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A35951 An expositon of all St. Pauls epistles together with an explanation of those other epistles of the apostles St. James, Peter, John & Jude : wherein the sense of every chapter and verse is analytically unfolded and the text enlightened. / David Dickson ...; Expositio analytica omnium Apostolicarum Epistolarum. English Dickson, David, 1583?-1663.; Retchford, William.; Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. 1659 (1659) Wing D1403; ESTC R7896 807,291 340

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qualities of his person and a more excellent condition than any of the Levitical Priests Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent than theirs As for the qualities of his person 1 Hee is holy both in his nature and in his desire wholly devoted to the glory of God the Father 2 Hee is harmless who doth injury to no man nor creature 3 Hee is undefiled first hee is free from the pollution or blot of all sin both of his own and others 4 Hee is separated from sinners i. e. No waies obnoxious to sin or so far from sin that hee cannot bee a sinner As to the state or condition of his person his is higher than the Heavens and all creatures therein for hee is raised above the Visible Heavens in his body exalted to a fellowship with the Father in his Throne Vers. 27. Who needeth not daily as those high Priests to offer up sacrifice first for his own sins and then for the peoples for this he did once when he offered up himself Argum. 15. Following upon the former Christ is not necessitated to offer Sacrifice for his own sins who had none or to offer Sacrifice often for the sins of the people it was sufficient to offer himself once But it was necessary for the Levitical Priests daily to offer both for their own and the peoples sins Therefore his priesthood is more excellent than the Levitical Offered up himself Argum. 16. The Sacrifice of Christ was not of any cattel or brute beasts but hee offered up himself and to the offering of this Sacrifice there could not bee any fitting and worthy Priest besides himself hee alone offered up himself but the Levitical Priests offered cartel which men could perform Therefore Christs Priesthood is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 28. For the Law maketh men High-Priests which have infirmity but the word of the oath which was since the Law maketh the Son who is consecrated for evermore Argum. 16. Is taken from a six-fold difference betwix● the Levitical or Legal Priesthood and the Evangelical Priesthood of Christ. 1 The constitution of the Levitical Priesthood proceeds from the Law which may bee changed but the constitution of the Evangelical Priesthood or of Christ flows from the word of the Oath which cannot bee changed because the Oath of God is unchangeable 2 The Levitical Law admitteth many to the Priesthood the Gospel only one that is Christ. 3 The Law admitteth one man to succeed another the Gospel admitteth one only without a Successor viz. Christ the Son of God 4 The Levitical Law admits men to bee Priests that labour with infirmities i. e. obnoxious to sin who cannot make their Sacrifice effectual to appease God or the blessing which they pronounce they cannot really confer upon those whom they bless but the Evangelical Word hath ordained Christ the Omnipotent Son of God who is able in all things to make his Priesthood effectual 5 The Law appoints temporary Priests who are consecrated only for the short time of their life but the Gospel hath the only Son who is consecrated for ever 6 The Levitical Law went before nor was the Law Gods ultimate determination touching Priests but the Gospel or the word of the Oath succeeded after the Law as Gods ultimate determination Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical All tends to this that the believing Hebrews seeing the weakness and abolition of the Levitical Priesthood and the excellency of Christs might renounce their Legal Rites and more firmly cleave unto Christ. CHAP. VIII HEE prosecutes the same Argument There are two parts of the Chapter In the first he proves the excellency of Christs Priesthood above the Levitical in four Arguments to vers 7. In the second hee proves the New Covenant to excel the Old Concerning the whole Chapter he prefaceth that in it is contained the summe of the whole comparison betwixt the Priesthood of Christ and the Levitical Vers. 1. Now of the things which wee have spoken this is the summe wee have such an High-priest who is set on the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty in the heavens Arg. 1. Christ our High-priest is such and of so great dignity that hee sits King at the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty of God the Father in the heavens equal to the Father in power and glory Hee leaves us the other part of the Comparison as sufficiently clear concerning the Levitical Priest that hee is not such an one Therefore the Priest-hood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 2. A Minister of the Sanctuary and of the true Tabernacle which the Lord pitched and not man Arg. 2. Christ is the Minister of that Sanctuary in the heavens where hee sits King in his Throne and all holy things which appertain to the worship of God and the salvation of man not faintly but effectually acting the part of a Priest in Heaven although hee is a Royal Priest as to the dignity of his Person and the manner of his Administration yet as a Minister as pertaining to his Mediatory Office Such are not the Levitical Priests on earth but onely Ministers Therefore the Priest-hood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Of the true Tabernacle Arg. 3. Christ is in heaven the Minister of that true Tabernacle which the Lord hath pitched and not man viz. of his body which Christ himself compared to a Tabernacle and is figured by the typical Tabernacle which true Tabernacle of his body the Holy Ghost miraculously formed and prepared for him in the womb of the Virgin And Christ now ministring in Heaven represents that body to the Father and his Humanity wherein hee suffered and offers to him continually interceding for us in the same body But the Levitical Priests are onely Ministers of the typical Tabernacle which man hath built Therefore c. Vers. 3. For every High-priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices wherefore it is of necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer Hee proves that Christ doth constantly offer up the true Tabernacle of his body to God the Father by three Reasons Reas. 1. Because seeing that every Priest is ordained to offer up gifts and sacrifices it is necessary that Christ have somewhat to offer But besides his intercession and the presenting of his sacrificed body to the Father Christ hath nothing in Heaven which may reconcile God Therefore the true Tabernacle of his body is that onely which Christ offers to God in the Celestial Sanctuary Vers. 4. For if hee were on earth hee should not bee a Priest seeing that there are Priests that offer gifts according to the Law Reas. 2. Because if hee was on earth hee could not bee a Priest by the Law to offer to wit those things which the Law prescribes to the Priests viz. Gifts and typical Sacrifices Therefore that true Tabernacle of his body onely remains which Christ offers in his heavenly Sanctuary Vers. 5.
Who serve unto the example and shadow of heavenly things as Moses was admonished of God when hee was about to make the Tabernacle For see saith hee that thou make all things according to the pattern shewed to thee in the Mount Reas. 3. Confirming the former because Priests according to the Law serve on earth onely unto the example and shadow of heavenly things for their Ministry was bound to the Tabernacle or the Temple of Ierusalem and is imployed in the administration of figures and typical Ceremonies as it appears by the Levitical Law Therefore Christ seeing hee cannot offer up any typical Sacrifices by the Law and if hee was upon earth neither could hee bee a Priest by the Law and seeing now hee is in heaven and therein exercises his Priest-hood it is necessary that hee administer about those heavenly things figured by those Legal shadows to wit the body and substance of all Ceremonies which hee also doth representing constantly the true Tabernacle of his body unto God and dispensing unto us spiritual benefits procured for us by the offering of his body The testimony proving the former is Exod. 25.40 from whence under the name of a Tabernacle God will not onely have the Tabernacle but all things appertaining to the Levitical Priest-hood to bee representations of heavenly things viz. Of Christs Priest-hood and his benefits Vers. 6. But now hath hee obtained a more excellent Ministry by how much also hee is the Mediator of a better Covenant which was established upon better promises Arg. 4. To prove the excellency of Christs Priest-hood above the Levitical from the excellency of the New Covenant above the Old Because Christ hath obtained so much the more excellent Ministry above the Levitical by how much the Covenant whereof Christ is Mediator is more excellent and established upon better promises than the Covenant was under the Levitical Priest-hood For the Covenant under the Levitical Priesthood as to its external form was a Covenant of Works established upon Conditional promises of external things but the Covenant under Christs Priest-hood is the Covenant of Grace freely promising Christ with all his benefits to Believers or the parties in Covenant And it is the Office of the Priest to intercede betwixt God and men and to confirm the Covenants between them by the offering of Sacrifice as also to endeavour that men may enjoy the Divine Promises Wherefore how much better the Covenants have been by so much the Priest-hood it self is to be esteemed more excellent and worthy The Second Part. Vers. 7. For if that First Covenant had been faultless then should no place have been sought for the Second The second part of the Chapter follows wherein hee confirms this Argument in the parts of it First hee proves that the New Covenant of the Gospel is more excellent than the old legal Covenant which is abolished by six Reasons For if Reas. 1. Grounded upon the Proposition connexed The former Covenant under the Levitical Priest-hood was imperfect wherein something was wanting and something might bee taxed not indeed in respect to it self but in respect to its efficacy and virtue and that not from any fault in the Covenant but because of the weakness of those that were under that Covenant Therefore the former Covenant was less excellent than this that is New Then should no place Reas. 2. Confirming the former Because the former Covenant was to bee done away and the New brought into its place which had not been had it not been imperfect Therefore that former is more imperfect and this New one more excellent Vers. 8. For finding fault with them hee saith Behold the daies come saith the Lord when I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah Reas. 3. Confirming the former Reasons Because the former Covenant by reason of the weakness of the parties in Covenant to perform the Law which was the condition of the Covenant could not make the Covenanters faultless or free them from the accusation of God but a better Covenant and more efficacious was found out by God for Justification Sanctification and Salvation Therefore the former Covenant is less excellent than the New one Vers. 9. Not according to the Covenant that I made with their Fathers in the day when I took them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt because they continued not in my Covenant and I regarded them not saith the Lord. Reas. 4. Because the New Covenant bears no similitude with that Covenant which God made with the people in Mount Sinai when hee brought them out of Egypt whereof Ier. 31.31 For that though it wanted not some obscurity in its signification of Grace which was to bee obtained in Christ represented by the Sacrifices yet it had the external form of a Legal Covenant and an express condition of full Obedience to bee performed to all Gods commandements as appears by the form of it Exodus Chap. 19. and 20. Ier. 17.23 31 32 c. But the New Covenant as will by and by appear is free from the condition of works both in respect to him that is to enter into covenant as also in respect to him who made the covenant Because they Reas. 5. The Covenanters according to the Old Covenant may fall away and have done so and may frustrate that covenant and have done so But the New Covenant as shall appear is of perpetual Grace according to which the true covenanters or beleevers have never fallen away nor can they fall away because of Gods Grace nor can they frustrate the New Covenant because of the fear which God puts into their hearts that they may not depart from him Ier. 32.40 Therefore the New Covenant is more excellent I regarded Reas. 6. The Covenanters according to the Old Covenant abusing the conjugal goodness of God and committing adultery with other Gods in their Idolatry according to the conjugal power and dominion which God had over them might justly bee despised rejected and condemned by God It is not thus with those that are under the New Covenant Therefore the New Covenant is more excellent whereof Christ is the Mediatour and Surety Vers. 10. For this is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord I will put my Laws into their minds and write them in their hearts and I will bee to them a God and they shall bee to mee a People Now hee proceeds to the proof of the other part of the Argument viz. That the New Covenant is established upon better promises and that by reciting four absolute Promises made to the Elect or Beleevers I will put The first promise is of Regeneration which is nothing else but the inscription of the Law of God first upon the mind consisting in the renovation of the mind to the Image of God after Righteousness and true Holiness And I will bee their God The second promise is of
Grace of God into prophane licentiousness which is the same with the Apostles conclusion inferred vers 25. See that yee refuse not him that is Christ that speaketh c. The force of the Argument is this If now seeing that not fear but love not Justice but Grace not the Law but Gospel offers it self to bee your leader in your way to Heaven ye shall fail of Grace or abuse it to prophaneness it shall come to pass that yee will be found to refuse and reject Christ speaking from Heaven and most gently inviting you to the communion with himself and his Saints which yee ought to have a care of As for the Covenants of works or the Law hee sets down the terrible manner wherein the Law was delivered of which description there are eight Branches 1 In the Covenant of works or Legal Covenant there was a Mountain that might bee touched or earthly whereto Heaven is opposed or the heavenly Mount Zion the Throne of Grace as if hee had said After yee beleeved in Christ yee came not unto the Mount that might not be touched and that which is earthly the very sight whereof did affright thereby the throne of Justice was represented wherein God sitteth when hee deals with the unregnerate man that putteth confidence in his own strength shining in the merit of his own works 2 In making that Covenant the Mount burned with fire whereby the anger of the Judge armed and ready to consume sinners trusting in their merits or works or dealing with him from the Covenant of works 3 In making that Covenant there was a whirlewind darkness and a tempest whereby was represented the perplexed condition amazement and horrour of the mind whereby the soul of the sinner is repressed when the Judge shews to him out of the Law or Covenant of works his justice and anger according to the condition of the violated Covenant 4 In giving the Law there was the sound of a Trumpet whereby was signified that all who are guilty of violating the Covenant of works shall be cited and of necessity appear before the Tribunal of God the supream Judge and none escape 5 In making that Covenant there was a voice of words by which was represented the Letter of the Law reciting the duties wee were bound to but not at all conferring strength for the performing of the things commanded 6 In making that Covenant they who had heard the voice of words intreated that the word should not bee spoken to them any more whereby was signified the intolerable weight of multiplied guilt contracted by the violation of the Law as also despair touching the future performance of the Law incumbent upon the conscience when God deals with the sinner out of the Covenant of works That which the Apostle here intimates when hee saies For they could not endure that which was commanded 7 In making that Covenant if so much as a beast had touched the Mountain it was to bee stoned or thrust through with a dart whereby was signified First That the sinner is excluded from all access to God neither is it lawful that any sinner should approach to him from the condition of this Covenant Secondly That both the sinner and all things that belong unto him his Oxen and Cattel are an abomination unto God Thirdly That the sinner is to perish miserably by this Covenant i. e. with contempt and ignominy as with stones and darts shot at his cursed and abominable head 8 In making that Covenant so terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake and confessed his horrour whereby was also signified that the most holy or just men could not bee able to stand before God if they should be dealt with according to the Covenant of works as Psal. 143. v. 2. It is said In thy sight shall no flesh living bee justified This is the former part of the Argument the summe whereof is this God hath delivered you from the Covenant of works and the terrours thereof Vers. 22. But yee are come unto Mount Sion and unto the City of the Living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels 23. To the general assembly and Church of the first-born which are written in Heaven and to God the Iudge of all and to the spirits of just men made perfect 24. And to Iesus the Mediatour of the New Covenant and to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel Now follows the second part of the Argument touching the Covenant of Grace which God hath made with all the faithful beleeving in Christ but the condition and happiness of man beleeving in Christ and under the Covenant of Grace is described as it were by its own parts 1 After that yee beleeved in Christ being set at liberty from Mount Sinai and from the Throne of Justice yee came to Mount Sion whereby was represented the Throne of Grace wherein God shews himself propitious to all that come unto Christ. 2 After that yee beleeved in Christ being recalled again from exilement and errours in the desert of this world yee are gathered again to your Head Christ and to the City of refuge to the possession of a quiet condition in Christ yee being freed from anger and death and reconciled to God are made free of the City of the Living God being delivered from the terrors of a just Judge yee are admitted into Ierusalem i. e. the Church of God wherein yee see the visions of peace being delivered from Hell yee are also delivered from Levitical Ceremonies which the inferiour and terrestrial Ierusalem now together with its children observes and are admitted to the priviledges of the heavenly Ierusalem the Church of the faithful and to the Kingdome of Heaven 3 After that yee beleeved in Christ being delivered from the society of Devils obnoxious to sin and torments yee are admitted into the society of an innumerable company of blessed Angels 4 After that yee beleeved in Christ being called and separated from the society of Reprobates wicked and banished men or men secluded from the inheritance of eternal life yee are come and are admitted into the society of the Catholick Church to the general Assembly and Church of the Elect who are restored to the right and priviledges of the first-born that yee may bee Priests to God and the portion of God select from amongst men 5 Yee that in times past did live amongst worldly men whose portion is in this life and whose names are written in the earth now yee are found to be of the number of the Elect and of those that were in times past written in Heaven in the book of life amongst the Elect and those that are predestinated to the obtaining of glory and grace 6 Yee that were without God in the world enemies to him and in times past hee was your angry Judge now being reconciled to him hee is your merciful Judge who absolves you and powerfully destroies your
For 1. As the Symboles of Gods presence was in the typical Tabernacle so the fulness of the Godhead dwelleth bodily in Christ. 2. As the typical Tabernacle had inclosed in it all the holy things the Candlestick Table of Shew-bread Laver Altar c. So hath the humanity of Christ or Christ the Man all holiness and perfection the fulness of all good and all holy things in him Light Food Washing and Reconciliation and all in himself that out of his fulness we may all receive Grace for Grace 3. As the Tabernacle in the outmost Coverings seemed but base yet had better stuff within so our Lord when he dwelt in the Tabernacle of his flesh amongst us was found in form as a man and in the shape of a servant but inwardly was full of Grace and Truth 4. In calling Christs Body The true Tabernacle which God builded and not man he teacheth us To make use of Christ in truth as the Church of old made use of the Tabernacle in the Type that is in him seek God Towards him turn the eye of our soul when we seem to our selves to be far removed to the end of the earth in him offer all our spiritual sacrifices in him seek our Washing our Food our Light our Comfort in him as his Priests make our Abode and daily Dwelling In him let us live and breathe 5. In so calling Christ hee appropriateth the sacrificing of his Body to himself in his own person as the personal and proper act of his Priesthood for the offering of the which Sacrifice once and never after as Heb. 7.27 sheweth he keepeth still the stile of the onely Minister of the true Tabernacle as his own incommunicable Prerogative And therefore whosoever presumeth to offer his Body presumeth also to take his place Vers. 3. For every High-Priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices wherefore it is of necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer He proveth That Christ is the Minister of the Tabernacle of his own Body by offering it up because it behoved him seeing he is a Priest to offer up something either the typical Oblations or else his own Body represented by them But the typical Oblations he could not offer according to the Law not being a Levite Therefore he behooved to offer up himself represented by the typical Oblations Then the Apostle acknowledgeth no Priest but either the Levitical Priest or the Priest that offereth up his own Body And whosoever pretendeth to have the Office of a Priest now usurpeth either the office of the Levite or Christs Office Vers. 4. For if he were on earth he should not be a Priest seeing that there are Priests which offer gifts according to the Law 1. He proveth That Christ cannot offer up the typical Oblations because he cannot be a Priest on earth albeit he were on earth because Priesthood on earth is proper to the Levites onely For they are the onely Priests by Law on earth and have prescribed to them by Law what they should offer Quest. You will ask me here Was not Chriest a Priest when he was on earth I answer Yes Quest. How then saith the Apostle here If he were on earth he should not be a Priest I answer Because albeit he began his Priesthood upon earth yet he could not brook his Office of Priesthood upon earth For as the High-Priest who was the Type carried the Sacrifice once a year through the Court and before the Sanctuary killed the sacrifice and then took the blood thereof in unto the Holiest of all and presented himself there before the Lord with the blood to intercede for the people and there remained during the time of Intercession appointed to him So Christ carrying his sacrifice out of the City offered up his Body on the Altar of his Godhead to his Father and by his own blood entred into the heavenly Sanctuary and sate down on the right hand of the Majestie on high and there he liveth for ever to intercede for us having then ended his sacrifice as this Apostle proveth Chap. 7.27 and Chap. 9.25 26. And having no sacrifice now to offer on earth it is with reason that the Apostle saith If he were on earth he should not be a Priest Whence we learn 1. That Christ is not now on the earth not in any place thereof and therefore if any man say to us Lo here he is Lo there he is we must not beleeve him it is a false Christ he sheweth us and not the true as Christ himself forewarneth Mat. 24.23 2. That it is impossible that Christ should now be on the earth for then should he lose his Priesthood which is impossible For if he were on earth he should not be a Priest saith the Apostle here 3. That Christs Priesthood is onely discharged now in heaven seeing he cannot be a Priest on earth 2. His Reason is They are Priests which offer Gifts according to the Law Then Every Priest who brooketh his Priesthood on earth must offer Gifts according to the Law as the Apostle here reasoneth And such Priests as those Christ hath abolished having changed the Priesthood and the Law also Therefore there can be no Priest by Office on earth at all with Gods allowance Vers. 5. Who serve unto the Example and Shadow of Heavenly things as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the Tabernacle For see saith He that thou make all things according to the Pattern shewed unto thee in the Mount He describeth the proper use of the Levitical Priests to serve unto the Example of heavenly Things Then 1. The Incarnation of Christ his Death and the Benefits thereof signified by Levitical Shadows are heavenly things in regard of their heavenly Fruits and Effects and other heavenly respects and are with an heavenly minde to be looked upon 2. The Ceremonies of the Law were not idle Rites but Examples and Figures of Christ and his Graces by the which men were led then as by the hand to Christ who was to come 2. From Exod. 25.40 he proveth they were Shadows of heavenly things because the Pattern in the Mount represented the heavenly things and Moses Tabernacle represented the Pattern in the Mount Therefore it represented heavenly things And unto this Pattern was Moses tyed Then 1. God would not no not in the time of Types suffer any device of man to come in for representing any thing heavenly Much less will he now 2. Those which himself ordaineth he will have observed and none omitted Vers. 6. But now hath Hee obtained a more excellent Ministery by how much also Hee is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was established upon better Promises 1. The offering of the Typical Oblations hee hath made proper to the Levites Now the offering of the true Sacrifices and service belonging thereunto hee appropriateth to Christ and calleth it A more excellent Ministery Then 1. The offering of the thing signified by the Levitical
him and powerfully seize upon the conscience to cause it acknowledge the Judge represented by the sound of the Trumpet 5. The killing Letter of the Law read out unto us shewing us our Duty what we should have done and have omitted and what we should not have done and have committed without giving any strength to obey for time to come represented by the sound of Words 6. By this Charge and new exaction of the Law an unsupportable weight lieth upon the Conscience pressing it down to Desperation and Death that we would give all the world if we had it to be free of the terror of the Lord and challenge of the Conscience upon so fearful a ditty represented by the peoples entreating That the word should not be spoken to them any more 7. There is an impossibility to help our selves by any thing we can do or to do any thing better than we have done and the seen impotency of our cursed Nature maketh the commandement for time to come a matter of desperation as well as the challenge for breaking the Law in time by gone represented by their inability to endure the thing which was commanded 8. No drawing near to God here such terrour in his Majestie justice being onely seen and no mercy represented by their debarring from touching of the Mountain 9. Such uncleanness and vileness as not onely our selves but our beasts and cartel and all that we have is counted unclean for our cause and liable to the curse with us represented by the debarring of the Beasts from the Mount 10. Such a loathsome abomination in the guilty as the Judge will not put hand on the Malefactor himself nor employ any of his clean Angels but give them over to death if they remain in that estate to be destroyed ignominiously represented by stoning or darting where the stone or dar● lighteth upon the Malefactor but not the hand which threw it Vers. 21. And so terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake Yet further 11. If God deal with us as Judge and by the Rule of the Law examine our works were we like Moses The meekest men under Heaven the least harmful and innocent in the world richest in good works for service done to GOD and to his Church yet could we not stand before this Tribunal all that ever we had done all our works were not able to free us from the curse of the Law and Gods fearful wrath for our sinfulness mixed amongst our works represented by Moses his confessed fear and quaking 12. And with all this no place to flee unto no place to remain in no company but an evil conscience within and matter of terror without represented by the Wilderness wherein this Throne of Justice was set up And this is the estate wherein we are by Nature according to the Law from which we are delivered by Christ according to the Gospel as followeth Vers. 22. But ye are come unto Mount Sion and unto the City of the living GOD the Heavenly Ierusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels This is the estate whereunto we are advanced under the Gospel by CHRIST which by comparison with the former shall be more clear thus 1. Before we come to CHRIST we have to do with God as Judge sitting upon his Throne terrible After we come to Christ we finde God upon a Throne of Grace reconciled unto us resembled by Mount Sion 2. Without Christ we are kept under upon the earth depressed in the valley and may not touch the Mount to ascend But through Christ we get access to climb up towards God and to advance piece and piece above the world and sin and misery towards Heaven resembled by going up Mount Sion 3. Without Christ vagabonds wandring abroad in a waste Wildernesse but through Christ collected together under a head and brought to a place of refuge and rest and commodious dwelling to the Kingdom of Heaven resembled by the City where Mount Sion stood 4. Without Christ exposed to the wrath of the living God Through Christ admitted to remain as reconciled in the City of the living GOD. 5. Without Christ afraid by the terrible sight of wrath and judgement Through Christ brought into Ierusalem the Vision of Peace not onely in this world by faith but in Heaven by fruition resembled by Ierusalem 6. Without Christ heirs of Hell Through Christ Citizens of Heaven 7. Without Christ exposed to the fellowship of Devils in sin and torments Through Christ admitted to the society of innumerable Angels resembled by the inhabitants of Ierusalem on earth 8. Without Christ Angels our foes Through Christ our fellow-Citizens Vers. 23. To the general Assembly and Church of the first-born which are written in Heaven and to God the Iudge of all and to the spirits of just men made perfect Without Christ we are scattered as sheep in the Wilderness a prey to all the ravenous Beasts But through Christ gathered together in one to the Society of the true Catholick Church of the Elect under the Government of one Head even CHRIST 9. Without Christ living with the world in the Suburbs of Hell Through Christ made Members of the true Church and Company which is called out of the world by the effectual calling of his Word and Spirit 10. Without Christ forlorn Children who have deprived our selves of our inheritance and wasted all our Fathers benefits on vanities Through Christ our fore-faulting is reduced our inheritance redeemed we brought back to the Family restored to the inheritance dignified with the first-born and made Priests to our God as his portion from amongst men 11. Without Christ living amongst them whose names are written in the earth and whose portion is beneath Through Christ our names are enrolled in Heaven amongst those who are written in the Book of Life elected and predestinated unto Grace and Glory 12. Without Christ without God in the world having God our Judge against us Through Christ we are reconciled to God get acces● unto him and have our God Judge of all upon our side to absolve us and to plead for us against all our foes 13. Without Christ we are for guiltiness in the rank of those who are already damned and brethren to those whose spirits are in prison But through Christ we are brethren to those who are already saved whose souls and spirits are freed from sin and misery and made perfect in holiness and glory having the same grounds of right to Heaven through CHRIST which they have who are entered already into possession Vers. 24. And to IESVS the Mediator of the NEW COVENANT and to the blood of sprinkling which speaketh better things than that of Abel He goeth on 14. In our natural estate we are under the Law and the Covenant of Works which bindeth us to perfect Obedience or to the Curse When we come to Christ we are under the Covenant of Grace which proclaimeth remission of sins unto all who are in him 15.
understand the Latin tongue Thus it pleases God to have it at this day Many Preachers in England who take upon them to teach others understand nothing but their Mother-tongue themselves nor ever came they where Learning grew But seeing they will undertake to minister to the people and the wind blows for their turn That the Church of Christ purchased with his most precious blood might not be left qu●●e destitute and totally subver●ed by comments of their own wee thought it meet to commend this useful Author to their understandings whereby they might have some assistance proportionable to their capacities These were the main inducements wee eyed in attempting this work and wee hope its general serviceableness will answer to whatever might be objected against the undertaking Sometimes through the mistakes of printing the Latin book the sense was here and there disturbed whereupon wee were forced to take the more care in finding out the Authors mind that wee might accordingly commend it to ●hy benefit Another thing I should signifie to the Reader Some years since this Author set forth his Explanation of the Epistle to the Hebrews a Book so useful and solid that it became deservedly acceptable to most men This wee have inserted in its proper place in this Volume and Edition So that besides the Analy●●cal Exposition of these Epistles which was the sole intendment of the Author in this present work yo● have his practical observations formerly set forth upon the Epistle to the Hebrews 〈…〉 remains but that thou apply thy self to the perusal of the whole and before thou unde●●●kest ●o be a Iudge become a Reader and while thy meditations are imployed in these sacred Oracles of God I shall pray that the Spirit of truth and goodness may come down and rest upon thee For 〈◊〉 hee b●eathes from these mountains of spices and wee delude our selves with the visions of our own heart● while wee think to finde the Holy Spirit God blessed for ever in any other Chanels but these wherein he is determined to conveigh his holy and heavenly motions Farewel Thine in the work of the Lord WILLIAM RETCHFORD THE EPISTLE of PAVL to the ROMANS Analytically Expounded THE SUMME OF THE EPISTLE THe Apostle determined to visit the Romans that hee might by his presence confirm them in the faith In the mean time when hee observes his coming delayed being moved by the Spirit of the Lord hee writes this famous Epistle unto them The parts of the Epistle besides the beginning and conclusion are two The first shewes the onely and spiritual ground of sinners Iustification by faith in Christ to Chap. 12. The other part treats concerning the holy course of life which justified persons should live to the end of the Chapter That which appertains to the first part presently after the beginning of the Epistle the Apostle undertakes to prove THAT NO MAN CAN BE IUSTIFIED BY INHERENT RIGHTEOUSNESSE BUT BY THE RIGHTEOUSNESSE OF CHRIST ONLY APPREHENDED BY FAITH ALONE AND FREELY OF HIS GRACE IMPUTED BY GOD TO US THAT BELEEVE This Position hee proves by ten Arguments whereof the two first are in the first Chapter The third in the second Chapter the seven other in the third Chapter To the further fixing of these Arguments hee sub-joyns a sevenfold proof of this doctrine The FIRST is That Abraham was justified by Faith alone Chap. 4. The SECOND is That this onely reason of our justification affords us comfort against the just anger of God and original sin the poison which Adam derived upon us Chap. 5. The THIRD is That this ground of our justification very much conduces to promote sanctification in them that are justified Chap. 6. The FOURTH is That this ground of our justification onely yeelds comfort to the afflicted consciences of them that are justified upon their imperfect obedience and the reliques of sin dwelling in them Chap. 7. The FIFTH is That this ground of our justification fenceth those that are justified and sanctified not onely against condemnation or all the evils to bee feared after this life but also confirms and comforts against all the troubles and afflictions to which the Children of God are obnoxious in this life Chap. 8. The SIXTH proof is That by experience it is found that the Iews seeking righteousness from their works fall short of it and that the Gentiles destitute of all shew of inherent righteousness by faith in Iesus Christ have obtained true and saving righteousness Chap. 9. Where from occasion of the Iews cutting off election and reprobation is handled The which rejection of the Iews being apparent and manifest to all the Churches because of their foolish incredulity and obstinacy hee proves to bee just Chap. 10. Yet all the Iews not to bee despised because the obstinacy of that Nation is to last but for a time which hee shews Chap. 11. In the other part of the Epistle wherein hee treats of sanctification in the lives of all those that are justified 1 After a serious obtestation that all who are justified should consecrate themselves unto God and all the Ministers of the Gospel maintaining peace amongst themselves every one according to his ability should promote the sanctification and salvation of the faithful Hee gives general Precepts about Sanctity Chap. 12. 2 Hee descends to more special duties towards the Magistrate and their neighbours of all degrees according to the Law of Charity Chap. 13. 3 Hee handles the mutual duties of the faithful in a prudent use of their Christian liberty Chap. 14. and in the former part of Chap. 15. Lastly Assuring the Romans of his love and authority in the remaining part of Chapter 15. with salutations of the Saints hee concludes his Epistle Chap. 16. CHAP. I. THere are two parts of this Chapter The first containes the beginning of the Epistle to verse 17. The other is an entrance to prove the principal Proposition of the Epistle viz. THAT WEE ARE JUSTIFIED BY FAITH IN JESUS CHRIST AND NOT BY WORKS The beginning contains the inscription of the Epistle to verse 8. And the proemial discourse to verse 17. and all is ordered to the preparing of the faithful Romans that with all submission of mind they would receive the subsequent doctrin which designe may bee comprehended to the same sense in this or the like maxim You O Romans ought with all subjection of mind to receive this following doctrin To this end hee insinuates eighteen Arguments whereof some are contained in the inscription and the rest in the proemial discourse of the Epistle Vers. 1. Paul a Servant of Iesus Christ called to bee an Apostle separated to the Gospel of God In the inscription of the Epistle you have the description of the Pen-man to verse 7. and of those to whom hee writes verse 7. A Servant Argument 1. I Paul the writer of this Epistle unto you am a Servant of Jesus Christ i. e The matters of Christ Jesus my Lord are in hand not mine own and to
contrary hee is condemned In the second verse a reason of this is subjoyned because the judgement of God is just and according to the merit of the deed condemns every sinner both him that judgeth and him that is judged Therefore hee which according to the judgement of God condemns another to death for sin condemns himself doing the like things Vers. 3. And thinkest thou this O man that judgest them which do such things and doest the same that thou shalt escape the judgement of God This Argument in the following part of the Chapter is confirmed removing the four pretended Objections whereby men may evade the force of the Argument Object 1. Hee securely contemns the judgement of God who because God hath hitherto spared him promiseth himself impunity or freedome from punishment when hee judgeth others I am not afraid saith hee of the judgement of God The Apostle refutes this Objection and proves it null by six Reasons Reas. 1. That such an imagination is vain and foolish for Thinkest thou c. which is the same as if hee had said In vain doest thou think to escape the judgement of God Vers. 4. Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long-suffering not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance Despisest Reas. 2. Such an imagination puts contempt and abuse upon the riches of the bounty forbearance and gentleness of God when any one because God hath spared hitherto goes on in sin and conceives hopes to go unpunished Bounty Reas. 3. That the bounty of God ought to invite and move to repentance not to go on in sin out of hopes to go unpunished Vers. 5. But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God Hardness Reas. 4. That such a thought is the hardening of our hearts in sin and a sealing of them up that wee cannot repent Treasure Reas. 5. That hee who securely contemns the judgement of God heaps up unto himself a kinde of treasure of punishments from divine justice to the time of that last and terrible judgement wherein that whole treasure of punishments in the most righteous anger of God shall bee openly poured out upon him Vers. 6. Who will render to every man according to his deeds 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternal life 8. But unto them that are contentious and do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousness indignation and wrath 9. Tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil of the Jew first and also of the Gentile 10. But glory honour and peace to every man that worketh good to the Jew first and also to the Gentile Reas. 6. God will give to every man in the day of Judgement according to his works good or evil his rewards of grace or punishments of his justice To wit eternal life to them that persevere in obedience to the truth hoping for a reward vers 6 7. And besides the signs of wrath in this life eternal death also after this life as it is just for an angry God to inflict upon the adversaries of the truth and the servants of unrighteousness verse 8. Hee confirms this reason in that God will have no respect to any Nation or outward Priviledges in the inflicting of his punishments But the Jews which had the chiefest favours of God should bee first in their punishments and that hee would inflict upon the soul and body of the Heathens or Gentiles their deserved torments verse 9. And to the same manner in his rewards without difference of Nations hee will glorifie i. e. with all gifts that may externally accomplish a man such as Glory and Honour and inwardly which is signified by Peace and will heap upon the pious and honest Jew according to all the priviledges which hee hath vouchsafed to that Nation and will crown the pious and honest Gentile in his place with eternal life verse 10. from whence it follows that hee is deceived who indulges hopes of impunity because God hath hitherto spared him Vers. 11. For there is no respect of persons with God Hee confirms the former reason from the equity of God in that hee is no respecter of persons and hee meets with the second Objection propounded verse 2. against the severe judgement of God against sinners Some might object In the executing of Judgement respect is to bee had as well of the Heathen who lives out of the Church without the knowledge of the Law or the doctrine of God as also of the Jew which is a Disciple of God and an hearer of the Law God forbid that either of them should perish for both seems unjust although they are sinners Hee refutes this Objection and proves it just that every sinner should perish by five Reasons Reas. 1. Because there is no respect of persons with God that hee should exempt from condemnation those that persevere in sin whether Jews or Gentiles for any reason which appertains to the person not the cause And here it is to bee observed that God looks with an equal eye upon the Jew and Gentile out of Christ not in the degrees of punishment but in the guilt of eternal death which all sinners are worthy of although not in the like degree Vers. 12. For as many as have sinned without Law do by nature the things contained in the Law those having not the Law shall be judged by the Law Reas. 2. This confirms and unfolds the other because they that have sinned without the Law scil written Against the Law written upon their hearts by nature even by the same Law within them shall perish without the written Law by the sentence of Justice And whoever have sinned in the Law or in the knowledge of the Law written shall bee condemned even by the sentence of the written Law Vers. 13. For not the hearers of the Law are just before God but the doers of the Law shall be justified Reas. 3. Especially intended against the Jews who according to the rule of Righteousness cannot bee accounted for Righteous before God even they that are hearers of the Law unless they perform perfect obedidience to the Law which because neither Jew nor Gentile can do by consequence neither can they bee exempted from deserved condemnation but on the contrary especially the Jews which are hearers of the Law and do not keep it are most worthy of judgement Vers. 14. For when the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves 15. Which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another Reas. 4. Especially intended against the Gentiles which though they have not the written Law yet they have a Law within
them and by nature do some external works of the Law although they have not the written Law yet that Law within them is a Law and that really and indeed written upon their hearts as their consciences witness accusing them when they do ill and excusing them when they do well Therefore they have nothing to pretend why they should not undergo deserved condemnation when they sin much less the Jews Vers. 16. In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel Reas. 5. Because in the day of judgement God will bring forth the secrets of the heart and according to this my doctrine in the Gospel will pronounce the condemnation of sinners to bee just whether Jews or Gentiles Therefore they cannot bee excused who sin but perish by their own just desert Vers. 17. Behold thou art called a Jew and restest in the Law and makest thy boast of God 18. And knowest his will and approvest the things that are more excellent being instructed out of the Law 19. And art confident that thou thy self art a guide of the blind a light of them which are in darkn●ss 20. An instructer of the foolish a teacher of babes which hath the form of knowledge and of the truth in the Law The third Objection But something must bee allowed to the priviledges of the Jews that they come not into the like condemnation with the Gentiles And here hee seems to conflict with some principal teacher of the Law and Patron of Righteousness by works and brings forth seven props of his vain confidence by way of concession granting all 1 The first that hee grants is the external honour of a worshiper of God Thou art called a Jew which was a name not of Nation only but of a confessor of the true Religion 2 A submission of mind to the doctrine of the Law Thou restest in the Law and thou applaudest thy self in this as an eminent benefit 3 Thou makest thy boast in God viz. that thou art of that people chosen above all other Nations in Covenant with God vers 17. 4 The knowledge of Gods will taken out of the Law 5 The discerning of good and evil and of things that differ and controversies by the benefit of the same Law verse 18. 6 The confidence of such abundant knowledge and certainty that they could teach others 7 That they had a systeme and collection of that knowledge which was here and there contained in the Law and that all the rest besides this our Rabbi are infants and foolish verse 19 20. Vers. 21. Thou therefore that teachest another teachest thou not thy self Thou that preachest a man should not steal doest thou steal 22. Thou that sayest a man should not commit adultery doest thou commit adultery Thou that abhorrest idols doest thou commit sacriledge 23. Thou that makest thy boast of the Law through breaking the Law dishonourest thou God The Apostle answers the Objection and all these being granted hee shews them insufficient to righteousness by two Reasons Reas. 1. Because thou doest not teach thy self i. e. thou dost not shew forth thy doctrine by thy deeds but either pollutest thy self with those vices or the like which thou forbiddest in others Therefore those things suffice not to free thee from condemnation Vers. 24. For the Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you as it is written Reas. 2. Confirming the former Because through your fault the Gentiles speak evil of God as if hee had or could bear prophane worshipers Therefore the forecited priviledges make nothing to Righteousness This reason hee confirmes by the testimony of Ezekiel 36.22 who complains of the Hypocrites of his time boasting in the same priviledges Vers. 25. For Circumcision verily profiteth ●f thou keep the Law but if thou be a breaker of the Law thy Circumcision is made uncircumcision The fourth Objection But because of the Covenant of God the sign whereof is Circumcision I shall not perish who am circumcised saith the Jew confiding in the outward Ceremony The Apostle answers and proves that Circumcision does not exempt us from condemnation or death by four Reasons Reas. 1. Because Circumcision if it bee joyned with perfect obedience to all the rest of the commandements if it could bee it would profit as a part of that obedience to justification by works for which the Jew did contend but if the transgression of the Law bee found in him that is circumcised as touching justification by works circumcision and uncircumcision will bee the same Therefore circumcision exempts not from condemnation Vers. 26. Therefore if the uncircumcision keep the righteousness of the Law shall not this uncircumcision be counted for circumcision Reas. 2. Because the Gentiles uncircumcision joyned with perfect obedience to the Law if it could bee shall bee of the same account with the Jews circumcision If so bee God require to justification by works nothing but a perfect observation of the Moral Law Therefore circumcision frees not from condemnation Vers. 27. And shall not uncircumcision which is by nature if it fulfil the Law judge thee who ●y the letter and circumcision dost transgress the Law Reas. 3. Because the Gentile being by nature uncircumcised if it was possible that hee could keep the Moral Law compared with thee who are outwardly circumcised and yet transgressest the Law by thy own judgement hee shall argue thee worthy of condemnation Therefore circumcision doth not free from condemnation Vers. 28. But he is not a Jew which is one outwardly neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh 29. But hee is a Jew which is one inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and no● in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Reas. 4. Because neither the outward profession of the true Religion long ago erected among the Jewes by God himself is to be accounted for a true profession of the true Religion nor outward Circumcision of the flesh is to bee reckoned for true Circumcision ver 28. But hee is a true Professor of the true Religion who is such an one in the Spirit and that is true Circumcision which is of the heart spiritual in the inward soul and not that which is outwardly in the body or the letter which is commonly called Circumcision He that is a Jew indeed and that which is true and spiritual Circumcision hath commendation and praise not only among men who only see things that are open and manifest but with God who looks into the heart Therefore outward Circumcision perfects not our righteousness nor frees any man from condemnation ver 29. CHAP. III. THere are two parts of this Chapter in the FIRST he answers five objections against the foresaid Doctrine to ver 9. In the SECOND part he proceeds to prove the POSITION touching JUSTIFICATION NOT BY WORKS BVT BY FAITH Ver. 1. What advantage then hath the Iew or what profit is there of
in Jesus Christ Therefore this ground of our Justification by Faith is no less to bee maintained than the glory of Gods Justice Faithfulness and Goodness to bee declared in justifying Believers Vers. 27. Where is boasting then it is excluded By what Law of Works nay but by the Law of Faith 28. Therefore wee conclude that a man is justified by Faith without the deeds of the Law Argum. 10. Because by the Law of Faith or the Covenant of Grace which requires Faith to our Justification by the Righteousness of another mans boasting in himself is excluded and not by the Law of Works or the Covenant of Works which exacts perfect obedience and affords matter of boasting to men in their Inherent Righteousness Therefore saith hee wee conclude that a man is Iustified by Faith without the Works of the Law The Argument is good For if men were Justified by their Works and Inherent Righteousness they might boast of the meritorious cause of their Justification to bee in themselves but they that are Justified by Faith are compelled to renounce their own Inherent Righteousness and to place their only Confidence in the imputation of the Righteousness of Christ and solely in the grace of God Vers. 29. Is hee the God of the Iewes only Is hee not also of the Gentiles Yes of the Gentiles also 30. Seeing it is one God which shall justifie the Circumcision by Faith and uncircumcision through Faith Hee concludes this Disputation with the resolution of two questions which give much light to the present Doctrine The first question is Whether this way of our Justification by Faith bee common both to Jewes and Gentiles To which hee answers That it 's common to both whereof he adds a reason because there is one God of those that are Justified therefore there must bee but one way of justifying all to wit by Faith or of Faith For if hee should Justifie the Jews upon one ground and the Gentiles upon another God would seem to differ from Himself in communicating Righteousness and Salvation to sinners both to Jews and Gentiles which is absurd Vers. 31. Do wee then make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea wee establish the Law Another question is Whether the Doctrine of Faith or Justification by Faith makes the Law of none effect or to bee given in vain while it is denied that men are Justified by the Law Hee answers that the Law is no wayes rendred void but is rather established by the Doctrine of Faith for Faith or the Doctrine of Faith establishes the Law three wayes First in respect to the threatnings shewing that Christ was dead by the Sentence of the Law that hee might satisfie the Law and that wee were lyable to death unless freed from it by Christ. Secondly in respect to the Precepts because hee demonstrates that perfect obedience was yeelded to the Law in the Righteousness of Christ. Thirdly Faith establishes the Law in respect to Believers because being justified by Faith by virtue of Christ they are initiated into new obedience who before they were justified by Faith could do nothing but sin CHAP. IV. UNto the twelfth Chapter the Apostle illustrates commends and further by many Arguments establishes this Divine ground of our Iustification by Faith not by Works Wee for the more easie method shall make the Confirmation of this Doctrine seven-fold The first Confirmation of Iustification by Faith which is contained in this Chapter is chiefly from the example of Abraham the ground of whose Iustification is common both to Iews and Gentiles whose Faith is set before us all of God for a pattern There are three parts of the Chapter In the first the example of Abrahams Iustification is set down to ver 9. In the second hee proves this ground of Iustification to bee common both to Iews and Gentiles to ver 18. In the third the Faith of Abraham is commended to the use of Believers to the end of the Chapter Vers. 1. What shall wee say then that Abraham our Father as pertaining to the flesh hath found So much as pertains to the example of Abraham under the form of an interrogation hee denies that Abraham was justified according to the flesh or by the Law of Works or Inherent Righteousness which is called flesh Galat. 3.3 in respect to the Spiritual Righteousness of Christ From whence it follows that no man is justified by Works Vers. 2. For if Abraham were justified by Works hee hath whereof to glory but not before God This Thesis concerning Abraham is asserted by five Reasons Reason 1. If Abraham was justified by Works hee hath whereof hee may glory but not before God therefore hee is not justified by Works before God The reason is sufficient because boasting in our selves is not taken away by the Law of Works but by the Law of Faith Rom. 3.27 For in the question before men Whether Abraham is just Abraham can produce his Works and boast saying I will shew thee my Works and so hee shall bee justified before men by his Works But the question is Whether hee bee righteous before God whereupon hee must renounce his own works and fly to the Promise of Blessedness in Christ to come of Abrahams Seed that hee might bee justified in Christ by Faith alone Vers. 3. For what saith the Scripture Abraham hath believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness Reason 2. The Scripture testifies Gen. 15.6 that Abraham was justified by Faith or that Righteousness was imputed to him by Faith therefore hee was justified by Faith not by Works Vers. 4. Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of Grace but of debt Reason 3. The reward cannot bee of Grace but of debt to him that seeks after righteousness by his works wee may assume thus But to Abraham it was imputed of Grace Therefore Abraham did not mercenarily seek after righteousness by the works of the Law Vers. 5. But to him that worketh not but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly his Faith is counted for righteousness Reason 4. To this purpose Faith is imputed for righteousness to him that is not mercenary but renouncing his own righteousness believes in God who freely justifies the ungodly that flees to Christ Jesus But such was the Faith of Abraham Therefore Abraham was not justified by works before God but Faith was imputed to him for righteousness or the Blessing promised in Christ to come received through Faith by Abraham was imputed to him for righteousness Vers. 6. Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputed righteousness without works 7. Saying Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered 8. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin Reason 5. David testifies Psalm 32.12 that Blessedness is given to him to whom Righteousness is imputed without works and whose righteousness consists not in good works but in the forgiveness of sins therefore such was
of necessity the Justification of Abraham consisting not in the perfection of his works but in the remission of his sins Understand the same of the Justification of all which the Apostle even now hath shewed Vers. 9. Cometh this Blessedness then on the Circumcision only or upon the uncircumcision also for wee say that Faith was reckoned to Abraham for righteousness The second Part. The second part of the Chapter wherein hee proves this to bee the ground of Abrahams Justification and obtaining Eternal Life to wit by Faith is common to the uncircumcision or the Gentiles and to Circumcision or the Jews The question is propounded in this verse the answer whereof follows till hee hath proved it common both to Jews and Gentiles Vers. 10. How was it then reckoned when hee was in circumcision or in uncircumcision not in circumcision but in uncircumcision Hee proves this ground of Justification and obtaining of happiness to bee common to the uncircumcised or the Gentiles no less than to the Jews that were circumcised By seven Arguments Argum. 1. From the state of incircumcision where●n Abraham was when hee was pronounced righteous as it appears in the History Gen. 15.6 Righteousness was imputed to Abraham by Faith while hee was yet uncircumcised Therefore this way of Justification is common even to Believers while uncircumcised Vers. 11. And hee received the sign of circumcision as a seal of the Righteousness of the Faith which hee had yet being uncircumcised that hee might bee the Father of all them that believe though they bee not circumcised that Righteousness might bee imputed to them also 12. And the Father of Circumcision to them who are not of Circumcision only of our Father Abraham which hee had being yet uncircumcised Argum. 2. Abraham received from God the Sign of Circumcision as a Seal of the Covenant of Grace or the Righteousness of Faith which hee had yet being uncircumcised to that end that hee might bee the Father as well of the Faithful that were uncircumcised as of those that were circumcised which were the children of the flesh and also of the Faith of Abraham Therefore the righteousness of Faith is common to Believers both circumcised and uncircumcised or those that follow the steps of the Faith of Abraham not yet circumcised Abraham is called the Father of the Faithful because hee was the first eminent example of Faith the Righteousness which is imputed by Faith and by his example a Leader to all that they may believe Vers. 13. For the promise that hee should bee the heir of the world was not to Abraham or to his Seed through the Law but through righteousness of Faith Hee proves that Abraham was not the Father of any but Believers both circumcised and uncircumcised and with this hee adds a third Argument The Promise was made to Abraham and to his Seed that hee should bee afterwards heir of the Land of Canaan in a type and of the World and Heaven in truth being restored to that right which Adam lost and hee came not to this by the Law or upon the condition of works but by the absolute Promise being j●stified ●y Faith or having the Righteousness of Faith therefore his children are not they which are by the Law looking for righteousness by Works but only they which are of Faith looking for righteousness by Faith i. e. All and only they that believe circumcised and uncircumcised who have an equal community in the righteousness of Faith and the promise of the inheritance The Argument is valid for if Father Abraham is not heir of the world and hath any righteousness but by Faith certainly none are his sons but the faithful who have their righteousness by Faith and from Righteousness the Inheritance Vers. 14. For if they which are of the Law bee heirs Faith is made void and the promise made of none effect Argum. 4. This confirms the former Argument If those which are of the Law or seek Righteousness by Works are the children of Abraham and heirs of Life and partakers of Righteousness then Faith is vain and the Promise is void But this is absurd therefore they which are of the Law are not heirs but only Believers are the children of Abraham and heirs of Righteousness and Life The Argument is strong for if Righteousness and the Inheritance are given through Faith and the Promise then they are freely given But if by the works of the Law then of debt and merit and not of grace for merit or debt leaves no place for free grace and by consequence makes faith and the promise void Vers. 15. Because the Law worketh wrath for where no Law is there is no transgression Argum. 5. Confirming the former the Law worketh wrath to them that seek for Righteousness by their Works i. e. it pronounceth condemnation and death upon the guilty for their transgressions which should bee none if there was no Law Therefore they that are of the Law are not heirs of Righteousness and Life but all and only they which are of Faith both circumcised and uncircumcised Vers. 16. Therfore it is of Faith that it might bee by Grace to the end the Promise might bee to all the Seed not to that only which is of the Law but to that also which is of the Faith of Abraham who is the Father of us all Argum. 6. God hath determined that the Inheritance should bee of Faith to this end that it might appear to bee of Grace or through Grace therefore all and only Believers circumcised and uncircumcised are heirs The Argument is good because Faith and Grace concur mutually standing and falling together Faith is wholly maintained by Grace which Grace is only promised and given to them that believe It being granted that the Inheritance is through Grace it follows to bee through Faith also and it being granted that it is through Faith it follows that it is by Grace also and that Believers are heirs only through Grace That it might bee firm Argum. 7. The Inheritance is of Faith and by Grace that the Promise might bee firm to all the Seed not only to that which is of the Seed of Abraham by the Law of Nature and with all Believers i. e. to the believing circumcised Jews but also to that seed which is not after the flesh but only of the Faith of Abraham that is to the believing uncircumcised Gentiles Therefore unless wee would make the Promise of Righteousness and the Inheritance hanging it upon the condition of performing the Law infirm and uncertain the whole Seed of Abraham or all and only they that believe both circumcised and uncircumcised are heirs by Faith with Father Abraham who according to Faith is the Father of all us that believe both Jews and Gentiles The matter is clear because the Law or the condition of Works would render the Promise of the Inheritance infirm and altogether uncertain seeing that whatever depends upon our works can no wise bee firm both
of their Sanctification and the reliques of sin Which consolation hee appropriates to those that are justified endeavouring after holiness secluding those that are unregenerate and delight in sin to ver 9. which hee applyes to the Romans to ver 12. and thus applyed hee shews the use of it to ver 17. The second part contains the Consolations of the Iustified in respect to the calamities of this life to which the godly are lyable to ver 31. The third part contains the triumph of those that are justified over all their enemies to the end Vers. 1. There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit From what hath been spoken hee infers consolation to those that are justified against the fear of condemnation which the conscience of sin dwelling in us may easily affright us with There is no condemnation saith hee to those which by true Faith are ingrafted into Christ And because many profess the Faith they have not hee describes true Believers and justified persons from this property that they do not indulge themselves in sin neither do they willingly follow the guidance of the flesh and corrupt nature but walk after the Commands of God and the motions of the Holy Ghost inwardly perswading them to direct the course of their life according to the Rule of the Word of God Vers. 2. For the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Iesus hath made mee free from the Law of Sin and Death That this consolation belongs to them that are truly justified and endeavour after holiness hee proves by three Arguments Argum. 1. The Law of Faith of Life and the Spirit in Christ or the Covenant of Grace hath freed every Believer and mee in particular from the law of sin and death or the Covenant of Works Therefore to them that are justified truly united unto Christ there is no condemnation For by the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hee understands the Law of Faith or the Covenant of Grace because by Faith or the Covenant of Grace the Spirit is received and communion with the Life of Christ. And by the Law of Sin and Death hee understands the Law of Works as Rom. 3.27 or the Covenant of Works by which Law or Covenant conviction of sin is made and condemnation unto death of them that are guilty Vers. 3. For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh Argum. 2. Seeing the Law was found weak to procure for us Justification by reason of the infirmity of the flesh or humane nature now corrupted not able to yeeld perfect obedience to the Law God sending his Son in the flesh of the same nature with us and in all things like unto us sin excepted in the flesh of his Son crucified condemned our sin that satisfaction being made for us it might bee abolished in us Therefore sin in us that are justified who are in Christ cannot bee the cause of condemnation and thus there is no condemnation to us Vers. 4. That the righteousness of the Law might bee fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Argum. 3. To this very end sin is condemned in Christ that is condemned and dead for us that wee being once dead and condemned in him it might appear that the Law is satisfied in us I say who follow not the lusts of the flesh but the guidance of the Holy Ghost Therefore now no condemnation remains us Vers. 5. For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit Hee gives four reasons why hee makes this consolation peculiar to them that follow after holiness secluding all that are unregenerate and continue in sin The first reason They that are carnal and unregenerate savour and affect only those things that are carnal and wicked but those that are regenerate savour and affect spiritual things Therefore its no wonder that only they that follow after holiness are admitted to the consolation of an immunity from condemnation and they which are carnal are excluded Vers. 6. For to bee carnally minded is death but to bee spiritually minded is life and peace Reason 2. The wisdome of carnal men which is the Governour of their counsels and actions and is carried only to those things which please the flesh whether in respect to God or eternal life and so it inclines to death But the wisdome of the spirit or an habit directing the actions of regenerate men is carried to those things which belong to spiritual life and peace Therefore it s no wonder if only they that are regenerate and spiritual are exempted from condemnation but not they that are carnal Vers. 7. Because the carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can bee Reason 3. Confirming the former the wisdome of the flesh it self the principal virtue of politick wits is enmity against God for it only seeks and cares for its own rejecting God neither is it subject to the Law of God or can bee subject for it cannot but subject to its own carnal ends the Soul Heaven God and all things and pursue after these so far as it thinks them conducible to carnal ends Therefore it s no wonder that carnal men are not freed from condemnation Vers. 8. So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God Reason 4. Whoever are unregenerate in the state of corrupt nature or the flesh cannot please God because they cannot but follow after those things which please them Therefore no wonder they are not freed from condemnation Vers. 9. But yee are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so bee that the Spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ hee is none of his Applying the character of justified persons out of the judgement of charity to the Romans hee also applies to the same Romans to whom hee writes the consolation which arises from freedome from condemnation hee prudently in the mean time bespeaks them that they would not indulge hypocrisie in any and hee gives four Reasons of this application The first Reason You are not subject to the dom●nion of the flesh you are not unregenerate but in a spiritual condition following the guidance of the Spirit Therefore there is no condemnation to you or which is the same to you belongs the foresaid consolation Reas. 2. Confirming the former the Spirit of God dwelling in you framing your hearts and lives unto holiness for unless I should thus judge of you I should think you did not belong unto Christ for hee that hath not the sanctifying Spirit of Christ is not yet a living member of Christ Therefore there is no condemnation unto
prevents those Objections which might bee moved about the rejection of the Jews The first Objection Some might say Paul whatsoever thou shalt produce about the rejection of the Jews seems to savour of that hatred wherewith thou hatest them This Objection hee prevents and rowles away the suspition with seven Reasons The first Reason I clear my self by an oath that I speak the truth sincerely without hatred or prejudice as it becomes a man which is in Christ acted and inspired by the Holy Ghost in what hee speaks which two witnesses of the truth I shall speak I attest with my own conscience Vers. 2. That I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart Reas. 2. Because my conscience bears mee witness and the Spirit of Christ who searcheth the hearts how sorrowful I am and how much I am troubled for the rejection of my Nation Vers. 3. For I could wish that my self were accursed from Christ for my Brethren my Kinsmen according to the flesh Reason 3. Because so great is my love towards the Iews that if it might bee I would redeem their ruine with the loss of my own salvation and truly I could wish to bee as an accursed thing separated from Christ out of an eager desire of their salvation and the glory of God if by any means the Jews might bee saved who are now separated from Christ. With so great zeal was hee carried out to the glory of God and the salvation of so many thousand souls that hee did not think his own salvation to bee compared with the salvation of so many Myriads Kinsmen Reason 4. Because I am bound to love them as my Kinsmen and Brethren according to the flesh which I do from my soul. Vers. 4. Who are Israelites to whom pertaineth the adoption and the glory and the covenants and the giving of the Law and the service of God and the promises Reason 5. Because I am bound to honour the people of the Iews because of the priviledges wherewith God hath dignified them Seven hee reckons up whereof the first is That the Israelites are pa●takers of the honor which the Name of Israel divinely imposed upon the Patriarch Iacob brought with it Secondly the Adoption into the people of God before other Nations Thirdly the presence of the glory of God in the Ark and other representations Fourthly that God had entred into Covenant with them Fiftly that the Law was especially given to them Sixthly that the Worship of God was set up amongst them Seventhly that to them in special the Promises were made Vers. 5. Whose are the Fathers and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came who is over all God blessed for ever Amen Reason 6. Because of their Progenitors Abraham Isaac and Iacob I think it fitting to magnifie them Reason 7. Because of this people Christ was born according to the flesh who in the unity of his person is true man and true God blessed for evermore and eternally to bee celebrated to whom wee all say Amen Which Lord whoever honors cannot maliciously detract from that people whereof according to the flesh hee came Therefore there is no reason that any man should suspect mee in those things which I speak of the rejection of my Nation or shall say Vers. 6. Not as though the Word of God hath taken none effect for they are not all Israel which are of Israel The second objection Some might say But if the Iewes bee accursed from Christ as thou teachest the Word of God is of no effect and the promise of Grace made to the Israelites is void when God said to Abraham I will bee thy God and the God of thy Seed Hee answers Although the Nation of the Jewes for the most part is rejected yet it cannot bee that the Word of God should fail or the promise should bee void The reasons of this answer are six The first reason Not all that were born of Israel the Patriarch according to the flesh are true and elect Israelites or the elect people Israel to whom the promise of Communion with God is made Therefore although many born of the Patriarch Israel are rejected it follows not that the Word of God or the Promise of God should fail because it is fulfilled in the Elect. Vers. 7. Neither because they are of the Seed of Abraham are they all children but in Isaac shall thy Seed bee called Reason 2. Neither doeth it follow because the Jews are the Seed of Abraham according to the flesh therefore they are all children or in a Scripture sense that promised Seed For so the Ishmaelites should bee reckoned the Seed of Abraham contrary to the Scripture which restrains the right of sons to Isaac and his family saying In Isaac shall thy Seed bee called Therefore although the Jews for the most part are rejected it does not follow that the Promise should fail Vers. 8. That is they which are the children of the flesh these are not the children of God but the children of the Promise are counted for the Seed Reason 3. The children of the flesh are to bee distinguished from the elect children of God For this God intended when Ishmael was secluded hee called Isaac the Seed of Abraham to wit the children of the flesh of Abraham not that they were all the elect children of God but only the children of the Promise or those whom God out of his grace did appoint to make children of the Faith of Abraham with Isaac were the children of God and the Seed to whom the promise was made Therefore although the Jews are rejected which are now alive for the most 〈◊〉 it does not follow that the promise is of no effect Vers. 9. For 〈◊〉 the word of promise At this time will I 〈◊〉 Sarah shall have a son Reason 4. Confirming the former The word of promise which is this At the very same time will I come and Sarah shall have a Son The word of promise I say shewing that Isaac not by any priviledge after the flesh but born by virtue of the Divine Promise proves that the Blessing was given not to the Seed after the flesh but to the elect Seed raised up by grace Therefore although the Jews are rejected for the most part it follows not that the promise is null because there remain Elect which are heirs of the Promise Vers. 10. And not only this but when Rebecca also had conceived by one even by our Father Isaac Reason 5. After this manner not only the former examples shew that all the children are not the true Seed to whom the promise is made but also more clearly the example of Rebecca who conceived Twins of the same Isaac our Father viz. Esau and Iacob whereof one only was truly a son to whom the Promise of the Blessing was made Therefore it follows that some Seed of Abraham may bee rejected and yet the Promise not bee void but abide firm and bee fulfilled in the Elect Seed Vers.
as hee please Therefore God may of the mass of man-kind fashion some to honour others to dishonour as hee please and by consequence unrighteousness is not to bee objected against God in the matter of Election and Reprobation Vers. 22. What if God willing to shew his wrath and to make his power known endured with much long-suffering the Vessels of wrath fitted to destruction The fourth Answer not onely freeing God from all unrighteousness in this his free choice of some and the reprobation of the rest but also shewing the wisdome and exact justice in this whole business that neither the Reprobate can complain of unrighteousness nor the Elect glory in their merits The force of the answer by way of question to touch the consciences of men the more sharply is urged thus What if God willing to shew his wrath or his vindicative justice and would make known his power in the execution of his justice which was most just hee hath indured with much patience the vessels of wrath by their own wickedness fitted to destruction before he would give up their deserved condemnation to execution What is here I say that common reason can reply against God what is here which any man may not commend in this Counsel of God Thus the matter was in the casting off the Jews whom God rejected not from the grace of the Gospel until they had refused the grace of Christ and abused much gentleness and lenity which Righteousness in the execution of the decree frees God from all unrighteousness in making the difference seeing that hee executes no otherwise than hee hath decreed Vers. 23. And that ●ee might make known the riches of his glory on the Vessels of mercy which hee had afore prepared unto glory A question yet depends therefore wee must repeat What if God that hee might render the riches of his glorious grace more illustrious towards the Vessels of mercy whom hee hath prepared unto glory will have his wrath and power manifested in the just destruction of the vessels of wrath what is there in this decree that any one can blame in the execution whereof there is so much Righteousness and wisdome and goodness manifested The second Part. Vers. 24. Even us whom hee hath called not of the Jewes onely but also of the Gentiles The second part of the Chapter wherein that hee might satisfie all concerning the calling of the Gentiles and the casting off the Iews and strengthen the Faith of the Romans that they might not bee offended with doubtful thoughts of Reprobation First hee applies the Doctrine of Election to the Christian Jews and Gentiles whose election and future glorification God had made manifest by their effectual calling to Faith in Christ. Vers. 25. As hee saith also in Hosea I will call them my people which were not my people and her beloved which was not beloved 26. And it shall come to pass that in the place where it was said unto them yee are not my people there shall they bee called the children of the living God Secondly hee proves the calling of the Gentiles to bee fore-told by the testimony of Hos. 2. ver 23. after this manner Those that were not my people I will effectually call or make them my people and they that were not indued with the gifts of my grace and love shall partake of the same Chap. 1.10 to this purpose The Gospel was preached in Greece Italy and other places among the Gentiles where they lived that were alienated from the Covenant of God that they might bee effectually called the children of the living God or the Elect should bee converted to the true Worship of God Vers. 27. Esaias also cryeth concerning Israel Though the number of the children of Israel bee as the sand of the Sea a remnant shall bee saved 28. For hee will finish the work and cut it short in righteousness because a short work will the Lord make upon the earth 29. And as Esaias said before Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed wee had been as Sodomah and been made like unto Gomorrah Thirdly hee proves the rejection of the Jews to bee fore-told by the testimony of Isai. 10.22 crying out on this manner Although the people of Israel according to the flesh after the promise of God should bee so multiplyed that they might bee compared with the sand which is on the Sea shore yet a remnant only i. e. a very few shall bee saved but a multitude shall bee rejected and perish ver 27. For God after much abuse of his lenity will in short time end his controversie with that people following the exactness of Justice because God determined quickly to execute and compleat his severity in casting off that people And Chap. 1. ver 9. the same Isaias foretold Except the Lord of Hosts had left to the people of Israel a very small remnant in which the promised blessings should bee fulfilled wee should have been wholly consumed and destroyed as Sodom and Gomorrah The third Part. Vers. 30. What shall wee say then that the Gentiles which followed not after righteousness have attained to righteousness even the righteousness which is of Faith The third part of the Chapter wherein the Apostle opens this as his scope to what went before that the experience of Believers among the Gentiles and of Justiciaries among the Jews might confirm his former Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not of Works The first part of the experience touching the Gentiles is this The Gentiles saith hee which did not follow after the righteousness of works attained true righteousness viz. that righteousness which is by Faith Therefore that is the only ground of Justification which is by Faith and not of Works Vers. 31. But Israel which followed after the law of righteousness hath not attained to the law of righteousness The other part of the experience is of the unbelieving Jews The Israelites saith hee followed after the law of righteousness that they might bee justified according to that but attained not that righteousness which is by works because righteousness by the Law is impossible Therefore Justification is not by Works or according to the Law but of Faith Vers. 32. Wherefore because they sought it not by Faith but as it were by the works of the Law for they stumbled at that stumbling stone That hee might further make use of this experience hee enquires after the cause why the Jews that followed after the Law did not attain to righteousness By way of answer hee assigns a threefold cause The first is because they did not seek after righteousness by Faith which is the only ground of Justification Another cause in as much as they sought after righteousness by works which way is impossible not only because no man could perfectly observe the Law but also because good works which the followers after legal righteousness without Faith perform are not worthy the name of good works they have only the
that by the necessity of his office and the Command as also the fear of Gods displeasure Vers. 17. For if I do this thing willingly I have a reward but if against my will a dispensation of the Gospel is committed unto mee My Preaching saith hee if it bee voluntary it shall have a reward but if against my will yet I must discharge it because of the dispensation committed unto mee by the Command of God and that would bee without the glory of my voluntary Preaching If I should unwillingly preach the Gospel as they do who exercise their Ministery not out of any love to God and desire of converting Souls but for filthy lucres sake or out of vain-glory Vers. 18. What is my reward then Verily that when I preach the Gospel I may make the Gospel of Christ without charge that I abuse not my power in the Gospel Now hee saith that hee hath matter whereof to boast against his Reproachers as a reward of his not receiving any stipend from them in as much as hee Preached the Gospel to the Corinthians without charge unto them whereunto hee sub-joyns another reason That if hee had exacted a maintenance there where his Reproachers endeavoured to bring an evil report upon him then hee had abused his liberty Vers. 19. For though I bee free from all men yet have I made my self servant unto all that I might gain the more Hee extends the moderating of his liberty to all sorts of things indifferent wherein hee served not himself but others that hee might gain them Vers. 20. And unto the Jews I became a Jew that I might gain the Jews to them that are under the Law as under the Law that I might gain them that are under the Law That hee explains particularly in three things First that hee did conform himself to the Jew bound as they thought under the Ceremonial Law observing the Mosaical Ceremonies for time and place as the matter required as if hee had been under the yoke of Ceremonies and that hee did by the opinion of the Council at Ierusalem which left to the Jews born under that yoke whereof the Apostle was a free use of Ceremonies for a time but in no wise to the Gentiles Act. 21. 21 25. Vers. 21. To them that are without Law as without Law being not without Law to God but under the Law to Christ that I might gain them that are without Law The second is That conforming himself to the Gentiles which were without Law hee laid aside the use of Ceremonies as one that was without Law but in the mean time hee intimates that hee did not understand the Moral or the law of love which is the perpetual Law of God and Christ from which hee could not bee freed but the Ceremonial Law from which indeed hee was freed that hee might freely for the advantage of the Gospel use Ceremonies or might abstain from using them Vers. 22. To the weak became I as weak that I might gain the weak I am made all things to all men that I might by all means save some The third That hee conformed himself to those that doubted of their liberty abstaining from things lawful as they did finally hee accommodates himself in all things indifferent to all men for three causes First That hee might gain as many as possible or at leastwise some Vers. 23. And this I do for the Gospels sake that I might bee partaker thereof with you The second cause That the Doctrine of the Gospel might bee better esteemed of amongst all by his moderate carriage The third cause That serving the advantages of the Gospel hee might bee saved being made partaker of the Gospel with other Believers Vers. 24. Know you not that they which run in a race run all but one receiveth the prize So run that you may obtain Hitherto hee hath insisted upon his own example as the Antecedent of the Argument the force of this example follows or the hortatory conclusion viz. That the Corinthians would labour after temperance and not so mind their meat as to eat with offence that which was offered unto Idols To this end hee shews them that they must run in their Christian Race in which all not one only as it was usual in their sports that run according to the Laws of God were to bee crowned Vers. 25. And every man that striveth for the Mastery is temperate in all things Now they do it to obtain a corruptible Crown but wee an incorruptible And how that comes to pass hee shews viz. If after the example of those that contended in those Noble Games whether running or combating usually celebrated neer unto Corinth they should not indulge themselves in gluttony and pleasures but temperate in all things bearing all things whereby the conquering Crown might bee won In their Isthmian or Corinthian Games the Runners and Wrestlers inured themselves to a most temperate diet by way of Preparation for the Race as now horses are fitted for running The Conquerours in these Games were crowned with Lawrel or Ivy or were honoured with some such like reward After the same manner the Apostle would have Christians most moderate in their using the things of this world and abstinent from whatsoever may stop their course or hinder them in their warfare and that they might obtain an incorruptible that is an Eternal Crown laid up in heaven for all those who strive lawfully and finish their course Hee adds three Hortatory Arguments Argum. 1. Because you Christian Wrestlers may expect a more noble Crown than that corruptible one of those that sport in those Gymnastick Games Vers. 26. I therefore run not as uncertainly so fight I not as one that beateth the ayr 27. But I keep under my body and bring it into subjection lest that by any means when I have preached to others I my self should bee a cast-away Argum. 2. From his own example running and acting the part of a Champion and smiting his adversary certainly and seriously I earnestly keep down the body of sin and the old man and the lusts of the flesh that they may bee slain and I compel my body properly so called by virtue of Spiritual Discipline to bee subject to my Spirit Therefore do you the same thing For so the Apostle nurtured his body that in labours and watchfulness and fastings it might hold out in its duty that it might not wax wanton against the Spirit and the body of sin as much as lay in him bee destroyed Lest by any means Argum. 3. From the end of it I keep under the body of sin or the old man lest if I should live otherwise than I advise others to live I should bee a cast-away or as an hypocrite should bee blotred out of the number of the Saints Therefore do you the same thing that I do and to the same end The Apostle here does not oppose Reprobate to one that is Elect but to one that is Approved for as the
edifying of the church 13. Wherefore let him that speaketh in an unknown tongue pray that hee may interpret Hee infers an exhortation to what was fore-spoken that they might bee zealous of the gift of Prophecie for the good of the Church and to that end that hee which hath the gift of an unknown tongue might pray that hee might have also the gift of interpreting that tongue Vers. 14. For if I pray in an unknown tongue my spirit prayeth but my understanding is unfruitful Reason 7. If any one speak unto God praying publikely in an unknown tongue hee doth ill because though hee that prayes understands yet the understanding of him that prays shall bee unfruitful to those that hear and do not understand and hee doth ill much more who speaks publikely to men in a tongue not understood Therefore the gift of Tongues is inferiour to that of Prophecie Vers. 15. What is it then I will pray with the Spirit and will pray with understanding also I will sing with the spirit and I will sing with the understanding also Hence hee draws forth his exhortation because amongst those who had the gift of strange tongues some had the faculty miraculously to reason in divine mysteries some had the faculty of praying others did sing in those strange tongues and others gave thanks these gifts were divers and for divers uses hee commands them so to use them all that they may bee understood by the hearers for if any one pray by the Spirit or from the gift of the Spirit what profit shall it bee to the Church unless hee pray also with understanding i. e. so that the hearers may understand him Vers. 16. Else when thou shalt bless with the Spirit how shall hee that occupieth the room of the unlearned say Amen at thy giving of thanks seeing hee understandeth not what thou sayest This hee confirms and adds the eighth Reason from the unprofitableness of it because when any one shall bless by the gift of the Spirit those that occupy the room of private men in the Church i. e. the rest of the hearers in the Assembly cannot joyn their prayers with him or say Amen unless hee speaks in a known tongue The matter is otherwise in Prophecying where all things are uttered in a known tongue Therefore c. Vers. 17. For thou verily givest thanks well but the other is not edified Hee gives a reason because the hearers in the Church neither understand nor are edified although that which is spoken is most excellent Vers. 18. I thank my God I speak with tongues more than you all 19. Yet in the Church I had rather speak five words with my understanding that by my voice I might teach others also than ten thousand words in an unknown tongue Reason 9. From his own example who was most inabled in the gift of Tongues and yet hee had rather speak a few words which might bee understood by the hearers than many in a tongue unknown to the people Therefore the gift of Prophecie excels that of Tongues Vers. 20. Brethren bee not children in understanding howbeit in malice bee yee children but in understanding bee men Reas. 10. Backed with a Precept because this abuse of the gift of strange Tongues being no way profitable to the hearers is a childish and foolish ostentation whereas it became them to bee children indeed in respect to innocency but not in respect to knowledge Vers. 21. In the Law it is written With men of other Tongues and other Lips will I speak unto this people and yet for all that will they not hear mee saith the Lord. 22. Wherefore Tongues are for a sign not to them that beleeve but to them that beleeve not but prophesying serveth not for them that beleeve not but for them which beleeve Reason 11. Out of Isa. 28.11 and Ier. 5.15 because to speak with Tongues not understood in the Church is set down of God as a threatning for a punishment of unbelief But Prophecie serves for the edification of Beleevers Therefore let unknown Tongues bee rejected out of the Church and let Prophecie bee preferred Vers. 23. If therefore the whole Church bee come together into one place and all speak with Tongues and there come in those that are unlearned or unbeleevers will they not say that yee are mad Reason 12. Taken from the avoiding of Scandal Unbeleevers or Professors of a private condition will bee estranged from the Faith and they will say that both the Preacher and the People are mad if the time appointed for publick worship bee spent in the hearing of an unknown Tongue Therefore the gift of Tongues is inferiour to the gift of Prophesying Vers. 24. But if all prophesie and there come in one that beleeveth not or one unlearned hee is convinced of all hee is judged of all 25. And thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down on his face hee will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth Reason 13. From the special fruit which would ensue If laying aside the use of strange Tongues all the Prophets for hee denies that all the faithful in the Church were Prophets Chap. 12.29 should prophesie i. e. should propose the Oracles of the Prophets and their Doctrine to the edification of the Church For in this case if any unbeleever should come in or a private Christian one of their hearers should hear them prophesying hee is convinced of sin and condemned according to the sentence of the Law by all that prophesie and the secret sins of his heart are manifest unto him which when the hearer sees and observes the Grace of God laid open by the Prophets in the Gospel hee falls upon his face adores God and seriously gives testimony of Gods presence with the Prophets in the Church Therefore Prophecie is more excellent than the gift of Tongues The second Part. Vers. 26. How is it then Brethren when yee come together every one of you hath a Psalm hath a Doctrine hath a Tongue hath a Revelation hath an Interpretation let all things bee done unto edifying The other part of the Chapter in which hee gives seven Precepts concerning good order The first is that if the Spirit shall suggest to any one of the Prophets any godly Psalm to the praise of God or any Doctrine or expression of a strange Tongue for the use of the Church or revelation of a thing to come or of a mystery not observed before or the interpretation of a strange Tongue or of the Scripture Hee commands that the exercise of all these bee fitted to the edification of the Church that all may go out of the Assembly better than they came Vers. 27. If any man speak in an unknown Tongue let it bee by two or at the most by three and that by course and let one interpret Vers. 28. But if there bee no Interpreter let him keep silence in the Church and let him speak to himself
the Gospel or the Covenant of Grace through Christ is the Ministring of the Spirit because according to and by that the Holy Ghost is administred whereby the hearer is quickened and strengthened to embrace that which is propounded Killeth Compar 2. Confirming the former The Ministery of the Law of Works or the written Letter onely convinceth of sin and killeth the sinner by pronouncing to him the sentence of death But the Ministery of the Gospel or grace in the New Covenant sheweth liberty from sin absolves the sinner and so brings him life Vers. 7. But if the ministration of death written and engraven on stones was glorious so that the children of Israel could not stedfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance which glory was to bee done away 8. How shall not the ministration of the Spirit rather bee glorious In Stones Compar 3. The Law of Works which onely administers death for according to this Covenant no man doth obtain righteousness or life was engraven in stones to signifie that the heart by it cannot bee mollified nor renewed but remaineth dead But the Gospel of Grace is writ in the fleshy Tables of the heart i. e. in hearts by the power of the holy Ghost quickened and mollified it is so imprinted that the virtue of divine Grace may bee discerned in all the expressions of the heart Glorious Compar 4. The Ministery of the Covenant of Works which is the Ministery of death to all that have sinned was truly glorious as it appeared in Moses for justice is glorious in punishing of sin But the Ministery of the New Covenant which is the Ministery of the Spirit quickening is more glorious for as in Moses pronouncing the curse of the Law against sinners his bodily glory did shine but O how much spiritual glory doth shine in the face of Christ setting sinners at liberty by his Grace Vers. 9. For if the ministration of condemnation bee glory much more doth the ministration of righteousness exceed in glory Compar 4. The Ministery of the Law or the Old Covenant of Works is a Ministery of condemnation for sin therefore indeed glorious But the Ministry of the Gospel or the New Covenant is the Ministery of the Righteousness of Christ and absolution from sin and therefore so much the more glorious by how much absolution and justification do excel condemnation and sin Because by the Covenant of Works wee are all accused of sin wee are all condemned and made obnoxious to death Therefore its Ministery is called the Ministery of sin condemnation and death Vers. 10. For even that which was made glorious had no glory in this respect by reason of the glery that excelleth Compar 5. The Ministery of the Law although it was glorious was exceedingly excelled by the glory of the Ministery of the Gospel or of Grace that it not deserves to bee called glorious but let it vanish rather in comparison as the glory of the Stars when the Sun appears is obscured But the Ministery of the Gospel is simply and by way of excellency glorious Vers. 11. For if that which was done away was glorious much more that which remaineth is glorious Compar 6. The Ministery of the Covenant of Works in respect to the annexed ceremonies hath onely the glory of temporal dispensation because so long it was to endure whilst men in the infancy of the Church convicted of sins and of their own impotency to deliver themselves were taught to fly unto Christ and as it were by the hand of a School-master might bee led to him which manner of instructing the Church being now at its full growth and continuing under the brightne●s of the revealed Gospel is abolished as unprofitable But the Ministery of the New Covenant hath permanent glory until the glorious coming of Christ. Vers. 12. Seeing then that wee have such hope wee use great plainness of speech 13. And not as Moses which put a veil over his face that th● children of Israel could not stedfastly look to the end of that which is abolished Compar 7. The Ministery of the New Covenant is plain and perspicuous so that the Ministers thereof can plainly and confidently preach the way of Salvation having Christ now revealed who in times past being to come was hoped for But the Ministery of the Law as it did appear in the type of the Mosaical ministration was obscure and wrapped up in types Put Hee follows this comparison to the end of the Chapter illustrating the latter part thereof to the last verse in this sense Moses the Minister of the Law turned from the Tabernacle from the Altar from the Ark and the Propitiatory speaking with his face veiled signified to the people and typically related the nature of the legal Covenant of Works and of its Ministery divided from Christ and did also figure out the blindness of the people under the legal Covenant because they did not perceive Christ to bee the end of the Law and temporal ceremonies now abolished Vers. 14. But their minds were blinded for until this day remaineth the same veil untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament which veil is done away in Christ. 15. But even unto this day when Moses is read the veil is upon their heart The Apostle observes that now blindness also may bee perceived in the Iews who while they read the Old Testament they see nothing besides the veil of ceremonies because the veil of ignorance and infidelity remaineth upon their minds which veil represented by the type of the external veil covering Moses his face by Christ is taken away from all the Faithful for righteousness life virtue and lastly all grace and glory is published and communicated to the Faithful in Christ But hitherto this veil doth remain upon the hearts of the unbelieving Iews Vers. 16. Nevertheless when it shall turn to the Lord the veil shall bee taken away Hee hath hope of the Iews Conversion when by the Grace of God the heart of the Israelites or the Doctrine of Moses now veiled should bee turned by them to God i. e. should bee brought according to this typical signification to Christ who is the end of the Law Then the veil of ignorance and of the darkness of ceremonies should bee taken from them as the veil was taken from the face of Moses when hee entred in unto God sitting betwixt the Cherubins chiefly that they might see God their Lord and their Saviour Christ and might acknowledge him to bee the true end of the whole Law Vers. 17. Now the Lord is that Spirit and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty The reason of this is given Because 1. Christ is the Spirit or the Soul of all ceremonies that a spiritual thing is signified by them 2. Christ is also the Spirit or the Soul of the Moral Law because hee fulfilled the Law in whom alone the perfect righteousness of the Law is to bee found 3. Christ
parents if hee would glory in the Nobility of his Race hee sprung from the more Noble Israelites because from the Tribe of Benjamin Benjamin was the Son of Rachel a woman free-born but some Tribes had their original from bond-maids If they strived for the Antiquity of Religion that they remained in the Covenant as true Abrahamites here also hee was equal to any one of them Vers. 23. Are they Ministers of Christ I speak as a fool I am more in labours more abundant in stripes above measure in prisons more frequent in deaths oft Sign 3. If they had striven for the dignity of office herein modestly as one compelled hee prefers himself before them in respect of his Apostleship and office granted to him extraordinarily I am greater saies hee because I am an Apostle In labours The fourth Sign of his dignity is sincerity in the administration of his office Of this his sincerity hee produces nine Testimonies First His labours or his diligence Secondly His sufferings in general which belonged to his health and bodily liberty and the dangers of his life Vers. 24. Of the Iews five times received I forty stripes save one Thirdly Hee produces his special sufferings from the Jews that hee was whipped by them five times according to the number of stripes inflicted upon malefactors by the Law for the Jews although they are cruel yet they would seem to contain themselves within the Law Deut. 25.3 Vers. 25. Thrice was I beaten with Rods once was I stoned thrice I suffered shipwrack a night and a day I have been in the deep Fourthly His sufferings from the Gentiles bear testimony that by their Lictours or Sergeants hee was beaten thrice with clubs and whips and once stoned Fifthly That hee thrice suffered shipwrack in one whereof after hee was twenty four hours tossed by the waters in the deep Sea hee was freed by the powerful hand of God Vers. 26. In journying often in perils of waters in perils of robbers in perils by mine own Country-men in perils by the heathen in perils in the City in perils in the Wilderness in perils in the Sea in perils amongst false Brethren The Sixth Testimony of his sincerity comprehends the labours of his journying and eight kinds of dangers which hee found in sundry places and from divers kinds of men Vers. 27. In weariness and painfulness in watchings often in hunger und thirst in fastings often in cold and nakedness The seventh hath five sorts of troubles with which while hee fulfilled the work of the Ministery hee was very often exercised wherein being wearied hee was instead of rest forced to take in hand new labours Vers. 28. Besides those things which are without that which commeth upon mee daily the care of all the Churches Eighthly His unconquerable patience in daily publick businesses a solicitous mind for all the Churches of Christ. Vers. 29. Who is weak and am I not weak who is offended and I burn not The ninth Testimony of his Sincerity is his sympathy with all that are afflicted and offended by any scandal Vers. 30. If I must needs glory I will glory of the things which concern my infirmities Hee retorts the Objection of his adversaries But all these things have made thee a contemptible and miserable man Hee answers that hee purposely determined to glory in these as the things which did more commend his sincerity than the prosperous affairs of the false Apostle adorned them Vers. 31. The God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which is blessed for ever more knoweth that I lye not 32. In Damascus the Governour under Are●as the King kept the City with a Garison desirous to appreh●nd mee 33. And thorough a window in a basket was I let down by the wall and escaped his hands Lastly Because these things which hee had mentioned may seem incredible viz. that one should bee able to bear so many afflictions premising an oath touching the truth as well of those things that were said already as of those that were to bee spoken hee mentions the special danger of his life out of which there was no apparent escape unless God had kept him safe for the good of the Church and opened a way by his special providence for his escape concerning which Act. 9.23 CHAP. XII HEE proceeds in his holy glorying There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee explains the heavenly vision presented to him together with the events of the same To vers 11. In the second hee proves that the Corinthians ought to have freed him from this necessity of glorying or defended him To vers 19. In the third hee produces the causes of his troubles Vers. 1. It is not expedient for mee doubtless to glory I will come to visions and revelations of the Lord. The Preface being Premised that hee doth not glory for his own sake because that was not expedient for him For this is here somewhat emphatical for mee but for the Corinthians and the Churches sake whom it concerned to preserve the authority of the Apostle intire hee commeth to extraordinary revelations one of which hee begins historically to declare Vers. 2. I knew a man in Christ above fourteen years ago whether in the body I cannot tell or whether out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth such an one caught up to the third heaven I knew a man Hee discovers the excellency of this revelation and his modesty by nine Arguments Argum. 1. That hee scarcely dare publish his name in this business but lest hee may seem to arrogate much to himself hee is compelled to speak of himself in a third person In Christ Argum. 2. That although this revelation may seem to extol him above the common condition of men yet hee doth not affect any other excellence than to bee in Christ or in the number of Beleevers who have renounced themselves that they may glory in Christ alone Fourteen Argum. 3. That silently with himself hee had suppressed the mention of this glorious revelation whole fourteen years never intending to recite it unless hee was compelled by the importunity of his Emulators who endeavoured to diminish his Apostolical authority to the damage of the Gospel and the Church Caught up Argum. 4. That hee was caught up to the upper heaven above all the Stars to the place of the blessed Spirits where God chiefly manifests his glory Whether in the body Argum. 5. That hee is ignorant whether hee was caught up by the local translation of his body into Heaven or whether his soul extraordinarily was separated for that time and lifted up into Heaven concerning the other notwithstanding I am certain Vers. 3. And I knew such a man whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth 4. Hee was caught up into paradise and heard unspeakable words which it is not lawful for a man to utter Into Paradise Argum. 6. That hee certainly knew the matter done and that hee was caught up
and Gentiles become one seed i. e. one Christ mystical by faith Lastly vers 17. Hee concludes that this Covenant confirmed by a sacrifice after the manner of a Will and established by God with relation unto Christ could not bee made void or of none effect by the Law which was given four hundred and thirty years after The Promise Hee includes a reason why this Covenant could not bee changed by the Law viz. because the Covenant is Gods absolute promise which as it were obligeth God promising that he cannot change it But the Law hath the nature of a commandement which bindes not the Legislators but the subject For the Legislator can change Laws but hee cannot change absolute promises Therefore the Law after so many years made cannot disanull the Covenant or the promise absolutely made to Abraham Vers. 18. For if the inheritance bee of the Law it is no more of promise but God gave it to Abraham by promise Lest any one should object that the Law and the Promise may be conjoyned Hee answers and adds Arg. 16. If the inheritance be of the Law or works then not of the free promise for the one of these takes away the other but the inheritance is freely given to Abraham by a free promise Therefore not of the Law and consequently because the inheritance or life eternal is not of the Law or any works neither shall justification bee by the Law but only by grace through faith Vers. 19. Wherefore then serveth the Law It was added because of transgressions till the seed should come to whom the promise was made and it was ordained by Angels in the hand of a Mediator 20. Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one but God is one Hee moves a question concerning the use of the Law inquiring to what purpose the Law was made Hee answers and adds Arg. 17. The Law is given that transgressions might bee manifest and held in as it were with some bridle untill Christ should come who is the seed to whom the promise of blessing is made Therefore seeing that onely the manifestation of sin cometh by the Law justification is not by the Law but by Christ or by faith And it was necessary to the manifestation of sin that the Law should bee renewed because the Jews sinned and yet did neither acknowledge the power of sin nor their own impotency to obey the Law Therefore the Law was urged until that compleat seed arose made up of Jews and Gentiles united the partition Wall between the Jews and the Gentiles being thrown down into one body with their head Christ by Faith Ordained Argum. 18. A terrible manner of giving the Law by the Ministery of Angels and by the hand of a Messenger or Mediator it was a sign rather of discord than of peace and concord betwixt God and men Because a Mediatour or a Messenger useth not to bee onely of one party seeing no man disagreeth with himself but of parties whereof one hath made a breach with the other But God is one and alwaies constant to himself Therefore the dis-agreeing party is man and the manner of making the Law did both signifie and argue that This is the force of the Argument which being granted reconciliation is not made but discord betwixt God and man remaineth by that Justification is not But the Law being given reconciliation is not made but discord betwixt God and the people remaineth as it appears from the manner of giving the Law Therefore Justification is not by the Law Vers. 21. Is the Law then against the Promises of God God forbid For if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily Righteousness should have been by the Law Hee propounds another question whether the Law is contrary to the Promise shewing to men the contrary waies of justifying Hee answers by denying and adds Argum. 19. If a Law had been given which could communicate life to sinners and strength for the performing those things that were commanded surely Justification had been by the Law wee may assume But such a Law is neither given to sinners nor can bee Rom. 8.3 Therefore Justification is not by the Law Vers. 22. But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the Promise by Faith of Iesus Christ might bee given to them that beleeve Argum. 20. The Law of God and the whole Scripture hath concluded all men and whatsoever commeth from man under sin and renders all men guilty of sin that now nothing else can remain to man but Faith in Jesus Christ by which the Promise of free blessing belongs to all that beleeve Therefore Justification is not by the Law but by Faith For if all are sinners no man by Works no man but by Faith can bee saved Vers. 23. But before Faith came wee were kept under the Law shut unto the Faith which should afterwards bee revealed Argum. 21. From the end and use of external Discipline before the comming of Christ in the Church of the Jews who were daily urged under a curse to perform Obedience to the Law according to the Covenant They were daily instructed by the yoak and observance of Ceremonies imposed touching due Obedience to the commands of their impotency to obey the Law and of their manifold sins they were also daily taught that they should flie to the Altar to sacrifice to washings that by this Discipline they might acknowledge themselves to be sinners and not to bee freed but by the oblation of the Lamb of God that was to come and by expiation in his blood or by Faith in the promised Messias From hence is the Argument wee Jews before the comming of Christ or before the full revelation of the Doctrine of Faith come were kept under the external Discipline of the Legal Covenant as under a Garrison circumscribed with boundaries that wee might not by any way turn our selves from the curse unless unto that Faith alone which was to bee revealed i. e to seek Righteousness and a blessing in the promised Messias Therefore wee are so far from Justification by the Law that on the otherside by the Discipline of the Law the ancient Church was shut up in streights and compelled to look unto Justification alone by Faith But the Discipline of the Law is abused by many to a contrary end yet this was the end of the Legal Discipline instituted by God Vers. 24. Wherefore the Law was our School-Master to bring us unto Christ that wee might bee justified by Faith Argum. 22. Illustrating and confirming the former The Law or the external form of the Legal Covenant like a School-Master sent to us by God did instruct our childish Church and lead it by the hand to Christ that wee might bee justified by Faith Therefore wee are so far from Justification by the Law that on the other side unless wee bee justified by Faith the Law is frustrated in its end For what else did the Law do by propounding moral Precepts
than that as in a Glass it might shew to the Church how far men are distant from Righteousness what else did Legal Promises and Threatnings speak if thou canst not perform these conditions if now thou dost shamefully violate all those thou art undone and utterly lost unless thou takest another course for salvation Lastly To the same end did the Ceremonies tend For what purpose were Sacrifices and Washings but that they should bee exercised in the daily meditation of their filthinesses and deserved damnation and should behold in the image of an innocent Creature killed before their eyes the necessity of their Redemption by a Messias who is that immaculate Lamb of God and beleeving in him to Justification Vers. 25. But after that Faith is come wee are no longer under a School-Master Argum. 23. From the abolition of the external Discipline of the Legal Covenant which hee intimates vers 23. when hee determined that the use of his Discipline was before the time of the Gospel and until the time of Faith and vers 24. when hee compared this Discipline to a School-Master whose office is onely appointed for our childish age The Argument is propounded After Christ was manifested and the time of the Gospel the time of manifesting the free Covenant ●or the time of Faith is now come wee are no more under the pedagogie of the Legal Covenant or the external Discipline wherewith the Church was exercised onely until the comming of Christ i. e. until and not beyond the time of Faith Therefore wee are so far from being justified by the Law that the whole of the external Legal Discipline is now abolished under the Gospel Hee doth not say that the Moral Law is abolished but hee saith that that pedagogical manner of urging the Legal Covenant together with the appendages of Ceremonies is abolished For although the faithful are freed from the Law as a Covenant or as it imports the Covenant of Works yet they are not freed from the Law commanding or as it is the rule of manners but rather they are obliged with a nearer and sweeter tye by the Covenant of Grace to obey the Law Vers. 26. For yee are all the Children of God by Faith in Christ Iesus Hee applies the former Argument to the faithful Galatians and proves them not to bee under the Legal Pedagogie but to bee exempted from the yoak of Levitical Ceremonies by three Reasons Reason 1. All yee faithful Galatians are in the number of Children i. e. of those that are grown to full age by reason of your Faith in Christ now manifested Therefore yee are not under the childish Pedagogie of Ceremonies or Legal Discipline Vers. 27. For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. Reason 2. Confirming the former Now Circumcision being made void yee by the Sacrament of Baptism have so put on Christ the Son of God and in the presence of God you carry the name and person of Christ that yee may bee esteemed to bee in him and not in your selves Therefore yee being the Children of God grown up are exempted from the Pedagogie of the Law Vers. 28. There is neither Iew nor Greek there is neither Bond nor Free there is neither Male no Female for yee are all one in Christ Iesus Reason 3. Preventing a tacit Objection and shewing that the Gentiles have no need of Legal Ceremonies that by those they may bee joyned after the manner of Proselytes with the People of God Because in the business of Faith there is no difference of Nation whether thou bee Jew or Greek nor of condition whether thou bee a Servant or Free neither whether thou bee the Male or the Female For all you whosoever are indued with true Faith do constitute and as it were make up one person in Christ Therefore yee Galatians are no less children grown up than wee Apostles or some other faithful Jews Therefore yee are exempted by Christ from the childish Pedagogie of Ceremonies Vers. 29. And if yee bee Christs then are yee Abrahams seed and heirs according to the Promise Hee prevents another tacit Objection intimating as if they could not bee the seed of Abraham any otherwise than by a being united to the People of God by Circumcision and the observation of Ceremonies and withall hee brings Argument 24. to prove that Justification is not by the Law but by Faith which may bee thus formed They that are united by Faith to Christ and so made that blessed seed of Abraham and heirs according to the Promise and not according to the Law or Covenant of Works they are not justified by the Works of the Law but by the Faith of the Promise But yee are united to Christ and made Abrahams seed according to the Promise and not Heirs hereafter according to the Law Therefore yee are not justified by the Worke of the Law but through the Faith of the Promise CHAP. IV. THere are three parts of the Chapter In the first the Apostle doth exhort them to renounce the yoak of Ceremonies to vers 12. In the second there is a courteous invitation moving them to return to a sound mind and to the Doctrine which hee had taught them in the beginning concerning Righteousness by Faith to vers 21. In the third hee confirms the whole disputation and illustrates it by a signal allegory to the end As to the first part of the Chapter bee converts his disputation into an Exhortation to the Galatians that they renouncing the servile yoak of the Law should carry themselves as the Free-men of Christ. The hortatory Proposition is this yee ought to renounce the yoak of Ceremonies The Arguments for confirmation are ten Vers. 1. Now I say that the Heir as long as hee is a Child differeth nothing from a servant though hee bee Lord of all 2. But is under Tutors and Governours until the time appointed of the Father 3. Even so wee when wee were children were in bondage under the elements of the world Argum. 1. From the servile and childish external condition in which the Church before the comming of Christ was constituted which hee illustrates by this similitude As an Heir so long as hee is an Infant or under age although hee bee Lord of all his Fathers goods according to the Law yet in respect of possession and exercise of the Law or as to external liberty hee differeth nothing from a servant vers 1. but remaineth in subjection to Tutors and Guardians until the time appointed by his Father vers 2 so the Church of God whereof wee are members as to its external state under torrene figures and worldly elements or the rudiments of legal Ceremonies as an Abe●edarian sticking in the rudiments of A B C did undergo a hard bondage until Christ. Hence the Argument Childish and servile is the yoak of Legal Ceremonies onely appointed to the Infant and under-age-Church before the comming of Christ Therefore yee Galatians who are under the Gospel
times past you have allowed the causes of my afflictions neither have yee contemned mee whilst I was exercised with temptations in my flesh but yee have received mee as an Angel as bearing the person of Christ Therefore now do both the same thing and return unto the same mind Vers. 15. Where is then the blessedness you speak of for I bear you record that if it had been possible yee would have plucked out your own eyes and have given them to mee Argum. 6. In times past you did account your selves blessed in my Ministery Therefore if you would bee blessed it behoveth you to adhere constantly to my Doctrine Hee minds them the more earnestly of this blessedness by an interrogation because they seemed to have forgotten it Record Argum. 7. In time past that you might every way gratifie mee yee spared not your most dear injoyments Therefore return yee and by my example cast off the Legal yoak If you will do that which is acceptable unto mee Vers. 16. Am I therefore become your enemy because I tell you the Truth Argum. 8. So far as yee are offended by this sharper reprehension yee ought to esteem mee an enemy whom therefore you would not imitate that on the otherside because I speak the Truth for your good yee are bound to make more of mee and my Exhortation Vers. 17. They zealously affect you but not well yea they would exclude you that you might affect them Argum. 9. From his unlikeness to the seducers The false Apostles saith hee who earnestly contend that you may bee brought under and submit to the Legal yoak they little regard you and with a preposterous zeal are carried out towards you and in very deed they go about to destroy you desiring to exclude you from mee and my Doctrine and consequently from the society of Christ that yee might follow them and become their Disciples Therefore return yee to my Doctrine Vers. 18. But it is good alwaies to bee zealously affected in a good thing and not onely when I am present with you Argum. 10. My zeal for you is good and in a good thing and constant when I am absent as well as present The zealousie of my Emulators concerning you is perverse and counterfeit Therefore return yee to my Doctrine Vers. 19. My little children of whom I travel in birth again until Christ bee formed in you Argum. 11. The Image of Christ consisting in the Knowledge and true Faith concerning Christ is deformed in you by your falling to the yoak of the Law and Justification by Works Therefore return yee to my Doctrine I travel in birth I am no less seriously anxious concerning your repentance nor less solicitously do I labour concerning the reparation of your Faith and the Image of Christ in you than one labouring in birth for the bringing forth of a child or than I myself did labour for the conversion of you to the Faith Therefore return yee to my Doctrine Vers. 20. I desire to bee present with you now and to change my voice for I stand in doubt of you Hee confirms this perplext anxiety of minde by a sign to wit from his desire of seeing their faces and instructing them and accommodating himself to their necessity Lastly from the cause of this anxiety to wit that hee was uncertain and dubious about them whether gently or severely or what course hee should take with them For how deeply this errour was rooted in them how many infected how every one was affected in his business unless hee had been present it could not easily bee known to him The Third Part. Vers. 21. Tell mee yee that desire to bee under the Law do yee not bear the Law The Third Part of the Chapter follows in which hee confirms and illustrates the whole disputation from the history of the condition of Abrahams family in which by a typical Allegory God hath prefigured the whole matter now disputed The summe of which is this God in times past prefigured that they who seek justification by Works or a Covenant of works are in a servile miserable and cursed condition and at length shall bee cast from the face of God and society of the Saints they that seek justification by grace through faith in Christ are free Sons of the family of God and blessed and at length shall certainly come to an inheritance of life eternal why therefore are you so foolish O Galatians that yee willingly affect this servile miserable and cursed way of justification sought by the works of the Law For this end the Apostle in this last part of the Chapter First of all provokes them to the Law or to the books of Moses that the whole question may bee decided vers 21. Furthermore he propounds a typical history of the condition of Abrahams family ver 22 23. Thirdly he propounds the type and opens the mystery vers 24 25 26. Fourthly hee confirms the exposition out of Isaiah vers 27. Fifthly hee applies the allegory or type to the truly faithfull Christians and hee comforts himself and the rest against the persecution of the false brethren strangers to the grace of God vers 28 29 30 31. Tell That which appertaines to the first hee reproves the Galatians of a double errour The first errour is that willingly they had affected to bee under the Law i. e. under the legal Covenant or the Covenant of works whose condition is this that thou binde thy self to the perfect fulfilling the Law and God deals with thee according to the Covenant of the Law that is hee saves thee if thou offend in nothing but doth curse and destroy thee if thou become guilty in the least tittle of that which is written in the book of the Law or art found in the least to turn aside from the Rule For otherwise all the faithful are under the Law as a rule and direction of life and they are to endeavour obedience to it sincerely in all things through grace administred by Christ. The second errour is That they were very ignorant both of the sense and scope of the Law or of books that were written by Moses Vers. 22. For it is written that Abraham had two Sons the one by a bond-maid the other by a free-woman 23. But hee who was of the bond-woman was born after the flesh but hee of the free-woman was by promise In the second place hee propounds from Gen. 16. 21. the typical history of Abrahams family wherein there were two wives that were mothers Hagar and Sarah The conditions of the mothers twofold Hagar was a servant Sarah free-born Two Sons Ishmael a servant of his mother a servant Isaac free of his mother free-born a twofold principle of their Nativity viz. The power of nature according to the flesh eminent in the nativity of Ishmael of a young woman and the vertue of the promise or divine supernatural vertue in the nativity of Isaac of Sarah an old woman and conspicuously barren From
hence arose the unlike disposition of Ishmael and Isaac so great a discord that Ishmael persecuted Isaac and the dissimilitude of both their conditions in the upshot Ishmael is cast out of the family but Isaac obtains the Inheritance by which type God did figure out the divers conditions of the visible Church sprung from divers principles and causes For 1. As there are two wives Hagar and Sarah so there are two Covenants of God with men the Covenant of works or legal the Covenant of grace or the Evangelical 2. Both the wives had off-spring so both the Covenants had their worshippers and professors as born of the Covenant 3. As Hagar a young woman according to nature and the flesh brought forth but Sarah barren and an old woman according to the power of the divine promise So the Law or Covenant of works hath the ordinary strength of nature or the powers of free will for its foundation But the Gospel or Covenant of grace hath for its foundation the special grace of God 4. As Ishmael was of a servile and malicious disposition that hee would persecute his brother but Isaac indued with an ingenuous and godly disposition patiently indured persecution so how many justiciaries so ever seeking righteousness by works are of a servile and perverse disposition and they do vexe the true faithful of God But the truly faithful and Sons of the promise worship God with an ingenuous piety and do suffer persecutions as it behoves them Vers. 24. Which things are an allegory for these are the two Covenants the one from the Mount Sinai which gendereth to bondage which is Hagar In the third place the Apostle expounds the signification of the type as much as belongs to the present purpose and first hee shews that the two Wives are figures of the two Covenants whereof one is the Covenant of Works represented by Hagar The other is the Covenant Grace or faith represented by Sarah As to Hagar and the Covenant of Works the Apostle teacheth First That Covenant had its rise from Mount Sinai because in that mountain the Law was given and this Covenant was established betwixt God and his people Secondly hee teaches that this Covenant generated an off-spring to bondage or did render the Disciples and professours of it onely servants i. e. Mercenary worshippers of God who do nothing but the external work and brought to that either by fear or hope of a reward and they heing ignorant that this was the end of the Law that being sensible of our sins we might flye to Christ do abuse the Law being meer hypocrites seeking by it righteousness which they never obtain but being not freed remain in their sins Vers. 25. For this Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia and answereth to Ierusalem which now is and is in bondage with her children Hee shews the convenience of the exposition 1. From this because Mount Sinai situated in Arabia and far removed from the promised Land was called by the Arabians and Caldeans Hagar by the special providence of God 2. That it had affinity with the earthly Ierusalem as it was in the Apostles time or with the Jewish Synagogue which is said to bee in bondage with her children because shee was tenacious of the Covenant of works and continued with her Disciples in a servile condition strangers to the Redeemer and free deliverance by him Vers. 26. But Ierusalem which is above is free which is the mother of us all Hee expounds what is figured by Sarah the free-woman viz. The Covenant of Faith or Grace whereof the Church of the truly faithful is very tenacious which is the heavenly Ierusalem that is above created by God and studious of heavenly things the mother of all the faithful called both of Iews and Gentiles Vers. 27. For it is written Rejoyce thou barren that bearest not break forth and cry thou that travellest not for the desolate hath many more Children than she which hath an husband In the fourth place The Apostle proves the Exposition give● out of Isaiah 54.1 where the Church of the faithful the upper Ierusalem our Mother is represented by Sarah barren as if shee had been a Widow And the Synagogue of the Jews unfaithful and tenacious of the Covenant of Works is represented by fruitful Hagar dwelling with her Husband But the Church of the faithful before the comming of Christ was compared as it were to a barren Widow because her Husband the Covenant of Grace was unknown almost to all except a few who dispersed hither and thither did not make a company neither did Grace appear but lay hid like an Husband absent or dead under the covers of Ceremonies The Synagogue of unbeleeving Justiciaries is compared to a fruitful Wife dwelling with her Husband viz. the Covenant of Works conspicuous in the external dispensation of the Law And it is fore-told by the Prophet that it should come to pass that the Church of the faithful made fruitful by the Promises of God shall bring forth more children under the Gospel than the Synagogue hath brought Servants under the Law and therefore is commanded to rejoyce and praise God Vers. 28. Now wee Brethren as Isaac was are the children of Promise In the last place hee applies this typical history and partly admonishes the truly faithful Christians and partly comforts them by four Arguments Argum. 1. That wee are redeemed children justified by Faith and truly free born and regenerated by virtue of Evangelical Promises to the similitude of Isaac who is elder than those other Citizens of the heavenly Ierusalem that were after him Vers. 29. But as then hee hat was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit Argum. 2. Of consolation That suffering persecution by false Brethren Patrons of free will and Righteousness by Works were finde nothing unlike to Isaacs condition For when in Abrahams Family hee who is onely begotten by the ordinary strength of nature persecuted him who is begotten by a divine and spiritual way what wonder then if the same now bee usual amongst us Vers. 30. Nevertheless what saith the Scripture cast out the bond-woman and her Son for the Son of the bond-woman shall not bee heir with the Son of the free-woman Argum. 3. That the persecutors of the faithful and Patrons of Righteousness by Works seeing they are not set at liberty by the Son are to bee cast out of the society of the Saints and the inheritance of life eternal as it was figured by the sentence of God concerning the casting Ishmael with his Mother out of the family and excluding him from the inheritance that was to bee enjoyed with Isaac Vers. 31. So then Brethren wee are not children of the bond-woman but of the free Argum. 4. From the comparing of this verse with the former that seeing wee are not children of the bond-woman but of the free certainly wee shall obtain an inheritance of life eternal which Argument with the former as it
hath the virtue of consolation so also of admonition that they would not adhere to their errour in seeking Righteousness by the Works of the Law and moreover of an exhortation that they hold fast Righteousness by Grace through Faith in Christ unless they would exclude themselves from the inheritance CHAP. V. THere are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee goes on to urge that shaking off the yoak of the Covenant of ●orks and Legal Ceremonies they may defend their Christian Liberty to vers 13. In the other hee gives Precepts concerning the right use of Christian Liberty to the end Vers. 1. Stand fast therefore in the Liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free and bee not entangled again with the yoak of bondage The Proposition to bee confirmed in the former part is plainly proposed under the form of an Exhortation Yee must stand fast in the Christian Liberty which is the scope of the former Doctrine and disputation and it is drawn from that as the conclusion The Arguments for the proving this Proposition are thirteen Argum. 1. Liberty from the servile yoak of the Legal Covenant or Ceremonies thereof is obtained by the blood of Christ Therefore you must stand stedfast in that Vers. 2. Behold I Paul say unto you that if yee bee circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing Argum. 2. Is established by an Apostolical obtestation If you bee circumcised according to the Ceremonial Law now abolished and add but this one Ceremony to free Justification by Christ Christ whom you declare by this fact an imperfect Saviour will not advantage you to salvation Therefore you must stand fast For if they could not be justified except they joyned Circumcision together with the Grace of Christ making Christ the half of their Righteousness they destroy the whole making him an imperfect Saviour they made him none at all Vers. 3. For I testifie again to every man that is circumcised that hee is a debter to do the whole Law Argum. 3. Is established by the same obtestation The Covenant of Works being abrogated and the Ceremonial Law now abolished if any one returns to Circumcision the Sacrament of initiation to this Legal Covenant hee by this means makes himself a debtor to the whole Law and consequently obliges himself to the curse unless hee perfectly with his whole strength fulfil the Law which is the condition of the Covenant of Works The matter is clear Because although Circumcision by the purpose of God to the faithful expecting the Messias until Christ was a Sacrament of the Righteousness of Faith as Abraham was circumcised and although in the time of toleration till the clear manifestation of Christian Liberty to them that were born Jews Circumcision was accounted amongst things indifferent so Timothy born of a Jewish Mother is circumcised and Titus is not yet to all the Jews and Proselytes of the Gentiles seeking Righteousness by Works or by the Law Circumcision is made part of the Legal Righteousness or of the Obedience of the Covenant of Works yea and the Sacrament of that Covenant And after this manner the false Apostles did urge Circumcision amongst the Galatians to whom religious Circumcision was every way unlawful No wonder then if hee said Christ will not profit them if they bee circumcised because they that were circumcised by that very fact did imbrace the Covenant of Works Vers. 4. Christ is become of no effect unto you whosoever of you are justified by the Law yee are fallen from Grace Argum. 4. Confirming the former whosoever of you return to Circumcision and Legal Customes abolished seeking Justification by the Law ye● by that same fact renounce Christ and the Covenant of Grace because the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace in Christ do mutually exclude one another neither can they consist For if Justification is by Works it is not by Grace and on the contrary Therefore yee must stand in your liberty except you would be separated from Grace and Christ. Vers. 5. For wee through the Spirit wait for the hope of Righteousness by Faith Argum. 5. Wee Jews and Apostles that are circumcised after our conversion to the faith being taught by the Spirit renounce the Covenant of works and legal customes and do expect life eternal as the fruit of justification by Faith you that are Gentiles by nature cannot otherwise be justified or saved either by the Law or Circumcision Therefore you must stand fast in your Christian liberty Vers. 6. For in Iesus Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but faith which worketh by love Argum. 6. Confirming the former In the Kingdome of Christ or the new state of the Church under the Covenant of Grace the difference of circumcision and uncircumcision is taken away that neither helps nor hinders any thing to justification Therefore you must stand fast in your liberty from the yoak of the Law But faith Arg. 7. True faith alone or that which worketh by love without respect to circumcision or uncircumcision availeth to the act of justification Therefore in this way of justification yee that are in the Kingdome of Christ must necessarily stand fast Vers. 7. Yee did run well who did hinder you that yee should not obey the truth Argum. 8. Not long since yee ran well in the course of the truth of this Doctrine neither can any account bee given of your falling from the truth Therefore you must as yet go forward and stand fast in that course Vers. 8. This perswasion cometh not of him that calleth you Argum. 9. By answering an Objection Although perhaps yee are perswaded that yee continue in a right way yet that credulity and perswasion to depart from that which you have received from mee is not from God calling you but some other way viz. from impostors from your inconstancy and from the Devil Therefore this perswasion is to bee rejected and yee must stand fast in the liberty Vers. 9. A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump Argum. 10. By answering an Objection Although it may seem that wee mu●● not contend about the introduction of some few customes for peace sake and that the Jews might the more easily bee won yet this little legal leaven or Judaism doth corrupt the whole sincerity of the Doctrine of faith Therefore yee must have a care of that and stand fast in the liberty Vers. 10. I have confidence in you through the Lord that you will bee none otherwise minded but hee that troubleth you shall bear his judgement whosoever he bee Argum. 11. Although the danger of your errour and inconstancy make mee suspect the event yet love and the constancy of Divine grace commands mee to hope better things which whilst I behold I am perswaded that you will return into that opinion with mee concerning the casting away the yoak of the Law and defending your liberty by faith in Christ Therefore it is meet to satisfie my expectation Troubleth Argum. 12. Your seducers who trouble your
to these vices Therefore hee includes himself in this Exhortation with the rest that the Galatians may more easily receive this Exhortation CHAP. VI. HEE proceeds to prescribe Christian duties to the Galatians much more excellent than those Legal Ceremonies and more worthy of their practice There are two parts of the Chapter in the first hee adds to the former Precepts two other to vers 11. In the other hee compares himself with the false Apostles and deservedly prefers himself before them lest the Galatians by the admiration of those should bee deceived Vers. 1. Brethren if a man bee overtaken in a fault yee which are spiritual restore such a one in the Spirit of meekness considering thy self lest thou also bee tempted The first Precept concerning dealing gently with the Brethren who fall through infirmity that they bee restored in the Spirit of meekness by those who seem more confirmed in the Spirit but hee speaks especially to the Presbyters upon whom it lyes by duty to recall those again to repentance that are fallen into scandalls by ecclesiastical censures and to restore again the dis-joynted members of the Church into their place Hee commandeth those to use me●kness towards them that through infirmity are fallen back and not to deal severely with them which without doubt belongs to those who have the power of punishing sinners There are six reasons of the Precept Reason 1. Because the same may happen through a temptation to any one even to the spiritual themselves Vers. 2. Bear yee one anothers burdens and so fulfil the Law of Christ. Reason 2. Because seeing that it may bee presupposed that sinning Brethren are sorrowful and grieved for their backslidings and sins Therefore it is fitting that sinners which are dejected and cast down in all moderation and sympathy should bee succoured and relieved under their burden And so Reason 3. Because the Law of Love renewed by Christ requireth that from us Vers. 3. For if a man think himself to bee something when hee is nothing hee deceiveth himself Reason 4. Hee that despiseth others that backslide through infirmity and thinks himself more strong deceiveth himself is amongst the weakest yea hee is a man of no strength at all Vers. 4. But let every man prove his own Works and then shall hee have rejoycing in himself alone and not in another Reason 5. Propounded after the manner of a Precept making for the quelling of self admiration and shunning the casting contempt upon a backsliden Brother Because if every one would try himself and examine his actions according to the rule of the divine Law no man would arrogate to himself the praise of holiness from other mens sins but onely from their good actions if hee found any of them worthy of praise This was said against them who never cease to aggravate another mans sin that they may seem more holy themselves Vers. 5. For every man shall bear his own burden Reason 6. Confirming the reason fore-going Because every one shall give an account of his Works to God not compared with others but considered with himself Therefore it is not safe to despise those that are fallen into sin and to bee lifted up against them because in like manner thou art not fallen thy self Vers. 6. Let him that is taught in the Word communicate unto him that teacheth in all good things The second Precept belongeth to the people concerning liberality to bee exercised towards the Ministers of the Word that wee communicate coporal goods to them who communicate unto us by their office spiritual things and give themselves to this Work Vers. 7. Bee not deceived God is not mocked for whatsoever a man soweth that shall hee also reap Hee gives six reasons of the Precept which are all extended to liberality in general and do confirm the Precept of Liberality to Pastors the more strongly Reas. 1. Supposing these who are ingrateful towards their Teachers to bee also niggardly and slow to every good Work because the excuses of niggardliness are the delusions of covetous men with which God will not suffer them to delude themselves Whatsoever Reas. 2. Because every one shall receive fruit according to his deeds hee that hath onely received and refuseth to bee thankful shall bee rewarded according to his ingratitude and on the contrary Vers. 8. For hee that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption But hee that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting Hee expounds this Argument in particular Hee that bestows his goods or substance and his actions to the fulfilling the lusts of the flesh hee shall of his doing reap corruption But hee that on the contrary layeth out himself and all for the glory of God and promoting the works of the Spirit hee shall bee graciously rewarded with eternal life Vers. 9. As let us not bee weary in well-doing for in due season wee shall reap if wee faint not Reas. 3. Because whatsoever may bee said concerning liberality shewed by any one already as if enough was done by him yet hee must know that good things past are not sufficient unless wee persevere in well-doing Due Reas. 4. Illustrating and confirming the former Because an harvest of rewards shall certainly in due time bee to those alone that persevere in well-doing and faint not or bee weary Vers. 10. As wee have therefore opportunity let us do good unto all men especially unto them who are of the houshold of faith Reas. 5. Because the time of exercising well-doing is short therefore opportunity is to bee observed whilst life and abilities last and to reward them when they are dying is somewhat late Especially Reas. 6. The common bond of nature requireth that wee should bee liberal to all that are in want The bond of brother-hood requires charity towards the houshold of faith therefore how much more doth the bond of a flock towards their Pastor require that hee bee nourished by the milk and the fleece of the flock The Second Part. Vers. 11 ●ee see how large a letter I have written unto you with mine own hand The second part of the Chapter follows wherein after his Doctrine compared with the errour of his Adversaries now hee compares the Teacher with the Teachers i. e. Himself with the Seducers of the Galatians and that for their own edification who admired those glorious Doctors their Seducers Before hee compares himself hee premises the commendation of his sincere love towards the Galatians that hee writ this so large an Epistle with his own hand without the help of any Scribe as a most ample testimony of his solicitousness for their salvation Vers. 12. As many as desire to make a fair shew in the flesh they constrain you to bee circumcised onely lest they should suffer persecution for the Cross of Christ. Hee begins his comparison and proves the hypocrisie of his Emulators by four signs A fair shew Sign 1. That they study nothing more than to carry
serve our neighbours Vers. 22. Wives submit your selves unto your own Husbands as unto the Lord. Now follow the oeconomical Precepts 1 That Wives should bee in subjection to their own Husbands chastly sincerely and in lawful things The reasons whereof are four As unto the Lord Reason 1. Because Christ commanded that the Wife should bee subject to her Husband and accounts of that subjection as if shee yeelded obedience to himself and in like manner looks upon the Wives rebellion against her Husband as rebellion against himself Vers. 23. For the Husband is the Head of the Wife even as Christ is the Head of the Church and hee is the Saviour of the body Reas. 2. Because the Husband is in honour and authority over the Wife as the head is over the body Therefore it is meet that the Wife ●●ould bee in subjection to him As Christ Reas. 3. Because 〈◊〉 will have the Husbands authority over the Wife to ●ee a similitude of Christs authority over the Church And hee is Reas. 4. The same similitude is illustrated As Christ is the Head of the Church for its good so the Husband is the Head of the Wife for her good whom hee ought in all things to defend ch●rish and comfort And as it is expedient for the Church to bee obedient to Christ so it is for the Wife to bee obedient to her Husband Vers. 24. Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the Wives bee to their own Husbands in every thing From these reasons hee inferrs the conclusion that it is necessary for the Wife to bee obedient to her Husband in all things which hinder not her due subjection unto God and Christ. Vers. 25. Husbands love your Wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it Prec 2. Which is given to men that they should love their Wives the reasons thereof are five As Reas. 1. From the example of Christs love towards the Church which love the Apostle commends from these four marks 1 That Christ out of his love offered himself for the Church which was then lost Vers. 26. That hee might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word 2 That hee loved his Church and offered himself for it to the end that hee might sanctifie it or of a prophane and impure Church make it a holy one Washing 3 That Christ doth effectually cleanse his Church by virtue of his blood and of his free promise which hee applies to us by the ordinary means of Baptism and of the Word as by instruments of his Spirit ordained for the confirmation of Faith and the communication of virtue Vers. 27. That hee might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinckle nor any such thing but that it should bee holy and without blemish 4 That hee hath loved his Church for this end that hee might at length present it glorious in Heaven without any mark or token either of sin or misery and hee will ever prosecute this his work till hee hath brought it to pass Vers. 28. So ought men to love their Wives as their own bodies hee that loveth his Wife loveth himself Reas. 2. Of the Precept given to men touching loving their Wives Because Wives are the bodies of their own Husbands according to that Law of God They two shall bee one flesh Hee that loveth Reas. 3. Because hee which loveth his Wife loveth himself and performs the office of love unto himself for that love of a mans own Wife doth every way redound to the Husbands good Vers. 29. For no man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it even as the Lord the Church Reas. 4. Because it is as unnatural to a Wife and good Husband not to love his Wife as it is to hate his own flesh and it is as agreeable to reason to favour and make much of his Wife as it is to regard his own flesh As Hee confirms and illustrates this reason by the example of Christ which hee wills us alwaies to have in our eye as the most perfect example of love Vers. 30. For wee are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Hee proves that Christ loved us as his own flesh and that it was not possible for him to hate us but hee was as it were constrained out of love to maintain and cherish us because wee are members of his body flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone that is wee are as nearly joyned to him as Eve was to Adam for what Eve owed to Adam in the flesh wee owe to Christ in the regeneration of our spirit and much more In the forming of Eve Adam lost onely one rib but in the reforming of the Church Christ lost his life Onely the matter of Eve was from Adam but the Church hath from Christ its natural formation and spiritual reformation in respect of both the body and soul of every member Vers. 31. For this cause shall a man leave his Father and Mother and shall bee joyned unto his Wife and they two shall bee one flesh Reas. 5. Where hee proves both that the Church owes its beginning to Christ and that Husbands ought to love their Wives even from the institution of marriage which requires that by reason of the streight knot between Husband and Wife a man shall leave Father and Mother and bee joyned to his Wife and they two shall bee united into one flesh by the bond of wedlock by which they now have a mutual right to and power over one another the words of this institution have a typical sense for God in that saying Gen. 2.23 Thou art flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone intended to represent the union of Christ and the Church and to shew that wee are bone of Christs bone and flesh of Christs flesh that is that wee are most nearly united to Christ because in the speech of Adam to Eve it was prefigured that Christ as hee was one flesh with us and made us one flesh with himself by a spiritual wedlock did as it were leave his own Father laying aside after a manner that glory which hee had with the Father abasing himself when hee was in the form of God and taking upon him the form of a servant Also it was prefigured that Christ should leave Mary his Mother that by dying hee might buy the Church to bee his Spouse with which hee would bee one flesh Vers. 32. This is a great mystery but I speak concerning Christ and the Church The Apostle viewing this last thing not the carnal wedlock but the union of Christ with the Church calls it a great mystery and lest any one should otherwise understand his saying hee signifies in express words that hee doth not speak this of the mystery touching the carnal marriage of Husband and Wife but concerning the spiritual conjunction of Christ and the Church which is made by virtue of
back of Epaphroditus the Philippians Pastor who had brought mony for Pauls use and for a time had ministred to him in prison Hee commends him in five honourable Epithites or Titles 1 His Brother 2 His companion in labour 3 Fellow-souldier 4 The faithful messenger of the Philippians And 5 The publick Minister to the Apostles necessity in prison Vers. 26. For hee longed after you all and was full of heaviness because that yee had heard that hee had been sick Hee adds four causes of sending him back which would serve also for his commendation 1 The Pastoral love of Epaphroditus towards the Philippians 2 His trouble for the Philippians grief because hee knew they would hear certainly of his sickness but nothing of his recovery Vers. 27. For indeed hee was sick nigh unto death but God had mercy on him and not on him onely but on mee also lest I should have sorrow upon sorrow Hee confirms the tydings of Epaphroditus his sickness and commends the special grace of God shewn to Epaphroditus and himself whereby God was careful to restore Epaphroditus to health lest the Apostle should bee too much afflicted Vers. 28. I sent him therefore the more carefully that when yee see him again yee may rejoyce and that I may bee the less sorrowful 3 The joy of the Philippians was another cause 4 The ease of the Apostles sickness who for the Philippians sake would deprive himself of Epaphroditus his service otherwise very necessary to him rather than hee would suffer them any longer to want their Minister Vers. 29. Receive him therefore in the Lord with all gladness and hold such in reputation Hence hee wisheth them to receive him according to his worth and to esteem of him and such Ministers as Jewels and treasures Vers. 30. Because for the work of Christ hee was nigh unto death not regarding his life to supply your lack of service towards mee Hee adds four Reasons of his desire 1. Because hee had carried on the work of Christ in comforting the Apostle 2. Because hee had ministred to the Apostle with danger of his life 3. Because hee preferred the service hee undertook before his own life being more heedless of his own health than of taking care of the Apostles business 4. Because hee had supplied the Philippians absence who as they ought did earnestly desire to serve the Apostles necessities CHAP. III. IN this Chapter the Apostle exhorts them joyfully to relye upon Christ alone or onely upon his Righteousness Grace and Vertue as abundantly sufficient for holiness and happiness that they would beware of false Apostles and follow the examples of the Apostles and faithful Ministers of Christ. There are three members of the first Exhortation contained in the three first verses 1. That they would rejoyce in Christ alone 2. That they would take heed to themselves of false Iewish teachers 3. That they would imitate the example of the Apostles and faithful who do wholly adhere unto Christ. The Arguments of this Exhortation are nine all which do urge that cleaving unto Christ they should follow the example of the Apostles Vers. 1. Finally my brethren rejoyce in the Lord to write the same things to you to mee indeed is not grievous ●ut for you it is safe The first member of the Exhortation That they would rejoyce in Christ that is that with joy they would rest upon his Righteousness and Vertue nor seek for any other helps to their salvation besides him This is propounded as the end of the whole former Doctrine and as a brief of all Christian duties The same things Argum. 1. By prevention of an Objection This Exhortation is so profitable for you that it is not at all troublesome to me to inculcate repeat it often to you nor should it bee tedious to you to hear the same often Therefore cleave unto Christ earnestly imbracing this Doctrine of his sufficiency Vers. 2. Beware of Dogs beware of evil workers beware of the concision The second member of the Exhortation is That they would beware of false Apostles who endeavouring after an impossibility would joyn righteousness by the works and ceremonies of the Law with free justification by faith Dogs Argum. 2. These false Apostles that act the part of Jews confounding the righteousness of the Law with the righteousness of faith and so teaching that wee must not rest only on Christs righteousness are not holy worshippers of God as they pretend but unclean Dogs barking at the pure Doctrine of the Gospel and defaming the sincere servants of Christ with their revilings They are not upholders of good works but evill workers they are not worthy to have the honour of Circumcision but they shall bee called authors of Concision and perdition because that by their false doctrine they do ruine and separate both themselves and others from Christ and of these you must take heed by reason of the imminent danger Therefore you must relye only upon Christs Grace and Vertue Vers. 3. For wee are the Circumcision which worship God in the Spirit and rejoyce in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the flesh The third member of the Exhortation is wherein hee proposeth the example of the Apostles and faithful who do wholly cleave unto Christ first in general then more particularly further repeating the Exhortation unto vers 18. Wee are Argum. 3. Onely wee Apostles and other beleevers who rest upon Christs righteousness are to bee honoured with the title of truly Circumcised viz. Those 1. who worship God with an internal and spiritual affection of the heart And 2. who glory in Jesus Christ as the only and sufficient Saviour 3. Who do not place our confidence in Ceremonies in carnal Circumcision in any external priviledges or any other such Helps Therefore you should as wee do onely rest upon the Grace and Vertue of Christ if yee will bee accounted truly Circumcised Vers. 4. Though I might also have confidence in the flesh if any other man thinketh that hee hath whereof hee may trust in the flesh I more Argum. 4. From the particular example of the Apostle preventing an Objection I Paul who have more cause to glory in fleshly or external priviledges than any false Apostles can have do nevertheless renouncing all confidence in priviledges or my works only relye on Christ and endeavour through Christ alone to make progress in holiness unto salvation Therefore you ought to acquiesce with mee in the Grace and Vertue of Christ alone Vers. 5. Circumcised the eighth day of the flock of Israel of the Tribe of Benjamin an Hebrew of the Hebrews as touching the Law a Pharisee 6. Concerning zeal persecuting the Church touching the righteousness which is in the Law blameless Hee clearly explaines this example by reckoning up eight causes of carnal boasting vers 5. 6. 1. I am circumcised and so brought into the number of Gods people 2. I was circumcised the eighth day exactly according to the Law not as a
poverty by idleness but by calamity lest they waxe sloathful in the actions of any vertue but go couragiously forward to do th●se things which are decent and excellent Vers. 14. And if any man obey not our word by this Epistle note that man and have no company with him that hee may bee ashamed Exhort 7. That they note the refractory and brand them that obey not the Apostolical doctrine that is that they excommunicate those which is manifest from this that hee commands that they have no society with him that is thus noted which is the consequent of excommunication and for this end commands that the excommunicate person segregated from the society of others being ashamed might enter into himself and repent Vers. 15. Yet count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother Hee expounds the Commandement that they bee not cruel toward the excommunicated person or esteem him as an enemy but to shew their hatred to his sin that the excommunicated person may understand that under that severe correction there is brotherly love and so hee may bee reduced into favour with God and the Church by repentance Vers. 16. Now the Lord of peace himself give you peace alwayes by all means The Lord bee wi●h you all The Epilogue remains whereof there are three Articles In the first hee praies the God of Peace so to direct their waies and bridle the turbulent spirits of the disobedient that they may injoy peace towards God and amongst themselves and with those that are without which work did require a divine hand Furthermore hee praies that God by his gracious presence would bee alwaies present with them all Vers. 17. The salutation of Paul with my own hand which is the token in every Epistle so I write Artic. 2. Contains the obsignation of the Epistle by the subscription of Paul himself who for the most part did use the help of Scribes in writing the body of every Epistle but hee subscribed the conclusion with his own hand that his genuine Epistles might bee known from the adulterate and counterfeit which were carryed about in the name of Paul and by Impostors thrust upon the Churches Vers. 18. The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with you all Amen Artic. 3. Contains the Apostolical vote set down by his own hand wherein hee wishes the eternal influence of the Grace of Christ as the fountain of all good things to them for their sanctification and salvation The First Epistle of Paul to TIMOTHY Analytically expounded The Contents THe Apostle departing from Ephesus into Macedonia did not think it sufficient to commit the Church of Ephesus now publickly founded to the care of ordinary Pastors but desired the Evangelist Timothy that hee would tarry there a while to establish the Church in all things that appertained to Doctrine and Discipline which work being accomplished the Apostle intended to call him back and imploy him for the confirming of other Churches as appears in the end of the Epistle and other places But because Timothy was young as yet and might seem not sufficiently furnished with authority for the restraining of unruly men which possibly might make insurrection against him in this Epistle hee doth not onely admonish him concerning his office as one that hee knew very well instructed already but all the Churches and their Governours are informed touching the Authority of Timothy and their own duties The special parts of the Epistle are six according to the number of the Chapters In the first Chapter hee laies down the manner of his preaching the Law and the Gospel duly and with profit In the second Chapter hee sets down how Pastors and Hearers Men and Women ought to behave themselves in their publick prayers and Ecclesiastical meetings In the third Chapter hee treats of the right institution of Pastors and Deacons and concerning the Heads of Doctrine whereof they were to take special care In the fourth Chapter hee speaks of avoiding the Apostacy that was comming and touching the diligence which ought to bee used by a faithful Pastor to that end In the fifth Chapter hee treats of private admonitions to bee performed by the Elders and how they ought to carry themselves toward Widows and other Elders In the sixth Chapter hee delivers Precepts to Timothy wherein hee is instructed what hee ought to teach concerning Christian duties as well of private persons as of Ministers CHAP. I. BEside● the Inscription which is contained in the two first verses There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee enjoyns Timothy to observe the right method and course of teaching and to suppress the perverse Teachers of the Law to vers 12. In the second hee asserts his Apostleship that with authority it might bee avouched by Timothy as hee had commanded to vers 18. In the third hee encourages Timothy to carry himself stoutly in the discharge of his Ministery Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the Commandement of God our Saviour and Lord Iesus Christ which is our hope The Inscription of the Epistle wherein 1 That hee might win authority to this Epistle Paul affirms that in writing of it hee fulfilled his Apostolical Embassage for Christ 2 Hee confirms his Apostleship by a special command from God the Father whom hee calls the Saviour because hee is the Author of our Salvation who had called him to the office of an Apostle and used him in the execution of his office about the present matter hee was in hand with 3 Hee confirms his Apostleship from the command of our Lord Jesus Christ whom hee calls our hope because the Author the meritorious cause the object and the finisher of our hope Vers. 2. Unto Timothy my own Son in the Faith Grace Mercy and Peace from God our Father and Iesus Christ our Lord. Timothy to whom this Epistle is written is called the Son of the Apostle not simply but in 〈◊〉 Faith because hee was his Disciple and as the Son represents the Father in face and manners so Timothy resembled Paul in Doctrine and an holy conversation In his salutation hee wishes to Timothy 1 Grace i. e. the renovation of the Image of God from the fountain of Gods free good will 2 Mercy i. e. free remission of sins because hee knew that the holy young man affected with the sense of his sins with many tears did daily prostrate himself before God 3 Peace i. e. Quietness of conscience and joy from the apprehension of divine favour and finally a compleat felicity in the life to come which is comprehended under peace Vers. 3. As I besought thee to abide still at Ephesus when I went into Macedonia that thou mightest charge some that they teach no other Doctrine The first part of the Chapter follows touching the right manner of teaching wherein after hee had confirmed to Timothy not an ordinary Episcopacy in the Church of Ephesus but a special temporary and extraordinary Commission hee repeats the command
given him about restraining certain perverse Zelots of the Law and admonishing them that they teach no Doctrine diverse from that which is Apostolical In prescribing of which the Apostle chuses to use words of beseeching and intreating rather than to speak imperiously that hee might supply the stead of Timothy who could scarcely bee loosed from the most sweet society of Paul not for a time even by the intreaties of the Apostle Vers. 4. Neither give he●d to fables and endless genealogies which minister questions rather than godly edifying which is in Faith so do For example Hee commands that Fables and Jewish Genealogies bee avoided i. e. newly devised opinions or traditions besides the holy Scriptures and curious speculations about unnecessary things such are very many Talmudical and Cabali●tical such also are to bee found amongst the School-men Endless The Reasons of his admonition are six Reas. 1. Because those vain speculations are idle and endless whereof there is no use Which rather Reas. 2. Because they beget curious and contentious questions nor do they promote the knowledge of piety which lead unto God for edification proceeds not from probable and dubious questions but by the solid beleeving of the Word of God Vers. 5. Now the end of the Commandement is charity out of a pure heart and a good conscience and of Faith unfeigned Reas. 3. Because those Teachers that are wholly exercised in discussing of smaller matters which may bee fetched from the Law though they seem to bee carried with a Zeal to the Law of Moses yet they refer not the Law to its true end or to the proper scope of the whole Scripture which is that men by the Law being led to the knowledge of sin and deserved misery may seriously betake themselves to Christ by Faith unfeigned Charity This Faith hee describes from a three-fold effect 1 That true Faith in the propitia●ory blood of Christ renders the conscience good or peaceable and quiet 2 That the conscience being now pacified Faith will not suffer that the heart bee any longer delighted in evil but rather endeavours after purity and that it may bee purged from all evil affections 3 That true Faith is not idle in that which is good but stirs up a man diligently to labour in the obedience of every Precept by love to God and men Vers. 6. From which some having sw●rved have turned aside unto vain jangling Reas. 4. Confirming the former Because it is approved by the experience of some that unless Teachers abstain from their vain curiosities and intend more earnestly the edification of m●n in Faith and Charity they cannot but bee drawn away from the simplicity of Doctrine into vain babling for where there is vanity there verity is not Vers. 7. Desiring to bee Teachers of the Law understanding neither what they say nor whereof they affirm Reas. 5. Because it is also known by experience that those ambitious Teachers while they affect a new kind of teaching and seek after applause from their knowledge of the Law betrayed their ignorance whilst they understood not the questions whereof nor the Arguments from which they disputed Therefore avoiding idle speculations Timothy was to take care that in the Apostolick Doctrine or the manner of teaching it no innovation was made by any one Vers. 8. But wee know that the Law is good if a man use it lawfully Hee answers an Objection Therefore are thou against the divine Law who so earnestly rebukest the Teacher● of it The Apostle answers that hee did not at all detract from the Law reproving those that abuse it but rather commends and teaches the right use of the Law Vers. 9. Knowing this that the Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient for the ungodly and for sinners for unholy and prophane for murderers of Fathers and murderers of Mothers for man-slayers 10. For Whore-mongers for them that defile themselves with man-●ind for men-stealers for lyars for perjur●● persons and if there ●ee any other thing that is contrary to sound Doctrine 11. According to the glorious Gospel of the blessed God which was committed to my trust Hee confirms the Answer with three Reasons The first is from the end of the Law or the Legal Covenant so far as it is opposed to the Gospel the Law is established not that the faithful justified by Faith in Christ should bee justified by the Law as the perverse Teachers of the Law intended but that the unrighteous and unbeleevers as are all wicked and prophane persons condemned by the Law might acknowledge their unrighteousness and deserved condemnation repent and flye unto Christ Therefore the Apostles Doctrine detracts nothing from the Law According Reas. 2. All sins which are forbidden by the Law are also prohibited by the sound Doctrine of the glorious Gospel and all the duties which are commanded by the Law are earnestly urged and taught in the Gospel so much as concerns the performance of our obedience unto God the demonstration of our thankfulness and the proof of the sincerity of Faith in the fruits of holiness Therefore the Doctrine of the Gospel detracts nothing from the Law Committed Reas. 3. I an Apostle to whom the Gospel of God in himself most blessed and the Author of all blessings towards us is committed do no less urge this wholesome doctrine of Sanctification and all good works which in the Law are commanded than any Zelot of the Law although not to the same end Therefore the Apostolical Doctrine nothing at all detracts from the Law The Second Part. Vers. 12. And I thank Iesus Christ our Lord who hath enabled ●ee for that hee coun●ed mee faithful putting mee into the Ministery The second part of the Chapter follows which contains the vindication of the authority of his Apostleship against those that denied it or in consideration of his fore-acted life did lessen it and that with thanksgiving for the Grace that was bestowed upon him Seven Reasons are laid down of his thanksgiving All which prove that his Apostleship is in no wise to bee disparaged Reas. 1. Christ by the grace of his Spirit hath strengthened mee an infirm man and heretofore a slave to sin the Devil and the world appointed an Apostle by him that as a leader I should with an invincible courage stand up for the defence of the Gospel against all the insul●●tions of the world the flesh ●nd the Devil Therefore thanks are to bee given for my confirmation in the Apostleship so little reason is there that any thing should bee detracted Accounted mee faithful Reas. 2. Christ hath endued mee being appointed an Apostle with the gifts of his Spirit and hath so far honoured mee that hee made and accounted mee his faithful friend who would commit to mee the Gospel to bee dispensed to the souls of his Elect Therefore my authority is not to bee disparaged Hath appointed Reas. 3. Christ the Lord hath placed mee in the Minist●ry i. e. in
the things is without descent or genealogy without all Kindred and naturall or earthly consanguinity Nor end Mark 9. As Melchisedec in his historical and typical state So Christ is truly eternal without beginning of daies or end of life wherefore they seem to bee over curious and bold who dare to search after and define even out of the Scripture the Genealogy of Melchisedec which God hath purposely concealed Made like That this comparison may bee known to bee solid the Apostle shews that all the parts of this description are to bee conceived typically and in that assimilation wherein hee represented the Son of God as Priest eternal Vers. 4. Now consider how great this man was unto whom even the Patriarch Abraham gave the tenth of the spoils Mark 10. As Abraham although Conqueror of so many Kings and a Patriarch or a most noble Prince of the Fathers in paying tithes of the spoils yet hee acknowledgeth Melchisedec superiour to himself viz. wherein Melchisedec was a type of Christ So hee necessarily acknowledged Christ represented in that type much above himself Vers. 5. And verily they that are of the Sons of Levi who receive the office of the Priest-hood have a commandement to take tithes of the people according to the Law that is of their Brethren though they come out of the loyns of Abraham The Apostle proves this a mark of Christs excellency from this That Levi upon this very account is above his Brethren because according to the command of God hee received tithes of his Brethren Therefore for the same reason Melchisedec i● superior to Abraham who of his own accord offering tithes acknowledged himself inferiour to Melchisedec Vers. 6. But hee whose descent is not counted from them received tithes of Abraham and blessed him that had the Promises Mark 11. Melchisedec who is not reckoned amongst the stock of the Levites did not onely receive tithes of Abraham but also as superior blessed Abraham Abraham himself I say who in the name of all the faithful first received the Promises Therefore Christ whose type and shadow hee onely was is much more excellent than both Abraham and all the Levitical Priests which sprung of him Vers. 7. And without all contradiction the less is blessed of the better Hee proves this to bee a mark of Excellency from this that it is without controversie that the less is blessed by the greater which is not to bee understood of the blessing of Praise whereby wee bless God not of the blessing of Charity whereby wee pray for good things one to another but of the blessing of Power whereby God effectually blesseth his or of Authority whether ordinary whereby Pastors and Parents by office commonly or extraordinary whereby the Embassadors of God extraordinary by special commission apply the blessing of God to any one by prayer In this kind hee that blesseth as such an one is greater than hee that is blessed Vers. 8. And here men that die receive tithes ● but there hee receiveth them of whom it is witnessed that hee liveth Mark 12. Melchisedec although neither in a Physical state nor Civil yet in a typical and scriptural state received tithes as ever living as the Image of the immortal God But the Levites receive tithes as mortal men Therefore Christ represented by Melchisedec who by nature is God truly immortal compared with the Levites is far more excellent than they Vers. 9. And as I may so say Levi also who receiveth tithes payed tithes in Abraham 10. For hee was yet in the loyns of his Father when Melchisedec met him Mark 13. Melchisedec as a type of Christ and by consequence Christ himself the truth represented in Melchisedec received tithes not onely of Abraham but also of Levi who was in the loyns of Abraham according to the account of Natural Generation when Abraham offered tithes to Melchisedec and to Christ represented by him Therefore the true Melchisedec Christ both in himself and compared with the Levites is far more excellent than they It is true that Christ was to spring out of the seed of Abraham when Abraham paid tithes to Melchisedec but hee was not to spring of him according to the account of the eternal Priest-hood of a Mediatour whereof here hee speaks nor according to the account of his Natural Generation nor of his person simply but onely according to his humane Nature the matter of his flesh wherein although Christ was to administer his Priest-hood yet not as meer man as the Levites but as God-man the God of Abraham and Mediatour betwixt God and Abraham in which respect Christ is not contained in Abraham but is opposed in the type of Melchisedec both to Abraham and all others sprung from him as above them and far more excellent Therefore the Argument strongly holds Vers. 11. If therefore perfection were by the Levitical Priest-hood for under it the people received the Law what further need was there that another Priest should rise after the order of Melchisedec and not bee called after the order of Aaron Wee have spoken of the Excellency of Christ Person The second part of the Chapter follows wherein the excellency of Christs Priest-hood is proved to bee above the Levitical Priest-hood and that by seventeen Arguments Argum. 1. The perfection or effectual consummation of the worshipers of God as to the expiation of sin Justification Sanctification and Eternal life could not bee obtained by the Levitical Priest-hood Therefore the Levitical Priest-hood is imperfect nor so excellent as the Priest-hood of Christ. What further Argum. 2. Confirming the former If perfection could have been obtained by the Levitical Priest-hood there was no need that another more excellent Priest should arise viz. Christ after the order of Melchisedec not after the order of Aaron Hee leaves the Assumption to us to gather which is this But there was a necessity that a more excellent Priest should arise as it appears from Psalm 110. Therefore perfection by the Levitical Priest-hood cannot bee obtained but by the Priest-hood of Christ and therefore it is more excellent The people A Reason confirming the Major Proposition The Law was given under this Priest-hood and the people were exercised in its Discipline and whatsoever force the Law or the Legal Covenant had all this is ascribed by those that are zealous of the Law that the worshipers by this Priesthood might bee perfected but in vain Therefore if by this Priest-hood or the Law or by the Legal Covenant joyned with it the worshipers might obtain perfection there had been no need of a more excellent Priest-hood and another Law But seeing that perfection by this Priest-hood could not be obtained there was need of another more excellent Vers. 12. For the Priest-hood being changed there is made of necessity a change also of the Law Argum. 3. Proving withall that Christ should arise a Priest after the order of Melchisedéc not denominated after the order of Aaron nor obnoxious to the Levitical Law The
changeableness and the changing of the Levitical Priest-hood hath drawn along with it the mutability and change of the Levitical Law or Legal Covenant joyned with it that another Priesthood might succeed and another Law or another unchangeable Covenant Therefore the changeable Levitical Priesthood is not so excellent as that of Melchisedec or the immutable Priesthood of Christ. Vers. 13. For hee of whom these things are spoken pertaineth to another tribe of which no man gave attendance at the Altar 14. For it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Juda of which tribe Moses spake nothing concerning Priesthood Argum. 4. Proving withall the Levitical Law was to bee changed with the Priesthood Christ● concerning whom these things are said in Psalm 110. belongs to another Tribe and that the Principal and most worthy viz. Iudah from whence it appears that our Lord sprang whereof none attends at the Altar none hath any command from Moses●o ●o exercise the Levitical Priesthood Therefore Christs Priesthood being introduced the Levitical is to bee done away with the Levitical Ceremonial Law and by consequence the Priesthood of Christ which sprang of the Principal Tribe is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 15. And it is yet far more evident For that after the similitude of Melchisedec there ariseth another Priest Arg. 5. From the words of Psalm 110. proving the same that before Christ is another Priest from the Levitical between whom and Melchisedec his type there is a similitude Therefore is follows that the Priesthood of Christ doth not hang upon the Levitical Law and also because it is Melchisede●ian it is far more excellent than the Levitical Priesthood Vers. 16. Who is made not after the Law of a carnal commandement but after the power of an endless life Argum. 6. Christ is made a Priest not according to the Law which gave weak and carnal commandements concerning bodily Ceremonies as the Levitical Priests but after the power and virtue of an immortal or indissoluble life whereby Christ himself lives for ever and can as the author of life effectually bestow eternal life Therefore Christs Priesthood is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 17. For hee testifieth Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Hee confirms this Argument from Psalm 110. wherein the Father declares his Son a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec and by consequence declares the virtue of Christs Priesthood to bee sufficient unto eternal life Vers. 18. For there is verily a disanulling of the Commandement going before for the weakness and unprofitableness thereof Argum. 7. Taken from the foresaid Psalm The Law or Legal Covenant with the Ceremonial Precepts and the whole Levitical Priesthood joyned to that Covenant by reason of the weakness and unprofitableness of it in it self for the expiation of sins and the justification of men and the bestowing of eternal life is abolished by the introduction of an eternal Priesthood viz. of Christ Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 19. For the Law made nothing perfect but the bringing in of a better hope did by the which wee draw nigh unto God Argum. 8. Confirming the former The Law or Legal Covenant under the Levitical Priesthood although it was a School-master unto Christ yet in it self it made nothing perfect it justified sanctified saved none But the Priesthood of Christ that better hope or Gospel that good prefigured and hoped for by the faithful under the Law being now introduced in the room of the Levitical Priesthood or Legal Covenant This I say brings perfection to the people of God and puts them into good hopes of life Therefore the Priesthood of Christ c. By the which Argum. 9. By the Priesthood of Christ or by that hope better than the Law or Levitical Priesthood wee that are at a great distance from God by nature all of us come near unto God to the Throne of his Grace which was the priviledge of the Priests onely or rather of the Chief Priest under the Legal types Therefore the Priesthood of Christ c. Vers. 20. And in as much as not without an oath hee was made Priest 21. For those Priests were made without an oath but this with an oath by him that said unto him the Lord sware and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Argum. 10. The Levitical Priests without an oath by a Law changeable at the pleasure of God the Law-giver were made Priests But Christ as appears from Psal. 110. is declared a Priest for ever by the oath of God the Father Therefore the Priesthood of Christ c. Vers. 22. By so much was Iesus made a surety of a better Testament Argum. 11. Christ in his Priesthood is the Surety of a Covenant so much the more excellent by how much the Priesthood confirmed with an oath is more excellent than that which is mutable and commanded for a time Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent For where there is a Priest there is a Covenant the Surety whereof is a Priest the Covenant being legal and vanishing had for its Surety a typical Priest which prefigured the true Priest Christ that was to come But the Covenant of Grace hath Christ the true Priest for its Surety who first of all bound himself to give satisfaction to Divine Justice for our debt furthermore that as the friends of God in the Covenant of Grace wee should walk to life eternal There are other offices of a Surety but these suffice for the opening of the present Argument Vers. 23. And they truly were many Priests because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death 24. But this man because hee continueth ever hath an unchangeable Priesthood Argum. 12. The Levitical Priests were many at one time and successively followed one another for one alone could not undergo all things belonging to the office and death did hinder that any one should abide long in his office But Christ alone executes his Priestly Office for ever having no Partner or Successor nor wanting any to substitute in his stead Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 25. Wherefore hee is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing hee ever liveth to make intercession for them Argum. 13. Following upon the former Christ our Priest living for ever and in the perpetual odour of his Sacrifice interceding for his is able to save and perfect to the utmost or every way to accomplish the sanctification and salvation of all the faithful or of all that come in to him But the Levitical Priests could not do that Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 26. For such a● High Priest became us who is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners and made higher than the Heavens Argum. 14. Christ as a Priest as it became our onely Redeemer hath more excellent
perpetual communion with God arising from the confederation of Marriage right whereby the people in covenant become the possession of Gods peculiar love and God becomes a blessed possession to his people and both these God promiseth I will bee their God saith hee and they shall bee my people and I will account them for my people Vers. 11. And they shall not teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord For all shall know mee from the least to the greatest The third promise is of continual instruction and teaching by the holy Ghost so that they shall not fetch the knowledge of God from the decrees and opinions of men nor shall hang their Faith upon the authority of mens teachings nor shall stick in the bare speculation of those things they shall hear preached as it befalls the unregenerate who live not under the New Covenant but by the means of teaching which are of divine institution they shall bee all as well the least as the greatest instructed in and indued with a lively effectual knowledge love and observance of God so that neither in it self nor in the estimation of beleevers hee that plants or hee that waters shall bee any thing in comparison with God But God onely shall 〈◊〉 the teacher who teacheth efficaciously and gives the increase Vers. 12. For I will bee merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more The fourth promise is of eternal remission of sins whereby God for the sake of Christs obedience shews himself reconciled to the faithful that are in covenant Vers. 13. In that hee saith A New Covenant hee hath made the first Old Now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish away From the words of Ieremy hee infers a twofold consectary The first is the Legal or Levitical Covenant because it is declared by the Prophet to bee Old in the Epithite New it waxeth old and is vanished Now that The other Consectary drawn from hence in the times of Ieremiah the Prophet the Legal or Levitical Covenant was neer its dissolution and vanishing and by consequence after the comming of Christ under wh●● all things become new it expired Than which nothing could be more effectually spoken to move the Hebrews that renouncing the Levitical Ceremonies they would consecrate themselves wholly to Christ alone CHAP. IX HEE prosecutes the Comparison of the Levitical Priest-hood with the Priesthood of Christ and further shews the excellency of the Priesthood of Christ There are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee proves by fifteen Arguments that the Priesthood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical to vers 16. In the second part hee removes the scandal of the Cross or of the death of Christ by demonstrating the sufficiency and necessity of it to the end Vers. 1. Then verily the first Covenant had also ordinances of Divine service and a worldly sanctuary As to the first part the seven first Arguments are so many characters of the imperfection of the Levitical Priest-hood from whence the excellency of Christs Priest-hood is commended Argum. 1. The first Covenant appertaining to the Levitical Priesthood had onely shadowed rites of Justification and an earthly Sanctuary Therefore it follows that the Priesthood of Christ which contains true Justification according to the New Covenant and an heavenly Sanctuary as before was shewed is much more excellent Vers. 2. For there was a Tabernacle made the first wherein was the Candlestick and the Table and the Shew-bread which is called the Sanctuary Hee explains this Argument First By describing the parts of the Sanctuary and the sacred things in it further hee describes the typical rites of Justification The Tabernacle that Moses erected had two parts The fore-part was called the Holy the inner part the Holy of Holies in the fore-part was the Candlestick in the South part of the house set on the left hand Against it in the North part of the house was the Table with the Shew-bread so called because they were set before God by which was signified that light and life is vouchsafed to them which come unto God And in this part was the Altar of incense placed before the entrance to the inner part whereby the offering of prayers was signified Vers. 3. And after the second veil the Tabernacle which is called the Holiest of all The veil that hung in the entrance of this part is here understood to bee the first veil The other veil which divided the fore-part from the Holy of Holies here 't is called the middle veil and the inner house which was behind that is called the Holy of Holies the fore-part figured out the Church upon earth the hinder part figured Heaven or the place wherein God manifests himself to the Church Triumphant Vers. 4. Which had the golden Censer and the Ark of the Covenant over-laid round about with Gold wherin was the golden Pot that had Manna and Aarons Rod that budded and the Tables of the Covenant In the Holy of Holies was 1 The Golden Censer which was used by the High Priest entring in once a year fit to signifie the intercession of Christ praying for us and making our prayers acceptable unto God 2 There was the Ark of the Covenant covered over with Gold whence God uttered his voice a fitting type of Christ the word incarnate and opening the Counsel of God to us 3 There was the pot of Manna conveniently signifying that hidden Manna which God truly was in Christ to the faithful for their food unto eternal life 4 There was the Rod of Aaron that budded fitly signifying the effectual blessing which Christ gives to the labours of his Ministers 5 The Tables of the Covenant were put into the Ark which taught us that the fulfilling of the Law is onely to bee sought in Christ. Vers. 5. And over it the Cherubims of glory shadowing the mercy-seat of which wee cannot now speak particularly There were Angels Cherubims with wings towards each other covering the Ark between which wings God as it were sa●e and gave out answers when hee was enquired of whereby the Ministery of Angels waiting upon CHRIST The great mystery of godliness dwelling in unapproachable light was propounded in the type And because here is enough said of the glory of the outward Tabernacle or of the earthly place the Apostle breaks off his discourse concerning the terrene Tabernacle Vers. 6. Now when these things were thus ordained the Priests went alwaies into the first Tabernacle accomplishing the service of God The place hath been spoken of in the next place hee describes the shadowy rites of Justification and first of all those which the Priests daily exercised in the fore-part of the Tabernacle burning incense taking care for bread for the furnishing of the Table oyl for the Lamp and the rest according to the Law Vers. 7. But into the second went the High Priest alone once every year not
than c. The Second Part. Vers. 16. For where a Testament is there must also of necessity bee the death of the Testator The second part of the Chapter follows wherein to take off the scandal of the Cross hee first proves the necessity of Christs death by six Arguments to vers 25. Furthermore the sufficiency of his offering once upon the Cross hee proves it by five Arguments to the end Argum. 1. The New Covenant of Christ is the New Testament of Christ Therefore it was necessary that the death of the Testator Christ should intercede Vers. 17. For a Testament is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at all while the Testator liveth Argum. 2. Confirming the former unless Christ had died the Covenant or Testament had not been firm for even amongst men a Testament is not valid while the Testator is alive but onely after his death For while hee lives it may be changed but not when hee is dead Therefore it was necessary that Christ should dye Vers. 18. Whereupon neither the first Testament was dedicated without blood Argum. 3. As the Old Testament was not dedicated unto God without typical blood so neither the New Testament can be dedicated or offered by way of satisfaction for sinful men without the true blood of Christ the true Mediatour the Antitype Therefore it was necessary Christ should dye Vers. 19. For when Moses had spoken every Precept to all the people according to the Law hee took the blood of Calves and of Goats with water and Scarlet wool and hysop and sprinkled both the book and all the people 20. Saying This is the Blood of the Testament which God hath enjoyned unto you Hee explicates and proves this Argument out of the History Exod. 24. concerning the dedication of the first Tabernacle by Blood where Moses sprinkled the Book of the Covenant and the people with the blood of Calves and Goats withall expounding the signification and use of the ceremony that that Blood was the Blood of the Covenant or a symbol of the Covenant typically made in those ceremonies and truly to bee fulfilled in the Blood of Christ. Vers. 21. Moreover hee sprinkled with blood both the Tabernacle and all the Vessels of the Ministery 22. And almost all things are by the Law purged with blood and without shedding of blood is no remission Argum. 4. As under the Law all things were purged either with blood or washings drawing virtue to purge from the Sacrifices so that without typical shedding of blood there was no remission of sins So in the New Covenant there can bee no remission of sins but by the shedding of the Blood of Christ Therefore the Death of Christ was necessary The Tabernacle and the Holy Vessels which were in themselves without pollution are said to bee sprinkled with blood because in respect to us were wee not purified by the Blood of Christ all things become polluted unto us Therefore the use of the most holy things must bee sanctified to us by Christ otherwise to the impure all things are impure in as much as in all things unbeleevers pollute themselves Vers. 23. It was therefore necessary that the patterns of things in the heavens should be purified with these but the heavenly things themselves with better Sacrifices than these Argum. 5. If the types ought to bee purged with typical blood heavenly things signified by those types ought to bee consecrated by better Sacrifices i. e. with the Blood of the Mediator himself who in his Virtue comprehends all Sacrifices and by consequence the Death of Christ was necessary Vers. 24. For Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands which are the figures of the true but into heaven it self now to appear in the presence of God for us Argum. 6. Confirming the former Christ is not entred into the typical Holy place made with hands but into heaven signified by the holy place that constantly appearing there hee might intercede for us Therefore it behoved him to offer up a more excellent Sacrifice viz. himself as much as heaven exceeds the earthly Holy place and by consequence his death was necessary Vers. 25. Nor yet that hee should offer himself often a● the High-Priest entereth into the Holy place every year with blood of others Now hee proves the sufficiency of the one Oblation of Christ upon the Cross by five Arguments Argum. 1. Christ entred not often into the Terrestrial Sanctuary that hee might often offer up himself as the Levitical High-Priest who offered not his own but other blood yearly but is once entered into heaven Therefore that one Oblation of himself upon the Cross was sufficient whereby hee was admitted into heaven Vers. 26. For then must hee often have suffered since the foundation of the world but now once in the end of the world hath hee appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself Argum. 2. Unless that one Oblation of Christ upon the Cross had been sufficient hee must by often offering himself die often from the beginning of the world for if an Oblation of the Body of Chirst ought to have been often offered up for sin it would have been necessary that the Oblation should have begun at what time sin began to bee committed i. e. from the beginning of the world and from that time that Sacrifice ought to have been so often repeated as new sins were committed after the Sacrifice the courses of Sacrifice being acted over and over without number But this is absurd Therefore his once offering up upon the Cross was sufficient But now once Argum. 3. Christ in the fulness of time appeared to that end that by his one Oblation of himself he might abolish the sins of his people present past and to come For to the obtaining and application of remission of sins to the mortification and abolishing of sins of all the Redeemed or Elect there is virtue enough in the Death of Christ Therefore his one Oblation is sufficient Vers. 27. And as it is appointed unto men once to die but after this the Iudgement 28. So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many and unto them that look for him shall hee appear the second time without sin unto Salvation Argum. 4. As it is appointed of God that all men shall once die and after death come to Judgement so it is appointed of God that Christ should onely once offer up himself to expiate the sins of many i. e. of his Elect and that hee should come the second time judge both of quick and dead Therefore his one Oblation of himself upon the Cross is sufficient The second time Argum. 5. Christ coming the second time at the Day of Judgement shall make it manifest to all the world that hee with one Oblation of himself hath most fully satisfied for sin and that the imputation of sin and the punishment or misery and whatever footsteps there are of sin are removed
care for the Religion and outward conversation of his subjects to the weal of their souls and bodies both amongst men and towards God in this life and hereafter 2. As Melchisedec is the blesser of Abraham the Father of the faithful in the type So is Christ in truth the blesser of Abraham and all the faithful the fountain of all blessing in whom alone every one is blessed who getteth blessing Vers. 2. To whom also Abraham gave a tenth part of all first being by interpretation King of Righteousness and after that also King of Salem which is King of Peace 1. To go on in the Comparison As Melchisedec the Type was honoured by Abrahams paying of Tythes unto him So is Christ to be honoured by all Abrahams children by giving of their Substance and worldly Goods what is sufficient to maintain the honour of his Kingdome amongst them 2. Presuppose the Type were laid aside yet this thankful meeting that Abraham gave to the man whose office was to bless him in the Name of the Lord doth teach All the faithful Abrahams true seed a duty of Thankfulness to Gods servants set over them to bless them in the Name of the Lord even to honour them by giving of their goods for their sufficient maintenance 3. As Melchisedec the Type is by interpretation King of Righteousness So is Christ in truth King of Righteousness 1. For the personal Righteousness in himself 2. Because hee is the Righteousness of his Subjects made of God unto us Righteousness by imputation 3. Because hee frameth his Subjects peece and peece unto a righteous disposition by sanctifying them 4. As Melchisedec the Type is King of Salem that is King of Peace So is Christ in truth King of Peace to his Subjects by reconciling them to the Father by giving peace of conscience within themselves by making all the Creatures at peace with them and all things turn together for their good and by working still on their eternal welfare and blessedness until hee perfect it 5. As Melchisedec was first King of Righteousness and then King of Peace in the Type So is Christ in truth in this Order first King of Righteousness to his Subjects to take away their sins and to give them Righteousness And then King of Peace because hee giveth them his Peace as the fruit of Righteousness This is the order of his Kingdome Righteousness and Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Vers. 3. Without Father without Mother without Descent having neither beginning of daies nor end of life but made like unto the Son of God abideth a Priest continually 1. Melchisedec certainly was a very Man King and Priest in such a City if wee consider him in his natural being But if wee consider him in his spiritual being as hee standeth in Scripture under this name hee hath neither Father nor Mother beginning nor end There is no more mention of him what hee was or of whom hee came or of his death but these three verses of Genes 14. As then hee is in a typical being in Scripture So is Christ in truth in his personal being as God without Mother as Man without Father as God without beginning as God and man without ending of life 2. As Melchisedec looking how hee standeth in his Scriptural being abideth a Priest continually so that wheresoever hee is named in Scripture there hee is eve● found a Priest also and never a word of his laying down of the Priesthood Even so is Christs Priesthood unseparable from his person Hee abideth a Priest continually in real accomplishment 3. By saying Hee is made like unto the Son of GOD hee giveth us to understand That Gods purpose was in those particulars so to describe him as hee might resemble the Person and Offices of the Son of God And so is a Type of Gods own appointment 4. And if hee was made a likely Type of Christ in his Office of Priesthood then it followeth a● Melchisedec had neither any joyned with him in his Priesthood nor Deputy nor Vicar under him in it nor Successor to his Office So neither hath Christ any joyned with him or Substitute or Successor to him in his Priesthood Vers. 4. Now consider how great this man was unto whom even the Patriarch Abraham gave the Tenths of the Spoils To shew Christs Excellency hee draweth them to consider Melchisedec's Excellency above Abrahams that so they might see Christs Excellency to be far more The reason in force goeth thus 1. If Melchisedec the Type be more excellent than Abraham much more must Christ of whom hee is a Type 2. And if Melchisedec's greatness be not easily perceived except there be a due consideration of it much more Christs greatness requireth consideration and is worthy of contemplation 3. If Abraham by paying of Tythes acknowledge Melchisedec's superiority Much more should all Abrahams Off-spring acknowledge Christs Superiority whom Melchisedec typically represented by paying of what is due for the maintenance of his Service and bestowing on his Ministers who are appointed to bless in his Name whether it bee less or more which they bestow in such a manner as it vilifie not nor disgrace their high Employment which Christ hath put upon them and so dishonour him whose Servants they are Vers. 5. And verily they that are of the Sons of Levi who receive the Office of the Priesthood have a Commandement to take Tythes of the people according to the Law that is of their Brethren though they come out of the loyns of Abraham Hee proveth that in Tythes taking Melchisedec was greater than Abraham who did pay Tythes Because for the same respect the Levites by taking Tythes of their Brethren as Priests had a Superiority over them for their office sake who otherwise were their equals Then 1. The Priestly office lifted up the Levites above their Brethren who were sprung of Abraham as well as they 2. The command of taking Tithes was annexed to the office of the Priesthood in token of their superiority by office over them who by nature were at least their equals Vers. 6. But hee whose descent is not from them received Tythes of Abraham and blessed him that had the promises 7. And without all contradiction the less is blessed of the greater Hee proveth again Melchisedec to be greater than Abraham and so greater than Levi because hee blessed him and therefore behoved to be greater Then 1. Abraham notwithstanding hee had the promises yet got hee the blessing by Melchisedec in type and from Christ represented by him in truth 2. If Melchisedec was greater because hee blessed him as type Then Christ far more who blesseth in effect Now there are sundry sorts of blessings 1. There is a blessing of reverence and worship So men bless God This sort importeth no greatness in the blesser but subjection 2. There is a blessing of Charity So men bless one another by mutual prayer This sort importeth no Superiority neither 3. There is a blessing of authority
to dye The Articles of the Covenant also evinceth it to be a Testament and the promiser bound to make his word good and so to dye For Jer. 31. the Lord Christ promiseth to reconcile his people to God to take away their sins and to be their God Iustice required satisfaction of them before they could be reconciled Satisfaction they could not make themselves therefore he who promised to make the Reconciliation with God was bound to make the satisfaction for them to God and if satisfaction for them then to undergo the curse of the Law for them and so to dye Then 1. The New Covenant is of the nature of a Testament and the benefits promised therein to wit Remission of sins Reconciliation Sanctification and Life Eternal are Legacies freely left unto us by our Defunct Lord who was dead and is alive to execute his own will for evermore The Scripture is the instrument and evidence the Apostles Notaries the Sacraments are seals witnesses from Heaven the Father the Word and the Spirit witnesses on earth the Water the Blood and the Spirit 2. Christ Jesus is both the maker of the Covenant which is in Ier. 31. and the Mediator thereof also the Testator and Executor of that blessed Testament 3. Christs death was concluded and resolved upon and intimated before he came into the world Vers. 17. For a Testament is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at all whilest the Testator liveth He cleareth his reasoning from the nature of Testaments amongst men which not before but after a mans death have force But here it may be objected How can this be seeing by vertue of the testament of Christ benefits not a few were bestowed upon the Church before his death from the beginning of the world not onely Remission of sins and Eternal Life but also many graces and blessings in this life both bodily and spiritual I answer Albeit Christs death was not accomplished in act till of late yet for the certainty of his death to follow and the unchangeableness of his minde towards his Church before his death he was reckoned both with God and the Church for dead and the promise of laying down his life for his people accepted for the time as if it had been performed For which cause he is called Rev. 13.8 The Lamb slain from the beginning of the world And Christ was still represented as a slain man in all these Sacrifices which the Apostle pointeth at as meeting this doubt in the next words which follow hereafter Vers. 18. Vers. 18. Whereupon neither the first Testament was dedicated without blood He proveth the necessity of Christs death yet farther Under the Law his bloodshed was represented by types of bloody Sacrifices therefore it behoved those types to be answered by his real bloodshed and death Then 1. What the types of the Law did signifie Christ behoved to accomplish in verity 2. The Old Church was taught that by vertue of the blood signified by these types the Covenant stood betwixt God and them Vers. 19. For when Moses had spoken every Precept to all the people according to the Law he took the blood of Calves and of Goats with Water and Scarlet Wooll and Hyssope and sprinkled both the book and all the people 20. Saying This is the blood of the Testament which God hath enjoyned unto you 21. Moreover he sprinkled with blood both the Tabernacle and all the Vessels of the Ministery From Moses example we learn 1. That the Lords Word should be manifested to all the people and none of them debarred from taking knowledge thereof 2. That the Word must be spoken plainly with a distinct voyce in the common Language and not muttered in an unknown Tongue 3. That with the use of holy Rites appointed of God the Preaching of Gods Word should be joyned to shew the Institution and force of Gods Ordinances to his people 2. In that the Book and the People and Instruments of Service were all to be sprinkled we learn That every thing which we touch or meddle with or make use of is unclean unto us were it never so holy in it self except the Blood of Jesus make it clean unto us and cleanse us in the using of it Vers. 22. And almost all things are by the Law purged with blood and without shedding of blood is no remission He saith Almost because of some purging which was done by washing and yet even that washing also drew the Vertue of Ceremonial purging from the Sacrifice whereunto the washing was annexed 2. In saying Without shedding of blood there is no remission of sins he teacheth us That wheresoever a sacrifice is offered for obtaining remission of sin there shedding of blood must really be and where an unbloody sacrifice is pretended to be offered for obtaining remission it serveth not the purpose because Without shedding of blood there is no remission Either therefore must such as pretend to offer Christ for obtaining the remission of sin grant that Christ is daily murthered by them and his blood shed anew in their pretended Offering or else that by their Offering no new Remission is purchased But the truth is Christs Blood is once shed and never to be shed again and that once Offering and Blood shedding is sufficient for everlasting remission without any new Offering of him again Vers. 23. It was therefore necessary that the Patterns of things in the Heavens should be purified with these but the Heavenly things themselves with better Sacrifices than these Another reason of the necessity of Christs death in force thus much If things figuratively holy behoved to be cleansed with the Typical Blood of Beasts Then things truly holy behoved to be cleansed with better blood even the blood of the Messias Hence we learn 1. That for the significations cause God would not have the Tabernacle nor any Instrument of Service about it to ●e esteemed holy till blood was shed to sprinkle it That it might be known thereby that without the shedding of Christs blood he would not accept of any thing from us as holy 2. That the blood of Beasts was sufficient to make representation but better blood even the Blood of the Messiah behoved to be shed to give the truth of the signification For as far as Heaven is above the earthly sanctuary and mens souls above the vessels thereof so far better behoved to be that blood which made souls acceptable to God and to get entrance into heaven than the blood of Levitical sacrifices was Vers. 24. For Christ is not entred into the Holy Places made with hands which are the figures of the true but into Heaven it self now to appear in the presence of God for us He cleareth the matter how Christ hath offered a better Sacrifice than the Levitical yea and behoved to offer a better because he is entered into a better Sanctuary another man in another manner and to another end than the High Priest under
that is from the Doctrine of Grace in begun Knowledge Faith Love Renovation or any measure thereof Then 1. Albeit the Elect cannot fall away fully and finally yet some Professors in the visible Church may fall away from their Profession and what degrees of Grace they had attained unto for whose cause warning must be given to all as a mean to keep the Elect from a fall 2. Albeit the Elect cannot fall away finally from Grace yet may they fall for a time from the purity of the Doctrine of Grace and from some degrees of the work of Grace from the measure of their first love and zeal and at length fall into scandalous sins He joyneth another point of advertisement with the former That they beware lest any bitter root break forth whereby many be defiled that is left any scandalous sin break forth amongst them Then 1. As men do fall from any measure of the work of Grace so doth the bitter root of unmortified sin spring out and grow The ones decreasing is the others encreasing 2. When any scandal breaketh forth in the Church it troubleth the whole body and polluteth them by the contagion thereof till it be removed 3. Watch must be kept diligently by every man ●o curb this bitter root preventing the out-shooting thereof Vers. 16. Lest there be any fornicator or prophane person as Esau who for one morsel of meat sold his birth-right He expoundeth this bitter root in the example of fornication and prophanity like Esaus Then 1. Fornication and prophanity are the bitter roots of other evils and able to defile a Congregation 2. Such as count more of the satisfaction of their sensual lusts than of their spiritual Prerogatives do prove themselves prophane persons and are justly ranked in with Esau. Vers. 17. For ye know how that afterwards when he would have inherited the blessing he was rejected for he found no place of repentance though he sought it carefully with tears He sheweth Gods judgement on Esau to terrifie all men to hazard upon the sinful satisfaction of their own lusts at any time Then 1. Esaus judgement should be a terrour to all men to keep them from presuming deliberately to commit that sin which they know may cut them off from the Blessing because sundry times albeit not always God doth punish presumptuous sinners with giving over the man to his own ways and final impenitency 2. Esaus example sheweth how justly they may be deprived of the Blessing annexed to any Sacred Symbole or gracious Mean who do despise the mean whereby the Blessing is conveyed For the Birth-right amongst the Patriarchs was a pawn of the Blessing of being an Heir of Promise and therefore was Esau counted to reject the Blessing when he counted light of the Birth-right 3. His example sheweth how little sinners consider for the present what Merchandize they are making with Satan when they meddle with known sins and how they will be made to know it afterwards 2. He saith that afterwards he would have inherited the Blessing but was rejected Then It agreeth with the prophane mans disposition to desire the Blessing and yet despise the means whereby the Blessing is gotten ●o satisfie his fleshly lusts for the present and to desire the Blessing withall afterwards But God will neither sever the means from the Blessing nor joyn the Blessing with the satisfaction of mens lusts Therefore he who will have the Blessing must use the means to obtain the same and renounce the satisfaction of his sinful lusts or else be rejected when he thinketh to get the Blessing 3. He saith He found no place of repentance albeit he sought the blessing with tears That is he could not obtain that his father should repent the bestowing of the blessing beside him nor that God should repent his righteous judgement on him For repentance here is recalling the sentence given out And why Because he for all his tears and untimeous seeking of his sold blessing repented not himself of his sin for he continued as prophane as before and resolved to murther his brother as soon as he found opportunity Then 1. Esau did rue his deed but repented not his sin It is one thing to rue a deed done and another thing to repent the sin in doing of the deed and every known sin for that sins cause 2. Tears may follow upon ruing as well as on repenting and it is possible that the loss or harm procured by sin may draw forth the tear and not the sorrow for the offending of GOD by the sin 3. Esau here is not brought in dealing with God for pardon of sin and the heavenly inheritance but with the man who had the ministry of dispensing the earthly blessing onely We read then that a blessing was sought carefully from a man with tears and not obtained but we read not that Gods Mercy and Blessing was ever sought from himself carefully and not obtained Vers 18. For ye are not come unto the Mount that might be touched and that burned with fire not unto blackness and darkness and tempest Beside the example of Esau's judgement here is another reason to move us who are under the Gospel to beware of licentiousness and prophanity because we are delivered from the terrour of the Law ver 18 19 20 21. and brought by the Gospel to the society of so holy a company as beseemeth no prophane man to enjoy vers 22 23 24. The sum tendeth unto this You are not under the Law but under Grace Instead of saying whereof he saith You are not come unto Mount Sinai but unto Mount Sion For the LORDS manner of dealing with the people at Mount Sinai represented the state of men in nature under the Law liable to the Curse His manner of dealing with them at Mount Sion represented the state of men reconciled through Christ and under Grace Let us take a view of both as the Apostle setteth them before our eyes And first how the state of man unreconciled in Nature and under the Law and Curse thereof was represented 1. Before we come to Christ we have to do with God as a terrible Judge sitting on the Throne of his Justice shadowed forth by Mount Sinai 2. Our Judge is offended with us his wrath is kindled ready to consume us as his adversaries in our transgressions represented by the burning of the Mount 3. When God beginneth to shew himself as our Judge offended with us we are filled with confusion and perplexity and fire represented by Blackness and Darkness and Tempest Vers. 19. And the sound of a Trumpet and the voyce of Words Which Voyce they that heard entreated that the Word should not be spoken to them any more 20. For they could not endure that which was commanded And if so much as a Beast touch the Mountain it shall be stoned or thrust thorow with a dart What further 4. There is no flying from compearance before our Judge Summons and Citations go forth from
other duties towards our neighbour As for an holy conversation he comprehends that under the endeavour of preserving our selves through the grace of God undefiled from the world or from the defilements which are abroad in the world and from the contagion of other mens sins so that we pollute not our selves with wickedness nor have fellowship with those that pollute themselves in the mire of sin CHAP. II. THere are two Admonitions contained in this Chapter The first is to shun respect of persons especially in Ecclesiastical matters to ver 14. The other to avoid vain boastings of faith where good works are wanting Vers. 1. My brethren have not the faith of our Lord Iesus Christ the Lord of glory with respect of persons The first vice which he admonishes them to avoid is respect of persons which is committed when in the same cause more or less is attributed to any one than is fitting by reason of something in his person which nothing belongs to that cause So they offended amongst the Hebrews who did magnifie faith in Christ in the richer sort but esteemed the same faith as nothing in the poorer sort so that the rich though unbelievers were esteemed very highly but the poor were accounted though believers of no value but contemned He dehorts them from this vice by ten Arguments Argum. 1. Jesus Christ is glorious and faith in him is equally glorious in all Therefore you ought to beware of respect of persons Vers. 2. For if there come unto your Assembly a man with a gold ring in goodly apparel and there come in also a poor man in vile rayment 3. And ye have respect to him that weareth the gay cloathing and say unto him Sit thou here in a good place and say to the poor Stand thou there or sit here under my footstool 4. Are ye not then partial in your selves and are become judges of evil thoughts Argu. 2. This respect of persons is condemned even by your consciences which he makes apparent from the example of their practice For rich men unbelievers coming into your Churches haply out of curiosity onely are so publikely honoured out of meer respect to their riches that in the mean time your poor brethren are slighted ver 2 3. He urges this testimony of their consciences by way of interrogation And become Argum. 3. They that respect persons are perverse Judges whose thoughts are perverse not that it is unmeet to honour the rich or more to honour the rich than the poor but that it is unmeet to honour the rich though wicked for their riches sake with contempt of the faithful and godly poor because they are poor For so riches are accounted the sole cause of honouring men and piety is contemned without riches Therefore respect of persons is to be avoided Vers. 5. Hearken my beloved brethren Hath not God chosen the poor of this world rich in faith and heirs of the Kingdom which he hath promised to them that love him 6. But ye have despised the poor Do not rich men oppress you and draw you before the judgement-seats 7. Do not they blaspheme that worthy Name by which yee are called Argum. 4. By this respect of persons yee dishonour the poor whom God hath honoured by chusing them into the inheritance of his Kingdome by adorning them with better riches than these worldly riches are viz. with the riches of Faith and Love of God and with promises of the inheritance of Heaven which are saving graces Therefore respect of persons is to be avoided Do not rich men Argum. 5. Because by the respect of persons yee are so inconsiderate that yee honour the publick enemies of the Gospel who are honourable neither in respect of Magistracy nor in any other except for riches sake but tyrannically usurp power over you which is not given to them oppress you and accuse you before Judges and draw your bodies to the judgement-seats and blaspheme Christs glorious name from whence yee are denominated Christians which is the highest foolishness Therefore respect of persons is to be avoided Vers. 8. If yee fulfil the royal Law according to the Scripture Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self yee do well 9. But if yee have respect to persons yee commit sin and are convinced of the Law as transgressours Argum. 6. By preventing an Objection Because in this respect of persons yee are by the Law reproved as transgressors For it yee would pay that civil respect which is due to every one according to his outward and civil condition and according to every ones merits yee may be excused if yee would give to men of greater fortune that which is meet and not deprive your beleeving Brethren of that which is equal fulfilling the royal Law of God the King of Kings by communicating to others a measure according to the common rule of love even as your selves may expect a just measure from others then indeed might yee be pardoned vers 8. But when yee give undue honour to rich men but do not give due respect to the poor that are Beleevers in this you respect persons and are held guilty of sin and transgressours of the Law Therefore respect of persons is to bee avoided Vers. 10. For whosoever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point hee is guilty of all Argum. 7. Confirming the former If yee indulge your selves in this respect of persons onely contemning the poor beleevers yee shall be accounted guilty of the whole Law although yee make shew of observing all the other Precepts excepting onely this Because whosoever offendeth in one Precept alone hee is guilty of the violation of all not that all concur in one sin but because there is a conjunction of all the commandements in one rule of justice and in one alone the same authority of God is violated in all and so the general guilt of all the Laws or the curse of God by the violation of one Law is drawn upon you although the difference of the guilt and curse remaineth in special degrees Therefore respect of persons is to be avoided Vers. 11. For hee that said Do not commit Adultery said also Do not kill Now if thou commit no Adultery yet if thou kill thou art become a transgressor of the Law Hee confirms this Argument in the example of the sixth and seventh Commandement whereof in the violation of either the authority of him that commandeth both is violated Vers. 12. So speak yee and so do as they that shall be judged by the Law of Liberty Argum. 8. Propounded by way of exhortation So ought yee to speak and do especially towards the poor beleevers as knowing that your selves are to be judged without respect of persons according to the Doctrine of the Gospel which forbids respect of persons Therefore c. Vers. 13. For hee shall have judgement without mercy that hath shewed no mercy and mercy rejoyceth against judgement Argum. 9. Unless yee exercise mercy especially
the example of holy women in the Old Testament whose praise is in the Scripture not for the external adorning of the body but for faith in God and subjection paid to their husbands Vers. 6. Even as Sarai obeyed Abraham calling him Lord whose daughters ye are as long as you do well and are not afraid with any amazement Reas. 4. From the example of Sarah who meekly obeyed Abraham and acknowledged him to be her Lord. Whose Reas. 5. Because if they would express the piety and m●de●ty of Sarah in her manners and would not suffer themselves by any worldly fear to be drawn from the pu●su●e of Piety they should declare themselves to be the daughters of this holy Matron Vers. 7. Likewise ye husbands dwell with them according to knowledge giving honour unto the wife as unto the weaker vessel and as being heirs together of the grace of life that your prayers be not hindred On the other side he commands husbands to dwell with their wives that is that they indulge them courteously and treat them according to knowledge and as it becomes wise men wisely rule their wives Likewise There are four Reasons of the Precept Reas. 1. Because in like manner by the obligation of the Divine Law husbands are bound to perform mutual offices to their wives as wives are to their husbands To the weaker Reas. 2. Because prudence requires that the female sex should be so much the more respected because it is the weaker and otherwise may suspect it self contemned by the man Heirs Reas. 3. Because wives are not onely partakers of the honour and earthly goods which belong to their husbands but are also coheirs of saving grace with their believing husbands Lest Reas. 4. Because otherwise brawlings and strifes would arise whereby publique and private prayers of the husband as well as of the wife might be hindred and disturbed The second part Vers. 8. Finally be ye all of one minde having compassion one of another love as brethren be pittiful be courteous The second part of the Chapter follows wherein he exhorts to the study of holiness although it be joyned with the Cross or to the common duties of holiness and to vertues which belong to men of what condition soever and he reckons six whereof the first is Concord without which the whole life is disquieted with perpetual troubles and brawlings The second is Sympathy which makes us affected as it becomes us both with the troubles and happinesses of our neighbours grieving with those that grieve and rejoycing with those that rejoyce The third is Brotherly love whereby we closely embrace Christians as brethren in the Lord. The fourth is Mercy whereby we succour the poor and strangers or banished men The fifth is Gentleness whereby we yield our selves affable and courteous towards others for the publique good and edification of others Vers. 9. Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing but contrariwise blessing knowing that ye are thereunto called that ye should inherit a blessing The sixth is Patience whereby we patiently bear injuries received from others whether by word or deed yea whereby we repay good turns for bad The Arguments of the Exhortation to follow after these vertues especially patience are seventeen All which prove that we must follow after these vertues although we therefore suffer afflictions That ye Argum. 1. Because we are called to this condition by God that by perseverance in well doing and by patient bearing evils we may attain eternal life vouchsafed to us by an hereditary right Therefore we ought to follow after these vertues and especially patience Vers. 10. For he that will love life and see good days let him refrain his tongue from evil and his lips that they speak no guile 11. Let him eschew evil and do good let him seek peace and ensue it 12. For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous and his ears are open unto their prayers but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil Argum. 2. From the testimony of Scripture out of Psal. 34.12 13 14 15 16. verses where the next way to happiness is taught that the children of God follow after good works and abstain from impatience and all kinde of evil deeds and that on this side being compassed about with the hope of Divine blessing and on the other with the fear of Divine wrath they go forward in the courses of holiness Therefore yee ought to endeavour after these virtues and chiefly patience Vers. 13. And who is hee that will harm you if yee bee followers of that which is good Argum. 3. Because this course is best whereby they following after these virtues may bee freed from many inconveniences which the wicked take occasion to bring upon them for hee is like to a Monster that will harm the Innocent and those that follow after goodness Therefore yee ought to endeavour after all these virtues and especially patience Vers. 14. But and if yee suffer for Righteousness sake happy are yee and bee not affraid of their terrour neither be troubled Argum. 4. Because if whilst yee follow after these virtues yee suffer evils for Righteousness sake yet yee remain blessed in Gods account howsoever your condition may seem miserable in this world Therefore yee ought to follow after these virtues Vers. 15. But sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts and bee ready alwaies to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear Argum. 5. Yee Christians ought not to be deterred from the following after these virtues by the threatnings and the terrour of the wicked nay not so much as be troubled in mind but on the contrary yee ought to sanctifie God in your hearts i. e. so much to value the terrour and the good will of God the commands threatnings promises power help comforts issues and deliverances of God which hee both can and will perform to set at naught and undervalue whatsoever men can do against you Bee ready Argum. 6. It is so far unbecoming you to be deterred from the following after virtue by the fear of men that on the contrary confiding in the goodness and omnipotency of God yee ought to be ready to sanctifie God in open confession of the Christian Faith not being ashamed to produce the word of God as the ground and foundation of your Faith as often as a reason of your Faith is required of you so that the answer which is required may tend to the glory or sanctification of his name Yet hee commands that this confession bee uttered with meekness towards men and fear or reverence towards God lest the Truth of God by any means should be polluted by our passions Vers. 16. Having a good conscience that whereas they speak evil of you as of evil doers they may bee ashamed that falsely accuse your good conversation in Christ. Argum. 7. In following after these virtues yee will have a good