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

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Wisdom and Holiness that having designed the bringing of many sons unto Glory he should make the Captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings So the Condecency here intended may respect 1. The Wisdom Grace and Goodness of God It became him to give us such an High Priest as we stood in need of namely one that was able in the Discharge of that Office to save all to the uttermost that come unto God by him For to design our salvation by an High Priest and not to provide such an one as was every way able to effect it became not the Wisdom and Grace of God 2. Respect may be had herein unto our state and condition Such this was as none but such an High Priest could relieve us in or save us from For we stand in need of such an one as our Apostle declares as 1. could make Attonement for our sins or perfectly expiate them 2. Purge our Consciences from dead works that we might serve the living God or sanctifie us throughout by his Blood 3. Procure Acceptance with God for us or purchase eternal Redemption 4. Administer supplies of the spirit of Grace unto us to enable us to live unto God in all Duties of Faith Worship and Obedience 5. Give us assistance and consolation in our Trials Temptations and Sufferings with pity and compassion 6. Preserve us by Power from all ruining Sins and Dangers 7. Be in a continual Readiness to receive us in all our Addresses to him 8. To bestow upon us the Reward of Eternal Life Unless we have an High Priest that can do all these things for us we cannot be saved to the uttermost Such an High Priest we stood in need of and such an one it became the wisdom and Grace of God to give unto us And God in infinite wisdom Love and Grace gave us such an High Priest as in the Qualifications of his Person the Glory of his Condition and the Discharge of his Office was every way suited to deliver us from the state of Apostacy sin and misery and to bring us unto himself through a Perfect salvation This the ensuing particulars will fully manifest The Qualifications of this High Priest are expressed first indefinitely in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Difference from other High Priests is included herein He must not be one of an Ordinary sort but one so singularly qualified unto his work so exalted after his work and so discharging his work unto such Ends. In all these things we stood in need of such an High Priest as was quite of another sort order and kind than any the Church had enjoyed under the Law as the Apostle expresly concludes ver 28. His Personal inherent Qualifications are first expressed and we shall consider first some things in general that are common unto them all and then declare the especial intendment of every one of them in particular Such an High Priest became us as is Holy Harmless Undefiled Separate from sinners And 1. There is some Allusion in all these things unto what was Typically represented in the Institution of the Office of the Priesthood under the Law For the High Priest was to be a Person without blemish not maimed in any part of his body He was not to marry any one that was defiled nor to defile himself among the People On his forehead in his ministrations he ware a Plate of Gold with that Inscription Holiness to the Lord. And no doubt but Personal Holiness was required of him in an especial manner for want whereof God cast out the Posterity of Eli from the Priesthood But all those things were only outward Representations of what was really required unto such an High Priest as the Church stood in need of For they were mostly external giving a Denomination unto the Subject but working no real change in it And where they were internal they were encompassed with such a mixture of sins weaknesses infirmities and the Intercision of Death as that they had no Glory in comparison of what was required All these things the Apostle observes reducing them unto two Heads namely that they were obnoxious unto Sin and Death and therefore as they died so they offered sacrifices for their own sins But the Church was taught by them from the Beginning that it stood in need of an High Priest whose real Qualifications should answer all these Types and Representations of them 2. It is possible that our Apostle in this Description of our High Priest designed to obviate the prejudicate opinion of some of the Hebrews concerning their Messiah For generally they looked on him as one that was to be a great earthly Prince and warriour that should conquer many Nations and subdue all their enemies with the sword shedding the blood of men in Abundance In opposition unto this vain and pernicious Imagination our Saviour testifies unto them that he came not to kill but to save and keep alive And our Apostle here gives such a Description of him in these holy gracious Qualifications as might attest his Person and work to be quite of another nature than what they desired and expected And their frustration herein was the principal occasion of their unbelief See Mal. 3. 1 2 3. 3. I am sorry that it hath fallen from the Pen of an able Expositor of our own on this place that the Time when the Lord Christ was thus made an High Priest for ever and that by an Oath was after he had offered one sacrifice not many for the People not for himself once not often of everlasting vertue and not effectual for some petty Expiations for a time and after he was risen ascended and set at the right hand of God If by being made an High Priest only a Solemn Declaration of being made so is intended these things may passe well enough For we allow that in the Scripture then a thing is oft-times said to be when it is first manifested or declared So was the Lord Christ determined to be the son of God with Power by the Resurrection from the dead But if it be intended as the words will scarce admit of any other Interpretation that then the Lord Christ was first made an High Priest after all this was performed the whole real Priesthood of Christ and his proper Sacrifice is overthrown For it is said he was not made an High Priest until after that he had offered his one sacrifice And if it were so then he was not a Priest when he so offered himself But this implies a contradiction for there can be no sacrifice where there is no Priest And therefore the Socinians who make the consecration of the Lord Christ unto his Sacerdotal Office to be by his entrance into Heaven do utterly deny his Death to have been a Sacrifice but only a Preparation for it as they fancy the killing of the beast to have been of old And the Truth is either the Lord Christ was a Priest before and in the
Sin from occasional Resolutions Upon some smart of Conviction from Danger Sickness Trouble Fear Affliction there blooms in the minds of many a suddain Resolution to forsake Sin and as suddainly for the most part it fades again True Repentance firms a steady and unshaken resolution in the Heart which respects the forsaking of all Sin and at all Times or Occasions 2 Constant Endeavours to actuate and fulfill this purpose And these Endeavours respect all the Means Causes Occasions Temptations leading unto Sin that they may be avoided opposed and Deliverance obtained from them as also all means advantages and furtherance of those Graces and Duties which are opposed to these Dead works that they may be improved An Heartless unactive Purpose is that which many take up withall and ruine their Souls by Where therefore there is not a sedulous Endeavour by Watchfulness and Diligence in the constant use of all means to avoid all dead works in all their concerns from their first Rise and Principle to their finishing or Consummation there is no True Repentance from them 3 An actual Relinquishment of all sins in the course of our walking before God And hereunto is required 1 not an absolute freedom from all Sin for there is no man living who doth good and sinneth not 2 No absolute and precise deliverance even from great Sins whereinto the Soul may be surprized by the Power of Temptations Examples to the contrary abound in the Scripture But yet such Sins when any is overtaken with them ought 1 to put the Sinner upon a severe enquiry whether his Repentance were sincere and saving For where it is usually the Soul is preserved from such Falls 2 Pet. 1. 10. And 2 put him upon the renewing his Repentance with the same Care Diligence Sorrow and Humiliation as at the first But 1 it is required that this property of Repentance be prevalent against the common sins of the world mens old Sins which they lived in before their Conversion Those Sins which are expresly declared in the Gospel to be inconsistent with the Profession Ends and Glory of it it wholly excludes 1 Cor. 6. 9 10. 2 Cor. 6. 16. 1 Joh. 3. 14 15. And 2 against a course in any Sin or Sins either spiritual or fleshly internal or external 1 Joh. 3. 9. Rom. 6. 2. 3 For the most part against all outward Sins in the course of our Conversation in the world in which things our Sincerity or Perfection is exercised And these things were necessary to be touched on to manifest the Nature of this first Principle wherein men are to be instructed There is no Interest in Christ or Christian Religion to be obtained without Repentance from Dead works nor any orderly entrance into a Gospel Church State without a credible Profession thereof This was one of the first things that was preached unto Sinners as was before declared and without a compliance herewith they were not further to be treated with For 1 The Lord Christ came not only to save men from their Sins but to turn them from their Sins to turn them from their Sins that they may be saved from them when he comes out of Sion as a Redeemer a Deliverer a Saviour he turns away ungodliness from Jacob that is he turns Jacob from ungodliness Rom. 11. 26. namely by Repentance This was one principal End of the Birth Life Death and Exaltation of Christ. His work in all these was to make Peace and Reconciliation between God and Man Hereunto belongeth the Slaying Destruction or removal of the Enmity that was between them This with respect unto God was done by the Attonement he made the Sacrifice he offered and the Price of Redemption that he paid 2 Cor. 5. 21. But the whole work is not hereby compleated The Enmity on our part also must be taken away or Reconciliation will not be finished Now we were Enemies in our minds by wicked works Col. 1. 21. and thereby alienated from the Life of God Ephes. 4. 18. The removal hereof consists in this Repentance For that is our turning unto God upon the Terms of Peace tendred unto us They therefore do but deceive their own Souls who trust unto Peace with God on the Mediation of Christ who are not at Peace with God in their own Souls by Repentance For the one is not without the other As he who is at Peace with God on his own part by Repentance shall never fail of Peace from God by the Attonement for he that so lays hold on his Arm and Strength that he may have Peace shall be sure to obtain it Isa. 27. 3. So without this whatever Notions men may have of Reconciliation with God they will find him in the issue as devouring Fire or Everlasting Burnings All Doctrines Notions or Perswasions that tend to alleviate the necessity of that personal Repentance which was before described or would substitute any outward Pennance or Corporeal pecuniary poenal Satisfaction in the room thereof are pernicious to the Souls of men And there is nothing so much to be dreaded or abhorred as a pretence taken unto Sin unto any Sin without Repentance from the Grace or Doctrine of the Gospel Shall we continue in Sin saith our Apostle that Grace may abound God forbid Those who do so and thereby turn the Grace of God into Lasciviousness are among the number of them whose Damnation sleepeth not 2 That any person living in Sin without Repentance should have an Interest in Christ or Christian Religion is inconsistent with the Glory of God the Honour of Jesus Christ and would render the Gospel if taught therein a Doctrine fit to be rejected by all men For where is the Glory of the Righteousness or Holiness of God if impenitent Sinners may be accepted with him Besides that it is contrary unto the whole Declaration of himself that he will not acquit the Guilty that he will not justifie the wicked nor accept the ungodly it hath an absolute inconsistency with the especial Righteousness of his Nature and which he exerciseth as the supream Rector and Judge of all that any such persons should approach before him or stand in his sight Psal. 5. 4 5 6. Rom. 1. 32. And for the Lord Jesus Christ it would plainly make him the Minister of Sin the thought whereof our Apostle so detests Gal. 2. 17. Nay a supposition hereof would make the coming of Christ to be the greatest means of letting in and increasing Sin on the world that ever was since the fall of Adam And the Gospel must then be looked on as a Doctrine meet to be abandoned by all wise and sober persons as that which would tend unavoidably to the debauching of mankind and the ruine of humane Society For whereas it doth openly and avowedly propose and declare the Pardon and remission of Sin of all sorts of Sin to all sorts of persons that shall believe and obey it if it did this without annexing unto its Promise the
a loss The final impunity of flagitious sinners in this world the unrelieved oppressions afflictions and miseries of the best the prosperity of wicked Devilish designs the defeating and overthrow of Holy Just Righteous undertakings and endeavours promiscuous accidents to all sorts of persons however differenced by Piety and Impiety the prosperous course of men proud and blasphemous who oppose God in Principles and Conversation no more than they are able the secret undiscovered murthers of Martyrs and Innocents in Inquisitions and Dungeons the extream confusion that seems to be in all things here below with other things of the like kind innumerable are ready to gravel and perplex the minds of men in this matter They have greatly exercised the thoughts even of the Saints of God and tried their Faith as is evident Psal. 73. ver 4. to 17. Jer. 12. 1 2. Habb 1. 3 4 13. Job 21. 5 6 7 8. c. And the consideration hereof turned some of the wisest Heathens into Atheisme or outragious Blasphemies at their dying hours But in this state even Reason rightly exerted will lead men to conclude that upon the supposition of a Divine Being and Providence it must needs be that all these things shall be called over again and then receive a final decision and determination whereof in this world they are not capable And among the Heathens there were proverbial Speeches which they uttered on occasion of great distresses which signified no less As Est profecto Deus qui haec videt For 1 Upon a due examination it will quickly appear that the moral actions of men with respect unto God in the way of Sin and Obedience are such as that it is utterly impossible that Judgement should be finally exercised towards them in things visible and temporal or that in this world they should receive a just recompence of reward For whereas they have an aspect unto mens utmost end which is Eternal they cannot be justly or rightly stated but under punishments or rewards Eternal Rom. 1. 32. 2 Thes. 1. 6. Seeing therefore no full Judgement can possibly pass upon the Sins of men in this world because all that can befall them is infinitely short of their demerit even reason it self cannot but be satisfied that God in his infinite Wisdom and Soveraignty should put off the whole Judgement unto that day wherein all penalties shall be equalled to their Crimes and Rewards unto Obedience So when our Apostle reasoned before Felix about Righteousness and Temperance knowing how unavailable his Arguments would be without it against the Countrey Sins and Evils from the impunity and prosperity of such sinners in the world to make them effectual he adds the consideration of the Judgement to come Acts 24. 25. Here Reason may relieve it self in the midst of all cross occurrences of Providence and such as are not only contrary to our desires but directly opposite unto our judgements as to what is suitable to infinite Justice and Wisdom The final determination of things is not made here nor is it possible it should so be on the ground before assigned 2 Should God take men off from a respect unto future Eternal Judgement and constantly dispense Rewards and Punishments in this world according unto what the wisest of men can apprehend just and equal which if any thing must satisfie without a regard to Eternal Judgement as it would be most unequal and unrighteous so it might be an occasion of greater wickedness than the world is yet pestered withall Unrighteous and unequal it must be unavoidably because the Judgement supposed must pass according unto what men are able to discern and judge upon that is outward actions only Now this were unrighteous in God who sees and knows the heart and knows that actions have their Good and Evil if not solely yet principally from their respect thereunto The Lord is a God of knowledge and by him actions are weighed said Hannah when Eli judged her drunk but God saw that she prayed 1 Sam. 2. 3. There is nothing more evident than that it is inconsistent with and destructive of all Divine perfections that God should pass a decretory sentence on the actions of men according to what appears unto us to be just and equal This therefore God declines namely to judge according to a Rule that we can comprehend Isa. 11. 3. Rom. 2. 2. But 3 Suppose that God should in this world distribute Rewards and Punishments constantly according to what he sees in the hearts and inward dispositions of the minds of men it is no less evident that it would fill all men with unspeakable confusions and prevail with them to judge that indeed there is no certain Rule of Judgement no unmoveable bounds and limits of Good and Evil seeing it would be absolutely impossible that by them the Judgements of God should be reduced unto any such Rules or Bounds the Reasons of them being altogether unknown This the Scripture plainly owns Psal. 77. 19. Psal. 36. 6. Wherefore 4 Should God visibly and constantly have dispensed Rewards and Punishments in this world according to the Rule of mens knowledge comprehension and judgement which alone hath an appearance of being satisfactory it would have been a principle or at least the occasion of a worse kind of Atheisme than any yet the Earth hath been pestered withall For it could not have been but that the most would have made the judgement of men the only Rule of all that they did which God must be obliged to comply withall or be unrighteous which is absolutely to dethrone him and leave him only to be the Executioner of the Wills and Reasons of men But from all these and the like perplexities Reason it self may quietly take sanctuary in submission unto Soveraign Wisdom as to present dispensations in a satisfaction that it is not only suitable unto but necessary on the account of Divine Justice that there should be a future Eternal Judgement to pass according to truth upon all the ways and actions of men And hereby doth God keep up in the hearts of men a testimony unto this great principle of our profession Therefore when our Apostle reasoned before Felix concerning such Duties and Sins as were discoverable by the Light of Nature namely Righteousness and Temperance with respect to both which he was openly and flagitiously guilty he adds this principle concerning Judgement to come the truth whereof the Conscience and Reason of the wretch himself could not but comply withall Acts 24. 25. 3. God hath given Testimony hereunto in all the extraordinary Judgements which he hath executed since the foundation of the world It is not for nothing that he doth sometimes that he doth so frequently go out of or besides the common beaten tracts and paths of Providence He doth it to intimate unto the world that things are not always to pass at their present rate but are one day to be called to another account In great Judgements the wrath of God is
he who is the Forerunner or Harbinger is so and no more But now although the Lord Christ be a Forerunner also yet he is more He is the Person in whose hand lyeth the whole affair and its conduct And he was himself the Forerunner because of the greatness of the matter he had in hand not manageable by any other And we may consider the words distinctly 1 His being a Forerunner 2 For us 3 Where he is so within the Vail 1 He is in his entrance into Heaven or the Holy place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Forerunner This the High Priest of Old when he entred once a year into the Holy place was not He entred thereinto himself but he made no way for any to follow after He did not go before the People to give them an entrance into the Holy place but both by his entrance and his return signified their exclusion for ever We have then herein another Instance of the excellency of our High Priest and his Office When he entred into the Holy place he did it not meerly for himself but to go before to lead and conduct the whole Church into the same Glory 2 He is a Forerunner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for us that is for all Believers for the whole Church in all Times Ages and Places And this he is three ways 1. By way of Declaration It belongs unto a Forerunner to carry Tidings and to declare what is the success that hath been obtained in the Affair which he giveth an account of The Lord Christ entring into Heaven makes an open declaration that he hath led Captivity Captive spoiled Principalities and Powers triumphed over them that he hath obtained his Portion and divided the spoil with the strong Isa. 53. 12. that he hath rescued his Church from the Power of Sin Sathan Death and Law And there were two parts of the Triumphant Declaration made by this Forerunner of the Church 1 That he had discharged his Original Engagement for the Salvation of Believers under the Old Testament on the Faith whereof they were accepted with God and saved Hence upon his entrance within the Vail they also joyn in that doxologie Rev. 5. 9 10 11 12. And he was their Forerunner also For although I have no apprehension of the Limbus Patrum fancied by the Papists yet I think the Fathers that died under the Old Testament had a nearer Admission into the Presence of God upon the Ascension of Christ than what they enjoyed before They were in Heaven before the Sanctuary of God but were not admitted within the Vail into the most holy place where all the Counsels of God in Christ are displayed and represented There was no entrance before either as to Grace or Glory within the Vail Heb. 9. 8. For as I said within the Vail are all the Counsels of God in Christ laid open as they were typed in the Holy place This none could or were to behold before his own entrance thither Wherefore he was their Forerunner also 2 To declare the Redemption of all the Elect that were to follow him in their several Generations This is Triumphantly declared in Heaven Psal. 47. 5 6 7. Psal. 68. 18 24 25 26. 2. By way of Preparation And this is twofold 1 With respect unto our present gracious entrance into the Holiest by Faith and Prayer This way was not made for us whilst the Old Tabernacle was standing chap. 9. 8. But this way is now prepared for us by our Forerunner Chap. 10. 19 20 21 22. We have an entrance into Heaven even whilst we are here on the Earth An entrance is made for our Faith for our Hope for our Prayer wherever they enter our Souls do enter and are present And this entrance we make daily and that with boldness and assurance on the account of our Forerunner 2 As unto our future entrance into Glory Under this capacity as a Forerunner it belongs unto him to prepare Mansions for us in his Fathers House whither he is gone and which he hath promised to do Joh. 14. 23. He prepares Mansions for us and he prepares us for those Mansions suiting Grace and Glory unto each other Heaven indeed is ready for us whenever we are meet and ready for Heaven 3. By the way of Possession He had now obtained for the Church Eternal Redemption and purchased for them and in their Name an Everlasting Inheritance Acts 26. 18. This he went for them and in their Name to take possession of and to reserve it in the Heavens for them 1 Pet. 1. 4. Hereon being by Adoption made Heirs of God they become to be Coheirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and are at last admitted into the same Glory with him So is he a Forerunner for us 3. As a Forerunner he is entred within the Vail that is into Heaven it self the place of the glorious Presence of God And this also may be considered two ways 1. With respect unto what he hath already done for us and two things are included therein 1 That he had compleatly finished the work he had to do upon the Earth He had absolutely won the Victory and secured the Church from all its spiritual Adversaries Without this a Triumphant Entrance into Heaven had not been granted unto him 2 Gods blessed Approbation of all that he had done here below Isa. 53. 11 12. Phil. 2. 7 8 9 10 11. 2. With respect unto what he hath yet to do for us Hence it is that he is not said absolutely to enter into his Glory but to enter as a Priest as through a Vail as into the Holy place where he continues as our Forerunner in the exercise of that Office as the Apostle declares in the close of the Verse made an High Priest after the order of Melchisedec whereof we must treat in the next Chapter Now the Lord Jesus being thus entred into Heaven as our Forerunner gives us manifold security of our entrance thither also in the appointed season This he assures us of Joh. 14. 3 19. For 1 He passed through all the Storms of Trials Temptations Persecutions and Death it self that we are exposed unto and yet is landed safely in Eternal Glory His Anchor was Trust and Hope in all his Storms chap. 2. 13. Isa. 50. 7 8 9. And it was tried to the utmost Psal. 22. 8 9 10. It preserved him in them all and will be no less Faithful unto the whole Church As he hath thus gone before us he is able to succour us and hath given us in himself a Pledge of success 2 He is now where our Hope is fixed namely within the Vail where he takes care of it and will preserve it unto the end Again If the Lord Christ be entred in Heaven as our Forerunner it is our Duty to be following of him with all the speed we can And it is required hereunto 1 That we be willing to follow him in the way wherein he went as well as unto
Reason is crooked froward perverse and rejected of God But there is an Objection that this Assertion of the Apostle seems liable unto which we must take Notice of in our passage For whereas he affirms that the Levites who received the Office of the Priesthood took Tithes of their Brethren it is evident from the first Grant and Institution of Tithing that the Levites who were not Priests were the first who immediately received them of the People See Numb 18. 21 22 23 24. Answ. 1. By Tithes the whole Consecrated portion according unto the Law is intended as we said before Hereof the Portion allotted unto the Priests out of various Offerings or Sacrifices was no small part wherein the Levites had no Interest but they belonged and were delivered immediately unto the Priests 2. The Levites themselves were given unto the Priests for their Service in and about Holy things Numb 3. 9. Whatever afterwards was given unto the Levites it was so with reference unto the Supportment of the Priesthood in due Order The Tithes therefore that were paid to the Levites were in the Original Grant of all to the Priests 3. The Priests Tithed the whole People in that Tenth of all which they received of the Levites and that being given unto them what remained in the possession of the Levites themselves became as all other clean things to be used promiscuously Num. 18. 26 27 28 29 30 31 32. Fourthly The Priviledge of the Priests in taking the Tenth of all is amplified by the consideration of the Persons of whom they took them Now these were not Strangers or Foreigners but their own Brethren And these also were so their Brethren as that they had a right unto and were partakers of the same Original Priviledge with themselves which did not exempt them from the Duty of paying Tithes of all unto them took Tithes of their Brethren though they came out of the Loins of Abraham Abraham first received the Promises and was an equal common Spring of Priviledges to his whole Posterity The Priests were not more Children of Abraham than the People were The whole People therefore being so and thereby equally interested in all the Priviledges of Abraham or the Church of Believers it is manifest how great the Honour and preeminence of the Priests were in that they took Tithes of them all And this the Apostle declares to strengthen his Argument for the Greatness and Excellency of Melchisedec in that he received Tithes of Abraham himself And we may learn 1. That it is Gods Prerogative to give Dignity and Preeminence in the Church among them which are otherwise equal which is to be acquiesced in Our common Vocation by the word states us all equally in the same Priviledge as all the Children of Abraham were in that respect in the same Condition But in this common state God makes by his Prerogative a three-fold difference among Believers as to Grace as to Gifts as to Office For 1. Although all true Believers have the same Grace in the kind thereof yet some much excel others in the degrees and exercise of it As one Star differeth from another that is excelleth another in Glory so here one Saint excelleth another in Grace This both the Examples of the Scripture and the Experience of all Ages of the Church doth testifie And this dependeth on the Soveraign Pleasure of God As he is Gracious unto whom he will be Gracious so when and how and in what measure he pleaseth Some shall have Grace sooner than others and some that which is more eminent than others have Only he that hath least shall have no lack as to making of him meet for the Inheritance of the Saints in Light and he that hath most hath no more than he shall find need of and exercise for But so it is some God will have as Pillars in his House and some are but as bruised Reeds And every ones Duty it is for himself in his place and Condition to comply with the will of God herein First Let not the weak the feeble of the Flock those who either really are so or in their own apprehensions complain or faint For 1. There is no Man in the world that hath so little Grace who hath any but he hath more than he ever deserved as none hath so much as that any Dram of it is of his own earning And as he who hath nothing but what he hath freely received hath nothing to boast of so he who hath that which he never deserved hath no Reason to complain 2. It is the Pleasure of God it should be so If it be his will to keep us Spiritually Poor so we are thereby kept Humble we shall be no losers I say not this as though any one who hath but a little Grace or apprehends himself to have so should on the Pretence that such is the will of God concerning him and his Condition neglect the most earnest Endeavour after more which would be a shrewd Evidence that he hath none at all but that those who in a diligent Use of means for Growth and Improvement cannot yet arrive unto such an Increase such an addition of one Grace unto another as their profiting may be manifest which falls out on several Occasions may find Relief in the Sovereign pleasure of God to keep them in their low Condition 3. They may do well to consider that indeed there is a great deal of Glory in the least of true Grace Though there be not so much as in more Grace yet there is more than in all things under the Sun besides No Man hath so little Grace who hath any as that he is ever able to set a sufficient price upon it or to be thankful enough for it 4. There is indeed so much spoken in the Scripture concerning the Love Care Compassion and Tenderness of our Lord Jesus Christ towards the Weak the Sick the Diseased of his Flock that on some Accounts the state of those Humble Souls who have yet received but little Grace seems to be most safe and desirable Isa. 40. 11. Let not such therefore complain it is God alone who is the Author of this difference between them and others And on the same Grounds Secondly Those who are strong who have much Grace ought not 1. To boast or be lifted up For as we observed before they have nothing but what they have freely received Yea it is very suspitious that what any one boasteth of is not Grace For it is the Nature of all true Grace to exclude all boasting He that by comparing himself with others finds any other Issue in his thoughts but either to admire Sovereign Grace or to judge himself beneath them is in an ill Condition or at least in an ill frame 2. Nor to trust unto what they have received There is none hath so much Grace as not every moment to need Supplies with more And he who like Peter trusteth unto that wherein he is above
note of Inference 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is frequently made use of by our Apostle in this Argumentative Discourse as Chap. 2. 17. 3. 1. 8. 3. 9 18. 11. 19. and in this place ideo quapropter Nor is it any where else in the New Testament used for the Introduction of a Conclusion or Inference from Premises in a way of Argument And the causality which here it includes may respect the whole foregoing Discourse as asserting that which necessarily follows thereon Or it may have respect only unto the ensuing clause in this verse As if the Apostle had only intended in particular that the Lord Christ is able to save to the uttermost because he ever abideth But he rather seems to make an Inference from the whole foregoing Discourse and the close of the verse is onely an addition of the way and manner how the Lord Christ accomplisheth what is ascribed unto him by vertue of his Office Being such an High Priest as we have evidenced to be made by an Oath and abiding for ever he is able to save Considerations of the Person and Offices of Christ ought to be improved unto the strengthening of the Faith and encrease of the Consolation of the Church So they are here by the Apostle After the great and ample Declaration that he hath made of the Excellency of his Priestly Office with respect unto his Person he applies all that he hath spoken unto the incouragement of the Faith and Hope of them that endeavour to go to God by him And all those who explode such considerations and such improvements of them are no otherwise to be looked on but as persons utterly ignorant both of Christ and Faith in him 2. That which is inferred to be in this Priest is Power and Ability 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He is able He can This is the second time the Apostle ascribeth Power or Ability unto this Priest see Chap. 2. ver 18. and the Exposition thereof And it is not an Ability of nature but of Office that is intended An Ability of nature in Christ he had proved sufficiently in the first Chapter of the Epistle and that accompanied with Supreme Power or Authority over all But whereas as our Mediator he hath undertaken such Offices for us he is as such able to do no more than he is so by vertue of them or in the discharge of those Offices If therefore there be any thing needfull for us which although it may be supposed within the compasse of the Divine Power of the Son of God is yet not to be effected in a way of Office that as our Mediator he is not able for Hence doth our Apostle presse his Ability not absolutely but as the High Priest of the Church As if a man who is mighty in Wealth Riches and Power be also made a Judge It is one thing what he can do by his Might and Power another what he is able for and can do as a Judge And he who hath to deal with him as a Judge is to consider only what he is able for in the Discharge of that Office And he doth this partly to evince his preeminence above the High Priests of the Law For by reason of their personal Infirmities and the limited nature of their Office they were really unable to effect many things which the Church stood in need of from those that discharged that Office supposing them the only way of our approach unto God Were they never so ready Willing diligent and watchful yet they were not Able to do all that was necessary for the Church Being themselves sinful Men made Priests by the Law of a carnal Commandment and subject unto Death they had no Ability to effect in the Church what is expected from the Priestly Office But the Lord Christ our High Priest being free from all these Imperfections as he was a Priest He is Able But principaliy he insists upon it to encourage and confirm the Faith of the Church in him with respect unto this Office Wherefore having by many Demonstrations assured us of his Love and Compassion Chap. 2. and Chap. 5 there remains nothing but to satisfie us also of his Power and Ability And this he hath now evinced from the nature and dignity of his Office as vested in his Person This is the Ability here intended not an absolute Divine Power inherent in the Person of Christ but a Moral Power a Jus a Right and what can be effected in the just discharge of this Office And hereon The Consideration of the Office Power of Christ is of great use unto the Faith of the Church To this end we may observe 1. That the Foundation of all the Benefits which are received by Christ that is of the Spiritual and Eternal Salvation of the Church is laid in his condescension to undertake the Office of a Mediator between God and Man And as this was the greatest effect of Divine Wisdom and Grace so it is the first Cause the Root and Spring of all Spiritual Blessings unto us This the whole Scripture beareth Testimony unto Heb. 10. 7. 1 John 3. 16. This is the fundamental Article of Faith Evangelical And the want of laying this Foundation aright as it occasioneth many to Apostatize from the Gospel unto a natural Religion so it weakeneth and disordereth the Faith of many Believers But this is the first Ground of all Friendship between God and Man 2. Having undertaken that Office all the Actings of it for us and towards us or towards God in our behalf are circumscribed and limited by that Office We have no Ground of Faith to expect any thing from him or by him but what belongs unto the Office that he hath undertaken Neither are we in our Addresses unto him and expectations from him to consider him absolutely as God the Eternal Son of God only but as the Mediator between God and Man VVe can look for no more from a King but what he can justly do as a King nor any other Person in Office no more are we to look for from Christ himself 3. This Office of Christ in general as the Mediator and Sponsor of the New Covenant is distinguished into three especial Offices of a King a Prophet and a Priest Whatever therefore we receive from Christ or by him we do it as he acts in that threefold capacity or in one of those Offices a King a Priest or a Prophet VVhatever he hath done for us or continueth to do whatever he doth over us for us or towards us he doth it in and under one of these capacities For unto them may all his Office Relation unto us be reduced And the kindness of all those other Relations wherein he stands unto us as of a Shepherd the Bishop of our Souls of an Husband of a Brother a Friend he puts forth and exerciseth in the Acts and Actings of these Offices 4. All these Offices whether vested jointly in any one other Person or severally
That It is good to secure this first Ground of Evangelical Faith that the Lord Christ as vested with his Offices and in the exercise of them is able to save us Salvation is that which all sinners who have fallen under any Convictions do seek after And it is from God they look for it he alone they know can save them and unless he do so they cannot be saved And that he can do so they seem for a while to make no Question although they greatly doubt whether he will or no. Here under these general apprehensions of the Power of God they cannot long abide but must proceed to enquire into the Way whereby he will save them if every they be saved And this the whole Scripture testifieth to be no otherwise but by Jesus Christ. For there is no salvation in any other neither is there any other Name under Heaven given among men whereby they must be saved Act. 4. 12. When their thoughts are thus limited unto Christ alone their next enquiry is how shall this man save us And hereon are they directed unto his Offices especially his Priesthood whereby he undertakes to deliver them from the Guilt of their sins and to bring them into favour with God Is it not therefore highly incumbent on them to satisfie themselves herein that Christ is able to save them in the exercise of this Office For if he be not there is no salvation to be obtained And when men are come thus far as that they will not Question in general but that the Lord Christ in the discharge of his Sacerdotal Office is able to save sinners in general yet unbelief will keep them off from acquiescing in this Power of his as so limited for their own salvation As Naaman had thoughts in general that Elisha could cure men of their Leprosie yet he would not believe that he could cure them in the way and by the means he prescribed He thought he would have taken another course with him more suited unto his apprehensions as a means for his Recovery Hereon he turns away in a Rage which if he had not by good advice been recalled from he had lived and died under the Plague of his Leprosie 2 King 5. 10 11 12 13 14. When Persons are reduced to look for salvation only by Christ and do apprehend in general that he can save sinners yet oft-times when they come to inquire into the way and manner of it by the Exercise of his Priestly Office they cannot close with it Away they turn again into themselves from which if they are not recovered they must dye in their sins Unless therefore we do well and distinctly fix this Foundation of Faith that Christ as a Priest is able to save us or is able to do so in the discharge of his Sacerdotal Office we shall never make one firm step in our Progress To this end we must consider That the Lord Christas Mediator and in the Discharge of his Office is the wisedom of God and the Power of God So saith our Apostle Christ crucified is to them that believe the Power of God and the wisdom of God 1 Cor. 1. 23 24. His death is both an effect of divine Power and Wisdom and thereby do they exert their efficacy unto the utmost for the attaining of the end designed in it Wherefore we are to look unto this Priesthood of Christ as that which divine wisdom hath appointed as the only way and means whereby we may be saved And if there be any defect therein if Christ in the discharge of it be not able to save us notwithstanding the Difficulties which unto us seem insuperable it must be charged on divine wisdom as that which was wanting in the contrivance of a due means unto its end And so it is done by the world For the Apostle testifieth that this wisdom of God is looked on and esteemed by men as meer foolishness The way proposed in it to save sinners by the Cross of Christ is accounted as folly by all unbelievers whatever else they pretend as the Reason of their unbelief But this Faith is to fix upon namely that although we yet see not how it may be done nor have the experience of it in our own souls yet this being the way which infinite wisdom hath fixed on there is no defect in it but Christ by it is able to save us For the very first notion which we have of wisdom as Divine and Infinite is that we are to acquiesce in its Contrivances and Determinations though we cannot comprehend the Reasons or wayes of them Besides the Lord Christ is herein also the Power of God God in him and by him put forth his omnipotent Power for the accomplishing of the effect and end aimed at Wherefore although we are not to look for our salvation from the Power of God absolutely considered yet are we to look for it from the same omnipotency as acting it self in and by Jesus Christ. This is the way whereby infinite wisdom hath chosen to act omnipotent Power And into them is Faith herein to be resolved 3. He is able to save also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word may have a double sense for it may respect the Perfection of the work or its Duration and so it is variously rendred to the utmost that is compleatly or evermore that is alwaies or for ever So the Syriack Translation carries it Take the word in the first sense and the meaning is that he will not effect or work out this or that part of our salvation do one thing or another that belongs unto it and leave what remains unto our selves or others but he is our Rock and his work is perfect Whatever belongs unto our entire compleat Salvation he is able to effect it The general notion of the most that are called Christians lies directly against this Truth In the latter sense two things may be intended 1. That after an entrance is made into this work and men begin to be made partakers of deliverance thereby there may great oppositions be made against it in Temptations Trials Sins and Death before it be brought unto Perfection But our Lord Christ as our Faithful High Priest fainteth not in his work but is able to carry us through all these difficulties and will do so until it be finished for ever in heaven 2. That this Salvation is durable perpetual eternal Isa. 45. 17. Salvare in aeternum to procure salutem aeternam But favores sunt ampliandi and there is nothing hinders but that we may take the words in such a comprehensive sense asto include the meaning of both these Interpretations He is able to save compleately as to all Parts fully as to all causes and for ever in Duration And we may observe Whatever hindrances and difficulties lye in the way of the salvation of Believers whatever oppositions do rise against it the Lord Christ is able by vertue of his Sacerdotal Office and in the
evert the force of his Argument For if the same sacrifice which the Lord Christ offered be often offered and had need so to be the whole Argument to prove the excellency of his Priesthood in that he offered himself but once above them who often offered the same sacrifices falls to the ground And hence also the Foundation of this fiction is rased For it is that the Lord Christ offered himself at the supper the night before he was hetraied as the Trent Council affirms Sess. 22. Cap. 1. For if he did so he offered himself more than once twice at least which being a matter of Fact is to give the Apostle the lye What he offered is expressed in the last place and therein the Reason is contained why he offered but once and needed not to do so daily as those Priests did And this is taken from the excellency of his offering he offered 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 himself And this gives the highest preference of the Priesthood of Christ above that of Levi. For 1. Those Priests had nothing of their own to offer but must be furnished with offerings from among the other Creatures 2. Though they had the best from them the blood and fat yet it was but the blood of Calves and Sheep and Goats And what can this do for the real Expiating of the sins of our souls See Micah 6. 6 7 8. Wherefore when at any time the People were brought under any serious conviction of sin they could not but apprehend that none of these sacrifices however multiplyed could deliver them from their Guilt But the Lord Christ had something of his own to offer that which was originally and absolutely his own not borrowed or taken from any thing among the Creatures And this was himself a sacrifice able to make Attonement for all the sins of Mankind And from the words thus expounded we may observe 1. That no sinful man was meet to offer the great Expiatory sacrifice for the Church much less is any sinful man fit to offer Christ himself As the first part of this Assertion declares the insufficiency of the Priests of the Church of the Jews so doth the latter the vain pretence of the Priests of the Church of Rome The former the Apostle proves and confirms expresly For no other high Priest but such a one as was in himself perfectly sinless did become us or our state and condition He that was otherwise could neither have any thing of his own to offer and must in the first place offer for himself and this he must be doing day by day And the latter on many accounts is a vile presumptuous Imagination For a poor sinful worm of the Earth to interpose himself between God and Christ and offer the one in sacrifice unto the other what an issue is it of Pride and Folly 2. The Excellency of Christs Person and Priesthood freed him in his offering from many things that the Levitical Priesthood was obliged unto And the due Apprehension hereof is a great guide unto us in the consideration of those Types For many things we shall meet withal which we cannot see how they had a particular Accomplishment in Christ nor find out what they did prefigure But all of them were such that their own infirm state and condition did require Such was their outward Call and Consecration which they had by the Law in the sacrifice of beasts with certain washings and unctions their sacrificing often and for themselves their Succession one to another their Purifications or legal Pollutions These and sundry things of like nature were made necessary unto them from their own sins and infirmities and so had no particular Accomplishment in Christ. However in general all the Ordinances and Institutions about them all taught the Church thus much that nothing of that was to be found in the true high Priest wherein they were defective 3. No Sacrifice could bring us unto God and save the Church to the utmost but that wherein the Son of God himself was both Priest and Offering Such an High Priest became us who offered himself once for all And we may consider 1. That this was one of the greatest effects of infinite divine Wisdom and Grace His Incarnation wherein he had a body prepared for him for this purpose his call to his Office by the Oath of the Father and Unction of the Spirit his sanctifying himself to be a sacrifice and his offering up himself through the eternal Spirit unto God are all full of Mysterious Wisdom and Grace All these wonders of wisdom and love were necessary unto this great End of bringing us unto God 2. Every part of this Transaction all that belongs unto this sacrifice is filled up with Perfection that no more could be required on the part of God nor is any thing wanting to give countenance unto our unbelief The Person of the Priest and the Offering it self are both the same both the Son of God One view of the Glory of this Mystery how satisfactory is it unto the souls of Believers 3. A distinct consideration of the Person of the Priest and of his sacrifice will evidence this Truth unto the Faith of Believers What could not this Priest prevail for in his Interposition on our behalf Must he not needs be absolutely prevalent in all he ayms at Were our cause intrusted in any other hand what security could we have that it should not miscarry And what could not this offering make Attonement for What sin or whose sins could it not expiate Behold the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the World 4. It was burdensom and heavy work to attain relief against sin and settled Peace of Conscience under the old Priesthood attended with so many weaknesses and infirmities Herein lyes the greatest part of that Yoke which the Apostle Peter affirms that neither they nor their Fathers were able to bear Act. 15. 10. Which the Lord Christ gives us deliverance from Math. 11. 27 28 29 30. VER XXVIII For the Law maketh men High Priests which have Infirmity but the Word of the Oath which was since the Law maketh the Son who is consecrated for evermore The Apostle in this verse summeth up the whole of his precedent Discourse so as to evidence the true and proper Foundation which all along he hath built and proceeded on 1. One Principle there was agreed upon between him and the Hebrews who adhered unto Mosaical Institutions and this was that an High Priest over the Church there must be and without such an one there is no approach unto God So it was under the Law and if the same order be not continued the Church must needs fall under a great disadvantage To lose the High Priest out of our Religion is to lose the Sun out of the firmament of the Church This was a common Principle agreed on between them whereon the Apostle doth proceed 2. He Grants unto them that the High Priests who officiated
re praeteritâ loquatur Respons ad cap. x. But as Beza very well observes the Apostle had before mentioned the one offering of Christ as already perfected and compleated Chap. 7. 27. He cannot therefore speak of it now but as that which was past and here he only shews how necessary it was that he should have himself to offer and so to offer himself as he had done And from these words we may observe 1. That there was no salvation to be had for us no not by Jesus Christ himself without his Sacrifice and Oblation It was of necessity that he should have somewhat to offir as well as those Priests had of old according to the Law Some would have it that the Lord Christ is our Saviour because he declared unto us the way of salvation and gave us an example of the way whereby we may attain it in his own personal obedience But whence then was it of necessity that he must have somewhat to offer unto God as our Priest that is for us For this belongeth neither unto his Doctrine nor Example And it was necessary that he should have somewhat to offer in answer unto those Sacrifices of old which were offered for the expiation of sin Nor would our salvation be otherwise effected by any other Acts or Duties of our High Priest For the Church could not be saved without taking away the guilt of sin And the whole design of the Priests and Sacrifices of old was to teach and instruct the Church how alone this might be performed And this was only by making atonement for it by Sacrifice wherein the Beast sacrificed did suffer in the room of the Sinner and did by Gods institution bear his iniquity And this our Apostle hath respect unto and the realizing of all those Typical Representations in Christ without which his whole discourse is useless and vain Wherefore there was no other way for our salvation but by a real propitiation or atonement made for our sins And whosoever looketh for it otherwise but in the faith and virtue thereof will be deceived 2. As God designed unto the Lord Christ the work which he had to do so he provided for him and furnished him with whatever was necessary thereunto Somewhat he must have to offer And this could not be any thing which was the matter of the Sacrifices of the Priests of old For all those Sacrifices were appropriated unto the discharge of the Priesthood And besides they were none of them able to effect that which he was designed to do Wherefore a body did God prepare for him as is declared at large Chap. 10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 c. 3. The Lord Christ being to save the Church in the way of Office he was not to be spared in any thing necessary thereunto And in conformity unto him 4. Whatever state or condition we are called unto what is necessary unto that state is indispensibly required of us So is Holiness and Obedience required unto a state of Reconciliation and Peace with God VER IV. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 VUl. Lat. si esset super terram all others in terra to the same purpose Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even also he should not be a Priest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vulgar omits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and renders the words cum essent qui offerrent Rhem. Whereas there were who did offer The Syriack agrees with the Original Manentibus illis Sacerdotibus quum sint alii Sacerdotes In the preceding Discourses the Apostle hath fully proved that the Introduction of this new Priesthood under the Gospel had put an end unto the old and that it was necessary so it should do because as he had abundantly discovered in many instances it was utterly insufficient to bring us unto God or to make the Church-State perfect And withall he had declared the nature of this new Priesthood In particular he hath shewed that although this High Priest offered his great expiatory Sacrifice once for all yet the consummation of this Sacrifice and the derivation of the Benefits of it unto the Church depended on the following discharge of his Office with his personal state and condition therein For so was it with the High Priest under the Law as unto his great Anniversary Sacrifice at the Feast of Expiation whose efficacy depended on his entrance afterwards into the holy place Wherefore he declares this state of our High Priest to be spiritual and heavenly as consisting in the Ministry of his own Body in the Sanctuary of Heaven Having fully manifested these things unfolding the mystery of them he proceeds in this Verse to shew how necessary it was that so it should be namely that he should neither offer the things appointed in the Law nor yet abide in the state and condition of a Priest here on earth as those other Priests did In brief he proves that he was not in any thing to take on him the Administration of holy things in the Church according as they were then established by Law For whereas it might be objected If the Lord Christ was an High Priest as he pleaded why then did he not administer the holy things of the Church according to the duty of a Priest To which he replies That so he was not to do yea a supposition that he might do so was inconsistent with his Office and destructive both of the Law and the Gospel For it would utterly overthrow the Law for one that was not of the Line of Aaron to officiate in the holy place and God had by the Law made provision of others that there was neither room nor place for his Ministry And the Gospel also would have been of no use thereby seeing the Sacrifice which it is built upon would have been of the same nature with those under the Law This the Apostle confirms in this Verse For indeed if he were on earth he should not be a Priest seeing that there are Priests that offer Gifts according to the Law The words are an Hypothetical Proposition with the Reason or Confirmation of it The Proposition is in the former part of the Verse For if indeed he were on the earth he should not be a Priest Hereof the remainder of the words is the Reason or Confirmation Seeing that there are Priests that offer Gifts according unto the Law And we may consider first the Causal Connexion For which relates unto what he had discoursed immediately before as introducing a Reason why things ought to be as he had declared He had in sundry instances manifested his present state and condition with the way and manner of the discharge of his Office A Priest he was and therefore he must have somewhat to offer which must be somewhat of his own seeing the Law would not accommodate him with a Sacrifice nor yet the whole Creation the Law having prepossessed unto its own use all that was clean and fit
cause God saw it necessary and it pleased him to put a grievous and heavy yoke upon them to subdue the pride of their spirits and to cause them to breathe after deliverance This the Apostle Peter calls a yoke that neither they nor their Fathers were able to bear Acts 15. 20. that is with peace ease and rest which therefore the Lord Christ invited them to seek for in himself alone Matth. 11. 29 30. And this yoke that God put on them consisted in these three things 1. In a multitude of Precepts hard to be understood and difficult to be observed The present Jews reckon up 613 of them about the sense of most of which they dispute endlesly among themselves But the truth is since the days of the Pharisees they have increased their own yoke and made obedience unto their Law in any tolerable manner altogether unpracticable It were easie to manifest for instance that no man under Heaven ever did or ever can keep the Sabbath according to the Rules they give about it in their Talmuds And they generally scarce observe one of them themselves But in the Law as given by God himself it is certain that there were a multitude of arbitrary Precepts and those in themselves not accompanied with any spiritual Advantages as our Apostle shews Chap. 9. 5. only they were obliged to perform them by a meer soveraign Act of Power and Authority 2. In the severity wherewith the observance of all those Precepts were enjoined them And this was the threatning of death For he that despised Moses 's Law died without mercy and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward Hence was their complaint of old Behold we die we perish we all perish whosoever cometh near unto the Tabernacle of the Lord shall dye shall we be consumed with dying Numb 17. 12 13. And the Curse solemnly denounced against every one that confirmed not all things written in the Law was continually before them 3. In a Spirit of Bondage unto Fear This was administred in the giving and dispensation of the Law even as a Spirit of Liberty and Power is administred in and by the Gospel And as this respected their present Obedience and manner of its performance so in particular it regarded Death not yet conquered by Christ. Hence our Apostle affirms that through fear of Death they were all their life-time subject unto Bondage This state God brought them into partly to subdue the pride of their hearts trusting in their own righteousness and partly to cause them to look out earnestly after the promised Deliverer 4. Into this estate and condition God brought them by a Solemn Covenant confirmed by mutual consent between him and them The Tenure Force and Solemn Ratification of this Covenant is expressed Exod. 24. 3 4 5 6 7 8. Unto the terms and conditions of this Covenant was the whole Church obliged indispensibly on pain of Extermination until all was accomplished Mal. 4. 4 5 6. Unto this Covenant belonged the Decalogue with all Precepts of Moral Obedience thence educed So also did the Laws of Political Rule established among them and the whole Systeme of Religious Worship given unto them All these Laws were brought within the verge of this Covenant and were the matter of it And it had especial Promises and Threatnings annexed unto it as such whereof none did exceed the Bounds of the Land of Canaan For even many of the Laws of it were such as obliged no where else Such was the Law of the Sabbatical year and all their Sacrifices There was Sin and Obedience in them or about them in the Land of Canaan none elsewhere Hence 5. This Covenant thus made with these Ends and Promises did never save nor condemn any man eternally All that lived under the Administration of it did attain eternal life or perished for ever but not by vertue of this Covenant as formally such It did indeed revive the commanding Power and Sanction of the first Covenant of Works and therein as the Apostle speaks was the Ministry of condemnation 2 Cor. 3. 9. For by the deeds of the Law can no flesh be justified And on the other hand it directed also unto the Promise which was the instrument of life and salvation unto all that did believe But as unto what it had of its own it was confined unto things temporal Believers were saved under it but not by vertue of it Sinners perished eternally under it but by the Curse of the original Law of Works And 6. Hereon occasionally fell out the ruine of that People their Table became a snare unto them and that which should have been for their welfare became a trap according to the Prediction of our Saviour Psal. 69. 22. It was this Covenant that raised and ruined them it raised them to Glory and Honour when given of God it ruined them when abused by themselves contrary to express declarations of his mind and will For although the generality of them were wicked and rebellious always breaking the Terms of the Covenant which God made with them so far as it was possible they should whil'st God determined to reign over them unto the appointed season and repined under the burden of it yet they would have this Covenant to be the only Rule and Means of righteousness life and salvation as the Apostle declares Rom. 9. 31 32 33. Chap. 10. 3. For as we have often said there were two things in it both which they abused unto other ends than what God designed them 1 There was the Renovation of the Rule of the Covenant of Works for righteousness and life And this they would have to be given unto them for those ends and so sought for righteousness by the works of the Law 2 There was ordained in it a Typical Representation of the way and means whereby the Promise was to be made effectual namely in the Mediation and Sacrifice of Jesus Christ which was the end of all their Ordinances of Worship And the outward Law thereof with the observance of its Institution they looked on as their only relief when they came short of exact and perfect righteousness Against both these pernicious Errors the Apostle disputes expresly in his Epistle unto the Romans and the Galatians to save them if it were possible from that ruine they were casting themselves into Hereon the Elect obtained but the rest were hard ned For hereby they made an absolute renunciation of the Promise wherein alone God had enwrapped the way of life and salvation This is the nature and substance of that Covenant which God made with that People a particular temporary Covenant it was and not a meer dispensation of the Covenant of Grace That which remains for the declaration of the mind of the Holy Ghost in this whole matter is to declare the differences that are between those two Covenants whence the one is said to be better than the other and to be built upon better Promises Those of
all our sins The Sanctification or Renovation of our Natures and the Justification of our Persons being promised herein seeing infinite power and grace are required unto them He alone must make this Covenant with whom all power and grace do dwell God hath spoken once twice have I heard this that power belongeth unto God also unto thee O Lord belongeth mercy Psal. 62. 11 12. 6 The Reward promised in this Covenant is God himself I am thy Reward And who but God can ordain himself to be our Reward Ob. All the efficacy and glory of the New Covenant do originally arise from and are resolved into the Author and Supreme Cause of it which is God himself And we might consider unto the encouragement of our Faith and the strengthning of our consolation 1 His infinite condescension to make and enter into Covenant with poor lost fallen sinful man This no heart can fully conceive no tongue can express only we live in hope to have yet a more clear prospect of it and to have an holy admiration of it unto Eternity 2 His wisdom goodness and grace in the nature of that Covenant which he hath condescended to make and enter into The first Covenant he made with us in Adam which we brake was in itself good holy righteous and just it must be so because it was also made by him But there was no provision made in it absolutely to preserve us from that woful disobedience and transgression which would make it void and frustrate all the holy and blessed ends of it Nor was God obliged so to preserve us having furnished us with a sufficiency of ability for our own preservation so as we could no way fall but by a wilful Apostasie from him But this Covenant is of that nature as that the grace administred in it shall effectually preserve all the Covenanters unto the end and secure unto them all the benefits of it For 3 His power and faithfulness are engaged unto the accomplishment of all the Promises of it And these Promises do contain every thing that is spiritually and eternally good or desirable unto us O Lord our Lord how excellent is thy Name in all the Earth How glorious art thou in the ways of thy grace towards poor sinful Creatures who had destroyed themselves And 4 He hath made no created good but himself only to be our Reward Secondly The Persons with whom this Covenant is made are also expressed The House of Israel and the House of Judah Long before the giving of this Promise that People were divided into two parts The one of them in way of distinction from the other retained the name of Israel These were the Ten Tribes which fell off from the House of David under the conduct of Ephraim whence they are often also in the Prophets called by that name The other consisting of the Tribe properly so called with that of Benjamin and the greatest part of Levi took the name of Judah and with them both the Promise and the Church remained in a peculiar manner But whereas they all originally sprang from Abraham who received the Promise and sign of Circumcision for them all and because they were all equally in their Forefather brought into the Bond of the Old Covenant they are here mentioned distinctly that none of the Seed of Abraham might be excluded from the tender of this Covenant Unto the whole Seed of Abraham according to the flesh it was that the terms and grace of this Covenant was first to be offered So Peter tells them in his first Sermon That the Promise was unto them and their Children who were there present that is the House of Judah and to them that are afar off that is the House of Israel in their dispersions Acts 2. 39. So again he expresseth the order of the dispensation of this Covenant with respect to the Promise made to Abraham Acts 3. 25 26. Ye are the Children of the Prophets and of the Covenant which God made with our Fathers saying unto Abraham and in thy Seed shall all the Kindreds of the earth be blessed unto you first God having raised his Son Jesus sent him to bless you namely in the preaching of the Gospel So our Apostle in his Sermon unto them affirmed that it was necessary that the Word should be first spoken unto them Acts 13. 46. And this was all the Priviledge that was now left unto them For the Partition-wall was now broken down and all Obstacles against the Gentiles taken out of the way Wherefore this House of Israel and of Judah may be considered two ways 1 As that People were the whole entire Posterity of Abraham 2 As they were typical and mystically significant of the whole Church of God Hence alone it is that the Promises of Grace under the Old Testament are given unto the Church under those names because they were Types of them who should really and effectually be made Partakers of them In the first sense God made this Covenant with them and this on sundry accounts 1 Because He in and through whom alone it was to be established and made effectual was to be brought forth amongst them of the Seed of Abraham as the Apostle plainly declares Acts 2. 25. 2 Because all things that belonged unto the Ratification of it were to be transacted amongst them 3 Because in the outward dispensation of it the terms and grace of it was first in the counsel of God to be tendred unto them 4 Because by them by the Ministry of men of their Posterity the dispensation of it was to be carried unto all Nations as they were to be blessed in the Seed of Abraham which was done by the Apostles and other Disciples of our Lord Jesus Christ. So the Law of the Redeemer went forth from Sion By this means the Covenant was confirmed with many of them for one week before the calling of the Gentiles Dan. 9. 27. And because these things belonged equally unto them all mention is made distinctly of the House of Israel and the House of Judah For the House of Judah was at the time of the giving of this Promise in the sole possession of all the Priviledges of the Old Covenant Israel having cut off themselves by their revolt from the House of David being cast out also for their sins amongst the Heathen But God to declare that the Covenant he designed had no respect unto those carnal Priviledges which were then in the possession of Judah alone but only unto the Promise made unto Abraham he equals all his Seed with respect unto the mercy of this Covenant In the second sense The whole Church of elect Believers is intended under these denominations being typified by them These are they alone being one made of twain namely Jews and Gentiles with whom the Covenant is really made and established and unto whom the grace of it is actually communicated For all these with whom this Covenant is made shall as really have the
be done by that Covenant against which the Sins were committed neither by the Priests nor Sacrifices nor any other Duties of it Therefore had he promised the Abolition of it because of its weakness and insufficiency unto this end as also the introduction of a new to supply its defects as we have seen at large in the Exposition of the foregoing Chapter For it became the Wisdom Goodness and Grace of God upon the removal of the other for its insufficiency to establish another that should be every way effectual unto his purpose namely the Communication of an Eternal Inheritance unto them that are called But then the Enquiry will be How this Covenant or Testament shall effect this end what is in it what belongs unto it that should be so effectual and by what means it might attain this end All these are declared in the words And Sixthly In general all this arose from hence that it had a Mediator and that the Lord Christ the Son of God was this Mediator The dignity of his Person and thereon both the Excellency and Efficacy of his Priestly Office whereunto alone respect is had in his being called here a Mediator he had abundantly before demonstrated Although the word in general be of a larger signification as we have declared on Chap. 8. 6. yet here it is restrained unto his Priestly Office and his acting therein For whereas he had treated of that alone in the foregoing Chapter here declaring the Grounds and Reasons of the necessity of it he says for this cause is he the Mediator And proceeding to shew in what sense he considers him as a Mediator doth it by his being a Testator and dying which belongs to his Priestly Office alone And the sole end which in this place he assigns unto his Mediatory Office is his death That by means of death Whereas therefore there were Sins committed under the first Covenant and against it and would have been so for ever had it continued which it was no way able so to take away as that the called might receive the Inheritance the Lord Christ undertook to be the Mediator of that Covenant which was provided as a Remedy against these Evils For herein he undertook to answer for and expiate all those Sins Whereas therefore Expiation of Sin is to be made by an Act towards God with whom alone Atonement is to be made so as that they may be pardoned the Mediation of Christ here intended is that whereby suffering death in our stead in the behalf of all that are called he made Atonement for Sin But moreover God had a further design herein He would not only free them that are called from that death which they deserved by their Sins against the first Covenant but give them also a Right and Title unto an Eternal Inheritance that is of Grace and Glory Wherefore the Procurement hereof also depends on the Mediation of Christ. For by his Obedience unto God in the discharge thereof he purchased for them this Inheritance and bequeathed it unto them as the Mediator of the New Testament The Provision of this Mediator of the New Testament is the greatest Effect of the infinite Wisdom Love and Grace of God This is the Center of his Eternal Counsels In the womb of this one Mercy all others are contained Herein will he be glorified unto Eternity 1 The first Covenant of Works was broken and disannulled because it had no Mediator 2 The Covenant at Sinai had no such Mediator as could expiate Sin Hence 3 Both of them became means of Death and Condemnation 4 God saw that in the making the New Covenant it was necessary to put all things into the hand of a Mediator that it also might not be frustrated 5 This Mediator was not in the first place to preserve us in the state of the New Covenant but to deliver us from the guilt of the breach of the former and the Curse thereon To make provision for this End was the Effect of Infinite Wisdom Seventhly The especial way and means whereby this Effect was wrought by this Mediator was by death Morte obita facta interveniente intercedente by means of death say we Death was the means that whereby the Mediator procured the Effect mentioned That which in the foregoing Verse is ascribed unto the Blood of Christ which he offered as a Priest is here ascribed unto his death as a Mediator For both these really are the same only in the one the thing it self is expressed it was death in the other the manner of it it was by blood in the one what he did and suffered with respect unto the Curse of the first Covenant it was death in the other the ground of his making Expiation for Sin by his death or how it came so to do namely not meerly as it was death or penal but as it was a voluntary Sacrifice or Oblation It was therefore necessary unto the End mentioned that the Mediator of the New Testament should dye not as the High Priests of old dyed a natural death for themselves but as the Sacrifice dyed that was slain and offered for others He was to dye that death which was threatned unto Transgressions against the first Covenant that is death under the Curse of the Law There must therefore be some great Cause and End why this Mediator being the onely begotten of the Father should thus dye This was say the Socinians that he might confirm the Doctrine that he taught He dyed as a Martyr not as a Sacrifice But 1 There was no need that he should dye unto that End For his Doctrine was sufficiently confirmed by the Scriptures of the Old Testament the Evidence of the Presence of God in him and the Miracles which he wrought 2 Notwithstanding their pretence they do not assign the Confirmation of his Doctrine unto his Death but unto his Resurrection from the dead Neither indeed do they allow any gracious Effect unto his death either towards God or men but only make it something necessarily antecedent unto what he did of that kind Nor do they allow that he acted any thing at all towards God on our behalf Whereas the Scripture constantly assigns our Redemption Sanctification and Salvation to the death and blood of Christ. These Persons 1 deny that of it self it hath any influence into them wherefore 2 they say that Christ by his death confirmed the New Covenant but hereby they intend nothing but what they do also in the former or the Confirmation of his Doctrine with an addition of somewhat worse For they would have him to confirm the Promises of God as by him declared and no more as though he were God's Surety to us and not a Surety for us unto God Neither do they assign this unto his Death but unto his Resurrection from the dead But suppose all this and that the death of Christ were in some sense useful and profitable unto these Ends which is all they plead