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A42584 Gell's remaines, or, Several select scriptures of the New Testament opened and explained wherein Jesus Christ, as yesterday, to day, and the same for ever, is illustrated, in sundry pious and learned notes and observations thereupon, in two volumes / by the learned and judicious Dr. Robert Gell ; collected and set in order by R. Bacon. Gell, Robert, 1595-1665.; Bacon, Robert, b. 1611 or 12. 1676 (1676) Wing G472; ESTC R17300 2,657,678 1,606

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yet are upon us Besides the Lord hath lately given us manifold signs from heaven forewarning us of these very times He testifies his great mercy to us as he did also to the old world before he sent the universal deluge Observ 2. As Righteousness is the most seasonable theme for the Preacher so of all other the most fit for the eighth preacher for him and them who preach in the time and nearest to the time of the deluge the overflowing scourge Observ 3. It is the most seasonable lesson that Preacher and People can learn When thy judgements are in the earth the inhabitants of the world shall learn righteousness Esay 26. Observ 4. Jesus Christ the true Noah is the eighth preacher of righteousness wherein he agrees with his type but as the truth in other things so in this also much exceeds the Type Noah and others can but preach righteousness to the ear and to the heart as the Prophets are commanded Esay 40.1 2. but they cannot incline and bow the heart or work that righteousness in man to whom they preach it But the Lord Jesus Christ the great Preacher of Righteousness is Jehovah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purifieth the heart and works his righteousness in us Esay 26. He is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the branch of righteousness or rather the young tender shoot sprout or twig or plant of righteousness of God the Fathers planting in us So he is called Jer. 23.5 though we turn it a branch improperly which the Chaldy Paraph. here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sucker Esay 53.2 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Esay 11.1 Chald. Paraph. again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this groweth in us See Notes on Jer. 23.5 Jesus Christ the true Noah is the eighth Preacher of Righteousness that we may the better understand this we must know that there have been from the beginning eight manifestations of the Deity 1. To Adam whom the Lord made a kind of visible God upon earth adorning him with his image in Wisdom Righteousness and Holiness 2. A second manifestation of the Deity was to the eight preachers of Righteousness especially to Noah God requiring by them his Righteousness and coming forth then out of his place to judge the world with Righteousness 3. A third manifestation of the Deity was unto Abraham Isaac and Jacob to whom God often appeared and made a Covenant with Abraham and confirmed it by Circumcision the seal of Righteousness by Faith 4. A fourth was unto Moses Aaron and Josuah to whom he made known his Laws his Statutes and Judgements by which he required his Righteousness of the people 5. A fifth manifestation of God was unto Samuel to David Solomon and the Prophets who testified in their several ages the Righteousness of God unto the people so that the righteousness of God was witnessed by the Law and the Prophets 6. A sixth was to Zorobabel Haggy Zachary and Malachy by whom the Lord brought his people out of the confused Babel and required of them his Righteousness 7. The seventh was made unto the Lord Jesus Christ manifested in the flesh who himself is the Righteousness of God 1 Cor. 1. 8. The eighth and last manifestation of the Deity is in these last days of the Spirit which the Lord Jesus Christ promiseth Joh. 14.16 17 18. and promiseth himself to be with them to the end of the world This is the Comforter which was given in the days of Pentecost Act. 2. The inward Teacher and Preacher Joh. 16.13 Joh. 2.27 The Reason why the true Noah the Lord Jesus Christ is the eighth preacher of righteousness will appear from the consideration 1. Of the object subject or argument of his Preaching 2. The number of eight 3. The consideration of the eighth Preacher himself 1. The object subject and argument of the true Noah's preaching is Righteousness which is 1. Sometimes taken for the whole Kingdom of God it self Psal 24.5 He shall receive the blessing and righteousness And Psal 69.27 which Christ preached Luk. 4.43 and commanded Luk. 9.2 2. Sometimes it is taken for a part of it as Rom. 14.17 The effect of righteousness is peace peace is taken also 1. Sometimes for the whole Kingdom Esay 57.2 These shall enter into peace 2. Sometimes for a part of it as Rom. 14.17 which the Apostle preached in Christ's name Act. 10.3 6. 3. Joy is either taken for the whole kingdom as Matth. 25.21 23. Enter thou into the joy of the Lord Or else 2. It is taken for the third part of the Kingdom which ariseth from righteousness and peace Rom. 14.2 Macrobius out of the principles of Pythagoras and Plato tells us that octonarius is numerus plenus and that fulness propriè nisi divinis rebus supernisque non convenit such a full number is the number of eight The number of eight is numerus justitiae the number of justice and righteousness And the reason is because it consists of parts which are pariter pares and may be resolved into equal parts This number makes a solid body which they call Tessera or cubus a four-quare which is the figure of the heavenly City and Kingdom Rev. 21.16 Hence it will appear why Righteousness must dwell in the heavenly Kingdom 2 Pet. 3.13 It is adequately and properly here as locatum in proprio loco Esay 2.62 Matth. 13.43 The righteous shall shine in the kingdom of their Father and 25.46 The righteous go into eternal life and not the unrighteous 1 Cor. 6.9 But as eight is numerus justitiae the Diapason so the Kingdom with which it holds proportion makes a disdiapason the more excellent harmony when as it was in the beginning it is now and shall be for ever as Diapason makes but one and the same sound even Jesus Christ in the beginnings yesterday to day and for ever 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 13.8 3. The true Noah is not only a just man but the just One. He is the righteousness He is Melchizedech Heb. 2.7 It is his work to destroy the spirit of errour the spirit of Antichrist Esay 11.4 5. The spiritual wickedness Ephes 6. 2 Thess 2.7 8. the wicked one Ezech. 28.19 This is the eighth and last beast yet of the seven Revel 17.11 The spiritual and inward Antichrist which is of the seven unclean spirits Matth. 12.45 Such was Adonizedeck to Josuah 10.3 he is in all the seven as his members and subjects over which he is the head Job 18.15 Thus Christ himself opposite unto Antichrist is he that is Jehovah Exod. 3.14 Rev. 1.8 He who is the eighth and hath the seven Rev. 3.1 of whom he is head Esay 11.2 Thus as God left not himself without witness but sent his Son in the days of his flesh to Preach Righteousness unto the Church of the Jews Luk. 19.41 42. So neither now doth he leave himself without witness in the days of his spirit but gives warning of the overflowing scourge by
degrees of torment in the hell of the damned for Matth. 11.22 It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sydon than for those Cities wherein most of his mighty works were done and they repented not and verse 24. It shall be more tolerable for the Land of Sodom in the day of Judgment than for Capernaum We read also of the lowest hell Deut. 32.22 My wrath shall burn to the lowest hell and deliverance from the lowest hell Psal 86.13 Thou hast delivered my Soul from the lowest hell and the depths of hell ProV 9.18 Her Guests are in the depths of hell Besides there are seven names of Hell as I shewed before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All which imply that there are divers degrees of punishment in Hell And so although he that saith to his Brother Thou fool be liable to hell fire yet there is a lower hell and the depths of hell prepared for him that murders his Brother because murder is a greater breach of the Sixth Commandment than being angry with our brother without a cause than saying to our brother Racha yea than saying to our Brother Thou fool as I shewed in the example of Cain And sith it is a greater sin in all reason and justice of God and man there must be a greater punishment than for any of these three Yea and saith he who saith to his Brother Thou fool shall be liable to hell fire He who shall murder his brother shall be liable to the lowest hell or the depths of hell This I believe is and seems probable reasonable and just to any understanding man yet if any should deny it or question it I know not how to prove that there be exactly such degrees of torment in hell the murderer shall be cast thereinto What then is there a greater punishment than Hell Surely there is what is that The lake of fire of which we read Revel 19.20 The beast and the false Prophet and they who worship his image shall be cast alive into the lake of fire burning with brimstone But happily this may be Hell it self No for the Devil himself shall be cast into the lake But why may not the Devil himself be cast into hell also That cannot be for Revelations 20. verse 14 15. Ye read that death and hell it self are cast into the lake and whosoever is not found written in the Book of life But yet we read of no murderers cast into the lake See then Chap. 21. 8. There ye find the murderers with all their Companions The fearful and unbelieving and the abominable and murderers and whoremongers and sorcerers and idolaters and all lyars shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone which is the second death So that although he who saith to his Brother Thou fool be liable to hell fire the angry and reproachful murderer who really and actually murders his Brother is liable to a greater Judgment than he who saith to his Brother Thou fool Obser 1. But I say unto you he that is angry with his brother c. Though the truth of God hath been delivered from all Antiquity to all Ages of men yet hath not the truth been taught 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all at once unto any Age. But it hath been wrapt up in conceptu confuso in dark Speeches and Parables and mystical Representations until the time of Reformation appointed by the Father Thus we read divers names which had Mysteries in them which were not known till after Ages made them manifest The Scripture is full of them Melchizedeck is interpreted by St. Paul Hebr. 7.1 2. The Coathites were to carry the Utensils and Instruments of the Sanctuary but they must not touch the Utensils themselves nor see them Numb 4.15 17 20. The Coathites signifie stupid and dull men such as were not able to see to the end of that which was to be abolished 2 Cor. 3. Obser 2. The Lord expects a greater measure of obedience under the Gospel than he did under the Law I say not that the Lord required not the same obedience under the Law No doubt he did but the Law was weak by reason of the weakness of our flesh and the Spirit that is in us lusts unto envy But under the Gospel God hath given more grace He hath sent his Son in the similitude of sinful flesh c. that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us c. Obser 3. The Law is not only literal and binding the hand from killing and the tongue from reproachful speaking but it 's spiritual also and binds the heart and Spirit from evill thoughts and passions This was meant by Exodus 32.15 See Notes on Rom. 7.12 Obser 4. Hence it appears how great a difference there is between the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees and indeed all them who look at the Commandments of God as purely literal and outward and that righteousness which Christ himself teacheth It is no doubt a far greater sin to kill our Brother than to be angry with him yet to kill our Brother according to Pharisaical righteousness makes a man liable to the Judgment only But according to the righteousness which Christ teacheth He that is angry with his Brother without a cause is liable to the Judgment which of all the three penalties is the least as hath been shewn and there remains two greater the Council and Hell Fire Hence it 's evident that there is a dispensation doctrine and discipline of the Father preceeding that of the Son whereof there is yet very little notice taken while men huddle all things together without distinction Men are loath to yield to this least they should for like reason be forced upon the third dispensation of the Spirit Obser 5. The Lord doth not reveal to man his whole duty all at once The generality of men of old knew no other breach of the Sixth Commandment than outward murder Our Lord reveals unto his Disciples a new Law Thou shalt not be angry with thy brother without a cause Not but that the Law-giver would be understood also that his Law was spiritual and reached to wrath which accordingly he blamed in Cain as also the sign of wrath the fall of his countenance Gen. 4. And the Wise men in all Ages knew that wrath and hatred were forbidden by that Commandment And therefore Abraham would have no strife between Lot and him nor between their herds-men Gen. 13. But while the Heir was a Child he was to be brought up under fear And therefore Solomon tells us Eccles 12. That to fear God and keep his Commandments is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole man or the whole duty of man and this is the first degree of wisdom Job 28.28 and Exodus 20.20 The Lord is come to prove you that his fear may be before your faces So saith Moses when he had delivered the Law for the fear of God was the common state of all men under the Law
16-19 Brethren as also in this Chap. 1.5.14 Brethren 2. They are called also Friends 1 Joh. and Act. 11. 3. And 1 Pet. 1. Christians which is the more usual name This the rather I note here because it imports the qualification of those who have this Law which is of principal regard in this place Now what is a Law And what is that Law which Christians have 1. A Law is an Ordinance or Rule declaring what is to be done what to be left undone for some common good end See Notes in Psal 78.5 This Law the Lord gives unto the fall'n man ubi supra Reason Necessity required it for whereas sin had entred upon the soul of man and estranged him by the Law is the knowledge of sin Observ 1. Thou art inexcusable O Man who ever thou art c. See Notes in Psal 78.5 Observ 2. This testifieth and witnesseth against all and convinceth all ubi supra Observ 3. This Law is fall'n down rejected destroyed and lost as it were among the rubbish c. ibidem 2. Liberty is a power to think will speak and do what we ought without constraint and without hinderance 1. The Law of Liberty is that Law which makes the believers in Christ free from the bondage of sin and death 2. Which renders the believers in Christ free from the compulsory power of Moses's Law 3. This is no other than the Moral Law of God which is said by St. Paul to gender unto bondage Gal. 4. and here by St. James to be a law of liberty are not these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. This law of liberty is called a perfect Law Jam. 1. Not that the Law of Moses is in it self imperfect but because it commands only and gives no power whereas the Lord Jesus gives Grace to help in time of need Hebr. according to which I came not saith he to destroy the Law but to fulfil it Matt. 5.17 when we are all dead in trespasses and sins The Reason 1. why Christians have this law of liberty appears from the donour and giver of it the Lord Jesus Christ He alone is free among the dead Psal 88.5 who hath loosed the bands or pains of death Act. 22.4 Yea he hath abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 2. There is Reason also in regard of those who are to be made free Under the Law we are all brought up as Children though heirs yet little differing from servants under the Pedagogie of the Fathers Law and therefore though Children of Abraham typically and so in a sort free according to our age yet we stand in need of another Redeemer and if the Son make ye free ye shall be free indeed who gives to all Believers his spirit of life without which spirit no man can be said to be Christs Rom. 8.9 or to be a Christian Joh. 2.27 Where the spirit of the Lord is there is liberty 2 Cor. 3. Observ 1. Christian liberty hath a Law The most free Christians have a Law to regulate their freedom for there is no freedom that 's true which freeth any man from obedience unto the Law of God Christians are not exempted or set free from the Law of God Christians are not free from any Righteousness which the Law of God requireth Here is a ground of all dehortations in Scripture all disswasions from doing evil Every man even Cain was supposed to have a power in him to have left his wrath and envy and hatred of his Brother the same is a ground of all exhortations and perswasions to do good the same Cain is supposed to have had a power to do well even while he was wrathful envious and hating his Brother If thou do well shalt thou not be accepted but if thou do evil sin lieth at thy door And the like Reason there is for all admonitions and comminations and threatnings in Scripture if they who are exhorted dehorted admonished threatned or any way perswaded or disswaded have in them no power to do or not to do answerably all these acts are utterly in vain How much more hath a Believer in Christ who hath the law of liberty a power in him to do according to the Law and Will of God so that when he is dehorted exhorted admonished reproved or threatned he hath in him a power to act according to the dehortation exhortation c. otherwise they should be all in vain Hence it appears that they who are truly Christians such as the Apostle calls Brethren they are set at liberty from the bonds of their self-chosen wisdom and knowledge free from their own self-will self-love they are released from the bondage of corruption from the dominion and power of sin Hence appears a great mistake among the people of God who in their weakness of understanding take that for free will which indeed is not as when we say we can do this or the contrary which they call libertas contrarietatis and that we can do this or leave it undone which they call libertas contradictionis and they who say this are held to be free-willers and to hold free will as they call it Now neither the one nor the other of these is truly and properly free will but a power and faculty which God Created in the soul of man and remains in the soul and continueth in it even in the state of sin This is evident in Cain who is called the first-born of the Devil He was now full of wrath and envy which is properly the Devils sin The Lord saith to him even then Gen. 4.6 Why art thou wroth and why is thy countenance fallen If thou do well shalt thou not be accepted and if thou doest not well sin lieth at the door and the desire of it shall be subject unto thee and thou shalt rule over it as I have heretofore proved the words should be read vers 7. Here was Cain actually under two great sins yet the Lord even then supposeth him to have power either to do well or ill surely this is not the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free See Notes on Gen. 9.13 Repreh The present untoward Generation who pretend that liberty wherewith Christ hath made his believers free as a cloak to cover their licentiousness as if the Lord Jesus had come to destroy the Law not to fulfil it Like Clodius the Letcher one of their Religion whom Tully justly blames that he Consecrated his house to the Goddess Liberty but set up for Liberty the Image of a notorious known Strumpet As God makes his people free with a true freedom so the Devil gives his Servants a false freedom See Notes on Gen. 26. post medium Rehoboth Observ 5. Consol To the weak Subjects under the Law of Liberty See Notes in Psal 78.51 3. We ought so to speak as they who shall be judged by the Law of Liberty So How The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which answers to 〈◊〉
Gell's Remaines Or Several Select SCRIPTURES OF THE New Testament Opened and Explained WHEREIN JESUS CHRIST As Yesterday To Day And the same for Ever is Illustrated IN Sundry PIOUS and LEARNED NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS thereupon In Two Volumes By the Learned and Judicious Dr. Robert Gell late Rector of St. Mary Alder-mary London Collected and Set in Order by R. Bacon Ph. Jerem. 6.16 Thus saith the Lord Stand in the way and see and ask for the old paths where is the good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest unto your Souls Vulgarium animarum oculi Divinitatis radios sufferre nequeunt Aug. LONDON Printed for NATH BROOKE at the Sign of the Angel in Cornhil near the Royal Exchange 1676. A PREFACE To the Candid and Christian READERS Men Brethren and Fathers OUr Saviour after he had fed five thousand with five Barley Loaves and two little Fishes gave commandment to his Disciples to take up the fragments that nothing be lost Joh. 6.10.11 12. And behold there was taken up twelve Baskets full much more at the last than appeared at the first This commandment hath touched and obliged us likewise to gather up these Remains of this Learned and Pious Author that nothing of his as much as in us was might be lost for we doubt not to affirm that they are of the same sort of Viands wherewith our Lord himself fed so many thousands in the Wilderness It is said very fitly for our purpose in the ordinary Gloss on that place that the five Barley Loaves were Vetus Lex the old Law contained in the five books of Moses and they are said to be Barley Loaves Quia Lex Cibus est Rudium Medulla hordei tenacissima palea vix separabili tegitur Because the Law is the food of the Rude and Weak the pith or inward part is covered with a most tenacious and scarcely separable husk or shell But behold in this Work the old Law is opened so as not only to become Food for Babes but strong meat for them that are of full age that by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern good and evil But though Fragments which Origen understands to be those more abstruce Divine and secret Mysteries which are usually made light of if not with contempt trod under foot by the more carnal and unspiritual and inconsiderate both Hearers and Readers yea and these as well of the Learned as the Unlearned sort and broken Meat yet such as have a good savour to them who have an hunger after the true heavenly Food that same panem super-substantialem we daily pray for Not indeed so prepared as they would have been had the Author himself lived to have brought them forth However they are no other but in the very Truth the same with his own Copy written with his own hand and faithfully transcribed for the Press Now that the Readers may not take offence that there are so many references in some of these Notes especially those on Matthew to others more fully speaking to the same thing they may and ought candidly to judge that the Author intended the publishing of them all that what seemed to be wanting in the one might be fully found made up in the other And this we doubt not but ye will find saving that I am to advertise you that though these are hitherto preserved yet many were to our great grief lost in the great hurry of that Fire which lately burnt this City some of them lying distant from the other so miscarried But through the mercy of God these like Moses having escaped the violence of the Fire as he did of the Water are here left as Monuments of God's Love to the World and in particular to this City to whom this Trumpet sounded Shrill enough that they might have heard it to their amendment and so their preservation for God Lightens before he Thunders but their Ears were bored before by others to their unutterable hurt and ruine But the City being now as miraculously restored to its former outward splendour as it was suddenly and to astonishment laid in Ashes This is in the other way of preaching the Gospel to them and the whole Nation the second time offered unto them in writing or print for so this Author gave heed unto that tripple command of our Saviour to Peter Pasce oves meos feed my sheep which some understand to be verbo vita scripto by word by life and by letter he hath taught this City by the two former already both which they may find a new imprinted for their use now in Letters and Syllables 2. Some may also take offence that especially in this Volume they meet with so many c's But they need not thereby be troubled for first the sence is good and entire without them and secondly what is wanting generally is either the full expressing of some Clause or Verse in the Scriptures which to have set down at large would have too much and unnecessarily enlarged the Volume especially considering that the most English Readers when they meet with any such they can either out of their memory or out of their Bibles make a supply 3. Some Apologie also may seem needful to the Readers for that they will find especially in the Notes on Act. 2.4 some very brief Repetitions of the same words and sence which they had read before But 1. though this the words of the Apostle Paul Phil. 3.1 may somewhat excuse who designedly did the same thing And though this may be taken for a defect or rather a redundancy yet the Reader is abundantly recompensed by the following Paragraphs which could not well come in their Order but by such a Repetition making way for them 4. It may be convenient also in this short Preface to give some account of the design of this Work which is chiefly intended to discover Jesus Christ who is the same yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13.8 which in brief is not only 1. Because as Irenaeus saith of the Scripture Vbique in sacra Scriptura disseminatus est filius Dei The Son of God is that holy Seed wherewith the field of the holy Scriptures is every where sown and overspread which our Saviour confirms by his Testimony of himself Luk. 24.25 26 27. Beginning at Moses and all the Prophets he expounded unto them in all the Scriptures the things concerning himself even so in all Humility and Modesty the like in its degree may be truly said to be the scope of this whole Work But 2. Also and more especially because it was the first and continued design of this Author to reveil Christ and the Truth concerning him out of every Scripture whatsoever he treated of whether of the Old or New Testament And those Texts that seem at first sight to be barren and to speak least of that great Mysterie for so the Apostle calls it he finds even there by the Divine Artifice he had
come to us let us draw our selves to it by the cords of love Psal 139. Examine me whether any way of wickedness be in me and lead me in the way everlasting 3. There is danger lest thine adversary deliver thee to the Judge This is the first degree of danger implyed in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nè quando lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the Judge 1. Literal 2. Spiritual 1. Who is the Judge 2. What is it to deliver one to the Judge And why doth the Adversary so deliver the Debtor to the Judge 1. The Judge is either Ordinary or Delegate Ordinary who by his own right or by the Authority of the Prince can exercise Jurisdiction 2. A Judge delegate is he who by Commission from another takes cognizance of some certain cause either of them may be here meant Both ought to act omnia secundum legem jus all things according to Law and Equity Who ever the Judge is he ought to be a good man and to fear God and that according to the Civil Laws and the Law of God For he that rules over men must be just ruling in the fear of God 2 Sam. 23.3 1. Who is the Judge The Father hath given all Judgment to the Son 2. What is it to deliver to the Judge The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sometimes signifieth simply tradere to deliver Matth. 25.14 He delivered to them his goods Sometime to deliver to be cast into prison Matth. 10.19 When they deliver you up Acts 22.4 Binding and delivering into prisons sometime to deliver by treachery Luke 21.12 He that betrayes me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 22.48 Now because sometime the Creditor by the fraud of his Debtor is put upon shifts to take him Vulpinari cum vulpinatore deliver to the Judge the Evangelist here useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lest he deliver thee or betray thee Sometime the Creditor is forced by the wilfulness of his Debtor to use violence to apprehend him and therefore the word used by St. Luke 12.58 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to draw lest the adversary draw thee to the Judge 3. Why doth the adversary deliver the Debtor to the Judge Apprehension and citing the Debtor to appear before the Judge is the beginning of Judicial Process 2. It is the Judges office to enquire examine determine and decide according to Law what is justice and equal yea by sentence and due execution of sentence to compel and enforce the Debtor to that which with his own will and by fair means otherwise he will not do Doubt But can a Brother be so unkind as to turn such an adversary as to deliver yea draw me to the Judge and so to be the author of all the ensuing dangers Men are apt to reason very favourably in behalf of themselves and lay the whole blame upon another But who ever thou art deal equally in this business between thy brother and thy self Thou sayest can thy brother be so unkind c. Reason now on thine own part Can I being a Brother be so unjust as to offend and provoke my Brother as to detain his right from him Whether of the two is the greater offence thy Brother's unkindness to thee or thine injustice which provoked thy Brother to be unkind And this unkindness of thy Brother renders him but just when he delivers thee to the Judge such differences as these are among the younger Saints Obser 1. Take notice here that there are divers kinds of Spirits one sort of those which are acted by men under the Law and Prophets another of those which are acted by the Spirit of Christ and his Apostles 1. They who acted by the Spirit of the Law and Prophets are of an austere fierce and rigorous Spirit as they who revenge themselves of the sin and sinners which have deceived them So zealous was Abel his blood cried Eliah who called for fire from Heaven to consume his adversaries so zealous was Jeremias 11.18 19. Let me see thy Vengeance 20.3 4 6 12. And Zachary 2 Chron. 24.22 The Lord look upon it and require it and Job who hath his name from his enmity against sin and iniquity Such effects are found in men when they know and are grieved that they have been beguiled by the deceitfulness of sin 2 Cor. 7.11 By this Spirit our Lord supposeth men acted while yet under the Law 2. But there is another Spirit wherewith they are acted who are led by Christ and his Apostles and are his true Disciples for the blood or Spirit of Christ speaks better things than that of Abel James and John were acted by the Spirit of the Law and Prophets and would have brought fire from Heaven to destroy the Samaritans as Elias did But our Lord told them they knew not of what Spirit they were or ought now to be And therefore Christ prayed for his Persecutors Father forgive them c. And St. Stephen Lord lay not this sin to their charge And St. Paul prayeth for the Colossians that they might be acted by the same spirit Col. 1.1 and Gal. 6.1 2 Tim. 2.25 26. With meckness instructing such as oppose themselves According to this Spirit our Lord did not condemn the Woman taken in Adultery to be put to death But what then did he approve of her God forbid no he bid her go and sin no more John 8.1 3. The Lord doth not disallow of legal process and proceedings at Law nor doth the Apostle 1 Cor. 6. simply forbid going to Law one with another He knew while men were yet in their younger spiritual age there would be differences one with other and therefore be regulates those differences 4. Our Lord doth not altogether disallow of coercive power when men are not willing yea when they are opposite unto what is right malo nodo malus quaerendus est cunaeus an hard knotty block requires an hard wedge 2. In this point three are met who make the Judgment complete The Adversary delivers thee to the Judge Judgment is the Act of three Judicis Actoris Rei The Judge the Adversary the Actor Plaintiff or Creditor and the Reus party accused Defendant or Debtor Mysticé This hath a truth also in the Mystery when the Adversary which is the Law of God and Prophets delivers him who will not agree with it unto the Judge And who is the Judge Who else but Christ And by what authority is he so John 5.22 The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all Judgment unto the Son v. 27. The Father hath given the Son authority to execute Judgment also because he is the Son of man Dan. 7. Unto this Judge the Law and Prophets deliver obstinate men Ye have one who accuseth you even Moses John 5.45 And the Law reproveth corrects accuseth convinceth condemns Reason 1. In regard of Justice every transgression and disobedience must receive a due recompence of reward Hebr. 2.2 And he who despised Moses's Law must
heaven and causing us to drink into one spirit Joh. 6. 1 Cor. 10. 3. But if it be not the meat but the welcome that makes the feast that 's not wanting Come saith Wisdom eat of my bread and drink of my wine that I have mingled and defecated or purged from the lees the true spiritual joy sublimated and cleared from the lees of all carnal and sensual delights And ye know how Christ the Bride-groom cheers up his friends at his Marriage-feast Eat O my friends i. e. ye who do his Commandments Joh. 15.14 as Abraham Joh. 2.23 drink yea drink abundantly of Loves or O my well Beloved How gracious is our God in providing inviting us to come and welcoming us unto his Feast what can he do more how ungracious how unthankful shall we be if we come not and can we do less which will appear if we consider what that is that detains what else but the meat that perisheth how unreasonable to prefer our husks before the store and plenty of our Fathers house to prefer with Esau one mess of Pottage before our birthright to prefer our Farm or our Merchandize before the True Treasure Add hereunto the consideration of the Time both too much mis-spent in other Feasts and spent in the preparation and invitation unto this feast How seasonable it is to come to this feast how unseasonable to riot at other feasts For the time of our life past may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles when we walked in lasciviousness lusts excess of wine revellings banquettings and ●bominable idolatries 1 Pet. 4.3 He saith not that they had spent much time of their life but how much or how little thou hast spent of thy life in revellings thou knowest perhaps many years perhaps but a few dayes little or much there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enough of sin be it never so little the least time past is too too much to have been spent in it since there is none at all allowed Eccles 3.1 8. No no not in surfetting and drunkenness not in chambering and wantonness not in strife and envying None at all allowed to make preparation for such Feasts Make no provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Rom. 13. ult Is' t fit that we should spend time upon our lusts while the Great King the Feast-maker is providing for us a feast of Graces Long since he promised this Feast The Lord of Hosts shall make unto all people a feast of fat things c. Esay 25.26 and a long time it was preparing under the Law shadowed in types and figures and as it were served up in covered dishes and we mean time shut up under the Law unto the Faith which should afterward be reveiled Gal. 3. So saith that Dispensator Gratiae that great Steward of Gods Grace that this Feast in other Ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now reveiled unto his Holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit That the Gentiles that we should be fellow-heirs and of the same body and partakers of his Promise partakers of that Divine Nature in Christ by the Gospel Eph. 5.6 Yea many Prophets and Kings have desired to see the things which we see and to hear the things which we hear and to have a tast of the same feast which is set before us but could not for of this the Prophets in old time enquired and searched diligently who prophesied of the Grace that should come unto us unto whom it was reveiled that not unto themselves but unto us they did minister the things which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the Gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven Nay not only Men but Angels themselves desire to look into the things which now are set before us Yet 't is strange to consider how slow men are in the prosecution of their greatest good how unwilling the Israelites were to go out of Aegypt though to possess the Holy Land Exod. 5.21 and being come out and invited to the same Spiritual meat that we are how they longed for the fish and cucumbers and melons and leeks and onions and garlick Numb 11.5 and being come into the Holy Land how slow were they to take possession of it Josh 18.3 How long are ye slack to go to possess the Land which the Lord God of your Fathers hath given you The Apostle applyeth all this to us Heb. 4.1 So seasonable is the time to come unto this Feast for behold now is the accepted time behold now is the day of Salvation 2 Cor. 6.2 And to day if ye will hear his voice then harden not your hearts Heb. 3. yea 't is high time we come for this day of Salvation is far spent St. John tells us it is the last hour 1 Joh. So unseasonable therefore is the time for other Feasts for this is the day which the Lord hath made Psal 118.24 wherefore we must walk honestly in it as in the day time not in surfetting and drunkenness c. Rom. 13.12 13 14. And that it may appear that it 's a very unseasonable time for other Feasts St. Peter proved that his Convivae his fellow guests had not been at any other Feasts that they had not been at the Wine because it was the third hour of the day Act. 2.15 And the same Apostle reproves those who walk after the flesh in the lusts of uncleanness and not in the day-time 2 Pet. 2.10 13. especially since it is the last hour of the day Nor ought we to think that it 's a matter Arbitrary and left meerly to our discretion whether we will come or no if we come welcome if otherwise no harm will come of it No no 't will be very ill taken if thou come not for the King who now vouchsafes to send forth his Servants to invite thee and bid thee come if thou refuse his profered Grace if thou come not he invites others nor shalt thou taste of the Feast which was prepared for thee Luk. 14. if it seem to thee a small loss what thinkest thou of that poena sensus vers 7. The King being wroth sends forth his armies and destroyes the unworthy guests And how much better were it that the goodness of God should lead us to repentance than his severity Hos 5.15 Let us enquire whether we be guests at this Feast or no Surely if we come and communicate with God and partake of his Spiritual Marriage-feast we do not communicate with the Devil Ye cannot partake of the Table of the Lord and the Table of Devils for what communion hath righteousness with unrighteousness light with darkness what concord hath Christ with Belial what part hath he that believeth with an infidel what agreement hath the Temple of God with Idols wherefore come out from among them and be ye separate saith the Lord 2 Cor. 6. What then you 'l say must we have no dealing no
the trumpet of the Jubilee was to sound and liberty was proclaimed throughout all the Land Levit. 25.16 when the servant was freed from his master and one of his brethren was to redeem him vers 48. all which pointed at Christ and our deliverance and redemption by him from our spiritual thraldom under uncleanness and iniquity so our Lord who best knew interpreted it Luk. 4.18 The spirit of the Lord is upon me he hath sent me to preach deliverance to the Captives recovering of sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised to preach the acceptable year of the Lord and vers 21. This day saith he is this Scripture fulfilled in your ears this day of Christ who is hodie Hebr. 13. and fulfilled it was then and God grant it may be fulfilled now for now daily the spirit of God calls upon us to day if ye will hear his voice Now daily the trumpet is blown proclamation made to the servants of sin to renounce their masters and yield their members servants unto righteousness For this Liberty is not wrought by a strong imagination which many a deluded soul calls faith but it 's really and truly wrought in him where ever the Son makes free if the Son make ye free then are ye freed indeed not only in conceit as I shall shew anon He is our elder brother and not ashamed to call us brethren Hebr. 2.11 and to him it belongs to redeem us as being our brother so the Law was Levit. 25. and he through death works a powerful redemption He overcame him who had the power of death i. e. the Devil and delivers or redeems them who through the fear of death were all their life time subject unto bondage vers 15. But now is the judgement and now the Prince and Ruler of this world is cast out This is that hard master that tyrant whom so long we serve as we serve uncleanness and iniquity from whence we are then freed when the Creature is redeemed from the bond of corruption into the glorious liberty of the Sons of God The Jubilee or blowing of the trumpet is the publication of the Gospel the joyfull tydings of redemption through Christ Lift up thy voice like a trumpet Isa 58.1 shew my people their transgression and the house of Jacob their sins let them know that they serve not those masters they owe services unto they are now called to serve righteousness Revel 1.10 11. and 4.1 Christ's voice is a great voice the voice of a trumpet the trumpet of Jubilee the last trumpet hath sounded to raise us up from the death of sin into the life of righteousness Rev. 1.15 1 Cor. 15. Psal 89.15 And blessed thrice blessed are they who can distinguish the sounds of the trumpet know the joyful sound There are many trumpets blown which give uncertain sounds Alas we are in Babel in a confusion we understand not one another but only according to the false conceit every man hath in his own heart and therefore no man prepares himself to the battle to go out of Babel We think the only thraldom is without us and that far enough in the Babel at Rome I excuse not them I believe they have the best share of Babel in the whole Christian world but while we all misunderstand and misapply the Scripture and mistake and oppose one another and continue still under the service of iniquity we are in a Babel in a confusion Out of this Babylonian slavery and captivity under sin uncleanness and iniquity the Prophet and Apostle call us by the trumpet of Jubilee Come out of them my people come out of their slavery out of the captivity of sin unto the glorious liberty of the Sons of God And blessed are the people that know the joyful sound they shall walk in the light of thy countenance in thy name shall they rejoyce all the day the day of the Lord and in thy righteousness shall they be exalted Psal 89.15 16. Psal 60.4 Cant. 2.4 Isa 13.1 2 3. That we may the better understand this we must consider Gods threefold oeconomy and dispensation under the government of the Father the Son and the Spirit and these three as in every Christian Man so in the whole Church These are commonly neglected and hudled all together confusedly and without distinction whereas there is indeed in Scripture a manifest distinction of them one from other 1. The dispensation of the Father and the Son as Rom. 3.19 We know that whatsoever things the Law saith it saith to those who are under the Law vers 21. But now the righteousness of God without the Law is manifested being witnessed by the Law and the Prophets even the righteousness of God which is by the faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all that believe vers 26. 2. Of the Son and Spirit Joh. 14.25 26. These things have I spoken unto you being yet present with you but the Comforter the holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my name he shall teach you all things 3. We have all three together 1 Cor. 13.11 12. I was a Child I spake as a Child I understood as a Child I thought as a Child there 's the dispensation of the Father toward the Child under the pedagogie and discipline of the Law of which St. Paul speaks Gal. 3. and 4. But when I became a man I put away childish things He understands the young mans age the age of strength under the Gospel of Jesus Christ the power of God yet though the man be then strong yet he hath not a clear sight of God but sees through a glass darkly he sees the back parts of God Exod. 33.23 as yet he sees through a glass But by the dispensation of the Spirit he sees God most clearly Numb 12.6 7 8. face to face Answerable to these three dispensations are the three degrees of obedience 1. to the Law 2. the obedience of Faith 3. the obedience of Charity Now of all these three dispensations the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the now in the Text referrs to this time of Christ this accepted time the time of Jubilee the day of Salvation Christ the Redeemer challengeth this duty of us which is the end of his redemption That we being redeemed out of the hands of our enemies uncleanness and iniquity those who tyrannized over us might serve him in holiness and righteousness all the dayes of our life Let every one groan until the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text the time of Grace for as the whole Church so every member in it hath a time under the Law when lusts rule in our members Rom. 7. from which Christ the Redeemer in his due time redeems and frees us This was figured Jude 3. Gal. 4.4 Observe what is the true redemption wrought by Christ what else but redemption from uncleanness and iniquity for properly redemption is the buying again of that which was sold Thus Ahab sold
Lord be no cause of evil yet he ministers occasion of doing evil He exposed his own Son to the power of darkness yet he who betrayed him had the greater sin and the greater punishment it had been better he had never been born This is the more to be heeded because some think that when providence offers an occasion to do otherwise than the Law commands we may embrace the occasion though contrary to the Law of God Davids men were of this mind 1 Sam. 24. When David had Saul at a great advantage his men said to him Behold the day of which the Lord said unto thee Behold I will deliver thine enemy into thine hand that thou mayst do to him as shall seem good unto thee And by this they stirred up David ●o kill Saul Yea Saul himself was of the same mind vers 18.19 But did David himself embrace this occasion which God put into his hand No David did not examine the Will of the Lord by the providence which he put into his hand but by the commandment of God which forbad him to stretch forth his hand against the Lord 's Anointed And therefore I shall propound this necessary Rule to your consideration whereof we shall have manifold use in this life especially in these times Examine not the Commandment of God by the providence and occasion put into in thine hand but examine the providence and occasion put into thine hands by the Commandment of God and act thou accordingly Observ 2. Observe it is no good Argument that sin is mortified in us and that we live as we ought the Christian life because the motions of sin appears not in us Sin may be asleep and not dead or like one in Lipothymia in a swoon When the commandment comes then 't will discover its self that it was not dead but only in a dead sleep like the Snake in the Fable benumb'd with cold but gathered heat from the fire so doth the sin which seems dead but when the fiery law cometh it revives like the water that appears clear till it be stirred and then it discovers it self all mudd at the bottom As the wakening of a sleepy dog As the stirring of a Wasps nest They are quiet enough till they be moved Observ 3. See the truth of that which the Psalmist tells us Psal 143.2 That in the sight of the Lord no man living can be justified which our Apostle expounding Rom. 3.20 saith by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in Gods sight which he repeats Gal. 2.16 where the Emphasis is to be set not only upon the sight of God because no man can be justified in his sight but also upon no man living which is not to be understood as we do in in our common speech when we would express our selves more vehemently we say No man living but in such a sence as our Apostle useth it in this Chap. 7. vers 1.2 The law hath dominion over the man so long as he liveth c. Ainsw in Levit. 13.13 14 15. Thus no man living that is while the man lives and God and Christ lives not in the man its impossible that any man living should be justified But when God lives in the man when Christ lives in the man then he justifieth the man It is God that justifieth Rom. 8.33 And therefore what the Psalmist saith no man living the Apostle turns no flesh no carnal no earthly man it is impossible that any living man that any flesh should be justified by the works of the Law Observ 4. Learn then from hence the absolute necessity of a strong mighty and powerful Saviour The Law discovers the sin but it cannot take it away yea sin revives by the coming of the Law and is made more powerful more violent than before it was As when Moses and Aaron came to Pharaoh with a message from God about the deliverance of the people Pharaoh laid a greater and a more unreasonable heavy task upon them Exod. 5.20 So deals the spiritual Pharaoh when the Law-giver sends his Law unto us he lays load upon us such as no man living is able to bear And therefore the Lord he graciously promiseth to his people oppressed in the Spiritual Egypt Revel 11. That when they cry unto the Lord because of the oppressors he shall send them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we turn a Saviour and a great one Esay 19.20 The words are a Saviour and a Prince So 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth and so Christ is called Act. 5.31 A prince and a Saviour whom God hath exalted with his right hand to give repentance to Israel and remission of sins And by him all that believe are justified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from all things what things are they The most Ancient English Manuscript hath it from all those sins from which we could not be justified by the Law of Moses Act. 13.39 When the sin is now by the force of the Law spread abroad in the man and become exceeding sinful like a leprosie then the high Priest Jesus Christ he cleanseth the Leper Levit. 13.12 13. we turn it he shall pronounce him clean The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. mundificabit he shall make him clean as Arias Montanus turns it well But on the contrary vers 14.15 if he see 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. living flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall make him unclean not pronounce him only If we would judge our selves we should not be judged of the Lord. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness 1 Joh. 1.9 But if there be any living flesh any flesh that would live by the law the Lord makes that unclean he stains the pride of all glory because by the works of the law no man living no flesh can be justified But here the poor disconsolate soul complains I was alive without the law once I found nothing amiss in my self no regreeting no remorse of conscience But now when I see a better a greater light I find my self in a greater darkness the motions of sin were quiet before now the Law comes they are stirred up in me violently As he who in a fight reeceives many a wound yet then feels them not nor thinks himself to be wounded at all till he cools and then he feels them In the pursuing of the heat of our concupiscence we receive many a fiery dart of the Devil which yet as then we perceive not but afterwards in cool blood I was whole and sound once but now I find wounds and bruises and putrifying sores mine iniquities are gone over mine head and are an heavy burden too heavy for me to bear my wounds stink and are corrupt through my foolishness and there is no soundness in my flesh wretched man that I am Till now indeed thou wert a wretched man thou livest frolickly without curb without
spiritual understanding and strength and might according to his glorious power And this is more observable in this Epistle because the Colossians were in this condition wherein the man in the Text declares himself Col. 3.3 ye are dead saith he and your life is hid with Christ in God Observ 2. Sin is a stranger to our nature for howsoever through long custom in sin sin and the man becomes all one yet one they cannot be because one and the same cannot be at one time alive and dead Now sin revives and lives and the man dies therefore surely they are not one This was couched in Nathans parable to David 2 Sam. 12.2 where David's lust is represented by a traveller who came to the rich man Vngodly men invite it unto them Wisd 1.12 16. and 2.24 through the envy of the Devil came death into the world it was he that brought it into Judas and then Satan entred into Judas Luk. 22.3 for even Judas the Traytor himself was not all one with it but Satan had darted covetousness and treason into his heart Joh. 13.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 immisisset he had darted Ambition was a stranger to the Apostles There arose a reasoning among them which of them should be the greatest Luk. 9.46 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there entred a dispute among them and vulgar Latin intravit cogitatio the thought came into them it was none of the house Observ 3. Take heed of judging or condemning any one in whom the motions of sin appear especially if the man dye unto them The humours in the body must be moved and flow before they can be expelled The best Saints of God yea all of them pass through the same purgatory into heaven Observ 4. We see then from hence the energie and power of the Law how far it extends it kills it s a killing letter Thus what the murmuring Jews upbraided Moses and Aaron withall is in some sort true ye have killed the people of the Lord Numb 16.41 It cannot give life Gal. 3.21 This was figured by Elisha who sent his servant with his staff to revive the child but it would not be 2 King 3.29 The law of the Lord is a staff so where the Psalmist Psal 23.4 saith Thy rod and thy staff the Chaldee Paraphr puts thy law This staff Elisha sent by his servant to raise the dead child Elisha Who is that See Notes in Col. 3.1 This is that staff of bread which nourisheth not for ever nor so satifieth but that he who eats it hungers and thirsts again so saith the Initial Wisdom which is the wisdom of the Law Ecclus. 24.21 They that eat me shall yet be hungry and they who drink me shall be thirsty Then presently the Wisdom adds all these things are the commandments of the most high even the Law which Moses commanded But our Lord speaks otherwise of the water of life Joh. 4.13 whosoever shall drink of this water shall thirst again but he that drinketh of this water that I shall give him shall never thirst He that cometh to me shall never hunger and he that believeth in me shall never thirst Joh. 6.35 This was figured by Manna which was the food of the people in the wilderness and they gathered it every morning Exod. 16.21 But when they came into the Land of Canaan the Manna ceased Jos 5.12 And they eat of the corn of the Land of Canaan Christ is the true bread and the true land of Canaan the Manna ceased upon the next day after the passover after the death the manna ceaseth The Jews challenged our Lord with this Moses gave us bread from heaven Joh. 6.31 and again vers 49.50 Your fathers did eat Manna and are dead c. and 58. Consol Here is great need of comfort to the disconsolate soul dejected and cast down by the sight of his sins for whereas upon the approach of the Law sin revives and groweth strong in the man yet the Law bringeth no power with it for the subduing of the sin but a guilt and obligation unto death Alas what shall the silly man do but complain I am in trouble my life is spent with grief and my years with sighing my strength faileth because of mine iniquity and my bones are consumed c. Psal 31.10 Psal 116.3 4.5 The sorrows of death compassed me about and the pains of bell-gate hold on me And 142.5 6 7. I cryed unto thee O Lord and said thou art my refuge and my portion in the land of the living Thus the Law is a killing letter the ministration of death the ministration of condemnation 2 Cor. 3. This was figured Numb 17.10 where the Lord said to Moses Bring Aarons rod before the Testimony When Aarons rod appears and awakens us when the Law figured by Aarons rod of the Almond-tree appears it threatens judgement unto all who rebel against it and therefore the Lord denouncing his judgements against Israel Jer. 1.10 I have set thee to root out and pull down to destroy and throw down the Lord confirms it with a sign saying Jeremiah what seest thou And he saith I see a rod of an Almond-tree Then said the Lord thou hast well seen for I will hasten my word to perform it As the Almond-tree blossoms first of all the trees and hastens the flowers and awakens as it were after a winters sleep as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth so hastily shall vengeance awake and come upon transgressors When therefore weak Jacob sees the Rod of the Almond-tree flourish when the Law goes out of Sion he foresees the judgement hastens and therefore cryeth out we perish we die we all perish we are but dead men But to the comfort of such dying souls be it spoken the Lord in mercy provides a sovereign Remedy for such dying men for upon the complaint of the dying people Chap. 17.12 13. in Chap. 18.1 The Lord said unto Aaron Thou and thy sons and thy fathers house with thee shall bear the iniquity of the sanctuary The care of the Sanctuary lies upon Aaron that the people might not sin die and perish The terrours of Conscience wrought by the Law are relieved and quieted by Faith in Jesus Christ He is the true High Priest of whom Aaron was but a figure He it is who through death destroyes him who had the power of death i. e. the Devil and delivers them who through fear of death were all their life-time subject unto bondage Hebr. 2.14 15. And therefore the Redeemer comforts them against their sins Isai 41 10-16 Therefore to those who are thus dead unto sin and the motions of sin living in them the Gospel and gladtidings of Salvation is preached so we understand that obscure place 1 Pet. 4.6 The Gospel is preached unto them that are dead that they may be judged indeed according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the Spirit For so these dead men are judged for dead in the flesh
c. sanctifie you wholly spirit soul and body Objection This doctrine would make a man desperate Answer Truly so it doth that 's the reason why the man dies upon the coming of the holy law for despair is causa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only the righteous hath hope in his death Prov. 14.32 when sin abounds and the man dies yet there remains hope As when all the diseases were taken out of Pandora's Box there was spes in ima pixidis and therefore the Lord raised up his witness in Jacob and gave Israel a Law that they might set their hope in God and so keep his Commandments Psal 78.5 6 7. And therefore the grace of God appeared teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly c. looking for the blessed hope of the glorious appearing of our Lord Jesus therefore St. Peter blessed God that he hath begotten us again to a lively hope or hope of life Syr. 1 Pet. 1.6 2. This doctrine would make us despair if it were expected of us that we should be holy by our own power or by the power of the Law but whereas by the power of the Law sin abounds the grace and power of God much more abounds 'T is true the Law is the strength of sin 1 Cor. 15. but blessed be God who hath given us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ 3. This doctrine would make us despair if holiness were expected of us all at once and all alike but as there are divers degrees and ages in our natural life children young men and old men so likewise in the spiritual life there are divers degrees children young men and old men 1 Joh. 2. which are the same which the School-men aim at when they tell us of incipientes proficientes perfecti which would help to dissolve many a knot were they taken notice of which are handled and confounded altogether in the present Babel As there are divers degrees and ages in our spiritual life so are there proportionable degrees of grace and holiness befitting them 1. The first degree is Fear 2. The second degree is Faith 3. The third degree is Love 4. These were all typified unto us by the parts of the Tabernacle and Temple 1. The Porch that represents unto us the fear of the Lord and is the childrens condition brought up under the Law and under the spirit of fear and bondage and there is a degree of holiness proportionable unto this fear for by the fear of the Lord men depart from evil 2. The second part of the Tabernacle and Temple is the HOLY wherein after the slaying of the sacrifice at the entrance of the HOLY the table of Shew-bread stands ready for the young men who have overcome the evil one and subdued their iniquities through the power of the stronger one and so become in a second degree holy as God is holy and purifie themselves as God is pure 1 Joh. 3.3 3. The third is the HOLY of HOLIES whereinto Christ hath entered and prepared a way for these old men who have perfected holiness in the fear of God Now they who have made no further progress yet than the very Porch which was the condition of children under the Law they are subject to fear despair and doubt So was David himself Psal 73.3 12. there he confesseth that he was envious at the foolish and wicked men c. he thought God was pleased with wicked men not with holy men yea hence he said he had cleansed himself his heart in vain and washed his hands in innocency Such tumultuous thoughts he had till he went into the sanctuary then he understood the end of those men such an one was Agur Prov. 30. I was saith he more brutish than any man and have not the understanding of a man I neither learned wisdom nor have the knowledge of the Holy Of both these the Wise Man speaks Prov. 9.10 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom here 's the first then follows the second The knowledge of the HOLY is understanding Now they who have made no further progress than the very first of these to wit they who through fear and awe of the Divine Majesty depart from evil so they sit not down there but endeavour to go on further they ought not to despair non eadem à summo minimoque the Lord expects not the like measure of holiness of all men all at once ye have a notable example 2 Chron. 30.17 20. 1 Joh. 2. Observ 2. All Laws which favour or allow unholiness impurity profaneness c. they are not of God they are ipso facto null they abrogate themselves Observ 1. All violation and breach of the Law is uncleanness sin is defilement uncleanness and unholiness Observ 3. The Law of the Lord is against all sin uncleanness and unholiness Reproves Those who teach or follow a doctrine of liberty or license rather under what specious name soever it be commended unto us Most men are guilty of this for under one specious name or other unholiness and uncleanness is retained among us Some call it Venial Sin Sin then it is and if sin how are they who commit it and allow themselves in it an holy people and observers of the holy Law others call it frailty infirmity or weakness quotidianas incursiones c. I deny not but such there are but under that name all uncleanness Charity covers a multitude of sin but this name of infirmity covers all sins hypocrisie profaneness lying swearing cursing drunkenness whoring stealing c. in a word all uncleanness 2. Reprove us who think too highly of our own holiness as the Pharisees did There is no degree of holiness but will if we watch not well over our own hearts bring with it a degree of spiritual pride Pride is a Vermin that will breed even in the trees of righteousness themselves unless it be wormed out This is the ground of dividing our selves one from another Isai 65.5 Who say stand by thy self come not near me I am holier than thou There is a generation who are pure in their own eyes and yet are not cleansed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from their filthiness from that which comes from within them It is the fault of us all we are too quick-sighted in discerning other mens sins but dark and blind at home which proceeds from pride and self-love 'T is true the holy Law commands us to withdraw our selves from every brother who walks disorderly 1 Cor. 5.11 2 Thess 3.6 and therefore the Prophet must not eat nor drink with Jeroboam an idolater 1 King 13.9 But when we observe this holy Law we must take heed that we our selves be not unholy that we our selves be no idolaters neither covetous nor fornicators thus 2 Cor. 6.14 be not unequally yoaked with unbelievers why for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness c. Hast thou the righteousness of God the Light the
God's Love of Righteousness and the propagation and preservation of it which could not be wrought by any means so convenient as by writing the great things of the Law 1. As for tradition that might fail or be corrupted by the Apostacy of some Age as we know de facto it hath been 2. Ancient wayes of conveying the memory of things past to posterity Tradition Hierogliphicks 1. The means of conveying by Hierogliphicks and Pictures was too obscure which although the Aegyptians used and it was that learning wherein Moses was brought up Act. 7. yet experience taught after Ages that such kind of learning was not clear and manifest but left much to uncertain conjectures and therefore however the Romans used it in their Coyns yet knowing how dark an expression it was they added the superscription or writing over or about their Hierogliphicks to signifie what was meant by them The reason why God wrote these great things are 1. In regard of the great things themselves 2. In regard of God the writer of them 1. The things are so great honourable excellent hidden and mystical that they could not be written or dictated by any other than God himself for they are the counterpart of Gods will so the Will of God is expounded by the Law of God Psal 40.8 I am content to do thy will thy Law is within my heart Now who hath known the will of the Lord but the Christ who could state or dictate it but himself 2. In regard of God the writer of them 1. His impulsive cause moving him to write them 2. His end It remains therefore that the only means to propagate them is by God writing them 2. God wrote them out of Love unto his people from his right hand went a fiery Law for them yea he loved the people All his Saints are in thy hand they sate down at thy feet c. Deut. 33.2.3 Psal 147.19 20. He sheweth his Word unto Jacob his Statutes and Judgements unto Israel He hath not dealt so with any Nation nor have the Heathen the knowledge of the Law i. e. of the written Law The end of all other Arguments is most various but the end of writing these great things these multitudes of the Law is for the premonition or forewarning of all Generations and for the signification of Gods will unto them if rebellious and disobedient that it may stand upon record as a Divine Testimony against them Deut. 31.24 25 26 27. if plyable and obedient that the generations to come might know them even the children that were yet unborn c. Psal 78.5 6 7. when the Heathen should be made partakers of these great things when the Lord should build up Sion and when his Glory should appear This shall be written for the generation to come and the people which shall be created shall praise the Lord viz. the new Creatures 2 Cor. 5.17 Whatsoever things were written were written for our learning that we by patience and consolation of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15.4 All Scripture was by Divine Inspiration and is profitable that the Man of God may be made perfect 2 Tim. 3.16 The very gift of Writing it self is so wonderful so excellent that it can referr to no other Author but God himself Plutarch tells us that Mercury taught the Aegyptians to write the Latins referred it to Saturn saith St. Cyprian but he and St. Basil referr the gift of Letters unto the true God and he taught his own people first For besides Pliny tells us that the Assyrians Syrians and Phoenicians and Canaanites had the first skill in writing Amaius according to the Churches tradition tells us that Adam taught his Son Enoch Letters who wrote that Prophesie part whereof is extant Jude vers 14. and some other parts are recorded by the Fathers But as the gift of writing must needs be Gods gift so most certain it is that the great things themselves could be written by no other than God himself That a man should signifie his mind unto another one thousand miles hence and one thousand years hence no distance of time or place hindering it it 's a rare invention things not considered are neglected being considered provoke admiration Observ 1. Hence it follows That Gods Commandments are everlasting and shall endure for ever Psal 119.114 This is true but how doth it follow from Gods writing of his Law It 's a Rule in Plato and Plotinus Whatsoever things proceed immediately from God without the intervention or mediation of any second cause they are incorruptible and everlasting But we have a greater than both to confirm this Eccles 3.14 I know that whatsoever God doth is for ever Psal 119.89 Zach. 1. 1 Pet. 1.25 Exhort If the Lord hath written them it 's our duty to read his Letter it concerns the greater or the greatest matters c. It 's a love-letter of our God our Maker unto his Spouse The Spouse if she receive a Letter from him whom she loves she will read it over and over again she would be much in it for therein she reads his mind cold love to read them but once and lay them by but once repeat them lay them up in a precious Cabinet as Alexander did Homers works as the King of Morocco the imitation of Christ as we bind up our Bibles costly and beautifully Books make not a Scholar nor a great deal of reading a Christian if we bind up the Law to observe and keep it we do well Observ 2. See the gracious condescent of the Almighty to his Apostate Creature the Man falls and see his God he stoops to take up the fall'n Man his Wife goes a whoring from him and he vouchsafes to write her not a Bill of Divorce to reject her but a Love-letter to return Jer. 3.1 2. They say if a man put away his Wife and she go from him and become another mans shall he return unto her again No he might not by the Law Deut. 24.4 Yet the Lord offers reconciliation and wooes his Church Thou hast played the harlot with many lovers yet return even unto me saith the Lord his love and mercy transcends the rigour of his Law he hates putting away Mal. 2.16 He sues her by his Love-letter to return unto him Observ 3. Observe with what Authority the word of our God comes unto us it 's God's Chyrographum his own hand-writing and therefore with what reverence and observance ought it to be read it's a Letter that comes from our Superior from the Supreme from the Highest with what love he deals with us as with his familiar friends I have not gone back from the Commandments of his lips I have esteemed the words of his mouth more than my necessary food Job 23.12 Such it ought to be unto the obedient people and ministers of it as it was to Ezech. 2.10 A roll of a Book or letter was sent unto him and a Commandment to eat it and it was in
by God under the Law As for the multitude of Ceremonies under the Gospel whether in the Papists Church or the Reformed doubtless as there is less warrant for them out of the Word of God so are they less useful to us then they were to the Jews to whom all things happened in figures 1 Cor. 10. But this may generally and truly be said of all of what kind soever and howsoever grounded that if we esteem them in higher rank and degree than indeed they are or God better pleased for our performance of them in themselves considered or our selves the better for the performance of them if rested in certainly they are no better than these old things in the Text and ought to pass away with them especially if men as I fear some have done place all their holiness in them if they have nothing else to shew for their Religion but bowing at that Name in the Church by which they swear out of it if they drink whore game revel and think to cover all with a Surplice if such there be as God forbid surely what they trust in will prove to them but an old thing and must pass away A fourth Motive may be this they do not adequately signifie those heavenly things which they are intended to represent for as all the Creatures taken asunder or put altogether cannot adequately and demonstratively prove the Omnipotency and Infiniteness of the God-head because all these Created things are Finite heaven and earth and all things in them whereas the God-head is Infinite and therefore the Apostle saith by Faith we believe not by Reason we demonstrate that the worlds were made Hebr. 11. So all the Ceremonies in the world cannot adequately signifie unto us heavenly things but are at the best only shadows of them as the Apostle calls them like the Painters first rude draught of a picture with a coal and therefore as the shadows are the longest at the rising and setting of the Sun so are these Ceremonial shadows They were the longest in the rising of the Jewish and Christian Church if they should now grow long again and we repose trust in them it might be feared which God avert the Church would set with them 5. If rested in they hinder that very end for which they were first Ordained or Instituted for whereas their best end was to convey unto us the knowledge of God and heavenly things and our own duty service and worship of God if we rest in them and stand on them we hinder the knowledge of those very things which they are intended to represent As the painted glass however beautiful to the eye keeps out the light Thus the Pictures and Images of Saints pretended to be helpful to devotion and called by the Papists Lay-mens Books though God be praised some of them are better seen in the best Book than those who call them so are indeed great hinderances to true Piety and have alwayes been of dangerous consequence to the Church of God For can they be more helpful than the Picture or Image of Christ's humanity Yet that is not helpful to us vers 16. Nay the flesh of Christ it self profits nothing Had any said so but Christ himself we might have questioned it but he saith so Joh. 6.63 Nay it not only not profits but hinders It is expedient for you that I go away otherwise the Comforter will not come Joh. 16.7 Do we not perceive this shadowed in the Old Law What a glorious work was the veil of the Temple all wrought with Cherubims and hanged on pillars overlaid with Gold Exod. 26.31 32. so exceedingly thick that it might seem to have been made to last for many Ages yet it hid from the Jews the Holy of holies the Mercy-seat and the Ark of the Testimony all emblems and figures of heavenly things which Christ came to reveil unto us Hebr. 10.20 And therefore at his death that glorious veil was rent asunder from the top to the bottom and the Holy of holies appeared all that glorious garnishing proved but an old thing 'T is a commendation amongst us for a man to keep his Church well and indeed it is praise-worthy but this if rested in 't is but an old thing it may be done as well by a proud Pharisee as an humble Publican for both went up to the Temple to pray And the hypocritical people come unto that saith the Lord to Ezechiel as my people cometh both alike Ezech. 33. But all this while we hugg and please our selves as free from these old things but have not we also old forms of Godliness if we esteem them higher than they are or God better pleased or our selves better men for performance of them they will prove but old things and must pass away 'T is a commendation to the Minister to be a painful Preacher but if he preach to others and prove a cast-away himself all his preaching will prove to him but an old thing and little worth So hearing the Word preached wherein some men place the greatest part of Religion and indeed ye do well that ye give attention to it 2 Pet. 1.19 But if we hear only and not obey 't is an old thing and an old complaint of an old thing an old trick of the Devil whereby he deceives many a soul Jam. 3.22 Be ye doers of the Word and not hearers only deceiving your own souls Syriack So for Repeating what we have heard an excellent Duty Thou shalt teach them diligently or whet these things on Deut. 6.7 that the word of God may be sharp like a two-edged sword Heb. 4.10 And the like Reason there is of Conference an heavenly exercise it is When two or three are gathered together in my Name there am I in the midst of them Matth. 18.20 I who is that Christ himself the Divinity it self It was a known speech among the Jews which our Saviour applyes unto himself When two or three sit and talk of the words of the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Divine presence Christ himself he is in the midst of them So he saith Malac. 3.16 They that feared the Lord spake often one to another and the Lord hearkened and heard it and a book of remembrance was written for them that feared the Lord and thought upon his Name But if this Conference be but a lip-labour but a mouth-deep-holiness 't is an old thing and little worth and an old complaint made of it This people draw near unto me with their lips but their heart is far from me it goes after their covetousness Ezech. 33. Another form of Godliness is Receiving of the Holy Sacrament 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the renewing of the Covenant between God and us a mystical sign of our Conformity unto Christ's death The Sacrament of Union and Concord between God and the Saints and the Saints one with another yet if we come unduly prepared and receive it unworthily if having received it we think our selves
Prov. 22.15 delivering from the body of death and giving them victory over all their enemies Rom. 7.24 25. Thus he is called Jesus a Saviour because thus he saves his people from their sins and thus he is said to be the Saviour of his Body which is the Church And thus the Son of God is made manifest that he may thus dissolve the works of the Devil 2. Christs Power is seen in the strengthening believers to do the will of God which as yet children and weaklings could not do for whereas these Children had but a small measure of strength against the body of sin in them and were too too weak to grapple with so potent an enemy as being brought up under the Law which made nothing perfect saith the Apostle That which the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sent his Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh that the Righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit Rom. 8.3 4. And by him all that believe are justified from all things or as a most Ancient English Translation hath it by him all that believe are justified from all sins from which we could not be justified by the Law of Moses Act. 13.39 Thus Christ is formed in believers according to his second measure degree or age on which I have stood the longer because the forming of him according to old age in believers consists much-what in the increase of the same light and strength so far forth as they are capable of it in this life But that we may have a more distinct view of the man-age or old age of Christ formed in the Saints we may consider it in it self according to the nature and degrees of it and in the fruits of it And in it self considered according to the nature of it it 's the old Saints Communion with the Ancient of dayes with God and with his Son Jesus Christ That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you saith St. John that ye may have fellowship with us with you At quid magnum est societatem babere cum hominibus saith St. Austin he answers himself Noli contemnere vide quid addit Our Communion saith he is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 1.3 By reason of this Communion they are made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 partakers of the divine nature according to the Promises 2 Pet. 1.4 2. In respect of the eminent degrees of it whatever was before it was but want and imperfection This 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the perfect that is to come 1 Cor. 13.10 lest this term should seem new to any ye have the perfect age of Christ Ephes 4.13 and their perfect age who are conformed unto Christ Hebr. 5.14 In regard of this compleat estate what ever was before it was but emptiness this is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fulness of God Ephes 3.19 so great a fulness a perfection so great that whatever was in the Saints before must be emptied and made void that there may be room to receive it not as if all the habits of the Soul should be destroyed as St. Hierom thought but either the manner changed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Chrysostom or rather as St. Ambrose whom the Gloss followeth Destructio imperfectionis est quando id quod imperfectum est impletur verum As a greater light brought into a room puts not out but perfects those lights which were there before nor is that little stature of a Child abolished when the Infant grows up from Childhood unto Youth and from Youth unto old Age. This fulness according to the three principles of action in God and every intelligent and reasonable agent Vnderstanding Will and Power is answerably threefold a fulness of Wisdom Power Virtues and Graces 1. Of Wisdom So St. Paul prays for the Ephesians That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the father of glory would give unto them the Spirit of wisdom and revelation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 1.17 18. by the knowledge or experimental knowledge of Christ the eyes of their understanding being enlightned that they might know what is the hope of this calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints 2. The second fulness is of power the same which our Lord promised the Apostles Luk. 24. and wherewith they were filled Act. 2. The power of the young man was great but this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an hyperbolical greatness of power toward them that believe And that it is no less the pattern of it proves for it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the working of the might of his power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Eph. 1.19 20. And great reason for it is in the Saints for the same end to raise them up from the death of sin Eph. 2.16 The power of Christ in the Saints to vanquish the power of Satan that which the great voice utters Apoc. 10.12 Salvation and strength and the kingdom of our God and the power of his Christ This full Victory of the Israel of God over all their spiritual enemies is meant by all the victories of the Israel according to the flesh And that all those victories look at this appears by old Zacharies exposition of them Luk. 1.74 75. That we being delivered out of the hands of our enemies might serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness all the days of our life And this is if I may so speak a second kind of Omnipotency or Almightiness imparted unto the Saints by Christ formed in them according to old age If it seem an hyberbole it is no other than Paul the aged averreth of himself Phil. 4.12 I am able to do all things in Christ that inwardly enables me Phil. 4.13 For as the power of Christ prevails in them to raise them up from the death with Christ so also to place them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in heavenly vertues and graces with Christ Jesus Eph. 2.6 That 's the third fulness as ample as any of the two former so great as cannot be expressed except in generalites Whatever things are true whatever things are honest whatever things are just whatever things are pure whatever things are lovely whatever things are of good report if there be any virtue if there be any praise think on these things These things which ye have both learned and received and heard and seen in me do and the God of peace shall be with you Phil. 4. That peace and joy they are the fruits of the old age in Christ For the work of righteousness is peace Ephes Esa 32.17 and the fruit of the Spirit is joy Gal. 5. And both these they are 1. For intensness plenteous abundance of peace Psal 72. and fulness of joy Psal 16.11 And 2. For extension everlasting The
it and will glorifie it again Such a voice was heard at Rome admonishing them that the Gauls were coming and that they should provide lest the City were taken The third sort is here understood and that divers ways 1. By Angels so the Law was given Act. 7.38 Gal. 3.19 So was Daniel instructed Dan. 8.16 17. and 9.21 2. Sometime by vision Esay 6.1 2 3. 3. Sometime by dreams Numb 12.6 4. Sometimes by Revelation Esay 22.14 Dan. 2.19 5. Sometimes by Oracles Exod. 25.22 6. Sometimes the Lord spake face to face Numb 12.7.8 Macrobius speaks of five ways whereby men were instructed in their sleep 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Three of which the Prophets nay the Heathen used to interpret but all these were full of errours and uncertainty Thus God reveiled himself in and to the Prophets 2. The word in the second notion God reveiled himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the Prophets 1. Sometime the Lord made the Prophet a sign unto the people Esay 20.2 3 4. 2. By way of parables as Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12. and the Prophet to Ahab 2 King 13.4 5. Thus Moses taught by the Levitical Types 3. Sometimes by miraculous signs from heaven for conviction of the people 1 Sam. 12.16 17. 1 King 18.21 39. 4. Sometime by comfortable messages when Israel was in distress Exod. 4.29 30. and sought the Lord 2 Chron. 20.5 14 15. 5. Sometime by information 2 Sam. 24.18 6. Sometime and that usually by reproof 2 Sam. 12.7 and commination 2 Sam. 9.10 1 King 19.20 21. 7. Sometime by prevention as 2 Sam. 7.7 And sometime by warning 2 King 6.8 9. 8. Sometimes by prediction and foretelling the coming and kingdom of Christ Eay 2.1 2 3. and 7.14 and 9.4 and 11.1 2. and 12.12 Luk. 1.70 Act. 10.43 The Reason of this is the great Love and Goodness of God unto men as it were turning himself into manifold forms fashions and similitudes Thus the Poet calls the Wise Vlysses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who knew how to demean himself according to time places and persons Thus our God turned himself into all forms fashions and shapes as it were that he might instruct mollifie and win unto himself that stiff-necked and hardned people the Jews Thus he appeared to Ezechiel in a chariot of cherubims to Jeremy in virga virgulta and a boiling pot To Esay in his high throne to Daniel in the shape of the ancient of days To Hosea Joel Zachary and others in other forms and shapes as he speaks generally in Hosea 12.10 Visionem multiplicavi in manu prophetarum assimilatus sum Thus as the Poets feign that Jupiter informed man So God to win the love of his people his Spouse his Church And what could he have done more than he hath done Esay 5. God appears in such forms as the matter requires To Moses in a bush Observe the duty of the Prophets to become 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to become all things to all men 1 Cor. 9.19 Iis qui sub lege i. e. Judeis cum Timotheum circumcidit purificatus est in templo Act. 21. Non mentientis actu sed compatientis affectu ut omnium moribus me contemperans omnium morbis mederi possem non mentiendo sed compatiendo non simulantis actu sed commiserantis affectu omnibus omnio factus est Paulus August Epist 9. and 19. Exhort To search the Prophets Writings it is our Saviours exhortation if an Exhortation search the Scriptures when there were no Scriptures but the Law and Prophets And good Reason for the Christian Church is built upon the foundation as of the Apostles so also of the Prophets Eph. 2.20 will we build without foundation Herein we see the manifold Wisdom of God how by manifest types and figures he applyed himself to men Prolepsis True it is they are obscure and difficult But so they were to the Eunuch Act. 8. and he knew it yet when he exercised himself in them God guided a guide unto him and so he will one or other unto us These Prophets are the Messengers sent before Christ Matth. 22. These are they who give testimony of Christ St. Paul preached no other thing Act. 26. Repreh Those who neglect Moses and the Prophets who will come to Christ ex tempore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The third Collation in respect of time the word signifieth either 1. A long time since and so is used but once in the Old Testament Esay 37. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or else 2. A long time continued Mark 15.44 and it is here both ways 1. That God long since spake to the Fathers by the Prophets 2. That he so spake for a long time together c. 1. That long since even as long since almost as there have been men to be spoken to even before the Flood Enoch the seventh from Adam Jude Verse 14. after the Flood Reason In respect of God the Ancient of days who abideth for ever he of old spake unto our Fathers out of his tender mercies and loving kindnesses which have been ever of old Psalm 25.6 These he expressed to our Fathers of old by the Prophets for as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But more especially to prevent the suggestions of the old Serpent he reveiled his truth betimes The good man sowed good Seed in his Field but while men slept the enemy sowed Tares And when his people were infected by the Serpents Seed it hath been his custom to rise early to warn them of their destruction Jer. 25.4 The Lord hath sent unto you all his servants the Prophets rising up early and sending them Turn ye again every one from his evil way and from the evil of your doings c. Chapter 29.19 But if God have long since spoken by the Prophets to the Fathers it seems they have done their errand and they no way concern us But surely howsoever God spake of old by the Prophets to the Fathers their errand concerned us also even now as will appear if we consider the office of the Law and Prophets and our own condition in respect of both The Office of the Law whether inwardly written in the heart or outwardly in Tables of Stone it is to give testimony unto God righteousness and to require the fulfilling of the same of the Sons of men which because it is a dead and silent Letter the Prophets in all ages have been added thereunto to quicken it and give it life and voice to interpret it and testifie it unto men Rom. 3.20 Now because by the works of the law no man can be justified both law and prophets point us unto faith in Jesus Christ who is stronger than both and can subdue our iniquities and conquer the strong man Rom. 3.21 22. The righteousness of God without the law is manifested being witnessed by the law and the
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore holy brethren partakers of the heavenly calling consider the apostle and high priest of our profession Christ Jesus THe Authority of the Old Testament is upheld by those things especially whereof the Jews gloryed 1. The Ministry of Angels 2. The Embassy of Moses 3. The Priesthood of Aaron 1. The Ministry of Angels for the Law was given by the disposition of Angels Gal. and it 's called the word spoken by Angels Hebr. 2. 2. The Prophecy and Embassy of Moses therefore the Jews say they were Moses's Disciples and they knew that God spake by Moses John 9.28 29. 3. The Priesthood of Aaron for him they acknowledged as their Mediator unto God and as the Saint of the Lord Psalm 106.16 Whom the Lord had chosen Psalm 105.26 Against these three things our Apostle opposeth other three in behalf of the New Testament 1. That it was not delivered by Angels but by him who is their Lord. 2. Not by Moses but by him who is worthy of more Glory than Moses 3. Not by Aaron an High Priest made without an oath but by Christ a Priest for ever made by oath according to the order of Melchisedec Our Apostle therefore having compared the Lord Jesus with the Angels and preferred him before them in the two former Chapters he now proceeds to compare Jesus Christ 1. With Moses and then 2. With Aaron and to prefer him before them both 1. He compares Jesus Christ with Moses in this and the next Chapter 2. With Aaron chap. 5. 1. He compares Jesus Christ with Moses in this and the next Chapter Moses was Gods extraordinary Ambassadour and his Prophet And therefore holy brethren partakers of the heavenly calling consider the Apostle or Ambassadour of our profession Christ Jesus 2. He compares Jesus Christ with Aaron the Priest of the Lord chap. 5.1 and therefore consider the High Priest of our Profession Christ Jesus This Chapter is inferred out of the former 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore or from whence In this third Chapter we have 1. The Apostles Doctrine his comparison of Christ with Moses vers 1-6 2. The Apostles explication of his Doctrine to the Hebrews vers 7. to the end of chap. 4. In the first Verse we have the Apostles 1. Compellation twofold Holy Brethren Partakers of the heavenly calling 2. Exhortation to consider c. Which we may resolve 1. The compellation into these three Axioms 1. The Hebrews were brethren 2. They were holy brethren 3. They were partakers of the heavenly calling We may resolve the exhortation into other three Axioms 1. Jesus Christ is the Apostle of our profession 2. He is the High Priest of our profession 3. We ought to consider the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession As this verse hath dependance on the former and is inferred from it since we know the excellency of Jesus Christ above all the Angels and his love unto us Consider the Apostle c. 1. Brethren is a large word and extends to them who have one common nature as Cain and Abel were brethren Gen. 4. and those who have a like depraved nature as Simeon and Levi were brethren in evil Gen. 49. and those who are renewed in the divine nature and such were the Hebrews in the Text yet the natural relation ceaseth not between them who are in different spiritual estates as the rich man in Hell calls those who survived him brethren upon earth and he not only calls Abraham father but Abraham also calls him son Luke The brethren here understood are 1. The Hebrews who had the same common father according to the flesh we have abraham to our father And Paul was an Hebrew 2 Cor. 12.22 and so calls them brethren 2. But besides their brotherhood they had another and a better according to which all believers are also called brethren They have one father even God and one mother even Jerusalem above the mother of us all Gal. St. Paul speaks to both in Act. 12.20 Observ Our near relation we have one to other whoever are believers in the Lord Jesus whoever are true Hebrews for they are the Spiritual Hebrews c. See Notes on the Preface of the Epistle such as these are brethren in near relation one to another and to the Lord Jesus Christ their brother 2. This is a ground of mutal love See Notes on Act. 37. Exhort If the true Hebrews the Christians be brethren let them love as brethren The Christians in the Primitive times See Notes on Heb. 12.14 2. The Hebrews were holy brethren Quaere what is meant by holiness They are called holy brethren Object How can the Hebrews be holy brethren if God alone be holy how can we be holy if God alone be so Revel 15.4 Respon See Notes on Heb. 12.14 2. They are holy brethren Sanctitas importat duo Separationem ab aliis applicationem ad aliquid this was figured in the old Law See Notes on Heb. 12.14 Ratio God the Father is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sanctus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence they are holy 1 Pet. 2.14 15 16. Christ is the pattern Heb. 7.26 2. The Church their Mother is the holy Catholick Church It 's the end Eph. 1.4 Observ 1. Though all men be brethren yet the true Hebrews the Saints only are holy brethren Observ 2. Take notice here of a name whereby the people of God were called they were stiled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy So Rom. 1.7 1 Cor. 1.2 2 Cor. 1.1 Observ 3. Note we here that this compellation and name holy brethren is and may be deservedly given unto some it was justly given to the Hebrews here nor is there any doubt but some are truly such and it is their honour and crown that they are such yea there may be many such in one City 1 Thess 5.27 Observ 4. Note here what kind of Religion the Christian Religion is See Notes on Heb. 12.14 Observ 5. The Apostles did own the obedient Saints for such though of a younger age and stature than themselves Observ 6. The Lord did not reject or cast off the whole Nation of the Jews or Hebrews in the Primitive Church Here are many Saints and holy Brethren Repreh 1. This discovers the close hypocrite who walks in a vain shew in a vizard of made counterfeit holiness which some in all ages do c. See Notes on Heb. 12.14 If men so highly prize the shews and appearances of holiness how would they esteem the holiness it self if they knew it What an high honour would they account it to be numbred with the Saints What a glory must they needs think it to be to be like the most high God to be pure as he is pure 1 Joh. 3.3 holy as he is holy But they say they are justified by Faith and as for holiness that will follow Truly if it do not follow of it self I perceive but little zeal to follow it nor do men think it so necessary as indeed it
Dignity of Ambassadour yea of a King Priest and Prophet and therefore in all justice and equity he must be true and faithful to his maker Moses who was admitted unto that intimacy with his master could not but observe his faithfulness God is faithul and will not suffer c. faithful is he that hath promised Doubt But here it may be doubted whether Moses was thus faithful to his maker for we read Numb 20.12 that both Moses and Aaron were unfaithful Some answer thereunto that one act of unfaithfulness could not hinder Moses from being stiled faithful no more than David's sins hindered him from being called a man after God's own heart Sequens paenitentia antiquum nomen ex multis virtutibus comprobatum retinet Hierom. Others rather say that the Lord gave Moses that testimony according to his present and past faithfulness Numb 12. whereas hitherto he had not been unfaithful as afterward he was Numb 20. But indeed neither of these Answers clears the Doubt but what I intimated before touching the proper meaning of faithfulness in these words for no doubt that faith or faithfulness for which Moses is commended Numb 12. differs from that against which he sinned Numb 20. which was a doubting of God's power whether he could give so much water out of the Rock as should satisfie so many men women and children beside their cattle this Moses and Aaron seemed to doubt of Numb 20.12 24. As for the other faithfulness for which Moses is commended that truth in fulfilling his Word Promise and Covenant against that Moses never offended he was always faithful to him who appointed him But as for that defect of faith or unbelief in Moses and Aaron it was a figure of that defect and impotency of the Law and Legal Priesthood which can never bring those under it into the true land of promise Wherein more particularly this faithfulness of Moses is seen will appear in the next point Moses was faithful in all his house Mean time take notice that God's workmanship is for God's service he made Moses who was faithful to his maker Repreh 1. Our unfaithfulness to our maker that vow which we have made unto him in our Baptism That we would continue his faithful Soldiers and Servants to our lives end that we would fight against the world the flesh and the Devil c. Who of us have been so faithful in keeping of it as we ought We frustrate him of the end of our Creation Esay 43.7 but Proverbs 2.8 4. 2. Those who think it enough to be faithful to God in mind and heart though they really and in actual performance be found unfaithful As if an Adulteress should say to her Husband Husband in my heart I am faithful to you though I prostitute my body to another man Vide in chap. 2. fine 3. Moses was faithful in all God's house What faithfulness is and how Moses was faithful unto him that appointed or made him I have shewn in the former point it now remains wherein particularly Moses was faithful and that in all God's house We understand by an house one of these two things Either 1. The structure and building Or 2. The family inhabiting and dwelling in that structure or building As for the structure and building what outward house had the Lord in Moses his time but his Tabernacle This the Lord calls his Tabernacle Levit. 15.31 Herein he promised to dwell Levit. 26.11 In the building and furnishing of this and anointing it Moses was faithful doing all things according to the pattern that was shewn him in the Mount Exod. 27.8 2. But that house wherein Moses was principally faithful was the Church of God as vers 6. Whose house are we if c. So the Chaldee Paraprast Numb 12.7 Now Moses was faithful to God and to the people he was a faithful Prophet Apostle and Ambassadour from God to the people Hence ye read so often As the Lord commanded Moses 1. He was a faithful King ruling the people for God notwithstanding their stubbornness c. 2. He was a faithful Priest interceding and mediating with God for the people and would take no answer Exod. 32.32 11 2 3. Numb 14.13 Psalm 106.23 Observ 1. Note here a laudable example of faithfulness in Moses how sincerely and uprightly he dealt between God and the people such a faithful Ambassadour is health saith Solomon Prov. 13.17 Such faithful Ambassadours procure peace and lengthen the tranquility of Kingdoms and Common-weals such were the Ministers of State whom the Jews employed to Rome and Sparta and obtained peace with both Nations and such were the Agents of both Nations who were faithful to both their Common-weals and were a means of their long continuance they dealt in all faithfulness with other Nations Pompey the Great was sent Ambassadour some whither abroad and being to take ship the wind being very high the Master of the Ship told him the voyage would be dangerous Pompey answered him it matters not ire necesse est vivere non necesse est Such true and faithful dealing among themselves and with other Nations confirmed their prosperity Whereas other Nations and Commonweals by their falshood and unfaithful dealing among themselves and with others hasten their own and others ruine For what hath been the practice of Kingdoms and Commonweals of latter times but so long to continue true and faithful one to other until they could break their Faith with more advantage Whence an Ambassadour hath been plausibly defined and said to be one qui proficiscitur ad mentiendum pro Republica who goes abroad to lye for his respective Commonwealth Moses was no such Ambassadour he was faithful in all Gods house Observ 2. Laudari à laudato summa laus a man may be praised of some who are not able to judge as Quintil Scito ille pessimé dixisse quem maximé laudant Its the greatest praise to be praised by him who is most praise worthy as the Lord himself is who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who inhabites the praise of Israel who examines the heart and the reins and can best examine our truth and faithfulness and give testimony of it He it is that saith of Moses Numb 12. which the Vulgar Latin turns fidelissimus he is most faithful in all my house Herein Moses exceeded Pompey the Great so much commended for his faithfulness to the Common-wealth of Rome for Tully Pompeys own friend writes of him and hath left upon Record a Testimony most dishonourable unto him Solitum aliud sentire aliud loqui So did not Moses who was faithful Observ 3. A pattern to all who sit in Moses his chair to be faithful to the Lord who sets them over his house as Moses was a faithful Ambassadour such was John Baptist Joh. 1.20 He would not take any glory from Christ such were Paul and Barnabas Act. 14. He delivered Gods message to Pharaoh with boldness and confidence not fearing the wrath of the king Heb.
afterward come we now to the disparity between Christ and Moses Moses is faithful as a servant in all Gods house Christ is faithful as a Son over his own house So that the disparity consists between 1. A Son and a Servant 2. Ones own and anothers house 3. Faithfulness 1. Of a Son and over his own house 2. Of a Servant in Gods house 1. Moses was a servant Christ a Son How and what manner of servant of God Moses was I shewed in opening the first point It remains that I shew what a Son of God Christ is We read in Scripture of divers Sons of God c. See before on Heb. 1. It is true that Christ is often called Gods servant Esay 41.2 Behold my servant whom I uphold c. and 49.6 Is it a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant c. But this service he takes upon him for our sakes that he may be an example unto us of humility and obedience and that the same mind may be in us which was also in Christ Jesus Phil. 2.7 A Son and Servant a●e unequal in relation to the Master of the house and to one another The Master of the house looks at his son as a part of himself And the Son of God saith in regard of this relation I and the Father are one Joh. 10.30 Nor thought he it any robbery to be equal with God Phil. 2. He keeps his servant at a greater distance who to his Lord is but an instrument in the building of his house Such was Moses in the erecting of the Tabernacle 2. The Son and Servant are unequal in their relation one to other for the Son is the Lord of the servant so Abrahams servant Gen. 24.20 Rebecca asked him who Isaac was he said it is my Master 1 Sam. 9.5 7 10. Saul said to his servant which indeed was his Fathers servant such yea infinitely greater inequality there is between Christ the Son and Moses the Servant 2. The second disparity is between ones own house and anothers what is ones own a man loves though happily in it self not lovely as Parents love their own Children though deformed they consider their child as somewhat of themselves And the Son of God the express image of the Father as he for that reason is beloved of the Father So the House of God which is the Church of God and Christ 1 Tim. 3.15 is beloved of the Son as being made after his Image as the Son himself is made according to the Image of the Father and as the Son came from God so the Church the true Eve the Mother of the true living ones she is taken out of the heavenly man and is made like unto him See Notes before on Heb. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Church is here said to be an house as elsewhere Gods Tabernacle and Temple as an house is built by the orderly joyning and uniting of stones c. See Notes on Matth. 16.17 This is said to be Christs own house Moses here figures the weakness of the Law it begets not sons unto God that 's proper to the Gospel of Jesus Christ he is therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pater futuri saeculi the father of this after age And by that incorruptible seed the word of truth and belief in Jesus Christ we are born of God 1 Pet. 1.23 1 Joh. 5.1 And therefore Moses though faithful as a servant yet hath not that degree of genuine love care annd faithfulness which is in a tender Father towards his Children that belongs unto Christ who it 's said expresly of him he shall perform that service Esay 40.11 which was figured by David Ezech. 34 23. and our Lord applys it unto himself Joh. 10.11 Observ 1. The Church is Christ's own House as being built by him 1 Cor. 3.9 Ye are Gods building But that house being aliened from God becomes Christs again as being redeemed by him Levit. 25.25 He purchased it by his blood 1 Pet. 1.18 Exod. 12.13 The Son labouring under his Father quicquid acquirit filius acquirit patri Thus Christ was a minister of circumcision Rom. 15.8 and Joshuah is said in type to be a servant unto Moses But whatsoever the son got in the wars by hazzard of his life it 's called peculium castrense and it 's the sons own and therefore the Church is called Christs house because he obtained it by sheding his blood for it it 's his peculium Castrense 3. The third thing wherein the disparity between Christ and Moses consists is in the faithfulness of Moses the servant in the house of God and the faithfulness of the Son of God over his own house Ratio Why Christ the Son should be rather faithful than Moses over his own house appears from that innate and genuilie care that a Son hath of preserving his Fathers goods out of that honour and respect he owes unto his Father 2. Because a Son is in order to the inheritance of his Fathers goods Gal. 4.1 and the Lord Jesus is the heir of all things Heb. 1.2 c. Now whereas the servant hath no right to inherit and therefore although he have a care of his Masters goods and be faithful for the present in preserving of them yet having no interest in them his faithfulness extends not to the future as if he could hope to inherit his Masters goods 3. A Son even as a Son and much more if a Son and Heir is the Lord of his Fathers goods even while his Father liveth say the Civilians Whence the sons are reputed as heri minores as the second Masters to the Servants and Daughters in inscriptions are called dominulae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my young master Eliezer calls Isaac his master Sauls fathers servant is called Sauls servant All which is most true in the Lord Jesus who saith of all the spiritual goods All that the Father hath are mine Joh. 15.16 and 17.10 All mine are thine and thine mine Observ 2. Christ hath his own house over which he himself hath his proper government and inspection See Notes on Matth. 16.17 Observ 3. We may learn from hence under what dispensation we are Observ 4. A servant hath nothing of his own according to the Civil Laws and if he have any thing it 's his by such tenure as villanage was of old according to which all the servant had was his Lords Gods servant David acknowledgeth this 1 Chron. 29.11 Moses disclaims any right that he should have over the House or Church of God Numb 11.11 12. And therefore he is grieved that the burden and cumbrance of the house of Israel should be laid upon him That care belongeth to Parents to the Father who had begotten them to the Mother who conceived them and brought them forth and whose duty it was to nurse them The houshold of God is not the servants but the Masters of the house Observ 5. The Church is Christ's own house over which he