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A41197 A brief exposition of the Epistles of Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians by James Fergusson. Fergusson, James, 1621-1667. 1659 (1659) Wing F772; ESTC R27358 577,875 820

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of the body 1 Thess. 5. 23. for saith he Because ye are sons He hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts 6. According as Beleivers do attain to a larger insight in this excellent benefit of Adoption and a greater measure of the fruits of it there will be a proportionable measure of the Spirit 's in-dwelling and manifesting of Himself in His gracious operations especially in His assisting and furnishing for the duty of Prayer for he proveth they had received a clear insight in this priviledge of Adoption and the more free use and fruition of it because the Spirit was more plentifully bestowed to dwell in their hearts And because ye are sons saith he God hath sent forth c. 7. Though the exercise of Faith Love Hope and other graces in the duty of Prayer and at other occasions doth flow from the renewed soul as the proper inward and vital cause of those actions so that properly we and not the Spirit of God are said to believe repent pray c. Rom. 10. 10. Yet because the Spirit doth not only create and preserve those gracious habits in the soul Ezek. 36. 26. but also exciteth the soul to act and assisteth it in acting according to them Philip. 2. 13. without which actuating exciting and assisting grace habitual grace in us could do nothing Joh. 15. 5. Therefore is it that the exercise of those graces is ascribed to the Spirit of God as the external efficient cause thereof for which reason our affectionate and believing Prayers are ascribed here unto Him God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son crying Abba 8. There is an holy vehemency and fervor required in Prayer opposit to carelesse formality and deadnesse for praying is here called crying which is an usual evidence of fervency and earnestnesse and the doubling of the word Father maketh for the same purpose Crying Abba Father or Father Father 9. This holy vehemency and fervor consisteth not so much in the lifting up of the externall voice as in the inward bensal and serious frame of the spirit it is a cry not of the mouth but of the heart Into your hearts crying 10. Besides this fervency and earnestnesse requisit in Prayer there would be also a confident familiar owning of God joyned with reverence to Him as a Father for the Spirit maketh them to call upon Him by the name of Abba Father Vers. 7. Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God through Christ. HEre he concludeth from what is said first That under the New Testament we are no more servants as being redeemed from that legal yoke of bondage under which the ancient Church was And secondly That we are sons and by consequence heirs of God which is verified mainly in real Believers under the New Testament in so far as they are sons come to age and heirs past tutory actually partaking of their father's inheritance in a larger measure than Believers did under the Old Testament as was explained ver 5. All which priviledges are bestowed upon us through Christ and through vertue of His coming unto the flesh Doct. 1. It is a safe way of reasoning upon the observation of the saving effects of God's Spirit in our selves to conclude that we are in a state of grace even the adopted Children of God for the Spirit of God by the Apostle doth so reason in this place Because He hath sent forth His Spirit into your hearts wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son 2. The rare priviledges which are bestowed upon Believers chiefly under the New Testament as they do exceed in some degrees those which the generality of Believers enjoyed under the Old so they are many and all of them so linked together as in one golden chain that where one of them is the rest are also and it is our duty having attained to know our enjoying of any one of them thence to gather that we have all the rest for the Apostle reckoneth a number of such priviledges which as to the degree wherein they are bestowed are proper to the dayes of the Gospel and doth alwayes from the former infer the latter Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God 3. Though the natural Son of God be only one even Jesus Christ the only begotten of the Father Joh. 1. 14. yet every man who hath the Spirit of God dwelling in his heart is His son by grace and adoption even they who by nature are children of wrath Eph. 2. 3. for from God's sending forth His Spirit into their hearts he concludeth Wherefore thou art a son 4. Our right to the heavenly inheritance as also the possession of it whether that which is begun here in the Kingdom of Grace or which shall be compleated hereafter in the Kingdom of Glory doth follow upon our sonship and adoption so that God of rebels doth first make up sons and then none can challenge Him of injustice for bestowing upon us the inheritance of children And if a son then an heir of God saith he 5. As none since the fall ever was or shall be lifted up to that high dignity of being sons and daughters to the Lord Almighty or could lay any just claim to Heaven and Glory as his inheritance but by vertue of Christ's obedience and death whereby all those high and precious priviledges being formerly forfeited and lost were again recovered So the actual exhibition of Christ in the flesh and the real payment of the price by Christ did bring with it God having so appointed a larger measure and higher degree of those priviledges to be bestowed upon Believers after that time than was ordinarily enjoyed by Believers formerly for he is speaking here mainly of that higher degree of freedom and of that more evident and clear fight of and right to the inheritance together with the fuller measure of its possession in the Graces of God's Spirit which is proper to the dayes of the Gospel and sheweth all this cometh through Christ to wit His actual incarnation obedience and death Vers. 8. Howbeit then when ye knew not God ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods 9. But now after that ye have known God or rather are known of God how turn ye again to the weak and beggerly elements whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage THe Apostle having now sufficiently confirmed by Scripture and Reason the Churche's freedom from that ancient legal dispensation and more especially from the Ceremonial Law doth now in the second part of the chapter labour upon their affections to work them up towards the imbracing of this Truth both by sharp reproofs and most affectionate insinuations And first that he may fasten a reproof upon them for their begun defection the more convincingly he sheweth when that legal dispensation was in force they to wit the Galatians who were of
state is in a state of Sonship or Adoption which noteth her freedom from that rigor and servitude under which the ancient Church was through the outward legal dispensation of the Covenant of Grace chap. 4. 3. and the truly godly have some peculiar dignity added in relation to the grace of Adoption over and above what Believers under the Old Testament had in so far as the vail of that legal dispensation being removed the generality at least of Believers now have more ready accesse to the Covenant-promise and a clearer insight in and knowledge of all those priviledges which belong unto them as the sons of God Heb. 12. 22 23 24. for taking what the Apostle saith of their being the children of God in both or either of those respects his intended scope is brought about which is to shew That the christian Church is not under the pedagogy of that Mosaical dispensation even for or because ye are all the Children of God saith he 2. Though Faith in the Messiah to come did entitle Believers under the Old Testament to the dignity of Sons and Daughters to the Lord Almighty yet Faith in Jesus Christ already come doth adde some peculiar dignity of Sonship upon the christian Church and especially upon Believers in it even that which is presently mentioned in the preceding Doctrine the Lord having been pleased to make the Churches full growth and utmost perfections as to her priviledges and outward state and measure of accesse to tryst with His Son 's coming in the flesh that so His entry to the world might be more stately as being accompanied with such a measure of royal munificence Heb. 11. 40. for saith he Ye are all the children of God by Faith in Jesus Christ to wit already come Vers. 27. For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. 28. There is neither Jew nor Greek there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female for ye are all one in Christ Jesus 29. And if ye he Christ's then are ye Abraham's seed and heirs according to the Promise THe Apostle having proved that the christian Church is freed from the mosaical dispensation which was added to the Promise upon mount Sinai seemeth in these verses not only to confirm that which he had presently asserted of our being the children of God by Faith because we are baptized into Christ have put on Christ are one in Christ but also and mainly to obviate an Objection yet more made use of by the false Apostles in behalf of Circumcision which was not added upon mount Sinai unto the Promise but given to Abraham with the Promise as the initiatory seal of the Promise Gen. 17. 10. whence it seems they argued That notwithstanding all that which was added upon mount Sinai was now abrogated yet Circumcision was to be kept in the Church as that without which none could be Abraham's seed or an heir according to the Promise The Apostle's Answer cometh in effect to this That Baptism into Christ that is which sealeth and signifieth our ingraffing into Christ Rom. 6. 4. was substituted in the place of Circumcision and sufficient for compassing all those ends for which Circumcision was instituted and that because they who are baptized into Christ do put on Christ and so are in a manner incorporate and make one body with Him as a man is incorporated with his garments from which the word is borrowed ver 26. Which incorporation of the christian Church and making all the members thereof one in Christ he sheweth is effectuated without any respect had to any difference of Nations conditions worldly or distinction of sexes leaving them to gather that Circumcision which by vertue of its institution did serve for keeping up a distinction between Jew and Gentile Exod. 12. 48. could have no influence upon this businesse ver 28. From all which he concludeth Seing Baptism doth testifie and seal up Christ's interest in those who are baptized as His and their union with Christ who is the real Head of the blessed Race through whom alone Abraham and his seed were to be blessed That therefore ipso facto and without any more ado they were Abraham's seed and apparent heirs of that heavenly inheritance given unto Abraham by promise and so that there was no necessity in order to this end of joyning them to the blessed Nation by Circumcision as the ancient Proselytes were and as the false Apostles alleaged should yet be practised ver 29. From Vers. 27. Learn 1. Though Circumcision the initiatory Seal and leading Sacrament of the Covenant under the Old Testament Exod. 12. 48. be now abolished with the rest of that ancient dispensation yet seing the Church of God even under the New Testament is not wholly spiritual but in part earthly and carnal Rom. 7. 14. standing in need to be instructed and confirmed in spiritual Truths by things sensible and earthly Joh. 3. 12. it hath therefore seemed good unto God to enjoyn the celebration of some Sacraments in the christian Church unto the end of the world Mat. 28. 19 20. which are in signification more clear and in use lesse painfull and burdensom and particularly He hath substituted Baptism in the place of Circumcision which doth serve for all these spiritual uses now which Circumcision did serve for then to wit all these uses which were of common concernment to the Church at all times and not peculiar to the dispensation which then was for the Apostle clearing how Circumcision was now abrogated doth shew how Baptism doth it in all those necessary uses for which it did serve For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. 2. Among other uses for which Baptism doth serve this is the first and chief to signifie and seal up our ingraffing into and union with Christ there is an external visible union consisting in external covenanting and serious profession of christian Truths either personally or parentally which is sealed up to all visible Professors absolutely for they are in Him externally Joh. 15. 2. There is a real and saving union signified and sealed up unto all the Regenerate absolutely for they are in Him savingly Rom. 8. 1. and to all the Members of the visible Church conditionally if so they come up to the termes which Scripture calleth for as necessary in order to union with Him to wit saving Faith for this much the Apostle doth import by saying we are baptized into Christ even that our ingraffing into Him is signified and sealed by Baptism 3. Baptism doth also signifie and seal our putting on of Christ to wit by Faith for by Faith we make application of Christ unto our selves Joh. 6. 40. and Christ so applied serveth for the same use to the soul which garments do serve to the body He covereth our loathsom nakednesse Rev. 3. 18. and is also for an ornament unto us Eph. 5. 27. He communicateth heat and warmnesse even those
while he saith Fathers provoke not your children to wrath 2. To provoke or stir up others unto sin maketh us guilty before the Lord even of those sins which others commit being provoked thereunto by us Hos. 6. 9. for Paul forbiddeth and condemneth this as a sin in parents towards their children Fathers provoke not your children to wrath 3. So small command have all men naturally over their passions especially when provoked by reall injuries from others that the strongest of natural bonds cannot keep them in order and at under except they be restrained by grace but they must transgress the bounds even children cannot bear injuries from their very parents without being incited thereby to sinfull anger yea such is the corruption of some children that they can bear lesse at the hands of their parents than of any other else for so much is implied while he saith Fathers provoke not your children to wrath 4. A necessary duty is not to be neglected upon pretence that others may take occasion to sin against the Lord from it and particularly parents are not to withhold seasonable and necessary correction from their children even although their children should be enraged and provoked to wrath by it for notwithstanding he forbiddeth fathers to provoke their children to wrath yet he will not have them upon that pretence neglecting to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. 5. As people are most ready to run from the one extream of any sin unto the other from prodigality to sinfull parcimony from rigiditie to too much lenity So the servants of Christ while they are disswading people from the one extremity had need most carefully to guard lest under pretence of eschewing that people do rush upon the other for the Apostle while he forbiddeth too much rigidity in parents he seeth it necessary to guard them against the other extremity of too much indulgence and lenity while he saith bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. 6. It is the duty of parents not only to provide for the bodies and outward estate of their children but also and mainly to care for their souls endeavouring by all meanes possible to bring them up for sons and daughters to the Lord Almighty for as they are to bring them up or nourish them so also to beat down sin in them by nurture or correction and to make them know Jesus Christ the Lord But bring them up saith he in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. 7. As parents are to correct their children betimes so they ought not herein to satisfi● their own rage and passion but to go about it with a composed minde as a piece of service injoyned by God aiming mainly at the amendment of the faulty childe and in order hereto joyning instruction and admonition with correction yea and seeking the blessing of Christ to accompany it for the Apostle will have nurture and admonition joyned together and both of them in the Lord In the nurture and admonition of the Lord. Verse 5. Servants be obedient to them that are your masters according to the flesh with fear and trembling in singleness of your heart as unto Christ HE commeth now in the last place to the duties of masters and servants and first beginneth with servants See the reasons why he insisteth so long on their duty upon Col. 3. 22. Now servants were of two sorts some did serve for hire or as apprentises Mal. 3. 5 Others were bond-slaves to their masters being either taken in war 2 Chron. 28. 10. or bought with money Lev. 25. 44. The Apostle speaketh to both those sorts and first giveth a sum of their duty to wit obedience to their masters according to the flesh by which designation of masters he limiteth their dominion and mastership to the bodies of their servants to things temporall and of the flesh only leaving the soul and conscience to God only who is the alone Lord of conscience Matth. 23. 8. And the obedience here enjoyned to be given by servants unto those as it is largely taken doth consist in a chearfull executing of all their lawfull commands Matth. 8. 9. even though the thing commanded be laborious painfull Luke 17. 7 8 9. and rigid 1 Pet. 2. 18. in a meek and patient bearing of their rebukes Tit. 2. 9. yea and corrections also 1 Pet. 2. 18 20 21. and in with-holding their hands from picking and their tongues from abusing their masters by alledging commissions from them which they have not for their own advantage 2 King 5. 20 c. and in abstaining carefully from all contriving and procuring of their masters prejudice for benefiting themselves or others Luke 16. 1 2 c. Secondly he giveth some properties of this obedience as first it must be with fear and trembling which property consisteth in a sollicitous and earnest care and indefatigable diligence in following their masters affairs to his greatest advantage Gen. 31. 38 39. joyned with reverence flowing from love to their masters person 1 Tim. 6. 1. and with fear of his displeasure Mal. 1. 6 and is contrary to pride and lazinesse See working with fear and trembling taken in this sense Phil. 2. -12. Secondly their obedience must be with singlenesse of heart which is opposed to a double heart hypocrisie and deceit and it implyeth that faithfulnesse which ought to be in servants towards their masters as minding and intending from their very heart the thriving and successe of their affairs in all things and at all times Tit. 2. 10. And thirdly it must be as unto Christ whereby he expresseth the manner motive and rule of their obedience See upon chap. 5. ver 22. Doct. 1. Christian liberty and spirituall freedom from sin Satan and Gods wrath is not inconsistent with civil bondage and subjection Christ and the Gospel teacheth no man to cast off that yoke but how they are to carry themselves as becometh Christians under it for he speaketh to servants as servants enjoyning them civil subjection though they were now converted and partakers of that spirituall liberty purchased by Christ Gal. 3. 28. Servants be obedient to your masters 2. The condition of none is so base or despicable but free grace in God will stoup so low as to take notice of them in it yea and bestow upon them all those precious blessings purchased by Christ that so grace may appear to be grace when it hath compassion on those who are in all respects most unworthy and vile for even some of those servants who for the most part were bond-slaves and as little esteemed of by their masters as their very beasts were converted by the Gospel and are therefore here spoken unto as converts Servants be obedient to your masters 3. Such is the sufficiency of Scripture that there is no rank state nor degree of persons even from the King to the bond-slave to whom it doth not serve as a full and perfect rule to direct them how to
A BRIEF EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLES of Paul TO THE GALATIANS AND EPHESIANS BY JAMES FERGUSSON Minister at Kilwinning Isa. 28. 10. For precept must be upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little Col. 3. 16. Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another c. LONDON Printed for the Company of STATIONERS Anno Dom. 1659. To the Right Honourable and noble Lords Alexander Earl of Eglintoun c. AND Hugh Lord Montgomery his Son And to the Right Honourable noble Lady The Lady Mary Lesley Lady Montgomery RIGHT HONOURABLE IT is decreed in Heaven That we must through much tribulation enter the Kingdom of God Act. 14. -22. God only wise hath so resolved that by means of sanctified trouble the Heirs of glory may be weaned from earth and learn to place their chief contentment and happinesse not upon their enjoyments below which are uncertain empty and perishing but upon things above an inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in Heaven for them How hard were it to make even those who are born of God long to be dissolved and bid adieu to all their sublunary contentments except the Lord in mercy did place a prick in every one of those roses and make their most promising earthly comforts within a little to prove as streams of brooks that passe away Job 6. 15 And how should this conciliate love to a sad and suffering lot and make the Lord's People who are strangers and pilgrims delight in the way which leadeth to such an home as Heaven is It is indeed our unacquaintance with Scripture and with what the Word of Truth holdeth forth to be the mind of God while He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth which doth occasion so much proud rising of spirit or base dejectedness of mind when the Lord doth not carve us out such a satisfying lot in all things as we would How often do we mistake our way and little lesse than quarrel with God only because He hedgeth us in with thorns of affliction that we cannot find out our lovers and therefore that man is truly blessed whom the Lord doth not only chastise but also instruct out of His Law Ps. 94. 12. and thereby make him understand and hear the voice of the rod and of Him who hath appointed it Mica 6. 9. And herein indeed the Lord doth greatly manifest His marvellous loving kindnesse and in wrath remembreth mercy that He joyneth instruction with correction and doth furnish His afflicted People with abundant means by which they may take up the mind of God for good unto them under His saddest dispensations even that the fruit of affliction is to take away their sin Isa. 27. 9 that He doth punish them seven times more and yet seven times more untill their uncircumcised hearts be humbled and they accept of the punishment of their iniquity Levit. 26. 24 28 41. that though He visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes Nevertheless His loving kindnesse will He not utterly take from him Psal. 89. 32 33. and that when they are judged they are chastened of the Lord that they should not be condemned with the world 1 Cor. 11. 32. All this and much more to this purpose hath the Lord made known by His Word and doth daily inculcate and make more and more known by His sent Ministers who according to their Commission do open up and apply the rich treasure of holy Scripture unto the Lords People of their charge And as if all this were not sufficient He hath besides stirred up the spirits of many of His Servants in every age to 〈…〉 mit their Labours upon Scripture unto writing for the more publick use of the Church of God not only in the present but also the succeeding generations As for my self I ingenuously professe that being conscious of mine own weaknesse I did much incline to rest satisfied with expressing my Commission by word only in preaching to and conferring with my Flock and those of my charge But being earnestly requested and in a manner commanded by some Reverend Brethren whom I honour and reverence in the Lord to draw up briefly in writ a plain Analysis a short and sound Exposition of and the chief Observations grounded upon such Scriptures as I had either largely preached upon or more briefly opened-up to the Lords People of my charge I shewed them some of my weak endeavours of that kind to be disposed upon at their pleasure which when they were pleased to publish and to call for more work of the same nature expressing their confidence that what I had already done was acceptable to all that love the Truth and would be edifying to the present and after-ages and being thereunto also encouraged by diverse faithfull and understanding persons I have in obedience to their desires given-out this other Piece to be disposed of by them as they should see good And seing they have advised the publishing of it To whom could I with more confidence and conscience of duty dedicate these my mean labours than to your Honours considering that God hath appointed me to watch for your souls as one who must g 〈…〉 n account and that your Honours have endeavoured for your parts to encourage me to go about all the parts of my Ministery with joy and not with grief My Lords when I called to remembrance how long each of you was detained these years by-past from enjoying the benefit of my publick Ministery by your necessitated abode elsewhere I thought the best way to give you an account and to make you reap some fruit of my labours in your absence was to present these my weak endeavours to your Honours and what you have heard from me upon these Scriptures in publick when you were permitted to be my hearers I hope this little piece shall conduce to bring it to your remembrance and the Lord Himself convey it into your hearts there to remain to make your Honours more and more wise to salvation that in the day of the Lord Jesus ye may be matter of joy and a crown of rejoycing to those who have laboured among you and spoken the Word of God unto you And for you Madam who hath had liberty to be my hearer more frequently and constantly than my noble Lords as I trust your Honour will observe there is a good harmony betwixt that which I taught in the Congregation and which I now publish to the world and that this little piece shall according to your usuall diligence in searching Scripture and in keeping fellowship with God in the practice of all commanded duties be improved by your Honour for your further edification and encouragment to walk worthy of the Lord unto all well-pleasing So when I consider how refreshfull it hath been often unto me to behold your sweet submission under the Lord's hand your truly
tending to it is also manifested with it Thus the Lord had separated Paul from the mothers womb to preach the Gospel among the Gentiles whereby is meant that God was without Paul's knowledge preparing him for that Office by His providence about him from his very birth as that he was born of such parents with such a bodily temper fitted as it would appear to endure much travel and hardships that he was educated at the feet of Gamaliel that he was a Pharisee instructed in all humane and divine learning according to the Law c. 5. The effectual calling of the Elect in time whereby they are drawn to Jesus Christ Joh. 6. 44. and inabled to imbrace Him as He is offered 1 Tim. 1. 15. their minds being savingly illuminated Act. 26. 18. and their wills renewed Ezek. 36. 26. is the work of God's almighty Power and Grace in the first instant of which work man doth only receive the impression from Grace and hath no active influence in it Eph. 2. 5. This doth Paul assert while he saith God called me by His Grace From Vers. 16. Learn 1. However man by the light of Nature Rom. 2. 14 15. and by the works of Creation Rom. 1 19 20. and Providence Psal. 19. 1. may attain to know there is a God and that this God should be served Act. 17. 23. and will be terrible to those who serve Him not Rom. 1. 23. Yet the knowledge of Jesus Christ the Son of God and of Redemption purchased to lost sinners through Him is a thing which the greatest Wits by the fore-mentioned helps cannot reach except it be revealed unto them either by an ordinary or extraordinary revelation for even Paul had this knowledge by revelation It pleased God to reveal His Son in me 2. As there is an ordinary way of revealing Christ to souls to wit by the Word preached Rom. 10. 17. and God's blessing upon the Word 1 Cor. 3. 7. so there is another extraordinary without the Word preached whether by voice instinct or apparition This latter way was Christ revealed to Paul as appeareth not only from the history of his conversion Act. 9. and 22. chapters but also from the expression here used to reveal His Son not to but in me whereby as some conceive is signified that the grace and knowledge of Christ did from Heaven immediately break-in upon his soul. 3. The knowledge of Jesus Christ which Ministers especially do receive from God is not only for themselves but that it may be communicated by them unto others So that the Lord doth bestow the more liberally upon them for His Peoples sake 2 Cor. 1. 4. Thus God revealed His Son in Paul that he might preach Him among the Heathen 4. Though before Christ's coming in the flesh the doctrine of Salvation was by God's appointment confined in narrow bounds Psal. 147. 19 20. Yet by Christ's death the partition-wall was removed and the division which was betwixt the Jews and the Gentiles quite abolished Eph. 2. 13. so that the doctrine of Salvation was to be spread among the Heathen and this that the Prophecies of the calling of the Gentiles might be fulfilled Psal. 2. 8. Isa. 2. 2. That I should preach Him among the Gentiles saith Paul 5. The Call of God whether to amendment and newnesse of life or to undergo any lawfull Office especially an Office in His House it being once known to be His Call ought not to be shifted but immediately and without delay obeyed Heb. 3. 7 8. because our life is uncertain Iam. 4. 14. we know not if we shall again get such an offer Act. 13. 46. or though we get a new offer yet the longer we delay there will be the greater indisposition to imbrace it Jer. 13. 23. for this made Paul immediately to follow the Call of God Immediately I conferred not with flesh and bloud 6. Because flesh and bloud whether thereby be meant carnal men friends or any other or our own carnal and natural reason will furnish abundance of seeming reasons either for questioning the reality of God's Call or for not obeying or at least for postponing obedience to His Call chiefly when obedience to it doth carry hazard losse or probability of discredit with it Mat. 16. 22. Therefore in the things of God and in the matter of obedience to the will of God we are not to consult with flesh and bloud but once knowing what the will of God is we are without deliberation whether we shall obey or not to put it in execution committing all our cares and fears about the issue to God Esth. 4. 16. for Paul conferred not with flesh and bloud the word signifieth to lay down our cares and difficulties as a burden in some friends bosom but he looked not on flesh and bloud as a friend to be advised with in the present case From Vers. 17. Learn 1. That extraordinary way of revelation whereby the Lord made known His mind to the Penmen of Scripture was so infallible in it self and so evident to those unto whom it came to be no delusion but the very mind of God that they were above all doubt to the contrary and needed not so much as to advise with the best of men in order to their thorowconfirmation about the realitie of it for Paul was so perswaded of his immediate Call from God to be an Apostle and of the infallible truth of the Gospel which was revealed unto him that he did not consult with the very Apostles about it Neither went I up to Jerusalem to them which were Apostles before me to wit that he might consult with them and obtain a Permission or Commission from them to discharge his Office otherwise it is probable from Act. 12. 17. that Paul shortly after his conversion went to Jerusalem going through it in his way to Arabia but went not at that time to any of the Apostles being discharged by God to stay any longer there 2. There may be more ground of hope to bring the most wild and barbarous savages to the saving knowledge of Jesus Christ than a people outwardly civilized living under the drop of Ordinances and thereby inured to a form of godlinesse without the power thereof for Paul being commanded to make hast out of Jerusalem there being no hopes that his Testimony would be received there Act. 22. 18. is sent to the wicked and savage Arabians But I went to Arabia 3. The Lord maketh sometimes the first piece of publick service which He putteth His Ministers upon as hazardous uncouth and unsuccessful-like as any wherein He doth ever imploy them afterwards that hereby they may be taught to depend more on God's blessing than upon any humane probabilities for successe to their pains 2 Cor. 1. 9. and that they may give proof of the sincerity of their obedience to the Call of God when no apparent hazard will make them repent their undertakings Jer. 17. 16. and withall that they may in the first entry
the bondage of sin and wrath here and at last should be banished from the face of God And on the other hand that a more clear dispensation of the Covenant of Grace should succeed under the New Testament and that those who according to the tenour of that Covenant did seek to be justified through Faith in Christ should be the children of God free from the bondage of Ceremonies and of God's wrath here and possesse the heavenly inheritance hereafter In order to this the Apostle first prefaceth in this vers by citing his adversaries and all others who of their own accord without and contrary to God's Command did put themselves again under the yoke of the Mosaical Law and sought to be justified by the Works thereof otherwise all Believers are under the Moral Law as the rule of their life Eph. 6. 2. he prefaceth I say by citing all such to hear what the Law it self or that Scripture which is a part of those five Books of Moses which are called the Law Rom. 3. 21. doth say to this purpose and withal he taxeth them indirectly for their not understanding the scope of the Law and of the doctrine relating to it notwithstanding of their pretending so much to the knowledge of it Doct. 1. The Minister of Jesus Christ is so far in the spirit of meeknesse to condescend to the humours of those who oppose themselves in order to their gaining as that he alwayes keep up his authority amongst and over them as an Ambassador in Christ's stead 2 Cor. 5. 20. for Paul having for condescendence and tendernesse carried himself to them as an affectionate mother doth now carry the matter with more authority citing and commanding them to hear a clear refutation of their error Tell me saith he 2. So ignorant are all men naturally of that righteousnesse which is of God by Faith that when it is offered they do what they can to reject it and such is their pride and madnesse go about to establish their own righteousnesse by Works betaking themselves to stand or fall according to the sentence of the Law and Covenant of Works for the Galatians were thus mad who rejecting the offer of Christ's righteousnesse in the Gospel desired to be under the Law to wit so as to be dealt with by God according to the sentence of it 3. The Doctrine of the written Law is so far from giving any patrociny to that dangerous error of Justification by Works That this error ariseth mainly from ignorance of the Law and chiefly of that which is the scope of the Law to wit Christ for righteousnesse Rom. 10. 4. for Paul doth point at the reason of their so great desire to be under the Law even their not hearing the Law so as to understand it Do ye not hear the Law saith he Vers. 22. For it is written that Abraham had two sons the one by a bond-maid the other by a free-woman 23. But he who was of the bond-woman was born after the flesh but he of the free-woman was by promise THe Apostle in the second place propoundeth the typical history of Abraham's family taken from Gen. 16 and 21. chapters The sum whereof is that as Abraham had two sons to wit Ishmael and Isaac he had also several others by Keturab Gen. 25. 2. but these two are only mentioned as being appointed by God to prefigure the present purpose the condition of which two sons did differ in two things first That the one Ishmael was born of a bond-woman or servant to wit Hagar Gen. 16. 1. 15. and so was but as a servant himself and not the heir Gen. 21. 10. The other Isaac was born of a free-woman to wit Sarah Gen. 21. 2 3. who had been never a servant but mistris and joynt in the government of the family with her husband and therefore Isaac himself was no servant but a free-man even the heir ver 22. A second difference did ly in the principle of their generation and birth for Ishmael was born after the flesh or by the ordinary strength of nature his mother Hagar being a young woman and fit for conception Gen. 16. 2. but Isaac was not conceived nor born from any such principle Sarah his mother being ninety years old when she conceived Gen. 17. -17. and so according to the course of nature unfit for conception Heb. 11 12. but he was born by promise or by vertue of that promise made to Abraham Gen. 17. 16. and the miraculous operation of God ver 23. From this history of Abraham's family considered in it self and leaving the mystery prefigured by it to its own place We Learn 1. The best of men are not perfect there having been some things even in the holy Patriarchs which were not commended but only tolerated by God as a lesser evil for prevention of a greater Such was their polygamy or marrying of moe wives than one which though contrary to the first institution of Marriage Mal. 2. 15. and Mat. 19. 4 5 8. yet was practised by many of the Patriarchs as not knowing or at least not considering what sin was in it being blinded partly by the tyranny of common custom and partly by that great desire which they had to multiply their posterity that if it were possible the Messias might have descended of their line Thus even Abraham had two wives a bond-maid and a free-woman 2. The best of men are in no small hazard to be so far overpowered with tentations to mis-belief under the delayed performance of divine Promises and the want of all lawfull probable means for the performance of them as to close with sinful means for bringing of it about and to repute themselves free from guilt in so doing as if a good and necessary end could commend a sinfull mean for attaining to it for Abraham having a promise that the blessed Seed should come of him Gen. 12. -3. and having waited for a childe until Sarah his wife through age had lost all hopes of conception is moved at her desire to go-in unto Hagar his bond-maid that he might obtain seed by her Gen. 16. 1 2. rather than the Promise should ly unperformed The one by a bond-maid saith he 3. The Lord standeth not in need of our sinfull means for bringing about of His own gracious work towards us for after that Ishmael is sinfully begotten upon the handmaid the Lord maketh Sarah conceive a son miraculously in whom the Promise was to have its accomplishment The other by a free-woman 4. The Lord hath placed in the natures as of beasts and birds so of men and women an ordinary power of generation and conception wherby one generation may succeed to another until the heavens be no more and that men who cannot live any long space of time in their own persons may in a kind perpetuate their life and memory in their posterity unto all succeeding generations Thus Ishmael was born after the flesh or by the ordinary strength of
without any reserve or limitation and the practice of any other is to be followed but so far as their example is conincident with Gods Word and practice See 1 Cor. 11. 1. where Paul commandeth them to follow him with an expresse limitation to wit as he was a follower of Christ but here his command is absolute and unlimitted Be ye followers of God 5. The Lord doth enter into most intimate friendship with and taketh on most neer relations unto those whose sins He pardoneth So that He doth not only free them from deserved wrath but placeth them among the children and maketh them adopted sons and daughters unto Himself for here he calleth them God's dear children of whom He said chap. 4. 32. that God had forgiven them for Christs sake 6. All those who are dear children to God by adoption should look upon their highest priviledges as strongest engagements to duty and particularly set themselves to imitate Him in the exercise of mercy kindnesse forgivenesse and of such other duties as He hath made lovely and amiable by His own example for Paul maketh their priviledges an engagement to duty and to imitate God in particular Be ye followers of God as dear children 7. It is not sufficient that we set our selves to imitate God except we do it as dear children that is first humbly Matth. 18. 2. 3. and next with a kind of naturall affection and propension for so do children affect to imitate and by imitation to please their parents and not as servants and slaves by compulsion Hence he saith as dear children pointing not only at the reason why but the manner how they should follow Him Vers. 2. And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour HE doth next illustrate yet further that precept given chap. 4. ver 32. and joyntly sheweth wherein they were to imitate God to wit not only in forgiving but also in loving one another and so as they should walk in love whereby is meaned that all their actions towards their neighbour ought not only to be good in themselves but also flow from a principle of love to his good and edification which duty or constant task of walking in love is inforced by a new argument taken from Christ's example who loved us and did evidence His love by giving Himself freely and of His own accord Job 10. 18 even unto death for us or for our sins Gal. 1. 4. which action of Christ is illustrated first from the end for which He did give Himself even to be a propitiatory sacrifice unto God for expiating all the sins of the Elect as was fore-signified and typified by all those expiatory levitical sacrifices under the Old Testament whether those which were generally called by the name of offering under which were comprehended all sacrifices both of living beasts and of things destitute of life as flowre oyle frankincense and such-like or those which were more strictly called by the name of sacrifice and were of living beasts and therefore conjoyned with shedding of bloud as the word in the original implyeth which cometh from a root signifying to kill and slay hence it is that our crucified Lord doth here get the name both of an offering and sacrifice This action of Christ is illustrated next from its fruit and efficacy to wit the rendering of God well-pleased with Christ His offering up Himself and with the persons and performances of true Believers for His sake as sweet smelling odours by reason of their likenesse unto and agreement with our spirits are well-pleasing and satisfying unto such as find them Doct. 1. Whatever duties of mercy and kindnesse we do discharge unto our neighbour we do not sufficiently imitate God therein neither perform service acceptable to Him if they flow not from a principle of love to our neighbours good and edification and be not directed thereunto as the great end of our work next to the glory of God and therefore a man may do many externall duties of love and yet not be accepted of God when his great aim is to be seen of men Matth. 6. 2. or to merit heaven by his good works Rom. 9. 31 32. without any inward compassion or affection to his neighbour or a sincere aim towards his good for the Apostle sheweth we do only then rightly imitate God in the duties of kindnesse and love when all we do floweth from the inward affection of love and is from love to our neighbour directed to his good while he saith walk in love 2. Our walking in love to our neighbour as it is formerly explained and when it floweth from the fountain of love to God is an evidence of adoption and of one who is a dear childe to God for having spoken of their near relation to God as being His dear children he presently enjoyneth them to make so much evident by their walking in love 3. That God the Father doth pardon the sins of the Elect having given His Son unto death to purchase pardon for them doth speak His love unto those whom He doth pardon and that Jesus Christ did willingly give Himself to death for them doth no lesse speak His unspeakable love unto them also So that they are equally loved both by the Father and the Son for he saith as Christ also hath loved us the particle also relateth to the love of the Father in pardoning for Christs sake whereof he presently spoke 4. So necessary is love among Christians together with those many duties which flow from it So many are the snares and difficulties which Satan our own corrupt natures and our mutual infirmities do create in our way to keep us from it that God seeth it necessary to propose the love both of the Father and the Son as two most powerfull adamants to draw our backward hearts up towards it for saith he Walk in love as Christ also hath loved us 5. As Christs love to lost sinners being firmly believed is a strong argument constraining those whom He hath so loved to walk in love towards others that being one of the great things required by Him from those whom He loveth Joh. 15. 12. So this love of Christ to us ought to be a pattern and copy to which we are to be conformed in our love towards others and therefore our love ought to be free for so was His Job 15. 16 It ought to be fruitfull for so was His Gal. 1. 4. it ought to be constant for so was His Job 13. 1. it ought to be discreet not encouraging or humouring the person beloved in sin for so was His Matth. 16. 23. And walk in love as Christ hath loved us saith he 6. Then do we consider the love of Christ aright and so as to be effectually incited to our duty from the consideration of it when we look upon it in those effects which flowed from it and especially
in His death and sufferings and do labour to appropriate by faith the good and benefit of those unto our selves for Paul holding forth the love of Christ as an argument inciting to love one another doth so look upon it while he saith and hath given Himself for us 7. The guilt of sin is so great as being a breach of Gods most holy Law and consequently a wrong done against an infinit God Psal. 51. 4. So exact is divine justice in requiring equivalent satisfaction for the wrong done Exod. 34. -7. that as there is no reconciling of God with man without satisfaction So no satisfaction which man himself or any meer creature could give was sufficient to do the turn for otherwise there had been no necessity that Christ should have given Himself for us 8. What no meer creature could do Christ Himself having taken-on the nature of man hath done even given full satisfaction to provoked justice by giving Himself to suffer both in soul Isa. 53. 10. and body Isa. 50. 6. in the Elects stead so that He is taken and they go free Joh. 18. -8. for He gave Himself for us 9. The pain and torment both in soul and body which Christ did give Himself to endure and suffer was inexpressible and such as was fore-signified by what was done with the ancient offerings and sacrifices according to Gods command some whereof were killed flayed and burnt some rosted some fryed on coals and some seethed in pots All which are but shadows of what Christ our Lord endured for He gave Himself an offering and sacrifice 10. As those leviticall offerings and sacrifices under the Law were not sufficient to satisfie divine justice for the sins of the Elect So Jesus Christ being offered up to God in death is that only true and reall sacrifice wherein provoked justice doth rest satisfied and whereof all those other sacrifices were but types and shadows for if they had satisfied justice there had been no necessity of this other sacrifice which came in their stead and so was represented by them He gave himself an offering and sacrifice 11. Jesus Christ Himself in this offering was both the Priest who as He was God did offer up Himself Heb. 9. 14. and the Sacrifice which was offered to wit as He was man Heb. 10. 10. Yea and we may add He was the Altar also whereupon this sacrifice was offered up the vertue of His God-head being that which not only underpropped His humane nature in suffering Isa. 50. 7 8. but also did adde an infinite value to His sufferings as being the sufferings of Him who was God Acts 20. -28. even as the altar doth sanctifie the gift Matth 23. 19. for He gave himself an offering and sacrifice 12. The ransom given by Christ for sinners was payed unto God whom they had wronged and not unto Sathan whose slaves we are by nature although by vertue of that ransom we are freed from Sathans slavery and sins dominion Heb. 2. 14. for God the just Judge being satisfied Sathan the jaylour and unjust tyrant did lose his right to keep us longer in bonds He gave himself an offering and sacrifice not to Sathan but to God saith he 13. As sin doth mak us loathsom and unfavourie to God and stireth up His wrath against us So the sweet savour of this one sacrifice offered up by Christ being laid hold-upon by faith appeaseth His wrath and maketh us savourie and well-pleasing in His sight for so much is implyed while he saith He gave himself a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour a metaphor taken from men who when their senses are offended with some stinking favour cannot be at quiet until some sweet perfume be burnt which prevaileth above the other In like manner the noisom smell of our sin did so move the Lord to wrath that He would not be at rest untill the sweet smell of His Sons obedience did come to His nostrils Job 33. 24. 14. It is the only sacrifice of Christ which by its own vertue doth appease the wrath of God and make both the persons of the Elect and their spirituall performances acceptable to God for it is a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour And though this much be also spoken of other sacrifices Gen. 8. 21. Exod. 29. 41. yet it is to be understood of them not as they were considered in themselves Heb. 10. 1. but as they related to this sacrifice of Christ whereof they were types and upon which the godly even then did rely by faith Heb. 11. 4. Doct. 15. Whence it followeth and from the text also that not only an end is put to all those leviticall sacrifices seing Christ this true and reall sacrifice whereof they were types is offered up already in death but also that there is no sacrifice properly so called to be offered up in the Christian Church neither of any other thing besides Christ neither is that sacrifice of Christ Himself again to be repeated and consequently that there is no Priest properly so called but Christ alone for the Apostle sheweth this one sacrifice did abundantly pacifie provoked justice and therefore there is no need of any other besides that the vertue of it is perpetual Heb. 10. 14 18. and so it needeth not to be reiterated A sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Vers. 3. But fornication and all uncleannesse or covetousness let it not be once named amongst you as becometh Saints THe Apostle cometh now to give some new precepts And first in this and the following verse he forbiddeth six vices all of them for the most part contrary to chastity prescribed in the seventh command Three of which vices are in the outward actions and forbidden in this verse 1. Fornication or the sin of filthinesse between parties both free from the yoke of marriage 1 Cor. 7. 2. a sin looked upon as a thing indifferent and no sin among the Gentiles 1 Cor. 6. 12. 2. Uncleannesse under which are usually comprehended all other sorts of filthie lusts between any parties whatsomever 3. Covetousnesse that is an immoderate desire Heb. 13. 5. to acquire Micab 2. 2. or to preserve worldly goods Prov. 11. 24 26. All which he doth so discharge as that they should not name them to wit with delight and without detestation otherwise it is lawfull to name them while we reprove them as the Apostle here doth and he urgeth this prohibition from the state wherein they were as being Saints separated from the world and dedicated to God and therefore it were most unseemly for them to defile themselves with such filthy lusts Doct. 1. True Christian-love unto our neighbour whereby we endeavour his preservation and good in his honour person chastity outward estate and good name Rom. 13. 9. doth hugely differ from fleshly love flowing from lust and from the love of the world whereby we seek to satisfie our own sinfull lusts with our neighbours hurt for the former was