights and Deliverances not absolutely but as he was a Type of Christ. That he was so the Jews cannot deny seeing the Messiah is promised on that account under the name of David And the close of the Psalm treating of the calling of the Gentiles as a fruit of his deliverance from sufferings manifest him principally to be intended And that which the Apostle intends to prove by this Testimony is that he was really and truly of one with the Sons to be brought unto glory and that he doth from hence inasmuch as he was made and brought into that condition wherein it was necessary for him to trust in God and act in that Dependance upon him which the nature of man whilest exposed unto Troubles doth indispensibility require Had he been only God this could have been spoken of him
had somewhat of his own to offer unto God other Priests had somewhat to offer but nothing of their own only they offered up the beasts that were brought unto them by the people But the Lord Christ had a Body and Soul of his own prepared for him to offer which was properly his own and at his own disposal chap. 10.5 3. He alone was set over the whole spiritual House of God the whole Family of God in heaven and earth This belongs unto the Office of a High Priest to preside in and over the House of God to look to the rule and disposal of all things therein Now the Priests of old were as unto this part of their Office confined unto the material House or Temple of God but Jesus Christ was set over the whole spiritual House of God to rule and dispose of it chap. 3.6 4. He alone abides for ever The true and real High Priest was not to minister for one Age or Generation only but for the whole people of God unto the end of the world And this Prerogative of the Priesthood of Christ the Apostle insists upon chap. 7.23 24. 5. He alone did and could do the true and proper work of a Priest namely make reconciliation for the sins of the people The Sacrifices of other Priests could only represent what was to be done the thing it self they could not effect for it was not possible that the blood of bulls and goats should take away sin as the Apostle shews chap. 10.4 but this was done effectually by that one offering which this High Priest offered verse 11 12 13 14. All which things must be afterwards insisted on in their proper places if God permit This then is his Prerogative this is our priviledge and advantage II. The assumption of our nature and his conformity unto us therein was principally necessary unto the Lord Jesus on the account of his being an High Priest for us It behoved him to be made like unto us that he might be an High Priest it is true that as the great Prophet of his Church he did in part teach and instruct it whilst he was in the flesh in his own Person but this was in a manner a meer consequence of his assuming our nature to be our High Priest For he instructed his Church before and after principally by his Spirit And this he might have done to the full though he had never been incarnate So also might he have ruled it with supreme Power as its King and Head But our High Priest without the assumption of our nature he could not be because without this he had nothing to offer and of necessity saith the Apostle he must have somewhat to offer unto God A Priest without a Sacrifice is as a King without a Subject Had not God prepared him a body he could have had nothing to offer He was to have a self to offer to God or his Priesthood had been in vain For God had shewed that no other Sacrifice would be accepted or was effectual for that end which was designed unto this Office On this therefore is laid the indispensible necessity of the Incarnation of Christ. III. Such was the unspeakable love of Christ unto the Brethren than he would refuse nothing no condition that was needful to fit him for the discharge of the work which he h●d undertaken for them Their High Priest he must be this he could not unless he were made like unto them in all things He knew what this would cost him what trouble sorrow suffering in that conformity unto them he must undergo what miseries he must conflict withall all his life what a close was to be put unto his pilgrimage on the earth what woful temptations he was to pass through all lay open and naked before him But such was his Love shadowed out unto us by that of Jac●b to Rachel that he was content to submit unto any terms to undergo any condition so that he might save and enjoy his beloved Church See Ephes. 5.25 26. And surely he who was so intense in his love is no less constant therein Nor hath he left any thing undone that was needful to bring us unto God But we are yet farther to proceed with our explication of the words The Apostle having asserted the Priesthood of Christ describes in the fifth place the nature of the Office it self as it was vested in him and this he doth two ways 1. By a general description of the Object of it or that which it is exercised about 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things appertaining unto God 2. In a particular instance taken from the end of his Priesthood and the great work that he performed thereby to make reconciliation for the sins of the people First He was to be an High Priest in the things pertaining unto God that is either in things that were to be done for God with men as the Apostle speaks We are Ambassadors for Christ as though God did beseech you by us 2 Cor. 5.20 Or in things that were to be done with God for men For there were two general parts of the Office of the High Priest the one to preside in the House and over the Worship of God to do the things of God with men This the Prophet assigns unto Joshua the High Priest an especial Type of Christ Zech. 3.7 Thus saith the Lord of hosts If thou wilt walk in my ways and if thou wilt keep my charge then thou shalt also judge my house and thou shalt also keep my courts And of Christ himself even he shall build the Temple of the Lord and he shall bear the glory and shall sit and rule upon his throne and he shall be a priest upon his throne chap. 6.13 that is the High Priest of our profession chap. 3.1 He was set authoritatively over the House of God to take care that the whole Worship of it were performed according unto his appointment and to declare his Statutes and Ordinances unto the people And in this sense the Lord Christ is also the High Priest of his Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 feeding and ruling them in the Name and Authority of God Mich. 5.4 Yet this is not that part of his Office which is here intended by the Apostle The other part of the High Priests Office was to perform the things toward God which on the part of the people were to be performed So Jethro adviseth Moses Exod. 18.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be thou unto the people before God which words the LXX render 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the phrase here used by the Apostle Be thou unto the people in things appertaining unto God And this was the principal part of the Office and Duty of the High Priest the other being only a consequent thereof And that it was so as to the Office of Christ the Apostle manifests in the especial limitation which he adjoyns unto this general assertion he was an High