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A53678 A continuation of the exposition of the Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Hebrews viz, on the sixth, seventh, eight, ninth, and tenth chapters : wherein together with the explication of the text and context, the priesthood of Christ ... are declared, explained and confirmed : as also, the pleas of the Jews for the continuance and perpetuity of their legal worship, with the doctrine of the principal writers of the Socinians about these things, are examined and disproved / by J. Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1680 (1680) Wing O729; ESTC R21737 1,235,588 797

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thereby and confirmed the New Covenant he concludes from thence and proves the necessity of it because the Legal Sacrifices could not effect those ends which they seemed to be appointed for Wherefore they must be taken away to give place unto that whereby they were perfectly accomplished This therefore he now proceeds to prove God having designed the compleat consummation or sanctification of the Church that which only made a representation of it and of the way whereby it was to be done but could not effect it was to be removed For there was an appointed time wherein he would perfectly fulfil the counsel of his infinite Wisdom and Grace towards the Church herein And at this time which was now come a full clear understanding of the insufficiency of all Legal Sacrifices for that end was to be given unto it For he requires not faith and obedience in any beyond the means of light and understanding which he affords unto them Therefore the full Revelation and demonstration hereof was reserved for this season wherein he required express faith in the way whereby these things were effected 2. The Subject spoken of is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That which he immediately intends is the Sacrifices of the Law especially those which were offered yearly by a perpetual Statute as the words immediately following do declare But he refers what he speaks unto the Law it self as that whereby these Sacrifices were instituted and whereon all their vertue and efficacy did depend They had no more of the one or other but what they had by and from the Law And the Law here is the Covenant which God made with the people at Sinai with all the institutions of worship thereunto belonging It is not the Moral Law which Originally and as absolutely considered had no Expiatory Sacrifices belonging unto it nor is it the Ceremonial Law alone whereby all the Sacrifices of old were either appointed or regulated but it is the first Testament the first Covenant as it had all the ordinances of Worship annexed unto it as it was the Spring and cause of all the priviledges and advantages of the Church of Israel And whereunto the Moral Law as given on Mount Sinai and both the Ceremonial Law and the Judicial also did belong This he calls the Law chap. 7. 19 and the Covenant or Testament compleatly chap. 9. Concerning this Law or Covenant the Apostle declares two things 1. Positively and by way of concession It had a shadow of good things to come 2. Negatively that it had not the very Image of the things themselves which we must consider together because they contribute light unto one another These expressions are Metaphorical and have therefore given occasion unto various conjectures about the nature of the Allusions in them and their application unto the present subject matter I shall not trouble the Reader with a Repetition of them they may be found in most Commentators I shall therefore onely fix on that sense of the words which I conceive to be the mind of the Holy Ghost giving the Reasons why I conceive it so to be Both the Expressions used and the things intended in them a shadow and the very Image have respect unto the good things to come The Relation of the Law unto them is that which is declared Wherefore the true notion of what these good things to come are will determine what it is to have a shadow of them and not the very Image of the things themselves The good things intended may be said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either with respect unto the Law or with respect unto the Gospel and were so either when the Law was given or when this Epistle was written If they were yet to come with respect unto the Gospel and were so when he wrote this Epistle they can be nothing but the good things of Heaven and Eternal Glory These things were then are still and will alwayes be unto the Church Militant on the earth good things to come and are the Subject of Divine Promises concerning future things In hope of Eternal Life which God that cannot lye promised before the world began Tit. 1. 2. But this cannot be the sense of the words For 1. The Gospel it self hath not the very Image of these things and so should not herein differ from the Law For that the very Image of these things are the things themselves shall be immediately declared 2. The Apostle in this whole discourse designes to prove that the Law with all the Rites of worship annexed unto it were a Type of the good things that were really and actually exhibited in and by the Gospel or by the Lord Christ himself in the discharge of his Office Wherefore they are called good things to come with respect unto the time of the administration of the Law They were so whilest the Law or first Covenant was in force and whilest the institutions of it were continued They had indeed their Original in the Church or were good things to come from the first promise They were more declared so to be and the certainty of their coming more confirmed by the Promise made unto Abraham After these promises and their various confirmations the Law was given unto the people Howbeit the Law did not bring in exhibit or make present the good things so promised that they should no more yet be to come They were still good things to come whilst the Law was in force Nor was this absolutely denyed by the Jews nor is yet so to this day For though they place more in the Law and Covenant of Sinai than God ever placed in them yet they acknowledge that there are good things to come promised and fore-signified in the Law which as they suppose are not yet enjoyed Such is the coming of the Messiah in which sense they must grant that the Law had a shadow of good things to come Hence it is evident what are those good things to come namely Christ himself with all the Grace and mercy and previledges which the Church receiveth by his actual exhibition and coming in the flesh upon the discharge of his Office For he himself firstly principally and evidently was the Subject of all promises and what ever else is contained in them is but that whereof in his Person Office and Grace he is the Author and cause Hence he was signally termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He who was to come he that should come Art thou he who is to come And after his actual exhibition the denying of him to be so come is to overthrow the Gospel 1 Joh. 4. 3. And these things are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these good things 1. Because they are absolutely so without any allay or mixture All other things in this world however in some respect and as unto some peculiar end they may be said to be good yet are they not so absolutely Wherefore 2. These
2 Cor. 9. 15. Thanks be to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for his Gift that cannot be declared that is fully or sufficiently Now this Gift was his Grant of a free charitable and bountiful Spirit to the Corinthians in ministring unto the poor Saints The Grant hereof is called Gods Gift So is the Gift of Christ used also Ephes. 4. 7. according to the measure of the Gift of Christ that is according as he is pleased to give and grant of the fruits of the Spirit unto men see Rom. 5. 15 17. Ephes. 3. 7. sometimes it is taken for the thing given properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Jam. 1. 17. so it is used Joh. 4. 10. If thou knewest the Gift of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gift of God that is the thing given by him or to be given by him It is as many judge the Person of Christ himself in that place which is intended But the context makes it plain that it is the Holy Ghost For he is the Living water which the Lord Jesus promiseth in that place to bestow And so far as I can observe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Gift with respect unto God as denoting the thing given is no where used but only to signifie the Holy Ghost And if it be so the sense of this place is determined Acts 2. 38. Ye shall receive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Gift of the Holy Ghost not that which he gives but that which he is Chap. 8. 20. Thou hast thought 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the Gift of God may be purchased with money that is the Power of the Holy Ghost in miraculous Operations So expresly chap. 10. 45. chap. 11. 17. Elsewhere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so far as I can observe when respecting God doth not signifie the thing given but the grant it self The Holy Spirit is signally the Gift of God under the New Testament And he is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heavenly or from Heaven This may have respect unto his work and effect they are heavenly as opposed to carnal and earthly But principally it regards his Mission by Christ after his Ascension into Heaven Acts 2. 33. Being exalted and having received the Promise of the Father he sent the Spirit The Promise of him was that he should be sent from Heaven or from above as God is said to be above which is the same with Heavenly Deut. 4. 39. 2 Chron. 5. 23. Job 31. 2 8. Isa. 2. 2 15. and chap. 45. 8. When he came upon the Lord Christ to anoint him for his work the Heavens were opened and he came from above Matth. 3. 16. so Acts 2. 2. At his first coming on the Apostles there came a sound from Heaven Hence he is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent from Heaven 1 Pet. 1. 12. Wherefore although he may be said to be Heavenly upon other accounts also which therefore are not absolutely to be excluded yet his being sent from Heaven by Christ after his Ascension thither and exaltation there is principally here regarded He therefore is this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the heavenly Gift here intended though not absolutely but with respect to an especial work That which riseth up against this Interpretation is that the Holy Ghost is expresly mentioned in the next clause And were made partakers of the Holy Ghost It is not therefore probable that He should be here also intended Answ. 1 It is ordinary to have the same thing twice expressed in various words to quicken the sense of them and it is necessary it should be so when there are divers respects unto the same thing as there are in this place 2 The following clause may be exegetical of this declaring more fully and plainly what is here intended which is usual also in the Scrptures so that nothing is cogent from this consideration to disprove an Interpretation so suited to the sense of the place and which the constant use of the word makes necessary to be embraced But 3 The Holy Ghost is here mentioned as the great Gift of the Gospel times as coming down from Heaven not absolutely not as unto his Person but with respect unto an especial work namely the change of the whole state of Religious Worship in the Church of God Whereas we shall see in the next words he is spoken of only with respect unto external actual operations But he was the great the promised Heavenly Gift to be bestowed under the New Testament by whom God would institute and ordain a new way and new Rites of Worship upon the Revelation of himself and Will in Christ. Unto him was committed the Reformation of all things in the Church whose time was now come Chap. 9. 10. The Lord Christ when he ascended into Heaven left all things standing and continuing in Religious Worship as they had done from the days of Moses though he had virtually put an end unto it And he commanded his Disciples that they should attempt no alteration therein until the Holy Ghost were sent from Heaven to enable them thereunto Acts 1. 4 5. But when he came as the great Gift of God promised under the New Testament he removes all the carnal Worship and Ordinances of Moses and that by the full Revelation of the Accomplishment of all that was signified by them and appoints the new holy spiritual Worship of the Gospel that was to succeed in their room The Spirit of God therefore as bestowed for the introduction of the New Gospel state in Truth and Worship is the Heavenly Gift here intended Thus our Apostle warneth these Hebrews that they turn not away from him who speaketh from Heaven chap. 12. 25. that is Jesus Christ speaking in the Dispensation of the Gospel by the Holy Ghost sent from Heaven And there is an Antithesis included herein between the Law and the Gospel the former being given on Earth the latter being immediately from Heaven God in the giving of the Law made use of the Ministry of Angels and that on the Earth but he gave the Gospel Church state by that Spirit which although he worketh on men in Earth and is said in every Act or Work to be sent from Heaven yet is he still in Heaven and always speaketh from thence as our Savour said of himself with respect unto his Divine Nature Joh. 3. 13. Secondly We may enquire what it is to taste of this Heavenly Gift The expression of tasting is metaphorical and signifies no more but to make a Trial or Experiment For so we do by tasting naturally and properly of that which is tendred unto us to eat We taste such things by the sense given us naturally to discern our food and then either receive or refuse them as we find occasion It doth not therefore include eating much less Digestion and turning into nourishment of what is so tasted For its
he who is the Forerunner or Harbinger is so and no more But now although the Lord Christ be a Forerunner also yet he is more He is the Person in whose hand lyeth the whole affair and its conduct And he was himself the Forerunner because of the greatness of the matter he had in hand not manageable by any other And we may consider the words distinctly 1 His being a Forerunner 2 For us 3 Where he is so within the Vail 1 He is in his entrance into Heaven or the Holy place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Forerunner This the High Priest of Old when he entred once a year into the Holy place was not He entred thereinto himself but he made no way for any to follow after He did not go before the People to give them an entrance into the Holy place but both by his entrance and his return signified their exclusion for ever We have then herein another Instance of the excellency of our High Priest and his Office When he entred into the Holy place he did it not meerly for himself but to go before to lead and conduct the whole Church into the same Glory 2 He is a Forerunner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for us that is for all Believers for the whole Church in all Times Ages and Places And this he is three ways 1. By way of Declaration It belongs unto a Forerunner to carry Tidings and to declare what is the success that hath been obtained in the Affair which he giveth an account of The Lord Christ entring into Heaven makes an open declaration that he hath led Captivity Captive spoiled Principalities and Powers triumphed over them that he hath obtained his Portion and divided the spoil with the strong Isa. 53. 12. that he hath rescued his Church from the Power of Sin Sathan Death and Law And there were two parts of the Triumphant Declaration made by this Forerunner of the Church 1 That he had discharged his Original Engagement for the Salvation of Believers under the Old Testament on the Faith whereof they were accepted with God and saved Hence upon his entrance within the Vail they also joyn in that doxologie Rev. 5. 9 10 11 12. And he was their Forerunner also For although I have no apprehension of the Limbus Patrum fancied by the Papists yet I think the Fathers that died under the Old Testament had a nearer Admission into the Presence of God upon the Ascension of Christ than what they enjoyed before They were in Heaven before the Sanctuary of God but were not admitted within the Vail into the most holy place where all the Counsels of God in Christ are displayed and represented There was no entrance before either as to Grace or Glory within the Vail Heb. 9. 8. For as I said within the Vail are all the Counsels of God in Christ laid open as they were typed in the Holy place This none could or were to behold before his own entrance thither Wherefore he was their Forerunner also 2 To declare the Redemption of all the Elect that were to follow him in their several Generations This is Triumphantly declared in Heaven Psal. 47. 5 6 7. Psal. 68. 18 24 25 26. 2. By way of Preparation And this is twofold 1 With respect unto our present gracious entrance into the Holiest by Faith and Prayer This way was not made for us whilst the Old Tabernacle was standing chap. 9. 8. But this way is now prepared for us by our Forerunner Chap. 10. 19 20 21 22. We have an entrance into Heaven even whilst we are here on the Earth An entrance is made for our Faith for our Hope for our Prayer wherever they enter our Souls do enter and are present And this entrance we make daily and that with boldness and assurance on the account of our Forerunner 2 As unto our future entrance into Glory Under this capacity as a Forerunner it belongs unto him to prepare Mansions for us in his Fathers House whither he is gone and which he hath promised to do Joh. 14. 23. He prepares Mansions for us and he prepares us for those Mansions suiting Grace and Glory unto each other Heaven indeed is ready for us whenever we are meet and ready for Heaven 3. By the way of Possession He had now obtained for the Church Eternal Redemption and purchased for them and in their Name an Everlasting Inheritance Acts 26. 18. This he went for them and in their Name to take possession of and to reserve it in the Heavens for them 1 Pet. 1. 4. Hereon being by Adoption made Heirs of God they become to be Coheirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and are at last admitted into the same Glory with him So is he a Forerunner for us 3. As a Forerunner he is entred within the Vail that is into Heaven it self the place of the glorious Presence of God And this also may be considered two ways 1. With respect unto what he hath already done for us and two things are included therein 1 That he had compleatly finished the work he had to do upon the Earth He had absolutely won the Victory and secured the Church from all its spiritual Adversaries Without this a Triumphant Entrance into Heaven had not been granted unto him 2 Gods blessed Approbation of all that he had done here below Isa. 53. 11 12. Phil. 2. 7 8 9 10 11. 2. With respect unto what he hath yet to do for us Hence it is that he is not said absolutely to enter into his Glory but to enter as a Priest as through a Vail as into the Holy place where he continues as our Forerunner in the exercise of that Office as the Apostle declares in the close of the Verse made an High Priest after the order of Melchisedec whereof we must treat in the next Chapter Now the Lord Jesus being thus entred into Heaven as our Forerunner gives us manifold security of our entrance thither also in the appointed season This he assures us of Joh. 14. 3 19. For 1 He passed through all the Storms of Trials Temptations Persecutions and Death it self that we are exposed unto and yet is landed safely in Eternal Glory His Anchor was Trust and Hope in all his Storms chap. 2. 13. Isa. 50. 7 8 9. And it was tried to the utmost Psal. 22. 8 9 10. It preserved him in them all and will be no less Faithful unto the whole Church As he hath thus gone before us he is able to succour us and hath given us in himself a Pledge of success 2 He is now where our Hope is fixed namely within the Vail where he takes care of it and will preserve it unto the end Again If the Lord Christ be entred in Heaven as our Forerunner it is our Duty to be following of him with all the speed we can And it is required hereunto 1 That we be willing to follow him in the way wherein he went as well as unto
For being reconciled by his Death we are saved by his Life Rom. 5. 10. He therefore alone is the Mediator of Intercession who is able by vertue of his Office to save us to the utmost through that intercession of his Those whom they choose to go to God by are able to save them or they are not If they are not is it not the greatest folly and madness imaginable whilst we seek after Salvation to set him aside on any occasion in any one instance who can save us to the utmost and betake our selves unto them who cannot save us at all If they are able to save us in any sense it is either by vertue of some Office and Office-Power that they are invested withal in Heaven as Ministers are in the Discharge of their Office said to save them that hear them 1 Tim. 4. 16. That is ministerially and instrumentally or without any such Office If they can do so without any Office they can do more than Jesus Christ can do for he is able to do it by vertue of his Office only And if it might have been otherwise what need was there that Christ should undertake and discharge this Office of the Priesthood and that our Apostle should so labour to prove the Excellency of this his Office only to satisfie us that he is able to save them that come to God by him If they do it by vertue of any Office committed to them let it be named what it is Are they Priests in Heaven for ever after the Order of Melchisedec Dishonour enough is done unto Christ by making any Sacrificing Priests on the Earth as they do in their Masse but to make interceding Priests in Heaven also is the highest reproach unto him Or are they the Kings or Prophets of the Church or under what Name or Title is this Power intrusted with them Such imaginations are most forreign from true Christian Religion An Holy painful Minister on the Earth can do much more towards the saving of the souls of Men than any Saint or Angel in Heaven For the work of doing it ministerially by the Dispensation of the Word is committed unto them in the way of Office but Office in the Church beareth none in Heaven but only Jesus Christ. And what is the Reason why men should so readily close with other means other Mediators of Intercession to go to God by them For when they pray to Saints although they should only pray unto them to intercede for them as some of them pretend however openly and manifestly against their expresse and avowed Practice yet do they go to God by them For to speak of any Religious Prayer and yet not to look on it in general as a going or coming to God is a fond and senseless Imagination Wherefore whenever they pray to Saints as most of them do more than to Jesus Christ their design is to go to God by them But what is it that should enduce them hereunto Our Lord Christ hath told us that he is the way and that no man cometh unto the Father but by him John 14. 6. What reason can any man give why he should not believe him but although he hath said that no man cometh unto the Father but by him should yet attempt to go another way Have others more Power in these things than he so as it is adviseable on that Account to make our Application unto them Where is it said of any Saints or Angels or all of them together that they are able to save to the utmost all that come to God by them Or where is any one word spoken of their Power or Interest in Heaven unto that Purpose But it will be said that we may be relieved and saved wee stand not in need of Power only but of Love Pity and Compassion And although the Saints have less Ability than Christ yet they may have more of Love and Compassion for us For some of them it may be were our Kindred or Progenitors or Country-men or such as may have an especial kindness for us especially the Blessed Virgin and other female Saints are by their natural constitution as well as their Grace who would not think so mightily enclined unto pity and compassion And indeed they are marvellous things which some of them tell us concerning the Blessed Virgin in this case and her condescension in the pursuit of her Love and Pity But yet this Imagination is the highest pitch of Folly and Ingratitude Certainly nothing can more stir up the Indignation of God than to have any Creatures in Heaven or Earth or all together equalled in Love and Compassion with Jesus Christ. He that doth not know that there is an unparellel'd Eminency of these in him who is not in some measure instructed in the cause and effect of them knows no more of the Gospel than a Jew There is more Love Pity and Compassion in Christ Jesus towards every poor sinner that comes unto God by him than all the Saints in Heaven are able to comprehend And if Kindred or Alliance may be of consideration in this matter he is more nearly related unto us than Father or Mother or wife or children or all together we being not only bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh but so joyned to him as to be one spirit with him But it will yet be said that it is on none of these considerations that men choose to go unto God by other Mediators of Intercession only whereas the Lord Christ is so great and so gloriously exalted at the right hand of the Majesty on high they dare not alwaies presumptuously intrude into his glorious presence and therefore they make use of the Saints who are more cognate unto us and not cloathed with such terrible Majesty And in going unto God by the friends of Christ they please him as well as if they went immediately by himself Answ. 1 He is an Unbeliever unto whom the Glorious Exaltation of the Lord Christ is a Discouragement from going unto him or by him unto God on the Throne of Grace For all the Glory Power and Majesty of Christ in Heaven is proposed unto Believers to encourage them to come unto him and to put their Trust in him But this is the talk of men who whatever Devotion they pretend unto indeed know nothing really of what it is to pray to believe to trust in Christ or by him to draw near with boldness unto the Throne of Grace see Heb. 4. 14 15 16. 2. All the Glory Power and Majesty of Jesus Christ as exalted in Heaven as our Mediator are but means effectually to exert and exercise his Love and Compassion towards us He lives for ever to make Intercession for us But we proceed The close of this verse gives us the special Reason and Confirmation of all the efficacy that the Apostle hath assigned unto the Priesthood of Christ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alwaies living to make Intercession for them And
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Minister Having declar'd the Glory and Dignity which he is exalted unto as sitting down at the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty in Heaven what can be farther expected from him There he lives eternally happy in the enjoyment of his own Blessedness and Glory Is it not reasonable it should be so after all the hardships and miseries which he being the Son of God underwent in this world Who can expect that he should any longer condescend unto Office and Duty Neither generally have men any other thoughts concerning him But where then would lie the advantage of the Church in his Exaltation which the Apostle designs in an especial manner to demonstrate Wherefore unto the mention of it he immediately subjoins the continuation of his Office He is still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Publick Minister for the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to minister either with God or before God as a Priest for others or for God in the Name of God towards others as do Magistrates and Ministers of the Gospel And therefore all these sorts are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Lord Christ is expresly spoken of here as a Priest it is a name of his Priestly Office wherein he acts towards God Nor is he any where called or said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in any of his Actings from God towards us although he be said therein to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 15. 8. that is he was so in the days of his flesh but that name now no way belongeth unto him He is not therefore styled a Minister because he executeth the Purposes of God towards us as Schlictingius fancieth but he acts towards God and before God on our behalf according to the duty of a Priest He went into Heaven to appear in the presence of God for us and to discharge his Office before God on our behalf And it is granted also that by vertue thereof he doth also communicate all good things from God unto us For the whole administration of things Sacred between God and the Church is committed unto him And we must observe that The Lord Christ in the Height of his Glory condescends to discharge the Office of a publick minister in the behalf of the Church We are not to bound our Faith on Christ as unto what he did for us on the Earth The Life and Efficacy of the whole of his Mediation depends on what he did antecedently thereunto and what he doth consequently unto it For in these things doth the Glory of his Love and Grace most eminently appear Antecedently unto what he did on Earth and to make way for it there was his infinite condescension in assuming our Nature He was in the forme of God and in the eternal enjoyment of all the Blessedness which the Divine Nature is essentially accompanied withal Yet being thus Rich this was his Grace that for our sakes he became poor This ineffable Grace and Love of Christ is the principal object of our Faith and Admiration as it is declared by the Apostle Phil. 2. 6 7 8 9. And as he emptied himself and laid aside his Glory for a season to undertake the Work of Meditation So now he hath reassumed his Glory as to the manifestation of his Divine Power and hath the highest Addition of Glory in his Humane Nature by his exaltation at the right hand of God yet he continueth his care of and Love towards the Church so as yet to discharge the office of a Publick Minister in their behalf As all the shame reproach misery with death that he was to undergo on the Earth deterred him not from undertaking this work So all the Glory which he is environed withal in Heaven diverts him not from continuing the Discharge of it 2dly There is a Limitation of this ministration of our High Priest with respect unto its proper Object and that in a double expression For he is a Minister 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. He is so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word may be either of the Masculine or of the Neuter Gender and so respect either Persons or Things If it be taken in the former way it is of the Saints And this is the ordinary sense of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Books of the New Testament Saints or Holy Persons But they cannot be here precisely intended And the Apostle useth this word frequently in another sense in this Epistle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Neuter Gender may have a double signification 1. Of Holy things in general 2. Of Holy Places 1. Of things So the Uul Lat. renders the word Sanctorum which the Rhemists translate Holies that is of Holy Persons or Holy things And ours place Holy things in the Margen And the sense is true if the signification of the word be extended unto all Holy Things For the ministration of them all is committed unto Jesus Christ. But the word hath yet a more peculiar signification The inmost part of the Tabernacle our Apostle calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 9. 3. That is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holy of Holies the most Holy Place And absolutely he calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holyes Chap 9. 8 12 24 25. Chap. 13. 11. And in answer thereunto he calleth our Spiritual Presence before God whereunto we have an Access by the Blood of Christ by the same name Chap. 10. 19. And hence the word is rendred by most Interpreters the Sanctuary as by the Syr. The House of the Sanctuary Particularly that Part of the Tabernacle whereinto the High Priest entred alone and that but once a year Take this Sanctuary properly and literally and Christ was not the minister of it He never entred into it nor could nor had any Right so to do because it belonged and was appropriated unto others as our Apostle declares ver 4. Wherefore we must take our Direction herein from the words following For mentioning the whole Tabernacle as he doth here one part of it namely the Sanctuary he gives it a note of Distinction from the Old Tabernacle of Moses the true Tabernacle So must the Sanctuary be distinguished from that of Old It is that which answers thereunto And this is nothing but Heaven it self Heaven not as considered absolutely but as the Place of Gods glorious Presence the Temple of the living God where the worship of the Church is represented and all its Affairs transacted This is called Gods Sanctuary Psal. 102. 19. He looked down from the height of his Sanctuary from Heaven did the Lord behold the Earth And so the Apostle himself plainly interprets this place Chap. 9. 24. Christ is not entred into the Holy Places made with hands which are the figures of the true but into Heaven it self And this is called the Sanctuary because there doth really dwell and abide all
say the Lord Christ could not by any means take away that other Priesthood until he himself had accomplished all that ever was signified thereby according unto Gods Institution The whole end and design of God in its Institution had been frustrate if the office bad ceased de jure before the whole of what was prefigured by its Being Duties and Offices was fulfilled And therefore although there was an Intercision of its administrations for Seventy years during the Babylonish Captivity yet was the Office itself continued in its right and dignity because what it designed to prefigure was not yet attained And this was not done till the Lord Christ ascended into the heavenly Sanctuary to administer in the presence of God for the Church For until then the High Priests entering into the holy place in the Tabernacle once a year had not an accomplishment in what was prefigured thereby Wherefore there was not an end put unto their Office and Ministration by the oblation of Christ on the Cross but they still continued to offer Sacrifices according to the Law For there yet remained unto the fulfilling of what was designed in their whole Office his entring into the holy place above Wherefore they were still to continue Priests until he had compleated the whole Service prefigured by them in the oblation of himself and entring thereon into the heavenly Sanctuary This therefore is the sense of the Apostles reasoning in this place The Priests of the Order of Aaron continued de jure their administrations of holy things or were so to do until all was accomplished that was signified thereby This was not done until the Ascension of Christ into Heaven For the first Tabernacle was to stand until the way was made open into the Holiest of all as we shall see afterwards Now the Lord Christ was not a Priest after their Order nor could he offer the Sacrifices appointed by the Law Hence it is evident That he could not have been a Priest had he been to continue in the Earth and to administer on the Earth for so their Priesthood with which his was inconsistent could never have had an end For this could not be without his entrance as a Priest into the heavenly Sanctuary It appears therefore how vain the pretence of the Socinians is from this place to prove that the Lord Christ did not offer his expiatory Sacrifice here on the Earth For the Apostle speaks nothing of his Oblation which he had before declared to have been once for all before he entred into Heaven to make intercession for us But he speaks only of the Order of his Priesthood and the state and condition wherein the present administration of it was to be continued Ob. 1. Gods Institutions rightly stated do never interfere So we see those of the ancient Priesthood and that of Christ did not They had both of them their proper bounds and seasons nor could the latter compleatly commence and take place until the former was expired The entrance of Christ into the Holy Place which stated him in that condition wherein he was to continue the exercise of his Priesthood unto the consummation of all things put an absolute period unto the former Priesthood by accomplishing all that was signified thereby with a due and seasonable end unto all legal worship as to right and efficacy When he had done all that was figured by them he took the whole work into his own hand 2. The discharge of all the Parts and Duties of the Priestly Office of Christ in their proper order were needful unto the salvation of the Church His Oblation was to be on the Earth but the continuation of the discharge of his Office was to be in Heaven Without this the former would not profit us if he had done no more he could not have been a Priest For 1 As this dependeth on the infinite wisdom of God ordering and disposing all things that concern the discharge of this Office unto their proper times and seasons so 2 Believers do find in their own experience how all things are suited unto their conditions and wants Unless the foundation of a Propitiation for their sins be first laid they can have no hopes of acceptance with God This therefore was first done in the offering of the Body of Christ once for all But when this is done unless they have a continual application of the efficacy of it unto their Souls neither their Peace with God nor their Access unto God can be maintained And this is done by the Ministration of his Office in the heavenly Sanctuary which ensues thereon VER V. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qúi ut qui as those who 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deserviunt inserviunt Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who ministred as in a sacred Office properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exemplari Rhem. that serve the exemplar and shadow every way imperfectly Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto the similitude 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eras. Coelestium others Rerum Coelestium of heavenly things Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the things which are in Heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sicut responsum est Mosi Rhem. As it was answered Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not an Answer but an Oracle given out upon enquiry and so any Divine Instruction Quemadmadum divinitus dictum est admonished of God say we Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was spoken simply which expresseth not the Original VER V. Who serve in Sacred Worship unto the example and shadow of heavenly things even as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the Tabernacle For see saith he that thou make all things according to the pattern shewed to thee in the mount WE must first consider the reading of these words by reason of the testimony which the Apostle quotes out of the Law and his rendring thereof The words in the original Ex. 25. 40. are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And look or take heed and make after their pattern which was shewed thee in the mount The Apostle adds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things which is not in the original nor in the Version of the LXX But 1 he might take it from ver 9. of the Chapter where the word is expressed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according unto all that I shall shew thee 2 Things indefinitely expressed are to be expounded universally 1 Kings 8. 39. and to give to every man according to his ways that is 2 Chron. 6. 30. and render to every man according to all his ways Deut. 19. 15. At the mouth of two or three witnesses shall the matter be established that is 2 Cor. 13. 1. shall every word be established Psal. 110. 1. Until I make thine enemies thy footstool that is 1 Cor. 15 25. all thine enemies Wherefore the Apostle by the addition of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things says no more but what is expressed in one place and necessarily understood in
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sure and not a deceiving Imagination It maketh not ashamed Rom. 5. 5. by any failure or disappointment Groundless Presumptions are the deceitful Engines whereby the Souls of multitudes are ruined every day of no more use than if the Mariners should cast out a Logg or a burden of Straw to stay their Vessel in a Storm But Hope proceeding on and built on Faith is infallible and will not deceive 2 In its Use it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 firm and invincible against all oppositions not indeed from its self but from the ground which it fixeth upon namely Christ in the Promise as the next words declare For Secondly The way or means whereby this spiritual Anchor secures our Souls is expressed in the words following and which entereth into that within the Vail And herein there is a dissimilitude in the comparates For an Anchor is cast downwards and fixeth it self in the Earth at the bottom of the Sea but Hope ascendeth upwards and fixeth it self in Heaven or in that which is therein And we must enquire 1 What is this Vail 2 How Hope entreth it 3. What is that within it that Hope entreth into 1 For the Vail it self the Apostle unto that natural Allusion which he insists upon adds also one that is Typical which renders the whole context figurative as we shewed before The Vail therefore here alluded unto was that which parted the most holy place from the Sanctuary or Body of the Temple This our Apostle calls the second Vail chap. 9. 3. and here the Vail absolutely For the Body of the Temple whereinto the Priests only entred to offer Incense was separated from the People by the first Vail as the most Holy place was from that by the second Vail Through the former the ordinary Priests passed every day to offer Incense through the latter the High Priest passed and that once a year Now that which was denoted hereby with respect unto Christ and his Priesthood were these aspectable Heavens through which he passed in his Ascension into the glorious Presence of God See our Exposition on chap. 4. ver 14. Within the Vail therefore is within and above these visible Heavens the place of Gods glorious Residence the Holy Tabernacle not made with hands where the Lord Christ continueth to administer for his Church 2 This Hope entreth into or passeth through The Heavens are as a Vail unto the sense and reason of man there their sight and their thoughts are bounded they can neither discern nor judge of any thing that is above or within that Vail But Faith with Hope pierceth through it no created thing can keep them at a distance from God himself As an Anchor stays not in the Waves of the Sea as it cannot fix it self in the Waters but pierceth through them until it come unto solid Earth in the bottom no more doth or can the Hope of a Believer fix it self on any thing under these Heavens but it pierceth through all till it come within the Vail And this it doth 1 under the conduct of Faith which goes before it and presents unto it the things hoped for Heb. 11. 1. 2 By the Rule and Line of the Word which on no occasion it will vary from And 3 this it doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to that which is within And what is it that is within this Vail not an Ark and a mercy-seat not Tables of Stone and Cherubims the work of mens hands but the things signified by them God himself on a Throne of Grace and the Lord Christ as the High priest of the Church standing at his Right Hand God the Father as the Author of the Promise of Grace Christ as the Purchaser of all Mercy the Counsel of Peace being between them both Here Hope fixeth it self to hold the Soul stedfast in all the Storms and Tempests that may befall it Wherefore that which Hope fixeth on within the Vail is 1 The Father as the Author 2 The Lord Christ as the Purchaser 3 The Covenant as the Conveyance of all Grace which were all Typically represented by the things within the Vail of Old And the Apostle makes use of this Expression for two Reasons 1 Because our Hope and Faith are not now fixed and bounded on Types Shadows and obscure Representations of the good things of the Promise as things were under the Old Testament All these things are now passed away and we have immediately to deal with God and Christ Jesus 2 To instruct the Hebrews in the Nature and Use of the Old Tabernacle Institutions and from thence in the true Nature of the Priesthood of Christ which he is now returning unto And we may observe from these words That all true Believers are exposed to Storms and Tempests in this world This makes Anchors so necessary for them The wise God would not have provided an Anchor for them and enjoyned its use if he had not known they would be exposed unto Storms He that dwells at peace in his House of all things thinks least of an Anchor But we are to look for Storms Suppose we might pass our time of sojourning here without outward Troubles which yet he is exceedingly unwise who promiseth unto himself any such thing whilst we are in the Flesh and accompanied with so many occasions of Distress on every hand yet who can escape from those inward Trials Exercises and Troubles from Temptations Darkness Sin and the Law wherewith we are often tossed and afflicted and it may be for a season not comforted For These Storms would prove ruinous unto the Souls of Believers were they not indefeasibly interested by Faith and Hope in the Promise of the Gospel Every Storm almost will be too hard for Ships without Cables or Anchors And as little security have we in a time of Trial from any thing in our selves if Hope hold not fast on the Promise which is the Anchor of the Soul And this it will do if it be genuine For No distance of place no Interposition of difficulties can hinder the Hope of Believers from entring into the Presence of and fixing it self on God in Christ. It pierceth through the Clouds passeth through the Heavens stops not at their glorious Vail until it comes unto the Eternal Fountain and Spring of all Grace and Mercy And therefore The strength and assurance of the Faith and Hope of Believers is invisible unto the world They enter in within the Vail where no Eye of Reason can pursue them There all their concerns are hid and the secret Influence which unto all purposes they have from thence is sometimes admired sometimes derided by the blind and wicked world However it is effectual to their good For Hope firmly fixed on God in Christ by the Promise will hold steady and preserve the Soul in all the Storms and Trials that may befall it It is an Anchor both sure and stedfast Wherefore It is our Wisdom at all times
the Serpents Head wound the Head over the large Earth Psal. 110. 6. This was to be Effected by a Glorious Conquest and Victory which is every where so described in the Scripture See Col. 2. 15. And because outward Force and Opposition is always used by the World in the Defence of the Interest of Satan He will also sometimes apply the outward Sword for the Destruction of his stubborn Adversaries Isa. 63. 1 2 3. Rev. 19. This therefore was no unmeet Season for the Introduction of him who made so Solemn a Representation of him 2. Abraham himself was in this Victory herein also a Type of Christ not absolutely of his Person as was Melchisedec but of his Power and Presence in his Church Melchisedec I say Represented Christ in his Person and his Offices Abraham Represented his Presence in the Church or the Church as his Body I will neither approve of nor reject that Conjecture of some that these four Kings were Types of the four great Monarchs of the World which the Church of God was to conflict withal and at length to prevail against as Dan. 7. 18. ver 27. And indeed many things in their Names and Titles do notably countenance that Conjecture But it is certain in general that they were great Oppressors of the World roving up and down for Dominion and Spoyl Wherefore Abraham's Conquest of them was not only a Pledge of the final Success of the Church in the VVorld but also a Representation of the Usefulness of the Church unto the VVorld whenever its Pride and Blindness will admit of its help and kindness Micah 5. 7. The Church is indeed the onely means of conveying Blessings unto the VVorld as the Oppression thereof will prove its Ruine 3. The Land of Canaan was now given unto Abraham and his Seed for a Possession to be the Seat of the Church and Gods VVorship among them The Nations now Inhabiting of it were devoted unto Destruction in an appointed Season And he was not to allow these Foreign Kings to set up any Dominion therein And God gave him this Victory as a Pledge of his future Possession 4. Abraham was obliged in Justice and Affection both to Rescue his Brother Lot whom they were carrying away Captive And this is expressed as the next cause of his Engagement against them ver 14. On all Accounts therefore this VVar was just and the Victory of God And because there was a Representation therein of the Victory and Success of Christ in his Church it was a Season most eminently proper for the Introduction of Melchisedec blessing him in the exercise of Sacerdotal Power 5. This Congress of Melchisedec and Abraham after Abraham had gotten the Victory over all his Adversaries was a Type and Representation of the Glorious Congress and Meeting of Christ and the Church at the last day when the whole Church shall have finished its warfare and be Victorious over the VVorld Sin the Law Death and Hell Then will the Lord Christ bring out the Stores of Heaven for their Eternal Refreshment and give them in the fulness of the Blessing and all things shall issue in the Glory of the most High God All the Promises are unto him that overcometh And we we may observe That 1. All the Commotions and Concussions that are among the Nations of the World do lye in or shall be brought into a subserviency unto the Interest of Christ and his Church I intend those places where either the Seat of the Church is or is to be A great VVar and Tumult there was between these Eastern Kings and those of Canaan and many Nations were smitten and destroyed in the Expedition Gen. 14. 5 6 7. And what is the final Issue whereinto all these things do come VVhy two things fell out hereon that neither side of the Combatants either looked for or had any Interest in 1. The Victory of Abraham or the Church over them all 2. A Glorious Type and Representation of Christ brought forth visibly acting in his Church Yea I may add that in Abraham's Glorious Victory and Royal Munificence on the one hand and in the Sacerdotal Blessing of Melchisedec on the other there was such a Representation of Christ in his Principal Offices as Priest and King as had never been made in the VVorld before This Issue did God direct that VVar and Tumult unto It will be no otherwise with all those Confusions and Disorders that the world is filled withal at this day though we can see nothing of the ways and means of their tendency unto such an end 2. There have been and are to be such Seasons wherein God will dispose of Nations and their Interest according as the Condition of the Church doth require as he did here with all these Nations Isa. 43. 3 4. Chap. 60. 6 7. 3. The Blessing of God may be expected on a Just and Lawful War This VVar and Victory of Abraham which he received the Blessing upon is Celebrated Isa. 41. 2 3. And our Apostle mentions that Circumstance of the Slaughter of the Kings as that which was a Token of Gods kindness unto Abraham and of his own Greatness And where these things occur 1. A Lawful necessary immediate Cause of War as Abraham had for the Rescue of Lot 2. A Lawful Call unto the War as Abraham had being a Sovereign Prince and raising his Army of his own People meerly and that to the securing of the Possessions of a Countrey granted unto him by God himself and 3. A Subserviency unto the Glory of Christ and the Good of the Church the Presence of God in it and the Blessing of God upon it may be justly expected VI. Melchisedec is farther Described by two Acts of his Sacerdotal Power or Office which he exercised on this occasion of meeting Abraham 1. He Blessed him and then 2. He received Tithes of him He met Abraham and Blessed him This Solemn Benediction is fully expressed Gen. 14. 19 20. And he Blessed him and said Blessed be Abraham of the most High God Possessor of Heaven and Earth and Blessed be the most High God who hath delivered thine Enemies into thy hand There are two parts of this Blessing 1. That which hath Abraham for its Object a Blessing of Prayer 2. That which hath God for its Object a Blessing of Praise Our Apostle seems to take Notice only of the first or that part of the Blessing whereof Abraham was the immediate Object But the Truth is the other part whereby he Blessed God being on the Account of Abraham and as it were in his Name it belongs also to the Blessing wherewith he was Blessed As to this Blessing we may consider 1. The Nature 2. The Form of it As to the Nature of it Blessings in general are the means of Communicating Good Things according unto the Power and Interest in them of them that Bless Gen. 33. 11. So also are Curses of Evil. Hence it is God alone that absolutely can
Interest in the Priesthood as it was Established by Law 2. He had no Genealogy upon the Priestly Line And that which is Recorded of him on other accounts is so far from having respect unto his Right unto the Priesthood of the Law that it directly proves and demonstrates that he had none For his Genealogy is evidently of the Tribe of Judah which was excluded Legally from that Office as we have besides the Institution an Instance in King Uzziah 2 Chron. 26. 16 17 18. from Exod. 30. 7. Numb 18. 7. Hence our Apostle concludes That had he been on the Earth that is under the Order of the Law he could not have been a Priest there being others who by virtue of their Descent had alone the Right thereunto Heb. 8. 3 4. Wherefore God in these things Instructed the Church that he would erect a Priesthood which should no way depend on Natural Generation Descent or Genealogy whence it inevitably follows that the state of the Priesthood under the Law was to cease and to give place unto another which our Apostle principally designs to prove 3. In this respect also the Lord Christ was without Beginning of Days and End of Life For although in his Humane Nature he was both Born and Died yet he had a Priesthood which had no such Beginning of Days as that it should be traduced from any other to him nor shall ever cease or be delivered over from him unto any other but abides unto the consummation of all things In these things was Melchisedec made like unto Christ whom the Apostle here calls the Son of God made like unto the Son of God I have formerly observed in this Epistle that the Apostle makes mention of the Lord Christ under various Appellations on various Occasions so that in one place or another he makes Use of all the Names whereby he is signified in the Scripture Here he calls him the Son of God and that 1. To intimate that although Melchisedec were an Excellent Person yet was he infinitely beneath him whom he Represented even the Son of God He was not the Son of God but he had the Honour in so many things to be made like unto him 2. To declare how all these things which were any way Represented in Melchisedec or couched in the Story or left unto Enquiry by the vail of silence drawn over them could be fulfilled in our High Priest And it was from hence namely that he was the Son of God By virtue hereof was he capable of an always-living abiding uninterrupted Priesthood although as to his Humane Nature he once died in the Discharge of that Office This Description being given of the Person treated of which makes up the Subject of the Proposition it is affirmed concerning him that he abideth a Priest for ever For any thing we find in the Story of his Death or the Resignation of his Office or the Succession of any one unto him therein he abideth a Priest for ever Some I find have been venturing at some obscure Conjectures of the perpetuity of the Priesthood of Melchisedec in Heaven But I cannot perceive that they well understood themselves what they intended Nor did they consider that the real continuance of the Priesthood for ever in the Person of Melchisedec is as inconsistent with the Priesthood of Christ as the continuance of the same Office in the Line of Aaron But things are so related concerning him in the Scripture as that there is no mention of the ending of the Priesthood of his Order nor of his own Personal Administration of his Office by Death or otherwise Hence is he said to abide a Priest for ever This was that which our Apostle principally designed to confirm from hence namely that there was in the Scripture before the Institution of the Aaronical Priesthood a Representation of an Eternal unchangeable Priesthood to be introduced in the Church which he demonstrates to be that of Jesus Christ. It may not be amiss in the close of this Exposition of these Verses summarily to represent the several particulars wherein the Apostle would have us to observe the likeness between Melchisedec and Christ or rather the especial Excellencies and Properties of Christ that were Represented in the Account given of the Name Reign Person and Office of Melchisedec As 1. He was said to be and he really was and he only first the King of Righteousness and then the King of Peace seeing he alone brought in Everlasting Righteousness and made Peace with God for Sinners And in his Kingdom alone are these things to be found 2. He was really and truly the Priest of the High God and properly he was so alone He offered that Sacrifice and made that Attonement which was signified by all the Sacrifices Offered by Holy Men from the Foundation of the World 3. He Blesseth all the Faithful as Abraham the Father of the Faithful was Blessed by Melchisedec In him were they to be Blessed by him are they Blessed through him delivered from the Curse and all the Fruits of it nor are they Partakers of any Blessing but from him 4. He receiveth all the Homage of his People all their grateful Acknowledgments of the Love and Favour of God in the Conquest of their Spiritual Adversaries and Deliverance from them as Melchisedec received the Tenth of the Spoils from Abraham 5. He was really without Progenitors or Predecessors unto his Office nor would I exclude that Mystical sence from the intention of the place that he was without Father as to his Humane Nature and without Mother as to his Divine 6. He was a Priest without Genealogy or Derivation of his Pedigree from the Loyns of Aaron or any other that ever was a Priest in the World and moreover Mysteriously was of a Generation which none can declare 7. He had in his Divine Person as the High Priest of the Church neither Beginning of Days nor End of Life as no such thing is reported of Melchisedec For the Death which he underwent in the Discharge of his Office being not the death of his whole Person but of his Humane Nature only no Interruption of his endless Office did ensue thereon For although the Person of the Son of God died whence God is said to Redeem his Church with his own Blood Acts 20. 28. yet he died not in his whole Person But as the Son of man was in Heaven whilst he was speaking on the Earth John 3. 13. namely he was so in his Divine Nature so whilst he was dead in the Earth in his Humane Nature the same Person was alive in his Divine Absolutely therefore nor in respect of his Office he had neither Beginning of Days nor end of Life 8. He was really the Son of God as Melchisedec in many Circumstances was made like to the Son of God 9. He alone abideth a Priest for ever whereof we must particularly treat afterwards The Doctrinal Observations that may be taken from these Verses
are things still of this Nature both as unto whole Churches and as unto particular Persons Some Churches are like Capernaum as to the outward means of Grace as it were lifted up to Heaven Let them take heed of Capernaum's Judgment in being brought down as low as Hell for their Abuse of them or Negligence in their Improvement Some Persons have Eminent Endowments and if they are not Eminent in Service they will prove their disadvantage Yea the Highest Priviledges should make Men ready to condescend unto the meanest Duties This is that which our Lord Jesus Christ so signally Instructed his Disciples in when he himself washed their Feet and taught them the same Duty towards the meanest of his Disciples John 13. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17. 3. Opportunities for Duty which render it beautiful ought diligently to be embraced So did Abraham as unto this Duty upon his meeting of Melchisedec Hence the Performance of this Duty became so Renowned and was of the Use whereunto it is here applyed by our Apostle It is Season that gives every thing its Beauty And Omission of Seasons or Tergiversations under them are Evidences of an Heart much under the power of Corrupt Lusts or Unbelief 4. When the Instituted Use of Consecrated things ceaseth the things themselves cease to be Sacred or of Esteem For what became of all these Dedicated things after the death of Melchisedec They were no more Sacred the Actual Administration of his Typical Priesthood ceasing Of what Use was the Brazen Serpent after it was taken from the Pole whereon it was lifted up by Gods appointment or of what Use would the lifting of it up be when it was not under an express Command We know it proved a Snare a means of Idolatry and that was all Gods Institution is the Foundation and VVarranty of all Consecration All the Men in the world cannot really Consecrate or Dedicate any thing but by virtue of Divine Appointment And this Appointment of God respected always a limited Use beyond which nothing was Sacred And every thing kept beyond its Appointment is like Manna so kept it breeds VVorms and stinketh These things are manifest from the consideration of all things that God ever accepted or dedicated in the Church But Ignorance of them is that which hath filled the world with horrid Superstition How many things have we had made Sacred which never had warranty from any Institution of God Monasteries Abbies Persons and Lands Altars Bells Utensils with other things of the like Nature very many which whatever Use they are of yet all the Men in the world cannot make them Sacred And the extending of the Sacredness of Dedicated things beyond their Use hath had no less pernitious Event Hence was the Useless Reservation of the Consecrated Bread after the Sacrament and afterwards the Idolatrous VVorship of it But these things are here occasionally only mentioned The Apostle adds in the Confirmation of his Argument VER 5. And verily they that are the Sons of Levi who receive the Office of the Priesthood have a Commandment to take Tithes of the People according to the Law that is of their Brethren though they come out of the Loins of Abraham There is in these words an Illustration and Confirmation of the present Argument proving the Preference of Melchisedec above Abraham from his giving the Tithe or Tenth of all unto him and consequently receiving the Blessing from him And this is taken from what was determined in the Law and acknowledged among the Hebrews with which kind of Arguments the Apostle doth principally press them in the whole Epistle as we have shewed on many Occasions Now this is that the Priests who received Tithes by the Law were Superiour in Dignity and Honour unto the People from whom they did receive them And this was only declared in the Law for the Foundation of it was in the Light of Nature as the Apostle expressely intimates in the Instance of Benediction afterwards There are considerable in the words 1. The Introduction of this new confirmation of his fore-going Argument 2. A Description of the Persons in whom he Instanceth 3. The Action ascribed unto them with its Limitation And 4. The Qualification of the Persons to whom their Power was exercised The Introduction of his Reasoning herein is in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Connexion in the Conjunction is plain yet not a Reason is given of what was spoken before but a Continuation of the same Argument with farther Proof is intended And he adds the Note of Observation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verily as if he had said as to this matter of Tithing and what may thence justly be inferred as to Dignity and Preeminence you may consider how it was under the Law and there what I propose unto you you will find directly Confirmed It is a great advantage to press them with whom we have to do from their own Principles The Description of the Persons in whom he Instanceth is in those words The Sons of Levi who receive the Office of the Priesthood It was the Priests directly whom he intended or the Sons of Aaron and he might have so expressed it the Priests according to the Law But he varieth his expression for sundry Reasons that appear in the Context 1. Because all the Levites did receive Tithes by the Law yea Tithes in the first place was paid unto them in common But because their Dignity among the People was less conspicuous than that of the Priests and the design of the Apostle is not meerly to argue from the giving of Tithes unto any but the giving of them unto them as Priests as Abraham gave Tithes of all to Melchisedec as Priest of the High God he thus expresseth it The Sons of Levi who receive the Office of the Priesthood For though all the Sons of Levi received Tithes yet all of them did not receive the Priesthood with which sort of Persons alone he was concerned 2. He doth thus express it to introduce the mention of Levi whom he was afterwards to mention on the same Occasion and to lay the weight of him and the whole Tribe under the same Argument 3. He minds them by the way of another Dignity of the Priesthood in that not all the Posterity of Abraham no nor yet of Levi were partakers thereof but it was a Priviledge granted only to one part of them even the Family of Aaron And these are the Persons in whom he makes his Instance Thus God distributes Dignity and Preeminence in the Church as he pleaseth Not all the posterity of Abraham but only those of Levi were set apart to receive Tithes and not all the posterity of Levi but only the Family of Aaron did receive the Priesthood And this Order of his Soveraign pleasure God required of them all to submit unto and acquiesce in Numb 16. 9 10. And it is a dangerous thing out of Envy pride or Emulation to transgress the Bounds of
and distinctly in several Persons as they were under the Old Testament could never extend their Acts and Effects unto all the occasions and necessities of the Church The business of our Apostle in this chapter is to prove that the Office of the Priesthood as vested in Aaron and his Successors made nothing perfect did not consummate the Church state nor could effect its Salvation The Kingly Office as it was Typically managed by David and others was remote from answering that Rule and Safety which the Church stood in need of Neither did nor could any one Prophet no nor yet all the Prophets together reveal and declare the whole Counsel of God But 5. These Offices as they were in Christ did perfectly answer and yet do all that belongs to the Redemption Sanctification Protection and Salvation of the Church And this they do on two Accounts 1. Because they were Committed unto him in a more full ample and unlimited manner than either they were or could be unto others on Purpose that they might answer all the ends of Gods Grace towards the Church So as he was made a King not this or that degree or enlargement of Power was committed unto him but all Power in Heaven and in Earth over all the Creation of God in all things Spiritual Temporal and Eternal See our Description and Delineation of this Power on Chap. 1. ver 2 3. As a Prophet he did not receive this or that particular Revelation from God but all the Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge were laid up in him and he knew the whole mind and Counsel of God as coming forth from his Divine Bosom And as unto his Sacerdotal Office we are now engaged in an enquiry into its especial nature as differing from and exalted above whatever was committed unto any of the Sons of men under that Name 2. The principal Reason of the All-sufficiency of the Office-Power and Ability of Christ is taken from his own Person which alone was capable of a Trust of such a Power and able to execute it unto all the Ends of it He alone who was God and Man in one Person was capable of being such a King Priest and Prophet as was able to save the Church unto the uttermost Wherefore in the consideration of this Office-Power of Christ wherein all our Salvation doth depend we have two things to attend unto First his Person who bears these Offices and who alone was fit and able so to do and secondly the especial Nature of the Office as committed unto him On these grounds he was Able to do infinitely more as a Priest than all the Priests of the Order of Aaron could do So the Apostle expresseth it in the next words 3. He is able to save 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even to save to save also not for this or that particular end but absolutely even to save The general sense of this word is limited and determined in the use and Application of it throughout the Scripture not any temporal Deliverances but that which is supernatural spiritual and eternal is intended thereby And 1. The Notion of the word includeth in it a supposition of some Evil or Danger that we are delivered from This is sin with its consequents of Misery in the Curse of the Law and the VVrath to come VVherefore it is said of Christ that he saves his People from their sins Math. 1. 21. from the Curse Gal. 3. 13. and from the Wrath to Come 1 Thess. 1. 10. In these things all that is or can be Evil unto our nature here or unto eternity are included 2. The bringing of us into an estate of present Grace and Right unto future Blessedness with the enjoyment of it in its appointed season is intended in it For although this be not included in the first notion of the VVord yet it belongs unto the Nature of the thing intended This Salvation called therefore great and Eternal Salvation doth not meerly respect the evil we are delivered from but the contrary Good also in the present favour and future enjoyment of God And concerning this Salvation two things are to be considered 1. That there is Power and Ability required unto this work He is able to save It was no easie thing to take away sin to subdue Satan to fulfil the Law to make Peace with God to procure Pardon to purchase Grace and Glory with all other things great and glorious that belong unto this Salvation And it is the great concernment of Faith well to fix this principle that he who hath undertaken this work is able to accomplish it and that by the means he hath designed to use and the way wherein he will proceed We are apt to pass this over without any enquiry into it and to take it for granted that God is able to do whatever he pleaseth But it is not of the absolute Power of God whereof we speak but of the Power of God or of Christ put forth in such a peculiar way And the want of Faith herein is the first and most proper part of Unbelief VVherefore as God ingageth his Omnipotency or All-sufficiency as the Foundation of all his Covenant Actings towards us Gen. 17. 1. So he often pleadeth the same Power to assure us of the Accomplishment of his Promises Isa. 40. 28 29. And it is expresly asserted as the principal ground of Faith Rom. 4. 21. Chap. 11. 23. 1 Cor. 10. 10. 13. Ephes. 3. 20. 2. Tim. 1. 12. Jude 24. and often in this Epistle 2. It is here supposed that the discharge of Christs Priestly Office is the Way designed to save us by or to effect this great work of Salvation No other way or means is appointed of God unto this End Here we must look for it or go without it Wherefore the enquiry is necessary whether in the discharge of this Office and within the bounds and limits of it he be able to save us with this Salvation For indeed many are like those sons of Belial who said of Saul when God had anointed him King how shall this man save us and despised him 1 Sam. 10. 21. They understand not how Christ is able to save them by his Priesthood and therefore under various Pretences they trust to themselves and despise him All false Religion is but a choice of other things for men to place their trust in with a neglect of Christ. And all Superstition grows on the same Root in all effects or instances of it be they great or small VVherefore I say we are to consider whether this Office and the Acts of it be suited and meet for the effecting all things that belong to this Salvation For if we find them not so we cannot believe that he is a Priest able to save us But they evidence themselves to be otherwise unless our minds are darkned by the Power of Unbelief as we shall see in the particulars afterwards insisted on by our Apostle And we are here taught
three things must be considered in these words 1 The state and Condition of Christ as an High Priest He liveth alwayes or for ever 2. What he doth as an High Priest in that state and Condition He maketh Intercession for us 3. The Connexion of these things their mutual regard or the Relation of the work of Christ unto his state and condition the one is the end of the other He lives for ever to make intercession for us 1. As to his state and condition He lives for ever He is alwayes living The Lord Christ in his Divine Person hath a threesold life in Heaven The one he lives in himself the other for himself and the last for us 1. The Eternal life of God in his Divine Nature This he liveth in himself As the Father hath life in himself so hath he given unto the son to have life in himself Joh. 5 26. He hath given it him by eternal Generation in a communication unto him of all the divine Properties And he that hath life in himself a life independent on any other he is the living one the living God No creature can have life in himself For in God we live move and have our being He is hereby Alpha and Omega the first and the last the Begining and end of all Revel 1. 11. because he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the living one ver 18. And this Life of Christ is the foundation of the efficacy of all his Mediatory Actings namely that he was in his own divine Person the Living God Act. 20. 28. 1 Cor. 2. 8. 1 Joh. 3. 16. But this is not the immediate cause of his Mediatory Effects nor is it here intended 2. There is a Life which he liveth for himself namely a Life of unconceivable Glory in his Humane Nature He lead a mortal life in this world a life obnoxious unto misery and death and died accordingly This life is now changed into that of immortal eternal Glory Hence forth he dyeth no more death hath no more Power over him And not only so but this Life of his is unto him the cause of and is attended with all that ineffable Glory which he now enjoyes in Heaven This Life he lives for himself it is his reward the Glory and Honour that he is crowned withal All the endowments all the enjoyments and the whole eternal exaltation of the Humane Nature in the Person of Christ belong unto this Life of Glory And the glorious exaltation of that individual humane nature which the son of God assumed far above all Principalities and Powers and every name that is named in this world or the world to come is the principal part of the Design of Infinite wisdom in the work of the new Creation But neither is this the Life here intended 3. The Lord Christ lives a Mediatory Life in Heaven a Life for us So saith our Apostle he was made a Priest after the Power of an endless Life whereof we have treated before He lives as King Prophet and Priest of the Church So he describes himself Revel 1. 18. I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for evermore and have the keys of Hell and Death As he died for us so he liveth for us and is entrusted with all Power over the Churches adversaries for its good As he died for us so he liveth for us in Heaven and therefore tells us that because he liveth we shall live also Joh. 14. 19. Now this life differeth not essentially from that life of Glory in the Humane Nature which he liveth for himself in Heaven Only it denoteth one especial end of it and that only for a season The Lord Christ will have the life in himself the divine life unto all Eternity and so also will be the Life of Glory in the Humane Nature But he shall cease to live this Mediatory Life for us when the work of his Mediation is accomplished 1 Cor. 15. 28. But he shall lead this life alwaies for us until the whole work committed unto him be accomplished and shall lead it as a Life of Glory in himself unto Eternity Obs. It is a matter of strong consolation unto the Church that Christ lives in Heaven for us It is a spring of unspeakable Joy unto all true Believers that he lives a Life of Immortality and Glory in and for himself in Heaven Who can call to mind all the miseries which he underwent in this world all the reproach and scorn that was cast upon him by his enemies of all sorts all the wrath that the whole world is yet filled withal against him but is refreshed rejoyced transported with a spiritual view by Faith of all that Majesty and Glory which he is now in the Eternal Possession of so was it with Stephen Act. 7. 56. And therefore in all the Appearances and Representations which he hath made of himself since his Ascension into Heaven he hath manifested his present Glory Act. 26. 13. Revel 1. 14 15 16 17 18. And the due consideration hereof cannot but be a matter of unspeakable Refreshment unto all that love him in sincerity But herein lyeth the Life of the Churches Consolation that he continues to live a Mediatory Life in Heaven for us also It is not I fear so considered nor so improved as it ought to be That Christ dyed for us all who own the Gospel profess in words though some so explain their Faith or rather their Infidelity as to deny its proper use and to evacuate its proper ends That so he lived for us here in this world so as that his Life was some way or other unto our Advantage at least thus far that he could not have died if he had not lived before all men will grant even those by whom the principal end of this Life namely to fulfil the Law for us is peremptorily denyed But that Christ now lives a life of Glory in Heaven that most men think is for himself alone But the Text speaks to the contrary He lives for ever to make Intercession for us Neither is this the only end of his present Mediatory Life in Heaven though this only be here expressed Should I undertake to shew the ends of the present Mediatory Life of Christ for the Church it would be too great and long a decursion from the Text. However the whole of the work of this Life of his may be reduced into these three heads 1. His immediate Actings towards the Church it self which respects his Prophetical Office 2. His Actings for the Church in the world by Vertue and Power of his Kingly Office 3. His Actings with God the Father in their behalf in the dischage of his sacerdotal Office 1. The first consisteth in his sending and giving the Holy Ghost unto the Church He lives for ever to send the Holy Spirit unto his Disciples Without this constant effect of the present Mediatory Life of Christ the Being of the Church would fail it
could not subsist one moment For hereon depends 1. All saving Light to understand the word of God or spiritual things in a spiritual manner wherein he continueth the exercise of his Prophetical Office 2. All Habitual Grace whereby the souls of the Elect are quickned and regenerated 3 All supplyes of actual Grace which the whole Church hath from him every moment and without which it could yield no Obedience unto God 4. All spiritual Gifts the sole foundation and means of the Churches edification and without which it can have no real benefit by any Gospel Ordinances or Administrations 5. All Comfort and all Consolation which in all variety of occurrences the Church doth stand in need of which things I have elsewhere spoken unto at large 2. His Actings by vertue of his Mediatory Life for the Church in the world are also various wherein he exerciseth his Kingly Power that Power which is given unto him as he is Head over all things unto the Church Ephes. 1. 22. Hence is the whole preservation of the Church in this world by glorious effects of divine wisdom and power Hence doth proceed the present controuls that are given unto its Adversaries and hence will proceed their future Destruction for he must raign until all his Enemies be made his footstool In the exercise of this Life wherein the Keys of Hell and Death are committed unto him doth he put forth his Mighty power over the World Sathan Death the Grave and Hell for the Eternal security and Salvation of the Church Did he not live this Life for us in Heaven neither the whole Church nor any one member of it could be preserved one moment from utter ruine But hereby are all their adversaries continually disappointed 3. By vertue of this Life he Acts with God on the behalf of the Church And the only way whereby he doth this in the Discharge of his Priestly Office is expressed here in the Text He lives for ever to make intercession for them Now this expression containing the whole of what the Lord Christ as the High Priest of the Church doth now with God for them and whereon the certainty of our Salvadoth depend it must with some diligence be enquired into Expositors especially those of the Roman Church enquire with many Disputes into the External form of the Intercession of Christ as namely whether it be oral and vocal or no. And they produce many Testimonies out of the Antients upon the one side and the other And great weight is laid by some on the Difference and Determination of it For whereas Ribera grants that the Dispute is more about words and the manner of Expression than the matter it self Tena affirms that what he says is most false And it is evident that the Testimonies produced by themselves out of the Antients as Chrysostome Theophylact Ambrose Austin and so to Ruperu●s and Thomas are expresly contradictory to one another Now although our principal concernment lyeth in the internal form and efficacy of the Intercession of our High Priest rather than in the outward manner of it yet so far as that also is revealed we may enquire into it And we shall find that the true stating of it tends unto the encouragement and establishment of our Faith And the things ensuing may be observed unto this purpose 1. The Socinian Figment about the Nature of the Intercession of Christ is of no consideration For by a strange violence offered unto the nature of things and the signification of words they contend that this Intercession is nothing but the Power of Christ to communicate actually all good things the whole effect of his Mediation unto Believers That Christ hath such a Power is no way questioned But that this Power in the exercise of it is his Intercession is a most fond Imagination That which casts them on this absurd conception of things is their hatred of the Priestly Office of Christ as exercised towards God on our behalf But I have elsewhere sufficiently disputed against this fiction 2. The Intercession of Christ was under the Old Testament Typed out three ways 1. By the Living fire that was continually on the Altar Herewith were all sacrifices to be kindled and burned which thence were called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Firings But this principally Typified his Prayers when he offered himself unto God through the Eternal Spirit which he did with strong cryes and Supplications or Intercessions Heb. 5. 7. Hereby and the Actings of the Eternal Spirit therein he kindled and fired in himself a sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour unto God Eph. 5. 2. 2. By the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or dayly sacrifice of morning and evening for the whole People See the Institution of it Exod. 29. ver 38 39 40 41 42. For although that sacrifice had in it the nature of an expiatory Oblation because it was by blood yet the principal end of it was to make continual Application of the great solemn annual expiation unto the Consciences of the People 3. By the Incense that was burned in the Sanctuary And this was of two sorts 1. That wherewith the High Priest entred once a year into the most holy place on the Day of Expiation For he might not enter in yea he was to dye if he did unless in his entrance he filled the place and covered the Ark and Mercy-Seat with a cloud of Incense Levit. 16. 12 13. Which Incense was to be fired with burning coals from the Altar of burnt-offerings So did our High Priest He filled Heaven at his entrance with the sweet savour of his Intercession kindled with the Coals of that Eternal Fire wherewith he offered himself unto God 2. The Incense that was burned every day in the Sanctuary by the Priests in their courses This represented Prayer Psal. 141. 2. and was always accompanied with it Luke 1. 9 10. This also was a Type of the continual efficacy of the Intercession of Christ Revel 8. 4. But this was the most solemn representation of it In that anniversary Sacrifice whereof we must treat afterwards at large there was Attonement made for all the Sins and Transgressions of the People Levit. 16. 21. And it was consummated by carrying some of the Blood as a representation of it into the most holy place sprinkling it before the Ark of the Covenant and the Mercy-Seat This was done but once in the year To keep this in Remembrance and to make Application of the Benefits of it unto the Consciences of the Worshippers the dayly sacrifice was appointed So doth the intercession of Christ make continual Application of his great sacrifice and Attonement whence it derives its efficacy And as the Fire on the Altar kindled all the renewed sacrifices which were to be repeated and multiplyed because of their weakness and imperfection so doth the Intercession of Christ make effectual the one perfect sacrifice which he offered once for all in the varions applications of it unto the Consciences
of Believers Heb. 10. 2. 3. The actual Intercession of Christ in Heaven as the second Act of his sacerdotal Office is a fundamental Article of our Faith and a principal Foundation of the Churches consolation So is it asserted to be 1 John 2. 1 2. And it is expressed by our Apostle as that whereby the Death of Christ is made effectual unto us Rom. 8. 3 4. For it comprizeth the whole care and all the Actings of Christ as our High Priest with God in the behalf of the Church This therefore is the immediate spring of all Gracious communications unto us For hereby doth he act his own Care Love and Compassion and from thence do we receive all Mercy all Supplies of Grace and Consolation needful unto our Duties Temptations and Trials Hereon depends all our encouragement to make our Application unto God to come with boldness of Faith unto the Throne of Grace Chap. 4. 15 16. Chap. 10. 21 22. Wherefore whatever Apprehensions we may attain of the manner of it the thing it self is the center of our Faith Hope and Consolation 4. It is no way unworthy or unbecoming the humane nature of Christ in its glorious Exaltation to pray unto God It was in and by the humane Nature that the Lord Christ exercised and executed all the Duties of his Offices whilst he was on Earth And he continueth to discharge what remains of them in the same Nature still And however that Nature be glorified it is the same essentially that it was when he was in this world To ascribe another kind of Nature unto him under pretence of a more divine Glory is to deny his Being and to substitute a fancy of our own in his Room So then the Humane Nature of Christ however exalted and glorifyed is humane Nature still subsisting in dependance on God and subjection unto him Hence God gives him new Revelations now in his glorified condition Revel 1. 1. With respect hereunto he acted of old as the Angel of the Covenant with expresse Prayers for the Church Zech. 1. 12 13. So the Command given him to intercede by the way of Petition Request or Prayer Psal. 2. 8. Ask of me respects his state of Exaltation at the Right hand of God when he was declared to be the Son of God with Power by the Resurrection from the dead v. 7 8. And the Incense which he offereth with the Prayers of the Saints Rev. 8. 3 4. is no other but his own Intercession whereby their Prayers are made acceptable unto God 5. This Praying of Christ at present is no other but such as may become him who sits down at the Right hand of the Majesty on High There must therefore needs be a great difference as to the outward manner between his present Intercession in Heaven and his Praying whilst he was on the Earth especially at some seasons For being encompassed here with Temptations and Difficulties he cast himself at the foot of God with strong cryes tears and supplications Chap. 5. 7. This would not become his present glorious state nor is he liable or exposed unto any of the causes or occasions of that kind of treating with God And yet at an another time whilst he was in this world he gave us the best estimate and Representation of his present Intercession that we are able to comprehend And this was in his Prayer recorded John 17th For therein his confidence in God his Union in and with him the Declaration of his Will and Desires are all expressed in such a manner as to give us the best understanding of his present Intercession For a created nature can rise no higher to expresse an Interest in God with an Oneness of mind and Will than is therein declared And as the Prayers with cryes and tears when he offered himself unto God were peculiarly Typed by the Fire on the Altar so was this solemn Prayer represented by that cloud of Incense wherewith the High Priest covered the Ark and the Mercy-seat at his entrance into the most holy place In the vertue of this holy cloud of incense did he enter the Holy places not made with hands Or we may apprehend its Relation unto the Types in this Order His Prayer John 17th was the preparation of the sweet Spices whereof the Incense was made and compounded Exod. 30. 34. His Sufferings that ensued thereon were as the breaking and bruising of those Spices wherein all his Graces had their most fervent exercise as Spices yield their strongest savour under their bruising At his entrance into the Holy place this Incense was fired with Coals from the Altar that is the efficacy of his Oblation wherein he had offered himself unto God through the Eternal Spirit rendred his Prayer as Incense covering the Ark and Mercy-seat that is procuring the fruits of the Attonment made before God 6. It must be granted that there is no need of the use of Words in the immediate Presence of God God needs not our words whilst we are here on Earth as it were absent from him For he is present with us and all things are open and naked before him But we need the use of them for many reasons which I have elsewhere declared But in the glorious presence of God when we shall behold him as the Lord Christ doth in the most eminent manner Face to Face it cannot be understood what need or use we can have of words to express our selves unto God in Prayers or Praises And the souls of men in their separate state and condition can have no use of Voice or VVords yet are they said to cry and pray with a loud voice because they do so virtually and effectually Rev. 6. 9 10. However I will not determine what outward Transactions are necessary unto the glory of God in this matter before the Angels and Saints that are about his Throne For there is yet a Church state in Heaven wherein we have Communion Chap. 12. 22 23 24. What solemn outward and as it were visible Transactions of worship are required thereunto we know not And it may be the Representation of Gods Throne and his worship Revel 4 5. wherein the Lamb in the midst of the Throne hath the principal part may not belong only unto what is done in the Church here below And somewhat yet there is which shall cease and not be any more after the Day of Judgment 1 Cor. 15. 26 28. 7. It must be granted that the vertue efficacy and Prevalency of the Intercession of the Lord Christ depends upon and flows from his Oblation and Sacrifice This we are plainly taught from the Types of it of Old For the Incense and carrying of Blood into the Holy place after the Expiatory Sacrifice the great Type of his Oblation of himself did both of them receive their efficacy and had respect unto the Sacrifice offered without Besides it is expresly said that the Lord Christ by the one Offering of himself obtained for us eternal
gloriously in the Death and Resurrection of Christ so as to be the matter of triumphant Praises unto God Such is the Triumph thereon described Col. 2. 15 1 Tim. 3. 16. And it may be observed that as on the laying of the Foundation of the Earth all the Holy Angels triumphed in the expression and demonstration of the infinite Wisdom Power and Goodness of God which they beheld so in the Foundation of the New Creation the Apostate Angels who repined at it and opposed it unto their Power were lead Captives carried in Triumph and made the Footstool of the glory of Christ. But all this Joy and Triumph is built on the security of the unchangeable Love Care and Power of Jesus Christ gloriously to accomplish the work which he had undertaken For had he left it when he left the Earth it had never been finished For great was that part of the work which yet remained to be perfected Neither could the Remainder of this work be committed unto any other hand He employeth others under him in his work to act Ministerially in his name and Authority So he useth the Ministery of Angels and Men. But did not he himself continue to act in them by them with them and without them the whole work would fail and be disappointed In one instance of the Revelation of the will of God concerning the state of the Church by the opening of the Book wherein it was recorded there was none found worthy in Heaven or Earth to do it but the Lamb that was slain the Lion of the Tribe of Judah Revel 5. 5. Chap. 6. 1. How much less is any Creature able to accomplish all that remains for the saving of the Church unto the utmost Who can expresse the opposition that continues to be made unto this work of compleating the Salvation of Believers what Power is able to conflict and conquer the remaining strength of Sin the opposition of Sathan and the World How innumerable are the Temptations which every individual Believer is exposed unto each of them in its own nature ruinous and pernitious God alone knoweth all things perfectly in infinite wisdom and as they are He alone knows how great a work it is to save Believers unto the utmost what Wisdom what Power what Grace and Mercy is requisite thereunto He alone knows what is meet unto the way and manner of it so as it may be perfected unto his own Glory His infinite wisdom alone hath found out and determined the glorious and mysterious ways of the Emanation of Divine Power and Grace unto this End Upon all these Grounds unto all these Purposes hath he appointed the continual intercession of the Lord Christ in the most Holy place This he saw needful and expedient unto the Salvation of the Church and his own glory So will he exert his own Almighty Power unto those ends The good Lord help me to believe and adore the Mystery of it 2. The most glorious Prospect that we can take into the things that are within the vail into the remaining Transactions of the work of our Salvation in the most Holy place is in the Representation that is made unto us of the intercession of Christ. Of old when Moses went into the Tabernacle all the People looked after him until he entred in and then the Pillar of the Cloud stood at the door of it that none might see into the Holy place Exod. 33. 8 9. And when the Lord Christ was taken into Heaven the Disciples looked after him until a cloud interposed at the Tabernacle door and took him out of their sight Act. 1. 9. And when the High Priest was to enter into the Tabernacle to carry the Blood of the sacrifice of Expiation into the most Holy place no man be he Priest or not was suffered to enter into or abide in the Tabernacle Levit. 16. 17. Our High Priest is now likewise entred into the most Holy place within the second vail where no eye can pierce unto him Yet is he there as an High Priest which makes Heaven it self to be a glorious Temple and a place as yet for the exercise of an instituted Ordinance such as the Priesthood of Christ is But who can look into who can comprehend the Glories of those Heavenly Administrations Some have pretended a view into the orders and service of the whole Chore of Angels but have given us only a Report of their own imaginations What is the Glory of the Throne of God what the Order and Ministry of his Saints and Holy ones what is the manner of the worship that is given unto him that sits on the Throne and to the Lamb the Scripture doth sparingly deliver as knowing our disability whilst we are cloathed with flesh and inhabit Tabernacles of clay to comprehend aright such transcendent Glories The best and most steady view we can have of these things is in the Account which is given us of the intercession of Christ. For herein we see him by Faith yet vested with the Office of the Priesthood and continuing in the Discharge of it This makes Heaven a Temple as was said and the feat of instituted worship Rev 7. 15. Hence in his Appearance unto John he was cloathed with a Garment down to the Foot and girt about the paps with a golden Girdle both which were sacerdotal vestments Rev. 1. 13. Herein is God continually glorifyed hereby is the Salvation of the Church continually carried on and consummated This is the work of Heaven which we may safely contemplate by Faith 3. The intercession of Christ is the great evidence of the continuance of his Love and Care his Pity and Compassion towards his Church Had he only continued to Rule the Church as its King and Lord he had manifested his glorious Power his Righteousness and Faithfulness The Scepter of his Kingdom is a Scepter of Righteousness But Mercy and Compassion Love and Tenderness are constantly ascribed unto him as our High Priest See Chap. 4. 15. Chap. 5. 1 2. So the great exercise of his sacerdotal Office in laying down his Life for us and expiating our sins by his Blood is still peculiarly ascribed unto his Love Gal. 2. 20 Ephes. 5. 2. Revel 1. 5. Wherefore these properties of Love and Compassion belong peculiarly unto the Lord Christ as our High Priest All Men who have any spiritual experience and understanding will acknowledge how great the concernment of Believers is in these things and how all their Consolation in this World depends upon them He whose soul hath not been refreshed with a due Apprehension of the unspeakable Love Tenderness and Compassion of Jesus Christ is a stranger unto the Life of Faith and unto all true spiritual Consolation But how shall we know that the Lord Christs is thus tender Loving and Compassionate that he continueth so to be or what evidence or Testimony have we of it It is true he was eminently so when he was upon the Earth in the days
unto the Glory of our High Priest For after he had offered his great Sacrifice unto God he entred not into the Holy Place made with hands but into Heaven it self And he entred not to stand with humble Reverence before the Throne but to sit on the Throne of God at his right hand Nor did he do so to abide there for a season but for evermore 2. As to the words themselves we may observe that the Apostle three times in this Epistle maketh use of them with some little variety Chap. 1. 3. Chap. 12. 2. And in this place Chap. 1. 3. He sate down at the right hand of the Majesty on High where there is no mention of the Throne Chap. 12. 2. He is sate down at the right hand of the Throne of God where Majesty is not added Here we have both the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty In the first place the Glory of his Kingly Power is intended in the last his Exaltation and Glory as they ensued on his Sufferings and in this place the Declaration of his Glory in his Priestly Office The same Glory and Advancement hath respect unto various Acts and Powers in the Lord Christ. The manner of his enjoyment of this Dignity and Glory is expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He sate down Hereof there was nothing Typical in the Legal High Priest who never sate down in the Holy Place But as he was in many things typed by the Levitical Priests so in what they could not reach unto he was represented in Melchisedec who was both a King and a Priest And hence he is prophesi'd of as a Priest upon his Throne Zech. 6. 13. And the immutable stability of his state and condition is also intended 2. The Dignity it self consists in the place of his Residence where he sate down and this was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at the right hand See the Exposition hereof Chap. 1. 3. 3. This right hand is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is frequent mention in the Scripture of the Thorne of God A Throne is Insigne Regium an Ensign of Royal Power That intended by it is the manifestation of the Glory and Power of God in his Authority and Sovereign Rule over all 4. This Throne is here said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Majesty or Glorious Greatness and Power that is of God himself for his essential Glory and Power is intended The Right hand of the Throne of Majesty is the same with the Right hand of God Only God is represented in all his Glory as on his Throne Christ is sate down at the Right hand of God as considered in all his glorious Power and Rule Higher expression there cannot be used to lead us into an holy Adoration of the tremendous invisible Glory which is intended And this is the eternal stable condition of the Lord Christ our High Priest A state of inconceivable Power and Glory Herein he dischargeth the remaining Duties of his Mediation according as the nature of his especial Offices do require In this state doth he take care and provide for the application of the benefits of his Oblation or Sacrifice unto Believers and that by Intercession whereof we have spoken 5. Thus is he said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Heavens as in the other place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Highest that is Heavens And by the Heavens here not these visible aspectable Heavens are intended for with respect unto them he is said to be exalted above all Heavens and to have passed through them But it is that which the Scripture calls the Heaven of Heavens 1 Kings 8. 27. wherein is the especial residence and manifestation of the glorious presence of God With respect hereunto our Saviour hath taught us to call on our Father which is in Heaven And from the words we may observe that The principal Glory of the Priestly Office of Christ depends on the glorious Exaltation of his Person To this end is it here pleaded by the Apostle and thereby he evinceth his glorious Excellency above all the High Priests under the Law To evidence and make useful this Observation the things ensuing are to be observed 1. The Divine Nature of Christ is capable of no real Exaltation by an addition of Glory but only by the way of manifestation So God absolutely is often in the Scripture said to be exalted that is he is so when he himself by any Acts of Grace or Providence makes the eternal Glory of his Power his Holiness or any other properties of his Nature manifest and conspicuous or when others ascribe unto him the Glory and Praise that are his due So only may the Lord Christ be exalted or made glorious with respect unto his Divine Nature wherein he is essentially over all God blessed for ever And there is in this way an Exaltation or Manifestation of Glory peculiar and proper unto the Person of Christ as distinct from the Persons of the Father and the Holy Spirit For he did in a peculiar way and manner for a season forego and leave his Glory as to the Manifestation of it For being essentially in the form of God and counting it no robbery to be equal with God yet he made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant Phil. 2. 6 7. In his Incarnation and his whole converse on the Earth he cast a vail over his eternal Glory so as that it appeared not in its own native lustre Those indeed who believed on him saw his Glory the Glory as of the onely begotten of the Father full of grace and truth John 1. 14. But they saw it darkly and as in a Glass during the time of his Humiliation But after his Resurrection his Glory was unvailed and made conspicuous even when he was declared to be the Son of God with power according unto the Spirit of holiness by the resurrection from the dead Rom. 1. 4. 2. The Person of Christ as to his Divine Nature was always on the Throne and is uncapable of the Exaltation here mentioned of sitting down at the right hand of it Although he came down from Heaven though he descended into the lower parts of the Earth although he was exposed unto all miseries was obedient unto death the death of the Cross wherein God redeemed his Church with his own blood yet did he all this in the humane nature that he assumed his Divine Person can no more really leave the Throne of Majesty than cease to be So he saith of himself No man hath ascended up to Heaven but he that came down from Heaven even the Son of man which is in Heaven John 3. 13. His Ascension into Heaven in this place which preceded the actual Ascension of his humane Nature is nothing but his admission into the knowledge of heavenly things of all the secrets of the counsel of God see John 1. 18.
that was typically represented in the Sanctuary below And therein doth the Lord Christ discharge his Priestly Office for the good of the Church It was a joyful time with the Church of Old when the High Priest entred into the Holy Place For he carried with him the Blood wherewith Attonement was made for all their sins Yet he was quickly again to leave that Place and his Ministration therein But our High Priest abides in the Sanctuary in the Holy Place for ever alwaies representing the efficacy of the Blood whereby atonement was made for all our sins As no Interposition between Heaven and us should discourage us while Christ is there ministring for us so his being there will draw our hearts and minds thither continually if so be we are really interested in his Holy ministrations These things are to some in darkness and obscurity if not wholly out of their sight yet out of their Practice In their Faith Worship and Obedience they find no concernment in the Heavenly ministrations of this High Priest Things within the Vail are hid from them Yet would such Persons be esteemed Christians But the Relief the Direction the Consolation which true Believers do or may in the due exercise of Faith receive by the consideration hereof are gracious and pleasant yea full of Glory The second Part of the Limitation of the ministration of our High Priest is in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and of that true Tabernacle which is farther described by its efficient cause expressed both positively and negatively which God pitched and not man Expositors generally agree that by True in this Place that which is Substantial Solid and abiding is intended For it is opposed unto that which is Umbratile Transitory and Pigurative The Old Tabernacle could in no sense be said to be false or deceiving for it was an Ordinance of God set up and used by his Appointment and gave true directions unto its proper end But it was Figurative and Typical denoting somewhat that was to be the true and substantial Tabernacle of God So is the expression interpreted John 6. 23. Moses gave you not the Bread from Heaven but my Father giveth you the true Bread from Heaven that is Spiritually substantial and abiding nourishing the soul unto eternal Life But what is the Tabernacle here intended deserves our diligent enquiry And I find a fourfold sense to be given of these words The true Tabernacle 1. Some as Grotius take it for this whole Universe the Fabrick of Heaven and Earth This some even among the Heathen have called the Tabernacle and Temple of God This he hath made as it were to dwell in as a certain fixed Place for the manifestation of his Glory And whereas the ministry of Christ at least as unto the effects of it is not confined unto any certain Place above or below to no material Tabernacle or Temple The whole universe is called his Tabernacle as being that which is true substantial and abiding And thus it may answer what is affirmed of all Power being given unto him in Heaven and Earth and his being given to be the Head over all things unto the Church I see nothing absurd in this Opinion nor contradictory unto the Analogy of Faith But the Design of the Apostle in using these words and expressions will not allow this to be his especial meaning For somewhat he doth intend that the Old Tabernacle did typify and represent which it did not the Fabrick of the Universe but that especial pattern which was shewed unto Moses in the Mount 2. Some with more probability do judge that by the true Tabernacle the Universal Spiritual Catholick Church is intended For this is compared expressly unto a Tabernacle Isa. 33. 20. Chap. 54. 2. And herein doth God dwell and walk amongst men Hereof Christ may be said to be the minister For as he is the Head of it so he dwelleth in it And it is undoubtedly in the behalf of this Tabernacle that he continueth to administer in the Holy Place and all the Benefits of his Ministration do redound hereunto But yet all this doth not suffice to have the Lord Christ called the Minister of this Tabernacle This indeed is that which he ministreth for but it is not that which he ministreth by The Tabernacle and the things contained in it were the means of worship and that which was materially employed in divine service which the Catholick Church answereth not unto Neither was the Tabernacle of Old which is here alluded unto a Type of the Church but of Christ himself 3. Most Expositors take the Tabernacle as they do the Sanctuary for Heaven it self And they would have the word true by a Zeugma to belong unto the Sanctuary as well as unto the Tabernacle which we have also before allowed But yet this proveth not that the Sanctuary and the Tabernacle must be the same though both be equally true in the same sense This way go the Greek Expositors as Chrysostome Theophylact and Oecumenius on the Place And because this Tabernacle is said to be fixed of God Chrysostome reproacheth them who say that the Heavens do move and are Spherical though he never had a prophetical dream of the Copernican Hypothesis But yet as Beza well observes they forsook their own interpretation on Chap. 9. 11 12. where the Tabernacle is spoken of in the same sense that here it is But besides the Reasons that shall be given immediately for another interpretation two things will not comply with this For 1. There is no reason why the Apostle should express the same thing first under the name of the Sanctuary and then of a Tabernacle 2. There is no especial Reason why it should be added peculiarly concerning the Heavens which God hath fixed and not man for this was never questioned 4. I say therefore that by this true Tabernacle the Humane Nature of the Lord Christ himself is intended Hereof he is the Minister herein doth he minister before God above For 1. Hereof the Old Tabernacle was a Type Thence is the expression taken and thereunto is opposition made in the Epithete True This therefore is our best direction and rule in the interpretation of this expression For look what that Type did signifie what was to be the substantial Antitype of it that is the true Tabernacle whereof the Lord Christ is the Minister For all agree that it is called true in opposition and answer unto that which was umbratile and figurative Now that Tabernacle was not erected to be a Type of Heaven nor is any such thing intimated in the Scripture A token pledge and means it was of Gods presence with his People here on earth of his nearness unto them whence also he is said to dwell among them But this he doth really and substantially only through Christ. He therefore alone is this true Tabernacle For 2. In answer hereunto when he was incarnate and came into the world it is said that
the Church of Rome do commonly place this difference in three things 1. In the Promises of them which in the Old Covenant were temporal onely in the New spiritual and heavenly 2. In the Precepts of them which under the Old required onely external Obedience designing the righteousness of the outward man under the New they are internal respecting principally the inner man of the heart 3. In their Sacraments For these under the Old Testament were only outwardly figurative but those of the New are operative of Grace But these things do not express much if any thing at all of what the Scripture placeth this difference in And besides as by some of them explained they are not true especially the two latter of them For I cannot but somewhat admire how it came into the heart or mind of any man to think or say that God ever gave a Law or Laws Precept or Precepts that should respect the outward man onely and the regulation of external duties A thought of it is contrary unto all the essential Properties of the Nature of God and meet only to ingenerate apprehensions of him unsuited unto all his glorious excellencies The life and foundation of all the Laws under the Old Testament was Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy Soul without which no outward Obedience was ever accepted with him And for the third of the supposed differences neither were the Sacraments of the Law so barely figurative but that they did exhibit Christ unto Believers for they all drank of the spiritual Rock which Rock was Christ nor are those of the Gospel so operative of Grace but that without Faith they are useless unto them that do receive them The things wherein this difference doth consist as expressed in the Scripture are partly circumstantial and partly substantial and may be reduced unto the Heads ensuing 1. These two Covenants differ in the circumstance of time as to their promulgation declaration and establishment This difference the Apostle expresseth from the Prophet Jeremiah in the 9th verse of this Chapter where it must be more fully spoken unto In brief the first Covenant was made at the time that God brought the children of Israel out of Egypt and took its date from the third month after their coming up from thence Exod. 19. Chap. 24. From what is reported in the latter place wherein the people give their actual consent unto the terms of it it began its formal obligation as a Covenant And we must afterwards enquire when it was abrogated and ceased to oblige the Church The New Covenant was declared and made known in the latter days Heb. 1. 1. in the dispensation of the fulness of time Eph. 1. 10. And it took date as a Covenant formally obliging the whole Church from the Death Resurrection Ascension of Christ and sending of the Holy Ghost I bring them all into the Epocha of this Covenant because though principally it was established by the first yet was it not absolutely obligatory as a Covenant until after the last of them 2. They differ in the circumstance of place as to their promulgation which the Scripture also taketh notice of The first was declared in Mount Sinai the manner whereof and the station of the people in receiving the Law I have in my Exercitations unto the first Part of this Exposition at large declared and thither the Reader is referred Exod. 19. 18. The other was declared on Mount Sinai and the Law of it went forth from Jerusalem Isa. 2. 2. This difference with many remarkable instances from it our Apostle insists on Gal. 4. 24 25 26. These are the two Covenants the one from Mount Sinai which gendreth unto bondage which is Agar That is Agar the Bondwoman whom Abraham took before the Heir of Promise was born was a Type of the Old Covenant given on Sinai before the introduction of the New or the Covenant of Promise For so he adds For this Agar is Mount Sinai in Arabia and answereth unto Jerusalem that now is and is in bondage with her children This Mount Sinai when the Old Covenant was given and which was represented by Agar is in Arabia cast quite out of the Verge and Confines of the Church And it answereth or is placed in the same Series Rank and Order with Jerusalem namely in the opposition of the two Covenants For as the New Covenant the Covenant of Promise giving freedom and liberty was given at Jerusalem in the Death and Resurrection of Christ with the Preaching of the Gospel which ensued thereon so the Old Covenant that brought the People into Bondage was given at Mount Sinai in Arabia 3. They differ in the manner of their promulgation and establishment There were two things remarkable that accompanied the Solemn Declaration of the first Covenant 1. The dread and terror of the outward appearance on Mount Sinai which filled all the People yea Moses himself with fear and trembling Hebr. 12. 18 19 20 21. Exod. 19. 16. Chap. 20. 18 19. Together herewith was a Spirit of Fear and Bondage administred unto all the People so as that they chose to keep at a distance and not draw nigh unto God Deut. 5 23 24 25 26 27. 2. That it was given by the ministry and disposition of Angels Acts 7. 13. Gal. 3. 19. Hence the People was in a sense put in subjection unto Angels and they had an authoritative ministry in that Covenant The Church that then was was put into some kind of subjection unto Angels as the Apostle plainly intimates Hebr. 2. 5. Hence the worshipping or adoration of Angels began among the People Col. 2. 18. Which some with an addition unto their Folly and Superstition would introduce into the Christian Church wherein they have no such authoritative Ministry as they had under the Old Covenant Things are quite otherwise in the promulgation of the New Covenant The Son of God in his own Person did declare it This he spake from heaven as the Apostle observes in opposition unto the giving of the Law on the earth Hebr. 12. 25. yet did he speak on the earth also the mystery whereof himself declares John 3. 13. And he did all things that belong unto the establishment of this Covenant in a spirit of meekness and condescension with the highest evidence of love grace and compassion encouraging and inviting the weary the burdened the heavy and laden to come unto him And by his Spirit he makes his Disciples to carry on the same work until the Covenant was fully declared Hebr. 2. 3. see John 1. 17 18. And the whole Ministry of Angels in the giving of this Covenant was meerly in a way of service and obedience unto Christ and they owned themselves the Fellow-servants only of them that have the testimony of Jesus Rev. 19. 10. So that this world to come as it was called of old was no way put in subjection unto them 4. They differ in their Mediators The Mediator of the
the Old Testament or dispensation of the Old Covenant Such a time there was appointed unto it in the counsel of God during this season things fell out as described ver 9. The certain period fixed unto these days is called by our Apostle the time of Reformation Chap. 9. 10. After those days that is in or at their expiration when they were coming unto their end whereby the first Covenant waxed old and decayed God would make this Covenant with them And although much was done towards it before those days came absolutely unto an end and did actually expire yet is the making of it said to be after those days because being made in the wane and declension of them it did by its making put a full and final end unto them This in general was the time here designed for the making and establishing of the New Covenant But we must yet farther enquire into the precise time of the accomplishment of this Promise And I say the whole of it cannot be limited unto any one season absolutely as though all that was intended in Gods making of this Covenant did consist in any one individual act The making of the Old Covenant with the Fathers is said to be in the day wherein God took them by the hand to bring them out of the Land of Egypt During the season intended there were many things that were preparatory to the making of that Covenant or to the solemn establishment of it So was it also in the making of the New Covenant It was gradually made and established and that by sundry Acts preparatory for it or confirmatory of it And there are six degrees observable in it 1. The first peculiar entrance into it was made by the Ministry of John the Baptist. Him had God raised to send under the name in the spirit and power of Elijah to prepare the way of the Lord Mal. 4. Hence is his Ministry called the beginning of the Gospel Mark 1. 1 2. Until his coming the People were bound absolutely and universally unto the Covenant in Horeb without alteration or addition in any Ordinance of Worship But his Ministry was designed to prepare them and to cause them to look out after the accomplishment of this promise of making the New Covenant Mal. 4. 4 5 6. And those by whom his Ministry was despised did reject the counsel of God against themselves that is unto their ruine and made themselves liable to that utter excision with the Threatnings whereof the Writings of the Old Testament are closed Mal. 4. 6. He therefore called the People off from resting in or trusting unto the Priviledges of the first Covenant Mat. 3. 8 9 10. preached unto them a Doctrine of Repentance and instituted a new Ordinance of Worship whereby they might be initiated into a new state or condition a new Relation unto God And in his whole Ministry he pointed at directed and gave Testimony unto him who was then to come to establish this New Covenant This was the beginning of the accomplishment of this Promise 2. The coming in the Flesh and personal Ministry of our Lord Jesus Christ himself was an eminent advance and degree therein The dispensation of the Old Covenant did yet continue For he himself as made of a Woman was made under the Law yielding Obedience unto it observing all its Precepts and Institutions But his coming in the Flesh laid an Axe unto the Root of that whole dispensation For therein the main end that God designed thereby towards that People was accomplished The interposition of the Law was now to be taken away and the Promise to become all unto the Church Hence upon his Nativity this Covenant was proclaimed from Heaven as that which was immediately to take place Luk. 2. 13 14. But it was more fully and evidently carried on in and by his personal Ministry The whole doctrine thereof was preparatory unto the immediate introduction of this Covenant But especially there was therein and thereby by the truth which he taught by the manner of his teaching by the miracles which he wrought in conjunction with an open accomplishment of the Prophesies concerning him evidence given that he was the Messiah the Mediator of the New Covenant Herein was a declaration made of the Person in and by whom it was to be established and therefore he told them That unless they believed it was he who was so promised they should dye in iheir sins 3. The way for the introduction of this Covenant being thus prepared it was solemnly enacted and confirmed in and by his death For herein he offered that Sacrifice to God whereby it was established And hereby the Promise properly became 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Testament as our Apostle proves at large Chap. 9. 14 15 16. And he declares in the same place that it answered those Sacrifices whose blood was sprinkled on the People and the Book of the Law in the confirmation of the first Covenant which things must be treated of afterwards This was the Center wherein all the Promises of Grace did meet and from whence they derived their efficacy From henceforward the Old Covenant and all its administrations having received their full accomplishment did abide only in the patience of God to be taken down and removed out of the way in his own time and manner For really and in themselves their force and authority did then cease and was taken away See Eph. 2. 14 15 16. Col. 2. 14 15. But our obligation unto Obedience and the observance of Commands though formally and ultimately it be resolved into the Will of God yet immediately it respects the Revelation of it by which we are directly obliged Wherefore although the causes of the removal of the Old Covenant had already been applied thereunto yet the Law and its Institutions were still continued not only lawful but useful unto the Worshippers until the Will of God concerning their abrogation was fully declared 4. This New Covenant had the complement of its making and establishment in the Resurrection of Christ. For in order hereunto the Old was to have its perfect end God did not make the first Covenant and therein revive represent and confirm the Covenant of Works with the Promise annexed unto it meerly that it should continue for such a season and then die of its self and be arbitrarily removed But that whole dispensation had an end which was to be accomplished and without which it was not consistent with the wisdom or righteousness of God to remove it or take it away Yea nothing of it could be removed until all was fulfilled It was easier to remove Heaven and Earth than to remove the Law as unto its Right and Title to rule the Souls and Consciences of men before all was fulfilled And this end had two parts 1 The perfect fulfilling of the Righteousness which it required This was done in the Obedience of Christ the Surety of the New Covenant in the stead of them with whom
the Mercy-seat Wherefore they are ready unto the Ministry of the Church of mankind all things being now reconciled Heb. 1. 14. purely with respect unto the Mercy-seat which their faces were turned towards and which they shadowed with their wings 9. Yet was this Mystery so great namely that which was represented by these Types that the Angels themselves were to bow down to look into it 1 Pet. 1. 11. So are they here represented in a posture of admiration and adoration And in their overshadowing of the Mercy-seat with their wings they declared how this Mystery in the fullness of it was hid from the eyes of all men See Eph. 3. 8 9 10 11 12. 10. The Ground was originally blessed of God to bring forth food for man for the preservation of his life in that state and condition wherein he was to live unto God according unto the Covenant of works Gen. 1. 29. But upon the entrance of sin it was cursed neither are the fruits of it any more a Token or Pledge of the favour of God nor are they sufficient to maintain a life unto God Gen. 3. 17 18. Wherefore God declared that there must be bread given the Church from Heaven which might maintain a spiritual life in them This God did by giving them Manna in the wilderness And that all instructions in Grace and mercy might be reduced into an head in this Holy Place because of that whereof it was a Type a Pot filled with it was placed for a memorial in this Holy Place before the Ark and Mercy-Seat See Psal. 78. 24 25. Iohn 6. 31. Hereby were they taught to look for the bread of life from Heaven which should maintain them in their spiritual and nourish them unto eternal life 11. When the whole Church was ready to perish for want of water a Rock was smitten with the Rod of Moses which brought water out of it unto their refreshment God taught them thereby that the Rock of Ages was to be smitten with the Rod of the Law that the waters of life might be brought forth thereby 1 Cor. 10. 4. Wherefore this Rod also was laid up for an instructive memorial before the Ark. In all these things did God instruct the Church by the Tabernacle especially this most Holy Place the Utensils Furniture and Services of it And the end of them all was to give them such a representation of the mystery of his grace in Christ Jesus as was meet for the state of the Church before his actual exhibition in the flesh Hence he is declared in the Gospel to be the Body and Substance of them all And I shall endeavour with all humble reverence to make that application of them unto him which Scripture Light guides us unto 1. In his Obedience unto God according unto the Law he is the true Ark wherein the Law was kept inviolate that is was fullfilled answered and accomplished Matt. 5. 17. Rom. 8. 3. chap. 10. 3. Hence by Gods gracious dealing with sinners pardoning and justifying them freely the Law is not disanulled but established Rom. 3. 31. That this was to be done that without it no Covenant between God and man could be firm and stable was the principal design of God to declare in all this Service without the consideration whereof it was wholly insignificant This was the original mystery of all these institutions that in and by the Obedience of the promised seed the everlasting unalterable Law should be fulfilled In him as the Jews speak was the Law restored unto its pristine Crown signifyed by that Crown of Gold which was round about the Ark wherein the Law was kept Then had the Law its crown and glory when it was fulfilled in Christ. This the Church of Israel ought to have learned and believed and did so whilest they continued to pray for mercy for the Lord's sake as Dan. 9. 17. But afterwards when they rejected the knowledge hereof and adhered unto the Law absolutely as written in Tables of stone they utterly perished Rom. 9. 31 32 33. chap. 10. 2 4. And they do all yet what lieth in them return unto the material Ark and Tables of stone who reject the accomplishment of the Law in and by Jesus Christ. 2. He was the Mercy-Seat that is he was represented by it So the Apostle speaks expresly God set him forth to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 3. 25. A Propitiation that is to answer the Mercy-Seat and what was signifyed thereby And this was to cover the Law under the eye of God He interposeth between God and his Throne and the Law that he may not enter into judgment with us in pursuit of the curse of it The Law required Obedience and threatned the curse in case of disobedience With respect unto the obedience which it required Christ was the Ark in whom it was fulfilled And with respect unto the Curse of the Law he was the Mercy-Seat or Propitiation whereby Atonement was made that the curse should not be inflicted Gal. 3. 13. 3. It was his blood in figure that was carried into the Holy Place to make Atonement as the Apostle declares at large in this Chapter The Efficacy of his blood when he offered himself an expiatory Sacrifice for sin unto God that prevailed for an atonement in the Holy Place not made with hands See chap. 10. 11 12 13. 4. It is his Intercession that is the cloud of Incense which covers the Ark and Mercy Seat This gives a continual sweet Savour unto God from his oblation and renders acceptable all the worship of the Church in their approaches unto him Rev. 8. 3. These things did God instruct the Church in by Types and figures to prepare their faith for the receiving of him at his actual oblation And on the representation so made of him all that truly believed lived in the expectation of him and longing after him with the departure of these shadows of good things to come Cant. 2. 7. chap. 4. 6. chap. 8. 14. Luk. 10. 24. 1 Pet. 1. 11. And the refusal of this instruction was that which ruined this Church of the Hebrews 5. It was He who took off the original curse of the Law whose first execution was committed unto the Cherubims when man was driven out of the Garden and kept from all approaches unto the Tree of Life Hereby he made reconciliation between them and the elect Church of God Ephes. 1. 10. Hence have they now a ministery with respect unto the Mercy-Seat for the good of the heirs of salvation Heb. 1. 14. 6. He was the Bread of Life typed by the Manna kept in the Golden Pot before the Mercy-Seat For he alone is the nourishment of the spiritual life of men The mystery hereof himself at large declares John 6. 31 32 33 34. This were they taught to expect in the memorial of that heavenly food which was preserved in the Sanctuary 7. He was that Spiritual Rock which was smitten with the Rod of
Moses the curse and stroke of the Law Hereon the waters of Life flowed from him for the quickning and refreshment of the Church 1 Cor. 10. 3 4. Thus was the Lord Christ All and in All from the beginning And as the general design of the whole structure of the Tabernacle with all that belonged thereunto was to declare that God was reconciled to sinners with a blessed provision for the glory of his Holiness and the honour of the Law which is in and by Jesus Christ alone so every thing in it directed unto his Person or his Grace or some Act of his Mediation And two things do now attend all these institutions 1 As they are interpreted by Gospel Light they are a glorious representation of the wisdom of God and a signal confirmation of saith in him who was prefigured by them 2 Take them in themselves separated from this end and they give no representation of any one holy property of the nature of God nothing of his wisdom Goodness Greatness Love or Grace but are low and carnal base and beggarly And that we may have a due apprehension of them some things in general concerning them may be considered 1. The whole Scheme Frame Fashion Use and Service of the Tabernacle with all that belonged thereunto was a meer arbitrary effect of the soveraign will and pleasure of God Why he would by this way and by these means declare himself appeased unto the Church and he would graciously dwell amongst them why he would by them type out and prefigure the incarnation and mediation of Christ no other reason can be given but his own will which in all things is to be adored by us Other wayes and means unto the same ends were not wanting unto divine wisdom but this in the good pleasure of his will he determined on In the supreme authority of God was the Church absolutely to acquiesce whilest it was obliged unto the observation of these ordinances and other reason of them they could not give And whereas their use is now utterly ceased yet do they abide on the Holy Record as some think the fabrick of Heaven and Earth shall do after the final judgment to be monuments of his wisdom and soveraignty But the principal ends of the preservation of this memorial in the sacred Record are two 1 That it may be a perpetual Testimony unto the praescience faithfulness and power of God His infinite praescience is testified unto in the prospect which therein he declares himself to have had of the whole future frame of things under the Gospel which he represented therein His faithfulness and power in the accomplishment of all these things which were prefigured by them 2 That it might testifie the abundant Grace and Goodness of God unto the Church of the new Testament which enjoyeth the substance of all those spiritual things whereof of old he granted only the Types and shadows Wherefore 2. It must be acknowledged that the Instruction given by these things into the mysteries of the will of God and consequently all those teachings which were influenced and guided by them were dark obscure and difficult to be rightly apprehended and duly improved Hence the way of Teaching under the old Testament was one reason for the abolishing of that Covenant that a more effectual way of instruction and Illumination might be introduced This is declared at large in the exposition of the preceding chapter There was need for them all to go up and down every one unto his Brother andevery one unto his Neighbour saying know the Lord. For the true knowledge of him and of the mysteries of his will was by these means very difficultly to be obtained And now the Jews have lost all that prospect unto the promised seed which their forefathers had in these things it is sad to consider what work they make with them They have turned the whole of all legal institutions into such an endless scrupulous superstitious observance of carnal Rites in all imaginable circumstances as never became the divine wisdom to appoint as is marvellous that any of the race of mankind should enbondage themselves unto Yea now all things are plainly fullfilled in Christ some among our selves would have the most of them to have represented Heaven and the Planets the fruits of the Earth and I know not what besides But this was the way which the infinite wisdom of God fixed on for the instruction of the Church in the state then allotted unto it 3. This instruction was sufficient unto the end of God in the edification and salvation of them that did believe For these things being diligently and humbly enquired into they gave that Image and Resemblance of the work of Gods Grace in Christ which the Church was capable of in that state before its actual accomplishment Those who were wise and holy among them knew full well that all these things in general were but Types of better things and that there was something more designed of God in the Pattern shewed unto Moses than what they did contain For Moses made and did all things for a Testimony unto what should be spoken afterwards chap. 3. 5. In brief they all of them believed that through the Messiah the promised seed they should really receive all that Grace Goodness Pardon Mercy Love Favour and Priviledges which were testified unto in the Tabernacle and all the Services of it And because they were not able to make distinct particular applications of all these things unto his mediatory actings their faith was principally fixed on the person of Christ as I have elswhere demonstrated And with respect unto him his sufferings and his glory they diligently enquired into these things 1 Pet. 1. 11. And this was sufficient unto that faith and obedience which God then required of the Church For 4. Their diligent enquiry into these things and the meaning of them was the principal exercise of their faith and subjection of soul unto God For even in these things also did the Spirit testify beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the Glory that did ensue And as the exercise of faith herein was acceptable unto God so the discoveries of Grace which they received therein were refreshing unto their souls For hereby they often saw the King in his Beauty and beheld the pleasant land which was far off Isa. 33. 17. 5. That worship which was outwardly performed in and by these things was full of Beauty and Glory 2 Cor. 3. It was also suited to beget a due reverence of the Majesty and Holiness of God It was God's way of worship It was God's order and so had characters of divine wisdom upon it Wherefore although the People were originally obliged unto the observance of it by the meer soveraign will and pleasure of God yet the things themselves were so beautiful and glorious as nothing but the substance of the things themselves in Christ could excel This made the Devil as it were steal away so many
by the High Priest in the name of and for the service of the Church But this entrance being only once a year by the High Priest only and that with the blood of atonement which was always to be observed whilst that Tabernacle continued he did manifest that the access represented was not to be obtained during that season For all believers in their own persons were utterly excluded from it And we may hence observe 1. That the divine ordinances and institutions of worship are filled with wisdom sufficient for the instruction of the Church in all the mysteries of faith and obedience How eminent was the divine wisdom of the Holy Ghost in the structure and order of this Tabernacle What Provision of Instruction for the present and future use of the Church was laid up and stored in them What but infinite wisdom and praescience could order things so in their typical signification He that considers only the outward frame and state of these things may see a curious and beautiful structure a beautiful order of external worship Yet can he find nothing therein but what the wisdom and contrivance of men might attain unto At least they might find out things that should have as glorious an outward appearance But take them in their proper state as unto their signification and representation of spiritual and heavenly things in Christ Jesus and there is not the least concernment of them but it infinitely transcends all humane wisdom and projection He alone in whose divine understanding the whole mystery of the Incarnation of the Son God and his Mediation did eternally reside could institute and appoint these things And to instruct us unto an humble adoration of that wisdom is the framing of the whole fabrick and the institution of all its ordinances contained in the sacred Record for the use of the Church 2. It'is our duty with all humble diligence to enquire into the mind of the Holy Ghost in all Ordinances and Institutions of divine worship Want hereof lost the Church of Israel They contented themselves with the consideration of outward things and the external observance of the services enjoyned unto them Unto this day the Jews perplex themselves in numberless curious enquiries into the outward frame and fashion of these things the way manner and circumstances of the external observation of the services of it And they have multiplyed determinations about them all and every minute circumstance of them so as it is utterly impossible that either themselves or any living creature should observe them according to their traditions and prescriptions But in the mean time as unto the mind of the Holy Ghost in them their true use and signification they are stark blind and utterly ignorant Yea Hardness and Blindness is so come upon them unto the utmost that they will not believe nor apprehend that there is either spiritual wisdom instruction or signification of heavenly things in them And herein whilst they profess to know God are they abominable and disobedient For no creatures can fall into higher contempt of God than there is in this imagination namely that the old Institutions had nothing in them but so much Gold and Silver and the like framed into such shapes and applyed to such outward uses without regard unto things spiritual and eternal And it is a great evidence of the Apostate condition of any Church when they rest in and lay weight upon the external parts of worship especially such as consist in corporeal observances with a neglect of spiritual things contained in them wherein are the effects of divine wisdom in all sacred Institutions And whereas the Apostle affirms that this frame of things did plainly signify as the word imports the spiritual mysteries which he declares it is evident with what great diligence we ought to search into the nature and use of divine Institutions Unless we are found in the exercise of our duty herein the things which in themselves are plainly declared will be obscure unto us yea utterly hidden from us For what is here said to be clearly signified could not be apprehended but by a very diligent search into and consideration of the way and means of it It was to be collected out of the things he ordained with the order of them and their respect unto one another Most men think it not worth while to enquire with any diligence into sacred Institutions of divine worship If any thing seem to be wanting or defective therein if any thing be obscure and not determined as they suppose in the express words without more adoe they supply it with somewhat of their own But there are many things useful and necessary in the worship of God which are to be gathered from such intimations of the mind of the Holy Ghost as he hath in any place given of them And those who with humility and diligence do exercise themselves therein shall find plain satisfactory significations of his mind and Will in such things as others are utterly ignorant of 3. That which the Holy Ghost did thus signifie and instruct the Church in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This in the words was that the way into the most Holy Place the way of the Holies was not yet made manifest And for the explication hereof we must consider the things before proposed 1. What the Apostle intends by the Holies It is generally supposed by expositors that it is Heaven itself which is hereby intended Hence some of the Antients the School-men and sundry expositors of the Roman Church have concluded that no believers under the old Testament none of the antient Patriarchs Abraham Isaac or David were admitted into Heaven whilst the first Tabernacle stood that is untill the Ascension of Christ. Hereon they framed a Limbus for them in some subterranean Receptacle whither they suppose the soul of Christ went when it is said that he descended into hell where they were detained and whence by him they were delivered But whatever becomes of that imagination the most learned expositors of that Church of late such as Ribera Estius Tenae Maldenat A Lapide do not fix it on this Text For the supposition whereon it is founded is wholly alien from the scope of the Apostle and no way useful in his present argument For he discourseth about the Priviledges of the Church by the Gospel and Priesthood of Christ in this world and not about its future state and condition Besides he saies not that there was no entrance into the Holies during that season but only that the way of it was not yet manifest Wherefore they might enter into it although the way whereby they did so was not yet openly declared for they had but a shadow or dark obscure representation of good things to come And this is the interpretation that most sober expositors do give of the words Heaven with eternal Blessedness was proposed unto the Faith Hope and expectation of the Saints under the old Testament This
they believed and in the hopes of it walked with God as our Apostle proves at large chap. 11. Howbeit the way that is the means and cause of communicating the Heavenly Inheritance unto them namely by the Mediation and Sacrifice of Christ was but obscurely represented not illustriously manifested as it is now Life and Immortality being brought to Light by the Gospel And as these things are true so this Interpretation of the words being consonant unto the Analogy of faith is safe only we may enquire whether it be that which is peculiarly intended by the Apostle in this Place or no The Comment of Grotius on these words is that the Apostle signifies super aetherias sedes via eò ducens est evangelium praecepta habens verè coelestia Eam viam Christus primus patefecit aditumque fecit omnibus ad summum coelum Pervenit quidem eò Abrahamus Jacobus ut videre est Mat. 8. 11. alii viri eximii ut videbimus infra cap. 11. 40. Sed hi eò pervenerunt quasi per machinam non viam extraordinariâ quâdum et rarâ Dei dispensatione But these things are most remote from the mind of the Holy Ghost not only in this Place but in the whole Scripture also For 1. How far the Gospel is this way into the Holiest shall be declared immediately That it is so because of the Heavenly precepts which it gives that is which were not given under the old Testament is most untrue For the Gospel gives no precepts of Holiness and obedience that were not for the substance of them contained in the Law There is no precept in the Gospel exceeding that of the Law thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and thy Neighbour as thy self Only the Gospel adds new motives unto Obedience new encouragements and enforcements of it with directions for its due performance 2. That Christ should be no otherwise the way but only as he revealed and declared the Gospel and the precepts of it is not only untrue and injurous unto the honour of Christ but directly contrary unto the design of the Apostle in this Place For he is treating of the Sacerdotal office of Christ only and the Benefit which the Church doth receive thereby But the revelation of the Doctrine or precepts of the Gospel was no duty of that office nor did it belong thereunto That he did as the Prophet of the Church But all his Sacerdotal Actings are towards God in the behalf of the Church as hath been proved 3. That the antient Patriarchs went to Heaven by a secret Engine and that some of them only in an extraordinary way is plainly to deny that they were saved by faith in the promised seed that is that they were not saved by the mediation of Christ which is contrary unto the whole Oeconomy of God in the salvation of the Church and many express Testimonies of the Scripture These Socinian fictions do not cure but corrupt the Word of God and turn away the minds of men from the truth unto fables We shall therefore yet farther enquire into the true meaning of the Holy Ghost in these words The Apostle by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intends the same with ver 3. he called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Holy of Holies the second part of the Sanctuary whereinto the High Priest alone could enter once a year as he declares in the foregoing Verse Only whereas he there spake of the material Fabrick of the Tabernacle and the things contained in it here he designs what was signified thereby For he declares not what these things were but what the Holy Ghost did signifie in and by them Now in that most Holy Place were all the Signs and Pledges of the gracious Presence of God the Testimonies of our Reconciliation by the Blood of the Atonement and our Peace with him thereby Wherefore to enter into these Holies is nothing but an Access with liberty freedom and boldness into the gracious Presence of God on the account of Reconciliation and Peace made with him This the Apostle doth so plainly and positively declare Chap. 10. 19 20 21 22. that I somewhat admire so many worthy and learned Expositors should utterly miss of his meaning in this place The Holies then is the Gracious Presence of God whereunto Believers draw nigh in the confidence of the Atonement made for them and acceptance thereon see Rom. 5. 1 2 3. Ephes. 2. 14 15 16 17 18. Heb. 4. 14 15. Chap. 10. 19. The Atonement being made and received by Faith Conscience being purged Bondage and Fear being removed Believers do now under the Gospel enter with Boldness into this Gracious Presence of God 2. We must consider what is the way into these Holies which was not yet made manifest And here also Expositors indulge unto many Conjectures very needlesly as I suppose For the Apostle doth elsewhere expresly declare himself and interpret his own meaning namely Chap. 10. 19 20. This way is no other but the Sacrifice of Christ the true High Priest of the Church For by the entrance of the High Priest into the most Holy Place with Blood the Holy Ghost did signifie that the way into it namely for Believers to enter by was only the one true Sacrifice which he was to offer and to be And accordingly to give an Indication of the accomplishment of their Type when he expired on the Cross having offered himself unto God for the Expiation of our Sins the Vail of the Temple which enclosed and secured this Holy Place from any entrance into it was rent from the top to the bottom whereby it was laid open unto all Matth. 27. 51. And an evidence this is that the Lord Christ offered his great expiatory Sacrifice in his Death here on Earth a true and real Sacrifice and that it was not an Act of Power after his Ascension metaphorically called a Sacrifice as the Socinians dream For until that Sacrifice was offered the way could not be opened into the Holies which it was immediately after his Death and signified by the renting of the Vail This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the onely way whereby we enter into the most Holy Place the Gracious Presence of God and that with boldness 3. Of this way it is affirmed that it was not yet made manifest whil'st the first Tabernacle was standing And a word is peculiarly chosen by the Apostle to signifie his intention He doth not say that there was no way then into the most Holy Place none made none provided none made use of But there was not a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an open manifestation of it There was an entrance under the Old Testament into the Presence of God as unto Grace and Glory namely the vertue of the Oblation of Christ But this was not as yet made manifest Three things were wanting thereunto 1. It was not yet actually existent but only was vertually so The
sacerdotal office They are excellent in their Relation unto the Wisdom Grace and Love of God whereof they are the principal effects and excellent in Relation unto the Church as the only means of its eternal Redemption and Salvation Hadthey been of a lower or meaner nature so glorious a means had not been designed for the effecting of them Woe unto them by whom they are despised How shall we escape if we neglect so great Salvation And 4. Such a Price and value did God put on these things so good are they in his eyes as that he made them the subject of his promises unto the Church from the foundation of the world And in all his promises concerning them he still opposed them unto all the good things of this world as those which were incomparably above them and better than them all And therefore he chose out all things that are precious in the whole Creation to represent their excellencie which makes an Appearance of Promises of earthly Glories in the old Testament whereby the Jews deceived themselves And because of their worth he judged it meet to keep the Church so long in the desire and expectation of them 5. That which the Apostle hath immediate respect unto in the declaration of the Priesthood and Sacrifice of Christ is what he had newly at large declared concerning the Tabernacle and the Service of the High Priest therein Wherefore he assigns a Tabernacle unto this High Priest in answer unto that under the Law whereby he came or wherein he administred the duties of his office And concerning this he first asserts that he came by a Tabernacle 2 Describes this Tabernacle in comparison with the former 1 Positively that it was greater and more excellent 2 Negatively in that being not made with hands it was not of the same Building with it 1. He came by a Tabernacle These words may have prospect unto what is afterwards declared in the next verse and belong thereunto As if he had said being come an High Priest he entred into the Holy Place by a perfect Tabernacle with his own blood for so the High Priest of the Law entred into the Holy Place by or through the Tabernacle with the blood of others But the words do rather declare the constitution of the Tabernacle intended than the Use of it as unto that one solemn service For so before he had described the frame and constitution of the old Tabernacle before he mentioned its use Being come an High Priest by such a Tabernacle that is wherein he administred that office What is the Tabernacle here intended there is great variety in the judgment of expositors Some say it is the Church of the new Testament as Chrysostome who is followed by many Some say it is Heaven itself This is embraced and pleaded for by Schlictingius who labours much in the explanation of it But whereas this is usually opposed because the Apostle in the next verse affirms that Christ entred into the Holies which he expounds of Heaven itself by this Tabernacle which therefore cannot be Heaven also he endeavours to remove it For he saies there is a double Tabernacle in Heaven For as the Apostle hath in one and the same place described a double Tabernacle here on earth a first and a second with their Utensils and services distinguished the one from the other by a vail so there are two places in Heaven answering thereunto The first of these he would have to be the dwelling Place of the Angels the other the Place of the Throne of God himself represented by the most Holy Place in the Tabernacle Through the first of these he saies the Lord Christ passed into the second which is here called his Tabernacle And it is indeed said that the Lord Christ in his exaltation did pass through the Heavens and that he was made higher than the Heavens which would seem to favour that conceit though not observed by him But there is no ground to conceit or fancy such distinct Places in Heaven above yea it is contrary to the Scripture so to do For the Residence of the Holy Angels is before and about the Throne of God So are they always placed in the Scripture Dan. 7. 10. Mat. 18. 10. Revel 5. 11. And these aspectable Heavens which Christ passed through were not so much as the vail of the Tabernacle in his holy service which was his own flesh chap. 10. 20. The only Reason of this ungrounded curious Imagination is a design to avoid the acknowledgment of the Sacrifice of Christ whilst he was on the earth For this cause he refers this Tabernacle unto his entrance into the most Holy Place as the only means of offering himself But the design of the Apostle is to shew that as he was an High Priest so he had a Tabernacle of his own wherein he was to minister unto God This Tabernacle whereby he came an High Priest was his own humane nature The Bodies of men are often called their Tabernacles 2 Cor. 5. 1. 2 Pet. 1. 14. And Christ called his own Body the Temple Ioh. 2. 19. His flesh was the vail Heb. 10. 20. and in his incarnation he is said to pitch his Tabernacle among us Ioh. 1. 14. Herein dwelt the fulness of the Godhead bodily Col. 2. 9. that is substantially represented by all the Pledges of Gods presence in the Tabernacle of old This was that Tabernacle wherein the Son of God administred his Sacerdotal Office in this world and wherein he continueth yet so to do in his Intercession For the full proof hereof I refer the Reader unto our exposition on chap. 8. ver 2. And this gives us an understanding of the description given of this Tabernacle in the Adjuncts of it with reference unto that of old This is given us 1 Positively in a double comparative property 1 That it was Greater than it Greater in dignity and worth not quantity and measures The Humane nature of Christ both in itself its Conception Framing gracious Qualifications and Endowments especially in its Relation unto and Subsistence in the Divine Person of the Son was far more excellent and glorious than any material fabrick could be In this sense for comparative Excellency and Dignity is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 almost constantly used in the new Testament So is it in this Epistle chap. 6. 13 16. The humane nature of Christ doth thus more excel the old Tabernacle than the Sun doth the meanest Star 2. More perfect This respects its Sacred use It was more perfectly fitted and suited unto the end of a Tabernacle both for the inhabitation of the divine nature and the means of exercising the Sacerdotal Office in making A tonement for sin than the other was So it is expressed chap. 10. 5. Sacrifice and Burnt-offering thou wouldst not have but a body hast thou prepared me This was that which God accepted wherewith he was well pleased when he rejected the other as insufficient unto
Sacrificii ratio potissimum consistit peragi potuit cum ea in Sanct is ipsis fieri debuerit Hinc manifestum est Pontificis nostri Oblationem Sacrificium non in Cruce sed in Coelis per actam esse adhuc per agi Ans. 1 What they say at first is true but what they intend and infer from thence is false It is true that the entrance into the Holy Place and carrying of the Blood in thither did belong unto the Anniversary Sacrifice intended For God had prescribed that Order unto its Consummation and Complement But that the Sacrifice or Oblation did consist therein is false For it is directly affirmed that both the Bullock and Goat for the Sin-offering were offered before it at the Altar Lev. 16. 6 9. 2 It doth not therefore hence follow as is pretended that the Lord Christ offered not himself a Sacrifice unto God on the earth but did so in Heaven only but the direct contrary doth follow For the Blood of the Sin-offering was offered on the Altar before it was carried into the Holy Place which was the Type of Christ's entrance into Heaven 3 What they say that the Sacrifice of Christ was performed or offered in Heaven and is yet so offered utterly overthrows the whole Nature of his Sacrifice For the Apostle everywhere represents that to consist absolutely in one Offering once offered not repeated or continued Herein lies the foundation of all his Arguments for its excellency and efficacy Hereof the making of it to be nothing but a continued Act of Power in Heaven as is done by them is utterly destructive What they add in the same place about the Nature of Redemption will be removed in the consideration of it immediately In the close of the whole they affirm that the obtaining of everlasting salvation by Christ was not an Act antecedent unto his entering into Heaven as the word seems to import 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 having obtained but it was done by his entrance it self into that Holy Place whence they would rather read the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the present tense Obtaining But whereas our Redemption is everywhere constantly in the Scripture assigned unto the Blood of Christ and that alone Eph. 1. 7. Col. 1. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. Rev. 5. 9. hast redeemed us unto God by thy Blood it is too great a confidence to confine this work unto his entrance into Heaven without any offering of his Blood and when he had no Blood to offer And in this place the Redemption obtained is the same upon the matter with the purging of our Consciences from dead works ver 14. which is ascribed directly unto his Blood These Glosses being removed I shall proceed unto the Exposition of the words The Apostle hath a double design in this Verse and those two that follow 1. To declare the Dignity of the Person of Christ in the discharge of his Priestly Office above the High Priest of old And this he doth 1 From the excellency of his Sacrifice which was his own Blood 2 The Holy Place whereinto he entred by vertue of it which was Heaven it self And 3 the effect of it in that by it he procured Eternal Redemption which he doth in this Verse 2. To prefer the efficacy of this Sacrifice of Christ for the purging of Sin or the purification of Sinners above all the Sacrifices and Ordinances of the Law ver 13 14. In this Verse with respect unto the end mentioned the entrance of Christ into the Holy Place in answer unto that of the Legal High Priest described v. 7. is declared And it is so 1 As unto the way or means of it 2 As unto its season 3 As unto its effects in all which respects Christ was manifested in and by it to be far more excellent than the Legal High Priest 1. The manner and way of it is expressed 1 Negatively It was not by the blood of Goats and Calves 2 Positively it was by his own blood 2. For the Time of it it was once and but once 3. The Effect of that blood of his as offered in Sacrifice was that he obtained thereby eternal Redemption The thing asserted is the entrance of Christ the High Priest into the Holy Place That he should do so was necessary both to answer the Type and for the rendring his sacrifice effectual in the Application of the Benefits of it unto the Church as it is afterwards declared at large And I shall open the words not in the order wherein they lie in the Text but in the natural order of the things themselves And we must shew 1 What is the Holy Place whereinto Christ entred 2 What was that Entrance 3 How he did it once whereon will follow the consideration of the means whereby he did it with the effect of that means 1. For the Place whereinto he entred it is said he did so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Into the Holies It is the same word whereby he expresseth the Sanctuary the second Part of the Tabernacle whereinto the High Priest entred once a year But in the Application of it unto Christ the signification of it is changed He had nothing to do with he had no right to enter into that Holy Place as the Apostle affirms chap. 8. 4. That therefore he intends which was signified thereby that is Heaven itself as he explains it in ver 24. The Heaven of Heavens the Place of the glorious Residence of the Presence or Majesty of God is that whereinto he entred 2. His Entrance itself into this Place is asserted He entred This entrance of Christ into Heaven upon his Ascension may be considered two ways 1 As it was Regal Glorious and Triumphant so it belonged properly unto his Kingly Office as that wherein he triumphed over all the enemies of the Church See it described Ephes. 4. 8 9 10. from Psal. 68. 18. Satan the World Death and Hell being conquered and all power committed unto him he entred triumphantly into Heaven So it was Regal 2 As it was Sacerdotal Peace and Reconciliation being made by the blood of the Cross the Covenant being confirmed eternal Redemption obtained He entred as our High Priest into the Holy Place the Temple of God above to make his Sacrifice effectual unto the Church and to apply the benefits of it thereunto This he did once only once for all In the foregoing description of the service of the High Priest he shews how he went into the Holy Place once every year that is on one day wherein he went to offer And the repetition of this service every year proved its imperfection seeing it could never accomplish perfectly that whereunto it was designed as he argues in the next chapter In opposition hereunto our High Priest entred once only into the Holy Place a full demonstration that his one Sacrifice had fully expiated the sins of the Church Of this entrance of Christ into it is said 1 Negatively
many accounts 1 Of the Subject Matter of it which are things eternal none of them are carnal or temporal The state of Bondage from which we are delivered by it in all its causes was spiritual not temporal and the effects of it in liberty grace and glory are eternal 2 Of its Duration It was not for a season like that of the people out of Egypt or the deliverances which they had afterwards under the Judges and on other occasions They endured in their effects only for a season and afterwards new troubles of the same kind overtook them But this was eternal in all the effects of it none that are partakers of it do ever return into a state of Bondage So 3 it endures in those effects unto all eternity in Heaven it self 3. This Redemption Christ obtained by his Blood Having done all in the Sacrifice of himself that was in the Justice Holiness and Wisdom of God required thereunto it was wholly in his power to confer all the benefits and effects of it on the Church on them that do believe And sundry things we may observe from this Verse 1. The Entrance of our Lord Iesus Christ as our High Priest into Heaven to appear in the presence of God for us and to save us thereby unto the uttermost was a thing so great and glorious as could not be accomplished but by his own blood No other Sacrifice was sufficient unto this end Not by the Blood of Bulls and Goats The reason hereof the Apostle declares at large Chap. 10. 5 6 7 8 9 10. Men seldom rise in their thoughts unto the greatness of this Mystery Yea with the most this Blood of the Covenant wherewith he was sanctified unto the remainder of his work is a common thing The ruine of Christian Religion lies in the slight thoughts of men about the Blood of Christ and pernicious Errors do abound in opposition unto the true nature of the Sacrifice which he made thereby Even the faith of the best is weak and imperfect as to the comprehension of the glory of it Our relief is that the uninterrupted contemplation of it will be a part of our blessedness unto eternity But yet whil'st we are here we can neither understand how great is the salvation which is tendred unto us thereby nor be thankful for it without a due consideration of the way whereby the Lord Christ entred into the Holy Place And he will be the most humble and most fruitful Christian whose faith is most exercised most conversant about it 2. Whatever difficulty lay in the way of Christ as unto the accomplishment and perfection of the work of our Redemption he would not decline them nor desist from his undertaking whatever it cost him Sacrifice and Burnt-offering thou would'st not have then said I Lo I come to do thy Will O God He made his way into the Holy Place by his own Blood What was required of him for us that we might be saved he would not decline though never so great and dreadful and surely we ought not to decline what he requires of us that he may be honoured 3. There was an Holy Place meet to receive the Lord Christ after the Sacrifice of himself and a sutable Reception for such a Person after so glorious a Performance It was a place of great glory and beauty whereinto the High Priest of old entred by the Blood of Calves and Goats the visible pledges of the presence of God were in it whereunto no other person might approach But our High Priest was not to enter into any Holy Place made with hands unto outward visible pledges of the presence of God but into the Heaven of Heavens the place of the glorious residence of the Majesty of God it self 4. If the Lord Christ entred not into the Holy Place until he had finished his work we may not expect an entrance thereinto until we have finished ours He fainted not nor waxed weary until all was finished And it is our duty to arm our selves with the same mind 5. It must be a glorious Effect which had so glorious a Cause and so it was even Eternal Redemption 6. The Nature of our Redemption the way of its procurement with the Duties required of us with respect thereunto are greatly to be considered by us VER XIII XIV THere is in these Verses an Argument and Comparison But the Comparison is such as that the ground of it is laid in the Relation of the Comparates the one unto the other namely that the one was the Type and the other the Antitype otherwise the Argument will not hold For although it follows that he who can do the greater can do the less whereon an Argument will hold à majori ad minus yet it doth not absolutely do so that if that which is less can do that which is less then that which is greater can do that which is greater which would be the force of the Argument if there were nothing but a naked comparison in it But it necessarily follows hereon if that which is less in that less thing which it doth or did was therein a Type of that which was greater in that greater thing which it was to effect And this was the case in the thing here proposed by the Apostle The words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The words have no difficulty in them as to their Grammatical Sense nor is there any considerable variation in the rendring of them in the old Translations Only the Syriac retains 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from ver 11. instead of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here used And both that and the Vulgar place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in the foregoing Verse contrary unto all Copies of the Original as to the order of the words For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vulgar reads 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 per Spiritum Sanctum The Syriac follows the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the Eternal Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Original Copies vary some reading 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our but most 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 your which our Translators follow For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth unto the purifying of the flesh How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot unto God purge your Conscience from dead works to serve the living God The words are Argumentative in the form of an Hypothetical Syllogism wherein the Assumption of the Proposition is supposed as proved before That which is to be confirmed is what was asserted in the words foregoing namely That the Lord Iesus Christ by his blood hath obtained for us eternal redemption This the Causal Redditive Conjunction For doth manifest whereunto the Note of a Supposition If is premised as a Note of an Hypothetical Argumentation There are two Parts of
Covenant ver 18 19 20. 2 That which was Annual in the Sprinkling of the Tabernacle and its Vessels because of the Uncleannesses of the People ver 22. This latter Purification is that which is intended 4. The means whereby they were thus to be purifyed is with these In the next Proposition the Heavenly things themselves are said to be purified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with Sacrifices But the Purification of these Patterns was not absolutely confined unto Sacrifices Water and Scarlet wool and Hyssop and the Ashes of an Heifer in some cases were required thereunto With these that is with all those things which were appointed by the Law to be used in their Purification or Dedication unto sacred Use. 5. If enquiry be made Why these Patterns were thus purified the Apostle affirms that it was necessary it should be so This as it respects both Propositions in this verse equally was spoken unto in general before The grounds of this Necessity with respect unto these Patterns were these 1. The Will and Command of God This is that which originally or in the first place makes any thing necessary in Divine worship This is the only spring of rational Obedience in instituted Worship Whatever is without it whatever is beyond it is no part of Sacred Service God would have them thus purified Yet also was there herein this manifest Reason of his Will namely that thereby he might represent the Purification of Heavenly things On this Supposition that God would so represent heavenly things by them it was necessary that they should be purifyed 2 Seeing he would have them purified there was a Meetness that they should be so with these things For being themselves carnal and earthly as were the Tabernacle and all the vessels of it it was meet they should be purifyed with things carnal also Such as were the Blood of Beasts Water Hyssop and Scarlet-wool 3 In particular it was necessary that they should be purified with the Blood of Sacrifices because they were Types of those things which were to be purified with the only proper Expiatory Sacrifice These were the Foundations of the whole Systeme of Mosaical Rites and Ordinances and on them they stood until they were removed by God himself And that which we should learn from hence is a due consideration of that Respect which we ought to have to the Holiness of God in his Worship and Service He did manifest it unto us to beget in us a due Reverence of it He would never admit of any thing therein but was purifyed according unto his own Institution All other things he always rejected as unclean and prophane Without a due Apprehension hereof and endeavouring to have both our Persons and our Services purified by the Sprinkling of the Blood of Christ neither they nor we can be accepted before him The other Proposition in the Text is that the Heavenly things themselves were to be purified with better Sacrifices The first thing in the words is the Subject of the Proposition The Heavenly things themselves that is the things whereof the other were the Patterns by which God represented them unto the Church But what these things are is not easie to determine Some say that Heaven it self is intended the Superetherial Heavens the Place of the present Residence of Christ and of the Souls of them that are saved by him But taking the Heavens absolutely especially for that which is called the Heaven of Heavens with respect unto their Fabrick and as the Place of Gods Glorious Residence and it is not easie to conceive how they stood in need to be purified by Sacrifice Some say it is Spiritual things that is the Souls and Consciences of men that are intended And they are called Heavenly in opposition unto the things of the Law which were all carnal and Earthly And it is certain they are not to be excluded out of this Expression For unto their Purification is the vertue of the Sacrifice of Christ directly applyed ver 14. Yet the whole context and the Antithesis in it between the Types and the things typified make it evident that they alone are not intended To clear the Mind of the Apostle in this expression sundry things must be observed out of the Context 1. The Apostle treats of a double Purification as was immediately before declared In this Application of his Discourse he intends them both But whereas some things stood in need of the one only namely of that of Dedication unto God and some of the other namely purging from Defilements as the Souls and Consciences of Men they are distinctly to be applyed unto the things spoken of according to their Capacity Some were purified by Dedication some by actual cleansing from real Defilements both which are included in the Notion of Sacred Purification or Sanctification 2. These Heavenly things must be all those and only those whereof the other were Patterns or Resemblances This is plain in the Context and Antithesis Wherefore 3. By Heavenly things I understand all the effects of the Counsel of God in Christ in the Redemption Worship Salvation and Eternal Glory of the Church that is Christ himself in all his Offices with all the Spiritual and Eternal Effects of them on the Souls and Consciences of men with all the worship of God by him according unto the Gospel For of all these things those of the Law were the Patterns He did in and by them give a Representation of all these things as we may see in particular 1. Christ himself and the Sacrifice of himself were typed out by these things To prove this is the principal Purpose of the Apostle They were the Shadow he the Body or Substance as he speaks elsewhere He was the Lord from Heaven who is in Heaven who speaks from Heaven 1 Cor. 15. 49. Joh. 3. 13. 2 All spiritual and eternal Grace Mercy Blessings whereof the Souls of Men are made Partakers by the Mediation and Sacrifice of Christ are Heavenly things and are constantly so called Heb. 3. 1. Ephes. 1. 3. Joh. 3. 12. Eph. 2. 6. 3 The Church it self and its worship are of the same kind the things principally to be purified by these Sacrifices It is Gods Heavenly Kingdom Ephes. 5. 25 26. 4 Heaven it self is comprised herein not absolutely but as it is the Mansion of Christ and the Redeemed in the Presence of God for evermore Hereon the Enquiry will be how these things are said to be purified For of real Purification from Uncleanness not one of them is capable but only the Church that is the Souls and Consciences of men I Answer That we are to have recourse unto that twofold sense of Purification before laid down namely of external Dedication and internal Purging both which are expressed by the name of Sanctification in the Scripture Most of the things that were purified by the Blood of the Sacrifices at the giving of the Law were so in the first sense and no
otherwise The Covenant the Book of the Law and the Tabernacle with all its Vessels were purified in their sacred Dedication unto God and his service Thus were all the Heavenly things themselves purified Christ himself was Sanctified Consecrated Dedicated unto God in his own Blood He Sanctified himself Joh. 17. 19. and that by the Blood of the Covenant Heb. 10. 29. even when he was Consecrated or made perfect through sufferings chap. 2. 10. So was the Church and the whole worship of it dedicated unto God made holy unto him Ephes. 5. 25 26. And Heaven it self was dedicated to be an habitation for ever unto the Mystical Body of Christ in perfect Peace with the Angels above who had never sinned Eph. 1. 10. Heb. 12. 22 23 24. But yet there was moreover a real Purification of the most of these things The Church or the Souls and Consciences of Men were really Cleansed Purified and Sanctified with an internal Spiritual Purification Eph. 5. 25 26. Tit. 2. 14. It was washed in the blood of Christ Rev. 1. 5. and is thereby cleansed from Sin 1 Joh. 1. 7. And Heaven it self was in some sense so Purified as the Tabernacle was because of the sins of the People among whom it was Levit. 16. 16. Sin had entered into Heaven it self in the Apostacy of Angels whence it was not pure in the sight of God Job 15. 15. And upon the sin of man a state of Enmity ensued between the Angels above and Men below so that Heaven was no meet Place for an habitation unto them both until they were reconciled which was done only in the Sacrifice of Christ Eph. 1. 10. Hence if the Heavenly things were not defiled in themselves yet in Relation unto us they were so which is now taken away The Summ is As the Covenant the Book the People the Tabernacle were all purified and dedicated unto their especial ends by the Blood of Calves and Goats wherein was laid the Foundation of all gracious entercourse between God and the Church under the Old Covenant So all things whatever that in the Counsel of God belonged unto the New Covenant the whole Mediation of Christ with all the Spiritual and Eternal Effects of it were Confirmed Dedicated unto God and made effectual unto the ends of the Covenant by the Blood of the Sacrifice of Christ which is the spring from whence Efficacy is communicated unto them all and Moreover the Souls and Consciences of the Elect are Purified and Sanctified from all defilements thereby which work is gradually carried on in them by renewed Applications of the same Blood unto them until they are all presented unto God Glorious without spot or wrinkle or any such thing And we are taught that The one Sacrifice of Christ with what ensued thereon was the only means to render effectual all the Counsels of God concerning the Redemption and Salvation of the Church Eph. 1. 3 4 5 6 7. Rom. 3. 24 25 26. Of these Heavenly things it is said that they were purified with better Sacrifices than these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is added to encrease the signification All sober Expositors agree that here is an Enallage of Number the plural put for the singular The one Sacrifice of Christ is alone intended But because it answered all other Sacrifices exceeded them all in Dignity was of more Use and Efficacy than they all it is so expressed That one Sacrifice which comprized the Vertue Benefit and Signification of all other The Gloss of Grotius on these words is intolerable and justly offensive unto all Pious Souls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith he quia non tantum Christi perpessiones intelligit sed eorum qui ipsum sectantur unà cum precibus operibus Misericordiae Is it possible that any Christian should not tremble to joyn the Sufferings of Men and their works with the Sacrifice of Christ as unto the same kind of Efficacy in purifying of these Heavenly things Do they make Attonement for Sin Are they offered unto God for that end Are they sprinkled on these things for their Purification 4. The Modification of the former Proposition belongs unto this also It was necessary these things should be thus purified 1 As that which the Holiness of God required and which therefore in his Wisdom and Grace he appointed 2 As that which in it self was meet and becoming the Righteousness of God Heb. 2. 10. Nothing but the Sacrifice of Christ with the everlasting Efficacy of his most precious Blood could thus purifie the Heavenly things and dedicate the whole new Creation unto God The last thing we shall observe hereon is that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that this Dedication and Purification is ascribed unto Now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a slain Sacrifice a Sacrifice as slain a Sacrifice by Mactation Killing or shedding of blood so is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 also Wherefore it is the Sacrifice of Christ in his Death and Blood-shedding that is the Cause of these things Other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of him there was none he offered none For the vindication hereof we must examine the Comment of Schlictingius on this Place His Words are Licet enim non Sanguinem suum Christus deo obtulerit sed se ipsum tamen sine sanguinis effusione offerre se ipsum non potuit neque debuit Ex eo veró quod diximus sit ut Autor Divinus Christum cum victimis legalibus conferens perpetuò fugiat dicere Christi sanguinem fuisse oblatum et nihilominus ut similitudini serviat perpetuò Christi sanguinis fusionem insinuet quae nisi antecessisset haud quaquam tam plena tamque concinna inter Christum victimas antiquas comparatio institui potuisset Ex his ergo manifestum est in illa sancta celestia ad eorum dedicationem emundationemque peragendam victimam pretiosissimam proinde non sanguinem hircorum vitulorum imò ne sanguinem quidem ullum sed ipsum Dei filium idque omnibus mortalis naturae exuviis depositis quo nulla pretiosior sanctior victima cogitari potuit debuisse inferri Ans. 1 The Distinction between Christ offering his Blood and offering himself to God the Foundation of this Discourse is coyned on purpose to pervert the Truth For neither did Christ offer his Blood unto God but in the offering of himself nor did he offer himself unto God but in and by the shedding and offering of his Blood There is no Distinction between Christ offering of himself and offering of his Blood other then between the Being of any thing and the Form and manner of its being what it is 2 That he could not offer himself without the antecedent effusion of his Blood seems a kind concession but it hath the same Design with the preceding Distinction But in the offering of himself he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a slain Sacrifice which was in and by the effusion of his Blood in the very shedding of
did Jesus Christ the Son of God in Infinite Wisdom Love and Grace interpose himself in our behalf in our stead to do answer and perform all that God in Infinite Wisdom Holiness and Righteousness required unto that end And we may observe that There is a Signal Glory put upon the undertaking of Christ to make Reconciliation for the Church by the Sacrifice of himself 3. This undertaking of Christ is Signalized by the Remark that is put on the Declaration of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Behold A Glorious Spectacle it was to God to Angels and to Men To God as it was filled with the highest Effects of Infinite goodness Wisdom and Grace which all shone forth in their greatest Elevation and were glorified therein It was so unto Angels as that whereon their Confirmation and Establishment in Glory did depend Eph. 1. 10. which therefore they endeavoured with Fear and Reverence to look into 1 Pet. 1. 12 13. And as unto Men that is the Church of the Elect nothing could be so Glorious in their Sight nothing so desirable By this call of Christ behold I come the Eys of all Creatures in Heaven and Earth ought to be fixed on him to behold the glorious work he had undertaken and the accomplishment of it 4. There is what he thus proposed himself for saying Behold me This in general is expressed by himself I come This coming of Christ what it was and wherein it did consist was declared before It was by assuming the Body that was prepared for him This was the Foundation of the whole work he had to do wherein he came forth like the Rising Sun with Light in his Wings or as a Giant rejoycing to run his Race The Faith of the Old Testament was that he was thus to come And this is the Life of the New that he is come They by whom this is denyed do overthrow the Faith of the Gospel This is the Spirit of Antichrist 1 Joh. 3. 1 2 3. And this may be done two ways 1. Directly and Expresly 2. By just consequence Directly it is done by them who deny the Reality of his humane Nature as many did of old affirming that he had only an Aetherial Aerial or Phantastical Body For if he came not in the Flesh he is not come at all So also it is by them who deny the Divine Person of Christ and his preexistence therein before the assumption of the Humane Nature For they deny that these are the words of him when resolved and spoken before this coming He that did not exist before in the Divine Nature could not promise to come in the Humane And Indirectly it is denied by all those who either in Doctrines or practices deny the ends of his coming who are many which I shall not now mention It may be Objected against this fundamental Truth that if the Son of God would undertake this work of Reconciliation between God and Man why did he not do the Will of God by his mighty Power and Grace and not by this way of coming in the Flesh which was attended with all Dishonour Reproaches Sufferings and Death it self But besides what I have at large elsewhere discoursed concerning the necessity and suitableness of this way of his coming unto the manifestation of all the Glorious properties of the Nature of God I shall only say that God and he alone knew what was necessary unto the accomplishment of his Will and if it might have been otherwise effected he would have spared his only Son and not have given him up unto death 2. The End for which he thus promiseth to come is to do the Will of God Lo I come to do thy Will O God The Will of God is taken two ways 1. For his Eternal purpose and design called the Counsel of his Will Eph. 1. 11. and most commonly his Will it self The Will of God as unto what he will do or cause to be done 2. For the Declaration of his Will and Pleasure as unto what he will have us to do in a way of Duty and Obedience that is the Rule of our Obedience It was the Will of God in the former sense that is here intended as is evident from the next Verse when it is said that by this Will of God we are Sanctified that is our Sins were Expiated according to the Will of God But neither is the other sense absolutely excluded for the Lord Christ came so to fulfil the Will of Gods purpose as that we may be enabled to fulfil the Will of his Command Yea and he himself had a Command from God to lay down his Life for the accomplishment of this Work Wherefore this Will of God which Christ came to fulfil is that which elsewhere is expressed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes. 1. 5 11. c. His good pleasure his purpose the Counsel of his Will his good pleasure which he purposed in himself that is freely without any Cause or Reason taken from us to call justifie sanctifie and save to the uttermost or to bring them unto Eternal Glory This he had purposed from Eternity to the praise of the Glory of his Grace How this might be effected and accomplished God had hid in his own Bosome from the beginning of the World Ephes. 3. 8 9. So as that it was beyond the Wisdom and Indagation of all Angels and Men to make a Discovery of Howbeit even from the beginning he declared that such a work he had graciously designed and gave in the First promise and otherwise some obscure Intimations of the Nature of it for a Foundation of the Faith in them that were called Afterwards God was pleased in his Soveraign Authority over the Church for their good and unto his own Glory to make a representation of this whole work in the Institutions of the Law especially of the Sacrifices thereof But hereon the Church began to think at least many of them did so that those Sacrifices themselves were to be the only means of accomplishing this Will of God in the Expiation of Sin with the Salvation of the Church But God had now by various ways and means witnessed unto the Church that indeed he never appointed them unto any such end nor would rest in them and the Church it self found by experience that they would never pacify Conscience and that the strict performance of them was a Yoke and Burden In this state of things when the fulness of time was come the glorious Counsels of God namely of the Father Son and Spirit brake forth with Light like the Sun in its strength from under a Cloud in the tender made of himself by Jesus Christ unto the Father Lo I come to do thy Will O God This this is the way the only way whereby the Will of God might be accomplished Herein were all the Riches of Divine Wisdom displayed all the Treasures of Grace laid open all Shades and Clouds dispelled and the open door of Salvation
day whereas he Offered but once so as that the repetition of it is destructive unto it The other is that of the Socinians who would have the Offering and Sacrifice of Christ to be only his appearance before God to receive power to keep us from the punishment of sin upon his doing of the Will of God in the World But the words are express as unto the Order of these things namely that he Offered his Sacrifice for sins before his Exaltation in Glory or his sitting on the Right Hand of God And herein doth the Apostle give Glory unto that Offering of Christ for sins in that it perfectly accomplished what all Legal Sacrifices could not effect This therefore is the only repose of troubled Souls 3. The consequent hereof on the part of Christ is two fold 1. What immediately ensued on this Offering of his Body ver 12. 2. What continueth to be his state with respect thereunto both of them evidencing Gods high approbation and acceptance of his person and what he had done as also the Glory and Efficacy of his Office and Sacrifice above those of the Law wherein no such Priviledge nor Testimony was given unto them upon the discharge of their Office 1. The immediate consequent of his Offering was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he sat down on the Right Hand of God This Glorious Exaltation of Christ hath been spoken unto and opened before on Ch. 7. 3. Ch. 8. 1. Here it includes a double opposition unto and preference above the State of the Legal Priests upon their Oblations For although the High-Priest in his Anniversary Sacrifice for the Expiation of sin did enter into the most Holy Place where were the visible pledges of the presence of God yet he stood in a posture of humble Ministration he sate not down with any appearance of Dignity or Honour Again his abode in the Typical Holy Place was for a short season only but Christ sate down at the Right Hand of God for ever 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in perpetuum in an unalterable state and condition He sate down never to Offer Sacrifice any more And this is the highest pledge the highest assurance of those two things which are the Pillars and principal Foundations of the Faith of the Church 1. That God was absolutely pleased satisfied and highly glorified in and by the Offering of Christ. For had it not been so the Humane Nature of Christ had not been immediately exalted into the highest Glory that it was capable of See Eph. 5. 1 2. Phil. 2. 7 8 9. 2. That he had by his Offering perfectly Expiated the Sin of the World so as that there was no need for ever of any other Offering or Sacrifice unto the end 1. Faith in Christ doth joyntly respect both his Oblation of himself by Death and the Glorious Exaltation that ensued thereon He so Offered one Sacrifice for sin as that thereon he sate down on the Right Hand of God for ever Neither of these separately is a full Object for Faith to find rest in both in conjunction are a Rock to fix it on And 2. Christ in this Order of things is the great exemplar of the Church He suffered and then entred into Glory If we suffer with him we shall also reign with him ver 13. From henceforth expecting till his Enemies be made his Footstool So that 2. The state and condition of Christ after his sitting down at the Right Hand of God not absolutely but with respect unto his Enemies is declared in these words The whole Testimony is taken from Psal. 110. 1. and here explained in these Verses It is produced in the Confirmation of what the Apostle asserts concerning the impossibility as well as the needlesness of the Repetition of his Sacrifice For as it was no way necessary as in the Verses following he declares so it is impossible in his present state and condition which was Ordained for him from the beginning This was that he should sit at the Right Hand of God expecting his Enemies to be made his Footstool that is a state of Majesty and Glory But Offer himself he could not without suffering and dying whereof in this state he is no way capable And besides as was before Observed it is an evidence both of the dignity and eternal efficacy of his own Sacrifice whereon at once his Exaltation did ensue I acknowledge my thoughts are inclined unto a peculiar Interpretation of this place though I will not oppose absolutely that which is commonly received though in my judgment I prefer this other before it The Assertion is introduced by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 henceforth say we as unto what remains that is of the dispensation of the personal Ministry of Christ. He was here below he came unto his own he dwelt amongst them that is in the Church of the Hebrews some very few believed on him but the generality of the people the Rulers Priests Guides of the Church engaged against him persecuted him falsly accused him killed him hanged him on a Tree Under the Veil of their Rage and Cruelty he carried on his work of making his Soul an Offering for sin or taking away sin by the Sacrifice of himself Having fulfilled this Work and thereby wrought out the Eternal Salvation of the Church he sits down on the Right Hand of God In the mean time those stubborn Enemies of his who hated rejected and slew him continued raging in the fierceness of their implacable tumults against him and them that believed in him They hated his Person his Office his Work his Gospel many of them expresly sinning against the Holy Ghost Yet did they Triumph that they had prevailed against him and destroyed him as some of their accursed posterity do to this day It was the Judgment of God that those his obstinate Enemies should by his power be utterly destroyed in this World as a pledge of the Eternal Destruction of those who will not believe the Gospel That this was the end whereunto they were designed himself declares Matt. 22. 7. Luke 19. 24. Those mine Enemies that would not have me reign over them bring them hither and slay them before my face After our Lord Christ left this World there was a mighty Contest between the dying Apostate Church of the Jews and the rising Gospel Church of Believers The Jews boasted on their success in that by fraud and cruelty they had destroyed him as a Malefactor The Apostles and the Church with them gave Testimony unto his Resurrection and Glory in Heaven Great expectation there was what would be the end of these things which way the Scale would turn After a while a visible and glorious determination was made of this controversie God sent forth his Armies and destroyed these Murderers burning up their City Those Enemies of the King which would not have him to Reign over them were brought forth and slain before his face so were all his Enemies made his Footstool I
do judge that these are the Enemies of Christ and the making of them his Footstool which are peculiarly here intended namely the destruction of the hardned unbelieving Jews who had obstinately rejected his Ministry and opposed it unto the end Then were those his Enemies who so refused him slain and destroyed thereon For 1. This Description of his Enemies as his Enemies peculiarly directs us unto this sense the Enemies of his Person Doctrine and Glory with whom he had so many contests whose Blasphemies and Contradictions he underwent They were his Enemies in a peculiar manner 2. This the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expecting better answers unto than unto the other sense For the glorious visible propagation of the Gospel and Kingdom of Christ thereon began and was carried on gloriously upon and after the destruction of Jerusalem and the Church of the Jews his Enemies With reference hereunto Expectation may be no less distinctly ascribed unto him than if we extend the word unto the whole time unto the end of the World 3. The Act of Vengeance on these his Enemies is not said to be his own but peculiarly assigned unto God the Father and those imployed by him In the Original promise the words of God the Father to him are I will make thine Enemies thy Footstool I take it upon me Vengeance is mine to revenge the injuries done unto thee and the obstinacy of those Unbelievers Here in this place respect is had unto the means that God used in the work of their destruction which was the Roman Army by whom they were as the Footstool of Christ absolutely trodden under his feet with respect unto this special Act of God the Father who in the Execution of it proclaims that Vengeance is his For in the following words the Lord Christ is said only to expect it as that wherein his own cause was vindicated and revenged as it were by another Hand while he pleaded it himself in the World by that mild and gentle means of sending his spirit to convince them of Sin Righteousness and Judgment 4. This is that which the Apostle constantly threatens the obstinate Hebrews and Apostate Professors of the Gospel withal throughout this Epistle the time of their destruction being now at hand So he doth Chap. 6. 4 5 6 7 8. In this Chapter ver 26 27 28 29 30 31. Where it must be spoken to 5. This was that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or what remained as unto the personal Ministry of Christ in this World The horrible Destruction of the stubborn Obstinate Enemies of the Person and Office of Christ which befell the Nation of the Jews is a standing security of the endless destruction of all who remain his Obstinate adversaries 6. I leave this Interpretation of the Words unto the thoughts of them that are Judicious and shall open the Mind of the Holy Ghost in them according unto the generally received Opinion of their sense And to this end 1. The Subject spoken of is the Enemies of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Enemies He hath had many Enemies ever since his Exaltation and so shall have unto the Consummation of all things when they shall all of them be Triumphed over For his Enemies are of two sorts 1. Such as are so immediately and directly unto his Person 2. Such as are so to his Office and Work with the benefits of the Salvation of the Church Those of the first sort are either Devils or Men. All the Devils are in a Combination as sworn Enemies unto the Person of Christ and his Kingdom And for Men the whole World of Unbelieving Jews Mahumetans and Pagans are all his Enemies and do put forth all their Power in Opposition unto him The Enemies unto his Office Grace and Work and the benefits of it are either persons or things 1. The Head of this Opposition and Enmity unto his Person is Antichrist with all his Adherents and in a special manner all Worldly Power Authority and Rule acting themselves in subserviency unto the Antichristian Interest 2. All Pernicious Heresies against his Person and Grace 3. All others which make Profession of the Gospel and live not as becomes the Gospel they are all Enemies of Christ and his Office The things which rise up in Enmity and Opposition to him and the work of his Grace are Sin Death the Grave and Hell All these endeavour to obstruct and frustrate all the ends of Christs Mediation and are therein his Enemies 2. There is the Disposal of this Subject of these Enemies of Christ. They shall be made his Footstool 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 until they be put and placed in this condition it is a State which they would not be in but they shall be made put and placed in it whether they will or no as the word signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Footstool is used in a Threefold sence in the Scripture 1. For the visible pledge of Gods Presence and his Worship Gods Throne as we have shewed was represented by the Ark Mercy-Seat and Cherubims in the most Holy Place whereon the Sanctuary it self was his Footstool 1 Chron. 28. 2. Psal. 99. 5. Psal. 132. 7. So it is applyed unto God and his presence in the Church as the Ark was his Throne so the Sanctuary was his Footstool 2. It is applyed unto God and his presence in the World so Heaven above is called his Throne and this lower part of the Creation is his Footstool Isa. 66. 1. In neither of these senses are the Enemies of Christ to be his Footstool Therefore it is taken 3. For a Despised Conquered Condition a State of a mean subjected people deprived of all power and benefit and brought into absolute subjection In no other sense can it be applyed unto the Enemies of Christ as here it is Yet doth it not signifie the same condition absolutely as unto all persons and things that are his Enemies For they are not of one Nature and their subjection to him is such as their Natures are capable of But these things are intended in it 1. The Deprivation of all Power Authority and Glory They fate on Thrones but now are under the Seat of him who is the only Potentate 2. An utter defeat of their Design in opposing either his Person or the work of his Grace in the Eternal Salvation of his Church They shall not hurt or destroy no more in the Mountain of the Lord. 3. Their Eternal Disposal by the Will of Christ according as his Glory shall be manifested therein Sin Death the Grave and Hell as unto their Opposition to the Church shall be utterly destroyed 1 Cor. 15. 55 56 57. and there shall be no more Death Sathan and Antichrist shall be destroyed two ways 1. Initially and Gradually 2. Absolutely and Compleatly The First they are in all Ages of the Church from the time of Christs Glorious Ascension into Heaven They were then immediately put in subjection to him
all of them because that they should not defeat any one end of his Mediation And he maketh continual instances as he pleases of his Power over them in the visible Destruction of some of his most principal and implacable Enemies And Secondly it will be compleat at the last day when all these Enemies shall be utterly destroyed 4. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 until here hath respect unto both these the Gradual and Final destruction of all the Enemies of Christ. 5. This Christ is said to expect henceforth expecting Expectation and Waiting are improperly ascribed to Christ as they are in the Scripture unto God himself so far as they include hope or incertainty of the event or a desire of any thing either as to matter manner or time otherwise than as they are foreknown and determined But it is the rest and complacency of Christ in the faithfulness of Gods promises and his infinite Wisdom as unto the season of their accomplishment that is intended He doth not so expect these things as though there were any thing wanting to his own blessed Glory Power or Authority until it be actually and compleatly finished but saith the Apostle as to what remains to the Lord Christ in the discharge of his Office he henceforth is no more to Offer to Suffer no more to Dye no more to do any thing for the Expiation of Sin or by way of Sacrifice all this being absolutely and compleatly perfected he is for ever in the enjoyment of the Glory that was set before him satisfied in the Promises the Power and Wisdom of God for the compleat effecting of his Mediatory Office in the Eternal Salvation of the Church and by the conquest and destruction of all his and their Enemies in their proper times and seasons for it And from this Interpretation of the words we may take these Observations 1. It was the entrance of Sin which raised up all our Enemies against us From thence took they their Rise and Beginning as Death the Grave and Hell some that were friendly before became our Enemies thereon as the Law and some that had a Radical Enmity got power thereby to Execute it as the Devil The state in which we were created was a state of Universal peace all the strife and contention rose from Sin 2. The Lord Christ in his ineffable Love and Grace put himself between us and all our Enemies and took into his breast all their Swords wherewith they were armed against us so they are his Enemies 3. The Lord Christ by the Offering of himself making peace with God ruined all the Enmity against the Church and all the Enemies of it For all their power arose from the just displeasure of God and the Curse of his Law 4. It is the Foundation of all consolation to the Church that the Lord Christ even now in Heaven takes all our Enemies to be his in whose destruction he is infinitely more concerned than we are 5. Let us never esteem any thing or any person to be our Enemy but only so far and in what they are the Enemies of Christ. 6. It is our Duty to conform our selves to the Lord Christ in a quiet expectancy of the ruin of all our spiritual Adversaries 7. Envy not the Condition of the most Proud and Cruel Adversaries of the Church for they are absolutely in his power and shall be cast under his Footstool at the appointed season VERSE 14. For by one Offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified The Apostle 1. Gives the great Reason of this State of things with reference unto the Lord Christ in the discharge of his Office namely that he did not repeat his Offering as the Priests under the Law did theirs every year and every day that he is sate down at the Right Hand of God expecting his Enemies to be made his Footstool wherein they had no share after their Oblations And this is because by one Offering he hath for ever perfected them that are Sanctified This being done there is no need of any daily Sacrifice nothing that should detain the Lord Jesus out of the possession of his Glory So the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for inferrs a Reason in these words of all that was assigned before unto him in opposition unto what was done by the Priests of the Law it was by one Offering 2. What he did so effect which rendered all future Offerings and Sacrifices impossible He hath perfected for ever them that are Sanctified For the First what he did of the Nature of the thing spoken of was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by one Offering as what the Priests of old did was also by Offerings and Sacrifices The Eminency of this Offering the Apostle had before declared which here he referrs unto it was not of Bulls or Goats but of himself he Offered himself to God of his Body that is his whole Humane Nature And this Offering as he had observed before was only once Offered in the mention whereof the Apostle includes all the opposition he had made before between the Offering of Christ and those of the Priests as to its Worth and Dignity 3. That which is effected hereby is that he perfected for ever them that are Sanctified those on whom his work is effected are thereby Sanctified They that are Dedicated unto God those who are Sanctified or Purged by virtue of this Sacrifice unto them all the other effects are confined First to Sanctifie them then to perfect them was the design of Christ in Offering of himself which he purposed not for all Men Universally So in the Foundation of the Church of Israel they were first Sanctified and Dedicated unto God in and by the Sacrifices wherewith the Covenant was Confirmed Exod. 24. and afterwards were perfected so far as their condition was capable thereof in the prescription of Laws and Ordinances for their Church-State and Worship The word here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was used before He hath brought them into the most perfect and consummate Church-state and Relation unto God as unto all his Worship that the Church is capable of in this World It is not an absolute subjective virtual internal perfection of Grace that is intended the word signifies not such a perfection made perfect nor is ever used to that purpose nor is it the perfection of Glory for he treats of the present Church-state of the Gospel in this World But it is a state and condition of that Grace and those priviledges which the Law Priests and Sacrifices could never bring them unto He hath by his one Offering wrought and procured for them the compleat pardon of Sin and peace before God thereon that they should have no more need of the Repetition of Sacrifices he hath freed them from the Yoke of Carnal Ordinances and the Bondage which they were kept in by them prescribing unto them an Holy Worship to be performed with boldness in the presence of
That this difference so far as it had yet continued had no way alienated his Mind and Affections from them though he knew how great their mistake was and what danger even of eternal ruin it exposed them unto Hereby were the Minds of those Hebrews secured from prejudice against his Person and his Doctrin and inclined unto a compliance with his Exhortation Had he called them Hereticks and Schismaticks and I know not what other Names of reproach which are the terms of use upon the like occasions amongst us he had in all probability turned that which was lame quite out of the way But he had another Spirit was under another conduct of Wisdom and Grace than most Men are now acquainted withal It is not every Mistake every Errour though it be in things of great importance while it overthrows not the Foundation that can divest Men of a fraternal interest with others in the Heavenly calling 2. There is a Note of Inference from the preceding discourse declaring it the ground of the present Exhortation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Therefore seeing that these things are now made manifest unto you seeing it is so evidently testified unto that the Old Covenant Sacrifices and Worship could not make us perfect nor give us an Access unto God whereon they are removed and taken away which the Scripture fully testifies unto and seeing all this is effected or accomplished in the Office and by the Sacrifice of Christ which they could not effect and priviledges are thereon granted unto Believers which they were not before made partakers of Let us make use of them unto the Glory of God and our own Salvation in the duties which they necessarily require And we may observe that the Apostle applies this Inference from his discourse unto the use and improvement of the Liberty and Priviledges granted unto us in Christ with the Holy Worship belonging thereunto as we shall see in opening of the words Howbeit there is another conclusion implied in the words though not expressed by him and this is that they should cease and give over their attendance unto the Legal Worship and Sacrifices as those which now were altogether useless being indeed abolished This is the principal design of the Apostle in the whole Epistle namely to call off the believing Hebrews from all adherence unto and conjunction in Mosaical Institutions For he knew the danger both Spiritual and Temporal which would accompany and arise from such an adherence For 1. It would insensibly weaken their Faith in Christ and give them a disregard of Evangelical Worship which did indeed prove unto many of them a cause of that Apostacy and final Destruction which he so frequently warns them against 2. Whereas God had determined now speedily to put an utter end unto the City Temple and all its Worship by an Universal desolation for the sins of the people if they did obstinately adhere unto the observance of that Worship it was justly to be feared that they would perish in that destruction that was approaching which probably many of them did To instruct them in that light and knowledge of the truth that might deliver them from these evils was the first design of the Apostle in the Doctrinal part of this Epistle Yet doth he not plainly and in terms express it any where in this Epistle not in this place where it was most properly and naturally to be introduced yet he doth that which evidently includes it namely exhort them unto those duties which on the principles he hath declared are utterly inconsistent with Mosaical Worship and this is our free entrance into the Holiest by the Blood of Jesus For an entrance in any sence with our worship into the most holy place is inconsistent with and destructive of all Mosaical Institutions And this was an effect of the singular Wisdom wherewith the Apostle was furnished to write this Epistle For had he directly and in terms opposed their Observation no small tumult and out-cry would have been made against it and great provocations had been given unto the Unbelieving Jews But he doth the same thing no less effectually in these words wherein notwithstanding there is scarce a word which that application of his discourse doth not follow upon And his Wisdom herein ought to be an instructive example unto all those that are called unto the instruction of others in the dispensation of the Gospel especially such as through any mistakes do oppose themselves unto the truth Such things as will give exasperation unto the Spirits or advantages unto the temptations of Men ought to be avoided or treated on with that Wisdom Gentleness and Meekness as may be no prejudice unto them This way of Procedure doth the same Apostle expresly prescribe unto all Ministers of the Gospel 2 Tim. 2. 23 24 25 26. 3. There is in the words the Priviledge which is the foundation of the duty exhorted unto having therefore boldness to enter into the holiest for a regular entrance into or of the most holy The priviledge intended is directly opposed unto the state of things under the Law and from the consideration of it is the nature of it to be learned For the entrance into the holiest in the Tabernacle belonged unto the Worship of the Church it was the principal part thereof but it had many imperfection attending it 1. It was not into the special presence of God but only unto a place made with hands filled with some representations of things that could not be seen 2. None might ever enter into it but the High-Priest alone and that only once a year 3. The Body of the people the whole Congregation were therefore joyntly and severally utterly excluded from any entrance into it 4. The prohibition of this entrance into this Holy place belonged unto that Bondage wherein they were kept under the Law which hath been before declared The priviledge here mentioned being opposed to this state of things among them which respected their present Worship It is certain that it doth concern the present Worship of God by Christ under the Gospel And they are therefore utterly mistaken who suppose the entrance into the most holy to be an entrance into Heaven after this Life for all Believers For the Apostle doth not here oppose the glorious state of Heaven unto the Church of the Hebrews and their Legal Services but the priviledges of the Gospel-state and worship only Nor would it have been to his purpose so to have done For the Hebrews might have said that although the Glory of Heaven after this life do exceed the Glories of the Services of the Tabernacle which none ever questioned yet the benefit use and efficacy of their present Ordinances and Worship might be more excellent than any thing that they could obtain by the Gospel Neither were believers then also excluded from Heaven after death any more than now Therefore the priviledge mentioned is that which belongs unto the Gospel Church in its perfect
So that where any of them is mentioned the whole Humane Nature of Christ as unto the efficacy of it in his Sacrifice is intended 5. Yet were these things distinctly typified and fore-signified in the Sacrifices and Service of old So was the Flesh of Christ by the Veil as his whole Nature by the Tabernacle his Soul by the Scape-goat his Body and Blood by the Sin-offering on the day of Expiation when the Sacrifice was burnt without the Camp 6. Herein in an especial manner was the whole a Type of the Flesh of Christ in that there was no entrance to be laid open into the Holy place but by the rending of the Veil The time when the High Priest entered into it it was indeed by turning it aside whereon it immediately closed again and forbad an entrance and a prospect unto others Wherefore there could be no entrance into that holy place abiding unless the Veil was rent and torn in pieces so that it could close no more For it came to pass on the death of the Lord Jesus that the Veil of the Temple was rent from the top to the bottom And that which is signified hereby is only this that by virtue of the Sacrifice of Christ wherein his Flesh was torn and rent we have a full entrance into the holy place such as would have been of old upon the rending of the Veil This therefore is the genuine interpretation of this place we enter with boldness unto the most holy place through the Veil that is to say his Flesh We do so by vertue of the Sacrifice of himself wherein his Flesh was rent and all hindrances thereby taken away from us Of all which hindrances the Veil was an Embleme and principal Instance until it was rent and removed The sufficiency of the Sacrifice of Christ unto all the ends of the perfection of the Church in all duties and priviledges is that which the Apostle instructs us unto herein And there is great instruction given us in this Comparison of the Type and Anti-type into the way and nature of our access unto God in all our solemn Worship It is God as he was represented in the holy place to whom we address our selves peculiarly that is God the Father as on a Throne ef Grace the manner of our Access is with holy confidence grounded solely on the efficacy of the Blood or Sacrifice of Christ. The way is by Faith as to the removal of the Obstacles and the view of God as reconciled This is given us by the suffering of Christ in the Flesh which laid open the entrance into the Holy place Wherefore the Apostle saies not that the Veil was the flesh of Christ as some pretend who have hence cavill'd at the Authority of this Epistle on no other ground but because they could not apprehend the spiritual Light and Wisdom that is therein Only he says we have Our entrance into the Holy place by vertue of the flesh of Christ which was rent in his Sacrifice as through the rending of the Veil a way was laid open into the Holiest This is the first encouragement unto the Duty Exhorted unto from the benefit and priviledge we have by the Blood of Christ. Another to the same purpose follows VERSE 21. And having a great high Priest over the House of God Having is understood from v. 19. The word whereby the Apostle expresseth our relation unto Christ ch 4. 15. He is our Priest he exerciseth that Office on our behalf and our Duty 't is in all things to be such as becometh this great High Priest to own in the discharge of his Office What became him that he might be our High Priest as it is expressed ch 7. 26. shews what we ought to be in our measure that belong unto his care and say with boldness we have an High Priest which is another encouragement unto the diligent attendance to the duties we are here exhorted unto For it may be said that notwithstanding the provision of a new way into the Holiest and boldness given us to enter thereinto yet in our selves we know not how to do it unless we are under the conduct of a Priest as the Church of old was in their Worship All those Priests being removed how shall we do now to draw nigh unto God without such a conduct such a countenance The Apostle removes this from them and gives encouragement for what he had proved to be a Duty before namely that we have a great High Priest Three things are in the words 1. That we have a Priest 2. That he is a great Priest 3. That part of his Office wherein in this duty we are concerned which is that he is over the House of God The first hath been spoken unto on many occasions Onely the Apostle calls him not here Our High Priest which he doth most frequently but a Priest with the addition of Great A Great Priest which answers directly to the Hebrew Expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the High Priest was called yet the Apostle hath a respect unto his Eminency above all other Priests whatsoever He is great in his Person God and Man as he had described him ch 1. 2 3. Great in his glorious Exaltation ch 8. 1 2. Great in his Power and the efficacy of his Office ch 7. 25. Great in Honour Dignity and Authority the consideration whereof leads both unto the confirmation of our Faith and the ingenerating of a due reverence in our hearts towards him For as he is so great as that he can save us unto the uttermost or give us acceptance before God as unto our Persons and our Duties So he is so glorious that we ought to apply our selves to him with reverence and godly fear That which unto the particular end designed in this place we ought to consider in his Office is that he is over the House of God The Apostle doth not therein consider the Sacrifice of himself which he proposed as the foundation of the priviledge whence the ensuing Duty is inferr'd but what he is and doth after his Sacrifice now he is exalted in Heaven For this was the second part of the Office of the High Priest The First was to Offer Sacrifice for the people the other was to take the oversight of the House of God For so it is particularly exprest with respect unto Joshua who was an eminent Type of Christ Zech. 3. 6 7. The whole care of ordering all things in the House of God was committed to the High Priest so is it now in the hand of Christ he is over the House of God to order all things unto the Glory of God and the Salvation of the Church The House of God that is the whole House of God the Family of Heaven and Earth that part of the Church above and that here below which make up but one House of God The Church here below is comprized in the first place for unto them it is that