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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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manner The first comparison is in the opposite state of a natural and a spiritual body The first Adam was made a living soul not giving life which had a life indeed but supported as other creatures are with meat and drink c. And not such as could continue life to the body without nourishment But Christ the last Adam is made a quickning Spirit who could communicate virtue to those that were his by his Spirit that without nourishments of the body the most blessed union of body and soul may bee preserved Vers. 46. Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual but that which is natural and afterward that which is spiritual The second comparison in respect to Order The first Adam had the precedency in the natural state of the body The second Adam was latter in the spiritual state of the body for the imperfect state ought to precede so God is wont to proceed to the highest perfection Hee saith not simply that Adam was before Christ but that the Natural state of the first Adam is first in time in Adam in Christ and in us And our Spiritual state which is from Christ is latter Vers. 47. The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from Heaven The third comparison in the order and dignity of the person The first-Man meer man is of the earth earthy whose body rose out of the earth and is resolved again into earth upon the substraction of food whereupon hee could communicate unto us nothing but a terrene life But the second Adam is both man and God from Heaven who although hee hath a body from the earth yet because hee is God from Heaven and therefore is called heavenly as hee could support his body that it should not see corruption though in its own nature terrene and resoluble into dust and as it being raised out of the grave hee could make it every way glorious immortal and heavenly not needing earthly supports So in like manner can hee make our bodies such Vers. 48. As is the earthy such are they that are earthy and as is the heavenly such are they also that are heavenly From these hee proves the future mutation of the qualities of the body from earthly to heavenly from natural to spiritual by four Arguments Argum. 1. Such as was the earthly Adam the head of our stock after the fleshly propagation such it became us to bee born viz. mortal Therefore as the heavenly Adam our head in respect to regeneration and glorification is after his resurrection viz. Spiritual glorious incorruptible immortal such shall wee bee that are born again of him after our resurrection Vers. 49. And as wee have born the image of the earthy wee shall also bear the image of the heavenly Argum. 2. From its future certainty As sure as wee bear the image of the first Adam in the qualities of our substance being made conform to him in soul and body so sure shall wee bear the image of the second Adam in the glorious qualities of our substance Vers. 50. Now this I say Brethren that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdome of God Neither doth corruption inherit incorruption Argum. 3. The promises of glorifying our bodies or of bringing us into the glorious Kingdome of God ought to bee fulfilled But flesh and blood i. e. our bodies as now they are corruptible cannot enter into the Kingdome of God unless they bee fitted for that glorious state Therefore our bodies shall bee made meet by the mutation of their qualities to enter into the Kingdome of Glory Corruption By way of confirmation to this reason hee adds Argum. 4. Corruption cannot inherit incorruption Therefore necessary it is that our bodies bee changed in their qualities from corruptibility to incorruptibility Vers. 51. Behold I shew you a mystery wee shall not all sleep but wee shall all bee changed Objection 3. What shall become of those that are alive at the comming of our Lord How shall they arise which shall not dye but bee found alive by the Judge at his comming Hee answers by opening the mystery viz. that all shall not die nor rise again but they shall bee taken that remain alive at the comming of our Lord and changed into an eternal state of immortality either in glory or torments which change shall bee in stead of death and a resurrection Vers. 52. In a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last Trumpet for the Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall bee raised incorruptible and wee shall be changed Hee shews the manner of this change that it shall bee in the twinckling of an eye i. e. in a moment all that are alive and dead shall be summoned by a fearful alarum to the judgement of God Vers. 53. For this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality Hee gives two Reasons of this change First Mortality must bee swallowed up of immortality and this mortal body must put on immortality Therefore they shall bee changed that are found alive at the comming of our Lord. Vers. 54. So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption and this mortal shall have put on immortality then shall bee brought to pass the saying that is written Death is swallowed up of victory 55. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Reason 2. The Prophecie of Hosea ought to bee fulfilled chap. 13. v. 14. who fore-told our full victory over death and the grave Therefore they that are alive shall bee changed at the comming of the Lord which shall bee in stead of death Vers. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law That this victory may appear the greater hee intimates the victory wee shall have over sin and the Law without which the grave cannot prevail any thing over us for unless satisfaction bee given to the Law sin wrath and death remain in full power But after satisfaction is made to the Law for us sin and wrath are taken away wherewith death is armed as with a sting which being disarmed is abolished and triumphed over Vers. 57. But thanks bee to God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. Hee shews a twofold use of this victory The first is that thanks may bee given to God who hath given us through Christ victory over death sin and the Law yea verily hee hath imputed the victory of Christ to us and hath made it ours for hee hath died for us and by his resurrection hath obtained for us victory over death that hee might make us conquerours Vers. 58. Therefore my beloved Brethren bee yee stedfast unmoveable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Another use of this doctrine is this That under hope of the free gift at the day of resurrection wee would persevere constantly in the Faith of the Gospel
sin taking occasion by the Commandement wrought in mee all manner of concupiscence for without the Law sin was dead Reason 2. Because the sin that dwells in us or the habitual pravity of our nature is the cause of actual sins but the Law is not the cause but the occasion to sin not given but taken For sin that dwells in us saith hee or the evil of nature taking occasion from the Law forbidding lust so much the more is inflamed and excited And indeavouring after what was forbidden begat in mee all manner of concupiscence and evil motions against the Law For without the Law Which hee confirms by a sign Because the Law not being known sin lies hid and is as dead but when the Law comes it is stirred up and appears as filthiness is not seen in the absence of the Sun but that arising it appears and stinks not by the Suns fault but by its own Therefore the Law is holy Vers. 9. For I was alive without the Law once but when the Commandement came sin revived and I died By his own experience hee further explains the matter shewing that formerly when hee was a Pharisee and unregenerate in his own opinion hee was alive that is very just and in no wise guilty of eternal death but when his eies were opened by the grace of God the true sense of the Law was unfolded then hee understood the force of sin and that hee was guilty of eternal death Vers. 10. And the Commandement which was ordained to life I found to bee unto death From this experience hee saith that hee learned two things First That the end of the command and the effect was good in it self because the command is good in it self and by it self ordained to life if men obeyed it The other that the effect of the Law by accident was death so farre as it threatned death to the sinner and urges him from justice with the sentence of death Vers. 11. For sin taking occasion by the Commandement deceived mee and by it slew mee 12. Wherefore the Law is holy and the Commandement holy and just and good The third Reason in defence of the Law The sin that dwells in us is the cause of death onely taking occasion from the Law or the command as hee had learned by experience for sin while hee thought of what was forbidden in the Law invited and inticed him to forbidden things and polluted him and so by the Command made him more and more obnoxious to death Therefore the Law is altogether holy and particularly that which forbids Concupiscence is holy just and good because it is given by an holy God according to equity and for our profit Vers. 13. Was that then which is good made death un●o mee God forbid But sin that it might appear sin working death in mee by that which is good that sin by the Commandement might become exceeding sinful The second Objection Some might say Therefore hath that which is good been the cause of death Hee answers by rejecting the reproach for the occasion is to bee distinguished from the cause and the use of a thing from the abuse of it Hee therefore acquits the Law and casts all the blame upon the sin that dwells in us Truly saith hee it is not the Law but sin that dwells in mee which is the cause of death and discovers it self to bee sin so farre forth as it is stirred up in mee and kindled by the good Law of God it enkindles rebellious motions to the Law of God and so much the more upon this account doth it cause death that so sin in mee by the Command might appear above measure sinful Which is spoken most seasonably to stop the mouths of all who otherwise would deny inborn concupiscence now natural to all to be sin was it not found to bee the cause of actual sins and death and this defence hee makes for the Law The third Part. Vers. 14. For wee know that the Law is spiritual but I am carnal sold under sin The third part of the Chapter wherein is set down the second head of comfort to those who bewail the imperfection of their obedience to the Law from the Apostles example wrastling with the same evil and getting the victory by the favour and benefit of free justification as appears from vers the last This is the force of the Argument I bewailing in my self the power of sin wrastle against it taking comfort from justification by faith in Christ Therefore you holy Champions take comfort in your wrastling and conflict In the conflict of the Apostle appears a threefold difficulty and a threefold victory in the retreat in all which are mixed some Arguments of comfort drawn from the Apostles experience The first difficulty arises from a threefold contention The first is of the Law and himself I saith hee with the rest of beleevers acknowledge the Law to bee spiritual which wholly favour● the holiness of the Spirit of God and is wholly referred to a spiritual course of life But when I look upon my self and compare the imperfection of my obedience with the spiritualness of the Law I am compelled in respect to the Old Man in mee not yet mortified to acknowledge my self carnal and as a slave sold to subjection under sin out of whose bonds I cannot deliver my self but I am carryed away whither I would not Vers. 15. For that which I do I allow not for what I would that do I not but what I hate that I do Hee proves what hee hath said and shews the second contest betwixt his actions and his judgement renewed That which I do I do not approve viz. when I examine my actions to the perfect Rule of the Law I am forced not to approve but condemn many things in my actions The third disagreement hee shews to bee betwixt his actions and his will renewed I do not that good which I would saith hee hindered by the body of death in mee and that evil which I hate that I do failing of the Rule where I would not for I would perform perfect obedience to the Law of God but I fall short and in many things I offend Vers. 16. If then I do that which I would not I consent unto the Law that it is good The first difficulty you have seen the victory follows and three Arguments of Consolation whereby the Apostle comforts himself and the rest of his fellow-combatants Argum. 1. I my self am in the number of those who bewail their imperfect holiness and finde the same conflict in my self as they do from the imperfection of my obedience Therefore they have Consolation that mourn over the imperfection of their holiness seeing they suffer nothing different from other Saints nay not from the Apostles themselves I consent Argum. 2. Of Consolation Because from this con●●ict it appears that sanctification is begun in him that wrastles and a consent to the Law of God that it is holy and good
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
one man sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Another comparison is of Christ and Adam tending to shew that the righteousness of Christ is no less effectual to save those that are justified by Faith than the sin of Adam was of force to destroy those that are not justified There are six parts of the Comparison The first As by one man viz. Adam sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men that are the sons of Adam by nature in as much as in him as in a common parent all have sinned so by one man Christ Jesus the second Adam Righteousness entred into the world and Life by Righteousness and so life was communicated to all men which are the sons of Christ by grace such as all are which are justified by Faith in as much as in him as in a common parent surety and advocate all are justified This Antithesis remains to bee collected from what follows and especially from the end of ver 14. where Christ is made the Anti-type of Adam because hee is the Gate and Fountain of Righteousness and Life as Adam was the Gate and Fountain of sin and death Vers. 13. For until the Law sin was in the world but sin is not imputed when there is no Law 14. Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression who is the figure of him that was to come Hee proves that sin entred into the world by one man Adam and was propagated to his posterity For from Adam to the Law written by Moses sin was in the world and imputed and that could not bee unless there had been some Law at least unwritten and innate for had there been no Law neither written nor innate sin could not bee imputed ver 13. but it was imputed because the punishment was inflicted If so bee the wages of sin is death it reigned from Adam to Moses not only over those that were of riper years but also over infants which sinned originally in him seeing all men were in Adam one man though not actually or after the similitude of Adams actual transgression ver 14. The sum of all is there was death the wages of sin therefore there was sin therefore a Law and sin from one passed unto all Hee calls Adam a type of him that was to come viz. of the second Adam Christ that wee might understand how Christ ought to answer in his saving effects to those destructive effects of Adam and that by the purpose of God who would represent Christ the Saviour of men in the lost original of mankind that Christ might bee no less acknowledged the Fountain Head and Root of Righteousness and Life to bee derived to those that are his as Adam was the Fountain Head and Root of propagating sin and death to his Vers. 15. But not as the offence so also is the free gift for if through the offence ●f one many be dead much more the grace of God and ●he gift by grace which is by one man Iesus Christ hath abounded unto many The second member of the Comparison wherein they disagree which is first briefly propounded afterward more largely explained The offence is not like the gift of God for that good which proceeds from God is of Divine efficacy and virtue therefore infinitely surpasses the evil which is from man Wherefore if the offence of one man i. e. Adam could bring forth death to many that were naturally propagated from him much more the infinite grace of God and the free gift of one m●n Jesus Christ who also is God shall abundantly convey life to them which are spiritually born of Christ. The sum of all is Hee would have us know that the grace of Christ is more potent to save than the sin of Adam to destroy and the gifts which are bestowed through the grace of God are more excellent than those which Adam lost Vers. 16. And not as it was by one that sinned so was the gift for the judgement was by one to condemnation but the free gift is of many offences unto Iustification The third branch of the Comparison shewing the dissimilitude between the evil that entred only by Adam sinning and the gift which is by Jesus Christ because the just judgement of God from one sin of Adam proceeded to the just condemnation of himself and of all that by the Law of Nature were comprehended in his loyns But grace or the free gift of God not only frees us from that one Original sin but from a multitude of actual sins committed by every one to a full justification from all sin The sum of all is condemnation is from one offence but the gift of grace is an acquittal from all offences Vers. 17. For if by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one Iesus Christ. The fourth branch of the Comparison with a confirmation of the former after this manner If by one only sin of Adam death entring as a King subdued mankind to it much more being justified by Faith receiving that abundant grace of God and the gift of Righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ By how much the more excellent therefore the Kingdome of Life is which makes its Subjects Kings and companions with Christ in Life Eternal than the Kingdome of death which destroyes all its subjects by so much the gift of Christ in respect to its efficacy excells the offence of Adam Vers. 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgement came upon all men to condemnation even so ly the righteousn●ss of one the free gift came upon all men unto ●ustification of Life The fifth branch of the Comparison As by the fall of Adam only the guilt came upon all that sprang of Adam by a natural propagation to their condemnation so by the obedience of Christ only wherein hee was obedient to his Father unto the death the satisfaction came to justification of all men which spring of Christ by a spiritual regeneration Vers. 19. For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many bee made righteous The sixth branch of the Comparison illustrating and ●onfirming the former after this manner As by the disobedience of Adam only it comes to pass that many are accounted and dealt with in the judgement of God as sinners because they are derived from him according to the flesh so by the obedience of Christ only many shall bee made righteous that is shall bee accounted as righteous to wit all they that are in Christ by Faith born of him after the Spirit For equal it is that the poyson of sin should not pierce deeper or the sin of Adam spread further upon his Off-spring than the virtue
of Christs obedience upon his And it is meer that as one sin of Adam was imputed to his children to condemnation and death so the intire obedience of Christ only should bee imputed to his sons to Justification and the obtaining of Eternal Life Vers. 20. Moreover the Law entred that the offence might abound but where sin abounded grace did much more abound 21. That as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Iesus Christ our Lord. Hee illustrates and concludes this whole comparison by shewing the abundance of sin in those that are justified renders the grace of Christ more illustrious and this hee does by answering an objection concerning the end and use of the published Law It may bee questioned if death reigned by the Law of Nature not written before Moses what need was there of any written Law and seeing righteousness comes not by the Law as is said before to what end was the Law Hee answers by shewing a three-fold end of giving the Law First The Law entred that the offence might abound i. e. The Law forbidding sin and enjoyning righteousness in that space of time betwixt Adam and Christ came in that sin which was daily committed and yet because of ignorance not acknowledged might bee known to bee sin and that the natural wickedness of men might appear which occasions that by how much the more the Law requires righteousness by so much the more concupiscence is stirred up aga●nst the Law and that by this the sin which lyes hid in men might bee manifested and known to abound But where The second end that from the abundance of sin in those that were to bee justified the exceeding abundant grace of Christ towards those that are justified might appear seeing that where sin abounds in the conviction of men that are to bee justified there the grace of Christ justifying is found to super-abound Even as The third end that the power of sin as a King by the Law might more clearly appear shewing forth its condemning power the power of the righteousness of Christ as a Superiour King held forth in the Gospel might bee more ●minent prevailing not only to the abolishing of the Kingdome of sin but also to the conferring of Eternal Life upon those that are justified Therefore by how much the more the force of sin reigning over men not justified crowding them to the prison of Eternal death might more clearly appear by so much the more the virtue power and excellency of the grace of Christ overcoming and subduing sin leading men powerfully unto Eternal Life might more manifestly bee declared CHAP. VI. THe third proof of the Doctrine of Iustification freely by Faith in Christ in that it conduceth very much to the promoting of Sanctity and Holiness There are two PARTS of the Chapter In the first hee shews that by Faith in Christ or the Doctrine concerning the free ground of Iustification several wayes promotes endeavours after Sanctification to verse 12. In the other part hee exhorts those that are justified to follow after holiness to the end Vers. 1. What shall wee say then Shall wee continue in sin that grace may abound 2. God forbid how shall wee that are dead to sin live any longer therein By answering an objection which seems to arise from this Doctrine hee sets down a confirmation of the Proposition That this Doctrine of Grace or of Free Justification makes for the promoting of holiness Some may say Shall wee persevere in our sins wee that are justified by Faith that the grace of God may appear more abundant as this Doctrine of Free Justification by the imputation of the Righteousness of Christ seems to intimate Hee answers by denying and rejecting Far from us bee such a thought As if hee had said They that are justified by Faith ought not to indulge themselves in any sin but to endeavour after holiness And this Proposition hee confirms by ten Arguments Argum. 1. Wee are dead unto sin in as much as when wee gave up our names unto Christ that wee might bee justified and sanctified by him wee renounced sin that wee might not have any more to do with it than the dead have with the living Therefore wee that are justified ought not any longer to live in sin Vers. 3. Know you not that so many of us as were baptized into Iesus Christ were baptized into his death Argum. 2. Wee as you know which are freely justified by Faith in Christ are also taken into the fellowship of his Death by Baptism by which Sacrament wee have bound our selves to die unto sin and Christ hath bound himself unto us to communicate the power of his Death that wee might die unto sin Therefore wee ought not to undulge our selves in our sins but endeavour after holiness Vers. 4. Therefore wee are buried with him by Baptism into death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so wee also should walk in newness of life Argum. 3. Our communion with Christ in his Death is sealed to us in our Baptism for the abolishing of the old Man of Sin i. e. Not only that wee might bee bound to mortifie the old man but also that wee might bee made certain concerning the mortifying and subduing of sin by virtue of Christs Death Therefore wee ought not to indulge our selves in sin but endeavour the mortifying of it Argum. 4. As our communion with Christ in his Death is sealed to us in our Baptism so also in his Resurrection that as Christ was raised from the dead to a blessed and immortal life by the glory of the Father who powerfully raised him so should wee endeavour by Faith applying the virtue of Christ to arise from sin and to walk in newness of life to the glory of the Father powerfully renewing us Therefore ought wee not to continue in sin but follow after holiness Vers. 5. For if wee have been planted together in the likeness of his death wee shall bee also in the likeness of his resurrection Argum. 5. Drawn from our spiritual and neerest union with Christ by Faith which union is the ground of the communication of that virtue which flows from the Death and Resurrection of Christ for by Faith wee are planted into Christ as the Branch into the Vine and this ingrafting brings us into that conformity with the Death and Resurrection of Christ that wee dying unto sin Christ dying and following after newness of life Christ rising again may bee clearly seen in a certain likeness to himself Hence hee confirms his former Argument when wee are planted together with Christ by Faith wee are so neerly united to him that there follows of necessity a conformity with him in his death to the mortification of sin and in his resurrection to newness of life Therefore unless wee will acknowledge no union with him and implanting into him wee must renounce all sin and
endeavour after holiness Vers. 6. Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might bee destroyed that henceforth wee should not serve sin Argum. 6. From that judicial union which wee have with Christ crucified The force of which Argument that it may bee seen four things are to bee maintained 1. That Christ hanging upon the Cross as our Surety sustained our persons before Gods Tribunal 2. That hee under-went the punishment due to our corrupt nature or the old man so called because the evil of nature in those that are regenerated waxeth old and hastens to destruction 3. That hee took upon him to slay the old man in us 4. In that hee took upon him to represent our persons wee are thereby obliged to labour after mortification of sin by his Spirit that after Justification wee should no longer serve sin From hence the Argument wee know or believe that our old man is crucified judicially with Christ to this end that in us who are justified by Faith might bee weakned the body of death so that filthiness of habitual corruption compacted as it were into one monstrous body prepared with all its members to actual sinning that wee should no more after wee are justified serve sin Therefore wee ought to endeavour the mortification of sin unless wee will cast away the Faith of our judicial union with Christ hanging upon the Cross. Vers. 7. For hee that is dead is freed from sin Argum. 7. From the fruit of this union with Christ dying on the Cross whosoever is dead to his old Lord sin is justified and freed from the yoke and dominion of sin that hee might not serve it any longer nor obey the commands of it You may assume But wee are justified by Faith in Christ dying for sin upon the Cross wee are dead to ●our old Master Sin therefore wee are justified and freed from the yoke and dominion of sin that wee should not any longer obey its commands for what service can sin further exact from us whom Christ in his death upon the Cross hath slain as it were Vers. 8. Now if wee bee dead with Christ wee believe that wee shall also live with him Argum. 8. If wee die with Christ i. e. are united to him dying in his power endeavouring to mortifie sin wee need not doubt but wee shall live a spiritual new and heavenly life with him therefore it behoves us to endeavour the mortifying of sin Vers. 9. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Argum. 9. Confirming the former Wee believe that Christ rose to an immortal life neither is hee for ever hereafter lyable unto death but alwayes living hee both will and is able to perpetuate in us a new life that death may no more have dominion over us Therefore as wee do not believe in vain that by his power wee shall live a new and eternal life so ought wee to labour that the new life to which wee have risen with Christ may bee continued not to suffer sin should any more prevail or have dominion over us Vers. 10. For in that hee died hee died unto sin once but in that hee liveth hee liveth unto God 11. Likewise reckon yee also your selves to bee dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Argum. 10. As Christ died but once to wash away and abolish sin and rising from the dead hee lives for ever to the glory of God so you that are justified by arguments of Faith gather and reckon your selves in the death of Christ to bee once dead nor to bee obliged to dye for sin any more that yee were once dead by the dethroneing of sin neither are yee bound to serve sin any longer that yee were once dead to the destroying of sin nor can yee bee destitute of the strength of Christ to mortifie sin but in his resurrection yee are bound to live unto God or the glory of God and that yee might so live yee have strength and help enough by Jesus Christ our Lord. Therefore the Doctrine of free Justification by Faith is so far from opening a door of liberty to sin that on the contrary nothing is more effectual and conducible to the promoting of Sanctity and Holiness Second Part. Vers. 12. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies that you should obey it in the lusts thereof The second part of the Chapter follows wherein the Apostle infers out of what went before an exhortation to all that are justified by Faith that they follow after Holiness The Proposition to bee proved is the same with the former viz. They that are justified ought not to continue in sin but labour after Holiness Hee produceth thirteen Arguments whereof the three former are included in the following Exhortation The branches of this Exhortation are three and the Arguments as many couched in the Exhortation to the confirming of the Proposition The first branch of the Exhortation is that they would not obey sin by indulging the sinful lusts of the body Argum. 1. The first Argument is this To obey the sinful lusts of the body is to suffer in your mortal body the reign of sin or of the Devil from whence yee are freed which they that are justified should tremble at Therefore being now justified you ought not to follow after sin but holiness Vers. 13. Neither yeeld you your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yeeld your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God The second branch of the Exhortation is that they would not fight for this Tyrant viz. sin making use of the faculties of their souls or bodies as servants to contend for it wherein is the second Argument To serve sin is to yeeld the faculties of the Soul and members of the body as weapons of iniquity to fight for sin and the Devil against God and our own Salvation which all that are justified ought to abhor Therefore they that are justified ought not to serve sin Yeeld The third member of the Exhortation that they would yeeld themselves Souldiers and Servants unto God who hath freed them from death wherein is the third Argument God hath called you back from death in sin and Eternal Perdition unto Life that you might bee Servants unto righteousness and might contend for God against his enemies therefore ought you to labour after Holiness Vers. 14. For sin shall not have dominion over you for yee arae not under the Law but under Grace Argum. 4. If you contend and fight against sin the Tyrant shall not recover his dominion over you which hee hath lost neither shall sin reign over you but you shall become Conquerours through Christ therefore ought you to labour after Holiness For you are not Argum. 5. Confirming the former you are not under the Law under the Covenant of works wherein
the Commandment exacted strict obedience but affords no strength to assist in our obedience but you are under Grace or the Covenant of Grace wherein the Grace of God with the Command confers life to Believers and strength to obey therefore certain of the victory against sin yee ought to endeavour after Holiness Vers. 15. What then shall wee sin because wee are not under the Law but under grace God forbid Hee repeats and rejects the absurd objection of Libertines who take occasion from the grace of God to sin more freely when the contrary follows viz. because wee are under grace therefore wee ought not to indulge to our selves a liberty of sinning Vers. 16. Know you not that to whom you yeeld your selves servants to obey his servants yee are to whom yee obey whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness Argum. 6. Serving by the way to confute the objection seeing there is a necessity that you bee servants to him whom you obey and that you receive a reward proportionable to your work whether you obey sin or the Divine Commands unless you will bee accounted the servants of sin and will receive the reward of eternal death it behoves you to beware that you indulge not your selves in sin and if you will bee accounted the Servants of God that you may bee pronounced Righteous and Heirs of Life of necessity you must labour after Holiness Vers. 17. But God bee thanked that yee were the servants of sin but yee have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered to you Argum. 7. By the grace of God the time of your bondage is past in which you were servants to sin before your regeneration and now converted you have begun to yeeld sincere obedience to the Gospel the impression whereof you have received as from a print Therefore to return to the service of sin or to depart from the sound Doctrine is unworthy but it behoves you to persevere in your obedience to the Doctrine into which you were delivered Vers. 18. Being then made free from sin yee became the servants of righteousness Argum. 8. Being now freed from sin by the Omnipotent Arm of God yee are servants of righteousness to holiness Therefore by the Law of servitude being servants to righteousness yee are bound to become servants also unto holiness Vers. 19. I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh for as yee have yeelded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yeeld your members servants to righteousness unto holiness After his excuse of his homely similitude which in many things holds no proportion with these spiritual things yet notwithstanding the Holy Ghost is pleased to use because of the infirmity of the Romans for the sake of those that were carnal which could not so easily apprehend an higher or more spiritual way of speaking Hee repeats the exhortation and addeth Argum. 9. You have sometimes yeelded your members unto uncleanness and have been altogether servants to unrighteousness therefore now 't is fitting that with equal industry at least you yeeld your members servants unto righteousness and to holiness not to bee less studious of doing well than heretofore you have been of sinning and doing ill Vers. 20. For when yee were the servants of sin yee were free from righteousness Argum. 10. Confirming the former When you were servants of sin yee were free from righteousness for you were not at all servants unto righteousness Therefore now 't is equal seeing you are the servants of righteousness that you should bee free from sin and not at all servants unto it Vers. 21. What fruit had you then in those things whereof yee are now ashamed for the end of those things is death Argum. 11. You have gained no other fruit for your former sinful course of life but shame which is now upon you nor could you expect any other fruit for the future but eternal death which is the end of sin Therefore it behoves you to beware that you serve sin no longer Vers. 22. But now being made free from sin and become servants to God yee have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life Arg. 12. After you gained your liberty from the bondage of sin you became servants unto God and have your fruit unto holiness encreasing and abounding daily therein at length you shall obtain eternal life therefore ought you diligently to follow after holiness Vers. 23. For the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Iesus Christ our Lord. Arg. 13. Confirming those which went before after this manner Whatsoever hath hitherto been spoken in this Argument is sufficient and firm for it is decreed by a Divine Sentence to render a reward to sinners according to their deserts which is eternal death and to bestow life eternal with Justification and Sanctification which are chained to eternal life not of debt but freely of his grace and that no way but in our Lord Jesus Christ Therefore ought wee not to continue in sin lest wee perish but with Faith in Christ wee must joyn the practice of holiness which holiness with eternal life God will freely give to those that believe in Christ and follow after holiness as it is largely proved before CHAP. VII IN the former Chap. hee exhorts those that are justified by Faith to Holiness and because they who most follow after Holiness are most sensible and lament the power of sin dwelling in them not yet extinguished Therefore for the sake of these ariseth the fourth Confirmation of the Doctrine of Free Iustification by Faith in Christ in that it yeelds consolation to the afflicted consciences of the Saints by reason of their imperfect obedience to the Law and the reliques of sin that dwell in them There are three parts of the Chapter in the first that they who are justified should take comfort against their imperf●ct obedience to the Law hee handles the freedome of justified persons from the Covenant of Works and their interest in the Covenant of Grace which is the first place of Consolation to ver 7. The second contains an Apology for the Holiness of the Law two objections against the Law being answered to verse 14. In the third is contained the second place of Consolation wherein from the Doctrine of Iustification by Fait● in Christ the Apostle propounds the wrestling which hee had with the remnants of sin and the victory which hee gained that by his example and experience troubled consciences might take comfort The first Part. Vers. 1. Know yee not Brethren for I speak to them that know the Law how that the Law hath dominion over a man as long as hee liveth 2. For the Woman which hath an Husband is bound by the Law to her Husband so long as hee liveth but if the Husband bee dead shee is loosed from the Law of her Husband 3. So then if while
her Husband liveth shee bee married to another man shee shall bee called an adulteress but if her Husband bee dead shee is free from that Law so that shee is no adulteress though shee bee married to another man As to the first part taking a comparison from Marriage hee shews that the Justified which are delivered from the conjugal Covenant of the Law and Espoused by a new Covenant of Grace to a new Husband Christ should bring forth the fruits of holiness in new obedience to the Law to the glory of our new Husband Christ. In the three first verses hee propounds the protasis of the comparison after this manner As no Law hath dominion over the dead as yee know but only over them that are alive ver 1. and particularly the Law of Marriage is dissolved the one being dead so that the Wife the Husband being dead without adultery may marry another ver 2 3. so you c. as it shall appear by and by Vers. 4. Wherefore my Brethren yee also are become dead to the Law by the Body of Christ that yee should bee married to another even to him who is raised from the dead that wee should bring forth fruit unto God The Apodosis of the comparison to this manner So you that were espoused formerly to the Law by a Covenant of Works Christ being dead for you that hee might satisfie the Law Justice and the Covenant of Works in our name you are judicially dead to the Law in the body of Christ for the Law or Covenant of Works hath slain Christ and you in him and by consequence you are delivered from the matrimonial Covenant of the Law so that without the breach of Justice you may enter into a new Covenant of Grace with Christ being raised from the dead To this end hee shews that the purpose of marriage being disannulled betwixt the Law of Works and us not that wee should live as wee list but being raised from a state of death by the Resurrection of Christ that wee should bee espoused to another Husband viz. to him which is raised from the dead i. e. to Christ who rose from the dead and hath raised us with himself to newness of life and hath espoused us to himself according to the Covenant of Grace that being married unto Christ wee might bring forth fruits of obedience to the glory of God There are five Arguments of consolation to the Justified who bewail the imperfection of their own obedience Become dead Argum. 1. You are freed from the Covenant of Works which admits no obedience besides what is perfect and every way compleat Therefore all you that are Justified have consolation which bewail the imperfection of your new obedience Of another Argum 2. You are now married to another Husband viz. to Christ who is raised from the dead who when hee could answer the imperfections of your obedience and according to the Covenant of Grace render your begun obedience acceptable unto God hee took it upon himself You have this consolation that mourn over the imperfections of your new obedience Fruit Argum. 3. Ye● are married unto Christ which is raised from the dead that you may not abide unfruitful but may bring forth fruit to the glory of God Therefore take yee comfort who bewail your imperfect obedience Vers. 5. For when wee were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the Law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death Argum. 4. Confirming the former from the change of our condition while wee were unregenerate and by consequence under a Law-Covenant evil affections by the holy Law of God were stirred up and put forth themselves powerfully in our members and all our faculties both of soul and body to the production of the deadly fruit of actual sin Therefore it will follow when wee are now regenerated and under the Covenant of Grace holy desires stirred up by the New Covenant powerfully shew forth themselves in our members to the bringing forth the fruit of good works unto God that wee might not abide unfruitful Which is no small consolation for if wee by Faith would lay hold upon the Covenant of Grace and would stir up our souls by the promises thereof applyed unto us there is no doubt but wee should more plentifully bring forth good works That is it which Christ saith Joh. 15.5 I am the vine yee are the branches hee that abides in mee and I in him hee brings forth much fruit for without mee you can do nothing Vers. 6. But now wee are delivered from the Law that being dead wherein wee were held that wee should serve in newness of spirit and not in the oldness of the letter Argum. 5. Opening and confirming the former from the end of our changed condition Now to wit after Justification through the Grace of Christ wee are freed from the Law-Covenant that Covenant being dead in which wee were held or wee being dead in Christ in whom wee were contained judicially to that very end that wee should serve God by the power of the Holy Ghost bestowing new strength upon us by bringing forth new and spiritual fruit not superficial and hypocritical which the letter of the old legal Covenant now abolished at the most brought forth Therefore God will not fail of his end but will cause those that are justified bewailing their imperfect obedience to bring forth much fruit in the newness of the letter for the fruits which are brought forth by virtue of the Covenant of Grace are truly new and arise from the regenerating Spirit furnishing us with new strength forthwith to good works But the fruits which are brought forth by virtue of the Covenant of Works either are open rebellion of corrupt Nature against Gods Law or counterfeit obedience onely in the outward performance such as the fruits of the Pharisees are who in the letter that is the outward shew and formality obeyed without any renovation of the heart The second Part. Verse 7. What shall wee say then Is the Law sin God forbid Nay I had not known sin but by the Law For I had not known lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not covet The second part of the Chapter containing an Apology for the holiness of the Law in answering two Objections arising out of what was said before The first Objection seeing that evil and sinful motions are excited by the Law as was said the Law seems to bee sin or the cause of sin Hee answers by way of negation farre bee it from us to entertain any such thought hee gives three Reasons of his negation illustrated by his own experience wherein hee pleads for the Law The first Reason Because the Law discovers sin and manifests the evil that is in it which hee confirms by his own experience who had not known that lust which lurked in his heart to bee sin had hee not seen it forbidden by the Law Therefore the Law is holy Vers. 8. But
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
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
him publickly Vers. 12. For before that certain came from James he did eat with the Gentiles but when they were come hee with-drew and separated himself fearing them which were of the Circumcision The reasons of his reprehension are three Reason 1. Because hee dissembled the freeing of Christians from the yoak of Moses for fear of the hatred of some Jews when hee ought rather to fear lest hee should give scandal to the Jews or Gentiles Vers. 13. And the other Iews dissembled likewise with him insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away with their dissimulation Reason 2. Because by his example hee drew others with himself into the same dissimulation Vers. 14. But when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the Truth of the Gospel I said unto Peter before them all If thou being a Iew livest after the manner of Gentiles and not as do the Iews why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Iews Reason 3. For which Paul rightly reproves Peter because when hee had preached that a man is justified by Faith alone without the works of the Law by this hee confirms the false Doctrine of those that taught Moses Law necessarily to bee observed to salvation which was to halt in his course towards the mark of Evangelical Truth or to take a very ill course for the preservation of the Doctrine of Grace pure which fact was a most manifest sign that his Doctrine which hee had taught to the Churches of Galatia concerning justification by the Grace of Christ and freedome from the yoak of Ceremonies was so heavenly and divine that thereby hee had convinced Peter himself of errour when hee did not do things consentaneous to his doctrine The Second Part. Vers. 15. Wee who are Iews by nature and not sinners of the Gentiles 16. Knowing that a man is not justified by the Works of the Law but by the Faith of Iesus Christ even wee have beleeved in Iesus Christ that wee might bee justified by the Faith of Christ and not by the Works of the Law for by the Works of the Law shall no flesh bee justified From the occasion of his contention with Peter Paul commeth to the other part of the Chapter wherein as in the Epistle to the Romans hee confirms that Justification is not by Works of the Law but onely by Faith whilst hee affirms this Doctrine hee repeats his discourse had with Peter that all might know that hee had taught nothing else to the Galatians than that many faithful both of the Jews and Gentiles hearing speaking openly for the convincing of Peter which hee had taught before and defended viz. wee who are Iews by Nature c. The sense whereof is if referred to Peter wee who are Jews by Nature or propagation wee are holy in Gods account by the Covenant and not sinners i. e. strangers from the Covenant as the Gentiles wee sayes hee Jews and Apostles knowing that man is not justified by the Works of the Law but by Faith in Christ flie by Faith to Christ to this end that wee may bee justified by Faith and not by the Works of the Law Therefore the Gentiles are not to bee compelled to Judaize and to undergo the yoak of the Law as if they were any way under the Covenant of Works But if these words bee referred to the principal intent it is a Proposition of the Doctrine and of the same kind with that which hee had taught the Galatians and to which hee exhorted them to return to this sense wee Jews who by the Covenant are born the holy people of God and not strangers from the Covenant as you Gentiles wee are compelled to renounce the Works of the Law in point of Justification and to seek Righteousness through Faith in Christ Therefore much more to bee done by you gentile Galatians Furthermore hee confirms this Doctrine in this Chapter with three Arguments by the way answering Objections Argum. 1. No flesh is justified by the Works of the Law Therefore the Jews nor Gentiles Vers. 17. But if while wee seek to bee justified by Christ wee our selves also are found sinners is therefore Christ the Minister of sin God forbid Turning his speech to the Galatians hee solves the adversaries Objection The adversaries might say If whilst yee seek to be justified by Christ and not by the Law or Works yee are found sinners as from your own confession and your own mouth wee may judge of you then it will be lawful for you Christians justified by the Faith of Christ to give your selves liberty to sin and through you Christ will bee the Author and Minister or the Teacher of sin that you may sin by his authority Hee answers by abhorring the Objection as blasphemy God forbid sayes hee confidently denying it to follow from the Doctrine of Justification that it is lawful for him that is justified by Faith to sin or that Christ can bee said to bee the Minister or Teacher of sin Vers. 18. For if I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressor Hee gives four reasons of his Answer The first is this I betaking my self to Justification by the Faith of Christ have entred upon a sure course for the destroying of sin because I betook my self to Christ that hee might both forgive my sin and administer grace to the mortification of sin Therefore if I should again give my self up to sin as is objected and build the work of the Devil in mee I should bee contrary to my self I should transgress the means which is now laid for the destroying of sin and so I should bee foolish and mad not following the Doctrine of Justification by Faith Therefore from the Principles of Justification by Faith it is impossible that I should abuse the Grace or Name of Christ to sin more freely Vers. 19. For I through the Law am dead to the Law that I might live unto God Reas. 2. I by the strength of the Law am slain in the death of Christ and in respect of the Law or Legal Covenant I am dead to the Law and so set free from the Covenant of the Law to that end not that I should sin but that I should live unto God and should obey him Therefore from the Principles of this Doctrine I cannot indulge my self to sin The Argument is of force for if through the Law or Covenant of Works Christ is dead in the place of those that are to bee justified to this end that they being justified should live unto God It is impossible that the justified who in Christ are dead to the Law and would bee accounted free from the Covenant of Works should not also acknowledge themselves bound to live unto God and consequently that they ought not to indulge themselves in sin Vers. 20. I am crucified with Christ. Nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ liveth in mee and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the Faith
of the Son of God who loved mee and gave himself for mee Reas. 3. Confirming the former I being justified by Faith am judicially united unto Christ crucified and in him I am judicially bound to dye unto sin to crucifie the old man Therefore I cannot consent to sin from the principles of the Doctrine of Justification by Faith This is the Reason Christ our Surety on the Cross did not onely expiate the sins of the redeemed but also for their sakes hee promised that they should dye to sin and crucifie their corrupt nature Therefore hee which by Faith apprehending his judicial union with Christ crucified it is necessary also that hee acknowledge his obligation to dye to sin or to crucifie his old nature by the virtue of Christ. Nevertheless I live I justified by Faith am a new Creature by the Spirit of Christ living in mee so that I live not as to the old man but Christ dwelling in mee useth this natural life as his Organ and Member and Effects that by Faith in his strength I may lead this life taking care of all my affairs that I may as it were bring the Spirit into obedience unto God and that out of his same love by which hee dyed for mee Therefore I cannot consent to sin from the principles of justifying Faith The force of the Argument in short is this The Spirit quickens us that are justified by the Faith of Christ to live holily Therefore Justification by Faith doth not give liberty to sin Vers. 21. I do not frustrate the Grace of God for if Righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain The Objection is removed The second Argument for Justification by Faith and not by the Works of the Law followeth If Justification bee by the Works of the Law the Grace of God is in vain and made of none effect for if Justification bee by Works it cannot bee by Grace as Rom. 11.6 But God forbid that I should make the Grace of God of none effect Therefore God forbid that I should determine Justification to bee by Works For if Argum. 3. If Justification bee by the Law Christ is dead in vain because then both otherwise and more easily Justification might bee obtained than by the death of Christ But it is absurd to say that Christ is dead in vain Therefore Justification is not by the Law but by Faith CHAP. III. Vers. 1. O Foolish Galatians who hath bewitched you that you should not obey the Truth before whose eyes Iesus Christ hath been evidently set forth crucified among you Because hee knew that the minds of the Galatians were prepossessed with a false opinion Therefore lest they should faint upon the following disputation he by a grave objurgation shaketh them out of their drowsiness and pricks their consciences as it were with four stings For first of all hee calls them foolish and unadvised Because they suffer themselves foulely to bee deceived although not out of malice yet by their own imprudence 2 He calls them bewitched i. e. deluded by the delusions of Impostors 3 Hee objects to them their defection from the saving Truth of the Gospel concerning the Grace of Christ. 4 Hee amplifies their crime from this that Christ was so evidently preached amongst them and his sufferings with the causes of them so clearly explained as if the whole matter as in a painted Table had been set before their eyes The Preface being premised hee goes on to confirm that Justification is by Faith and not by the Works of the Law in four and twenty Arguments Vers. 2. This onely would I learn of you Received yee the Spirit by the Works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith Argum. 1. Yee have not received the Spirit of Regeneration and other graces by which the preaching of the Gospel is sealed amongst you by Works or by Doctrine received from the Covenant of Works but by Faith or by the Doctrine of the Covenant of Grace applied by Faith Therefore yee are not justified by Works but by Faith Vers. 3. Are yee so foolish having begun in the Spirit are yee now made perfect by the flesh Argum. 2. Although some Impostors have perswaded you that the beginning of Justification is by Faith but the accomplishment of it is to be had from Works yet this opinion is to be condemned of folly because it is impossible that the spiritual way of justifying by Faith should consist with that carnal way of justifying by Works much less that it should take its perfection from this Therefore wee are not justified by Works but by Faith Righteousness by Works is called flesh 1 Because although now this kind of Justification is impossible yet it is a common and foolish surmise of corrupt nature that wee are justified by Works and by the pride and vaunting of the flesh this is every where defended 2 Because all the Works of the unregenerate or a man not justified by Faith all his Works by which hee seeks Justification are meer flesh or the effects of corrupt flesh as they come from those that are not justified It is as absurd therefore to say that a man is justified by the continual violation of the Law or can acquire Righteousness by sinning But as touching Works which follow Justification or the remission of sins they cannot bee the cause of a thing already past before they were or could bee except you take Justification for the declaration of Justification amongst men already passed and pronounced by God Vers. 4. Have yee suffered so many things in vain if it bee yet in vain Argum. 3. If in your foolishness you proceed 〈◊〉 seek for Justification by Works or to bee justified partly by Faith partly by Works yee will lose all the fruit of your constancy hitherto and afflictions which yee have through Faith already suffered for the defence of Righteousness by Faith but I hope better things Therefore yee are not justified by Works but by Faith alone Vers. 5. Hee therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit and worketh miracles among you doth hee it by the Works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith Argum. 4. The Ministers by whom God gives his Spirit and works miracles among you are onely they which teach Justification not by Works but onely by Faith in Christ Therefore Justification by Faith alone is approved by God but not that which is feigned to bee by Works Vers. 6. Even as Abraham beleeved God and it was accounted to him for Righteousness Argum. 5. Abraham although hee did very much abound in virtues yet hee was justified by Faith alone for hee beleeved God and it was imputed to him for Righteousness For God hath promised to bless all Nations in his seed i. e. in Christ. Hee hath applied this blessing which containeth in it self Righteousness and life eternal in Christ to himself by beleeving Therefore wee are justified not by Works but by Faith Vers. 7. Know yee therefore that they which are
of Faith the same are the children of Abraham Argum. 6. Those alone who are justified by Faith or seek to bee justified by Faith and not by Works are the Sons of Abraham Therefore the onely cause of Justification is by Faith Vers. 8. And the Scripture fore-seeing that God would justifie the Heathen through Faith preached before the Gospel unto Abraham saying In thee shall all Nations bee blessed Argum. 7. The Spirit which is the Author of the Scriptures hath known this to bee the Counsel of God that the Gentiles should bee justified by Faith and foreseeing that this would come to pass hee preached the Doctrine to Abraham concerning the blessing of the Gentiles in him as in the Father the example and type of the faithful in him in whom the blessed seed Christ was included as being in his loyns as it is said of Levi Heb. 7.10 Therefore necessarily this way alone of Justification is firm Vers. 9. So then they which bee of Faith are blessed with faithful Abraham Argum. 8. The faithful alone or they which by Faith seek Righteousness do obtain a blessing with faithful Abraham Therefore this way of Righteousness by Faith is onely solid Vers. 10. For as many as are of the Works of the Law are under the curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them Argum. 9. How many soever are justified by the Law or seek justification by the works of the Law are under a curse because they adhere to the Covenant of Works yet perform not the condition of this Covenant that is perfect obedience to the Law Therefore justification is not of Works but of Faith It is written Hee confirms the antecedent because out of the Scripture Deut. 27.26 Cursed is every one that fulfilleth not the whole Law For they that seek justification by works do not fulfill the whole Law Therefore they are cursed Vers. 11. But that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for the just shall live by faith Argum. 10. The Scripture Hab. 2.4 pronounces that the just one shall live by faith therefore no man by the Law or by Works shall be justified in the sight of God Hee adds in the sight of God because hee doth not deny but that wee are justified by Works in the sight of men For justification before men is nothing else but the acknowledgement and declaration of justification already made by faith in the sight of God by reason of the fruits of faith that are manifested Vers. 12. And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them Argum. 11. Proving the consequence of the former Argument The Law or the cause of justifying by Works doth not consist with faith or with justification by faith because the legal promise is of giving life to him that doth and performeth the Law or to him who hath perfect inherent righteousness For faith bringeth righteousness imputed to them that beleeve in him who justifies the ungodly or bringeth righteousness to him who is destitute of Righteousness from himself Therefore if any righteousness bee given it is given by Faith and not by the Law and consequently righteousness of faith is alone to bee acknowledged Vers. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Argum. 12. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us upon the Cross undergoing a cursed death upon the Cross for us as it is manifest from Scripture which declares that kinde of death which Christ by the Counsel of God was to undergo to wit the hanging on a tree cursed Therefore justification is not by the Law but by faith in Christ who freed us from the curse of the Law Vers. 14. That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Iesus Christ that wee might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith Argum. 13. For this end Christ was made a curse that in Christ apprehended by faith the blessing of Abraham i. e. Righteousness and life eternal in the blessed seed might appear to the Gentiles who are destitute of works to which they may pretend to trust Therefore justification is by faith and not by works That wee might receive Hee changes the person and joynes himself and the other beleeving Jews to the beleeving Gentiles adding Arg. 14. Christ for this end is made a curse that all wee beleevers being Jews and Gentiles becoming one seed of Abraham might receive the promised Spirit of adoption by faith Therefore the justification of all us Gentiles and Jews is by faith unless wee affirm that Christ was frustrated of his end Vers. 15. Brethren I speak after the manner of men though it bee but a mans Covenant yet if it bee confirmed no man disanulleth or addeth thereto 16. Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made Hee saith not And to thy seeds as of many but as of one and to thy seed which is Christ. 17. And this I say that the Covenant that was confirmed before of Christ the Law which was four hundred and thirty years after cannot disanul that it should make the promise of none effect In these three verses is Argum. 15. confirming the former Covenants and Agreements justly performed even amongst men cannot bee made void or bee changed by superaddition vers 15. But a Covenant is duely made betwixt God and Abraham for the uniting all the faithful both Jews and Gentiles into one seed Christ an incorporation being made of Christ the head and all his members into one Christ mystical by faith vers 16. Therefore this Covenant cannot bee made void nor by the superaddition of the Law bee changed and so justification by faith shall stand That this Argument might bee understood vers 15. The Apostle prevents an Objection some might say That the way of justifying is changed neither is there the same reason of justifying Abraham before the Law and his posterity with whom the Law was made For latter things use to derogate from former He answers that in a ratified Covenant and now confirmed by Will and Testament nothing even amongst men can bee made void or changed much lesse in the divine Covenant now established after the manner of a Will Furthermore vers 16. hee assumes that so God covenanted with Abraham concerning a blessing freely to be given to those that beleeve in Christ that hee might take into one body his seed which consists both of Gentiles and Jews by the words of the Covenant This hee proves from the words of the promise because God said not to Seeds as if there should bee more seeds to wit Gentiles asunder and Jews asunder but hee said to thy Seed as of one viz. meaning Christ in whom the faithful both of Jews
faith at length howsoever they are esteemed amongst you shall bee punished by God Therefore bee yee not intangled in the same snares but repent and stand fast in the liberty Vers. 11. And I brethren if I yet preach Circumcision why do I yet suffer persecution then is the offence of the Cross ceased Hee refutes the calumny of his Adversaries and produces Arg. 13. Thou thy self dost teach Circumcision because thou hast circumcised Timothy Therefore undeservedly thou dost accuse us Hee answers by denying that hee taught Circumcision because although hee circumcised Timothy born of a Jewish mother for the use of Ceremonies with the Jews after the yoak of necessity was broken by the Decree of the Synod for a time it was left free yet hee never preached that Circumcision was to bee observed but hee both admonished the Jews concerning the abolition of Ceremonies and taught that legal Ceremonies upon no account should bee received amongst the Gentiles which hee proves because upon this ground hee suffered persecution by the Jews and because the Jews were not offended at the preaching of the Gospel or the Cross of Christ but freely tolerarated the Apostle if withall hee would promote the reception of Jewish customes amongst the Gentiles The strength of the Argument is this I had rather suffer persecution than preach that Circumcision is to bee joyned with the Gospel for if I should conjoyn them the offence of the Cross would cease the Jews would tolerate my preaching of Christ crucified But I dare not in the least depart from the purity of the Gospel Therefore yee must also stand fast in that Vers. 12. I would they were even cut off which trouble you At length shutting up the whole Disputation with an Apostolical Spirit hee both imprecates and denounces destruction to the Impostors by whom the Galatians were deceived The Second Part. Vers. 13. For Brethren yee have been called unto liberty onely use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh but by love serve one another The second part of the Chapter follows wherein the reason of his imprecation is given viz. because the seducers called them back and drew them again under the yoak whom God called to liberty under the form of an exhortation hee gives three Precepts concerning the right use of Christian liberty Onely 1. That bridleing the flesh or the sinful lusts of corrupt nature lest that being unsubdued it should draw Christian liberty into a licentiousness to sin they may serve one another in the duties of love Vers. 14. For all the Law is fulfilled in one word even in this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self Hee gives two reasons of this Precept 1. Because the Law is fulfilled in love and not in bare ceremonies Vers. 15. But if you bite and devour one another take heed yee bee not consumed one of another 2. Because unless they follow after love they will mutually devour and destroy one another by contentions Vers. 16. This I say then walk in the Spirit and yee shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh The second Precept is for the confirmation of the former that they follow the guidance of the Holy Ghost walking as hee himself out of the Scripture hath suggested to their hearts And that which The reasons of the Precept are six Reas. 1. Because so the lusts of the flesh shall not rule over you that yee may as servants obey its commands Therefore follow yee the guidance of the Spirit Vers. 17. For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other Reas. 2. Confirming the former because hee that follows the guidance of the Spirit will become victorious in the contest betwixt the flesh and the Spirit That this reason might bee plain the Apostle presupposes three things 1. Hee that is lead by the Spirit hath his nature partly renewed which is called the Spirit and partly corrupt which is called the Flesh. 2. Hee presupposes these two contrary principles with contrary endeavours to fight with one another that neither good nor evill without opposition and a mutual impediment can bee put in execution 3. Hee presupposes that the Holy Ghost doth help Beleevers in their striving by the Word and Grace From whence it is concluded that hee which hearkeneth to the Spirit will become victorious in striving Vers. 18. But if yee bee led by the Spirit yee are not under the Law Reason 3. Confirming the former Because they that are led by the Spirit are not servants to sin under the servile Covenant of the Law to whom onely the knowledge of sin is vouchsafed but not the victory or strength against sin but Gods Free-men are they who under the Covenant of Grace obtain strength of God for the resisting of sin Vers. 19. Now the Works of the flesh are manifest which are these Adultery Fornication Uncleanness Lasciviousness 20. Idolatry Witchcraft Hatred Variance Emulations ●rath Strife Seditions Heresies 21. Envyings Murders Drunkenness Revellings and such like of the which I tell you before as I have also told you in time past that they which do such things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Reason 4. Because if they do not follow the Spirit but rather the flesh doing the Works of the flesh of which sort hee reckons seventeen they shall not bee heirs of the Kingdome of God Vers. 22. But the fruit of the Spirit is Love Ioy Peace Long-suffering Gentleness Goodness Faith 23. Meekness Temperance against such there is no Law Reason 5. Because if they follow the Spirit and bring forth such fruit of whith sort hee reckons nine they will not have the Law against them i. e. cursing them and condemning them but for Reconciliation sake towards God they shall finde the Law their friend Therefore it behoved you to follow the Spirit Vers. 24. And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts Hee proves that they shall not have the Law against them because they that are Christs and judicially crucified in Christ for satisfaction to the Law they are also judicially obliged to crucifie the body of sin i. e. corrupt nature with the affections and lusts Wherefore they that actually indeavour to peform that and to bring forth the fruit of the Spirit they cannot have the Law against them as they that now seriously indeavour to promote the scope and end of the Law Vers. 25. If wee live in the Spirit let us also walk in the Spirit Reason 6. Because by the Spirit wee have Consolation Peace and Joy wherein life consists Therefore wee ought to follow the guidance of the Spirit Vers. 26. Let us not bee desirous of vain-glory provoking one another envying one another The third Precept is especially concerning the shunning Ambition with the attendants of that vice viz. backbiting and envy with which evils the Churches used to bee infected But because the Doctors of the Church were chiefly obnoxious
themselves fairly before men Onely Sign 2. That they compel the Galatians to admit of Circumcision not out of love but onely lest they should suffer persecution by the Jews for the Doctrine of the Cross or free justification by the death of Christ and not by the works of the Law Vers. 13. For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the Law but desire to have you circumcised that they may glory in your flesh Sign 3. That although they were circumcised long since yet they little care for the observance of the Law which they required of others But desire Sign 4. That they seek occasion from the circumcision of the Galatians to glory amongst the Jews that they had converted many Proselytes to the Law Vers. 14. But God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Iesus Christ by whom the world is crucified unto mee and I unto the world In the other part of the comparison the sincerity of the Apostle is shewn in these two things 1. That hee onely glories in his free Redemption by Christ crucified and in his sufferings for the Doctrine 2. That hee doth not affect earthly pomp but contemn the world with all its pomp and glory which persecuted and despised him for the Doctrine of the Cross sake and by the Cross learnt daily more and more to contemn the world Vers. 15. For in Christ Iesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but a new creature Hee gives four Reasons of his endeavour which are so many signs of his sincerity Reason 1. I know that in the Kingdome of Christ neither Circumcision nor Uncircumcision is respected by God but a new creature i. e. I know that it is necessary when any one is admitted by faith into the Kingdome of Christ and justified that hee should bee more and more renewed and sanctified but other priviledges are of no value without newness of life Therefore I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ. Vers. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace bee on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Reas. 2. The rule of my intention is the summe of the whole Canonical Scripture to which as to one onely rule or one onely Canon the Doctrine and life of all is to bee conformable Therefore I will only glory in the Cross of Christ c. Peace Reas. 3. I am perswaded that whosoever shall order their faith and life by this rule they shall also obtain peace i. e. a sense of their reconciliation to God all kinde of blessings or an accumulation of good things and mercy or a remedy for the purging away all evills Therefore I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ. Israel Reas. 4. They are alone the true Israel of God that follow this Rule Therefore all things laid aside I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ by c. Vers. 17. From henceforth let no man trouble mee for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Iesus After the Comparison as a Conquerour hee triumphs over his Emulators forbidding them to make him any further work either by gain-saying his Doctrine or by detracting from his Authority because hee bare the ensign of his Felicity towards Christ viz. the mark of a servant most devoted to Christ i. e. Hee hath all the signes of an Apostle and a faithfull Witness clearly to bee seen in him Vers. 18. Brethren the Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with your spirit Amen Hee shuts up the Epistle with his accustomed seal wishing that the Grace of Jesus Christ manifested beleeved and effectual might abide in their mindes hearts and whole life that from thence they may draw consolation both in life and death to which Amen is subjoyned as a testimony of his vote and the faith of an Apostle and for a seal of the truth of the precedent Doctrine The Epistle of Paul to the EPHESIANS Analytically expounded The Contents THe City of the Ephesians was the Metropolis of Lesser Asia in which the Apostle two whole years preached the Gospel Act. 19. And when lastly hee went up to Jerusalem hee fore-told a change of the Church to the Ephesians Act. 20. Against which hee fortifies them by this Epistle when hee was now held captive at Rome and plainly despaired of his return hee endeavoureth diligently to confirm their minds in Faith and Truth There are two principal parts of the Epistle besides the Preface and the Conclusion The first is The Doctrine of Grace for the confirmation of their Faith to Chap. 4. The other is the Doctrine of gratitude and thankfulness tending to holiness of life to the end of the Epistle That which belongeth to the first part First of all hee shews that the whole reason of our salvation is free and solidly founded on Christ in the first Chapter Furthermore hee amplifies this Grace from the former misery of the Ephesians Chap. 2. Thirdly The scandal of the Cross lying upon him being taken away hee exhorts them to constancy and progress in the Faith by the glorious commendation of his Ministery and by manifesting the cause for which hee suffered Chap. 3. In the second part hee gives Precepts of keeping the unity of the Church of holiness of life as well in general as in particular in the shunning of evil and following after virtue by which the life of every one is ordered in a Christian manner Chap. 4. and in the former part of Chap. 5. After these hee descends to houshold duties to which and all other Christian duties that are to bee performed hee arms the faithful in the latter part of Chap. 5. and in the former part of Chap. 6. CHAP. I. THis Chapter besides the Preface contains two parts In the first is a thanksgiving tending to prove that the whole business of salvation both of Iews and Gentiles is meerly of Grace and wholly built on Christ to vers 15. In the other is a commemoration of the Apostles continual thanksgiving and prayer offered to God for the Ephesians tending to the confirmation of Faith the assurance of their salvation and of the perseverance of all truly faithful unto the end The Preface in the two first verses contains a direction of the Epistle and a salutation of the Ephesians which is very short because hee hath not to do here with envious persons or enemies but with conformable and obedient men to whom it would bee sufficient briefly to intimate his divine authority in writing this Epistle and the Apostles good will towards them and opinion of them Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the Will of God to the Saints which are at Ephesus and to the faithful in Christ Iesus In the direction of the Epistle wee have the description of the Writer from his Name Office and Authority And then of those to whom hee writes from the condition in which they stood towards God and from the place which they did inhabit on the
and by baptism sealed to you so that there is no need to seek any thing out of Christ that belongs to the full paying the price of Redemption Therefore wee must not depart from him Yee are risen Argum. 7. Yee beleevers by baptism are brought into the communion of Christs Resurrection or his victory that hee gained over death and sin by which yee are not onely risen to newness of life in holiness but also yee shall rise in respect of your bodies to a glorious and immortal life so that nothing as to holiness and eternal life is to bee desired out of Christ Therefore yee must not at all depart from him Through the faith But yet lest too much be attributed to external baptisme from the work as they say done hee requires the faith of God efficaciously working in those that are baptized i. e. That wee beleeve that God who powerfully raised Christ from the dead according to his promises will also effectually raise us according to his promise to all manner of newness of life For by how much the nearer wee imbrace the power of God that raised Christ our head from the dead by so much the more wee shall make progress in newness of life Vers. 13. And you being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh hath hee quickned together with him having forgiven you all trespasses Argum. 8. God hath made you Colossians in times past dead in sins and lying in the uncircumcision of irregenerate nature partakers of the holy and immortal life of Christ as to right and an inchoate possession all your sins by grace being forgiven therefore as to a plenary remission of sins and to an holy and immortal life nothing is to bee sought out of Christ. This benefit is called a quickning together with Christ although Christ had risen some years before they were converted because in what moment soever any one is by faith united to Christ in the same moment is hee united to him now reigning in heaven yea in his dying burial and rising again after a judicial or forinsical manner so that in all things in which hee hath or doth sustain our person it is no less than if wee had in a Physical manner been present and consented to every act of his in our behalf Vers. 14. Blotting out the hand-writing of Ordinances that was against us which was contrary to us and took it out of the way nayling it to his Cross. Argum. 9. In which also hee explains how Christ obtained remission of sins for us viz. by taking away the hand-writing in this sense The Covenant of works is an hand-writing established partly in threatnings partly in appointed positive Ceremonials excluding the Gentiles from the Church was against us and contrary to us But Christ hath blotted out this hand-writing taking it out of the way and nailing it to his Cross Therefore you must not look back to the legal Covenant or ceremonial appointments in them to seek for any thing neither must yee depart in the least from the death of Christ by which yee are delivered from that hand-writing Hee compares this Covenant of works with its appurtenances to an hand-writing by which any one bindes himself for the paying of a debt for whosoever are convicted of sin by the light of nature are also by the force of the Covenant of Works obnoxious to wrath and as often as wee are convinced of sin so often also by nature wee confirm the punishment of sin or the condition of the legal Covenant by the judgement of our consciences against our selves as by an hand-writing The conscience of every one performs this much more which hath received the written Law and daily bears the punishment of the Law for the breaking of it But chiefly all justiciaries are compelled to subscribe to this hand-writing who acknowledge no righteousness besides inherent or that which is by works Of which number were those that Judaized and observeers of Ceremonies who adhered to this Covenant seeking Righteousness by works and the appointed Ceremonies For by how much they did indeavour by this means more manifestly to establish their own Righteousness by so much the more openly they did derive the punishment of the Law broken by the force of the Covenant upon themselves For no man enters a Covenant but hee also admits all the conditions of the Covenant The hand-writing is said to bee in Ordinances or rather subscribed to Ordinances so far as they took upon them those commands or Legal Ordinances that they might bee perfected in themselves they did withall oblige themselves to bear the punishment of the breach of those commands Hee calls it the hand-writing against us or contrary to us partly because it separated the Jews from the Gentiles and the Gentiles from the Jews Partly because it was a yoak which neither they nor their Fathers could bear Partly because as often as they did any work of the Law either moral or ceremonial to bee justified thereby so often by the imperfection of their work and the profession of their imperfection in the use of the Levitical Ceremonies they did argue themselves guilty or rather did acknowledge themselves guilty of death As for example when they offered Sacrifices and did repeat them they not onely acknowledged themselves sinners against the Moral Law but did also really confess that their frequent Sacrifices could not purge their consciences from sin and so the hand-writing of the Covenant of works was alwaies contrary to them But Christ hath blotted out this hand-writing and took it out of the way nailing it to his Cross insomuch as hee for the sake of them that were his hath paid for the redeemed the penalty due upon the hand-writing by the death of his Cross and hath compleated and abolished the positive Ordinances concerning those vanishing Ceremonies by the real Sacrifice of his own body once offered Vers. 15. And having spoiled principalities and powers hee made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it Argum. 10. Christ hath brought all the Devils who exercise their power and tyranny upon the Elect overthrown by the price of Redemption paid upon the Cross and gloriously triumpheth over them openly in the sight of God Angels and men whose eyes are open unto their own disgrace and our deliverance Therefore it remains that nothing is to bee sought out of Christ. The Devils are called Principalities and Powers 1 Because in the world they potently exercise authority over all the reprobate children of disobedience and all the unregenerate which do nothing else but execute the will of the Devil 2 Because they are Sergeants executing the judgement of God holding those captive that are not reconciled to God in Christ. 3 Because they fight against Christ the Redeemer neither do they dismiss the redeemed and reconciled from the prison of darkness unless compelled by the stronger power of Christ. They are said to bee spoiled by Christ on the Cross 1 Inasmuch as
Christ paying the price of our Redemption hath obtained by Covenant of the Father that all the redeemed should bee delivered from the prison of darkness ignorance sin and death 2 Inasmuch as Christ infinite in power when hee had once satisfied justice on the Cross broke the bars and chains of sin judgement and the Law wherewith the Devil held the redeemed bound that henceforth they cannot have any power 3 Inasmuch as hee hath made his redeemed his possession and peculiar people that they might not any longer bee the flock of Satan Christ is said to have made a shew of the Devils and to have openly triumphed on the Cross 1 Inasmuch as hee hath valiantly received overcome and extinguished all their temptations and poisoned darts whether immediately cast by them against him hanging on the Cross or hurled by the poisonous tongues of furious adversaries or brandished by the provocation of the ingratitude of his Disciples flying from him 2 Inasmuch as Christ hath turned the malice of the Devils all their subtilties and machinations by which they sought his life incessantly stirring up their slaves to crucifie him till hee hanged upon the Cross to their own destruction and to the most open ruine of their dominion 3 Inasmuch as hee hath shewn himself Lord of Heaven and Earth by signs and wonders in the very time of his crucifying 4 Inasmuch as hee hath shewn openly his power by converting the thief hanging at his right hand and the Centurion standing at his feet 5 Inasmuch as the price of Redemption being already paid the Conqueror not onely in the sight of God and Angels but also in the sight of these Devils and also in the bearing of all beholders cryed out that his work was finished and that to his own eternal glory and the perpetual ignominy of ●his enemies From which it follows that wee must not depart from Christ for the obtaining of any good or that wee might bee delivered from any evil The Third Part. Vers. 16. Let no man therefore judge you in meat or drink or in respect of an holy day or of the new Moon or of the Sabbath daies The third part of the Chapter in which by way of consequence hee brings in a special admonition to beware of some special corruptions of the false Apostles The admonitions are three 1 That they do not regard the judgement and censure of any who shall dare to condemn them for not observing of Mosaical Ceremonies as for example for meat or drink or for neglecting an holy-day or an part of any holy-day or for not observing the Sabbath of the Jews Vers. 17. Which are a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ. The reason of the admonition is Because those Legal Ceremonies were the shadows of future things which were onely to remain until the body or Christ the truth and substance of them should come which therefore ought to cease after his comming Vers. 18. Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshiping of Angels intruding into those things which hee hath not seen vainly puft up by his fleshly mind 2 Is That they beware of the worshiping and invocation of Angels For this end hee alledges seven Arguments Argum. 1. Because whosoever doth teach you this worshiping in very deed hee endeavours to defraud you of the reward of Religion or Life Eternal Voluntarily Argum. 2. Because not from the authority of God but of his own will and lust hee doth deliver this Doctrine Humility Argum. 3. Because hee that teacheth the worshiping of Angels doth hypocritically abuse you with the pretence of humility Intruding Argum. 4. Because hee that teacheth the worshiping of Angel proceeds boldly without the light of the Word of God yea without the light of right reason For hee never saw any thing concerning this Doctrine either in holy writ or with bodily eyes or by the light of sound reason Vainly Argum. 5. Because whosoever teacheth the worshiping of Angels is not humble as hee pretends but swelling in his own carnal opinion is most vainly puffed up Vers. 19. And not holding the head from which all the body by joynts and bands having nourishment ministred and knit together increaseth with the increase of God Arg. 6. Because whosoever teacheth the worshipping of Angels is void of true faith hee is not joyned nor cleaves unto Christ although hee know all other things yet hee is ignorant of the vertue of Christ and the grace that is in him yea hee is divided from Christ our head and doth renounce him From which Arg. 7. Because in Christ alone is the storehouse from which all grace and whatsoever is required to life and spiritual growth is abundantly derived to all his members so that neither is it necessary to ask any thing of the Angels neither can any thing be done in that kinde without dishonour done to Christ either by invoking the Angels or by worshipping them after any other manner Therefore ye are to beware of the invocation of Angels In this Argument by the comparison of the humane natural head Christ is described by a sixfold Similitude 1 As the humane natural head hath a body subject to it so Christ hath the Church subject to him as his mystical body 2 As sense and motion is derived from the humane head to the whole body and so to all its members so sense and spiritual motions are derived from Christ to all the members of the Church 3 As from the humane head the conjunction of the nerves and ligaments which go through the whole body are extended so from the head Christ the holy Spirit flows and faith in Christ and love towards our neighbour which are diffused through the whole body mystical 4 As by those junctures life sense and motion is administred to the whole body so by these all spiritual grace is administred to the faithful 5 As by these the members are compacted with the head and amongst themselves so by these Christ and his members are united 6 As by these in the natural body so by these in Christs body mystical first of all there is made an increase of every member and also of the whole body mystical 7 As there is the increase of nature so here of grace the increase of God i. e. great and solid according to the measure given to every one Vers. 20. Wherefore if yee bee dead with Christ from the Rudiments of the world why as though living in the world are ye subject to Ordinances The third Admonition follows with a reprehension because they had subjected themselves to decrees or humane traditions and doctrines of men determining Religion in those things which God hath not determined There are five Arguments of the Admonition or Reprehension 1 Because yee are freed by the death of Christ from all carnal rudiments of Religion such as Judaical ceremonies so that you have no further to do with them yee ought not to admit the
decrees and precepts of men as if as yet after the manner of children under Rudiments yee were obnoxious to such sort of Elements The force of this first Argument consisteth in these five things 1 Christ hath fulfilled that which was prefigured by Moses his ceremonies and by his death hath abrogated those typical ceremonies and that shadowy manner of teaching the Church and worshipping God so that the legal Covenant cannot exact any thing more from him than that which was paid and perfected in his death 2 Christ dying all in Covenant are dead judicially with him whose person Christ hath born Therefore the legal Covenant could exact nothing more from them for whose sake Christ dyed than the Laws of men required of those that are dead For all in him are reckoned as dead 3 All ceremonial Precepts in respect of the authority commanding were divine and heavenly untill Christ But now abolished through Christ they cease to bee divine and begin to bee humane elements or rudiments worldly and carnal not so much in respect to the things commanded as to the mundane authority commanding them 4 So long as the Colossians were not converted to Christ but did live in the world as worldlings free from righteousness so they were slaves to devils and men obnoxious to all manner of servitude and to all kinde of evil 5 But now after they were one body with Christ they were made free by faith and also were set at liberty from all evill neither ought they to submit themselves to any yoak unless to that which Christ would have them subjugated and consequently they ought not to bee subject in the business of Religion to the opinions and traditions of men Vers. 21. Touch not taste not handle not Argum. 2. Because those your superstitious commanders and authors of humane decrees by their precise prohibition of things left at liberty do also discover their tyranny and intolerable hypocrisie in the rigid exaction of their commands such as hee recites with some indignation Taste not touch not and the like in which they were not only willing to continue the Levitical Law contrary to the will of God but also to superadde their rigid exactions of the Law which was abolished Therefore do not yee subject your selves to them Vers. 22. Which all are to perish with the using after the commandements and doctrines of men Argum. 3. Because these corporeal things instituted by God to use that at length in using they might bee consumed and perish c. Therefore it is unjust to prohibit their use under the pretence of Religion Therefore do not yee subject your selves to these commands Of men Argum. 4. Because decrees of this sort are not the commands of God but the commands of men according to which God hath declared that he will not bee worshipped Therefore do not yee admit them Vers. 23. Which things have indeed a shew of wisdome in will-worship and humility and neglecting of the body not in honour to the satisfying of the flesh Argum. 5. With the confutation of an Objection because although these observations have a shew of wisdome as part of a voluntary and not compelled worship as exercises of humility towards Angels as of obedience towards the Governours of the Church as somewhat conducing to the mortification of flesh yet in very deed they have onely a meer shew of wisdome and are of no value or esteem before God Lastly so much as they seem to detract from the body so much they adde to the satisfaction of the flesh or corrupt nature which alwayes most earnestly desires in its forgeries about Religion to satisfie itself CHAP. III. THe second part of the Epistle is concerning the endeavours after a Christian life There are two parts of the Chapter In the first are contained general Exhortations pertaining to true piety and holiness of life to Vers. 18. In the other are special Exhortations which belong to certain and particular conditions of men to the end Vers. 1. If yee then bee risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God The general Exhortations are Nine 1 Is to the study of heavenly things that they no longer spend their endeavours and labours in seeking earthly pleasures honours and riches but that they seek Christian vertues and those that pertain to eternal life If yee bee risen The Arguments of the Exhortation are six all which prove that wee ought to study heavenly things 1 In Baptism yee have taken upon yee a resemblance of the resurrection or of pursuing a new and spiritual life and ingrafted by Faith into Christ yee have communion with Christ rising who for the sake of his own as a surety hath risen to spiritual life and hath undertaken to raise Beleevers by the virtue of his resurrection communicated to them Therefore yee ought to indeavour after heavenly things Where Christ Argum. 2. Above i. e. in Heaven Christ as to the local presence of his body is our head and the fountain of all our felicity Therefore that yee may injoy him yee ought to seek things above The right hand Argum. 3. Christ sitteth at the right hand of God by which as man hee hath gotten the highest advancement and a name above every name that he may grant to us all things above Therefore things above are to bee sought by you Vers. 2. Set your affections above not on things on the earth Hee amplifies this Exhortation commanding that they savour heavenly things i. e. that they study to know esteem care for effect and with earnestness pursue those things which pertain to an heavenly life and not those things that pertain to this terrestrial life which although they may be lawful and necessary yet they are to bee looked after by the by onely Vers. 3. For yee are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God Argum. 4. Yee by Faith in Baptism are partakers of the death of Christ and are obliged by the virtue of his death to dye to the world and sin yea yee are dead to them or in respect of them viz. after a judicial and spiritual manner savour not any more those earthly things or serve them Therefore yee ought to savour and follow things above heavenly and not earthly things And your life Argum. 5. Although your life i. e. your Adoption your Righteousness your Inheritance your full Sanctification and Glorification is hid to the world yea to you your selves for the most part for now you receive them onely by Faith and a little possession of first fruits yet it is preserved in Heaven in its causes with Christ hid in God Therefore yee ought to savour and seek those things which pertain to life eternal Vers. 4. When Christ who is our life shall appear then shall yee also appear with him in glory Arg. 6. By answering an Objection arising from the former Argument although your life is now hid yet fully and openly it shall bee
death that is the Devil Argum. 10. Christ out of his love to the Elect the Children of God would partake of the same humane Nature with them that hee might by his death satisfie for them and so abolish the power of the Devil which hee as an exe●utioner hath by the Law against all sinners Therefore the reputation of Christ is not to bee diminished because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 15. And deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage Argum. 11. Amongst the fruits and ends of Christs death this is one that hee might deliver his from the fear of death both temporal and eternal under which fear all sinners are held all their life long till they see themselves freed from sin and death upon the merit of Christ dying for them Therefore c. Vers. 16. For verily hee took not on him the nature of Angels but hee took on him the seed of Abraham Argum. 12. Christ by assuming the seed of Abraham or humane nature into the unity of his person wherein from eternity hee subsisted he● advanced the humane nature in respect to priviledges dignity and honour above the Nature of Angels which hee took not Therefore the reputation of Christ is no● to bee lessened because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 17. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to bee made like unto his Brethren that hee might bee a merciful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Argum. 13. Christ ought to bee made like his Brethren the Elect in Nature Properties Affections and all infirmities except sin that his Brethren might bee the more certain and assured of his faithfulness and mercy in the exercise of his Priestly Office and perpetual intercession with God for them Therefore the excellency of Christ ought not to bee diminished because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 18. For in that hee himself hath suffered being tempted hee is able to succour them that are tempted Argum. 14. Confirming the former Christ by his suffering afflictions and temptations in the humane Nature was fitted by his experience of sufferings in whom wee may trust to bee able and willing to succour us under the like trials Therefore his reputation is not to bee diminished because of his sufferings in the flesh And thus as in the former Chapter it was demonstrated that Christ is the true Son of God so in this Chapter hee hath demonstrated him to bee the son of man The one true God-man and hath removed the scandal of infirmities and sufferings of Christ in the flesh which all the beleeving Hebrews did dash against CHAP. III. THe excellency of the Prophetical Office and person of Christ being vindicated in the fore-going discourse even under all his sufferings in the flesh Hee exhorts them now to a consideration of this excellency that they may hold fast the profession of the Christian Faith and not apostatize from it to this end producing fifteen Arguments Vers. 1. Wherefore holy Brethren partakers of the heavenly calling consider the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession Christ Iesus The Proposition concerning the holding fast their Profession of the Faith is contained in an Exhortation to a serious consideration of Christ the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession Argum. 1. Yee are sanctified and by Faith made partakers of an effectual calling to heavenly things Therefore you ought to hold fast the Profession of this Faith Apostle Argum. 2. Yee have Jesus Christ the Son of God the Apostle or Teacher of your Faith sent from God and our High Priest who hath expiated our sins by his blood You have him I say the Author of this Profession Therefore it is to bee held fast Vers. 2. Who was faithful to him that appointed him as also Moses was faithful in all his house Argum. 3. Christ in the administration of his Apostleship and Priesthood committed to him is not less faithful than Moses who obtained testimony from God that hee was faithful in all his house Therefore ought yee to hold fast your Christian Profession Because the Hebrews ascribed too much to Moses and could hardly bee drawn away from Mosaical Ceremonies that they might bee brought to Christ Therefore here on set purpose hee compares Christ with Moses Vers. 3. For this man was counted worthy of more glory than Moses inasmuch as hee who hath builded the house hath more honour than the house Argum. 4. Christ is so much more excellent than Moses and the whole Church also by how much the builder of the house is more excellent than the house it self or any part of it Moses also is but a member of that Church and a part onely of that house Therefore the Profession of your Faith is to bee held fast Vers. 4. For every house is builded by some man but hee that built all things is God Argum. 5. Confirming the former under the same comparison As no house not part of an house is built by it self but by another man so neither the Church nor Moses who is a member of the Church is built by himself but owes his building to some higher Architect But Christ who is proved God is the builder of the Church and of every member of it and also of all things Therefore hee is more excellent than Moses and the Faith and Profession of his Doctrine is to bee held fast Vers. 5. And Moses verily was faithful in all his house as a servant for a testimony of those things which were to bee spoken after 6. But Christ as a Son over his own house whose house are wee if wee hold fast the confidence and the rejoycing of the hope firm unto the end Argum. 6. Moses was faithful as a servant in anothers family to testifie and that indeed darkly which afterwards more fully and openly was to bee spoken of Christ and his dominion But Christ is faithful as Son and Heir who is over his house and speaks from his own authority Therefore Christ is more excellent than Moses and the Profession of his Doctrine is to bee held fast Whose house Argum. 7. If wee firmly hold fast the confidence and hope of eternal life procured for us by Christ and to bee communicated in which hope wee now make our boast wee shall declare our selves to bee his house or his true Church in which the Lord will dwell Therefore the Profession of our Faith is to bee held fast Vers. 7. Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith Today if yee will hear his voice 8. Harden not your hearts as in the provocation in the day of temptation in the wilderness 9. When your Fathers tempted mee proved mee and saw my works forty years Argum. 8. From Psal. 95.8 9 c. unless you hold fast the Faith of Christ you will disobey the Holy Ghost who in the Scripture forbids you to harden your hearts when you hear the Word of God
Himself to bee made an High-Priest But hee that said unto Him Thou art My Son to day have I begotten Thee 1. Our Lord is commended for not glorifying himself by intrusion in his Office Then 1. Such as pretend to bee Christs Servants must beware to intrude themselves into any Office and must attend as Christ did Gods Calling to Gods Employment 2. Hee that usurpeth a Calling doth glorifie himself and taketh the honour that is not given him for which hee must give a Reckoning 2. Thou art My Son this day have I begotten Thee doth import by the Apostles alledging not onely Christs God-head and Declaration to be Gods Son but also the Declaration of him To be High-Priest in his Man-head taken out from amongst men So deep are the Consequences of Scripture when the Spirit bringeth forth his own Mind from it Vers. 6. As hee saith also in another place Thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedec Hee alledgeth another place more clear Then Howbeit Truth may bee proved from one place yet it is needful also for the ●earers cause to alledge more places till the hearer bee convinced Vers. 7. Who in the daies of his flesh when hee had offered up Prayers and Supplications with strong Crying and Tears unto him that was able to save him from Death and was heard in that hee feared Having proved Christs Office hee sheweth his Exercise of it in offering for our sins a more precious Oblation than the typical Even himself with Tears to Death In these words Then Christ is pointed out unto us 1. An High-Priest taken from amongst men a very true Man of our substance Flesh of our flesh 2. A Man subject to the sinless infirmities of our nature as Grief Fear Mourning Death 3. Having a set-time during which hee was to bear these our infirmities in the daies of his flesh 4. Exercising his Priestly Office in these his daies and offering his precious Tears and Cryes yea his life for us 5. One who howsoever Fear was upon his holy Nature yet knew hee should bee delivered from death 6. Who as a man in confidence of delivery made prayers to the Father 7. Whose prayers are not refused but accepted and heard on our behalf 8. And that these his sufferings were ended with the daies of his humiliation 1. These Acts of Fear and Tears c. are the proper Acts of his humane nature Then 1. As the Divine Nature had its own Acts proper to it self so had the humane Nature acts proper to it self also and some acts were common to both the Natures So of Christs acts some are Divine some Humane some are both Divine and Humane 2. As Man hee was unable to bear our burthen or to help himself and therefore behoved to have the help of the God-head 3. Albeit hee was God in his own person yet as Man hee behoved to take our room and place and pray for assistance both as surety for us and teacher of us To give us example how to behave our selves in straights 2. Hee feared death and offered Prayers and Tears and strong cries Because not onely death temporal presented it self before him but which was much more the curse of the Law the Fathers wrath for sin duly deserved by us was set in a Cup to his head which should have swallowed him up for ever if hee had not by the worthiness of his person overcome it and turned the eternal wrath and curse due unto us into a temporal equivalent to himself Then 1. The sense of Gods wrath whom will it not terrifie since it wrought so on Christ And Nature cannot chuse but fear when sense feeleth wrath 2. Felt wrath seemeth to threaten yet more and worse and therefore beside feeling doth breed yet further fear 3. The curse of God due to our sins virtually implying the deserved pains of Hell is more terrible than can bee told and such as the Creature cannot chuse but fear and abhor 4. Christs sufferings were no phantasie but very earnest vehement and terrible 5. No weapon nor Buckler against wrath but flying to God by supplication and crying and tears 3. Hee prayed to him that was able to save him and was heard Then 1. Albeit sense of wrath seeth no out-gate but black fears are alwaies before it yet Faith looking to Gods omnipotency seeth an out-gate 2. Christs prayers in our behalf receive no repulse but are heard 3. Christ both died and was saved from death also because it could not keep Dominion over him So shall wee bee saved from death though wee die Vers. 8. Though hee were a Son yet learned hee obedience by the things which hee suffered Hee removeth the scandal of his Cross by shewing the necessity and use thereof Albeit hee was the Son yet hee learned obedience by those things which hee suffered Then 1. In the time of Christs deepest humiliation the union betwixt his God-head and Man-head was not loosed hee remained the Son of God still 2. The excellency of his person exempted him not from suffering having once taken on our debt 3. Christ knew what suffering was before hee suffered but hee knew not by experience till hee actually suffered 4. Christs holy life was a part of his obedience to the Father but his obedience in suffering for our sins was obedience in an higher degree 5. To obey God by way of action is a common lesson to every holy creature but that a sinless and holy person should suffer for sin was a new lesson proper to Christ a practick which never passed but in Christs person onely Vers. 9. And being made perfect hee became the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him 1. The suffering of Christ is called his Perfection Then 1. Christ though perfect in his person yet hee wanted something to make him perfect in his Office till hee suffered for hee could not satisfie the Fathers justice till hee suffered nor yet could hee have fellow-feeling from experience of the miseries of his members 2. After suffering Christ lacketh nothing that may pacifie God or comfort and save sinners 2. The fruit followeth Being perfected hee is become the Author of salvation to all that obey him Then 1. The proper cause of our salvation is to bee sought in Christ perfected by suffering not in any one part of his holiness or obedience in doing or any part of his suffering but in him perfected by his obedience even to the death of the Cross. Wee may take comfort from and make use of his holy conception life and several virtues but wee must remember that his accomplished obedience in doing and suffering is our ransome joyntly considered and not any particular act looked on alone 2. None should stumble at Christs sufferings which perfected him in his Office and likewise perfected our ransome to the Father 3. Christ felt the bitterness of his own sufferings himself but wee got the sweet fruit thereof even eternal life 4. Onely they
of the New Testament is with an oath and so cannot be changed Then To make a Priest in the Gospel who is not consecrated by an oath to abide for evermore in the office but may be changed and another come in in his place is contrary to the institution of the Evangelical Priesthood The next difference hee maketh this The Law admitteth men in the plural number a plurality of Priests but the Gospel admitteth no plurality of Priests but the Son onely to be Priest Melchisedec's order in the type hath no Priest but one in it without a Suffragane or substituted Priest Therefore Christ the true Melchisedec is alone in his Priesthood without partner or Deputy or Suffragane Then To make plurality of Priests in the Gospel is to alter the order of Melchesedes sworn with an oath and to renounce the March set betwixt the Law and the Gospel 3. The third Difference The Law maketh men Priests but the Evangelical Oath maketh the Son of God Priest for the Gospel Then To make a man Priest now is to mar the Son of Gods priviledge to whom the priviledge onely belongeth 4. The fourth Difference The Law maketh such Priests as have infirmity that is sinful men who cannot make the Sacrifice which they offer effectual to pacifie nor the blessing which they pronounce to come nor the instruction which they give forcible to open the eyes But the Evangelical Oath maketh the Son who is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God through him Then To make a sinful and weak man a Priest now is to weaken the Priesthood of the Gospel and make it like the Law 5. The fift Difference The Law maketh men Priests which have infirmities over whom death had power that they could not be consecrated but for their short life time But the Evangelical Oath maketh the Son whom the sorrows of death could not hold and hath consecrated him for evermore Then As long as Christs Consecration lasteth none must meddle with his office 6. The last Difference The Law instituting Priests was not Gods last will but might suffer addition But the Evangelical Oath is since the Law and Gods last and unchangeable Will Therefore To adde unto it and bring in as many Priests now as did serve in the Temple of old is to provoke God to adde as many plagues as are written in Gods Book upon themselves and their Priests also The Summe of Chap. VIII THis is the Sum of all that I have spoken We have no Priest now but Christ who is equal in glory to his Father in Heaven vers 1. The offerer of his own body signified by the Tabernacle vers 2. For every Priest must offer something Therefore so must Christ vers 3. But the typical Sacrifice hee could not offer by the Law albeit hee were on earth vers 4. Because hee is not of the Tribe of Levi whose proper office was to meddle with the shadows Therefore hee must be the offerer of the Substance that is of his own Body signified by the shadows vers 5. And so now hee hath taken the office over the Levites head and hath an office more excellent than they and is Mediatour of a better Covenant than the Covenant which was in their time vers 6. For if that Covenant had been perfect another had been needless vers 7. But another Covenant was needful and God promised to make a new one vers 8. A better Covenant than that old which the people brake vers 9. For in this Covenant God undertaketh to make us keep our part of it vers 10.11 And to pardon where wee fail vers 12. Now when God promised a New Covenant hee declared the other to be old and to be abolished when the new came vers 13. The Doctrine of Chap. VIII 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 1. THe Apostle accommodating himself to help the capacity and memory of the Hebrews and urging the special point of his discourse is worthy of imitation 2. In saying Wee have such an High Priest who is set down on the right hand c. Hee setteth forth the glory of Christs person that hee may commend his Priesthood Then 1. The glory of Christs office is not seen till the glory of his person be seen 2. The glory of his person is not seen till his glorious Soveraignty and Government of the world be seen 3. Yea the glory of Christ is not rightly seen till his equality with the Father in glory be seen and acknowledged 3. In saying that Christ as High-Priest is set down on the right hand of the Throne hee giveth us to understand That Christ as in his Divine Nature hee is undivided from the Father in Glory and Dominion So in his humane Nature hee is exalted to the fellowship of Divine Glory with the Father Because of the union of the humane Nature with the Divine in one person of the Mediatour The two natures still remaining distinguished but not divided nor separated the one from the other 4. Hee noteth the place of this Glory to be in the Heavens wherein hee preferreth Christ above the Levitical Priests for their Priesthood is onely exercised on Earth But Christs in Heaven And therefore when wee will employ our High-Priest wee have no earthly City to seek him in but in the Heaven the onely place and palace of his residence Vers. 2. A Minister of the Sanctuary and of the true Tabernacle which the Lord pitched and not man 1. For all this glory yet Christ is still called here a Minister to shew us That his high honour hindreth him not to do his office for our good 2. Hee is called A Minister of the Sanctuary or of the holy things for the word will agree with both and both tend to one purpose for the holy things were all tyed to the Sanctuary and hee that was Minister of the Sanctuary was Minister of the holy things also and that in name of the Saints Now the Sanctuary or the holy things which here is spoken of is the thing signified by the Sanctuary and by the holy things And so taking all the significations of the word together we are taught That Christ in his glory is not idle but as a faithful Agent in the heavenly Sanctuary taking the care of all the holy things which his Saints and people are commanded to present procuring and giving forth all holy and spiritual things from Heaven to his Saints which their estate requireth 3. He is called a Minister of the true Tabernacle which God pitched and not man That is the Ministers of his own Body miraculously formed by God not after the ordinary manner of other men signified and represented by the Typical Tabernacle Then the Tabernacle and Temple under the Law was but the shadow and Christs Body was the true Tabernacle
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
repeated But Christs entry into Heaven to be perfect because but once not to be repeated 3. The Levitical Priests entred by the blood of Goats and Calves But Christ entred by his own blood 1. And if Christ entred but once into Heaven after his Suffering Then Wee must not think that his Body is any where else but in Heaven onely wherein it is once onely entred 2. If the blood whereby Christ entred into Heaven was his own blood Then 1. Verily Christs Body was like ours in substance having blood in it as ours and wee must not conceive otherwise of his body than to be of the same substance and substantial properties with ours 2. The blood belonged to the same person to whom the properties of God belongeth so often in this Epistle attributed unto Christ. His Blood was the blood of God Act. 20.28 That is the same Jesus was God and man with flesh and blood in one person 3. The Fruit of Christs bloody Sacrifice hee maketh The Eternal Redemption of those for whom hee offered it And to the typical Sacrifice hee ascribeth no redemption at all in the comparison Thereby giving us to understand 1. That from the worlds beginning to the end thereof salvation of sinners is by way of Christs Redemption That is by his loosing them through payment of a price 2. That the Redemption was manifested to have force when after his bloody Sacrifice hee entred into Heaven 3. That such as are once redeemed by Christ are Eternally Redeemed not for a time to fall away again but eternally to be saved most certainly Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh Vers. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God To prove that eternal Redemption is the fruit of Christs Sacrifice he reasoneth thus If the Typical Sacrifices and Rites of old were able to work that for which they were ordained that is external Sanctification Much more shall Christs true Sacrifice be able to work that for which it was appointed that is Eternal Remission of sins and inward Sanctification unto eternal life Then there are two sorts of Sanctification One external of the flesh which maketh a man holy to the Church whatsoever he be within Another internal of the conscience and inner man which maketh a man holy before God 2. The purifying of the flesh he maketh to be by the exercise of such and such Ordinances of Divine Service for the time Then External or Church-holiness of the outward man is procured by such and such exercises of Divine Ordinances in the Church as serve to make a man to be reputed and holden for clean before men and so to be received for a member of the Church as is to be seen Numb 19. 3. From his form of reasoning we learn That whatsoever liberty and access of coming to the Church was made to the Jew of old by these ceremonies of the Law as much and more liberty is made to the Christian to come in to God by the blood of Christ. 4. In describing Christs Sacrifice he saith Christ through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God Then 1. Christ is both the Sacrifice and the Priest in one person He offered himself as man through the Eternal Spirit that is by the vertue and power of his own Godhead by which he preached before his Incarnation to sinners 1 Pet. 3.19 2. His sacrifice was without spot He was that spotless Lamb in whom was no sin nor imperfection nor defect of any thing that the sacrifice required 3. The vertue of the sacrifice which made it to purchase Eternal Redemption unto us floweth from the infinite worth of his Eternal Godhead 4. Albeit Christs two natures have their distinct respects in the actions of his Office yet Christ is one and undivided in the execution of his Office 5. The fruit and force of the sacrifice is set down in this that this Blood shall purge our conscience from dead works to serve the living God That is shall both absolve a man from his foregon sin and also enable him to serve God for time to come Then 1. Sins are but dead works flowing from nature dead in sin and not onely deserving but also drawing on death upon the sinner 2. The conscience lieth polluted with the filthiness of dead works till the vertue of the blood of Jesus applied bring intimation of absolution 3. Christs blood doth not purge the Conscience from dead works that a man should go wallow in them again but that he may serve the living God more acceptably 4. The purging vertue of Christs blood is joyned with the sanctifying and renewing of the absolved sinner and what God hath conjoyned let no man put asunder Vers. 15. And for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions which were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Now lest any man should stumble at Christs death he sheweth a necessity thereof in respect of his office of Mediation and the purchase to be made by his Redemption The force of the reason is this Remission of sins could not have been given under the Law except the Mediator had been to pay the price of the same under the Gospel Nor could the faithful and called ones either then or now obtain eternal life for an inheritance otherwise than by the Mediators death Therefore it behoved the true Mediator by means of death to pay the promised price of the purchase of remission of sins and eternal life Then 1. The remission of transgressions and the inheritance of eternal life are both fruits of Christs Passion 2. The fruits of his Passion extended themselves unto them who were under the Old Testament as well as unto us under the New 3. The way of purchase of these benefits was by Redemption that is to say by lawful purchase such as might satisfie justice 4. The way in special was by means of the Mediators death His life was laid down to redeem ours His one life as good as all ours 5. For this cause Christ took the office of a Mediator unto himself that he might have right and interest by death to make this purchase 6. And therefore except he had really died the purchase could not have been lawfully made Vers. 16. For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator Another reason to prove the necessity of Christs death from the force of the word Covenant which signifieth also a Testament The force of the reason is this Christ Jer. 31.31 promised to make a New Covenant and therefore also a New Testament i● to make a New Testament then also he promised
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
the Law entred The comparison goeth thus 1. The Levitical High Priest entred into the material and artificial Sanctuary and a Typical sacrifice became him But Christ entred not into that Typical Sanctuary Therefore a Typical Sacrifice became not him 2. The Levitical High Priest entered bodily into the figurative Sanctuary But Christ did enter bodily into the true Sanctuary in Heaven it self 3. The High Priest entered in behalf of the people with the names of the twelve Tribes upon his breast and shoulders But Christ is entered in in behalf of us all his People to appear for us bearing the particular memory of every Saint in his Memory The High Priest entered in to appear for a short time and stayed not within the Sanctuary But Christ is entred in to appear now all the time from his Ascension unto this day and constantly still while it is called Now. Vers. 25. Nor yet that he should offer himself often as the High Priest entereth into the Holy Place every year with blood of others He proveth that he had offered a better Sacrifice than the Levitical because he behoved to offer an Offering not to be repeated as the Levitical and so a more perfect Offering The comparison goeth in dissimilitudes 1. The High Priest entered in with the blood of others But Christ entered in with his own blood 2. The High Priest made an Offering of other things than himself But Christ did offer himself Then the Offering of Christ is the personal action of Christ himself None can nor may offer him but himself For the Priest must be either better than the Sacrifice or as good at least as the Sacrifice But none can be so good as Christ nor be more excellent or better therefore none can offer Christ but himself 3. The High Priest offered his Sacrifice oftner But Christ offered not himself oftner than once Then to imagine an Offering of Christ often is both to give the lye to this Text and to make Christs Offering by repeating of it imperfect and like to the Levitical For if once offering of Christ be sufficient often offering is superfluous And if often offering be needful then that once offering was not sufficient and so was not perfect which were blasphemy to say 2. If any man pretend to offer Christ often it is not Christ that giveth him warrant so to do For here it is declared That he hath no hand in offering himself often Vers. 26. For then must be often have suffered since the foundation of the world But now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself He proveth That Christ cannot be often offered Because then saith he must he often have suffered Then 1. No Offering of Christ without the suffering of Christ His Passion and Death is inseparable from his Sacrifice If Christ were often offered he behoved to be often slain and put to death But that cannot be that he should suffer and be slain oftner therefore he cannot be offered up in a sacrifice oftener And they who will take upon them to offer Christ again and again take upon them to slay him and put him to new suffering again again 2. The offering of Christ in an unbloody sacrifice is a a vain imagination which the Apostle acknowledgeth not For if that were possible then were the Apostles words here false and his reasoning ridiculous which were blasphemy to say 2. Hee saith He behoved to have suffered often since the beginning of the World Because as often as new sins were committed and new Remission was to be bestowed as often behoved hee to have suffered to expiate these sins and to purchase the new Remission since the beginning of the World But this is impossible Therefore his Offering often is impossible Then 1. They who make it needful to offer Christ often make it needful also that Hee should have taken on flesh sooner than Hee did and been slain sooner than Hee was and slain as often as new sins were to be expiated and forgiven from the beginning of the world And so by this vain conceit they do ranverse all the wisdome of God about Christ and set to Him an Order and Course of their own making themselves wiser than God 2. It is by the Apostles estimation as vain a conceit and as impossible to offer Christ oftner than once now in the end of the world as to have offered Him before Hee came in the flesh since the beginning of the world 3. But now saith hee once in the end of the world hee hath appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself Then 1. No Sacrifice of Christ doth the Apostle acknowledge but such as is joyned with His bodily appearance in the world for that end Once hath Hee appeared and once onely hath Hee sacrificed Himself saith the Apostle 2. The Apostle understood no Offering of Christ but onely one and once to be offered for time fore-gone or time to come from the beginning of the world unto the end thereof 3. This one Offering once offered was sufficient to expiate the sins of the saved before it was offered and therefore must have force also to expiate the sins of the saved without repetition now after it is once offered 4. Whose sins Christ doth take away for those Hee appeared for those Hee made a Sacrifice of Himself And whose sins Hee doth not put away for those Hee appeared not Hee sacrificed not 4. In calling the time of Christs Suffering The end of the world hee giveth us to understand That there cannot be so much time betwixt Christs First and Second Comming as was betwixt the worlds beginning and his First Comming But a great deal of less time need force else were not that time the end of the world Vers. 27. And as it is appointed unto men once to dye but after this the Iudgement Another Reason to prove That Christ neither could nor should offer oftener than once from the Common Law laid upon man of Once dying Which Law Christ having once satisfied by dying when he offered up himself there is no reason he should offer himself again and so dye again 1. It is appointed saith hee for men once to dye Then 1. It is come by Gods just appointment that men should dye since His Law is broken by men 2. The Common Law of Nature appointeth but one death once to be suffered And though God by singularity of Miracles make some Exceptions yet the Common Law standeth for a rule beyond which no reason Christ should be tyed since his once dying is sufficient 3. Every man must take Dea●h to him and prepare himself to obey the Appointment 2. Hee saith After Death commeth Judgement Then 1. Every mans particular Judgement Day followeth his departure out of this life and general judgement abideth all at length 2 The time of Grace and mercy getting is onely in this life nothing but Justice remaineth either to absolve the
Reconciled or to condemn the unreconciled sinner Mens Devises for the Relief of the Dead are but Delusions of the Living Vers. 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 Hee applyeth the Common Law of dying once to Christ saying Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many Then 1. It is as unreasonable that Christ should offer Himself oftner than once as it is to exact of Him the laying down of His life oftner than once for that is to exact more than the severity of Gods Justice requireth of Him 2. Christs Death was not for any sin in Him but for our sins 3. Hee took not away the sins of every man in particular for many dye in their sins and bear their own judgement but the sins of many the sins of his own Elect People Mat. 1.21 Hee shall save his people from their sins 2. Hee saith That unto them that look for him hee shall appear the second time Then 1. After that once offering of Christ and ascending to Heaven Hee is not to be corporally present on earth again till the Day of Judgement The Apostle acknowledgeth corporal presence no oftner 2. To look for Christs corporal presence upon earth then and not till then is the property of true Beleevers 3. Corporal presence is joyned with Appearance the one is put here for the other 3. Hee will appear the second time without sin Then In his first comming hee was not without our sin yet lying upon him by imputation as his baseness and misery declared But the glorious manner of his second comming shall make evident That hee is without sin that is Fully exonored by that one Offering of the debt thereof which hee took upon him 4. In stead of saying That those who look for him shall be without sin hee saith That Christ shall appear without sin To teach us 1. That the defraying the Debt of the sins of such for whom Christ hath undertaken lyeth upon Christ and not upon the Beleevers for whom hee undertook 2. And that if his once sacrificing himself for them did not expiate their sins sufficiently then Sin should cleave unto Christ until His second comming 3. That Christs freedome from Sin shall evidence our freedome from Sin for whom hee became Surety 5. Hee will appear unto them who look for Him unto salvation Then 1. The full accomplishment of the salvation of the Beleevers shall not be until Christs second comming Though their souls be blessed before yet the full blessedness of soul and body is deferred till then 2. As Christs Glory shall testifie then that His once offering freed Him of the Suretiship for our sins So our salvation shall testifie that His Offering was sufficient to exonor us 3. They that love not his comming cannot look for salvation The Summe of Chap. X. THis once offering of Christ putteth the main difference betwixt this Sacrifice and those offerings of the Law which because they were repeated could never perfect the worshiper vers 1. For if they could have perfected the worshiper they should have ceased to be repeated vers 2. Now cease they did not but were repeated vers 3. Because they could not take away sin vers 4. Wherefore as the Scripture doth witness Psal. 40. Sacrifices of the Law were to bee abolished and Christ His Sacrifice to come in their room vers 5 6 7 8 9. By which Sacrifice once offered wee are for ever sanctified vers 10. And as their Sacrifice was imperfect so was their Priesthood also ever repeating the same Sacrifices which could not because they were repeated abolish sin vers 11. But Christ hath ended His Sacrificing in His once offering and entred to His Glory to subdue His Enemies vers 12 13. Having by that once offering done all to his Followers that was needful to perfect them vers 14. As the word of the New Covenant Ier. 31. proverb vers 15 16 17 18. Having spoken then of Christs Divine Excellency and of the Priviledges which the Faithful have in Him I exhort you to make use of it in special seeing wee have by Chris●● blood access unto Heaven vers 19. By so perfect a Way as is Christs Fellowship of our Nature vers 20. And so great Moyen by Christ before us there vers 21. Let us strengthen our Faith for the better holding of our Justification and Sanctification through him vers 22. And let us avow our Religion constantly vers 23. And help forwards one another vers 24. Neglecting no means publick nor private for that end as some Apostates have done vers 25. For if wee make wilful Apostacy from his known Truth no Mercy to be looked for vers 26. But certain Damnation of us as of his Enemies vers 27. For if the Despisers of the Law were damned to death without mercy vers 28. What Judgement abideth those who so abuse Jesus his Grace and Spirit as wilful Apostates do vers 29. For Gods threatning in the Law is not in vain vers 30. And it is a fearful thing to fall as a Foe in Gods Hand vers 31. But rather prepare you for such sufferings as you began to feel at your Conversion vers 32. Partly in your own persons and partly by your fellowship with Sufferers vers 33. Which you did joyfully bear in hope of a Reward vers 34. Therefore retain your Confidence vers 35. And be patient vers 36. God will come and help shortly vers 37. And till hee come you must live by Faith and not by sense But if you will not you shall bee rejected vers 38. But I and you are not of that sort that shall make Apostasie but of the number of true Beleevers who shall persevere and be saved vers 39. The Doctrine of Chap. X. THat hee may yet further show the impossibility of offering Christ oftner hee giveth the often repetition of Levitical Sacrifices year by year for a reason of their imperfection and inability to perfect the worshiper and therefore of necessity Christs Sacrifice could not be repeated except wee should make it imperfect like the Levitical and unable to perfect the worshiper as the Legal Sacrifice was The force of his reasoning is this The most solemn Sacrifice offered by the High-Priest himself Levit. 16. and lest subject to repetition of all the Sacrifices being offered not so often as each month or each week or each day as some Sacrifices were but once a year onely yet because they were repeated year by year they were declared by this means unable ever to make the commers thereunto perfect Therefore Christs Sacrifice could not be often offered lest for that same reason it should be found imperfect also And this is his drift in vers 1. Hee proveth his reason to be good thus If they could have perfected the commer then they should not have been repeated but ceased from being offered because
6. They who are united in the Faith of the Truth preached by us shall also be united with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ by virtue of the Holy Ghost Therefore c. Vers. 4. And these things write wee unto you that your joy may be full Reas. 7. The summe of our preaching which is written to you hath this end that yee being made certain of your election and glorification may have a true and spiritual joy and that your joy may remain and be perfected Therefore it is deservedly to be accounted the most excellent Vers. 5. This then is the message which wee have heard of him and declare unto you that God is light and in him is no darkness at all Reas. 8. The summe of our preaching is that God is light or a most present and perfect remedy against the evils of ignorance errours falshood vices and miseries which are in us and that God in himself is most free from these evils so that it is impossible for those that come unto him to be deceived not to be illuminated and directed not to be delivered from sins and misery and not to obtain eternal life Therefore it is necessary that my preaching and the rest of the Apostles should be excellent Vers. 6. If wee say that wee have fellowship with him and walk in darkness wee lye and do not the Truth The other part of the Chapter follows wherein hee propounds partly negatively and partly affirmatively the notes or signs of him that is a true Beleever who shall be partaker of the good things promised in the Gospel And the Notes are five Note 1. Is negatively propounded with his confirmation Hee that is a true beleever doth not walk in darkness is not given ever to sin leading his life according to the lusts of the flesh Because if any one profess himself to have communion with God who is light and holiness and in 〈◊〉 mean time walketh in the darkness of his sins hee is an hypocrite and a lyar seeing that hee doth not that which is right but that which hee professes with his mouth hee denies in his works Vers. 7. But if wee walk in the light as hee is in the light wee have fellowship one with another and the blood of Iesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin Note 2. Is propounded affirmatively Hee that walks in the light or hee that follows after holiness that hee may be conformable to God who is light and perfect holiness hee is a true beleever having communion truly with God and the Saints to whom the fruit also of Christs death to the remission of sins doth wholly belong Vers. 8. If wee say that wee have no sin wee deceive our selves and the truth is not in us Note 3. Is negative Hee that is a true Beleever is not so just in his own eies that hee denies that hee cannot sin either in word or deed or that hee hath not sinned after Justification or that hee as if hee could not want the daily intercession of Christ and the daily applying of his merit for the delivering of his conscience from new guilt is not touched with the sense of sin so that hee must forthwith flye unto Christ as his Redeemer For whosoever either in word or deed doth really so deny that hee hath sin in him for the present deceives himself and is an hypocrite in whom there is no sincerity Vers. 9. If we confess our sins hee is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness Note 4. Hee that is a true Beleever is so affected with the sense of his sins that hee acknowledgeth them before God and doth confess from his soul that hee deserves eternal death and that his guilt can no otherwise be expiated but by the merit of the blood of the Son of God and that hee cannot be sanctified but by the divine virtue of the Spirit of Christ or be free from the pollution of sin Faithful The Apostle promiseth to him that doth so confess his sins that upon the faithfulness and righteousness of God hee shall be absolved and purged from the guilt of sin or sanctified from the stain of it For God is faithful who hath promised these things and God is just who hath taken satisfaction from Christ the Surety hee doth not exact the debt from him for whom Christ hath satisfied but on the other side hee bestowes all the good things upon him that beleeves which Christ hath purchased for his salvation Vers. 10. If wee say that wee have not sinned wee make him a lyar and his word is not in us Note 5. Is negative Hee that is a true Beleever doth neither deny nor extenuate his sins past as if either with that Pharisee hee had performed all the commands of God from his youth or as if there was no original sin or as if it was not at all worthy of death Neither is hee impenitent as if the sins which hee had committed were light and venial which need not the expiation of the blood of Christ or as if there were not so much corruption in his nature but that by his free will hee might confide in his own strength to dispose himself for grace and merit it or at leastwise bee able to obtain it For hee that either so or by any other means directly or indirectly denies that hee hath not sinned and consequently denies that hee is not nor hath not been so guilty of death that hee needed such an expiation as the death of the Son of God is hee is a blasphemer against God accusing him of a lye who hath in his word condemned all as sinners and guilty of death and hath affirmed that there is no remission of sins but by the blood of his Son neither is the Word of God received by Faith at any time in his heart i. e. neither hath hee beleeved the Doctrine of the Law not yet of the Gospel CHAP. II. THe rest of the whole Epistle enforceth the use of the former Doctrine to which end five Exhortations are propounded The first to vers 9. The second to vers 15. The third to vers 18. The fourth to vers 29. The fifth to verse the last Vers. 1. My little Children these things write I unto you that yee sin not And if any man sin wee have an Advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous The first Exhortation is to the following after holiness that they sin not The Reasons of the Exhortation besides a friendly compellation are eleven Reas. 1. Because this is the end and use of the Doctrine of the Gospel and the Apostles writing These things write I unto you that yee sin not saith hee Therefore follow yee holiness And if Reas. 2. If yee follow after holiness the sins which perhaps yee shall fall into shall bee taken away through the intercession of Christ Jesus our Advocate and Lord Therefore endeavour after holiness When hee names one
of his prayers Therefore for this cause yee ought to beleeve in Christ. Vers. 16. If any man see his Brother sin a sin which is not unto death hee shall ask and hee shall give him life for them that sin not unto death There is a si● unto death I do not say that hee shall pray for it Argum. 13. Hee that beleeves in Christ not onely praying for himself but also out of love for his sinning brethren shall bee heard to whom through the merit of sin declining to destruction and perdition God will if hee bee but asked by a faithful man restore him to life Therefore c. Not unto death Hee excepts in case of the sin of the Holy Ghost When a Professor of the Faith or a Brother as to the external communion of the Church falls into open Apostacy from the Faith of Christ and maintains cruel ha●red against the Gospel and those that are faithful against the light of conscience illuminated once by the Holy Ghost hee commands not to pray for him that commits this sin when it may bee discerned It is called a sin unto death because eternal death follows that sin and hee that falls into it remains in it without repentance until hee is thrust down into Hell Vers. 17. All unrighteousness is sin and there is a sin not unto death Hee explains what hee had said that although all transgression of the Law is sin wherefore it deserves the wages of death yet death follows not all sin because all kind of sin is remitted except this sin which is called blasphemy against the Holy Ghost which was never remitted to any nor never shall Vers. 18. Wee know that whosoever is born of God sinneth not but hee that is begotten of God keepeth himself and that wicked one toucheth him not Argum. 14. Hee that is regenerate or truly beleeves in the Son of God is kept that hee sin not this sin yea nor doth hee lye alwaies intangled in any sin but by the grace of God and virtue of Gods seed remaining in him keepeth himself lest the Devil touch him to death with his sin Therefore yee must beleeve in Christ. Vers. 19. And wee know that wee are of God and the whole world lyeth in wickedness Hee applies this Argument by way of assumption from the proposition to their comfort and the comfort of the faithful to which hee writes and confirms it by five Reasons viz. that the faithful whereunto hee writes are kept together with hims●lf and shall be preserved in Faith and Obedience of the Gospel Wee know Reas. 1. Wee are certainly perswaded of our regeneration Therefore wee are perswaded that wee shall not sin that unpardonable sin neither shall bee in bondage to it but shall bee freed from the Devil fully through Christ. The World Reas. 2. Those that are of the world are onely in the power of that malicious Devil that hee may throw them headlong out of one wickedness into another Therefore wee who are translated out of the world into the Kingdome of God are not in the power of that malicious one but shall bee preserved as the free-men of God Vers. 20. And wee know that the Son of God is come and hath given us an understanding that wee may know him that is true and wee are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ. This is the true God and eternal life Reas. 3. Wee are certain of the coming of Christ our Redeemer into the world who hath enlightened our minds with his grace and hath given us true Faith in God Therefore wee shall not sin unto death but shall bee preserved And wee Reas. 4. Wee have communion with God and Christ wherein wee are and dwell by Faith Therefore wee shall bee untouched by that sin This is Reas. 5. Christ is the very true God and Life eternal who in himself is Life and the fountain of life to be communicated to the faithful and also the Procurer Giver and Preserver of it Therefore wee are certainly perswaded of our perseverance and eternal salvation Vers. 21. Little children keep your selves from Idols Amen For the conclusion of the Epistle hee proposes a short admonition that they have a care and keep themselves from Idols in the plural number and that from all sorts of Idols which after any manner might thrust themselves into the place of truth or of the true God to draw them from beleeving of the true Doctrine or from the true worship or obedience of God under any pretence whatsoever and that so much the more because these Idols may bee obtruded upon the faithful by the Devil and his Ministers and by all possible cunning Therefore hee the more diligently commands them to watch and to keep themselves from them lest they should bee in any wise polluted by them but by name that they beware of Images wherein Antichrist will glory and by these deceive the world The second Epistle of IOHN Analytically expounded The Contents AS Luke writ the Book of the Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles to a certain noble Theophilus for the use of all the faithful So John wrote this familiar Epistle to one Noble and Holy Matrone and her children not onely that hee might appropriate the Doctrine which hee had commended in his former Epistle to the universal Church of the faithful to this private family but also that hee might teach the Pastors how they ought to teach publickly and from house to house from the Apostles example Act. 20 20. The parts of the Epistle are three the Preface containing the direction of the Epistle and Salutation to vers 4. An Exhortation to perseverance in the obedience of the Gospel or a constant exercise of Faith working by love to vers 12. The third is the conclusion Vers. 1. THe Elder unto the Elect Lady and her Children whom I love in the Truth and not I onely but also all they that have known the Truth The direction of the Epistle shews who to whom and with what minde hee wrote this Epistle The writer is Iohn the Apostle who makes no doubt of his authority in this family content with the title of the ordinary and common ministery hee calls himself an Elder by which name hee being now very antient hee also notes his age to the end that his admonition who could not live long by reason of his age might bee the more deeply fixed in them The person whereunto it is chiefly writ is the Elect Lady To signifie civil and due honour hee calls her Lady acknowledging her more happy spiritual condition in the Lord. Hee calls her Elect because in that this Matron had from the sincerity of her Faith declared her self to bee elect a farre more excellent commendation than that shee was accounted a Lady in a civil condition by men Her children are adjoyned because they were partakers with their Mother of the Grace of God in the knowledge of Christ. As for the mind of the